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16-Tht Dally Sentinel .

Ohio

Wednelday, May 5,1893
•
IIECISTER TO Wll DUR•G

!:E'bocuNo

Ohio Lottery

Cavs take
2-llead in
playoffs

FllOCllMO'S

S141!AJIII¥fRSARfiiAI.E '

~·----------------,

Pick 3:

890

Pick 4:
9699
Super Lotto:

~10.13-33-37J$6

Page4

Kicker:
lll043

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RegieWioct.y •t.your 1001111 Foo.and for your chance to a' •••.•••••• -- ••••••••••••.•••
win - of the grMt prlz• dMcrlbecl below during our
111ur _ . ..... ~ oelebrt~~~on. '"'-'• 110 purCh••
nn nary. Tile grMCI prlzil of a v lion or $3,100 oeah

TYSON'S/HOLLY FARMS
U.S.D.A. GUDE 'I' CHICKEN

Win l . Hawaiian Or
Disney World Vacation

:,-..~0.: ~"':::..~:::; :!.'ii:.i"""

WHOLE
FRYERS.

500. 0~

Or Win s3
.

.

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a1.

In Cash!

Val.44. NO.$
' Multl. . .•lno.

-~
- ·~,· . . ..

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WEEK 1: May 2through Ma)! 8, 1993- You could win a.. ~:l't•,;,...; ·
free bag of groceries

_

.

3li Bag1 of GI"'Cerl~ Will Be Given Away At Elch Foodlllnd
WEEK 2: May 9 through May 15, 1993- You caul n

\

.,

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' .

Commis~ione.rs

a...

WEEK 3: May 16 through May 22,1993- You could win a•••
1 minute • 35 second shopping spree ~ .
~
A FQOdllnd Shopping Spree Will Ba Awarded At Each Stcn~
- ._
WEEK 4: May 23 thtough May 29, 1993- one lucky ~~mer will win a...
Hawaiian or Disney World Vacation or $3,500.
TRIP FOR 2 HAWAIIAN VACATION TRIP FOR 4 DISNEY WORLD

•

o6 nlghte •lrfare oec:c:onunodltlona oOianey puHt
orental car

ECKRICH MEAT SALE
ICIIICI

BOLOGNA

1 ll. SJ

69

FOODLAND

ECKRICH

BEEF
USDA CHOICE

SMOKED SAUSAGE $
and KIELBASA ll.

1
$249

ECKRICH

SMORGAS'PACK 1 Ll.
ECKRICH

LUNCHMAKERS EA.

99 c

ECIIICH

$ 89

COOKED HAM

LB.

ECKRICH

I LL PKG.

FUNIS

$169

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•:1•······-~·-··························
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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RAGd.
MAMIFACTUAER'S COUPON EXPIRES 511111 :

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SPAGHEnl SAUCE

ORANGE

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PLASTIC

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VM don Boi9l FOOCII Co. Rlgu PIOduetl, CMS Dopl. 336200. .1 F - DIMo,llll Rio,._ 78140 ........... 40c p1uo a,
-lng IN&gt;mllodln ... ,... .,.-van don~ FOOCII Co. Redon1&gt;lon POlley·-~ owquoo~, Co~ 1w nocaoll

YIIIU•---~.Limll.,.couponJ&gt;«~.
Goocl 0111y on procllict(o)lnllclll.-1.
----ORTAXID.

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I••···································
ir:::J
GOOD ONLY AT POOOL.AICt

Yt GALLON

Valrd 5/2 Si819J

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1QII 11121

I

FOODLANI&gt; SPECIAL COUPON

I

16 OZ. REG. OR LIGNI
MARGARINE .
QUARIIRS

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PARKA

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I
UMIT 1 WITH THIS COUPON AND $10 OR MORE AllDITlONAL PURCHASE• .

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•••
••
•••

"

$2

•·

OFF

OFF .

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••
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••

·Rutlllnd FD

PREMIUM GUDE

.CYPRESS 1o....· $
MULCH BAGS~:~:· .
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Rotan·ans

a·l•lmore _.

88

AND
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,.

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grant

011'.,....

r:!J:J

s
t

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The pairol also investigated a
minor 11ccident Wednesday moming involving a school bus.
·.
According to the report, Julian
S. Hill, 21, 193 Main Street,
.

=~~: :~v!':!n'r::::C~

thebusstruckthesideofabridge.
No inJuries were reported, The
bus sustained light damageand was
driven from the scene. The report
was incomplete 11 press time.

Regents chancellor to address
Rio graduates May 16

- ··

Man orrested on charge

99

gram is evidence of the continuing
interest in registered nursing, she
with tbe 1994 seCond-year studentS said. A nationwide shortage of
in the two-year pogralil offered by ltN.s in 1986 prompted the develRGCC, Dr: Byers said. Currendy, . opment of the LPN Advanced
there are 122 enrolled in the nurs- Placeaicnt Track !hat - instilllted·
ing prograln, split evenly between by the summer ri 1988.
first- and second-year level stuWhile the shortage appears to
dents..
easing within the immediate area,
Last summer's Advanced PlaceDr. Byers noted that positions
ment Track emollment was 13, Dr.
natioowide are expc:aed to open in
Byers said.
signifiCaat numbers well into the
''The emphasis is on interested
firSt clecac!e of the next century.
adult learners who 8111 LPNs and
Dr. Byers said strong inlerest is
wbo have already chosen nursing
being shown fiOm the IIOiitheaS'mi
as a profession," Dr. Byen said.
Ohio, Cllarleston and Huntington,
"This group is committed 10 the
W:Va. , and Ashland, Ky., areas,
career of nursing, and most will
juc!Jing from the backlog ohpplihave jobs to return to. l(s an
cations 10 the Advanced Placement
lllhaotage for them to spend Qll)y a
'l'nK:k prognun.
year to becciine a lqistered nurse,
The reason, she added, is that ·
because they RICCive cmdit for iheir
Rio Grande is the only other instipast nursing C8lm' experiences and
tution, aside from the NeiiiOIIvillcpast college-level work."
based Hocking College, to offer
The existence of a waiting list
such an opportunity and prognm in
for entry into Rio Grande's prothe lri-state area.

Tw0 IDJ
• •ored wb en vehIC
• Je overt urns

'

Large

'

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Accordi.js

JSjurors seated

Asst. Colors
~ ~Geraniums
4" Pot

New Gui.nea$
Impatiens
Hanging
Baskets

only iDcreaac enrollment in the
CommunitY College for the 1993·
94 academic 'fC&amp;r• but also reduce
the waiting lut of potential LPN
students awaiting ·entry into the
CollegeofNursing.
LPNs entering the Advanced

.----Local briefs------.

·: ANY HANGING BASKET
Any Full Flat or Bedding Plants :
•
With This Coupo1
Witlt Uis Coupo1
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NO U~T WITH COUPON
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Hartenbach and Mannin' Roush
VOfed for the pay miles while Commissioner Janet Howard O(JilCllii'CL
Roush IBid the pay nuses were
~ earlier this year and
were granled in response to pay
incrc ucs in the auditor's and p(CISecutor's office.
·
Howard commented that she
wanted to euniine the issue further
befole agreeing on the pay illcreiSes.
-Met in aa executive lleslic:ift
to diacuss penoniiCI matkn.
· Attendi~ere Commission
President R
Hartt:nbacb, Vice
President Janet Howard, Commissioner Mannilig Roush and Clerk
Mary Hobsteller.

Placement TniCk this summer who
complete the program will glllduate

Tuesdly.
to tbe M~igs
DEARBORN, Mich. (AP)- A applied for went to 8IIOiher person,
C:Ounty ~IJ!Or I offu:e, a JUf)' disgruntled posial worker shot four the ~ef said. "J:Ie ... has recendy
View of the murder scene !fK1 odier . people, killing one of them, at a b~en mvol~ed m ·an . empl~ye.~
areas relevant to the ~IS expect· post office garage in suburban gnevance with the postal semce.
ed on Monday.~ arguments .Dettoit ibis morning, police said.
be IBid.
and presen18bon Of evidence 81111Ct
It was the second post office
for Tuesday.
. .
shooting in the Dettoit area in 1 lfl
• LeMasler, of Racme, IS acc'ISNI
ean.
.
of f~ur charges of aggavated mur- Y The gunman, identified as,Larry ·
·
.
1
der •n the Feb. 8, 1991, shotgun Jason, 4~. wallced into the garage
slaytngs of Jeff Halley Sr., 36, and just before 9 a.m. and opened fire
Two youths were injured in a
According to the report, Bwfte
12-Y!'If~ld Jeff Halley Jr., boih of with at least two auns, s.id police
one-vehicle accident Wednesday was westbound on Swe Route 681
GallipoliS.
Chief Ronald DezkLOne man was , aftemocin in Orange Township, the when the vehicle slid off the right
ticall
Gallia-Meigs Post of th!l' State side of the road, struck an embank· _,
·
.
killed, another person wascri ·
Y Hi h
1
ment and o..- -.... onto ill side,
wounded and at least two other
g way PabO reported.
""""'""'
1
~~p~oyees s~ffered undetermined A.lr~~nR~a:.~~~:~iJ:: !~2~~ f:t~~'!tc~::=.
mJunes,heSIId.
·
· M. Swartz, IS, 42279 Alfredo ingfactor.
·
· Jason wa,s upset that a job he Road, Coolville, received minor
B\lrke was Ciied for failure to
7
'n'unes' but
not-~"
control . The vehicle sustained
. W;-\SHINGTON (AP) ...:. A ler weather had bounced back as
I ~The boy::eere ~in a
heavy, disabling damage and was
Federal Reserve survey suggests spring arrived last m_onth. Both
vehicle driven by Randall S. Burte, towed from the scene.
the economy may not be 110 bad off rerail sales and manufac1uring were
•
16, 42230 Alfred Road, Coolville. ·
.
up. .
•eco~onzze
lfterall. .
"Reports ... indicate generally
"Shopper ttaffic and rel8i1 sales • '
b
.
modelt improvement in ec:Onomic were reponed to have rebounded
conditions 1cross much of the modestly in April,.following ~natiOn'," according' to interviews a1 declines in March resulung m
with business people across the ~ from severe weather,'' IICCQI'd· .
country before April 23 hy the mg to ·the summary of the Beige
Gene Tripleu. vice president of
Fed's 12 regional blmks.
Book survey, named after the color the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary
The survey found that economic of its cover.
·
Club, reported on hia nip to HmllDr. ~ H. Haqstoo. Chancel- This will be a red letter day for Rio
activity !hat had foundered in win·
inj!toii, W.Va., for the annual dis- lor of the Ohio Board of Repts. Grande," Dr. Dorsey said.
mct conference at the Monday will address 350 graduates of the
Ceremonies begin at 10:30 am.
night meeting of the club.
Unive(Sity of Rio Grande and Rio with the Baccalaureate and
Recognized with a plaque at the Grande Community College during FOIIIIden • Day Program, in which
conference was William Gilmore annual commencement exercises the University pays lribwe to the
of Middleport who received the . on Su=, May 16 at 2 p.m. on fOiiilders, past trustees, fiCU!ty and
highest acore in the nation on· his Rio G
•8 Campus Gieen.
presidents of Rio Grande. During
J~ 'selection in ·the case of Ohio vs. William LeMasttz is pro- ,
socipl
studies
tum
for
tbe
General
Dr.
HaJn1on
has
been
a
mcmbcl'
,
that
ceremony, the Doctor of Public
ceeding filter than anticipated, Meigs ,County Prosecutor John
Equivalency
Diploma
(OED)
test.
·of
the
Regenll
staff
since
1979
and
Service
clesree will be conferred
Lentea Slid this moming.
.
Mr.
Gilmore
was
ICCO!llpanied
to
in
her
curlllllt
position
is
the
chief
upon
to
Plul
B. Mutzig of Jacbon.
A IOta! Of 1~ jurors have been seated as of Wednesday aflanoon,
the
conference
by
his
father,
Bob
administrativ~
officer
of
Ohio's
the
inunacliR
past JIRSidc:nt of the
Lentea Slid. ~~jurors are needed.-- ··
•
Gilmore.
'
planning
10d
coordinating
board
University
Board
of '1'rustces.
Lentes said wllnesles may be inttoduced. the jury as early as
Joe
Young
and
Dick
Ow~n
for
higher
education.
The
slate's
·
Commencement
exercises open
Monda.
.
.
reported
on
the
Crippled
Children
colle&amp;iate
system
Is
one
of
the
at
2
p.m.
witb
Dr.
Hairston
as the
· Le~. of Racine, is ICCused of four charges of aggravated
and
Adult
Fund
administered
by
largest
In
the
nation,
servin&amp;
m~n
featuml
~
I
"'·
:
murder in the Feb: 8, 1991, shotgun slayings of Jeff Hailey Sr., 36,
the local club. 'l'bole needin&amp; asais· than soo,ooo students.
Prior to JOining the Regenll, Dr.
and 12-year.ol!l Jeff Halley Jr., bodl of Gallipolis.
.
tance from .the fund may m11ko
Dr. HairSton's address will be a Hairston held several administta·
application through the Meigs highlight of a 117-year:old tradi- tive positions at Ohio Stale UniverCoimty ~nt of Human Ser- lion at Rio Grande, !laid Dr. ll8ll'y sity, including Associate Direclor
vices or tbe Meigs Count)- Health M. Doney; president of the Uni- of Affirmative Action programs
A Pomeroy inan was arrelled early Wednesday,. morning by
DeoaliiiCiil.
·
verslty and the Community Col- and Assistant Vice President for
depudea of the Meigs County Sheriff's Depaanent 011 a ~ of
lt WIS IIIIIIOIIiiCed !hat die Meigs lese. .
.
Resisuation SenoiceL
"'..........., ccnducl by iniDJticatlon following an incident at a llailer
Junior High .Achievement B111quct
"The University regards the
Aftt;r joining the RegeatS Iliff,
;&amp;iiiiic•lY Mobile Palk.
,
will be held at the achool on May · Jl'aduadon eotercise u the most she played a CCIItral role in many
Wlllilm i.. 0me1 Jr. of 408S4 State Route 681 pleaded guilty to
13. The Ro~ Club worka with 1mjJonant ceremonill occa&amp;ion of projecls, including the cleYe1opment
the cillrle in Meial County Court and was fined S20 plus ccr*·
.
I
the junior high m Jimviding awards the year," Dr. Doney said. "Our ·of Selective E'ceDence POJiliill,
for the acmeven. l&gt;ick VMiblft Is ovarldin&amp; goal durlnJ the plaming a llatewide college preparatory
receive~
the !i&amp;iaon for the club with the 91 the commencement poaram is core curriculum, 111d testing proThe RlllWid Fire Dep.1ment has been I'NII'IIed I Rural Commulocl1 junior high and :f:d all to focus •ntion 011
t 1 jPliiD_S to. reduce the need for coinity F'ue Protection (RCFP) JIUl of $3.000. Sen. J10 Micble! ~
Rotariaollll IIICild and
. with ' and their ICCOIIIpli._.tt in COil· ~ llllllediatlon.
{D-Cirt:leville) and Rep. Milt Malone '(D-Soudi Point).,.,..
the blnquet.
cludlq thla pbUe ot their educaDr. Hlinton cliiRd die Council
today. '
.
'
.
Plelident Oene Rigp diwvn ~ . don."
·
'
on ColleJO Level Services of the
RCFP grantS provide federll mau:hina funds of up to $3,000 to
with the Roalrianl die deaiilbillty
nia ycar'l commencement is ·CoJieF a.~~ in 'New Yolk from
commllllidea with popu1atiou Wider 10,000. The DIOIIDY l'ru!n the
of havlq Rotlrilnl enlittl~ l,lpifk:lnt. ~ Mded,llec;- the 1986 untlll988.
grllliS Cllll be Uled tb llpll'lde equipment It~ file~
aa Pial Auria Pe11owL hill Hlnil inlllkudon will hallar die flnt pldA lifeloq Ohio resident she
and Ill IIIia .de!*llilentl ,With orpniMdonl1 expeues. lllinwaa the foundlr ofltollry Clulllln uatet !Jf tbe Matt«'• depee pro- . bold• 1 Bacbc1or's Dearc'e In
ina and equipment COlli. . '
1905111d Ibis fund hu been iiiiiMd . gram m ~laiRoom cc!nr~don Md Bnsliab 1 Malter's Detr~e in
the Ohio Deplrtment ofNatwal ReiOIIteil rec«vecl !ipplieatiacis
in hilllc!nd', I
&gt;:
. .
.. from die Hollan Pn!pm inldat'd
CoiDm....iclliW and her Pli.I), In
tiom 372 fire dteplilliitiita ~the 111111. or theiiiPP'kltiU,
Onull of die clob were Jake
1110 for ICiderlk:llly Ill~ COIImDDiCidou, 111 from Ohio
RCPP,pll wn awaded to 3faJIImiinldol.-owldo.
·
.Koebelllld Ropl: B nxt, aenlor e
...........
State. A member or Pili Beta
The p11111 niYiillble dirouah the U. S. Depatnwwat of Mrl·
. ICiivltiel memben from tbe Gal"The awardinr..::!plOIDII to "lllPI abe - oae of 40 alumni
culaae'1 Fcftlt Service, Coopenrive Forutly AsliMK;e Act and
Iipolll club. The 1!dlcl oftllo Hclth grldUitea of f!io
IIIII Mil- , lilliiONd a Ohio Swe'sl987 colnare ldiftinilla'ed by the OhiO J)ql~Juneat ol NIUU'al ROIOIII'CCI'
.l1!'11ed
Mbthodilt
Church
aetYcd
tpt't
DIOIUIIDI
mab
lilCIIhcf
lilap . iiiCIICaiiCIIL She Ia a membcl' of die
Dlvilion of
• ·,
.
.
.
.
.
thO dinner.
m the evolilllon of the lnstillltion.
Juclp Fred W. Crow ill of ibe
Moias County Court of Common
~ !ill Clldeied JIOO! covemp of
J111Y ~ pm eedinp m the cue of
the Ohio !·. Wllllem LeMaster for
local1elevision stalions.
WSAZ-TV(~ 3) in Huntinpln, W.Va., hill agreed to COOl'·
diillte pool coverage and to pro~ coverage for the first ~Y of
tesWnony. Only one Cllllers will be
permitt;e&lt;! in th~ courtroo'!l each
day dunng ~ lrial.
J•...., selecuonln the case sl8tted

'
.
tb
ECOnomy
may
no
e
80
. bad after· all. survey revea1S

I

one academic )UI'. T11e acdocl will

not

DIsgrunte
•
J d pos. t a I work er
·Media pof?!ingtJ~dere4Jor trial · shoo~ people,)dlls one

I

MORE ADDillONAL PURCHASE.

I

The.Advanced Placement Track
program for LPNs wis~ing to .
become R.N.s will boost tiS num-

bers by more tban double the
amount from last summer, Dr.
Byers IBid.
.
The move will bring 30 LPNs
into the ISSOCiate degree iltirsing
program, which offers accelerated
R.N. educalion over the course of

top,eoaldremcmthetallbrMcba.(PiiotobyCIIarleMHoellleb)

1

L.IMIT 1 WITH THIS COUPON AND $10 OR

I

FOR SAFETY'S SAD. Till treea are tWIIcult 10 am and 10
budle thll ooe wllicb tllreatened the Dorothy Donie lioiiSe .on
, 111111 Stree1, Pomeroy flremn brou1ht In lbe lllclder truck so tlutt
Do,rale's - · AJu, •d a ne!pbor, Roaer Abbott, plctwed 11 the

C:

P51M5-040

ANY STYLE 27.5 oz., 21 oz., or 30 oz. JAR

I

F

JUICE

Enrollment in the one-year
Advanced Placement Track program offer¢ through tl)e Holzer
CoJJese of Nursing at Rio Grande
Community College will increase
this summer to better serve the
needs of those licensed practical
nurses .seeking to become registered nurses. said Dr. Janet M.
Byers, Dean of the College of
Nursing.

I
I
I

1 WITH THIS COUPON AND $10 OR MORE ADDmONAL PURCHASE. ·

sio~ .&lt;!fRulland water and sewer
faci!iues aod a van for the senior
citizen's program.
.
Acting on the advice of Meigs
Count&gt;: Emergency Medical Ser·
vtce Duector Bob Byer, the commission voted 10 advenise bids for
the
purchase
of
four
defibrillator/monitors to replace
four aging units.
In otber action, the commiSsion:
- Agreed to write a letter of
support for a S30,000 .rape JXtval"
lion grant being sought by the prosecutor's office. ·
. - Graated pay raises to Ed
Werry and Ray Parsons who are
employed by the commissioner's
office. Commissioners John ,

.

I

MILK

- ROUND STEAK

AIIIUita.,.alna.Newso~"'"'

College of Nursing to admit
more LPNs to special program
.

