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                  <text>High schobl
graduation
•
ISSUe

0 hio Lottery

Congratulatiom,
Graduates

Pick 3:
336
Pick 4:
I

Inside today.

5226

•

•

WENDY CLARK

e

KELLY DOIDGE

Community Calendar
SATURDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Long Bottom Community AsSociation smot.psbon1 Saturday 5 p.m. Cost is $5
for adults or $2.50 for children. ·
r

REEDSVILLE· Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Tbird Annual
Fishing Derby, Saturday, 8 a.m. 10
1 p.m. for ages Q-14. Prizes and
free hotdogs.
POMEROY • Belles and Beaus
Western Square Dance Club, dance
Saturday 8-11 p.m. Meigs County
Sen, Citizens Center. Dale Eddv.

.
.
,.. VoL 44, No.17 .
CoFI'flllled18a

Marieua, caller. 'All western styie
. 'ted,
.
dancers IDVI

· J.ury imposes 96~year penal~y · .

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
IaN""' Open For
Th• s.........
&amp;
"-~!~~Wets,

u.. ,, •••• •ry

....,.,_.,

PlusAm.a&amp; II•••• • -.
SPECIAL OF THE MONTH
. (

( Jll -

By JIM FREEMAN
· County man c:onvicted of killing a of Common Pleas.
Seatblel News S1alr
Gallia County man and his son
William D. Lemasters II of
. Following a 4 1/2-hour jury · received two consecutive life sen- Racine sat with his attorneys,
deliberation Thursday, a ¥eigs tences in ~ Meigs County Coun. William N. Eachus and Bill

1

!.15 ..L

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
SYUCUSI

OPEN DAILY N, SUNDAY 12-5

992·5776

LORETTA OILER

Meigs graduation ... ContiauecHrompqe 1
tie Turner, P~mer'?Y• ~urrently

e~lled ~. 9hi~ U!llvemty where
she IS IIUIJOOIIg m biology.

·D£BORAH ALKIRE

Beat of the Bend.._.
bY. Bob Hoeflich
Seems to me that
John Curtis, a stu.de11t at the
· Chester Elementary School, is
·about ro become a real hero.
. Young John, the son of Larry
and Julie Curtis, who reside on
Eagle Ridge Road, will be going 10
the Cleveland Clinic on May 31
where he will be the d9nor for a
bone marrow transpon for his half·
sister, Terri Nutter, 27, or the TupJil:n Plains area, a leukemia victim.
Terri must have the marrow
tranSPlant and if it is successful she
ti8s a 95 percent chance of recovery, Her tWO full brothers and full
sister were tested at Cleveland
Clinic as donors but didn't match
and couldn't be donors. It was a
one in 25,000 chance that John
could be the donor and with those
odds, personnel at the clinic were
hesitant 10 test John. However, he
insisted and what do you lcnow?
He matches and can and will
become the donor.
Terri will enter the clinic on
May 24 where she will undergo
lt8tS and treaunent for a week until
John arrives on May 31. The next
day the transplant will be done.
TC!Ti. of course, will be confined 10
the hospital for about three weeks
followin~ the procedure but John
will be dischar$ed right away, barring no complications. And John
has no misgivings about this. ·
Members of the Curtis Family
feel that they have been handed a
"miracle". I know you join me in
wishing that all goes well. By the
way, I don't know John, but I'm
sure proud of him.

Otha and Lois Ciltle of Racine
the son of Rosemary Circle, a 1946
graduate of Racine High School.
His wife is a pharmacist and they
have a three-year-old daughter, Jessica.
·

Incredible that the annual Heritage Weekend is again right on us.
So-a cOiiple of notices dealing
with the event.
Staff members of the Mei$s
County Senior Citizens Center will
be holding a quilt show and sale in
conjunction with the event, June 12
and13.
If you have quilts you would
like 10 display or se11J11ease contact
Alice Wolfe at 992-2161. She'll
tell you how 10 go about it. Quilts
can be taken to the center the week
before the show.
Admission 10 the show which is
open to the public is $1 and
desserts will be available at the
show site. Hours of the show and
sale arc 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday and from 12 noon 10 4 p.m. on
Sunday.
Meantime at the Meigs County
Museum plans are being made for
Meigs County members of the
Railrol\d Club of Southeast Ohio 10
again feature another display of
miniature trains , And that should
be outslanding.
By the way, David Robinette, a
member of the group, reports that
canceled stamped envelopes of
1975 and 1976, the Freedom Train
Series, are now available at $1 S a
set. A set includes a box of many
envelopes. Each envelope was canceled at a different city during the
A big day coming ' up for Eric run of the Freedom Train which
Bradley Raas.
traveled through 47 states. If you're
On May 28, Eric will receive his interested in a set give Robinette a ·
Phd in mechanical engineering at ring at992-7541.
the Massachusetts Institute of
'--Technology in Boston. He has
I KNOW . you're disappointed
already accepted a teaching posi- that the Ku Klux Klan rally schedtion at a college in Michi8B!J come uled for this Saturday in Pomeroy
September.
has been canceled. But hang on
Ratts is a grandson of the late anyway and do keep smiling.

. Michelle Young, daughter of
Dtane Young, Pomeroy, and Ron
Yo~g. Paduoa!', Kr .• enrolled at
O~to Sta~ UJ!tverstty wher,e she
wtll, .maJor m pre-vetennary
medicme.
Commencement
~~ speaker for .SliDday s graduauon pro~ wtll be
James
.
~let, supenn~n~t of
the Meigs tocaJ Sc~l DISinct f~r
the past five years. His address will
be one of !Jis final acts in his .career
Of educauon. Carpenter reures ~t
the end of May, He has been m
t~ch!ng ~d administrative J!OSiuons tn ¥etgs Local for the~ 13
years. Prior to thai he was pnnc1pal
of Federal Hocldng High School
for J1 years and prior to that taughl
eight years in sevcnl schools.
Spec:ial music for commencement will be ~_led by the band
ul!der the, direction of Toney
Dmgess, direc~, ~ by the cho~:vbnder the direcuon of Teresa
Th~ class will be presented b~
. . 1 .
F en ton Tay Ior, pnn~tpa
• wu
Larry W. Rupe, .Pres•dent. of the
Boar~ of Edocauon, handmg out
the diplomas.
T..,..,~ Graduates .
Members of lhe graduaung class
are Gary Wayne Adams, Deborah
Ann Alkire, Kevin Clay Amott,
Larry Wayne Ashburn, Terry Dale
Ashbury, Kandi May Bachtel, Timothy H. Baker, Nathan Frederick
Baloy, Jennifer L. Barnhart,
Michelle Renee Barren, Neil .
Edward Barrett, Carrie Elizabeth
Bartels, Megan Leigh Bartels, John
Stewart Bentley, James Nathan
Biggs, A])by Rut!) Blake, Richard
Lee Blankenship, Tessie Lynn
Bradshaw, Nathan Mauhew
Brown, Lorri Ann Bumem, Karen
Renee .Burns, Richard David Carson, Paul Jason Chadwell, Anna
Margaret Michelle Chapman,
Linda Louise Chapman.
Jennifer Chasteen, Tabitha
Michelle Clark, Wendy Jaylene
Clark, Brooke Ann Coates, Tracy
Dawn Collins, Verna Michelle
Compston, Matthew Cook, E.
Matthew Craddock, James Lee
Cramer, Jr., Jay Christopher Cremeans, Kimberly Dawn Cremeans,
Leanna Cundiff, Twaina Renea
Cunningham, David A. Curf'man,
Ginger Marie Curtis, David
William Dailey, Todd A. Dill,
Kelly Patricia Doidge, Elizabeth
Renee Downie, Carleton G. Drummer, Russell W. Edmonds, Ben
Fackler, Lawrence S. Faw, Kimberly June Fetty, Heather Marie
Franckowiak, Allison N. Gannaway.
Rebecca L. Garnes, Wesley
Shane Gilkey, Billy J. Glaze,
Autumn M. Griffith, Mary Ann
Grueser, Tracey Renee Grueser,
Michael J. Hall, Raben Jason Hall,
Robin Dawn Hall, James E. Har·
man, Lisa .Renee Harr, James
William Harris, Trevor Jon Harri·
son, Richard Shane Hatfield, Brian
Roger Hoffman, Bryan Todd Hoff.
man, Dennis Jay Hoschar, Tonya,
Lynn Hudnall, Jason Leonard

They go with all your clothes.
(Including into the
washing machine.)

ScottJBJ(HI Moore, ChristophUW:
Nee!, Raben M. O'Brien, Lorena
Lynn Oiler Lessie Mae Osborne
Heather J~ Pauley, Tom M.
nington, Kelly Denise Phelps, Bil·
lye Jo Pherigo, Michael E. PhiUips,
James A. Powell, Rick Prioe;
S,llanie Lynn Price.
.
ames P. Pullins, Tammy Jo
Queen, David L. Rees, Vincent
Lance Reiber, Lorena Lrnn Reit- .
mire, Steven W. Reitmtre, Amy
Elizabeth Reynolds, John Roger
Reynolds, Courtney Denise Riggs,
Marcia Anne Robinson Elizabeth
Ann Roush, Kelly Re~ee Salterfteld, Lisa Diane Schuler, Angela
Rae Searles Tiunmy Lynn Searles
Sherry Jo Seddon, Kyla Ren~
Sellers, Virginia Marie. Shuler,
Kyle Arthur Simpson, Melisa
Marie Sisson Rebecca Ann Snowden Rian Spencer Lonnie Lee
Sro~fe Pauick Scott Steele, Jason
L. ~te.;,an. Chris!Opher M. Swanson, Steven P. Swatzel, Sheryl
Renee Thoma, Donny Ray T'tllis
William C. Touitdas, Rossen' E
Tr_iplet!, Katrina. R. Turner:
Mtchael L. Van~e, Paul Thomas
Van Cooney, Michael A. Welsh,
Scott Wesley Whitlatch, Holly
Allyn Williams, Randall Zean Wit·
son Tonya Lynn Woodard Todd
•
•
Matthew Workman, Jennifer A.
Wright, Michelle L. Young, Vic10r
Charles Young IV Yvea.e Young
t...:•==.DD:::,:L::::IPO:_=::IT~------'----__!92·5627
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Peri:

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The SHDoi"'CAPLACE

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EXTRAIEXTRA

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on

s

~uth

I!Ahe youth choir presented sev- ef[ihe conclusion of the service

· mJ IOIIP and readings. During the all mpther's were recognized. Spe-

I

sinJing o~ "Ha-la-la-la" the .youth cia! potttd plants were presented 10
MDI out mto the congregation and Maye Mora, Ruth Francis, Mildred
brought their mothers to the fronl . Ward, Mary Harris, Evelyn Laoof the church and had then\ ~oin in ning, Mary Kau!Z. Dorothy Sheets,
acti vily of the song. The junior Carol Adams, Barbara Weeks, Car. cbolr presenled a short program on ric Kennedy, Barbara Riggs and
the life of a mother and her son. Nola Young.
They concluded the program by

••

Friday,
June 4, 1993

- Hurry, Picture Deadline is Monday, May 27.
The Baby Sentinel is a Special Section filled with photographS of
local kids, ages newborn to 4 years old.
'
The Baby Sentinel will ~ppear in the June 4th issue in celebration
·of National Baby Week.
·
Be sure your chUd, grandchild or relative is included. Complete
the form below and enclose a maps~ot or walle( size picture plus a
$5.00 charge for each photograph. (enclose payment with picture)

.