Ci

2%

2 So ctlonl. 12 Pagaa 25 - •

to advertise ·projects

By JIM FREEMAN
· nilnous ma~riai in ~ay from
Asphalt Malerilil ofMarietla.
Sentinel News Slalr ·
The Meigs County Board of
A spokesman for~ engineer's
Commissioners Wednesday agreed office urged.townsh~i:s to
to adverti~e bids for 1he Meigs contact the h!gbway
t as
County Htghway Depanment's soon IS possable to make .w~J~
Issue ~o res~g projcc1s.
meDII for dust conttol on township
PloJeciS slated mcludc the resur- roads.
. .
facing of Texas Road from Flat·
The commiSSion noted that
woods Road to State Route 7, funds were rec~ntly released for
Beech Grove Road from State 19!13 Communtty Dev~lopment
Route 124 to Cremeans Road, Block Grant (CDBG) proJeCts.
Happy Hollow Road from State · · CDBG projects .slated-include
Route 124 to 'New Lima Road', · the, purchase of fue pf.O~ction
Kingsblll)' Road from Sl8te Route equipment for the Sctpto and
143 to Rocksprings Road and !*him ~lunteer ~~IS.
Pomeroy Pike Road from Flat~ mstallallon of mne dry fue
woods RIBI to Slille Roule 7. .
hydrants, resurfacing of Court
In addition, the cominisJion Stteet in Sutton Township, extenapproved I bid to pun:bue aD _bllu·

A Certlflclte Will Be Given Away At Elch Foodl1nd Elch DayI

oranllll car_

.

Pomer()y·Middlepor1, Ohio, Thursday, May !i, 1993

$35.00 Food land gift certificate ~:.:._- _1i

•7 nlghte •lrfareoec:c:ommodlltlona

•

I

Board of Trustees of the Columbus ·
School for Girls, "I Know 1 Can," :
and the HuntingtOn National Bank. •
She is married to George W.
Hairston, managing partner in
Baka' &amp; Hostelltr, Columbus, and
they 8111 the pareniS of two children. Amy, 19, and Scott; 17.
Following Dr .. H1irston's .
address, .conferment of B~ebelor,
Associaie and Master •s degrees
will be conducted by Dr. Janet M.
,Byers, acting Vice President for
Academic Affairs.
Ceremonies will conclude with
the ~mues forming the tradition- .
a1 cii'Ck: on the green llld singin&amp; ·
the alma mater, "The Red and ·
While."
'

�•

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Commentary
-

111 Court Street

-

Pomeroy, Ohio
·DEVOTED TO THE INTERE8T8

or THE JIEJQ8.JIASON AREA

\

Attorney Ocaeral Juet R.eao tlllt wu ... profDilnd diQJice to bOne than die bulk of tbe pols who
told I CODJleUiOaal committee law enfoccanent," said Conyen, sit in jlilgmcnt of ha'.
=cady that lbe - not llllirur Ill and be wanted Reno to taow . Thea there's die lriPe lbout the
engqe in "ftltliminalioas'rtePnl- "there's at least one member of " military" nature of the governing die ll'llic ending 10 the Slllldoff
ment's sqe of the Branch Davidiin Waco.
·
·
an anpound. The left wing loves
Sp~ar
Well, I bave a few recrimina· thl.t one, ''The root cause of the
tions 'that have been pwing at me,
Iethai ouii:OIIIe (of the as=dl) was
· and some criminlllons, too, and Congras who is not going to ratio- ita central concept IS a military
unlike the sensible Ms. Reno, I nalize tbe i~nt deaths of two ope_ration,''. e!!Horialized The
have no qUIIms aboW enpging in ·· ·dozen ·cbikRn/ t · ·· · · · ·· · t ··
Nllion magazme. ·
them. I begin with her mos.t conThat statement astounded me.
Let us OO!w:cde dW the conduct
tentious critic, Rep. John Conyen, Here the man was, talking· to the of the ojlel'llion is fertile ground
D-Mich.
~ whose decision had resulted · for critical analysis. Who boldled
Conyers' assault on Reno took m the deatha or four score human the inilia1 raid on Feb. 28? W)ly not
place before a House Judiciary beings and whose face clearly rins lhe compound with concatina
CommiUee bcllring into the Waco showed the agony of that burden, and wait out lCoresb and his fllllllic
disaster, in ·which Branch Davidian and he was implying that she felt flock? Why was the final attack
cult !Cider David Koresh and, it no pain. If she had stretched him executed incremeDtany instead of
was then believed, IIOIIIC 85 of his inro a Siring and lied him into a half with fierce di$patch, as military
followas incinmlocl in a fire hitcb, I would've undcnalod- all commandos might have done?
they se1 after the feds began tear- the more so because Reno bad
AU that is worthy ~ della~. But
gassing them. The govenuncnt had openly accepted the blame, thereby to decry the "military" characll:r
mounted a "military operation" demonstrating she. baa more back- of the operation? What would the

Joseph

.I

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE llOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisber/ControUer

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All }etten are subject to editing and must .be signl:~ "!'itb name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned leners will be pubhsbed. Leuers
should be in good raste, addressing issues, not personalities.

For information on the
economy: Ask the people

~

I

By JOHN CUNNIFF
APB!!sinell~yst

NEW YORK - Perhaps it is time 11111 we who are stuck in this stagIWit economy take a tip from lhe rness~&amp;e on the pizza box: Since we
hive ttied the best, why not try the resl'l
That's a revcnal of the p!ZZa-box message, but the basic idea is the
Slllle - there ~ to be a better way of doing lhinp, and siDce we have
hean1 the "experts," maybe it is time we listen to "the res~" the oolinary

.

ro~ .

.

You can do your listening almost anywhere, anytime in any group among neighbQrs, friends, cow~ . rich, pcX. -:- and you williJI'IIbably
f!lld the same things, the same womes, fears and Problems about ihe economy.
..
you will find uncertainly, and its comtqUences.
1n some ways it is debilillting. Not knowing whal the fu~ holds,
: people undenlandably ~ wbat they have rather lban t*e fmancial
· risks. They avoid major conunitmeats. Some fear their mdil c.ds.
· People are vuy aware of
deficits, and the tJwnres are high
:thai in your survey you will
failb lags in the goverruneot' s way of
dealing with them. Most undrnland that you can't cut spending through
gimmickry, and that if you Clll'tcut speading, you can't cill llle cfeliciL
You will find wonies about homelllid economies.
.
'
Big debls and low sa~s are high oo any list of wonies, ani this in
spite of many fiiJ!Iilies havmg ~o ~ag~ Taxes -:- 1ft:SC11t ~ ·
future - are an ISSijC too. And job 1115eCllnly may be at Its highest m ·
many
' but inabi'lilY 10 fiind WVJA.·
-'- .,.,.__
9 c illi'
Notyears.
just insecunay,
.. ~~are ,. ,., m on
people unemployed, another 6 million or 110 working pan time becaWIC
they can't fmd full-time jobs, and another million or more who have pven
unlookin
up Many g.
ed .
1
~~~a·
.
of the unemploy are also acute y aware
t. m ac;me ~
compull:rs are more productive than !hey are, that therr sk:ills are not m
glUt demand anymore and that jobs just aren't being produced in sufficient numbers. ·
Health care costs are not just a big bill but a great fear. Everyone·
knows that costs are rocketing and that if they lose their job they might
lose their coverage too. Still, you may find them apprehensive about
. what's coming.
,.,.
taxes are what's coming, they say. Atop all the problems households.
are dealing with, income taxes are up, maybe real eslale taxes too, and .
there mighl be another tax 10 JliiY for health cllre costs.
~ ·
Everything considered, some respondents to your survey are likely to
wonder how the experts ever got rhe notion the consuiner could survive all
this, not 10 mention lead the economy into recovc:cy.
Over in the~ sector, especially in the small-business category,
you may find thai he~e too uncertainty undennines progress. Jobs just
aren't being created, and at least one reason is that old wait-and·see atti-

bi/.:-sgcl

Recently there was an incident
' on the school bus where a !OC~ was
11uown at the driver. Luckily 11 was
in the shoulder and not in the ·h~.
· The students on the bus atlhe ume
I
t
10 lligh
.. school.
ranged fOf
romcourse
e emen
no ary
one would
: come forward and say who threw
: the rock.
.
At the bcsinning of the year.
every ehild receives a copy of the
- bus rules and the~e are some that
don't need to be in writing, but
they remain the same all year.
·
Our bus drivers have a big
~nsibilily driving our children.
Children arc asked to behave and
reapect the rules, it's for their ow.n
safety and everyone else'~· Paren~
need 10 ins6U these rules IDIO tberr
children. Some have no respoect
for rules and get SUSIJilll(led nu~ous time and it's the same· th t ng

lime .ag;tin. If the child is put off
the bus then the parents should be
held accountable for their child's
actions. Maybe them parents will
start to help with enforcing rules
and teaching respecL Vllues start
at home and we need 10 enforce
them.
Everyone says their hands are
tied. Is it going 10 lake children rcelling killed or seriously hun be ore
something can be done?
Children can't be punished at
school anymore and are not beins
disciplined at home. Children are
losins respect and something needs
to be done somewhere.
Let 's back our bus d1i vers,
Jeachers and school off'ICials in the
decisions they have to make to proteet our children that have respect
for the rules.
Dawn Kopec .
Middleport

Legal system has. long way to go
ne.AsEditor,
.
.
a response to. the arucle
1D

-...-.o.y•s paper by Joh~ Lent.c$.
'''Y;,"our fegal system has come a
long W.~but it has a real long way
la w enforcement offi.
10 go.
cers jlldJes .xt Olhen need to be
more educated in how lO proU&lt;:I
Our Chl.ldren, in how to han. ddll&gt;e
. crimeS that our children ~ or
are victints of, so that our c:hi.ldren
Jam ~~ 60!11 ~ and IRI P.O'

tected ~ .of C01111Dually J"eVIC·
bDl
. ized by our legal S)'lll:lll.
•
Our Iesal 1y1tem and socaety .
needs 10 lielp our federallawmak~
ers (JellllOn IIlii •CfJiwlllli-) to
pass the -new
cnll they

n:~;~

·~w

•wv

.n
.
endlll

mendineDII

arewl'llwortinlfinallv
,..
any other.' victims
of Cri me more
,

~m Mi~
beill~
:---• w
P
~J"'
•
k
SyiiCW
1'
0
01-1111

embalmins fluid? Is the player ari
embariasSinent to the team, should
he just get out of the way for the
younger..suys?
..
.
. ·'
_

their men hit the f~elds. I swear, I
can 't lliKimland iL To love a man ·
and miss this? A woman can see
more emotion from a man in an
holD' on the .softball field than she
sees from l'iim the i:niire rest of the
__
year, Th~re have been several
boots written about men ani! inti•
I'm not stlre what it is about macy lately, bull put no stock in
soflball that auracts the llmost 9 them because none of them talk
million of us who are expected to , about soflball. lf you want 10 sec a
play Ibis SUilllll(r, a nwnba' grow· man's soul laid bait, watch him
mg by S pen:ent a ytar in d!e past smack a ball fD the wall in front of
five years. It pobably has much to an au4ience of his middle-age
do with the fact that as IOI_IIl as you peers.
keep yourself in a mod1cum of
I'm not sure what's happening
shape, you can keep intact this one
up in lhe stands, either, but I love
avenue back ID yoolh.
. ·
iL I've sat among women I know
You may not ha...e the wiJ!d for well and like, and thOse l'v!l barely
basketball, or the knees fur foot· meL It doesn't always make much
ball. But a liule extra Jirth on the difference. Theic's a bond between
upper torso seems to help one us there on those butt-breaking
whack a softballl'lllhel' tiull hinder. bleachers,
all watching our men
So you can't run u well IS you prove- at least this year, they
used to. Neither can the guy in left are not yet too old to do anythinJ.
field, and with a little luck you'D
Perhaps this is the most comswat it to him rather than the leellpelling hook for me, this defiance
ager in cenll:r.
of what we grew up believing
Some women I know call them- about age. Instead of Jiving up
selves "softball widows," spend- spons, as so many of our parents
ing the whole season at home while did In middle age, we baby

Sar._a__
·h 0 v_e_r,_s_.,_
·*"",e_e_
t

boomer~ lislened to exti'Cise physi· ololisll who told us tllroqhout our
adUlthood that we can extend our
athletic liVes well into our 70s and
80s.
,
'
·I watch No, 2 on the Slow
White Ouys team (yes, dial's their
real name) with special apptecia·
lion this year. In order to help
repair a tom hamstring, he swallowed his macho pride llld wmt kl
several months ol off-season yoga
clasa with ladies in leolanls. He
lifis a few waighll and nms a liU!e
several times a week all yearround. He's 43. When the first
pitch comes, he's Ieady.
On the field nextiO us, a couple
9f 55-year-olds are still whacldng
the whey out of the ball. The guys
on our lellll shake their heads and
basically consider them ph,.sicll
anomJ)ies, a rare combinauon of
DNA. I think-they're 'f1'1'01!41. I think
the Boys of Swnmer are figurin1
out just how Ions exm:ise and persistence can fcnstall the Cllllling of
fall.
Sarah Overstreet Is a •JIIdlcated writer ror Newspaper
.Ealerprlse Auodalioll.

Does the Clinton administration
see it diffcrendy. They
favor quotas? More Jenerally, are ·sayCritics
the
bill
out well at the
fundamenlalislliberal Democrats in .White Housestarted
and
the
Deparlinent
Congress using &lt;;JiniOII 10 advapce
of
Education.
It
was
then
·changed
their
ial SIOryu-~~~7
:...._. ·-""-?
Ori!IJSIClltheC
ls
Clio\lUI. . . .,.
ton us ins those liberals to break
gridlock llld move forward on his
campaiJn themes of a more disci- .after beins held ........,_ by '"'--plined America, including ''the
'""""6"
~..,..
more you learn, the mote you cratic congressional barons who
earn," and "no more sOmething foolishly try to protect minority
for nothing"?
.
stu~nts from the high standards
The questions arise lifter radina: those vezy lllldents need 111011.
the Clinton·education proposaf,
The critics note that the stan"Goals 2000: Educate America dards movement orisinally dealt
Ac 1," and following i.. tans led ,with "outputs," that is, whala stu·
course. It is 1 model of many lllllll- dent actually learns. But the pro·
moth political suugles to come. oosal now also deals with
Only after a qme wUI we see just f•lnputs,'' called "opponunity to
who is rolling whom.
learq'' standards. Those, critics
On its face the IJIOilOSIII is fine. say, are a design for a fedc:ol cash

Ben Wattenberg

.

~~::~~:::n:•.!~:m~~~ ~o~ f:n%~ ::u~e~

decade·loni}-Iass
up to wor ..-..effortlevtoels.geiThes'=!J
IS
to cut out the squishy stuff in
American edUC81ion b seuin out
what students should ~ ('IIIIIJI.
dards"), by detenninins whether
they're. learnin&amp; ("testinl{."
bJ'gj'oy ,·n her lifie
.
"assessment"), and by creaung
•
rewards or penalties ("stakes,"
"....,....
-- - Editor,
"&lt;".llMN&gt;uenc:ea").
·
-M;;"
Thank you Steve Bella·and.Car- ·
. uny lf!IICa have moved down
leton School Sllff so very QIIICh for this )JIIII, pieccmeal. 'lbeiC include
invitinJ Mary Rankin to go to die ArkAnsas, Whete Bill and Hillary
1993 S!W!ial 01
• 1 It
Clint~n led lhe fight, and South
big joy fDhcr Iife&gt;;J~ 111 ~:0~ Carohna, where reforms were
that she-will always remember. We pushed by tben-(lov. Richlrd
" all very proud ocher. Thanb a Rile~, now seae111y off'!h:ltlion.
bunch,
Rile:y ays ~ -·'d
od'f
WVUI
andandConnSh' ieleRantiJ·n
happened
•J:.eroy
ony ··and· Mary
rr YFryar
ones . ..........
·..:....-~y
. -•••.
- '""
waau ,.....,""' ·.

A

~ ~~':·~-~Y.

~cn·u·cs
notet ildea.hat the bt' ll pro •

.,!r.JI!! ~.

!\iJiitsto.-~~~deci~Sl
·ons

.,_,. --·--· ·..,....-.., ..,_

other education measures, and
mean more·to America tiull all the
hot political ill:ms now in the ~

at the last moment. It mandates
avoidance of "cmp.ue impacts ...
against individuals baled on race;
lineS.
.
gender, age, elhnicity, diability or
The quota issue is ambiguous in natiCilal origin• .,. " Although labor
the ""nlion !ICCtion of the popos- spokespe~;.~ons deny it, that is
al, which calls for "llllldent perfor- Iegaleae foi quo111, or race-normmance lllildarda that alllllldents ... ins, just the opposite of Clinton's
will be expecled 10 achieve." ('I1iat "no more ICiiiiCIIiini for nothing"
includes students from diverse manua.
racial, ethnic ud cultural back·We will fmd out soon how Clinsrounds, the disadvantaaec~. the . 1011 "will govern. Will ho dtnp the
disabled, and those with limited quota lan1JU8te? Will he use the
English proficiency.) Critics say it conc:ept of IOUJh standanls in the
means lawsuits if diverse students bis-money education bills? Lanser
don't JIOPOitionally meet the stari- ltllll, wiU ho see 10 ·it thallllldenll
dards, They maintain that the face real c:onsequencel'1
dy, alas, will be 10 dumb down the
Clinton set the standard~. He
standards.
will be leiiCd. At SlUe is whelher
Riley says federal law ill8ildall:s he and his party willjlet rolled,
fairness, but that tough standards apia, by libenl special m~ere~ta.
will apply equally to all, and that it
Bn 'WaunllerJ, a 101or felis lrllic to 1*1 i1onJ childml who low II tlte A•erleu latl!rprile
haven't learned enough 10 JIISI.
Illltlbde, Is •lllar ol "Tilt nnt
Most appallin, is a section on Uulvel'lll NaliH," publialted b7
"slti!lstandardt ' drafted by the Tk Free ..._ and a writer ror
Depabtliil( •o f La!U that appeared New1p1per Ealrprln Aaoela· ·
lion.
'

uation, srade promotion or retenlion of lludcnta." That, they ay, '
__.__the idea of "lllakcs." They
.,..._,
work .
aak: Wh,. should students wor
hankrlfltcloaa'tmaaer'l
Riley~
A II:ICher
basil's
10
lmow
aJaebra ("iqlat")
bcilft
fair teil whether the lllldenl...
·
B71'11eA.uelaleclrr.
10
F'
Toda · Tho-o~ May 6 die 26th
of """
learned ll&amp;ebraf'output"). IVe
YI S · - - , ,
•
I
day I,.,._,, There are 239 days
yea are~ kl CICile dle,lllllleft in lite,~' . .
'dards and the -.llld 10 ~liltToo:J~ ~•t.t m Hillery: ·

•oaiiWL

:::-

deutap~ed 10 !*I; dlc

COllie-

~ ;~93

=·

•

ui::{:j;;

IND.

Obio, .ud_Muon ~d !•~bon
(:ou~Uel II West VrrgtDII. To
quahfy, ~oateataata most be
betwoen mae llld 16~ Ol~ge
oa or beloie ~· I .
11tae is 110
•J!M..,. a Plf-

(f
.( f.•Jcolumtxislno I

•

Stocks
Aia Ele Power------·--.36 318
Albland OiL................ _ .lS Ill

!Jiei!-fllled ~ diriJible ''.Hindenbwa"

Oae.---·----.
.
.
.
.
.
Bob E - ----·--·----·11 314

•

' Ollrmin&amp;
Sltop..............._ J5 lJII
&lt;limp IDdllllica. ..______ l3 l(J.

'

Qay Jtoldilla.....
Federal Molnl----;;__,.20 IJB
Good)- "RR.-....----37 318
l..ancls: EIMI... ..........._.. _..........Ji lJ8

----·-·-..23

I .imiwllnc. ·-------·-: 22 318

------Weather----.......
Soulit-Central Oblo
Tonight, mostly cicar with.J low
i.n the mid·50s. Frida.,y, mostly
sunny with a high in die low 80s.

Exteltcled fol ecat:
~7 lltiwp Mollda:r- .
Fu ~~~~the period. Lows m
the SOs. Highs 15-8~.

23 fined in county.court
Twenly·thRe cases were pro·
" cessed Wednesday in the Meiss
County Court of Judge Patrick
O'Brien.
Fined Were: Todd Varney, Long
Bottom, seat belt violation, $25
plus costa; Floyd Pullins, Long
· Bouom; disorderly conduct, $100
fme suspended 10 $~COlts,
one year ~oo.
I assessment; resiSting arrest, costs only,
30 days jail suspended to three
days concurrent with village
charges, one year probation; Jennings Mollohan, Coolville, failure
., to yield right of way, ~10 plus
costs; Charles Jeffen, Middleport,·
speed $W plus COSta;

.w.~t~=·~h::~~~:

, ty $25 plus costs, Jellilulion, two
years probation, 30 days _jail sitspended to time served 10 Ohio;
Sharon s..Pierce, Racine, speed,
$20 plus costs; Carolyn s, Slant,
Pome'roy, seaa. belt violation,' $2S
plus costs; Benjamin D. Lozier,
Columbus, speed, $28 plus costs;
Carrie Dent, Colwnbus, speed, $23
nius costs·
·
··-

.A rea
· ' dea
. th
, ,

in

Mmme
Kapte a
' Minnie M. Kapteina, 82, of

John Stumbo, Pomeroy, disorderly while inloxicated, $30 PI!"
costs; WD1iam Gmves Jr., Dlrwin.
disorderly while intoxicated, SSO
fine suspended 10 $20 plus COlli;
Brian Nil%, Middleport, dumping
trash from a motor vehicle, 24
hours comm ...lty service plUJ
costs; William Feu,, Pomero~,
dumpins trash from a mo10r vehicle, 24 hours community service; ·
Keith Myers, Lons Boatom, no
operator's licenae, $100 plus COlli,
30 days jail SIII))CiwW 10 line,~
year ~tioll, ordered to oblain
0Lwllbln60•~11oban,.; Gallipolis
James C. .....
,
•,
theft, $100 plus costs, 30 da~ m

rlau~~'='::i

under ••spenV:,~u COlli,

. 30 days in Ja;ii
10 10, Clllll
year probation;
I Jenagon$ ,
Long Bottom, left o center, 30
plus costs;. _Timotby Coata,
Pomeroy, ·dnvms under su~­
sion, $100 plus COliS, 30.days m
jail su~~ to duec, one JCII
probation; fail.ure to control, 530
.
plus costs; BJ;llll Wheaton, Millfield, ·failure to conaol, $30 plus
COlts;
John F.' .:ri.!~
• ,......., ~--. W.Va. •
drivins under the ian~. 5450
plus costs, sill ~lila jailOLII"I'"'"ed to 10 days, one ~
II!~ .111
lion, one Yc.:probatiodayaoa;
under IIII)JCI!IIOO, I
m
with DtJI, CXIIII;
10 dme in mlibd J-. $2S plua
costs; Charles M. Durfee, SoUth.side, W.V~. ~ S2S plu~
seat belt violarioa, S2S pllll COliS;
Pamela New~ll, Tuppen Plalllll,
s~. $22 plya COliS; R~Y. A;
Puii!Ds, ~y. no reps~
on motor vehicle, $10 pllll COlli,
Ste~n M. ~. De~, failure
to display valid rettatraUoa, $10
plus costs.
, .
.
Forfeilin&amp; boncll were: Carrie
Dent, Columbus, 1St btlt violation,. $43 and Ale~ Halley,

u.-

:!

Chillico'the, formerly of PclmCroy,
died Wedneaday, Ma~S. 1993, at
Westmoreland Place, C!!illirodle.
11om on Mln:h S 1911 ll Jlartford, W. VL, she WM the 'c1aug1ar
of the late John Lee and Suan
Sprouse Lee. She was ,a home
health care worker prior to her
retirement. She bclonsed to the
Advent Christian Church at Creston, and the Ladies Aid Advent
Chrislian Chilreh.
She is survived by three daughters and sODJ-in-law, Wanda and
Ernest ImbOden of Syracuse; Mary
and Fled Fcmlndez ol TIIIIJII, Fla.,
and Sarah and Robert Goldsberry
of ChilliCothe; uon llld dau~in-law, Paul Henry and OI!&gt;n• Cheshin:,JCili!Ok,.Joiii'Oil,$43.
Kapteina of Columbus, e1s~t .
Jr&amp;lldchildren, 12 great-Jr&amp;lldchildren, and several nieces and Hospital news
nephews.
,.._
Besides her )liJellts slle was pre-· HOI ZER MEDICAL,_...., • ~
ceded in death by her husband, .
Ma7 5 dJoc' 1 -Kyle KinHeruy F. Kaptenia, a sister, Callie nan, Kathy Joll.-, Mra. JUICI
Sinclai~ two brothers, John and Thompaon and dauabiD', 'J'bcwu
William Lee, a srancllon, and a LOn&amp;, Cbrystian 10buon, Ailu
·gJUI-pandsoll.
•. Tilrner1 Evelyn Bclwardl, SUIIII
Funerll services will be ~ • ' Stew~n: Mra. Jerry Matacy and
1 p.m. Saturday at the Ewma son, Bdl Gambill, Maywood
Fuileral Home, Pomeroy. The Rev. BoJIS, Mary Miller, Mn. Sc:Oit
Bananl B. Moss will oflldlll. and Shover and -.Jemey Sm We,
burial will be ia Roek Spr11111 April Cider, Mrs. ~ llunlel,
eem.,.. Friendl may call ll die son and daupter; Judith Yo11111,
funcial l!ome Friday from 2 to 4 Jeremy Ma{ney, Racllcl Bolter,
and 7to9p.m.
Ann Erwin, James Tbompsoa,
Betty SICWII'l. Allllilda F'!IIB, Jessica Freeman, Helen Marts and
The Daily Sentinel ·

coac-

'

'
,

•

Ill,...

(UIPBIIS.IIU)

.

Published every afternoon~ MDIIIIay
Frido)', Ill Court Sl.. ~cay.
0111o bJ 111e OIIIQ \Ioney """""hinr
Company/Muldmoclla 1.... "-l"f,
Qlllo 411'11111, Ph. f18:1.21M. Seoon4 elaa

Christopbcr Browaia&amp;.
Ma, 5 lllrdtl-~. llld Mrs.
Bryan Oarditer, - · Vinton. Mr.
and Mrs. Stepheil Metzler, clattPtcr,OIItHill.
' '

Mullillotdia Inc. _ .... ___ 33 314

l'Uinl B
Ru R

Up.- .........- .... 14
• - --..--....3116

Rdiance Eleclril:... - ....- ...20 SIS
~ -------16l(l
Shoney'slnc...- .......- ....20 318

s. Bmt .....--------·- 36 l(J.

w~ Int'L----- -- - ·•3 Ill
Wcwd11 &amp;I' • Ind. ,, ___ ..26 Ill
Stoek reporta are tle 11:30
a.ia. qaotea Pr~t•lded .,
Ke•per Secaritlea, Iae., o
GAJ; an

Me.-:,._... - ·....

SPAIN~ VAll f'
445 ~~~~

,......,..-..

m

·

eJ'gs a·nnouncements
-· .
.

.I I
.

·uaits of lhe Meifs County
Emersency foledica Services .
raponded to four calla' for auis•
tance on Tuesday.
At 6:28 p.m. the Rutland unit
reiiJIOilded Ill Main Street for Barbin Stoldoem who wasliiDI)JOrtcd
10 veaer.s Menlllliallbpital .
The T~ Plalnl unil wait to
Numha' Nme ROid • 7 p.m. for
Clthy BaninJer, She was taba to
Camdat Clark Meuniallbpital.
At ·9:39 p.m. the Pumcaoy unit
was called to Nyc Avenue for C.la;
,Sne Bell. S~ was liken to YelleransThe Middleport unit went to

1Y.I. •

Truatees tO meet
The Bedfcrd Township Trustees
wUI !Reel Monclly at 7 p.m. at the
town hall.
.

1Jtenr7 dab to meet

.
The Middlepon Literary Club
will meet Wednesday 11 1:30 p.m.
11 the home of Mrs. Eldred Par110111• 11tae wil be a group review
!i CliiiOae BfUIIC's clasai&amp;: novel
"Jane Eyre."

Cllulc: set
The Harrisonville Senior Citi·
zens Club will hold ·a free blood
)IRSSUieClinic ~from 10:30
a.m. to noon at the townhouse.
Members will hold a potluct din·
ner afll:r the .clinic. All members
welcome.

Opeli boat let
The Racine FFA Chapter will
hold its annual open bouse at
Southern High School on Friday
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Activities
include a peainl 2100. anlique trac·
tor exhibil and lOur of the greenhouse.~ will be available for
$5 per Oat, $5 per hanginJ basket
and $4 for four-inch pots. Public
invited.
Plan barbeque
.
'
A chictcn barbeqne Will be held
Sunday at the Tuppen Plains fln:·
hciuse with BCI'Vini 10 begin at 11
a.m, ·~ dinner will inclUde a hilt

chicken or ribs for $3.75. The bar~ 1.1 lpl)lliCftd by the Tuppers
Plains lTR DqmtmenL

Friday·Saturday·

ay - May 7·8·10
ZENITH 25'' TV.

211DIIigDJIII
bnllllill*y 2

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Evwydor"' Atlf&lt;\18

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p
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.,.Clarrlar ... - ._..
OM W.U.....- ............,,......- ...........11.10

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.......

OM Mslll.- ..................... __ ....:......lll.tll
One 1'...-................ ,....... ,.................. IIS.to

··

EMS nrpolllb ill four ctllh

!!j·. anoderb
ther

development will b_c held at the
Blne Saeak Cab Co. m Middleport.
Anyone intereated i':' helping
with die youth fNF-.11 cncour·
aged to Mlelld 111e m1 ling. Regis·
traliott forms to lign up for derby
participation are available from