McLane, scparared from courtroom er with a mitigation hearing in the Barnes said .•Tile deputies have
been nice, she added. •
· spectators by a wall of uniformed rtrSt place?" ·
"We are pleased the jury CaDle
officers and deputies as the bailiff
Following closing arguments,
back
with ·a life sentence," Lemaspresenled the jury's decision.
• Crow instructed the jurors and
ters'
auomey,
Bill McLane, said.
Lemasters, 26, was found guilty released them for deliberation.
"(Lemasters) has indicated that he
Saturday in the Fell: 8, 1991, shotJury i'etums
gun slayings of Jeffrey L. Halley,
Courtroom doors were unlocked wants 10 file an appeal and we have
36, and 12-year-old Jeffrey S. Hal- shortly before 3:25 p.m. and nine been appointed by the coon to repley, both of Gllllia County. In addi- . uniformed officers and deputies resent him."
"It's a long way from over,"
tion, he was fOUIIj! guilty of aggra- filed iniO the room and poSitioned
vated robbery and two counts of themselves between spectators and McLane said.
"We are truly grateful for the
kidnapping in the incident.
the parties involved, making a
He received a life sentence in human barrier separaling coun offi. cooperation we have received from
each killln~ and must serve 30 cials lnd the jury from the rest of the sheriff's department and the
court," McLane added. "I believe
years of eac before being eligible the courtroom.
for parole. In addition, Lemasters
Other ofticers then brought the case was well and fairly tried
received three 10-year sentences Lemasters, wearing shackles, into by the prosecutor's office and we
for lhe robbery and kidnapping the courtroom where he was seated tried a dam good case."
Prosecutor John R. Lentes said
convictions and 1wo three-year with Eacbus and McLane:
he
was ·satisfied with the jury's
terms foc mandatory
speciDeputies locked the courtroom
decision.
fications.
at 3:51 p.m. Crow and the juty
"I'm satisfied with the verdict.
Another man, Fred Drennen of entered the hushed room at 3:52
It's
difficult for jurors... 10 sign the
Ravenswood, W.Va., pleaded p.m. at·which lime Crow asked the
death
penalty." he said.
guilty on March I 10 three counts jury foreman if they had relurned
of aggravated murder and is serv- with a decision.
Lentes said Lemasters' family
in!' three concurrent life sentences
At 3:53 p.m., Bailiff Teresa played an important role in saving
wtth the possibility of parole in 20 Tyson-Drummer read the jury's him from the death penalty.
"The family members had an
years for his role in the double recommendation of the two life
effect
on the jury," Lentes said.
· slaying. ·
sentences and Crow thanked the
'IJ believe the death penalty was
me~t.~r~~:/~rg~;~~~t:fJ:Y· jury which consisted of six men an appropriate sentence based on
and six women.
against Lemasters- which he did
"The United States has the the cold-blooded murder of Jeffrey
.on May II.
. finest cour:t system in the world and L. Halley and his 12-year-old son,"
Drennen told .jurors that Lemas- . you helped to guarantee il will Lentes said. "However, I understand the jury's difficulties in
ters traveled 10 Gallia County on remain so" Crow said . .
•
imposing the death penalty aAd J
llebv
8, 1991,
1oCoun
bring -"the elder
Cro w th•~n ·f.l!....,-:""'•~d th e :Jur
.· o~
u......
....._
the
•••
·
colimend
them for coming ba~k
10
·-~
·''""'" · ty ...,._
who opted '10· remain for sentencwith the serious penalty of life
guise of a drug deal during 'whic)l .
Drennen would appear ··and then mg.Before.· passing sentence, Crow imprisonment. I am complerely Sat·
pretend 10 rob Halley and Lemas- asked Lemasters if he wanted to isfied that William Lemasters will
never be released from prison and
ters. ·
comment. Lemasters declined.
According to testimony, upon
Aftermath
that he will suffer evety day for the
crime
against these two people."
PortlanarrivalatRthe m!l"dLeerbscene oTn Old
"The ball gan1e ain't over until
"I am also satisfied because
d oad tn
anon own- the fat lady sings," said Anna
ship, Dreruten and Lemasters shot Barnes, William Lemasters' moth- now, the release date is not in the
hands of the parole board. Instead,
the older Railey and robbed bim Cf· "She ain't sang yet."
the
prison system will teq&gt; LemasbeforeLemasterslrilledtheboy.
We have the support of good
ters
in prison for at least 96 years,"
Attorneys for Lemasters said counsel, investigaiOrs and friends,
l)rennen shot and killed the two
Lentes concluded.
Halleys while Lemasters sat in the

rm:arm

REMOVED FROM COURTROOM •
WIDiaa L=••n,--.. by cleplltles of 11te
Melp Couty Sberlff'1 Departmeat, II sllon
ltei'J helnl remcn'ed from 1ft COUI'trciMI slor1ly

after nceivinc two llle ~ateaees for Ills role In
1ft kBHnc of a Gallla COUDty man and his SOli.
(Sentbtel photo by Jim Freeman)

• d ·
.. p Jb • . d• d . ~
L. ODdOD
00 ,etng rea Ie tOr opentng . ay
·

By Kathryn Crow
Sealbtel Coa '"f lllldeat
Reports on the ·London Pool ·
fund aalllng pojr.un IIIII diC May
.SIIlli~whlch
_..__ .. t npriJmoted:-lhat
•"'~ b ......,I
and ·aIso u..........
.........,.,
f~U.Dlll!illilllhfed a recessed mee:t·
mg of!lyracuse VilJ•cre
... Council
Thursday niaht.
Janice Lawson, clerk-treasurer,
reported that as of ~ay 17,

ments have beCn made for nece8sary repairs and materials. He
reported that the pool is just about
ready for the opening-on ~moria!
matlll....
r r,
ar
D'ICJ(lillif leo~ "" the
progress and items which need 10
be purchased prior to the pool
opening.
Council hired seven lifeguards,
Heather McPhail, Roberta Caldwell, Rod Newsome, Michael
Smith, .Don Schaffer, Courtney
Knapp, and Chris Weaver. Hired as
a lifeguaid on an as-needed bas"
was David Deem.
Several prizes wen: awarded at
.
the May 8 activities and the winaggravaled felony of the first .ners were Don Goodson of Welldegree.
·
ston, a table; Barbara Stahl of
Whaley shot Samuel 0. Hoff- Pomeroy, as ba*et; Donna Peterman, 49, 4350 State Route 325, son of Syracuse, a frog; and DonPatriot, in the head with a small aid Karr of Middleport, a pizza.
·
caliber ha,dgun. Hoffman was
Mayor Pape commented on
b'IIISPOtll!d to Holzer Medical Cen- absenteeism of council members
ter after the shooting and was hos- from meetings. He said that council
pllllized for moie dum two month# members are elected to serve, that
before he died Dec. 1!1.
they should be doing that in fairlk
ness 10 those who elected them and
po~t
serve with them~ and that if they'
1 ·
II
don't want 10 serve, then he will be
glad 10 accept their resignations.
.. Kathryn Crow discussed the
do not want 10 jeopardize."
need
cleanup of the Snowball
AI Bradbl!fY'S residence, 4345 Hilf for
Cemetery
and the mayor
Centntl College Road, police found reponed it will be
taken care of
a.pproximatcly 25 planiS, 11:owing
before
Mefttorial
Day.
hghts, tuned·and other cqu1pmcnt
· George Holman reponed on
used to gmw 'marijuana. In an adjas.
o
me
vandalism taking plac~ al
c~nt house, which is being ,1entcd
some
property
be owns on College
to Harold L. Copley, Jr., 36, police
SlreeL
He
said
the po,....ty is postfound procCSSIIil marijuana.
ed
no
trespassing.
The incidents
No charges have been filed from
will
be
investigated
by police, the
the raid. The case will be sent to
mayor
said.
the Franklin County grand jury.
. Attending lhe meeting were
Bradbury bepn his career with
Mayor
Pape, Clett-l'reasunl' Law·
BEF in 1957 and became an officer
son,
Council
members Crow,
~f the company'in 1963. Accepting
Kenny
Bucldey,
Dennis
Wolfe, attd .
·~teri~ l'l'Sp~nsibilitics as chief
Bill
Roush,
and
a
resident,
Don
fmanc1al off1c:Cir and treasurer is
Schaffer.
Donald J. Radltosti, 38.
$1,191 .27 bad been received
toward lhe opening of London .
Pool. Shd'ISiid that the IOia1 came
from personal donations of
S662.4kb"·~;c.~oas of
3,750, Iiebe
.,.
, and
spaces collections $195, the
fuemen's barbecue of $1,07!1.21,·
and craft sales of $436.65.
Mayor J•es Pape estimaled a
~of about $4,000 after pay-

f;J

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t • H ff . n.,
SUspec In 0 ma
J y
murder Pleads\'gu•Jt

.
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A Columbus woman charged
with the Oct. 13 shooting of her
boyfriend pleaded guilty Thunday
in the Gallia County Court of Common Pleas to volunlary manslaupter.
•
• ·
Diana Whaley, 26, 1169 E. Innis
Street. was sentencid to six 10 25
yeitrs in prison and was fined $250
plus cOurt costs. The charge is an
.

BEF executl·ve ..esa·.glor..s
A Bob Evans Farms executive
who had IJI'arijuana seized from
two of his. houses lasl week has
·decided 10 ~c an early retirement.
the compant announced Thursday.
Columbus area police raided
the homes, owned by Keith P.
Bradbury, 59, chief financial officer and ucasurer for BEF, May 14
and recovered marijuana plants and
equipment.
The release quoted Bmdbury as
saying lhat his "grea~ respect for
t~1s company, its employees and
stockholders will not allow me to
co:&gt;linue my employment with Bob
Evans Farms at this time. The company's positive reputation is one I

=·pool

·\ll;j·ff:'!;
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ca".

The body of Jeffrey L. Halley
was found about seven months
later near the crime scene while the
body of the boy was recovered
about 14 month later in a wooded
area off Sellers Ridge Road several
miles aW!IY·
.
Closing arguments
Prior 10 jurors ~ginning deliberation at 11:22 a.m., atiOmeys for
the st8i.e and Lemasters presented
c~~~ents.
·
lant Prosecutor Charles H.
Knight. saying the ~ggravating factors outweighed the mitigating raetors, recommended jurors request
the death penalty for Lemasters.
Defense anomer Bill McLane
!Old jurors that life m prison would
be the worst possible punishment
for Lemasters.
•
"For someone with (Lemasters')
Jove of the outdoors and the woods,
it would be the worst punishment,"
he saicl
.
.
.·
"The decision to take a man's
life should not be based solely on
tho worst act of his life," he said.
''The rest of his life sbould be taken
into account. Otherwise, why both·

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PARENTS NAME·----------------- :
cnYa~TE~/------~----------~-----

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Meigs seniors honored
during annual assembly

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stalf
Scholarships rotating more than
$40,000 were a~ 10 25 Meigs
High School seniors at the annll81
awards ass~mbly held Thursday
morning at the high school.
The recipients included!
Allison Gannaway, American
Electric Power Co.. $6,000, Ohio
Board of Regents, $4,000, the
Holzer Hospital Science Scholarship, $200, Ohio University Man·
assah Cutler Scholarship, $750. .
Kevin Lambert, American Eleetric Power, $6,000.
Michelle Young, American
Eleetric Power, $6,000.
Randall iohnston, Rodney Paul
Harrison Award, $500; appointment to U.S. Air Force Academy.
Sheryl Thoma, Hocldng College
Principal's Award, amount not
announced.
Nathan Baley, Meigs Student
Council Scholarship, $125, and
Rodney Paul Hamson Award,
$100.
Lori Kelly, Parter Long Memorial Scholarship, and Student Council Scholarship; $125.
Debbie Alkire, Meigs Senior
Class Scholarship, 5200.
Abby Blake, Meigs Local
Teacher'S Associalion, $250, Louise
Morhart Music Grant, $S5().
Tammy Queen, People's Bank,
$500.
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Grande
Town-

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Imboden,
Sayre is music direciOr -Gf
and is assisted by Ralph

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CHILD'S NAMI(S) A A G " ' - - - - - - - - - - - - -

special
worship

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Is Coming
Soon!

\

· Lem·asters gets two life s.entences

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,n.
....
Y_'J'hiWt),
Pene4
1'11111, c..pleit

Inc._,......