William Snouffer or Gary Snouffer
at 992.707Sor992-6471

~

lll1iN wurF4
lito

IIJN'1iag of thole m

•Great Brands!
•Great Values!
•Great Service!

poolap poid all'liiiiOI.,, Ohto.

Ohio ~Jill' -.&amp;too. N - .
Advertllinc Re;tc . . . .ctv.. ..,...._
Ne...,.por Stloo, 733 ,tnt A..nae,
NtwYorll,liewVorlllOOI7.

~ W~ :.~

Clll'uiplltR illllll be 011 alllqil- and 8 p.m. and on Saturdays
lralion_JllliCII. Several raccn will between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. '"be on ctiii*J ll tile lilc for viewing pooide c:.bildral with die oppoilu·
by inlaated familiel 11tae will llity to lam bow to bllild racen,
be --'*• of !he
Co!mty and give ltaildl-oa exr::e to
SO!JP Box Deny Auociation on . voluilteaJ who belp c
.and
hlixl10 lalt wilb diose imeresiCd in ·. their pareuu, IS well· IS a lime
lltiDs pm in die del1ly race.
1rltae fulily invol'lellle:Dt can be
· C. clinics have been se1 up to nperienced while youngsters
be lteld on We«hny. betAfJCII s become apm of the paii:Sl ama·
.· teurracing-mintheworld

S..lur slated
Faith Fu1l GoaJ»I Olurch, Long
Bomm, will bold a three day semi·
lllr iln Mottday and T~y from
10 a.ni. 10 110011 and 7-9 p.m." and
·
~ Judy
on Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 2
Rli1nl!ld
SIR«
p.m, · Cl' to p.m. with.1luncll break wilh teachMcHalfic·
Who •WIS10tranSp&lt;Jrled
Veterans.
1n1 on lhe Holy Sp!rit by Rev.
Mary Diamond, Add1son. Everyone
Lottery numbers · wekonle. Putor s.cve Reed invites
thepWiic
' CLEVELAND (AP) - Tbc ·
.
Super l.oD:I jiiCt:pot ~ pow to $8
R.oud ap pla•td
million for Salunlay mgbt's ~wThe Southern Junior High ·
ins, after 110 one came up With all Booscm will hold 1 wur.em round
six numbers picked Wedn~sday · .., far Soudtenlloeal sixth, seventh
~with $4 million ll stake m the 111c1 eighth srac1e lludents on May
I..ouery
. h t , s iS at6 Jl'.m.
Here
are pme.
Wednea day Rig
Ohio I..ouery selections:
Boollen IO meet
Superl.GD:I: 9-10.13-33-37-46
The
Soutbetn
Junior High
Kicker: 1-1~1.().4-3
boulltu
will
meet
Monday
at 7:30
Pick 3 Numbers: 8-9-0
p.m.
ai
the
junior
high.
All
sixth
Pick 4 Nwnbers: 9-6-9-9
Ji8de J*'Cilll are to auend.

AT.tT...........- ....- ...........S'7lJI
Baat
.55 1/4

W. VA. ·

BINGU:COPY
P8IClt:

REG.~

- - nc&lt;dtotnnrlopoytllo....m.
w ,....,. n.Mt Ia adftMI IIINet. ta TM
Dolly a..UMI on a 111-. &lt;ria w 12
...,th boola. Credil wtn ... alvtn comer

--.-

No auboeripllono hy man permlllod tn
areu where home carrtw tervice il

·

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118 Wtob. .... ,..................................,.t41.110

.'

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ID ande'~:..- eta, "' ·ms,
I~
_...a, . Vi.- Ollll..es

IMansfield l77" l•

Dofl~ .....................,......................2!1 ~"'

Today in history

q - · Plrt c• ~=.
bunt miD
lild
while dockins in Late~ NJ.,IIIllna ~
after dtlt. He IIYI die
bill of dlc Ill pocplto on bc8d.
·
wllldodle'.. _...,.,_ thatonl)'a '
Ondtijdale:
.
·
.
.
i ·
Democrat
C1i1 11111 it,
lill840, EnJiand inll'Oducecl its flrat postap lllmp.
·
.
that the concept will expand, .to
· In 1861, Artwas "'Uded from the Union.
·

·

DOOD

~ ~J!: '!1*1 ~ "::..':'

grenades'/'

Is Clinton serious on education reform? .

.rights
than the criminals have. We
as citizens
need to show our support with letters and help make
these new laws to protect us and
especially our children.
.
·
Don.na Oibbi
Middleport

J~

8ox l)rrb,

•
•
•
2
.J1P-..
will belindleat !
mMI~ lltrouP ~

critics suggest? Inviting them to a
. nic? Striking up I boot·ICOOlin'
~e and hope they can't resill?
Telling them Koiesh CIM1not possi·
bly be Jesus Ouislm1• the real
Jesus called 1 PJeSS conference ip
Waco and denounced him? What
you would do, Mr. COnym?
Then there's the risht-wins
argument that tbe Waco siep was
further evidence of an emerging
police lillie. Why not limply leave
the Branch Davidians lloile with
their automatic weapons and
Well, there's the mauer of the
monstrous arsenal beinJ illepl.
And catainly the aulborilia lave a
right to be curious about who the
Branch Davidians planned 10. blow
away with all that weapoary. And
finally, there is the matter of the
folD' law enforcement offiCCra the
·cultists munleled on day one. Suf- ·
ficient reason, I thillli:, 10 justify
their apprehension.
,
Then 1beze is the claim by IOIIIC
that the attention accorded the
Waco calamity llliOUJIIS to a liticl
of religion. The New Republic:, fCI'
· examl'le, noted its dismay over
"the Insidious dispariiJCillent of
religious life - even cultic religious life - by the media 8,nd
politicians in the last few days." .
That is flat-outl10llSellle. David
Koresh was a lunatic who 'preyed
on the aMied, the I«* and the kJnc.
Iy. He appropriated their asaets,
stole their wives, re'NIIJIC the rules
to IICCOIIIIliOCia his ai&amp;:k pieasum,
and blupbemed the Almighty by
claiming to be Him. For dje pms,
at least, the CX)JOIIlre of such charlatans should be regarded as a
sacred miaion.
The man was a murderer for
whom I feel not a dollop ol mercy.
For the pitiful souls he suckered,
yes. For the children, God yea. But
for David Koresh, not a sub-atomic
panicle of IYmJlllthy. He reaped the
reward he sowed.
.
J01epll Spear Is I IJDdlaltecl
writer ror NeMJIIPft' Ellllrprile
Awodatlon.

=

Regislratioe of driven for the

Accu· Weather• forecut for

Boys of Summer want extra
innings,
.

Letters to the editor

: Dear Editor,

. Friday, May 7

'

Spring again. Softball season,
the fust evening game. The chill
spreads slowly across our bare
knees. The shons seemed. like a
good idea at five when we dlesaed, •
our dieams o~ horWcathet not yet
bothered by. the memory of how .
quicldy the metal aeats cool and the
wind kicks up once the sun is
down.
We've wailed all year for this,
the chlnco lo sit together in a 181tude.
.
gle and talk about women stuff
A familiar complaint is lllis: Why put on new Wlldcers when the~
while wBICbins our men do what
my is without real direction, when you don't know what mandaleS are
they have clone since they were litgoing to be imposed, when you don't know what's going to happen lo . tle boys ... somelbing ow: own little
. medical care costs?
boys do now, those of us lucky
'
These fears are imposed atOp an alrady burdensome nwnber of ~egulaenough 10 have them. Bat and hit,
: lions which lrallslate immediately into paperwork, doubts about the . run and throw, "'*h the ball, f1eld.
admu;istration' s economic plan and a generally high degree of fear about
Exultl Slap fi...el Toss the glove at
the immediate future.
,
the cage with Hair, 1Jr8b up the bat
All a ~esult. you may hear business people ~ying that rather than hire
and take a few practice swings.
they wiU extend overtime 10 existing workers, use pan·lime or contract
Fwapl Pppffffl Take that!
help, hold the reins on pay increases, and remain as flexible as possible Miss the short hop, the fly ball
in case.
that gets lost in the lighl!l, die ball
Such information on the nation's economic worries is there for lhe askthat slides just under the $98 alu·
ing without cost or a great deal of effort. But too often, it seems, the
minum Big )loy's Toy. Agonize.
ex~rts obtain their information elsewhere.
Question the equiJ;lment, the
umpire, Ood: Or is 11 the Orim
Reaper, creeping up on once-boy·
ish muse,les with premature

Teach children respect

Soap Box Derby registration schtduled saturday

OHIO Weather

P1g1 2--The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middl..,art, OhiO
Thursday, May 8, 1883

'

•

Waco second~;guessing is out of line

.The Daily Sentin~l
.

Thu...ay, May 6,1183

"

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•

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,.

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•

�Spo

•
: lhuradly, Mly 1, 1113

- The Daily Sentinel ·

..

"fhul'lday, lilly e, 1113

.

. Pesil 4

finlll.J:lcd

sug:lltal'l,

·

:~cincinnati

beats Florida 9-6; Pittsbur.gh downs Atlanta 4-1

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Hodrey Writer
The Toronto Maple Leafs are
learning in lbe second round of the
NHL playoffs what the Chica&amp;,o
Blacthawks found out in lbe fU'St
You can't put much past SL Louis
· f)oallender Curtis Joseph.
. After helpins lbe Blues upset
'"'lhe Blsckhawks in four slrlliShl.
;:.;,Joseph has been a huse factor iii
: 1he Norris Di•isidll frnal in lhe first
',"iwo &amp;ames asainst tbe Maple
"'1afs.
That series is tied 1-1 following
lhe Blues' 2-1 doubJc.overtime vic,
tory on Wedneadsy night because·
of Joseph's frne wort. Fie 111111e 61
saves m the' Blues' 2-1 double,;,'OYcnime loss in the opener, then S7
~. :more in Wednesday nisJrt's series·
' ·

··CH's Mann in rare company with 300 or.more track wins
..

·

.....

....

7

- · ·

5

0:

wllerelkCn

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7

W

r ._.......ne..-K~

t

I

,

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mat«.

His Tisers defeated Valley
Forae. 85 1/2-37 1/2.
Already a member of lbe Ohio
Track and Cross Country Coaches
Association hall of fame, Mann is
alm01t as proud of bow few !oases
be has.
"There are 38 (losses) on ' the
CLEViEUND (AI') - 'De lliilrJ.
._. JCIF. "Bu&amp; l was
other
side of the ledger," be said.
· Canisiiiii'GODI:F j4M 171&amp; sail'' . e1k..U.ard. it just
"But
only two of those defeats
strike zone wi lis fiag !lrar:e - " 1 piile iiriCiac'.I!IOw it's ·
··Jches. He.&lt;wi6Di!lllreW~1k
e~~i: 4-;',IIM's why .

C

Ramion giftlrg Clneltmd
State neetktl iils, lellllenhip
;.:

:meClevelanil
his·" -*.
011

SIIIC • e '

1

tured appendix, durlng bis senior
year of college lr)ICk.
Mann served,11 a lieutenant in
lbe U.S. Air Force. He lhen wel!l
Into teachina and,coachins. '
. Sixleell of Mann's Tipr teams
were unC~efeated in dual .meets,
includins this year's squid whicb
is 1~. His lelilll have won 1S of

' IJrnuse I
"il
lllik
7
'
(Qr
Ramion .iiJII!PCiil• • H r ' •
awid! lieDivision
L
I
._..,
.
.
Gianu
and seor. .it IIIW - a - a ..
..,
_.....melD
field rence·a!&amp;+' ~la!riit
the samc ·~lhe.. . F • 7 •· 7 De RUOD I
out of the pmk for lis
r 'al'
IDI:b tbat
sixth bornena
I a . _ . .... lkplilryed fOr the
'The Viklr!P "!""'il6rir'- ' 5 - - a - . U'lwodt
seascn by S~ ll• ' 7' ' 7 . . . liwlill_. lflow! liiJnll can
erfromthe~
Jl!lr.lllak
ii •III:CIIlao
It has ,b'e"cniDUijlwt-.tillt 4lif . . . . . . . . . li:welfrrMy·
for the seaior lfr1!lll "
School, Who- , .. z .37/J lllll
=
7 1 111i1 k didil't want
led the Vitiap iill ,,a .. I! ca- . . .. a~a 1 .
.. ~thebis
7
• _ _ _ .....
_
epiellutMCK.
a
"lbe 'b illiiu - z iill•liJI:•
a basketball," illlii4 • •
'IIIIa
1
played tW.O""I-•
Community~" [
-ferring to Ck:willllil Slll!ll: ... son. "I'm~- ... _ , _ .
and just goap &lt;I&gt;J- s• IM:iirar~
hard as I can. lt'sjd; r X &amp; ii11
there.
"You getibot_.IOIIII
I know ifsboli.iJIIt-, 1 • and play 'hard
_.jill
see bow il &amp;OCL~,
Rami on, :21, W l k - iirl
RBIS (23) 4114 ·· 77 {Ui , _
year when .rbe \'1 " 1 . - 0.~
under first-"'ear •
• Ieria
Rhomber0oma C1e 7
Indians inficllklr
The 6-.foot. IJ.IO i
' drafted in die 3110
.., San Francisco G~ .._ ._
7
"Lutpar.- • • W n : a
bit,'' said&gt;R .. • ..... j - L
in social wodt _.
....-.
4

pionships.
Under Mann, Cle¥eland Helihts
shared the 1982 Diyision I lllte
track.championsbip ,wllb Clervoland John Adams and the 1991
team won the Mansfield Mehock
· Relays.

.Sports briers
Boxtaa
HOT SPRINGS, Va. (Al') -.
~fter allowlnJ various rumors
about Riddick. Bowe's heallb to
spread for several days, manaser
Rock Newmin said the bea•ywei4bt clrMIJrion c!isiC!C'I!NI a bone
in hillel\ writt llld hu ftCO¥CI'ed

"100 pr:n:enL"
Newman said Bowe's wrilt was
sliJhlly injured by a puncb rran a
sparrills pll'lllel' 1ut week. Bowe is
lilinins at The ~mealead n:sort
for his May 22 tide bout with Jesse
Ferpson in Wlllhinston.

t &lt; lyinf

· I"~

. · ,

• Joseph demonstrated again
"' •why be's been the Jalk of SL Louis
fa- lbe last little while," aid Blues
coach Bob Berry·about his soal---Jelldet, who hu 8llowed only nine
while facins 270 shots In six
~es. an incredible .967 save pero
~ .

n

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..
wlli
• 11n,....
..,,.,

= .....-

~5

. COLUMBUS, Ohlo(AP)Ohio State'• recent award of a
$20,552 bonus to. women's bullet·
bill ~ N~~~~:y Dlndl hu 101n0
""' other c:o.:lrea complainios.
Foolball and mea's basketball
!:!: are the lone profit·makcn among
lbe31¥UiitysponsinOhioState's
• ~etic prtlllll!l. All other sports
;:,: qre termed non-revenue sports,
,.. ~lwhich means they operate at a
"defiCit
·
·
. "I don't consider women's basketball any more important dian
, ; men's tennis at Q11io State," said
: ~ John Daly, who rilceived I $3,SOO
: . bonus fa- ~~die rner:''s Jen• nis team to the 1991 B11 Ten

.,,

:=

:£

~

ew:q-

!1

I

II II

I II

utive strons start 111d.lowered ·his schedule. Plus I don't think IIIey
ERA 'from 9.6¥10 7.6S. He pve up were very cOrrfrdent in me:•'
six singles, two walks and two
Stew Foster pitched two scoreearned runs in six innings.
less innin&amp;s and Jeff Reardon a
"Now it's time fa- us to pick it scilrelets ninth, lowering the
.' up a bit," Brownin1 said. "We Cincinnati bullpen's F.RA to an
need 10 get drings rollins. We need NL-best 1.93.
to plsy a lit!le bit Jeapec:llble." .
Floridl's Ryan Bowen (2-3)
'The Reels lookecf awful against struck out six in the first 3 1/3
Florida on Tuesday night, commit- inninss. then suddenly misplaced
ling four errors and allowing four · his control and besan fallins
unearned runs in a 9-6loss.
behind the bitten. B the .lime lbe
"We played better today," fourth innins ended,
had
Perez said. "When you play good, four runs.
you win."
· ,J
"Ryan ~an 't walk ·people,"
Brownins wu working with 10 Marlin8 manager Rene Lacbemann
days of resL Rain postponed the Slid. "He brows !hat. His sarff is
last game be was.IO swt, llld Perez too good 10 have those lapses. He
decided assinst ftlehedulins him has ID overcome it to be a winning
pitcher."
for lbe next ~hL
"It didn't s1t too wen with me,"
Sanclcn and Kelly eacb bit his
lbe 33-year-old Brownins said. ''I third home run against Bowen.
hope it doesn't !Iappen again. It's Kelly 'a drive 10 left field in lbe .
~ of a pride thing. But I'm get- sevenlb lrilveled an estimated 423
liris older, and they've aotlbe three feet.
big guys they,.waot t~ keep on
"If I could bit lbe ball !hat way

tincinnali

cenJage.
lbe Leafs were biucrly clissppointJeff Browll ended tbe Blues- ed with lbe outcome.
Maple Leafs' 4-hour, 20-minute
"We deserved 10 win," said
marathon 11 lhe S!I'Oke of midnight Toronto coech Pat Burns. "Joseph
wirb a rebound goal. But he never · hail been pbenomensi. We're soins
would have goiJCIIIbe chance wilb- to.have .10 find a way 10 set (lbe
outJoseph'soutstandinsplay.
. puck) by him ...
After si¥ing up Dous Gilmour's
The overtime was the 17th of
soal in the first period, when the the playoffs, brealrins the mark of
Maple Leafs outsbot the Blues 23· 16 set in lbe 1982 postseason.
8, Joseph was uiryieldins the n:st of
In Wednesday night's other
the _way. Brert HuU had a fU'Sl-peri- same. the LOs Anseles Kinas beat
od ~-for SL Louis•
lbe Vaneouvcr Canucks 6-3 ID lie
'You're less lired when you their Smylhe Division firial811.
w.in the pme," Joseph said. "I'd
The playoffs continue tonight
be more tired if we lost. It's such a wilb l'ittsbursh visitins the New
great feeling rigbt now !hat we won York Islanclcrs in lbe Patrick frnal
that~ and aot out of here with and Montreal at Buffalo in the
a spliL 'The IIUYI worked hard and Adams. ·The Pensuins and
never said die.
lslandcn split the first ~o games
"(T!Ie Maple Leafs) said atter i!l.l'iJISburR!t, while Montreal leads
·Game I that dill wu a big win fa- Buffalo 2.0.
·
them. They brOte our spiriiS a biL •
KiDas 6, CIIUKks 3
So, I'm thlllkl'ul we came back and
Wayne Grctzty had a goal and
maybe broke their spiriL But Qbvi· two assists to lead lbe Kings over
ously lhe series isn't over.·lbere's
Canucks.
a lot of hockey 10 play. We expect theOre1Zky
was lbe dominant play·
more of the same.'
cr 11 die Kings scored three times
Ha¥ins outshot lbe Blues SS-40. in lbe first period to tate command
.
~st lbe Can~. who won the
division during die resutar season.
Grelzky set rip I shorthanded goal
by Jari Kurri llld another by War·
ren Rydlel in lbe first before scor·
.
"In some r~~pects, it's not ins bim~elf in the sec:onc1.
..
1be
~gs
can
Jake
command
of
worlb as much, Daly told ·l be
the
series
when
IIIey
return
home
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer. "If we
evaluate e•eryoae by bow mucb for games Prida_y and.suuday 1t the
lbeir prosram Ipse~ rmancially, Great WCIIaD Forum •
I've done much better than
get::.~;:'~~~~~;:
.women's N~ball."
hard
tonisht and, it's not a bis
·The women's team slrarecl the
secret,
we deserved 10 win. ·
Bis Te~ ~hampionsii!P with Iowa
·
"In
my last four james, I've
and finishing second m the NCAA
played w:ry well. I feel I've plsyed
T0111111iileRM
D L h' bo
.
s. arsc s nus IS 37 per- at lbe intensity level I need 10 plsy
cent.of her $SS,S24 ann_ual salsry at. This is the best hockey I've
and ts the lar_gest ever Jlillld 1':1 Ohio played in a 10111 time, maybe since
StsJe coach m ~y sport. IllS also lbe 1991 Canada Cup before I sot
more~ fi!C IIIIICS larger thllllbe hun."
Gretzky came back late in the
bonuses Pllld .other non-revenue
season
after sitting out with a herspoJ!Icoaclresmlbepast.
nialod dlac in biJ bact.

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8. QUICKEST PROOUCT DEUVEf'YIN THE INDUSTRY (we ARE PRESENTl.Y senDING 825 VANS AWEEK).
t, 217 QUAUTY CHEeKilY Ill Yi!HICLE EXCB.LENCE A...LYSTS.

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&amp;, STABIUTY. • PARENT ~IIHY "IIU!IINESS 46.YEARS (FOUNOEO 1946)
7. 24 HOUR OUAIWITE~ PAIITI DB.IIIp!Y FAOU SERviCE.
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rOR MOM OR iHt rAMILY

- --

Calitoah 6, Now Y!il: 2

WLI'd.GI
1 .131
. .. .........:...15· 12 .556
12

.

a - L Ookloooll

19

Ill.""'"' ... - ........,

•432 as San Francisco beat Rodrisuez (1-1) .
John Weueland (1-0) retired all
Pbiladelllhia in a ll)lll:hup of clivi·
four
baiters he faced.
sion leaden at Candlestick Part.
Montreal starter Ken HiD was
Royce Clayton added a threerun triple and drove in a career· charged with five runs on se•en
.-;~;,..;..
..,._,__
· high five runs for lbe Giants. San bill in s 1/3 im' .
San Diego•:frank Seminara
"I think the players really Francisco had 15 hits against
was
knocked lllit in lbo rhinl when
admire me and want me 10 be a Danny Jackson (2-1) and four other
lbe
Expos
erased a 3-0 deficiL
leader,': the first-year mimager pitchers.
.utnle
6, CM'ciiDall 3
Bill Swift (3-1} atrowed eight
said. "A leader has to keep his
Craig
Biggio
continued his IDr·
head on his shoulders. I Clll't lose hits, includins Darren Daulton's
rid
hitting,
soing
4 for 4 with a
sixlb homer. in se¥CR inninss.
my head and worry this early:
homer
fOI'
llouston.
Cubs 3, Rockies 2
"We will play better: I know
Bi&amp;JiO has a six-game hitting.
that."
Steve Buechele homered and
strea1c
m which hC has. batted .619
Elsewhere in the National Ryne Sandbers had two sacrifice
(13
fOI'
21).
Dies to make up for his first throw·
Leag~e. it was Pittsbursh 4,
Mark Portugal (3-2) allowed
Adanta 1; Chicago 3, Colorado 2; ins error in nearly three years,
Sill Fi'ancisco 11, Philadelphia 2; leading Chicago over ColOrado at five hits and two runs in S 1/3
Innings for the Astros, 94 011 lbe ·
Montreal 6, Sill Dieso 5; Houaton Wrigley F'teld.
6, SL Louis 3; arid Los Ankeies 6,
BUCC:hele homered in the fourth Jl)lld. Doug Jones aot his fifth save. ·
New Ylll'k 5.
.
· inning off Annando Reynoso (1-1) . Bigsio's homer off Dono¥8n
to snap a·1-1 tie, putting the Cubs Osborne (1·1) tied the game 1-1 in
.
Pirates 4, Braves 1•
lbe third. Ken Caminili also homeOne Dice ~ about lbe youth:. .ahead 10 stay.
.
red
for the Astroa.
·
Greg Hibbwd (2-2) pve up five
ful l'ittsburgh Pirates is that they
don't know wben tlley are sup· bits in eight inninp. Randy Myers
Dodcen '· Mets 5
Tim Wallach drove in a seuonposed 10 lose. l'itcber Bob Walle is Sot his eighlb saw.
·
glad fa- their ignorance. .
Sandber11's bad 'throw in the hish four runs, includln&amp; two with
· "That was a sood lesson 10 a third was b1s frrst throwing enor a two-out bases·loaded sinsle in
.
younsiCIIII liltc ours, IIOl to set too since July 4, 1990, covering 393 the eighth inning. ·
·
Walial;h's
decisive
bit
came off
down early in a game," Walk said games and 1,298 chances.
reliever Mike Maddux (0-3) and
Exp01 6, Padres 5
WedneSday night aftu beating the
' Larry Walker's second RBI sent lbe MeiS 10 their ninth loss in
Atlanta Brayes 4-1. "We could
have just huns our balds and said, double of lbe game scOnld Marquis 10 games.
Pedro Martinez (1-1) e.ned his
'We'll' not aoinS to ICl to this SUY Grissom, p¥ing Mon!real the Yictonight,' because (Greg) Maddux IDry in the bottom of lbe ninth at · first big-lea11ue victory with two
........
:- ''
Olympic Stadium. Grissom bit a · scoreless inrunp of relief. Jim Gou
Indeed. He had pitched 14 con- me-out single and scored from first pitched out of a jam in the ninth for
secutive shutout inri(ngs against on Walker's double off Rich his !bird save.
Pittsburgh. But his downflll bepn
wilb Walle, a .167 bitter, who doil·
bled tO start the sixth inning and
eventually scored pn Jeff King's
two-run double.
Kina. who sat out lbe Pliates' 3·
2 loss ID Atlanta on Tuesday with
the flu, was 3 for 4 with an RBI
sinJle in the ei&amp;hth. He has tw.p
homers, a double and seven RBis
in his lut two starts.
Walle (3-2) was nearly as effective as he wuln beating lbe Bra¥e&amp;
7-lln GameS of the NL playoffs.
He allowed· seven hits in seven
inninss, but got help from three
double plsys and a clispu!lld pickoff
of Davrd' Justice at (U'St base that
may ha•e pre•ented a bis fourth
innms fa- Atlanta.
Maddux (2-3), the 1992 Cy
Young A'IJIIard winner for the
Chicago Cubs, allowed tWo runs on
six hits in seven innings, walked .
'
one and llli'UCk outeiahL
YOUTH
BOWLERS
Winner
or tile Youtil BowU., TOIIJ'Un
Stan Belinda pitched the final
meat
held
recently
at
the
Pomeroy
Bowlia&amp; Lues are: Da¥1d
innins fa- his sixth save.
,:
P
ark,
ftnt;
Matt
Auh,
secoDCI;
and
Tony
Jlnnrn, tblrcL Tr~blrtl
Glanll 11, l'billies 2
were
given
to
Ault
aad Brown for hi&amp;b series. Nat JUI''S yotrtlr
Bany Bonds went 4 for 4,
leape will begin formin1ln Aupst.
increuing his batting average to
e•ery day," Kelly said, "I
wouldn't mind."
lbe Reds went I 0-16 in lbeir
month-~ series qainst lbe Eastem Di•isron, but Perez remains

HNEW0 1993 FORD CONVERSION VANS!

-Qr4,Dooook,

- • Bueball • -

'

7

I I

4

l

VALUE PERrORMER

-

! ~Some OSU coaches unhappy
5 ~with bonus Darsch received

7

freshman-··

same.

t:'JOI!s

_..._ - · *""'

5

the lut 16 Lake Erje League c...-

-4,.! •I 7 '

S

.

?Blues edge Maple Leafs in .double.
.~~overtime; Kings defeat Canucks ·

!.

s

·

;;;In the NHL p/IJyoffs,

11

n

·

The Dlllly Sentinel "-QI . 5.

· I" NL action, ·

'*

have come In die lul17 yean. ..
The Tiaen ha'le won 193 meets
in that ~· . At one point, Cloveland He1pts won 100 dual meets
ina row.
Mann's lateat ac:complilbment
left lbo OIII)Oiition impr d
"That's fiiiWoua," said Vrdley
Forse coach Tom Schreiber u be
consratulated Mann. ''That's a
n:markablil acoom lislrmeat.••
·
"It's nice to
there," nid
Mann, a 19SO padnatc: of Heights
and a 1954 sraduate of Western
Reserve University who wu drafted by the Los Anseles Rams u a
defensive bll:k. His chancel for a
profe11ional football career were
'cut short when he JUffered a rup-

Pomeroy-Mtldleport, OhiO

. By STEVEN WINE
MIAMI (AP) - Findinslhern·
sel•es in 1ut place, the Cincinnati
Reds didn't lQot lbe part.
Solid pitchins from Tom
"~ Browning ~ two relievcn, crror~· less defense and home run• by
~·Reule Sanders and Bobby KeUy
helped Cincinnsli beat florids 6-2
•·on \Vedncaday nisht.
· '' 'The Reds bepn lhe dsy with the
¥:worst record in the National
Leasue. The victory provided a
~· 'boost IICIIIIing into 111e1r rnt same
· " of the season asainst a Western
: ·Division opponentiOIIiJht at Houa·
ton.
'
~.:.'. "We needed this game," m.nlu 11'1' Tony Paez said. "I know it's
~=;e.ly. but aoins to Houaton, where
;"they're play ins well and in the
' Astrodome, we needed to get it
soinshere."
~
Browning (2-2), who sustained
P"a season-endins knee injury last
r•July 1, turned in his second consec·

'
Jly CHRIS SHERIDAN ·
in't'llindy,three chlml!iOIIIbiP riap.
AP Sportl Writer
. ' ocher a-, CJevellnd,took I 2· ~ lcllll
on New Jen~~y with 1 93-84 win; SM Adonio
After~ 13 yean in the COIIIJ*IY of
lMry B' .DenniS Johnson, Robert l'lrisb llld
went Ill-' ofl'Urdlnd 2-1 wldu107-101 vicn:st of the Bastorl Cellia, a won ud weary
tory; llld tbO Lol Aage1ea Clippen lied lheir
aenet·wilb HouaiOII It two pmoaeldl wilb ·l .
Kevin McHale
it quill.
.
McHale, wbo
lbe Celtics ldd three
93-IJOwln.
championship banners to lbe Boston Garden
· Haraell 104, Celtlea 103 - The Celtics
llftcn in lbe 1980s. announced biJ retirement
came back from a 19-polnt founb-~JIWter
defiCit, but A1o11zo Mourniq 111Jk I Jlllllpel'
Wedl'l'"'ay niSbt after lhe Celli&lt;:&amp; wac elimi.·
tiom lbo top of lbo key with 0.4 IIOCon'• Wl
IIIIa! fronllbo ~A playoffs by lbe ~
· With one lui cblnce 10· win, BOIIaliiD •
Homcls. •
'
"All sood thinp mast come 10 111 end," a
alley-oop plaJ for Dee BJOWD. McHale lOlled
in die ball rran m!4rrnrl. Brown ~ il up llld
teuy~ McHale llicllfta h i s - and lbe
lbo bllll wu detJec:tod before it hillbo liile of
Celtics 1011011 ended. ''II'Cilly wan!Cd 10 pJar
·,
one more same at the Boston GanSen. But rt · lbo rim llld bournd away.
()oa!tenctins?
.
WIIR't IMMt 10 be. 'The llilk's empty."
Chatloae won the,.belt-of-five ~Cries drtee
'The Collies Clllllinllerlbou&amp;bt 10, and dvigames 10 one llld became die first of the 11101t
sion replays llbowed
problbly ri&amp;ht
-ICeodall Oill..-ed 10 IOUCh ,iL
.
RCalt ~ ICiml to win I playoff IICiriea.
''The inbonnili ~ wu perfect aild Dee
McHale, 35, ftllired 011 die lime dale u two
adler 'Cales
Bill Ruaell and' Sam
was In lbo r111a pa~~lion.•• Bollon c:o.:h Chris
Jones. Pabrips
~t Celtic of 1hem Ill• . Fcxd said. "iijultclidn't ao. EndohlOfy."
Charlotte Will play the winner of lhe IndiBird, announced hiS ·retirement prior to this
ana-New York .nea In the second round of
season.
lbe playoffs.
··
.
"People ~d:Z.S u1t me whal it felt liltc to
plsy second
1D Larry Bird." be said. "I
ca..uen
Netll4 - At But Ruthersay it's still a pretty mean second fiddle,
ford, N J., Cleveland toot· ld•antase of an
bec:ese be Wll the best.
injury to yet anodler of New Jersey's ccaten.
'The Nets led by u muc:lr u 14 in lhe frnt
· So ended a career that included seven all·
quarter, but Sam Bowie went down wilb a
S18r selections, three selections to lbe all-defensive team, lWO Sixth Man awards; and, .most

CLEVELAND (AP) - Clc:ve•
land Heishu coscb Dick Mann
JHii'Y'S he's in a select sroup.
"I don't think IbM lbele are too
INSIDEPA'SS-- rwwiiiiiC ' =llld.liice(25)
js Jn S .• •
(far
IIIMY pys around wilb 300 victories," said· Mann, who won his
left) .rJoileNewAqy••• •irlkC
(MJ_,_, fi~Oitz
300th dUll-meet 1nll:k vicllll')' last
r
ftb
71
a;pt's NaA• ·,
nnn a rraa-e ..... m n ...., N,J, · · wecl in his 32nd SC'IOII It his alma

I

.

�Pqa 8 The Dally s.rtlnel

Thursdliy, May e, 1113

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

·In AL action,

By The Bend

..

Bielecki, bullpen lead IndiansJ!W!· to 3-2
triumph
over
Mariners
!Jt
case." J!ilr·

· l.fCIIUCK MELVIN ·
inning no -mauer what had hapCLEVELAND(AP)-Forbet- pened. Thebollleruncarneonthe
ti:r lhan half a game Mike Bielecki 104th pitch be tiRW.
is every bit the piu;her he used to
" He got a little tired and got
be.
that fas~l.~ to Amlrll.". Har"Then it kind of fiZZles out," pove said. Butlhlt - his last
Bielecki said Wednesda:,: night l~intanyway. Thl!t was his last
after he beat the Seattle MarinerS 3· hi~.
:
.
2. giving the Cleveland Indians
B1eleckl staried last year as~
their ftfth sttaight win
·
member of the Atlanta Braves
Bielecki (3-2) lasted 6 2/3 formidable rotation. His seas!&gt;n
innings, blanking the M
. ariners ~. !IO~va:. when bo tole.aliguntil Rich Amaral home.red willl ament m hiS nght elbow on July
two outs and nooe on in !'Je sev- . 29.
.
.
enth. It malebed Bielecki's longest · The lnd1ans aa.m~led !hat he
outing of the year as he continues . could com~ blct. SIJilllll.g him as a
· his comeback from last year's fnlc ~ent tn December.
elbow surgery .
.
"I m not all the way there yet,"
" I don't hurt." he said. "I seem said Biel~clt!, who ~ tasted at
to hit a brick wall at 8S to 100 least five IIIIUIIp ~ JIVeD up ~
pitches, and 1 really ·stan laboring. more than two ~ m each of ~
I'm not making alibis, but with the !- ~ SIII1S. I ve been aemng
way our bullpen is g~g. he(~- tnto kind ofa,JII'I)Ove my l_asl tluee
ager Mike Hargrove) 11 not go~g starts. I .!'ave t been waJkinS 1 lot.
to keep you out there unless you ve · of KUYS.
got a shutout going."
·
Seattle rookie John Cummings
. Hargrove said Bielecki would (0-S) Y'as the har_d-luck 1~. He
have been pulled afb:c the -seventh !eft WJl;h th~ ~Qers trailing 1-0
m the SIXth mrung.

'"What~ lay?:' ~tile

Michigan's Webber
to enter NBA draft

Amaral:•

Seles exercising to speed
recovery from stabbing
'

ending of my career at age 19. I
look at the positive side. It happened and I Just have to look at the
nexrstep."
All the mental toughness that
has gone into making her the No. 1
women's tei!Dia player - her absolute refusal to yield on any point,
let alone a game, a set or a match
- is evident in her attilllde toward
recovery from die attack in Germany.
"! feel fine, probably the best
that I could," she said, talldng of
enjoying her long walks in the val·
.
N
h
ll
ley in the quiet inrerlude between
h
UX
the ski season and the summer
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) crowds. "I'm getting beaer day by
Two southwest Ohio cities are day. I'm not looking forward, get·
planning to honor Cincinnati Reds ting impatienL I jUSl hope to have
broeclr•aer Joe Nuxhall.
my arm back."
His homelD\1111 of Hlmilton and
A nervous linle laugh followed'
his adopted home of Fairfield are · because, in truth, neitlier she nor ,
COIISidcrinl naming streetS after the her doctor knows when or even if
· longtime eds piiCher and broad· her muscles will heal JJrOI)el(y. At
caster, who as a IS-year-old the moment, her solden left arm,
schoolboy during World War II the one she used to wallop some of
became the youngest player to the hardest serves .in women's tenpitch in the major leagues. .
· nis and win eight Orand Slam titles
Fairfield Mayor Sterling Uhler and $7.4 million, hung limp and
thinks a sueet tal8llled for Nuxhall . immobile at her side, too painful to
sbould go through both cities. Nux- move.
·
hall was born in Hamil rod, but has
Yet she believes she 'II be back
lived in .Fairfield for 3S years. on court before too long, suonger
Uhler presented the proposal to than ever as a result of the workHamilton Mayor Adolf Olivas by · outs she's doins to speed her
letterTuesday.
JCCOYery.
By STEVE WILSTEIN
VAIL, Colo. (AP) - Resting
among the snow-covered Rockies,
far from the heat of the courts she
loves, Monica Seles is not embracing the role of victim~
· "I'm quite happy I can play ten·
nis again," Seles said Weclnesday
. in her first interview since the
; courtside stabbing in Hamburg,
Germany five days earlier. "It
would have been kind of a hard

Bielecki's,

run~savinJ catch in ~~:...:::.::h ,
helJIIIIIChica&amp;ObeatMil
. at
County SIJ!dinm.
Ventura homered off Jeue
~o (0-2) to break a 1-1 ti~.
Oticago got ar•!CN:r run on Sax •
double and an RBI single by qail

it out of my mind. try to forget

&amp;F.LouPinieUasaid. Hedidnt grove satd. "They re gett1ng about it. It's not that easy,
plleh all that t.d. again. He's a lit- enough work now, so that tlley can dtough."
tie IIIIMebit u far u r11111 are con- settle in."
•'
Texas starter Kenny Rogers (3~I~ he~lo~ to get.
Elsewhere in the AL.• it was 1) pve up fi~e hils and ~nm in

his first Will under hJS bell
·Cleveland took a ~-1 lead in'!&gt;
!he nin~ but the~ ~II
mlereSIUig_when JIIDCh·hlt~ Mike
Blowers bit a two-out, RBI Sln~e.
Dere~ Lill.iquist, !'Je Indl&amp;!ls'
fourth pt~, ended It by 5lri!'inB
9111 Ken ~ey Jr. on t1uee ptll:h·
es: Slra!i'!lnf runn"!'s at first and
third. un19.wst got his fifth sa_ve.
'The Indians soored ~ run II! the
first on Carlos Baerga s sacnfice
fly, but Cummings then shut them
down until the sixth, when Howard
and ·~;~-fll chased him with consecutive smglcs.
. .
.Carlos MB;ninez ~ Glenallen
H1ll then hu R!l! st!'gles off
Dwayne He_nry. Hill shit to cenrer
scored pmch-runner Alvaro
Espinoza from ~cond base, but
onlybec•nseC!IICherBill Haselman
chopped a superb throw from Griffey; . ·
.
.
"I thought! had it, but I,don't
know," Hasetman said. "It was the
best ll)row I had in my life. The
play has to be made."
home run in the sevenlh was his first of the season and
the second of his career. At 31, he
Webber led the Wolverines in . is the oldest roolde in the majors.
By LISA HOLEWA
scoring, rebounding, shootitfg perANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) The Indians' winning streak is
thetr longest of the year, and it
Chris Webber, an AU-American centage and blocks.
."There will never be another eqtials their longest sin&lt;;e they won
who led Michigan to the NCAA
championship game for two con- Fab Five," Webber said "You can six in a row in September of 1990.
secutive years, said Wednesday he put that name in a safe because ~y had a pair of five-gaine winwill skip his fiDaJ two yea of eli- that's the last time ... you're going nm11 streaks last year. · .
10 9ee iL You're never going to see
'I think everybody's getting
gibility to enter the NBA draft.
"Not winning a coUcse champi- five guys come in like that u fresh. into a groove, geUing comfortable,
·
onship makes leaving hard to do, men like that again."
Webber
is
expecled
to
be
among
but that's not going to make or
break me," Webber said at a news the top three pitts in the June 30 .
conference, where he was joined by draft. Philadelphia 76ers general
his family and Michigan coach manager Jimmy Lynam aaid
Wednesday be has no doUbt WebSteve Ftshll'.
bet
is ready for the NBA.
"It's a decision I felt was neces"Sure
he's mldy,'' Lynam aid.
sary for me to keep movinJ an4
move on. lbere's no doubt m my "What he does he does • well or
mind that I'm ready for the next beuer lhan any otha' college player..,
level"
"Luck will not be part of it,"
Webber, whose illegal timeout
call with 11 seconds to play cost Fisher said. "He's destined to be
Michigan a last chance to win the every bit of as successful on the
NCAA title, was a part of the Fab professional level as he 'a been in
Five recruitinJ class considered high sch.ool and on the college
one of the best m college basketball level. That success will follow him.
That's panofwho.he is."
history.
-webber said the lure of a
Michigan lost to Duke in the
wei_4hty
NBA contract '1\11 a ''big
1992 title game and to North Carpan
'
of
his
dedsiOJI, but not all.
olina this year.
.
"I've
been
ooor all mv li(e." he
"That was just one play," Websaid.
"I
could
wait another year.
ber said. "If I can play a good
game and jllll mess up 30 aeconds, I'll alwar,s be OK, even without
I t:.1111 jive witli tbal Nobody died beskdbaJ, 'I'IICI'e's no one concrere
I iilttJald' leave, but ifjult fek
· froln It, it didll't cost anybody their reDOII
.
jobs. It hurt, but I'm going 10 have right." .
He said be decided to enter the
toll li ..."
draft
~JI.Iki
....;l
.~~~
.~
"-·
be
,...;,.nt,"
••-,... ''
' .UW to
r. . . I&amp; with bit r~-Y·
Filher,
A
p18)1en
and
othCt
pro
Ile said. "I learned how to lake critathle~e~.
~
~~
.....~olfef.
icism. I learned how not to make
"I don't know if everyone's 100
S.._..ICM'a...-.
excuses. "'l'htl's it, but·it's a lot."
Webber joined Michigan along peiCCIIt happy, but they're happy I
Cllll 11272~ .
with Jalen Rose, Jimmy King, made my mind up," he saicC"A
lot
of
people
.
t
old
me
not
to
leave
...
Juwan Howard and Ray Jackson
and the unit quickly became known but they don't have to live my life.
I do."
as the Fab Five.

'·

especially

Texas 7, Toronto 1; Baltimore 3,
Minn_esota _O; Kans~s City 4,
De~lt3;_01icago 3, Milwaukee I;
Cabfom1a 6 , New York 2; and
Boston 3, Oakland 1.
~en 7, Blae Jays1
It wb a game Toronto first
baseman John Oterud would rather
forget- fast.
. Olerud m~ back~btl4 fi~- ,
mg errors ·~ the SIX;th mmng
Wednesday mght, leading to four
unearned r uns as the Texas
Rangers beat the visiting Blue Jays
7-1.
.
. . He ~a~e anot~er error 1n the
e1ghth llllll!lgto tte a club_ record,
after entenng !he game w1th ~y
one error tbts seasou. W1lhe
Upshaw also made '!lrCe eD'OI'S for
T~to at first base m, 1986.
,
A ro~gh .~ay? 1 d sayS?,
Olerud sa1d. Three err~rSJsa
preuy rou~ \lay. I w~ t sa~ I
was pressmg out there. I JUSt n:usplayed a couple of balls. l was JUSt
going after the ball"
Will:' the b~s loa'!ed and ~e
score~~~ 1-1 m the Sixth, David
Hulse. hit a grounder that scooted
through Olerud's legs to score two
runs.
.
.
. Three ptlehes taler, J~ ~
h1.t a grounder to_Oierud.s nght
w1th the ball glancmg off his glove
as two more runs scored.
.
Olerud couldn't recall a IOugber
day·
· ·
"Not that I can remember,
ever," he said. "I just have to put

you want it ...
you ·ve gotit ...

eight innings, 'fanning e1ght to
improve to 4-0 lifetime IP,irutlhe
Bille Jays. Todd Bums finished.
9rdlcck. .
.
·Todd SIOitlemyre (3-3) toot the
Scou.R"'m":f(1-0)tetind~
toss despite allowing only one batters 1n the e11hth for the wm,
earned run ins 2,13 innings.
tmd ~~ ~ ~ out
Joae Cansec:o hit a solo homer in the side m the nmth for his fourtb
ihe third inning, llis eighth lifetime IIIVC.
against Stottlemyre. Canseco has
RW Sa 3, Atlalttles 1
14 hits in his last 3"3 at-bats (.424),
Ivan Calderon, playiog beca•ne
with five doubles, 8 triple, three of Andre Dawson's knee injury,
bomcn and 11 RBis.
drove in twO rnns with a single and
Orlolesl, TwlllliO
1 triple to help Boston beat Oak··
Mike Mussina pilebed a two-hit- land at Fenway !'Wk. The hila pye
rer and blanked Minnesota for the Calderon four in five at·blls 1ft«
second time in a week as Baltimae 1 he ~ged just tbn:e hill in his
defeated Minnesota at the preVlOU8 24
Metrodome. . •
His singie off Ed Nunez (0-1)
It was the sixth major-leaJue follllwed a leadoff doUble by Mo
shutout and 12th career complete · Vaughnmf.ving Boston 1 2- .l lead
game for Mussina (4-1), who beat in the · . Back-to-bact triples by
the Twins ll-0 at Baltimore last Vaughn and Calderon made it 3-1
Thunday.
.
in the eighth. · .
Willie Banks (2·2) gave up fiVe
P1MJ1 Quantrill (2-0) got the win
hits in 3 113 innings. .
with 1 '113 perfect innings in relief
Royals4, Tillers 3
. o f - Jolm J)opol.
Harvey Pulliam liit a two-run
Aqell" ~ubell
bomll' in the eighth inning as visit·
Gary DiS111:ina bit a tbn:e-run
ing Kansas aty handed Detroit's homer off Melido Perez (1-2) and
David Wells h1s first loss of the . California ~ fivo-pme los·
season. Wells (4-1) allowed four ing llle* by be3, New YOlk at
runs on only five hits in eight Yanbe Slallium.
innings.
Jolin FaadJ (2-3) held the YanJeff Montgomery (2-1), the tees scoreleu 011 ~hill until
fourth Kan.sas Qt)o pircbel to work Kevin Mau hit his third bomCir and
in thi: seventh inning, finished and . second in two nights, a aoto lhot in
got the.vittory.
·
·
the seventh. Fllldl pve ~six bit$
White Sox 3, Blewtl5 1
and two rnns in 7 113 in11nip and
Robin Ventura homered in the Julio Valcr:a pitdted 1 1/3 illninp
ninth inning aDd Steve Sax made a for his third lll\le.
·

A SPECIAL MEAL FOR
SOMEONE SPECIAL

POSTER AND ESSAY WINNERS • ear- MJdkllr aad Tricla Davia were· preseuted awards by Marc Jelfen wlllle Karen
Walker, tacber, looka ou. Mldkllr ADd Davis were wbmen of the
= r d esaay coutelt of the M~lp SoB liDd Water Couervation
'

Essay, poster contest
winners are announced
Awards were preknted to stu- Ashli Davis, Erron Aldridge; Hardents in ~tern, Meigs and South, risonville: Megan c: Drummer,
em Local School Districts.who par- Franco Romuno, Angela Young;
ticipated in Jhe fourth grade posrer Tuppe,:s Plains: Stephanie Evans, ·
contest and sixth grade essay con- Joshua Hager, Jeremy Coleman;
tesl
Riverview: Mykel Sobieski, Jamie
The theme for the contests was White. Jerry West; Racine: Jessica
"Water in Your Hands.
Theiss, Jennifer Carleton, Ty JohnJessica Theiss, Racine Elemen· son; Chester: Valerie Karr, Kellie
tary; Tricia Davis, Salisbury; and Lightlout, Matthew King; Salem
Stephanie Evans, Tuppers Plains, Center, Bridlet Vaughan, Jessica
were county co-champions and . Priddy, Kimberly Riuerbeck; Bradeach received a trophy from the bury: Becky Johnson; Je!llica Cale, .
Meigs Soil and Water Coniiii'Yation Austin Carr, Rejoicing Life: Rachel
District for the essay coniUL
Pangio, Shannon BnriiJht, Rachel
County co-champions in the Forbes; Salisbury: Tncia Davis,
poster contest were Chris Bar- Lacy Ba!lkS, Tanya Sue Dill;
ringer, Riverview; Justin Burris, Pomeroy: Missy Darnell, Krisliti!l .
Portland; 111d Carson Midkiff, Sal- Kennedy; Portland: Jennifer ~r­
isbury. They ~ived trophies.
ris•.
Prizes for the posrer and essay
contest were SS and a blue ribbon,
first; $3 and a red ribbon, aecond;
$2