3 ~tlo... , 32 ,,... '21 c:.nt.
A lluldmedla

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May· 2~. 1993

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Sherry Jo Johnlon •. ABD~•

Johns!OJt, Keith Anlhony
Jeffrey J: Karr, l.,oreua Jean
Kelly, Gary L~ Kerr, Charles
Willian) King, Misti Dawn King,
ChrisiOPher Ladd Knlgl!t, Yea Ping
· Kong, Kevin Andrew Lambert,
Adam LitUe, Billie Jo Marcinko,
Kelly Michael Marcinko, Jolin
Emmett Martin, Jr., Meljisa Deanna Maynard, Michelle McDaniel,
Coney Cam illli Midkiff, Bryan- ·
S. Molden, Precious Ann Moore;·
(

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.' P.O. BOll 729 - Pomeroy, Ohio 4576!1

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BABYSEN11NEL
Pkturel Mlllt Be In By May 'l7, 1993 .
.· Plcturea can be picked up after June 7tb.

~~~
and Rod-

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Music
ney Paul Harrison, .

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• Dlld row:,~M Blloy, v... C.JIItGIII Deblllt A1ldn. ~
. a.,..., II. . 'tn'r Plb, I a - Olllr, Tolay Qaeell, Vlrtlldi

S. .ler, ud llact row, J....._ Dle~&amp;l, Kevla Lambert, S"teve
Swabel, s::n T-.a, Ca.rhley Midkiff, Mary Grllller, Jay .·
er.=w,
RaecleD Jollllltoll.
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Lorena Oil!r, !\(o!IJ• lligh
School Plculty 5c1101anhlp, $250,
Rodney Paul Harrison Award,
$250, Tecllnolo&amp;Y llducadan Cen- ·
ter, Ccilumbu, ~
• Verna &lt;;:ompaton. Rodney Paul
· Harrison $100. '

Kimberly Fetty, Rodney Paul
Harrison, $100.
Kelly Doidge, Rodney Paul
Harrii!Oil, $100.
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Jay Cremeans, Rodney Paul
Harrison, $100.
Virginia Shuler, Rodney Paul
Harrison, $100.
Kyla Sellers, Rodney Paul Harrison, $250.
Stephanie Price, Rodney Paul
Harrison, 5250.
JoshiJR Dickens, Technology
Education Center, $2,000.
Mike Phillips, Technology Education Center, $500.
Special Recogaitloa
Presented Presidential Academic Fitness Awards by Principal
FenlOn Taylor were Kevin Lambert, Allison Gannaway, Michelle
Young, Debbie Alkire, Randall
Johnston, Rusty Triplett, Lorri
Bumem, Katrina Turner, Linda
Chapman, Lori Kelly, Counney
Midkiff, Sheryl Thoma and Jennifer Chasteen.
Allison Gannaway and Katrina
Turner were .recognized as the outstanding French students having
.mainlained the highest averages for
four years. Others recognized for
academic extellence were Linda
Chapman, Courtney Midkiff,and
Allison Gerlach, !ldvanced American His10ry; Allison Gannaway, ·
ciiiCulus; Jon Vance, introductory
algebta 1'111 2; Chad Burton,
al science; Cindy Stewart, A
II, and James White, Algeln .
Industrial Technology Awardl
went to Tom Cremeans, Thomas
Israel Grimm, Wood

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Commentary
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Page 2-'-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Friday, May 21,1993

0

The Daily Sentinel
or 11IB IIEJ08-~N AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publlsber

C8AllLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Geaenl Manager

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·Military pumping money ·into closed bases

lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
I&amp;VOJBD TO 'I'D JN'I'ZitE81S

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LETIEitS OF OPINION are welcome. they should be less lbao 300
Wdds. All Ieaen ore subjtct to editing and mull! be signed with DEle,
addlaa aod tclepbooe number. No unsigned leu... will be published. Lou...
sboald be ill p&gt;OCl tute, adchssing issues, ml penonalilies.

Some 'don'ts' for
a modern e~onomy
BJ JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business AnalJSt
NEW YORK - It is a sign of the times when people evecywhere are
Idling eacb other how to live within an economy that, for the time being,
bas ccasr:d to grow in the manner to which Americans are accustomed.
Tbr,rc is a poipm:y to it because what used to distinguish AmericaiiS
rrom other people was the expectation that things go1 6etter and better
wilh each new year and each generation.
11 isn't .... E . ily so anymore, and millions of people have graceful1y
a:kjiowledged the bad news and are willing with almost no urging to
share their new, bardnosed philsophy of survival. These arc times of
denial
Hcanl se-.1 times in recent months - it may be the best example of
the gmrc: - is the suggestion lhat no longer shOald you ·look at your
home • an investme.u but instead should be llwlkfulto have a roof over
yours-!.
.
.
Here are a few others, overheanl on trams and planes, selected at random from coovcrsations, and culled from financial advisories, exhortations, ... lbOII&amp;, sidwalk pn:achings and myriad other sources.
•
-Doo't believe in political promises. Unlike the pizza parlo(s free
delivery, political prorruscs may be delivered at your expense.
.
-Doo't view low interest rates as an inducement to borrow. Think
insad or them as a way 10 reduce your existing debt faster. Millions are
doin iL
·
...!noo•t believe you're impressing anyone with conspicuous consumption, which includes showboating the lalest fad. Understand instead that
people mi(h! think you're a fool for wasting your mooey.
-Doo t be cmbsrrassed about buying at discount houses and thrift
shops, or we.ing secoOcls. Brag about it instead. It makes people think
you're so well off you don't need to impress.
·
-'-Don't put up with hoosehold clutter anymore. Hold a tag sale, as
. - y fwnilics do, and then pay down your bills with the income. It's a
. win, win sihu!rion.
- Doo't live l""espotmorJSibly. Personal preventive medicine can save big
. bills 011 bealth care. Besides, it's your responsibility, not Y.Dur insurance
Cllll~y·s or your doctor's.
·
·
-Doo"t waste your money on short-term buying and selling of securities. Sa~ the rommissions and taxes by buying smart and then holding.
And, tbc reccnl suggests, doing better financially toil.
-'-Don't always buy the costliest brands at the grocery store. Test your
pa1a1c from time to time. Maybe it isn't as reftned as you Wn1c it is. Hard
to admit. but maybe you ~n't a gounnet; maybe you can't 1aste the differena:.
-Doo't automalically go to the big league baseball park. Save your
IIIOIICY ud be more involved allellding the local sandlot or little league
games, or by adopting whatever minor league club is in your area. A lot
less hassle, 100.
.'
-Doo't trade in your car just because it needs a new set of tires. Buy
tires in*M, lD\ polish the metal yourself. Cars today last a lot longer
than those made just 10 years ago.
. -. Doo't take the advice of those who want 10 tell you how to spend
your DIOIII!y. Do a little homework, apply common sense and handle
fi•• es yourself. You may be your QWn best fiduciary. It's really your
n: spousibility.
....:non•t worry so muc.h about the national or world economy. Worry
instead about your own economy, about which, perhaps, and to some
small atent, you may be able to do something.
-DoD't keep telling yOII'SClf things will be better tomorrow, only to
be disappninled. Maybe they will, maybe not. Entenain no great expecl&amp;tions Md you might be pleasantly surprised.
And, incidellb)Jy, doo't forget to remain positive.

WASHING~N- When the
military of the world's last ~­
ing superpower goes on a diet,
there is still room for some splurging in the name or national security;
Republican senators torpedc?ed
President Clinton's ccononuc Slim·
ulus package amid complaints lhat
much of tlie money would have
~rone to iMer cities for amenities
such as swimming pools and shopping f.:ilities. But four years earlier, no one in Congress raised an
eycbmw when the U.S. Army spent
more than $300,000 to build a new
physical fitness center at its
Cameron Station facility in Virginia, seven months after tbe Pen·
ligon had selected it as one of the
fust bases to close as part of liase

realignmcnL

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Cameron Station is by no means
ail exception. While comlliunities
across the country have beell dev·
astated by defense cutbacks, some
m.ilitary installations have lll8llltgedo
to add fat at the very moment lhat
the military is trying•to tighten ita
belt. In most cases, funds that
Congress appropriated for closure
and realignment have been put to
use. But a series of in~al

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audits by the Department of . maintain telephone Units that saved about $6.5 million.
- Auditon also discovered tl)at
Defense Inspector General, nobody used. Five of the cireuits in
reviewed by our associate Jan question were still up and. running 10 projects being developed by the
Moller, reveal an agency where when the auditors arrived in Jan- Army and Air Force Exchange Seruar): 1992, and were not shut orr vice and. the DcfCDJC Commilsary
unlil the While House Communica- Agency were "IIOl fully relalcclto
tions Agency was told about the realignmenl" This included some
mbbap.
"get well" requirements costing
· - At Naval Statioo Pearl Har- about $1l.l million to improve
bor in Hawaii, constructioo crews existing facilities. Included in these
continued working oo new facili- "get well " funds was a request
ties to bomeport the battleship uss from Cannon Air Force Base for
Missouri, even after the Navy had alteratioos to their dining f.:ilitie!l.
taxpayer dollars are still bciing mis- decided to decommission the ship. The auditors qucstiooed the funds
spent in ways that range .from The Navy awardetl contracts to after leaming that Cannon's f.:ili- .
wasteful to whimsical:
build pier and shore improvements tics were QDiy 10 years old and had
- At Pease Air Force Base in for the Missouri in September receiltly been furnished wilh severNew. Hampshire, which closed in 1990, Two mooths later, the Navy al new amenities including ceiling
March 1991, auditors discovered decided to mothball the ship, yet lighting fixtures, a delicatessen
that tclecommupications ,lines · Pearl Harbor offie~ said the coo- a balray. .
between the base imd former Presi- struction projects were already far
APES officials also requested
dent Bush's SllllliDer ·home in Ken- enough along that to cancel them ·more lhan $4.6 million in buo clonebunlcport, Maine, were still up . would have been an even greater sure funds for "special use SJIIICC"
and running long after they were waste of money. Auditors deter- that included enclosed shopping
needed. These were not just any mined that the Navy could have . malls, fast-food outlets and
· phone lines - they were lines pro- saved $53 million if the projects mechanic:al space.
vided to the president by the were delayed long eoougb to learn
- At Naval Station Pugct
Defense Communications.System. the fate of the "USS Missouri, Sound, at Sands Point, Wash.,
In a new variation on the $600 toi- which hadn't been finaliud when which was recommended in 1988
let seat, some of these lines cost the construction contracts were for partial closure, ancl was later
$10,000 per year just to operate. handed down. Instead, the Navy closed completely, taxpayers COO• ·
The auditors estimate lhat taxpay- canceled three smaller contracts tinued to pay for repairs to the
ers paid a total of $151,000 to related to the Missouri, which focility long after its fate had been .
sealed. When auditors arrived in
Au~usa 1990, they focused oo 39
mamtenance projects costing lbout
$10,6 million, Md 111011 diacovered
that 26 or lbosc were noo-tial
Two years after lhc facility was
scheduled for clolllre, COIIIIn!C1ion
crews were repl.:ing cloors 10d
winclows at an cstinlated cost of
$822,000, ud plumbin&amp; and electrical wtd: was being pea baled to
the tunc of $804,000, when lbout
$100,000 would have sufficed if
Oilly basic repairs were made.
IJy the cad of 1993, the Pen' lagon will have spent more - $1 .
' billion shutting down operatioos
lllOIIId the coonlry. The good news
is that this year will be the ftrst
. · time the mililary will .:tually save
more money from closure tlwt lbcy
spend to mate it happen - a IOial
of $65.9 million. Stili, filibuslerillg
lawmalccrs might want to look at
the base. closlire account the next
time thcl get the urge to mate a
politica issue ou.t of tsxpayer·
sponsored shopping m811s.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Fe.ature Syndicate, Inc•

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

Spring: It's time to take out the· trash
.....

It's spring, and time 10 clean out welfare office.
so now the maggots are crawling Reagan?
Think of it! Every pen11iless all over his corpse.
.
.
bum, alcoholic, drug addict, prCJ·
Let m~ then, polish my credenA simple citizen's appeal to
lt sure didn't take the House nant teen-ager and mental case m tials for political incorrectness by President Clinton: Please stop
Ways and Means Committee loog
saying that I regarded J. Edgar returning the ~Illes of ~ Marines
to pass Mr. Clinton's tax pac:kage,
Hoover as a patriot and a great and other military types who stsnd
did it? Once again the media hailed
public servant while be was alive guard at various ceremonial locait as an heroic achievement, but the country will be encoursged Ill - and I still do.
tions. To be sore, Presidents Reagetting the Democrats to raise your qualify for the franchise. Why
gan and Bush did it, but few of
taxes is about as hard as persuading don't they just pass a law providing .
At least you can say this for their predecessor• followed the
a dog 10 spend a night in a blllclter that e.:h zombte will automatically Justin Kaplan, the edin of the new practice, and in any case you, as
shop. So batten dowlf the hatches, cB'It a ballot for the straight Demo- CJdition of "IJartlcttls Familiar COIIIIIIMidel in chief, can make any
America: Your taxes are going to . cratic ticket in the 11ext general Quotations": Unlike the maggots rules you want to.
go up $250 billioo in the next five election every time be or she picks mentioned above, he didn't wait
I should think that your own
years.
,
up a welfare check?
until his victim was dead before finely honed political instincts
And that, of course, is before
• •"
dumping 011 him. Mr. Kaplan care- would warn you against saluting,
Ms. Rodham Clinton tells you what
A maggot, of course, is a worm- . fully excluded from the book every · Every time you do it, you remind
her health care plan will cost you. like insect larva that is found in · memorable stalement Ronald Rea- millioos of Americans like me of
What all this will do to the econo- 1corpses. So it seems a particularly gan ever made, and included only a your own SCI]ICntinc Path throuah
my doesn't bear thinking abouL good name for the miscellaneous handful that he apparendy calculat- the draft laws of the late 1960s.
But hey, we voted for change, writers who are currently telling ed would do Mr. Reagan more You simply haven't earned the
didn't we?
lies about the late J. Edgar Hoover. hann than Jlood. Then, when some- right 10 reium the salule of a UnitAs long as Mr. Hoover was alive, body nouced this, he suavely ed States Marine.
.
.
Just in case the present elec- these mag~ots gave him a wide responded, in effect, "So what?
torate should prove insufficiently berth - not (ccrtsinly in most I'm anti-R~."
Finally, lest it dilillppear unrcgrateful for all this, Congress cases) became be had 111ylhing oo . So, Mr. Kaplan, you have man- nuRed, this dt.Sciiplion, by CBS
recently voted to enlarge it by them personally, but because be aged to corrupt a fine and impartial correspondent on March 13, of
many millions of people. Every was prepared to defend his honor tradition wilh your irrelevant bias- some anti-Ycltsin protesters in
welfare recipie~t i~ America. will and widely admired by the Ameri- es. You pompous little humbug, do MOScow: '''Ibosc loyal to the right·
henceforth be mv1ted to regtster can people. But, under our law,lhc you senously supfK!SC anybody v.:infti;:SC:·..waving red Commuwhen be or she shows up at the dead have no right to sue for libel; cares what you thtnk of Ronald mst
....

a few odds and ends.

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William A. Rusher

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Berry's World

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Is the 'Suicide Doctor' do.ing good·?

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What's behind the controversy hell who has committed suicide.
Now an even more ethically
over Dr. J.:k Kevorldan?
Known as the "Suicide Doc- complicated question is starting to
tor," he is qusading for the right to be asked.
be of help to terminally ill people
who decide to die.
According to one estimate, nine
out of 10 Americans believe that
people with fatal illnesses should at
least have the right to have alllifeCan suicide be rc:sorted·to with
su:Maining devices removed froin moral impunity by someone not
their bodies.
suffering from a fatal illness - a
Survey data also indicate that pmcn who wants to take leave of
about half of all Americans feel his earthly cltistence to 1JC1 an early
that, in the case of a falal illncss, a start on life in heaven?
doctor should be allowed to actualThis may be somebody burly he!p tlie patient end his or her dencd with loneliness, poverty or
own life.
deep unhappiness of another sort,
Slightly less than 40 pen:ent say or one who can foresee the terrors
that those people with a falal illness of old 111e coming inexorably over
should be allowed to take their.own the horizon.
lives.
. To ptJt it another "'!!Y· can sui·
'-:----i~Wl'iailaf1ayirrwaS1rnar/Oc'Kei1,1mulficulli7fe,1J.ip0-:-'-l-i;.1~~~Fe:have-risernlramal- &lt;:ide- once~- die unlle:
ically
euthanasia (the liever' s ticket to hell - be the
tifically coirrel;te,rJ, downsizecf and outpla,ced."
word !lle8lls
.
move- believer's short-cut to heaven?
ment bcgaiJ in tile
That question ftrst came up in
Today the ~hur&lt;:h no longer 1975 when a prominent ~laJYmaa
automatically
.a Jlcrson to - and educator. committed siilcide
• .

along with his wife. Henry Pitney in a noning home?"
Van Duscn was said by Time~Their declining health, they
azine to be ''one of the worl\1 s added, would no longer allow them
preeminent Presbyterians." He was to "do what we want to do."
~resident of' Union Theological •
The 77-yar-old V111 Ilu8en IIIII
. Seminary in New Yod[ from 1945 suffered a lllnlb live yean before.
to 1963.
.
·
.
T1iis left him with a severe speech
The Van Duscns believed that impediment, but he wu able to
following their suicide tbey would walk with a cane IRd had. .litUe
"enter together the lftalit'e which · pain. His wife, 80, suffered ~
is the cornerstone of the Christian crippling arthritis, but she bad
faith."
made a trip to Engl10d a 111011th
Their death note before she tom her life.
before both tom a lethal
Their decilion 10 end their !iva
of sleeping piiiJ - c•nsed thcolo- together wu not made therefore
gians and others to•pondcr.
under the CJdiQM; coodition of •·
• 'Nowadays it Is difficult to minal illness. Neither was it thc
die,'' they wrote.
·
result of mental illness. Friencb
This WM almost surely a refer- 1aid both Van Du1ens were of
ence 10 niodem medicine ibat often· IOUIId milld umil the and.
teepe people alive into old uelllll ·
·Another ltatement iit the Van
infirmity_.
.__ _ _ 1 ~DUcn•m.:cideiiOIII. turned,, '."'L'..,·"''·- Could the Van Dusens have prophetic: It 1111~. \\;'e
.
beell implying dial bec••sc of Died- way we arc taking will bec:omte
,' ical acicnce
. sonrc ~
- , are living ·
us--!,and .:ceptable u lhil .
put lh time all lttea io them b
,...n pass
Ood? .;. a n . sudlas
What dus seemed to Imply __
an attempt, tbarefore, to adjult ~_!or.::.e:!le WI!Old come to
11
thil)gl
.:cordin.lo
the
.lliPPOsed
•...-u"'
811( Mlllll . . . . .
divine plan - m which death's to~ lidfellua. !lllhl
liiW
role is lhat of a welcome viaitor tllllll will not loifcit onc'a claim
Louis' ~ near Paris, compieting the fnt solo aiJpa flight IICI'OU the who ·will forestall tbe pains often oo God'• ~ or one'• place in ·
Atlantic Ocean.
. . .
. attendant upon old~ .
heaven.
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On thlsllatc:
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For ...___..,""•
said, "We
G-1' 1'111- llaiJIIdicat· ..
In 1~2. S)l$lish exp~ Hernando de SolO died while SCM'Cblng for are bo;hi.:=euinaly weak and eel writer ror Ntwlplper E•tergold along the ~ssippi River.
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un~ll ~who wonld WMitto die . prlle ~....,.,

George R. Plagenz

Today_.·n hi.story.____~---------.,....;.--:'_____,;__
J.l

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BJ 'I'M A..ciated Pras 1
Toc_lay ii Friday! May 21, tbe 14lst day of 1993. There arc 224 days
Jdt in theToday'~flliblilllil in Hillory:
.
·
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·
011 May_2~&amp;1, Clllr~ A. pndhergh landed his "Spirit of SL

OUTSTANDING JUNIORS· Annully the
outstandiog girl aod the 011tstandlng boJ In ~
'junior class are presented tile Danforth Leadership Awards which inc~ • certificate and

ana

wrl!: J:

=
die.; ·

a

book "' Dare Yo•"· The 1993 reclpleats pic·
lured here as they received their awuds from •
Fston Taylor, prlllclpal, •t Thunday's awards
assembly, •re M.rlo ~lte and JUDD Miller.

-____;.,Area ·deaths-Luc1'Ue Cundiff
Lucille Cundiff, 61, of Middleport, died Thursday, May 20, 1993

OUTSTANDING ATHLETE AWARDSReeopized for their excellent In athletiC eodea•·
ors were these seniors of Mei11 Hilh School,

,.._ . . left, JoJ O'llrim,l..ori Kelly, ~I
Tur!lft', ViKat Reliller, M41 Ken. La.llert.
Th •wards -re •rese•ted at T••rsda;r's
awards-IIIJ 81 Meip...._

Meigs seniors..._c_on_ti_nu_ed_tro_m...:p...:ag:...eI_ __ EMS responds
awards; Katrina Turner and Steve Edmonds, Carrie Bartels, Tessie
Swau.el, Scholar Athlete Awards.
Bradshaw, Yea-Ping Kong, Kelly to four calls
Named OW A (Occupational Satterfield, Jodi Imboden, Yvette
Work) student of the year was Young, and Melissa Sissoo.
for assistance
Butth Bradshaw, with Gary Kerr
English III:. All A's, Arnie

Weather
S.*4'-C iaiOIUo
Toni&amp;ht. decn:asing clondincss
' Low in the Iowa 40s. Light west
winds. Satunllly, mostly sunny.
Hi2h 10 to 71.
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atCin:lcvillc.
~,
Units of the Meigs County
Born on Feb. 22, 1932 at taking the work study program Elliott, Tracy Fife, Marlo White,
Stmday, a c:hanc:e of showers.
Louisa, Ky. she was the daughter award. Nathan Brown was Joy O'Brien, Jason Witherell, Matt Emergency Medical Service
Lows
in die 40s, HiPs in the 70s.
of the late Eskill and Vina Jordan announced as the Meigs football Clark, Danielle. Crow, Lorri responded to four calls for assistance
ovcmighL
MoadaJ,
I cbance or showers
Adams, She was a housewife and new pl~jyer of the year by Cosch Bumem, Meron Orueser, Denise
Unitsrcspondipgwere:
and
tbuderstorms.
Lows in the ,
belonged to .the Hobson Cbilll:h of Staggs; Lori Kelly and Kevin Lalli- Shenefield and Jeremy Grimm.
THURSDAY - 10:04 a.m. 50s. HiPs ill the 70s. Tuesday, a
Christ in Christian Union.
ben as the Army Reserve National
Typing Awards: A average all
Middlepon to State Route 7 for chance of slaowers and thunderSbe Is survived by her husband, · Scholar Athletic Award.
year, Carrie Williams, Typing I.
Robcn Cundiff, Jr., Middlepon; . American Legion Americanism
Personal Typing: A average, Danny Ruggles who was treated S11l1111S. Lows in die 50s. Highs 6S
lhrcc daughters, Linda Dickens of Awards were presented to Nathan Lisa Tatterson, Yvette Young, but not transported; 2:02 p.m. Rut- tn75.
Pomeroy; and Robin Browning and , Baloy and Courtney Midkiff, bolh Adam Sheets, Edena Russell, Shilo land to Salem Center for Violet JarPANSY FRY
Roxan Cundiff, both of Columbus; recetving savings bonds; Allison Moore, Beclcy Meier, Heidi Hurt- rell who ...,.. 11ansponed to VCII:rfive sons, Rick Hamilton of Gannaway and Kevin Lambert man, Jarrod Folmer, Elizabeth ans Mcmmal Hcilpila1; 10:S3 p.m.
&lt;UVELAND (AP)- Hae arc
p
F
Columbus; Garland Cundiff of received Air Force math -and sci- Downie, Jason Taylor, Sarah Middleport to South Fowlh Stmc:t
ansy ry
Johnstown; Douglas E. Cundiff, encc awards; Michelle Young, an Anderson, Robby Baker, Kelly for Ruth Anderson who was hm- Thanday lliJht's Ohio Lottery
· Pansy Mlwic Fry, 89, of New Circleville, Randy Cundiff and award for maintaining the highest GIUeser, Sherry Ramsburg, Joey ported to Holzer Medical Center. scltc: •il •rr
Pidr 3 Ni•tlit;n 3-:Hi
Haven, died Thursday, May 20, Emmanuel Cundiff, both of Mid- average in ~h; and Lori Kelly, Ruchti, Michelle Shuler, .and south fourth ruth andc:noo bmc
Pidr 4 ...11. . .*5 5-2-2-6
FRIDAY 12:48 a.m.
1993, at Pleasant Valley HospilaJ.
dleport; four sisters, Mary Adams, the outstandmg senior selected by Stephanie ThOmas.
The Ohio Lottery will pay
Born May 20, 1904 in Runnel!, Bernice Johnson Betty Johnson, theNatiooalHooorSociety.
Marauder Yearbook Awards:· Pomeroy to Stste Route 681 for
WV, she was a daughter of the lale and Carlene Marcum, all ofColumThe Danforth Awards tradition- Stephanie Price, editor, Mary Elmer !3ailey who was I1'IIIISjJOital $392.6l9to winws in lbunday's
Pick 3 Nwnbcas dlily poe.
John and Sarah A. (Roush) bus; a brother, Elmo Adams, ally presented to the outstanding Grueser and Becky Meier, assistant toVMH.
Sales for the game tolalcd
Goodnite. She was a bOIIICII18kc:r Galion; 16 grandchildren, and one b_oy and girl in the junior class editors; Lisa Tatterson, Yvette
Meigs
announcements
$1,294,404.
and was a member of the F"lrst great-grandchild.
went to Marlo White and Jason Young, Lisa Yeauger, and Amanda
In the other daily pmc, Pid 4
CburchofGodofNcwHaven.
Besides her parents, she was Miller.
Well,pro&lt;luction.
Senkelact
Num~
players wagered
She WM also preceded in death preceded in deatll by an infant
Other Awards
Marketing Edocation:·Kim ereFaith Full Gospel Church of
$275,112.50
and will share
by her husband, Jess R, Fry; &amp;ve . granddaughter, Magan Cundiff.
Excelling .:ldemically in their means, student of the year; John' Long Bouan will have a P.'*'hing
$90,900.