and white n'bbon, third. In addiPOSTER WINNER • Justin Burris, Portland Elementary,
tion,' each person entering the conreceived a county co-champion trophy from Meigs SWCD supervi·
sur, Marco Jeffers ror his politer.
test received a pencil.
·
First, second and third place,
respectively, in the poster contest
· were Chester: Jenny Long, Cinila
Clifford, Chad Nelson; Tuppers
Plains: Dustin Kebler, Gary Vierling, Josh ~I; Riverview: Chris
. · • B..rlaier.·StaCey Kunes, Aniber
Baker; Pontand: Justin Burris,
. Brandi «;:odner, Matt Marshall;
Racine: Emily Stiven, Erin ROICh,
Fallon Roush; Syracuse: Cara Ash, __
Lee Reynolds, Sarah Ball; Salis- · • _ _
bury: Carson Midkiff, Budd Smith,
Amy Frecker; Salem ce·nter:
Roben Johnson, Dustin Erlewine,
Kendra Cleland; Harrisonville:
Chris Dodson, Benji Call, Johnnie
Barley; Rutland: Derrick Bolin,
ALL 2 &amp;3 PIECE
Allison Hayes, Justin Gilmore;
Middlepon: Chasity Stewart, Daek
LiviNG ROOM
Johnson, Rachel Taylor; Rejoicing
· SUITES
Life: Rose Sclwoc~ Chasidi Biggs,
'
lesaie Burton; Pomii'Oy: Julie Beth .
Kennedy, Betty Wilson, Missy
Lehew.
Winners in the essay contest
were • Syracuse: Zach Debolt,
H

,,

79E:.:..
SZIIf

'W

DKUTOR Of ESTATI, ROGER R. HUNTER

CASEt27642 •

I •

·, '&gt;

..... '

I

.

lort9'0f~

.

'

&gt;

I
I

·---==o::::a::- •
"!!:!::.~.,.~-'-·-_,_..,.

- , · ••

·········~·········

·.:;~

•

GAUIPoliS
215 Up(Nr IIYer ld. It, 7:(lcrullre• ,.. At,_rtJ
I

QUEEN SIZE
SLEEP SOFAS

40%c;::F
UST PRICE

sPiEc:E
FROM

$289

'

QUEEN ANNE

VELVET

CHAIRS

$199
3COLORS

RECLINER
SECTIONAL

499

__

l:a.., c· rwu

I

IA· 12l4. tA-1216

•

·a·5
2
=:r -.........

'

SIXTH GllADE ESSAY WINNER· Maico Jetren, SWCD
~. pl'llelltl a tophy to Stepbale E-, Tuppers 1'181111
Eletalllltiii'Y, l'ar her _ , willie 111xt11 grade teadler Cfndy Chad·
· well loolta 011.
·

')

111

(

...

'
•

.

•I
')

(~.

'

EMPLOYEE OF ' THE
MONTH - Mary Pltoenlz baa
· beea named u May Employee ot
the Month lot Overbroult Ceo·
ter. She has beea chilleD by Iter
peers for her dedlaltloa alld servlee to the resldenta aDd tile fadl.
tty. She has been Ia the •unlal
departmeDt .U I licellled pracU·
Cll nur1e IIDce April "91, Site
1 elida Ia Cltethlri wltlt ller IJul.
bud, Jolul, ud 11\'111 clllldl'ft,
Mlch11l, Jam11, A..ela, Krllta,
Racltel, Becky aDd Joltutilloa.
She received dinner ..d
o.v ernt,ht ac:co•udaUo•• at tile
' 1tlatorle Lafrllyette Hllfella Marl·

etta.

.

•

------Contest.slated------"·

s••
13147

'I'

I

LLOYD
FLANDERS
OUTDOOR
FURNITURE
PRE-SEASONED

• •

DAII SMiTH; AUOIONEER .

.

WOOD
DINETIES

TROPHY Plt8SENTED ·Marco Jelfen, SWCD aupervlaor,
praeata Chris Barrlnaer, Riverview Elemeutlry, a trophy for
. co.ty £0-Champloa DB hill po1ter while Fred Keulnaer, fourth
grade tellcMr 1nolll oa.
,

8oflllcc

,.

1962 COLONW HOUSE TRAILER HAS BEEN
WITHDRAWN FROM AUOION DUE TO
CIRCUMSTANQS IEYOND OUR CONTROL

•

,.,.111/y..Adlil_.,./lt,..,.,ptla

25%TO
50%.0FF

Friday Eveni• May 7, 1993 at 6 P.M.
'

Lunch Grind Bufrcf

, 99 ~".:!'!' l

Hamilton, Fairfield
to · onor
a

DAN SMITH
ESTATE AUCTION

N
'

...
3..•
P&amp;U

The Daily Sentinel

I

rill

....
.,....
11-.J

·,

OPEl lEVEl DAYI A WEEK

. 1:•
-1.m.
~
to 7'"'
p.m.........
•e dlr,- MdJl!andor
I a.m.IOIIJ!oulh
1 pa.......;

ULLIPDLII

·"

,.

2011JQ Aold

.........

CIC
il

A. cnati ve writing contelt hal nality and comet number of wonll.
beeu auuounced by the Meiss ' Poinll wilt be deducted for every
COiin&amp;y Lllnry Youth Council.
wordiMI' 2,000 01: under 750.
1be contolt is open 10 aliyone
Prizes are $2S for flnt place,
..,13-19. The lhortlloriela to $IS for ~nd place and $10' for
be IYPed or word-proce11ed and third place.
.·. doutile IIJICed and lllould lllballtFurther i11formation m'-y be
· · ted to die Melga CountJt Public obtained by calling the M:eiaa
Ulnry b,f 1- 12. BD!riee will be · County Pttblie Ubrary in Pomeloy
~ on CCII~ lfllllllllr,IJrial· . at 992-.5813. ··
·

.

' I

'

,,

.lodl Foellr
In

IOMMERSBY

P0-11

ONE I!VI!NIIQ IHOW 7:30
ITARliNCI FAI)AY
IIIICHAEL DOUGt AI IN

FAWNQDOWNR
INOWnMU
Fill., IAT,IUII; 7:•, 1:41

MON. THIIU THUIII.
.oNIIYIIINIIIHOW 7:10
Alii88110N 11.10 - 4II IIID

$988
BEDDING
FROM

saa

SWIVEL oR
GLIDER
RQCKERS

FRCMI$199

�Sentinel

THE BOOK
BARN

IUT • .LL • 1UDI
a11 LWit.
IIIIWiepert, Olllo

IOUISt

......,.. 10100.2100

.

. ..

'

J.I.H-1

.

. .
.. . ' .

.

M18lon. FoUowlng tho
Tile Vlllego or Pa•sor •A :J.~!..,T."e!l
a.11,.1!,1 el~ SMIJ'd ,..,._ ilild ....,......
clnlrte to rsastn ·saled'V RW
JF&amp; 1 I"" an
answer aua ""·
bldolor a ...... produllo -tlng
e long-torM riDIFdid I I lllli!wll be
- u; 1; 1 1 ,.._ 1.. 0 • w) . ..S.tlen _ . for Gall,. token fro• lnter ..tod
NOTICE TO .xJEM

,_.poitod.
ilild ft cloHI 1uo1 for All a-.d bldo 11w11 be
reoelved In tho Clerk'•
oflloe
•• azo e..t IIWn
IINat, Pomwoy, Ohio on or
L~
-oro
11:00 A.ll. May 14,
11111.
Tha Po11oroy Vlllgo
Colincll rOMrYao a.. right
~ IIOCeJ".Di

MEIGS OtYMPIAD TEAM • Wltl a llltlll
score of 444 oat of 500 qaeltloas, tbe Meigs
· J unlor Higb Sc:leJKe Clab tea• II llopillg far
some state nd ..tlo ..t recogaltlon Ia tile
Natloaal Sc:lell(t Ol,.plad. Tile stuclellts .U·
Ina tbe top scores, plctued llere Ill tile order of
thlr performance, were fro• tile lett, froat,
Jolla Barabart, Sbawa Fife, Erla Krawsczya,
and Tim Peavley; ud bact, Morp11 V•aa-a,
B. J, Workmaa, JtMI McElroy, Casey Booth,

11

and Andy Myen, Not pr~t for the plctlll't ·
- Paul ippenoa. Ia 1992 M.,. Julor lli2h
place seventh In 27 partlclpatfag schools Ta
Ohio, and 54th ot tle 40 partlclr.tiDg scllools
udollllly w1t11 a ICOI't of 437. • 1911 Melp

took flnt In the ltlte allll elalltla Ill tile utlclla
wltll 452 ICOI't, In 19911 Mb Ill Olalo and .otllln
tile utioB with a 446 score,IDCI lll1991, tied far
second In Oblo and llrd In tile utloa wltll I 440'
score. Rusty Bootmaa, ICience teDdler,ls advisor ottbe club. (Pboto by Cllarleae Hoelllcll)

Teresa Williams named 1993 queen
Tlie Fifth Annual Tri-County
Full Figure Beauty Pageant was
bcld m:ently at the Holiday Inn in
Gallipoli.l. Nine COIIICSIIIIIS panici·

.......,. the .,_, aile for

1111 8io Caunl11
Ev I 1 11M a..dr
ilildllrlao
h8e liMn ••:rlrlld IIIII a
*olt Toobth Arpan Ml

W,_.,,_,

IDDUIIIan
- on
pulrllo llrp.., 111111 County

II

A rovlew of tho enUre·

on

-n.

UCINE
MOWER CUNIC

AuthOrlad: Brlgge &amp;
, Stratton MTO,~ Rjlll,
I.O.C. Repllr Coiltor
PICKUP llild DEUVERY
Houra 06· M·F 11·3 Sot.
Cloaod Sundoy ,

. 949·2104 ,

Community Calendar
and Saturday, 7 p.m. Faitb Fellowship Crusade for Christ, Antiquity.

Public invited.

p.m., Old Legion Hall, Middlqlort.
No alcohol. Children welcome with
adult-supeiVision, flee admission.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
TUPPERS PLAINS • Round
and square dance, Friday, 8-11:30 Plains VFW Post No. 9053 and
p.m. by Tuppers Plains VFW Post Ladi~ AuxiHary, !lake sale, Satur9053
Ladies Auxiliary. Music by day, 9 a.m. across ftom Fanners
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Revival, Mid- Smokey Mountain Drifters. Bank, Tuppeti Plains.
dleport Community Church, Pearl Callers, Red Carr and Melvin
DANVILLE -Weekend ser,
Street, throUJlh Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Cross. Everyone welconle.
vices, Danville Church Q{ Christ,
Different smgcrs and preachers
POMEROY - Pomeroy Elemen· Saturday, 7 p.m., Sunday, 10:30
nightly. Public invited.
tary PTO, carnival, Friday, 5:8:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. ·Denver Hill, Fos·
COOL VILLE - Revival, p.m. at the school. Entertainment, IN, W.Va., speaker. Pubijc invited.
White's Chapel Wesleyan Church, games,.food and prit.es.
· POMEROY - Rock Springs
Coolville, through Sunday, 7 p.m.
nightly. Rev. Jack Wilhite invites
LONG BOTTOM - Faitb Fuil Women, bake and a'aCt sale, SatUr·
G-ospel Church, Long Bottom, day, 10 a.m., Big Wheel. ,
everyone.
preaching and singing, Friday, 7
. TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers p.m., David Dailey family, local . RUTLAND • Dance, Rutland
Plains VFW Post No. 9053, Ladies singers. Pastor Steve Reed invites American Legion HalL, Sa~Un~ay,
9 p.m. to I a.m., music by Pure
·Auxiliary, Thursday, 7:30p.m. tbe public. Fellowship follows.
Country Band. Public invited.
Homemade comforter will be given
away.
.POMEROY • Meiss County
CLIFTON, W.VA.· Benefit
Pomona Grange will meet Friday
RACINE - American Legion night at the Rock Springs Grange hymn sins, Saturday, 7 p.m .
Post 602, Racine, Thursday. Sup- hall. Harri1011villc Grange will host 'Clifton Tabernacle, Ross Stewan
per, 6:30 p.m. Election of offi~rs.
the meeting. The stale grange bak- Trio and Phylis and Bill Cadle,
singers. Public invited.
ing contest will be judged.
REEDSVILLE • Eastern School
Board, special meeting, Thursday,
POMEROY - Church Women
CHBSTBR • Chester baseball
4 p.m., pCrsonnel.
United, May Fellowship meeting, and 10ftball 9C8SOil kickoff, SaturPomeroy United Metbodist Olurch, day .. Parade, 11 a.m., car wash,
pOMEROY • Pomeroy Group Friday, noon. Bring sack lunch. noon to 2 p.m. at Keebaugb's Dairy
AA Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred . Beverage and dessert furnished. · Valley, bake sale 11:3~ a.m. to
He;art Catholic Olurch, 992-5763.
5:30 p.m. main ballfield with
SATURDAY
games scheduled noon to 6 p.m. all
RlJ'ILAND - Rutlllld Township
RBBDSYn.LB : Ladies Society, fields.
TrusteeS, Thursday, 6:30 p.m., fire Fellowship Chruch of the
1
stalion.
Nazarene, yard, bazaar and food
MILLFIELD - Round and
.
.
sale, Saturday, 9 a.m. to S p.m. square dance Saturday 8·11 p.m.,
MIDDLEpORT - te::,{!'line Tables available for $5.
Russell Building, Millf;eld. Music
CbapterNo. 172,0ES, · port, '
. ·
·
by Rusty Smith and Dan Fruth.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Honorini!. of
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers John Russell, caller.
2S-year members and presentation Plains Baseball Teams, opening . .
of 2S-year pins. Officers were day, Saturday, 10 a.m. to 6 ~.m.
LOTTRIDGE • Country music
chaplcr dresaea.
Parade, baseball and carmval night, Louridge Commumty Cengames, conc;eaions,
ter, Saturday, 7 p.m. 10 midnight
L()11'RIDGE • Loaridge Com·
Refieslunents. Everyone welcome.
munity Ceatu Association. ThursFAIRPLAIN, W.VA.· Liberty
\,
day, 7 p.m. Everyone welconle.
Mountaineen, Saturday, Jacbon · SYJ!,ACUSE - A skin testing
Cciunty Jamboree, Fairplaio, W.Va. · clinic will be conducted by Conriie
FRIDAY
.
Karschnik, R.N., Meigs County
· pARKERSBURG, W.VA. · The . BURLINGHAM - Burlin&amp;ham Tuberculosis Nurse, at the Sl:;
. • Junior Modem Woodmen of~· CillO Fire Swlon on Satunlay
Mc"~-,ys • .rFno~riday, 7 p.m., Park
...;;'j"'
ChriJiiln School. AdmiS· ican, bake Inc! Yard llle, Salurday, noon to 2 p.m.
sion,$101tdledoor.
lP a.m. to 6 p.m.. Burlinsham
.
Mod~m · Woodmen Hall. Proceeds ·
SUNDAY
.pOINT PLBASANT, W.,VA~ ' go., Bedford Volunteer P'ue CCmtuPPERS PLAINS • Chicken
Liberty Mountaineers , Friday, · mitlee.
· blrbec:ue, Sunday, Tuppers Plain
II
MLov
w
VL
Fire Hoo1e, 11 a.m .. $3.75 for
land. ....,._,, . ·
Stale
·
MIDDLEPORT , Round and chick'!ll or ribs, baked beas, llaw,
ANTIQUITY • Revi.-, Friday square dance, Saturday, 8-11:30 bread
. lnd bevettae· Deuerts extra...

r!

'

SEN. JAN LONG

......... ,.
Roof

LowCoeta.
Work Guarentoed

BA opt Po f 1 W - 4,100 oq, ~111m
bldg.

-

-

·

Free Eetllllllel,

C!llll1+1112-71041ar.. .
-

614•949·2335 or
614·593-5010

-

ILCCo.
01.

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES

· CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:46p.m.
Special Early Bird

.100Payolf
Thle ad good f~r 1
FREE c•RL

Fill

.

Clln'IUCftll

-

•••lflenllal looflng I• our

YOUNG'$

·

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

C11h &amp;

30% • 60% OFF
, EVERnHING

E'!V~)jllng

;J~•
319MLHdi•l
CrMirRHII
Mitldlt,.rt, Olllo

614·992·7144
4/29/93 tfl

WICK'·S
SERVICE.

2 Fro•t Stms • Lalllor

•4Price•
....11·~·-··
. .,.. at

HOWARD
EXCAVADNG

129.95 +Tax

1

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
llld TRACICHOE WORK
AVAI'BlE
SEPTIC SYilEIII;
HOlE liTES 8nd
TRAII.mllll!l,

&lt;I • j ~

, r 11 I'

u oli 'f.l"l1 \ (, ~

''

Worldng llojor Appllonces,
~
TY'e,_ Rololgwltors,
FrMara. VCH'a, MlciOWIIV..,
Air
Gull• Ampe,
Etc.

Condl-.._

-mi.

.

304'11753241. - ••hlgonflbt
•
J I 0'1 lloolo P - ond Solv111Jo,
oloo.........,
(In&lt; coro I trueloo.
304-m:l343.

Jare, alao tumth••

rtllniiJrlntl,

A1111 aunc, ·n· r 111,

112·11141.

Oo"'

llortln, 114-

.

RWOUill NICII

'!ap -

992·3470

CALL IEC
992·7204or
742·2223

IMSED PAREI GAUIE-DOOI

4/1818311 mo.

COIIPUIIEITIIY
FICW

SHRUB TREE
TRIMa•d
REMOVAL

MARY KAY

•LIGHT MIII,UL.II't\:U

Mary Koy hau ""(1111'111-r
offtctlw lldn en 11 ogram
ldMigned far your rldn ivPe.

htdapendrntllaauly
- c-.IW*

•FIREWOOD

BILL SlACK
992-2269

Clflllrn lolcCoJ

Htl·-..-

(814) 8INOI2

S.nch
(814)18N147

Producla In

USED RAILROAD nES

Quality

.....
c
•.
SIZED LIMESTONE

Pold: All Old

u.s.

cotM, Golcl AlMa.- Cotno,
Gold Colno. 11.U . Coin Shop,

1 .

111 -

INSTILUD PIICES OPEIIEIS IISTAWD
9ll7.;,$275.00
YJ HP.$200.00
·16•7-$450.00
Wiiii2T•• ......
ALSO- TRY OUR NEW
VINYL SEAL TRIM
Sl.OO PER FT.

,_...,,

36358 SR 7

__..._

~- .......... I Wllo

---

~ail

J IL304-

AVON . 1 AI ArMo I Shlrloy

........

Shade River Saddle Shop
. CUSlOM SADDLES, .
lEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

· - Goii!Polll.

Employment Ser·nces

You Won't Find A Better Valae!

AVON Earn ......., CUir, Toko
Onion l"amllv . And
FlllndL Call114 Ul

W·.

for 2 ,., Oklln lly
Hconio, _ , Thnt Frklo.J, 7:41
A.ll. To I P.M. 8o .......
!~UP-

:r .••

lrrt-Dotlp
etA
........
No -:· 2711,
- ·a/o
"
Q
Trtbuno, 825
Tlo
- . Oollpollo, OH
41111.

I

Chester, Oh. 45720

985-3406

FOR WE

-

6637

I'Nighi Corrlort
a ,_ tormlnol In
HurrlcMe ... , _ . uperilncld

lo -

OrR-.

....,I-I

Aato-RM14111
·SprlniTf••

...

1418.SIIIIIRL 7

• S1rorl up lo 28C per mlio

·---

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

614·992·7643

Mldd~

(lo s.n•ay,Cals)'

&amp; VIcinity

an ••••rv

. oBP Dleeel Suprame..~ Try II, l"- ltlll
dlffeNIIOe.
..
"Minimum 10 Ceblne
oLow uh MdiUifur

•Will not gel In wlnlW time.

. '
1tt31PRING LUBE SALE
MARCH 15TH.thN MAY '1ST
· ~IIIIIIFIII Mll'lltl' with paymant ~ tllitoe a y.r
.· · •~NO INTEREST or FINANCE CHARGE.
.
Larry E. Miler
114 4481157

8-tb lncludt YICIIIkM .. paid
hoHcloya, aornpany paid pan.
slon poogram. 4D1K, ahcn I

tong torro clloobiiHy, lllo ln.,.nc• I •n ••c:eptlonll medl-

--

rsct..

....

moet

CAI.L 'IOOAYI 304-fl2.7211oll&lt;
lar lloyd Alldna. lllrtng.

EOEJIIF.

Pomeroy,,

HARD FOR YOU.

.R32e I ' l l . ._tonal1112f aon,.

oal '

614 ~446073 6

PH. 114-2....110

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

"= .

On Loll, l.olo 01 llloc.

REPIII

10 mil• lOUth of Glllllpdlle
on BI•dlll Aolld

: ....... CC..7)

Don, Junk II Sell Uo Ycur Non·

SIZED UMESTONE

LUBRICANTS THAT WORK

FURtliTUPl

~71:0, ~'::.' ~
. . -

-·

W.,.od To IUJ': Junk· Aut &lt;HI
Or Wllholll ....... Coli
LAnyllv.lr.IMtW
J.

HA&amp; SUPERIOR FUELS AND

5
ICE

-lril
...... 'l""~rtlni,
DlihM, Clrpot,
I

---···

.J. S. MARINE

I

getWrol onU·
Ailllq-. Ruu
Wo ·do opo.
114-112.ZS2t.

wa-to ...,:~umbor.
Ftw-- Top=-~a.

Pow•-..,

MORRIS
.EQIIPMINT

lhotn--.

llone

Big on Voyagers
lhmliy Outbolrdl

Univenity Bxtenllon 1n1 aVIilable

=:,._

~ • - ......, _ . , Ftli'nlilft,

· Clolhoe, All - · .......,

Frldn a lltl!nfay, O.«GM
c-i. 112 - F1a111 AI. 7, -

..._oil

Oocoroiod _ _
lompe,
ontlque - . , mall """"h

Old
glou, chino,
nw" , a;wl••
tool•,

Pl. 614-t92-55t1
'

FIIIYGIIO l. . AIII

Cluoh64,_Yonl ....:
llh, 71h1!h· I AJl To? T Run, 1
011 - · '1(, lolly

ttr:~-~~

LICENSED ond ~ '

All educational ~~ and ·
IICiividel condllcted l!y Olilo Stile

Wanted to Buy

T~._

w.
..... To •:;a:: 81.-.g Timber, 11t 3U I Nt

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

3HP-11HP ,

9

••
If_,,

...,...,_,." "'.

Cholhi;.,
Of Friday
_.....,,

ALSO US Till

BISSELL BUILDERS, IN(.

'

Public Sale
" &amp; Auction

36970 Bal R11 Road
Pomeroy, Olio . ·

4-1

MANCO
:MINI KARS

8

, _ _ i.ltle

WELDING AID
UDIATOR
SIIVICE

St. II. 7
C....lre,OI.

40% '

~ .

(614) 742·2345

(614) .
667·6628

UIITO IIVI

J - C.......
. ..,
, _- , ........,.

. Chllclian'l Clolfl!tli, -

:vatt

Call 614-992·

'

to auend.

I

FREE ESnMATES

HAUUNG: U"""'one,
Dirt, GriM! and Cotrl

Commilllee Inc! the public illnvired

Worll Plumbing

~.

And
Clolhoo
LcUOfllloo._ 1,.

Clitia CI.Dtlloe.T.Y
- • ....,.. ~
• ~:;,,._
ClollrM,

NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR
TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.
614·992-7698

COMMERCIAL uul REsiDENTIAL
FREE EST~TES

Department of O~o Let::!:tive
Award. He and his wife
n
the ~nts or Justin, ase 10 and
Jasonqe9.
·
Featured entectainment will 'be
provided by the Eastern High
School concert band under the
direction of Dennis Hall, assisred
by Shelly Hall. The 39 member
band recently returned from the
National Concert Band fmals held
in Washinstoil D.C. They were
invited 10 participate in tbo compelition beclluse of !heir superior rat·
inp in man:hing and concert binds
the past two yem. They Jeeeiwd a
superior ratins in Washington, ·
D.C. and were aelccted 10 perform
this week It the Ohio Superinten·
denll and Princi~ Convenlioa in
Columbus, Oh;o. The band will
perform at 6:10 p.m. prior 10 the
dinner and play addidoilll niiDiben
· duringtbopognm.
· The Kfckoff Dinner !1 lponsored by the Meigs County 4-lf

• -

:

D.I.IOSION ·
EICIVAnNG

received the~ 'ous AMVETS

. .. _

Uce•IM, l•sur... &amp; .......

•TRUCKING

culbft Commiaee. Senator Long is

1 F~

New Wiring, Rewiring,
Treuble·Shootlng

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
; •TRACK LOADER

an advocate for Ohio's school clilldren and elderly . In 1991 be

ALL---ItPiklln
Wu••·
OE.ADI.IIIE: ~ p.m.
..., - "'"·od2:eo
lelo p.m.
""'·
' "'"
......,
_..,
odlllan • 2:00

CARPEm~. SEIVKE : ::-.

'

muum
111

a.a.1Mo.

How much _ , gy don the 1un give off? lmeglne that gaaollne flowed over Nlagare Falla It the rate of five billion gallons
per hour. If all the gaeollne that flowH over the filii for more ,
than 200 million yeara coukl-ba colleCted and burned, h would •
•
equal the energy 1hlt the aun glvea oflln one houri

Yonl Nle- 117 Unl101 A -•
IO:CJCIIM.4=1. ~and
Frldoy, ~ ......_.

ELECTRIC

~

Meigs County 4-H members,
advisors and their.families will
have an '?JIP.Oibdlily .10 meet Senator Ian Michael Long and lar the
award winning Eastern High
School Band at a kickoff dinaer
FRIDAY ... SATURDAY - OPEN 9:30 I.M.·6 P.M.
scheduled for Friday, May 7, 6:30
p.m. at Eastern High School. A ·
Car~- Sale
predinner perfOI'IIWICe by the band
will begin at 6:10p.m.
The potluck dinnec is open to all
4-H participantS, lbeir families and
anyone interelted in learning more
about 4-H. Each family lllellding is
asked to brjns a covezed dish and
dessert. Ham, tiRcy and beverages
RICE'S OUT DISCOUNTS THE DISCOUNTERS!
wiU be provided.
.
Jan Michael Long,Sta1e Senator
SPIIIDIL
from Ohio's ·1'7th Senate District
and Meigs Cou.nty native wil,l be
SOLID
the featured ,....... Senator Long
WOODI
is serving h;s second four-year
Sue·
term in the Le&amp;islature and is a
member of the Sent&amp; Education,
Mt.tll
Retirement and Aging, Finence,
SAft
Judiciary, A$ficlliture and Senate .
'24
Etblcs
Com1111aees.
Heof
is the
ing
Minority
member
tbo.RanlcAgri- h;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;;=!-::~:=;~;:;:;J~~

to all potential ·clientele on a
nondiscrilninatory .blali without •
reprd 10 rece, colat, creod, reli· ·
glon, sexual orienlldon, llllional
origin, sex, qo, lulndic!lp or Viet·
DIIII-CIIII veteran 11111111.

loPAinltina Services
Interior &amp; ~erlor
Paint Mobil•al
Homeslllld
Aluminum Siding
loPt•-• Washing .

COIUIEICIAL &amp; RESIDEIITIIL

F,_ Fov•d•tlon to

SllllloiMI..

...... -.

ENTERPRISES

24 Ill. UIER&amp;EICY SEIYICE

. IMPROVEMENTS

Y11d IIIIo: leturdly

- . Clohio,

BIN . 0
.

F~

. .... 8oby
Dlolln,
Etc. " '
~-~)1-0uiAII­

Lie. No. 0051·32

=====~.
I
J &amp; THOME

-Aac*le.
.. ....,41111.:1 ...,.,2
nloa ......... ~- In
.. rcn, N!M1

-l..- gr
.... IWII
T.,.,fll•+
~~:, - -·
.
H

'TIIIn. a 111.1011114 pm
104llullony Avt.
'-toy, 011. 417U

I,,

E•-

. . , . . Oftly. -

ttaura: 1un. a 11on. ClaMd

The price ..... - -......1100 nl
-_,.......
ll•ocloog :.'f.:-~
lao
.
per-

4-H kickoff
dinner
Friday

949·2168

Tuea.,Wod.Fri.
I:JO IIIMI:30 11ft

RACINE AREA COMMUNITY
ORGANIZATION YARD SALE
STAR MILL PARK
. FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
MAY 7 &amp; 8-9:00.5:00

I ..... Yonl - : lllr llh,
71b, 1111. II, At. IIIII, __.
F.-Clolhlng All

Llllerlng-

ReptJ/t .

- .

\...

· FREE ESnMAns

,~'\.I '
~~~
Shot