sisters and four brotbcn.
Funeral services will be held at respective subjects and presented Martin, most dedicated student.
and singing services Friday ai7 .
Survivors include two sons and a 11 a.m: Monday at the Ewing awards were the following stuSeniors recognized for perfect ·p.m. Pastor Steve .Reed invilcs the . ne jackpot for Saturday's
daugbler-in-Jaw, Hairy R. Fry of Funeral Home, Pomeroy. The Rev. dents:
attendance were· Nathan Baloy. public. Fcllowship will follow.
Louo clrawinJ is WU1h $4
New Haven and Harold L. a
Theron .Durham will officiate and
Sophomore English: Heidi Jennifer Barnhan, John Bentley,
Mary E. Fry of New Haven; a 'sis- burial will be in Gravel Hill Ccme- Huffman, Mandy Jones, Jason Tay- Tessie Bradshaw, and Jay CreEastern OAPSE 1o 11eet
ler, Sibyl M.:Knight of Leon; two
tery, Chcishire. Friends may call lor, Shilo Moore, Joey ~Jarrett, and means.
Eastern Local OAPSE Chapcer
pldsons, Larry J. and 0w1enc Sunday,2to4and7to9p.m.
J.errod Folmer, with Lisa Yeauger,
Special Recognition
will meet Monday • 7:30 .p.m. a
Fry and Melvin R. and Mary c.
Walt Williams, Sarah Anderson,
As a special feature of the the high school cafctaia,
Fry, all of New ltaven; two greatAdam Sheets, Crystal Vaughn, assembly, the National Honor Sodgranddaughters,
Melanie · and • Charles Dill ·' ...,_ ,
Kim Janey. and Kd'lly Grueser, et)' hootnd several retiring te.:h·
· AA
110.The l'omc:my Group of AA will
Andrea Fly both of New Haven.
Charles Gil)lcrt Dill, 74, of receiving all A's.
ers, Jack Slavin, Rita Slavin ,
Savice will bell 1 p.m. Satur- Pomeroy, died Thursday, May 20.
SeniorEnJiish: Linda Chapman, Charles Chancey, Everett Hoi- meet Thursday ll 7 p.m. a 5acRd
day, May 22, at the ·Foglesong 1993 at Veterans Memorial Hospi- Courtney Mtdkiff, Randall John- comb, and Earl Young. They also Heart Cathohc Church. Call 992F,uneral Home · wilh Rev. Dave 181.
. . Ston, and Jennifer Chasteen with ali honored Dana Kcssingef, longtime 5763 for inforination.
COLONY THEATRE
F'aelds ofliciating. Burial will be in ' Born in Pomeroy on July 25, A avera.f1J: all four ears, and te.:ber at the school who has been
All lHIU'ftUa.
Banquet lilted .
Griham Cemetery.
1918, be was the·son of the late Dcb~iC&lt;_
· , 'AIIisoo annaway,
by the Meigs County School
a&amp;.• SlAY
The Meigs Higl:t School spring
VISiting hours will be. tonight , John and Grace·Bumgardner Dill. Kevm Lambert and Michelle
as secondary supe~.
. sports ~uct w!ll be Monday a
(FridaY) from 6-9 p.m. at the , He was a former coal miner and Young.
6:30p.m. ID the high achool c:aCc.cfuneril home.
worked for the Parkersburg
Computer awards: Brian Smith
GROUNDHOG DAY P.G.
ria.
Meat,
rolls
and
drink
will
be
O..Ea 'c.._7:3D
,Foundry Rig and Reel, the Ohio and Jerod Cook.
li'
provided. BrinJ two dishes - •
Pallet Co. and Kelly Jeep Manufac- · Nursing Assistant students: len" I , Sl.a
dessert and a vegetable.
turing in Middleport. He was a vet- nifer Chasteen, Kelly Phelps, Beth
eran of World Warn, a member of Roush "and Virginia Shuler.
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, AmeriChemistry: Jasof) Witherell,
Am Ele Power.................... 34
can
Legion,
the
Rock
Springs
UnitMatthew
Clarl;, and Tmcy Fife.
-~l~id OiL ........................25
SPRINfi VAll£¥ Cl"fMA ed
Mcthpdilt
Church
and
the
Big
Home
Economics: Sherry SedAT&amp;T................................60
446 4\l4
'
Bend C. B. Club.
don, Tammy Queen, Lorena Oiler, .
Bank One...........................53 118
He is survived by his wife of 47 Beclcy Games, and Angie Searles.
Bob Evans ......................... 17 7,18
l t.'"" •'-•'£
-ors
Studies Awards of Dis"IIUit't:l" . l:r.tll
,_
• u.-.
~~ Miller Dill• pomcroy;
. Basic
,
Charming Shop.................. 17 1,18
three daughters 10d sons-in-law, tinction: Vema Compston, Russell
DAVE
Chmp Industries................. l4
City Holding. ~ .................... 25
Sharon and Georle Folmer, Jr.,
7:..... , .........
Linda and. Bobby Foster. Sr., Cathy
'"''-~­
Fcdeial MoKU1....................21
. , . J:JII
and Robert Scarberry, all of
VEJ'ERANS MEMORIAL
Goodyear TkR ..................39
Pomeroy; a: son and daughter-hiThursday admissions _ Ben
Lands End ..........................31
Limited Inc....................... 24
law, Charles Richard and Roberta Metz, Portland; Helen Jeffers
Dill, Pome!!Jr.; three brodtcrs, Carl Syrac11se,
'
Multimedia Inc..................35
"Hookie" Dtll of Pomeroy, John
Thursday discharges _ David
Point Bancorp... :................l4
Rax Restaurant .................. 1,18
Dil~ oJ Michi$80, and Bill Dill of Mann, Pomeroy; Lcn11 Carpenter,
SIX sisters, Kathryn Rutland; Donald Hoyd, RuUand·
Mansfield;
Reliance Electric................ 20
"Sis" Evans, Mary Starcher, Paul Card, Racine; Dixie Slaughter'
·Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 17
MICHELLE YOUNG
Frances Carleton, -and Esther Mason w v
'
Shoney 's Inc......................20
"Rckie" Dill, all of Pomeroy; and HOLZER ~EDICAL CENTER
Star Bank .......................... .35
Faye Wa15on of Reedsville, and
May 20 diacb•raes _ Barbara Yc.&gt;ung named MHS
Wendy Int'L ..................... )3
Rctta Arnett, of Mansfield, 11 Zerkle, Norma Trapn, Helen See- salutatorian
Worthington Ind................27
grandchildren,
grcat-griRd1ey, Don Russell • William"
·· vamey,
"Stock reports are the 10
-• . twoand
h
Michelle Young, daughter of
sons, scv.... meccs
ncp ews.
Brenda McDaniel, William Smith,
a.m. quotes pro•ided
Diane
Young, Pomeroy, and Ron
. Besides his parents he. was pre- S h 1
S · h W d 11 F.
Kemper Sec:ur1ties, Inc.,
ceded
in
death
by
a.
brother.
er
ynn
mu
•
en
e
tlzYoung,
Paducah, Ky .. has been
Gallipolis.
EIIsworlh Dill.
patrtck, Margaret Kight, Robert named salutatorian of the 1993
Funeral services will be held Metz, Lyronda Delgado, Mrs. Meigs High School graduating
Sunday at 2 p :m. at the Fisher Richard Hill and daughter, Linda class, Fenton Taylor, principal,
Funeral Home in Middleport. The Markin, Pamela Hager, Cllristopber announced ~y .
The Daily Sentinel ...
Rev. R. Keith llader will officiale Jeffers and Kimbrafynn Holcomb.
. Michelle ranked third in the
(USPS J1S.880)
and burial will be in the Rock
MaJ 20 birth - Mr. and Mrs. class with a cumulative grade point .
Published every afternOOn, Monday
Springs Cemetery. Friends may WilliamPniter,soo, Middlep;nt
avt~rage of 3.~57. She plans t'o
lh .... h Fridl!y, 111 Cpurt St., Pomeroy,
attend
Ohio State Universitf and"
Ohio by Lhe Ohio Va11ey Publilhint
call !It the funeral home Saturday 2 · Correction
to4and7to9p.m.
.
Compuy!MuUhnedia Inc., ~.
major in ~-veterinary medicliiC.
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2158. Second clAM
The bond for Brendli Sue Fry,
She is a member of the National
"'"""' ""id at Poll!01VY, Ohio:
43, of MiddlqJort, charged with thC Honor Society, French Club and
Member: Th' Altociated Preis, and &amp;he
attempted murder of her former French Hooor Society, has been a
Ohio N'ewap~~~ =-&amp;ion, Nation.ll
husband, Mike Hubbard, was set at cheerleader and played in !he band
1
Charity Gilmore
•
Adverti1ing
tiYfl, Branham
Newspaper Salee, 738 Third Avenue,
·$1.00,000 with 10 percent cash for four years; and was on the quiz
Charity
Sheana
Gilmore,
two
New York, New York 1001'7.
monlhs, Albany, died early Thurs- allawed, not $10,000 as was earlier team one year~
In both 1991 111d 1992 she was
POSTMASTER: Send add..O. ~ha- to
day
momins, May 20, 1993, at ICported.
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Coart St.,
The amount was set during a selected best over-all cheerleader,
Memorial
Hospital.
She
Veterans
Poouomy, PHiD-16769 ..
was the daughter of Don•ld preliminary hearing before County serving two years as captain of the .
sllii8CIUPTION RATIII
Matthew
Gilmore and Linda Gail Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien team, was named 1p the Tri-Vallcy
· ..,. Carrter or Motor Ro'!lte
WyanL
.
Wednesday. At that tlrilc Fry was Conference All-Academic Team
One Week..........:........................... ,.... Jt.60
One Mooth.................................... ..... l8.915
bound over to the jurisdiction of lhrcc years, and recdved Academic
She
was
born
in
Athens
on
()ne Year....................................... -.... m.ao
Meigs County Common Pleas Excellence Awards in 1991 and
·
SINGLE-COPY
March 27, 1993.
COUll
.
PRic&amp;
1993.
Bcsideabcr
is ·survived
and

Lottery results

!'lea..

..-e

0

hircdBoard.

•

"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'!!!!!lll!!l .

Stocks

I

f

·-·
·
--.
..

Hospital news

COMPLETE EYE
. EXAMINATION.
FOR$29

-In celebration of

NATIONAL SIGHT WE~~~
May 24 through May 28, 1993

at

No aublcriptioN by ,.._n permitted in
~·· whent home carrier sef"'kre Is
available.
·
1
Mall 8•blcrfptl:ona

laoldo Molp Coaaq
13 Weeb......................................... f2U4
26 w..u......................................... $43.16

12 w..u.........................................SI4.18

'

18 -

O.talda Jl•lp Co•ntF

. .................. ,..........,. ........... 121.40

26-kl.......................................... f46.110

12 weelui.............•....... _..:.....•,..:,,..:.SSS.40

\

cousins. .
Services will be Saturday II 2
p.m. at Bigony-Jordan Func{al
Home ia Albany with Rev. Jim
~eddoa offlclating. aur1a1 will be
ID Weill Cemctaj. . .
.
Friends may call at the funeral.
home lhl• e¥ellina (Friday) from 7·
9p.m.

·'

Eye Department
Call the Ophthllllliology DqHII1llrent
at 446-5411 for IIIJ llppOiltllllmt
(,e,lio• dUsufwdw• '-/fl'iaJ

r

�--~~---~

Sports

The Daily Sentinel_
Friday, May 21, 1993

Page 4

In eight-inning affair, ·

·.

Pomeroy-Miclclleport, Ohio

In the third, Southern got one
Dill was the winning pitcher in while walking 11.
runners on first lil!d second, but pointment To hang in there-aiirinst
a
pitcher
of
this
caliber
has
to
give
run
back wben Jeremy Hill walked, relief of Orueser. They combined Inning totals
Trimble hurler Justin Day, who is
being scouted by several major us confidence. I doubt if we'll face Billy Jones reached 011 a ftclder's for 11 strikeouts and six walks. Trimble: 130-100-10 = 6-8-4
league baseball teams and has a pitcher that throws any harder choice, stole secaid and scoml 011 Day fanned 16 in suffering the loss Southern: 001-023-01 = 7-8·3
a big RBI single by Jeremy
already signed with Ohio Universi- than Day."
...
Rough
start
Northup.
' "
ty, struck out the next Southern
p•
Trimble was th~ visitor on the
In the fourthgo-round Trimble
batter. The hard throwing Day's
last tally ~as his 16th strikeout of scoreboard and batted fttSt. Rusty scored another tally to put the _____.,..._ _ _ _ _.....,_
,Richards led off with a walk, score at 5-1. Richards smgled, ·
the day.
' As anxiety built in both dug- .advanced on .a wild pitch from advanced on a passed ball'and wild
'·'
'
outs Williams advanced to third on starter Andf Grueser, tlien was pitch, then scored when Southern
a passed ball, however, Northup balked to thud. Pay lined a hard made a throwing error on Day's
grounder.
,
was Wlilble to advance, leaving the single to SCO(C the game's first run.
Southern's
Billy
Jones
walked
threatened
in the
Southern
possibility of a double play.
·
to
lead
off
the
game.
Southern
tried
.
fourth,
loadit~g
the
bases
on an
Dill quickly dropped to 1-2 in
the
"bunt
and
run,"
but
Jones
was
error
and
two
walks
that
allowed
the count, casting an ere of uncertainty on the Southern cast mem- called out on a close play at second Eric Jones, Andy Fields and Hill to
bers. Dill drove Day's next pitch, and the next two Southern batters reach with two out Both of those
however, to deep center field, went down swinging at a blazing outs came on strikeouts, then the
last out of tile frame came on
allowing Williams to tag and come Day fast billL
Chad Hook led off Trimble's another strikeout at the hands of
home well ahead of the throw.
Dill's sacrifice fly and Williams second by walking. Tom Hardy Day. ·
"At ·this point we were somevictory jaunt s.ecured the district singled, and Ryan Stinson singled
championship for the joyous Tor- to load the bases. Reuben KiUle hit what frustmted," said Winebrenner.
nadoes, who stormed the field and a sacrifice fly, then Richards dou- ".We .had some scpring oPJKlrlllnitackled Dill, who had come bled home two more runs with a ues and didn't take advantage of
double to malce the score 4-0. ·
them, while Day seemed to be getthrou~h in the clutch.
·
The next batler walked, forcing ting stronger."
Wtnebrenner said, "It was a
Southern got a mental boost in
great game. The kids really played Winebremer to make a nip to the
hard to get back into the game. I mound and a call for Dill to extin- the ftfth when Dill struck out the
had some concerns when we went guish the flames. Dill got a ground side.
The Tornadoes came right back
down 4-0 early in the game, but we OUt to end the inning.
Dill and Kyle Wickline each to score two runs as Williants sinplayed the game we had to and
walked in the second, but were gled, an SHS batter fanned, Dill
made the key plays at the end."
"Justin Day is a fine pitcher. He sandwiched around the three Ks walked and Robert Reiber hit a
fans 16 of our batters and stiU gets Day put in the book to retire the deep drive to left that went off the
left fielder's glove to score two
beat...that has to be a big disap- side.
runs to make the scare 5-3.
A hit batsman put one Trimble
'.,.,.
runner on in the sixth, but Dill
reitred the side with ease.
Southern came back with a big
WAITS FOR PITCH - Southern hitter Kyle Wickline waits ror
pinch hit single by Roben Kimes.
a Jutill Day plkh durillg Tbunday's Division IV district title game ·
Hill reached on a single to right,
agalast Trlmblt It Jackson High School, where tbe Tornadoes won •
but was thrown out at second, then
7-ti In eight bmlnp.
· ·
:
Billy Jones doubi~ to right to put
runners at second and third.
Williams singled home one run
then Roben Reiber brought hom~
,the tying and go-ahead runs with a
, single to make the score 6-5.
In the seventh, Trimble came
right back on a Hook walk, Hardy
single, two strikeoutS and a KIU!e
single that tied the score at 6-6.
All three SHS batters fanned in
the seventh. Then in the eighth
SHS got a ground out, fJ y out and a
great throw by Billy Jones to nail
Bret Lackey, who was slealing sec. ond. Winebrenner said, "Billy
Jones made two great throws that
took away a couple Trimble scoring opportunities. Looking back,
the~ were very big plays."
Power ldckl, ·power wlndowa, air, crulu, caaaette, -:
Southern then came back with
the Williams. Northup, Dill victorY
speed. A lot or carl.
SALE*
rally to win the game.
~outhem hitters were Jones a
double, Williams three singles and .
singles each by Norlhuf., Kimes
Reiber (3 RBI) and Hil . Trimbl~
hitters were Hardy and Richards
DISTRICT CHAMPS - Southern's TornaTrimble 7-' In eight frames Thui-sday In a conwith a double and single and sindoes captured the Division IV district dlampitest postponed by rain.
·
.
gles each by Kittle, Day and StinPOMEROY, OH.
992-2174
ouhip by beating Tri-Valley Conference rival
.son.
I

..

'

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

In NBA pltiyoffs,

Barkley's clutch jumper helps Suns bounce Spurs· Rockets win
s~KM~~~H~ON

.
The
bt' reason the Phoenix Suns sur-

_

Southern edges Trimble 7~6 for Division JV district title

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentiuel Correspondent
Behind the bat and arm of senior
Jeremy Dill, the Southern Tornadoes roUed to a dramatic 7-6, extra. inning victory over the Trimble
Tomcats Thursday night to clinch
the Division IV district baseball
championship and advance to the
sweet 16 of Ohio baseball.
The Tornadoes ' berth in the
regional tournament at Ohio University will pit them against the
Gnaddenhutlen winner on Friday,
May 28 at 1:30 p,m.
Southern last won a district title
under head coach Mick Winebrenner in 1988 with ace hurler David
Amburgey on themound.
Dill's heroics
After coming on in the second
inning to pitch, Dill was· ncar perfect in one of -his best ever efforts
from the mound, lirnltin~ Trimble
to just two runs in 6 1/3 mnings of
work. Despite his pitching success,
his bat became the key ingredient
in sparlcing a Southern win.
Ryan Williams, who had singled
three straight times, was the offensive set-up man. He led the inning
off with a single oo a hard hit ball
in the whole on the left side of the
infield that Williams beat out and
forced a Trimble throwing error
that allowed him to advance to second.
Jeremy Northup walked to put

Friday, May 21, 1993

-

Clbooao------,.........2J u

Calil&lt;&gt;inio ....!........ ..ll 16

NATIONAL LEAGUE

r... ................. ..z1

:::::::or·-~~~. . . ...21WLPd.GB
11 .711

w-..111.·S..I'rmciooo ....... JI w .667
Allama ... ,... _....... ..24 II

-

.571

...............-22 17 .!64

CINCJNNAn. ....... 19 22 .463
Lu~ .. --------17 22 ,436
Saa~ .......... __-17 23
.425
Colando .........:...tl :It .293

.561

15

.m

11

:u

S..alo ....,,_, ........-20 21 . ....
Ellllu a.,. ... -......11 lO :414

T-

................ 22 II .5.10
11 .576
h Loail ,...............20 19 .513
l'ittlhoqh .............. l9 19 .500
Florida .................. 17 23 .425
Now Yad&lt; .............. l3 2.'l .342

~ ..............16

22
Ookload ................. 15 22

6.5

7J

I

.

u

IU
IU

.421
.405

Tbunday's -res

Tonllbt'•lames

·

D«:rolt cow1lcbCIIl I..G) It CLEVE-lAND (Biolocloi 3-l~~:QS pm.
Min....,• ~ '·2) 1t Totoruo
(Moail1-4), H5p.m.
M n - (Navaro 1-3) at llaltimon.
(Muooioa 5-1). 7:35p.m.
New Yodt (POnE 2-2) at
(l)opICI'I 2--2). 7:3,5 p.m.
Oa1daad (B. Wiu H) at Chioaao (F...
.....to. 5-2), I :OS p.m.

I.S
9.5
10
15.S

Teu 1

City

l

~0-~0:0S
· Colando
].5}: Lu AaJelea

(llonbloR-1-4 IG-.35 p.m.
·CINCINNATI (Belcher 1·3) at San
Fnnciooo (Swi!\5-1).10:35 p.m.
~

Atluta (Smoltz 4-3) at New York
(Ooodeool-4),1:051i
CINCINNATI " 5-l) at San Fnn·
ciaoo (Blodt 3-CJ), 4. ~ p.m.
Moaueal (D. Martlnt~z 2·S) at
Philade!t'l'i• (IU- 2-2~ 7:QS ~.m.
St. LOulo (O.bome ~I) at PitllbtuJh
(Wollt "-3), 7:05 p.at.
CbiCIIIG (Hibbard 3·3) 11 Florida
(A&lt;Iuioo:!-1~ 7:05p.m.
IA1ondo (11-r 2-4) at Lu Aaplea
2-3),10:CII p.m.
Hwaton (Dnbot 4-4) at San Di..o
at- 6-3~ 10:05 p.m.

Sund•.J:'•aames

Suaday's pmes
~at Tcnnto,l :35 p.m.
Doomil at CI:I!VEUND. 1:35 p.m.

Thunday's ICOrts
PhoaU .Wiflriel4-2

•

H-on 103, S..nlo 90;..,;., tied 3-3

Saturday's came

L
14
17
19
19
21
23
25

GB

.m

u

.611
.575

.525
.432
.410
.390

15

4.5
I
9
10

NalloouiiA....
COLORADO ROCKIES: Sent Scott
Fredericklon, pltcher, to Colorado
S~7"J' of tlu~ Pacific Co.,t Lesaue.

.

Montroal2. N.Y.lolanden I (On·

want to be :cat you have to bil
willing to take the big shot anywhere and. anytiple," Barldey said.
- ROCketS 103, Sonlcs !10
At Houston,
Tmy Teagle,' who
on!
played y one minute, gave such
good advice to Kemy Smith that it
helped keep the Houston Rockets
in the NBA _PI:ayoffs.
A late-mght shootinJ ~I and
counsel from Teagle helped Smith

chances apinst the Sonics. He hit
13 of 16 shots, including four
three-point baskets, atfd didn't
commit a turnover in igniting the
Rockets.
·
·
A hh~ ..... the s0111·cs led through
~~......
most of the ftrSt half and held a 4743 edge at intermission, Smith
scored 15 points in the ftrSt half to
keep the Rockers close. He added
10 more in the breakaway third

ry over Seattle in The Summit
The viciOfY exlended the Western Conference semifinal series to
the seventh game, scheduled Saturday in Seattle.
·
The witmer of Saturday's game
will play the Phoenix Suns in the
Western Conference finals. The
Suns' eliminated the San Antonio
Spurs on Thursday.
"I shoot at night all the time,' •
Smith said. "I came in last night
(Wednesday) and 1 realized that I'd
just been taking six or seven shots.
I was happy for a day off so 1 could
gn through my nOllllal drills...
Smith felt the shooting touch
return during his late-night
shootaround and Teagle urged him
to take more shots.
"Terry's been harping at me
that 1 was passing up scoring
opportunities," Smith said. "Having a guy like that hawkill&amp; you
makes a big difference."
Smith didn't miss many scoring

peto:-rnon Max'well, scoreless in
the ftrst half, also ended his slump ·
with 12 points in the third quarter,
when the Rockets outscored the
Sonics 36-15. Maxwell finished
with 15 points.
"The fans were kind of on me at
the half," Maxwell said. "They
were just saying 'Max, get on the
scoreboard.' It was positive stuff. I
knew I needed to get more into the
game.
"Everybody was teUing me to
shoot. I already knew what 1 had to
do. I had zerQ points and I can't
play like that"
MaxweU swished a 44-foot basket as time expired on the 24-second clock late in the third quarter
to give Houston a 70-60 lead, and
that took steam from the Sonics •
comeback hopes.
·
"I feel that was a big shot for
us," Maxwell said. "It was a big
three and a lucky three. I felt the
momentum shifted to us and my
=~~ence got going after tliat

The Suns, taking the best-ofseven series 4-2,now face the win'
· ner of the Houston-Seattle series.
(lame 7 of that series wiU be Saturday at Seattle.
For San Antonio, it was a distressing finish to an up-and-down
season of coaching chanaes. winning Slreaks foUowed by streaks of
mediocrity, then a trip to the conference semifinals for the ftrSt time
since Robinson's rooltie year four
seasoos ago.
"It was a tough way to lose,
especially at borne. We are all really ·disappointed," ~oblnson said.
" I feel like a train that hit a wall,
but my body could use the rest.
Mentally I'm ready to play on."
Robinson led the Spurs with 22
points and 14 rebounds. Sean
Elliott added 19 points, and J.R.
Reid had 14.
Early in the fourth quarter, the
Spurs looked like they were about

tof=.:n=~~iM."'76i:i

Bmulio Cucillo, outftelder. u. the
-"-fer Mall&lt; Gran!. pitda.
Tn

to start the quarter on Elliott's
three-pointer. But Phoenix immediately rallied with 12 sttaight points. ·
Then the stretch baUle was on.
The teams swapped leads four
times before Phoenix went ahead
96-94 on two free throws by Kevin
Johnson with 3:18 remaining.
"I thought we had the !lame
under conttol," Elliott said. r,The
whole key was they played a cOnsistent ball game. They stayed
closed unt¥. the end, until they got
their brealc:"
Trailing by four, the Spurs
closed to 99-98 after a three-pointer by Dale-Ellis with 14 ·seconds
remaining. Danny Ainge bit one of
two free throws. After a foul by
Barkley with 11 seconds to play,
Robinson tied the score by malting
two ·rree throws, even though he •d
been only 4 of 8 from the line in
the fourth quarter.
But Bartley answered with his

Natton.t B.ultatball Auo&lt;lalton
NBA: Fined Nate McMillan, Sc.tlle
fortran!; Oeo.J• ltul, Seaale coaclt, and
WW1GI o..tand, H""""" auanl. $5,000
each and Scou Brook.. Houslon auard,
S2.000, for their rol01 ia inoidenu in a
pmo on May 11. Finad the Sdpa$onia
.,....UZ.tion $5.000 and tho Ko&lt;i... crpniution $7,000 f&lt;ll" their pla}ltlll on-coon

Mike Britt auictant c:01ch md

FootbaU

- • NHL playoffs • ~--3-0

diaa.bJod

~amc4
ICOUl

. Saluni.aJ,Marn
New Yadlat OUcato. :Uo p.m.

Tbunday's 11:ore

Jim Cca- pitcbo&lt;. !nm Calpry.
TEXAS RANGERS: Plied Cr1i1
LetfiiU, pilclsw, on dae 1i:!.!~
1ilo .. to May 11.
ol Roaet
Pavlik, pitcher, from Okllhoma City of
the Amed.can A.ociation.

·SACRAMENTO lONGS : Promcxed
Eddie Jordan 10 fWJ..dme lui.&amp;ant COich.

~ao•tNewYOJt,lp.m.

I'd.

Shinall, Jlil&lt;lw. to Calpry of the Pacific
Cout Lilpe. Purchtiecl the contnct of

coach.

S..oda,,Ma,:u

,',!1.

W
Deooil ..... ... ........ -25
New Yadt ............. -23
. u.....................-..21
T-.. ................21
Mnwa-............ 16
Baldmcn .. - .. ~ ......16
CUM!LAND.......l6

Ameri~:~a A11odaUon. Plaoed Dennis
RumU:IIIIl. piu:hcr, on tho l!·day dis·

LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS: An·
nowiCCid the l'rlliJRition of Larry Brown,

Conferen&lt;e ftnals

,

pildYw, flam
..tCIC!o
UNSAS crrY ROY AU: CaDeoi up
Cboia ~- pjlchor.l'lom Omaha of the

~ticm.

HcM.latat SeauJo. 3:30p.m.

OdcaJO • Now YOit. 3:30p.m.
Tt
Mar'J5
. l!w
,,MaJ,2'

AIV'.ERICAN LEAGUE

J-

BIISketbaU

- * NBA playoffs • -

'

-

~TON RED SOX: Sil"ed John
Jr., catt:b., and -.....s him 10
"'""""' . IND"IANS: S•n
~~
- - . " ' - · to a.- ollho- -.
D~lloai[ Lea.-:~ Recalled But Wertz.
Stnllal

HOUSTON ASTRO$ : A••ianed
Bnutio Cutillo, outfielder, to Tucsm W
thol'lclfic c;..... Loap
Pl'l7$BURGH PlllATES: Callol up
Gkm Willon, audielcl•, from Buft"alo of
tho Amorioul A11ociatitlll. Optimed John
Wdaner, third bt.aeman, to Buffalo.

MiJ.waubl It ~alrimore, 1:35 p.m.
Oaltlaed a&amp;~. 2:35p.m.
Califomia at Teiu, 3:05p.m.
New YOlk at Boaon, ~~p.m.
Seattle "~City. 8:05 p.m.

'rb'•·

Placed

SEATTLE MARINERS: Sent Zak

Naw York (N. \Yin 2· 1) 1t Bo.ton
(Clatwu 5-l),l:OS p.m.
~atland (Darlina 0-2) 11 CbiCIJO
(Sti&lt;b1·2). 1:M p.m.
Doomil (Moaio 2·1) at CU!VEt.AND
(Mooa 4-2),1:35]&gt;-m.
MiMOiota (fapu.i 2-4) at Toronto
(Stoatem,.. 4-4), I :35 p.m.
Calitmaia (Saad•on 6-1) at Tn11
(Pavlik~). 3:0S p.m.
Milwaukee (Bon01 1-2) at Baltimore
(Mcllaoa1d 2-5). 7:05p.m.
S.Jilt~ (Canvaae 0-0) 11 K111111 Chy
(Appor 4-3). I :OS p.m.

Phoaia 102, San Antonio 100·

- OticaF at l'bido. 1:35pm.
Mc.aan.luJihild
1:35 p.m.
St. Utdl" Pllabutlb.l :35 p.m.
""-a 11 New yca_ I :40 p.m.
Colorado at Lu Anploo, 4:05p.m.
Jlauwm It San Diei.O. .:QS p.m.
CNCINNAn ,, i""ID FnnciaOD, 4:05
p.m.

'...

""""'••c;:~t·•
tho 15-day dioabledliot.
upJamioW.,...pjlchor•
troes l«:huter _or lhe Ia~ernational

ablecl II&amp;.

Saturday's eames

A.daac. (Maddux 3-3) 11 New Yolk
- (IIIDmaa 0-1 ~ 7:«1 p.m.
0..... (Podup1 "-2) at San Di. .

Saturday'a1ames

1t

Se~ttle (lobiUion 6·2) at K1r1.1u
(lloaoy ~- 1:35 p.m.

Tonll!bt'a pmes .

T-

Bueball

BALTI~~fcl~s,

B~

put hia basJretiwU magic to
work apin Thursdly nighL He lift.
ed the Suns to 8 1112-100 victory
over the San Antonio Spun wiJh a
· ·
1op-o f • th 9-a.ey
',.~ram e-wtnntng,
Jumper over the outstrelehed arm
of David Robinson with 1.8 seconds to play.
"I always expect-to hit the big
shot," said Bartley, who 8COl'lld 28
~ints and had 21 rebounds. "It