IULUftl IOIRD DIIDLIIE .
4:30 P. M. DIY IIFORE
PUILICiftOI

-

.

SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS.

LEATHER REPAIR

•

'

(614)·ft2·5315

Gutter CIMnlng
Painting ·

MEADOWS SHOE &amp;

r

.

SIH

:J.4.13.1

w.......

==1,11tl

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

614·742·2138

Mowli'l • Cltall S.ws

116' 10 P.IL
wll
... hold In the - t y '
loollld on 11M 3rcl
lito Courthouoo. 1111
Coliithotlao Ia looiiiH on
Colirt llrao111 Soaand and
Mulberry Avonuo, In
Pol..-oy.
'
·and
A 10 llllnule·8tudJ rwtow
Adiillnlotrllllon to
otucly the ftlaUon ......, of will oommenoe promptly II
tho lwo CoUnty ...... Tho . ~:30 Pll, lollowod bJ a 20
:nuto .-aon•d-abidy .
underllktn to

. Public Notice

JOE N. SAYlE
SAYlE TRUCII'G

c::'tod

•••ils.

FIIWKIIII AVWIII

Wlllll llliY
·Puts •• Service

~ountyC.unlla••

o£010 liiMMERS
.gUSIICIJTIIRS

Rtl.t" • -

Ritts

tho

3ZO"l. lloln Slrelt Study will be
to
P. 0. Box II&amp; the pullllo II a
Putlllo
....,_Of, OH. 4576t .Heorlng to be hold II tho

(4)2t;(5)1,2te

RIIIOI....

ahould be - • to
Authority In •

Airport.

.....

GUYEL &amp; COAL

Bl LLETI'\ B&lt;&gt;\RI&gt;

· Teresa Williams, Syracuse, was
· crowned the 1993 queen. fllSt runner-up was Karen Beckett, Lelart,
.W.Va. Second runnet·up was Bclh
Sheets, Gallipolis.
Ttie requirements to enter the
competition were to wear a size 14
. dress or larger size and be 21 years
or age or older.
·
· Contestants were judged on
poise, makeup and dresses only.
Sponsors of the event included
Shoe Place/Locker 219, Slyline
Lanes, Fanners Bank, Bob Evans
Restaurant, Derifield Jewelry,
Sports and Stuff, Diana Blazer •
Avon, David Cannan. Dentist, Gal- ·
BEAUTY PAGEANT HELD • Ttftll WIJH•w, ~ter, S7'1•
lipolis Electric Suvice, Pomeroy • cuse, - erowDed tile 1993 FaD lleaaty Pageaat Q-. Sbe - ·
. Fabric Shop, Mary Lee Fabi:ic and crowDed lly19U Oa-, Joy Nldtels. A11o pictured ~re· Karen
Craft, Mason Family Restaurant, Beckett, LeCart, W.Va.,lnt ruaer-up,left, llld Bella Slleetl, Gal·
Gallipolis Dairy Queen, Image lipolls, I«&lt;OICC ruaer-ap, rlgllt.
, Gallery, Four.Seasons Flor~st,
Unique Express1ons, Trophy King,
Mike Terry, Carved In Stone, · Conte$tants were registered by Pomeroy, David Grate, Rutland,
Hazel Persinger and Dreama Bra· Etta Richardson, Muon, W.Va.,
Wa'{llle Benson, Sew Crealive.
and Sharon Kincaid, Point Pleas·
Entertainment was provided by ley.
.
ant, W.Va.
Judges
were
Mike
Walker,
Frank Martin.

'

1

22.!11 lildll lt•• .,........ 011.

Downapouta

111t1M IU. 18 HP

LIMESTONE,

~lldeopenlnge

"Inspirations"
Flower Shop

1-11-13-tln

HAULING

.

REGISTERED
NURSES

l.,p.ru.i
~ ~. Tli~~··~·~•Etll~-;~~~~~-

IIMnpr•pned d••••llntl
tile onllro eludy:.,;aniL
Till d
......
1

pated. Marie Palmer was coordinator for die evcnL

Coml!lunity Caleodll' items
appear two days before aa event
and the day of that eveaL lleml
must be received well ill advall(t
to assu~ pubHcatlon In the cal·
·
. endar.

~-

for regleteNCI nu,_
-be
~
1o work In MedleaiSurglc•I or Special
.
to
111
1111 C•r• Unh - full 1111d
p•rt-tlme pool11ono.
aollll·ll•lgo · r:J!:nol
Airport Allllloiity
on
s•ry commenourate
Oi'Oi' boforo lhllllll~"' dlta.
whh experience. Ex·
"'
Wrl118n etatllloilla, aull- · c•llont fringe bon•
p;toi to a.. 'Pulrllc
fhL

Counllo•111 lor 11o111 Gillie
IIIII 11o1t11 Co!;illaa. II Ill
...... My or oil l'om.oy llld 0 Sp olla and
11 Ill 01111 llrlgr RagloMI

Kathy ltyHI~ a.tt

Help Wlnled

QIMkeut., ...........

Gutters

915-4473'
667·6179

Mcldllport
&amp;

louara? 'rn urlee'

NEW-REPAIR

Fill UTIII&amp;TIJ

Pomeroy,

&amp; VIcinity

a ••,.. ,..., ......

· ROOFING

Stoll &amp;

TIIIIDAY
992·3577

.
... . .. '... :.

Mown L Wrlttsel

COISTRUCnOI

C~OSID

.'

c

........
.=:.
·
:
"
.........
c_,.,.
IIISIU&amp;IMI

O.Uipolls

~,,.,

•...,,

�.......
.
-IT~~;~
IC.III.I'I,I

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t1t 111 . . 0ri111111W
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NEA Cro••word Puzzle

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37 Frank-

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1311-.101
M Gil' club

es llotpbl

tmployooe

ea Poolle

30r.=..
(lllllr.)

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Pus

Pus ·

(IIJIIr.)

7 Pack ewer

34 AnloiOpa

W..l

8 Swill aircraft

. DOWfll

32Sialh-

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

2 - 1110111
3Mnh
..., -1
5 Colagedeg.

controcllon
"lndigonl
10 Afllrnlallva

27 RUNiai\

' 4AI

Pus

57eon51111ng-t. 11 ClrCitlt

11 Acquire
20 ....., •
Item
22Amlocl
conllct
23 Plaine lndlln
25 lulling cry

SOV'l1l '
.AKQJIOI
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+Q5

r

I

508otlnnor

53 Ultoldlari
55 IIIIo

movlo
(2 wdL)

EAST

ID2

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-41 Sllclly tlull

Ul Frocl Attalio

.K754S

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-.wind
15 - and Ionic

.7&amp;2

WP8f

44 0111 ...

13 GtHII lolltr

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P:HJ4.IP
ALDER

•

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Openln1lead: t J .
LAYNI'II'URNINRI
...... twllll
___
_

Which land
is it?

Com~ll1t

~

...... N. .........

Qaa.·l .... ••••RL
~-Dohery.

By PkiUip Alder

Real EstJte
31 Homes for Sale

·: PEANUTS
'

1

t

1\IE 60T fi.IE
f\IUMBER5 F1611RED

OVerbi ook centM' II; now accopllng
CNA'L
For mcn-ln
..n·anlorad
1141112.f472.
Pllrt dme b ahb

AJiralll astlila aclvlrt~ In

OIIT. 8Uf WJ.IO ARE

this newspaper Ia djlet to
lhe F-al Fair Hollllng Act
c&lt; 1968 wni&lt;ft -ISIIIogal

p1r, ........,

TI-IESE PEOPLE 1/JITi-1
TJ.tE FliNN~ CLOTIIE5,
AHO Wi-IAT 6AME
ARE WE I'I.AVIN6,
ANVI/JA'f?

to advenile •any preterenoe.

IIIU.

tmiatlc;)n Df discrimination

based on roce, ootqt, religion,
se1 1amitiat status or Nllional
ortgtn, or any .,..,.ton 10

Imitation or dlsertrRnatlon_•

'.

Tl-lESE PEOI'l~ WITH
Ti-lE FUNN~ CLOTI-IES,
AND WI-IAT GAME
ARE WE PLAVIN6,

)

FRANK AND ERNEST

,;, ..1

wfV~

Pt,ll&gt;fl&gt; TO GttANT YOU
A NEw U&gt;tNTITY.

:::::::-._ GllMT I
1 ttow AIOUT

I

tc£VIN

'• .

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

12

42 Mobile Homes

Situation

tor Reill

Wanted

..., ...... - ........... ----r--1U. E. Main -

_.,. -

lnlonnollon on boby arodlo.llull
ovor o1oroge cllool, - ·ol'ilot&gt;
lion around 1190, can 114-Ull- I '•droom brick ranch. I IIIII•
trom Pl. Pit on Ill. 2. 1112 bolhe,
5301 collecl onytlrno.
........ &amp; .... nnl.
18 wanted to Do
car
alllorl
~

on Ill. 124.

a.T.w. 10:00
••

2 dll•":'.,a-117.000:

I1UII-4¥2

-..
--·

Hl'l.._,_
Complolo- -oollon OJ-. Ftw - · In""' Elan,
Or Prtvat. ~u L111 ::• 8111 :wa. 111111 'Ill
Toughl 11111101111y OUI-. On
AU Terrain. lrtltructor: Rick
Lolllngwoll Jr., M ,..,. Ez.
- - llh ...... Jonln. lionel
!lASE For '\IIIIH•ton &amp; Into To:
IINdcnl'o Uilll ....... P.O. lox
1127, Oolllpalle, Olllo •11131.
DNir 1 nc1 . . . . ---. .... the

---..,.

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2

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lot,lllg - ...... ,_.,
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Tlnl h 1tr: ra home, EliCIII

~~A::-~IMI

I

Flllllly ...,_ _ . . . ..,. ""
men or WOtnlll tDr elllerty or
hlndlclp, .,. - 11M2.

R ·~:r.':·

MW021.

32

--llooMIII11Iorup I

eo,.-.., Rooldti ..lol, 111...:

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or.

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FIL~ 5L.IMY, VILE.

OleGI.JST1N6-...

-

ONHIOMIND. '

/

-

- 2bo....
PotMe
oentr1l

-·:t
·-·1172
-

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-,!.!1 ...14Xlll,
h, C&amp;, IM,IOO.

44

Apanment
for Rent
l;-ii;;~;;-i;;;i;;;;"liiO
1 Bo*-n A...- Rio

RIFF •

... --

-. . -..,

f

1 I )l

\ I

I' I

'

I
•

I

II

I

VAKEN

My friend says lhal she
knows a rock star Who is hBv. - . . . ! ing· so much trouble with his
,.._________:_,hair thai he has 10- a balber
5

l-:,7,.....,.c.;.._;;I~Lr.T,....,_I,..:E:...--11
'!:.leaseomt pte~ ~.--,·h. uckte ---~·
9

I. I I' ·1 I

1...-L.-1..-L.
. ..,...J.L-.J._._
•

A. The poll is completed, and I wanL
to thank tht! many readers who are
still concerned aboul good spelling.
The dubious winner is .. recieve ,"
which bu received votes from around
the country. Other popular choices include . the one-M "accomndate• and
the one-N "milleoium.• &lt;Of course,
"tradgedy" is no tragedy, but it is
wrong.)

THURSDAY

1~

m~:R~l&gt;'&lt;BERED

v

rr,
yOU

·• '"

r ,. I' I' I' -r I

lffii&lt;w I I I I I I,. I I I I I
SCRAM LITS ANSWIIS
r-s
Gallop • TipSy · Adult - Number· BUGS OUT
We had spent several hours •t the parte swatting at
flies and gnats. My neighbor commented lhal picuiea
would be much more fun if they coilld work the BUGS

OUT:
ill

L.P.

TV Dill T

MAY 6

Fl Wortrl TJt

1

\..

_ . , .... ln ...............
- - polnllng,

woolt doWn . ......... '-'"·
._.., wiN do odd JobL Fr11
~-,.

--~

' IIIIo

!loy Con

Conlor I

81oak Will 01 HIIC on .toPiu 11-F I A.M. -e::IO P.ll. H
Qulllly And bporto.- to Till

11

eanc.m

ABTRO·OMPB

For , _ Clllld'o
C.o. CoM U. Ftw A
tn11n1

noddle,.

1M

*•· ,....,.

ue 1221.

ct:tDIIrE /School Age ..........

1224.
111o11Uo Homo Root Cc1o11na
Spoclll: lot$ To MS. IM-24

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

11111.

ca---.....;-

- . PI; 1-. II;. .......
....... 11;1111 ' .............
1212. .
.

---- ---10-lnTri«IIOTrM_T_
Tillw•"'IL r "
....WOWil;

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+

twcnou&amp;

33 Fanns for Sale

-

Cornia
-.
. - ]!=
....
&amp;lvtdl • .,.
ll!tMd
..-lf'MI
~-I-.......- M:IO~Iei-ii

Free . .

t.rn. •pprw:
tlallorn,
Coutlly,
• - 'II ....
·-·

10 -

........ -

........ .

- """ - c.:"· jjOOd

~me.:~
717~

. . ., .

7

••

.

~

-

du,..

proceu.

have control over your affeirs today, you
might end up reeling as lh&lt;lugh you are
being_pulled ancl tugged in diiiJNnl diree·
loons JUSIIO appeuo 0111111.
SAGITTAIIUS (Nov. 23-Dic. 21) This is
one of those days where y011 might lind
yourself in a no-win situation . The more
you'll &lt;to for Olhers, 111(1 more they'll ellp8Ct
from you , ancf llie le&amp;alhey're aptlo &lt;to In
relum.
CA"PRIC'"""0R"""N (!*. 22........ .11) Think very
carefully today before llllkn~g a lroencf a
tong-tom~ loan. There is a chance Mcould •
jeopardize tho roiMionlhip II 11 len't paid
beck on echlldull.
&amp;au&amp;llllli (Jin. . . -. 11) Your 1 still like you. but thlly mlglit 1101 lilve u
rnucli ttme lor WOU toclly 11 !hoy UIIMIIy &lt;to.
Pail wl1o are nomta!'Y ~ •
be
looking lhit other way when you ntad

develop IWO · YIRGO (Aut- 21' I L 22) Tlilre ill pol· · : : :· ,.,.. _ 1111 _ ,10) ~
·
01 · Qne lillilily you mlgliltefMII I -y
•- t•- AWl ....,... you
. graup 111ig111 be II your -'&lt;· 11hat prevloully CIUiejl you ~ Thil rnW toclly•lllll 118 Pl"l"t ..... upon your
~-- 111 olilr,.. be pon1y IOCIII. Ia a .... . _ wwno:t IIIII can be I\IOid- - · - o f your logic could PIO'M
· T&amp;iiRUI (Ajllil..., Ill) y,..; • ••• eel, .
to be unw111. Evaluate mattore In a
....,. be IIWIIIy ~ if tlld ~
111 ...-..&amp; IIIPI· 2I-Ocl. 22) You are 1 lair . dotal:hlld ·
lhlllbolnoe of your- optimlltlt lltl- _ . . , Ill your-~- but you ARB Jllanlh 11-Aprll11) A llrli1 llllf1l
. ludl. e.-re lilultlqna ru'fl• • 1101 .....,.. beconle ,_ad wi1li 101111 1*!1111 develop - , In • relatlonlhlp IIIII you
~onlr· nlflolfvotr: Gil a jump on ;J~ br wl1o _,,_ 'flair~ COUld bring you lilve ~ aocura. Try Ill got Ill .
which .,. &lt;town f11ihllir IIY'ol.
"' root- Oltlla ,..-n oo 111111 I cen
•undoretandlf19 1fMt lnnu 1 ' governing you .In lhll yur . . _, Send lor 1(:0111110 (Oot. 24 flOW. 22) II you Go not be dlvilll ~~quickly U

•

oJ.

.

j'.

*

lily I, 1

In lhll y.r ·~
, diiCNie, ......... -

....., . . .

Fum tailed
Rooms

•

.

Taul\ll' Aslro·Graph pradlcl- loday by
mailing $1 .25 plus a tong, llif-8ddlo8lad,
stamped envelope to Milo-Graph, r:Jo lis •
· ntWIPIIIIf, P.O. Box 4485, YO!!&lt;; NV
10163. 11e lUre to state )lOIII zodiacllign.
GEIINI (lily 21.,_ 20) llon'l ..ry 11o1o1y
·upon your memory today reglrdng procetor performing a compllcaled 1111&lt;.
Prepare allep-by-slep iw:l-10-.
you can refer.
.
CANCER (Junt 21..,uly '22)11 iS b1t1 not
to try to hide anything from people with
whom you're -...:~ ;n a joint venture. It
i8 bcuncf 10 1Uf1ace, ancf Mcould cauM you
embamnment when il dOll.
LB1 (July D-AIIg. 22) Do not makt II'IY
.mojo&lt; _ , . llxlay wi)hOIII nrst COMUil· ing your mate. ancl viCe " " '· Eacll 01 you
will be lrlQIIIIK! U yo&lt;! lrt ltlt OUI of thll

.

~--

by filling in the missing words
develop lrom liep No. 3 bolow.

e1• ace 2121.

,_ &amp;

=

.I I I I' I
1

OUR LANGUAGE

I

Mte~ERAet 1", ROTTeN,

a1r, ,n,
for Sale
Mllllmo, cloDooll !ICIIIIIM, f112,17 , .. lnolullntl • . 11C1-e112 or ._WCMI.
14im.

-doll•--lol-,
....
ro'.':.?'t2:""""

_ I I' I

of your poll on the worst misspelling?
I want to vote for "lradgedy."

,, MORTY MEEKLE AND WIN'I;'HROP

=:i.~"'='= =
. t..= :....-c
--·&amp;I"""' _..._
=.-:..:m=-..
~c;li':.iii'iii·~*·~=- =
r::c
____...........
.....__
,_

""rll.•---·

r.::t.r.=."'a-~- 'II Li ........ I

., T

Q. When will you have the results

a.a~......,an.•

~~

43 Farms tor Rent

Mobile Homea

t1
Muelc:el
lnlt
=-==~=rumenta=.:::;=.,...-

0

The noun tSOCKET refers to a
hollow '. spot or 'part Into which something else ftts. Pocket this pronunciation aid: SOCKET rhymes with
POCKET,
.

·

•

r::!::' S~\\.4llA-~t.~s·

By Jefhy McQualll

..

~ 0oeo 11 c.1 l'D'-...,.,

...........
CUI.-......
....
.,,
_..._
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..........................,..,.

lloqulnod. - . . - . - l t -

AQlU5IQ) WiJ

a....,,.,

lllllnl Inn .._,, 10 HP

Now. .. - - _ .. ........ u ........ g. to
ltdCI
- . ..-..--. • • • U.I1H• ann
•
P-ror
21&amp;'1
ront.llifll
Ill
~ ew Mint
locliUoft.~
21' a... TY, oooiolo

-~~--.Pol~
Ylltd Wlndf,"'b. W
..t ~ ~. ..,..._

OUileN Cle

-" • ,...
=- ........

2 bod- lllllbllo homo, Ill. :II
- ·11111M -lloudoroot• oftolr
1:00 Pll, 1C144711-1171.
2 l•*wlla, Partt.11v Furnlehed, C.ble, Air, Cleln I
Oullt. Alflt11 CII 6 ~

"""'
· - "''· .,.....um - or IM-843-.8281.
EAR TREE SERVICE. 1'~
Trimming, TrM " - - ,

A

r TIIEM t£r It£ I1B'IW6E I'IV ~
!!£~t-t.J.II:&gt;W 616 A CUTC»&gt;
OUR eux.£r
IWIDt.E?

miD AIW.! ,...,_,

,._
JACK N FW&amp;
CDI.LAR' IT WOIIKIHI Cart-

lllnaNO...,._P

.,

""TWJW. VfJ.tJHf3U....
fAY
eE

'

Poidw-.

Child • .,.; my hofM, Allin 11171.
Sir~, ~. Mory Dom-, lw91Ni;tpGiotiiite~i:ii-iiik'i.TotilcliCiOhoiMoiil:to,

' BORN LOSER

"""' . . . ..,.. -llpoolry, - · t2GO OICII, -h. no
oolln
ln- -._IM-1117.
otudeiUJI
.... liae1,171.
~dDI I ZlllliT &amp;lOUT

Llll. lo I:IOJj';a• ...., 1:00

loi:OOPJII.

.........

!'lelll!!- ......,..,

•

'OSTNfll1 ~

•

=

Oni

h

ANVWAV?

Mfp,··

- ..

make any such prelerenc•. .

.

IVE GOT TI-lE
NUM8ERS F1611RED
OIIT. SliT Wl-lO ARE

Let's try one of tboee wortl-as&amp;llCiation tests that pl!ychologillts love.
'Oz. • What comes to your mind?
·Probably Kansu, Judy Garland, the
tin man and the cowardly lion. But
maybe tome of you·thougltt of Australia. That land of Oz IWt its own unique ·
fauna: kan&amp;arooa. duck-billed platypi,
emus and koalas.
Todar's deal COllieS from a I'I!Cent
issue o Australian Bridle magaziae.
Look II just the North-South bands.
Alainst your fciur-epade contract,
West leads the diamond jack. East
wins with the kiag, cultes the ace and
CELEBRITY CIPHER
.
exits with a trump. Y011 draw a second
CAIIbritr CipMr Q')'Piogr.,. . . cnMid tram • or
bf IWnOut . . - . PMI end .,..._.
Each.._. In 1M ctpt,., .:InCh lor ......... T"*r'• C1W: R ~ L
.
round of spades, both opponents following. How do you continue?
C 8 Z IJ
I J! . U Y A K
0 S E Y W •
y A
South's leap to game wu aggres- -- • Y
sive, especially given the way he
UGE ' o
KIIEZ
UKZBZ
YA
played the cards.
After two rounds of diamonds and
UGED'&amp;
UZYBN
AI
WIOZ
YDAI
iwo rounds of spades, South cubed the
•
club ace, played a club to dummy's
T I 8 B
R Y P Y D C
e I I 0 G D N K ·Z a a
king and ntffed a club In band. However, the suit didn't split 3-3. Nell South
GD
IX 'Z BG , '
OGBAYD
EKiaA.
confidenUy finesled the heart queen,
but East won with the king and rePREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A 1yp1cat day In the lite o1 a hllooy..llllal
turned a heart: one down.
mullidan coneiSIS Of 0 r011nd of golf, and an AA ntMIIng." - B11y Joel
"East, why didn't you double with
tbat hand?' demanded South.
"Don't be so rude," iliterrupted
North. "Whea you lead the tllird club
.
U1lo4 loy ClAY I. POU&amp;N ..,;:;__;,___;,::::.:.,
from the dummy and Eut follows
suit, don't ruff. Instead, dlscanl one of
R..,rron~ loi!Ors of lf1o
four ICtomblocl -do br
your hearts. Tbat costs an o-vertrick if
low to form four Jimplo word•
the dubs are 3-3, but it paran~ the
contract. What· can East return? A
heart is into dummy's A-Q tenace. A
club establilbes the suit. And a diamond COIICedes a ruff-and-discard .
Whiche-ver be cbooaes, · you lose no
hearttrld&lt;. •
"Yoll're ript:". South apologized to
R0 0 M
botb North and Eut.

pol-,.·

'

• :1

.,

�Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

'JI1&amp;nday. lilY 6, 11183

·ohio Lottery

Eastern
girls are '
eliminated

Pick 3:

028
Pick 4:

0738

Page7

•

·e ·
Voi.44,NO. 7
MuttiiMdlllnc.

PETUNIAS • AND ALL YOUR OTHER FAVORITES
· FULL MARKET FLAT REG. $10.00

NOW JUST

S8.99
,

R~,~~

Now 2For s22.00

. ...:=51!=11~=

.

•· In ISipiM

~Nou: flip

lt;a'

I

II

1 I a :1w

OlwJGtiWI
•Gas'
•AM .....

- .G ive A Rose
That Blooms
All Summer
Every Veer"

.

HARDY HYBRID
TEA

"'The Cadillac of Roses•
•2 and 3 Gallon Pots
··Many Colors and ·
Varieties Available

•

Stop In And Reeister
· To Win A Banefne Ba•et
Of Your Choice•••

•••There's Lots Of C:,..nces·· · · ·.:. . . . . . .
To Win •ca..Se

'

'

y ... __"'i

:·

,•

Wort is starling Ibis week on a
preliminary study to relocate U.S.
33 from Alhens to lhe end of lhe
existing four-lane highway 81 Dar·
win.
Officials wilh Distticl 10 or lhe
Obio Deparunenl of Transportation
' ·have siplll ·a aJillnlet in ex~ of
Sl million wilb lhe callllllillg finn
of Sverdrup Associates Inc.,
Columbus, for the engineering
study. 0001' expects 10- 81least
.a ponion of lhe highway consauct·
edby 1998.
According 'to 0001', i'esidents
along lbe section of U.S. 33
in~olved should expect to see
activity as infonnation regarding
historic struciUreS, cultural fealureS
and environmental concerns are
gnlhered. The area has already been
marlced wilh wgets, or "X"s, for
aerial photographers.
Last year, Governor George
Voinovich and ODOT Director

... '

:,..;.;

----..

,·,

.

('

(

Bf Katllryu Crow
Sealillel Cw 1 .1rpowleat
Complaints in regard to mands·
~h

CIRCUS SCENES • The
Wilker BroL Ctrt. will ~ at
til¥ · Nfil1s -·co:lli'ty -tafr·;·
groulldi at Rock Sprlap oa .
May 14 with JIIOWII at 4:30
allid ·7 p.m.- Pomeroy Ma7or
Bruce Reed has proclaimed
that cll7 Circus Oa7. Reed il
pictured here with Ills soa,
Tyler, aad Toby tile Clo'IQ.
,\llo pictured Is Jeff Waruer,
presldeat of the Lloas Club
wllleh Is sJI(JIISOiiDa the eYeDL
Tickets, $5, are available at
Waruer lasuraaee, Teaford
Really, Fruth's, HUitop Grocery, Swisher aad Lollle a11d
at the olrlce of Kenaeth R. Utt,
C.P,,\. Chlldrea may attead
for tree It they preaeat oae ol
the spedal coupoas available
at local stores prior to tbe
show. Tob7 the CloWII Is also
pictured 01 Ills stilts as be
· bangs a promotloa poster Ia
Pomeroy oa Thursday after,

,.;'J,....!!k,

April jobless rate ·stuck at 7.0 percent

Gallipolis!

·· PLUS

YOU. MAY-WIN
A GRAND PRIZE
OF s150.00
'

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
TO REGISTER-AND YOU NEED .
NOT BE PRESI!NT TO WINI

POnED ·
•Geraniums

•Texas ... Be8 Usianthus

•Heatla
•New Guinta Hybrid Impatiens
•Potted Roses
•caladiums
·
•lostod ferns
•And Mora

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nllion'sjoblessratein April held at
7.0 percent for the lhird s~
monlh as service induslries
~numbers of new worten but
butldin&amp; and manufacturing
employment fell, the government
said lbday,
.
ne Labor Department said in
its montbly employment report lhal
the number of new jobs ll:roughout
the economy, as measured by 1 sur.
· vey of bustness payrolls, rose .by
119,000, followinff a revJsed
decline of9.000 jobs :n March. ·
There were 8.92 million people

.

unemployed in April, lhe· repor·a
said.
. .
.
The jobless rate or 7.0 pen:ent,
-which has llllt changed since it fell
0.1 point in Februaty,·and·lbeover·
all increase in new jobs,- in line
wilh economists' expectationL It
reflected a moden:le unprovemerit, ·
officials said today.
. Willlatn G. Barron, Jr., deputy
commissioner of lbe Labor Depar1·
ment's Bureau of Labor Slltislics,
said in testillJORy prepared for
delivery today before the Joint
Economic Commiuee lh8l April's
'figures reOect "more of lhe same

Jerry Wray approved lbc allOIIIlenl
of $1.6 million for lhe preliminary
study. The money will !lllo~ lhe
consultant to complete an enVUilll·
mental document and preliminary
engineering study, bolh of which
are necessary befon: lhe project can
mOve into lbe design phase.
. A preliminary study was com·
pleted in 1972, however lbe project
was shelved until Voinovich and
Wray decided it Sbould be revived
in an effort to improve highways
and Jlllllnole devdopnenl in south·
eastern Obio. Prdiminlry euginc:ering on lbe project mus&amp; be ~
because. the 1972 information is
outdated.
· Acalrding to 0001', Voinovich
and Wray made lheir decision at
t)Je reque~~t of District 10 Deputy
Director Jolm Dowler.
··
Allhough it can take several
yesrs to complete such a project,

from preliminary study to actual
construction, Tom Hedrick, planning engineer for District I0, . II
out thai it is lbe aim of v~.
Wray _, District 10, "to CUI time
in the )Jighway development pro.

cess.·

.

Svendrup has 24 monlhs to
complete lhe study and submit a
proposed alignment for lhe bigh- ·
way.
According to OOOT, the fum
also designed the Interstate 77
Mountain Bypass at Charleston,
W.Va., mel has indicalt.d !hey will
complete their wad: in lhe aloued
time.

Relocated U.S. 33 is expected to

·be approximately 13 miles long,

which is somewhai shorter lban lbe
existing route from Athens 10 Darwin.
.. At Ieist 6ne public hearing will
be held as lbe study progresses.

Mandatory trash collection draws
complaints from Syracuse residents

&lt; · - ~: .·

'"

pap If

Study begins this week
on U.S. 33 relocation

l "l
.
l':l '
I
:'~· ' ~

......... ..-.
. .I

a-•

.

-·

We're Civitae One Awa~
Ever, Hour All DaJ
·
Sat•rda~ And
SundaJAt
Mason And

REFRESHMENTS
WILL BE SERVED
AND THE
BOB'S MARKET .
CLOWN
·WILL IE GIVING
AWAY
BALLOONSI

..

HELP
CELEBRATE
OUR 5TH ANNUAL
OPEN HOUSE.
BOB•s IS FEATURING
ALL FLOWERING .
10•• HANGING BASKETS

BEDDI
G
PLANTS
INCLUDING MARIGOLDS • BEGONIAS • IMPATIENS

2 ~~ec~~o... 12 ,.._
.A llulllmeclalna. tl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Qhlo, Friday, May 7, 1993

,__Lions Circus scheduled May 14

~ SAVEIO%
. 'ON AREA'S LARGEST SELECTION AND HEALTHIEST'

Low IODJcbt Ia $0s. Cloudy.
Saturday, IUDIIy, blgb ID 80s.

sl~ improvement we hsve seen in
lhe labor mar!tet since early last
year."
Although the economy has
added an average of more than
100;000 new jobs a monlh so far
Ibis . year, total em~ment
remainubou&amp; 1 milliOO
of lbe
pre-recession peak in June 1990,
when lbe economy was providing
jobs for 110 miUion people.
.
~
·
·

··

collection were voiced
at Thursday
Symiiie-vtJ:

wilb Council 10 express
opposilion to council's p111posal for
mandatory trash collection were
Geo!JC Holman, Harold Smith, and
Gordon Winebrenner.
The three residents stated lbcy
do not use lbe service and hive no
need for it. Holman commented
lhat be has lived in Syracuse 36
years &amp;Dd recycled everything. "I
don't hsve garbage service so wh~
should I pay for some one elses,
Holm1111 said.
Winebrenner said that he has
lived in Syracuse 56 years and been
in business 40 years. Par1 of his
argument.centered around conccm
for lbe elderly many of whom have
limited incomes.
At last month's meeting a pro·
posal was made to write an ordi·
nance to add garbage collection
fees to water bills and make it
manda10ry for all residents to use
the service. Such an ordinance once
it is prepared for consideration·
would hsve .to be given lbree read·
. logs and adopted by Council before
bccomin&amp;law..
Mayor James Pape informed die
group that lhere is "nothing concrete" on lbe issue. Kenny Buck·
ley, oouncil member, noted lhat it
is a way for lhe villaac to make
m&lt;iney 'since there seems to be no
olher way, and also to keep the viJ.
!age clean.
Water SIPpi,)' reqRSt
Also meetiJig WJib COuncil was
Jim Cundiff, who operateS Maple·
wood Lake. Cundiff said lhat he
wants to put in 2S to 30 camP. sites
11 the lake but the EPA wtll not

approve lbe sites wilbout adequate
Wiler supply. He asked permission
to boot into lhe W81er line along
the highwaJ'.
Mayor Pape said lhat Will« is a
· cOIIIIIfodity-ill"d"'tlle purpose for
ham;l~ater is to sell it. He also
said
he dido 't want people in
SyriCUIIC village to nm OUl of warer
because of additional bool&lt;;ons to
the system. No action ori the
request will be taken until a study
is made.
This brought up a discussion

about lllCtelini watir for residenll
along with lhe possible need fo;
. drilling IIIOther well for lbe Yillqe.
It was suggested to Cundiff tblt he
. look into lhe possibilit)' of going
oniD !he TOppers-PlainS ·warer system.
·
· Other buslneM .
Also meeting Wilb·council was
Tom Lowery, pool manager, who
lalked about. his purchases and
anticill8ted profits. He said that be
hopes to till !be DOOI next week.
(Cootinued on Page 3)

'Kids Day Parade' will kick off
Syracuse activities Saturday
This Saturday will be a day of
The parade willtorm at 10:30 81
fun and gaines, with a Daft Show Larry's Grocery and then travel
thrown in for gond messure, in lbe along Route 124, beginning at 11,
Village of Syracuse:
to the Syracuse Municipal Park.
The annual "Kids Da Parade" Children will have lbe opportunity
at 11 am. will kick off
feslivi· 10 win cash prizes for bike c~ecora:
ties foUowed by a series of exhibi· lions.
lion ball games Sllrting at noon.
Announcement of contest wiJi.
A Craft Show, beins sponsored netS and introduction or teams will
Ill raise
' for London Pool in be made at King Field after lhci
tJie village~ be held atlbe pool parade and following dediCation of
parting Tot. It Sl8rtS at 10 a.m. and the new flag pole and flu donated
continues unti14 p.m.
by lhe Feenef Bennett American
In conjunction with the Craft Legion Post 0 Middleport. •
The schedule·of exhibition ball
Show, a free TB/Biood Pressure
games
is T-Ball, noon on Louks
Clinic will be conducted, lbere will
be giveaways or a picnic basket F:eld; l.iuie League, noon on King
and OC!@&amp;.oil picnic table, balloons F:eld; Minor~ Girls, 1:15 on
passedout, an Antique Tractor Louks Field; Juruor Pony Lcque
Show, $SO cash award and the 1:4S on King Field; Minor~
Mountaineer 2-Cylinder Club is Boys, 2:30 p.m. on Louks Fililci·
scheduled to be on hand. ·
Junior Girls! 3:30 on King Field;
The Craft Show will include Pee Wee Gtrls, 4 p.m . on Louks
boolbs 10 sell lamps, wood crafts, Field; Pony League, S: IS on Kin&amp;
flora arrangements, jewelry, T~ Field and Pee Wee Boys, 5:30p.m.
shirts, hand woven rugs, Walkins on Louks Field.
Products and bunnies, beads and
Refreshments, including pop,
bears. Craft spaces are available . hamburgers and hot dogs, will be
until Saturday mornina by contact· available throughout the day.
ing Bill Roush ~~-~·5315 .. . .

:le

-Local briefs-,__,.

Selection to be completed today

Jury selection in lbe.cue of Oblo vs. William LeMasltt should
he CO!J'Pieled today, Meigs County Prosec1110r John Leiltes said Ibis
mOOIIlll.
.
Twenty-five pOtpOCtivejuhii have been aelecled as of Thursday lftemoon, Lentcs said. Twenty-eight jurors ate tteeded
Today, aiiOIDCys for ·~ as.weD u IIIOIIIeyS representing
lbe stare ate finlJhina up quesdllnin&amp; of JlOIIOIIdal junn.
LeMaster, of Racine, iiiCCUieCT of four charges of qgravaled
m..-der in lbe Feb. 8, 1991, sholpn s1syings of Jeff Halley Sr., 36,
and 12-,-..old Jeff Halley Jr., bolh li Gallipolis.

Officials probe blaz.e at mine

Offieii1J from the Soutbem Ohio COil eomp.y·att inve"ip•;
ing a fire. Mei8 Mine 31 - Salem
Gilly Ibis 1110111iDJ.
A mochrJc:allailute In a belt drive ....-Uitly ltlrfallbe blaze,
Dr.e lla1ler laid IIIli~
Biker tammendocllbe Stlein Tow!llhiP Are
t b its
. qllict tuponte In ciontainJD; the fin. fila fin
ent. was ·
·called a J:47 Llll. and- on the ICelll undl7:37 1.m.
.
. . No .iiljUrlel _.. .tepOrted.
'.

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socco .,. .....

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Wwll.r P ; OS "•nlar7

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oble1 , _ of*lr ltanl ,._. . ........... Pldw.C, k,lroat,
am S1~arpeeter, M...U,. Melelj M111 ~ Cllarlllle
· Smltl: &lt; nt teaaer), Marjorie G11bl, Caral O.Deaer, Jlllla
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