~~~~h~ !:0:.~• it left my ::fth~ r~IS~~o)-~~i~

Suaday'scune

r.....,._._3

4
4J

, 7:30p.m.

T..- .ot La, Aaploo, I p.m.

'Seolllo7,Tozu4
Ooldwl4. Eaa.., a.,. 1 (12 inn.) .

Chic•Jo (Hirby •-t) 1t Florida
(Bo- 3-'4), 1_:~p.m.
• Moatrell (Hill 4-0) at Philadelphia
~"-1), 7:35p.m.
SL LoWa (MaarUo 2-4) at Piu.bwp

·-111-

MamrcalatN.Y.LJ

- • Transactions • -

C!JM!U.ND 3,)1ot._•.-,
Doomil 6. Mnn'*•l

Cilifomia (Farrell 2·5)
( I t - 3-3), 1:35 p.m.
.

·

· SaturdaiJ':J!!"•

4.5
5
7
7.5

o,....,

(Wabllold 3-4),1:35 p.m.

The best regular-season NBA
team, the Suns Jll8de it to the Western CQnference finals when

. w.o.--.605

• Baseball • -

ctiooao--................20

vived another rough pJaroff series
was the man with the btg shotCharles Barldcy.

Nalltul F - l i .....U.
..
MINNBSOfA VIKJNGS: S;pot Eoen TUllo. def'fllli.ve tackle, and Richard
Joneo,puttter.

Ron--

SAN FllANCJSCO 49BRS i Wo;vcd

taA:kle. •
SEATIU! SEAHAWKS : Si&amp;ncd Tom
Gibloo, defcn~lve a~d .

winning basket

1990 BUICK SKYLARK 4 DR.
Aclean, late model car, 4 cyl., auto. air, AMJFM stereo. ·

HURRY, THIS 0111 WOII'T WTI

/

"I learned from Andrew Tony
when I was oo the 76ers that if you

1989 TOY~TA CAMRY 4 DR.. "

S74QQOO.,

Sn1ith Nelson Motors, Inc.

0

Perez gives Reds earful following
their 6-1 road defeat to Giants
•

By WENDY E. LANE
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - For
,a manager, nothing reveals flaws in
your team like playing a team on a
roU.
The Cincinnati Reds' Tony
Perez saw a number of things the
fttSt-place San Francisco Giants did
Thursday in their 6-1 victory that
his stumbling team isn't doing. The
little things count, Perez said.
"The guys are walking from the
dugout to their positions," he said.
"There's no hustle .. The Giants run
to their positions. If you lose, at
least lose with pride."

Perez didn 'i like what he saw in
the opener of a four-game series
and blasted. his players, who got
just five hits, in the clubhouse
afterward. After winning seven
straight games, the Reds have
dropped four in a row - including
a three-game sweep at Los Angeles.
"In the L.A. game (Jose) Rijo
pitched, we were up 4-1 and we
lost," shortstop Barry Larkin ·said.
"That's not to say one game sets
the tone for a trip, but we went flat
after that game."
J;ly contrast, the Giants have
.

Outlaws coming to WVMS
for $5,200 first prize Sunday
Area race fans will have just one
chance this yearto witness the
"best in the business," in open- .
wheel, open-cockpit racing on Sunday. May 23 when the World of
Outlaw drivers invade the monster
5/8-mile clay oval at West Virginia
Motor Speedway, attracted by a
purse in excess of $32,000 and ··
sponsored, in part, by BUdweiser
and the Parkersburg Distributing
Company.
ln addition to the lightweight
winged speedsters, the Skoal Raeing sm/Clark Oil sm Modified
Challenge Series will be malcing its
first stop of the season, as drivers
compete in their third of 17 point
races for the year on their IQur of
II tracks.
A last-minute addition to the
n.-n.an~m will be the
Track

winner.
According to Steve Kinser,-"!
run wide open. It's fast We stiffe11 ·
the car and go with a thinner bodied top win~."
·
Oates w1ll open at 2 p.m. for a
very special autograph session with
J(inser, the 12-time King of the
World of Outlaws and Team
Valvoline driver who wiU be signing his full-color valvoline Hero
cards for fans. This rare opportunity to meet and. talk with the winningest driver !n sprint car history
will be from 2 to 3 p.m.
Warm-ups are scheduled for 5
p.m., time trials at 5:30 and racing
wtll be at 6 p.m. General admission
is $18, and children six to 11 years
old are $2.

won ·six in a row and nine of their
last 10.
Seven San Francisco starters·got
hits off Cincinnati's Tom Brown··
ing (3-3), who was tagged for a
season-high II. The atlack includ- '
ed three hits by No. 8 hitter Kin
Manwaring, who drove in two
runs.
Right now, there's not a weakness in San Francisco's order, said
former Giants outfieCder Kevin
Mitchell.
"They've got nine starters
going out there and playing hard,
and that's why the)l're winniRJ," .
said Mitchell, playing his ftrst
game at Candlesti4 Park since the
1991 trade that sent him to SeaUle.
''With the Giants, you get one guy
out and now' you've got to face
another."
~-The bottom of the Giants' order
-Willie McGee in the sixth slot,
followed by Royce Clayton and
Manwaring - has been surprisingly productive, All three are hitting
.287 or better.

·GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor SL

.

Pomeroy, OH.

SPIIII Ul SI••D

lOllS

Mon.-Fri. 9:00-5:00 -

.

EXTRA! EXTRA

~~

-~Y s~~~

~~~

Is Coming
Soon!
•'

.

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS

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CHU.D'S NAME(S) &amp;AGE;_____....__ _ _ _ _~---

Submitted By _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ :I

1

·····-----··············--·-··········SEND TO:
Dally Sentinel
P.O. Box 7i9- Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
BABY SENTINEL
Pictures Mlllt Be In By May 27,1993
Pictures can be pleked up after June 7th.

PKIUP or DKIYERY

•

.

.

'

I
I

$1 o~'

32,000 miles, one owner. Like new!

"All Payments lasecl On 60
Months at 7.25" APR With
Approved Credit.

9~ Chevy Conversion Vari
Only 5,000 miles. Loaded!

. p

92 Lumina APV .................................•12,999 ·

.Tax • mle fell not Included. All

tpbenk

.,

••

' J
.);t

•

I

89 Olds Cutlass ciera .......................... •s990
91 Buick ,Century.................................*7495
91 Toyota C~mry ................................. '9688
~ Olds Toronado .•......••.••••...••............*5999·
'
90 Gea Prlzm ................................:...... 54995
91
Monaco ...~ .......................... *7990 _
91 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

GRIDLY

992·2124

CARS

Only 37,000 miles.

~,.IE·

_.

•

90 810 Ptckup.......................................•4995
91 Pontiac Grand Am .......................... ?990
84 Mercury Wagon .............................. *1995
89 Chevy Caprice ................................*6999
90 Ford Escort.....................................*5990

PARENTS NAME.~------~----------~-------

.,.,..

ED

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Sat. 9:00.12:00

:\'

,

Friday,
June 4, 1993

The Baby Sentinel is a Special Section tiDed with photographs of
local kids, ages newborn to 4 years old.
The Baby Sentinel will appear in the June 4th issue in celebration
of National Baby Week•
Be sure your child, grandchild or relative is included. Complete
the form below.and enclose a snapshot or wallet size picture plus a
$5.00 charge for each photograph. (enclose payment with picture)

Ill W. MAIN SJIEETei'OMEROY

1 Topping

., ....

-

Hurry, Picture Deadline is Monday, May i7.

·'

-sponsoring the Lale
porllOn
of the show in its entirety. •
The speedway, Jocaled just eight
miles south of Parkersburg on I-77
at the Mineral Wells exit, is by far
the fastest surface, under a mile,
that the Outlaws will run all year. It
brings mixed emotions about ~e
track size and the JPeeds that will
be auained in search of a checkered
flag and the $S,200 that goes to the

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Ohio

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The

Ohio

•

Chester Garden Club reviews
'Carrots Love Tomatoes'

••

•

'

I

•

f. review pf "Carrots Love "God's Garde.n", and prayer pre- ten times more 10xic chemicals per
Tomatoes" by.Twila Bucldey was sen~ by Beae Dean.
~ · . acre than farmers. If even 10 per.;
the program at the May meeting of
Roll call was answered by II cent of lawn mowers began using
the Chester Garden Club.
members and guests, Mary Vir- organic pesticides, it would remove
Author Louise Riotta writes of ginia Kautz and Denise Mora. 2.5 to 5 million pounds Of toxic
companion plants, some helping Plan ting hints .''.Friend or Foe" chemicals from the environment
each other, or one plant benefiting included castor oil bean, which .is every year.
from the presence of anmher. Some poisonous, 'keeps males away and.a
. During the business meeting, i ~
·examples
are
rhubarb
in
flower
fragrant
soap
in
s~ng bags hung in
was
reported that Bette Dean,
I
beds control red spiders. Marigolds the garden will repel deer.
Maida Mora and Pat Holter attend·
TEAM PLACES • The Racine Future Farmers of America
repel many insects. Several radish
The Save the Earth Lesson , ·ed the April County meeting.
Farm Management team (top photo), 1-r, Bobby Moore, Christie
seeds planted with cucumber and "Lenve it a Lawn,~ by Pat Holter
Classes were assigned for .the
Cooper, Fred Matson and Stephanie Sayre placed fifth ip the
squash controls beetle.s. The herb, noted that lawn eare •s not some- Meigs County Fair flower show:
. CAROL ANN ALEXANDER rue, among roses help ~ to control th ing that is normally associated Chester Garden Club will secure·
recent Area S Envirothon held at the Racoon Creek County Park
.In Gallla County. The EnvlrotbUn Is an environmental competition
rose diseases. Dusty MiUer among with saving the (\llflh. An acre 'Of Ohio Association of Garden Club
where studeots compete in areas ot forestry, &amp;qlllltlcs, wiJsllife and
. flowers is a helpful companion lawn needs more than 27,000 gal- county officers for the upcoming
soils and environmental Issues. Teams composed ot three to five
plant. Garlic repels Japanese bee- Ions of water every week. Ameri- term.
.
•
Carol Ann Alexander, daughter tles.
·
members work toge6ler to answer ZO questions in each catagory
cans routinely over-water by 20 to · Mrs. Holter show,ed the associaAlso given were examples of 40 percent. Consider that there are tion slides "Blue Birds."
and the top four teams go on to state competition. Racine Future · of Bradley W. and Stephanie
Farmers of America AgriScience team (bottom) composed of, 1-r, · Alexander, Vinton, celebrated her plants that should not be planted an estimated 20 million acres of
Reports were give!) on the
fourth birthday rect~~tly with a Lit- near each other such as sunflowers lawn in the United States receiving Region 11 spring meeting at the
JeiT Rose, Larry Patterson, Chris Hamm and Kathy Qttman also
tle Mermaid themed family dinner near potstoes which steal nitrogen. watering, fertilizing lind mowing. Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.· J\ttendcompeted.
. and Beauty and the Beast cake. .
Do not plant ~ladioli near beans Soma mower facts to help the ecol- ing were Mrs. Dean, Pauline ·Ride,
Helping her celebrate were stll· because it inhtbits them. Broccoli ogy are to set mower blades high. nour, Maurita Miller and Jea~
blings, Katie and Nick, Victor should not be near strawberries. Do not be a victirii'-Qf the "Golf Frederick.
·
; ·
CastO and ,Annabelle, Mr. and Mrs. Tomatoes and potatoes do not Course Syndrome." For most types
The arran~ing program "East
Stephen Houchins, Susan Houch- make good companion plants. of grass, the proper\length is two Meets West' by Myrna CordraY.
ins, Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Alexan- Jewel weed or mullen, crushed and inches to three incljes high. This was discussed.
:·
der, Judy Goetter and Stacie rubbed over
encourages
longer,
healthier
roots,
Mrs
Dean
attended
the
Region,
areas IOUChed by
Alexander, and Amanda Eason.
poison ivy wil give immediate and provides natural shade for the 11 Spring Board luncheon meeting
Sending gifts and cards were relief. Jewel weed grows near poiaround each plant , helping at the Chest United Methodist
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Perkins, Mr. and son ivy patches. Thunder storms ground
to retain moisture. Keep mower Church.
: .
Mrs. Robert Eason, Mr. and Mrs. not only bring moisture ·but the blades sharp. Torn grass weakens
Appreciation for Sunshind'
Ron Yonaley, Brian and Julie, Mr. lightening releases· large amounts the plants, making them more sus- remembrances by Mary Kautz and
and Mrs. Tim Fogarty, Brianne and of nitrogen that plants can libsotb. ceptible to weeds a(ld diseases. Roy and Maurita Miller were
Ryan. Mr. and Mrs. Tim Casto,
During dry periods, leave grass noted. Sunshine chairman for May
adds sulfur to the soil.
Jonathan and Austin, Huey Eason Snow
The
program
book
was
given
to
clippiJigS
on the lawn . At other is Eleanor Knight.
and Regina RusseU. ·
A plant exchange by Mace! Barthe Pomeroy Public Library by times, use grass clippings in a comChester Garden Club in memory of post pile , providing prdens with ton, chairman, concluded the meetBuel K. Ridenour. Due to its' pop- natural mulch and fertilizA:r. Water- ing.
.,
.
ularity, the club wiU donate a sec- ing at night is better~ mid-day,
A ctessert course was served.
but night watering call' cause fun- Mrs. Barton received the door,
POMEROY - Three niRht ond copy to the library.
revival
at
Faith
Tabernacle
Church
The
meeting,
held
at
the
home
gus
in the grass plants. The best · prize.
'
. ·,.,
on Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy, · of Kathryn Mora, opened with Gar- choice is to water in the morning.
The annual opep meeting ~ill
FRIDAY
Baptist Church, Pomeroy Pike.
Monday through Wednesday , 7 dener's Creed in unison. Devo- In a drought, do mit waste water ori be held June 2 at Chester Umted
PORTI.AND • Revival at Fm:- Pastor Lamar O' Bryant invites the p.m. nightly. Jerry Cottrell, Pales- tions, prepared by Maurita MiUer, grass turning brown. It is dormant Methodist Church at 8p.m. Guest
dom Gospel Mission, Portland, public.
tine, W.Va., evangelist. Pastor honoring Mother's Day, included and will revive after normal rain speaker, Betty Mizikto, Athens
through Sunday 7:30 p.m. nighdy.
Emmett Rawson invites the .public. readings "Only One Mother", fall begins. Home owners use up to Garden Club, will sho\\' entries
• Rev. Marvin Welsh, evangelist.
HENDERSON, W.VA.· The
from the Ohio Association of Gar-:
Special singing nightly.
Gallia Twirlers Western Square
den Club convention Winners.
Dalice Club wiU hold .a dance SatRIPLEY, W.VA . - Liberty urday from 8-11 p.m. at the HenHUBRUW'S GREENHOUSE
The 1992 Meigs County Sweep
Tinie is fast approaching for the sweep. There are 57 miles of the
Mountaineers, Friday, Skate!and, der8on Community Center in Henl• N0t0 Ope" For
Ripley, W.Va.
. derson, W.Va. Albert Allie will be annual Ohio River SwC!lP·sched- Ohio River which border the coun- had 358 volunteers, jncluding
Da.s.........
uled for June 19. The 1993 theme ty and several sites have been . scouts, 4-H clubs, chun:bes, garden ·
. l1" 1 Pl.m(Fitw... &amp;
the caller.
is "It's Up to You."
selected all along tbe way includ- clubs, community groups, governALBANY • Phil Dirt and the
VltlhiWt), ...... Wlh, Pent4
This
is
the
fifth
consecutive
year
ing Reedsville/Forked Run, Racine, ment officials, sportam.en's clubs,
SUNDAY
Dozers, Fourth Annual Spartan
Pllm, ~it liM ef SlleLL•ry
Spring fling, Alexander High . SHADE • Revival at Shade for the sweep which has won many Syracuse park/marina; Pomeroy fishermen, professionlil ~Mel,
PlllllzeiHs&amp; ....... . .
SPECIAL OF THE MONTH
School, Friday, 5:30p.m., car show United Methodist Church, Sunday national a wards for the largest levee and bridge area, and Middle- .locks and darn eQIPloY~ and oth.
q.
' ers.Further
and entertainment. Tickets, $5, lit through Wednesday, 6:45 p.m. environmental clean-up and beauti- port rivaflout and marina area
11
information may be
There will be a coordinator at'
Caellllew.- 11.1 HeL
the gate.
Special music. Chet Lemley, evan- fication project in America.
The event is organi~il by lhe each site and all participants must obtained by calling the Meigs
HUlBARD'S ·GREEIHOUSE
'
gelist. Everyone welcome.
Ohio
River Valley Water Sanita- sign a waiver form before the County Litter Control,Office at
TUPPERS PLAINS - Round
SYUCUII
and square dance Friday 8-11:30
MIDDLEPORT . Doug McCo- tion Commission (ORSANCO) and sweep. Those under the age of 18 992-6360. Waiver forms should·be
OPEN DAILY N, SUNDAY 12-5
p.m. Tuppers Plains VFW 'Post mas, musical evangelist, performs involves volunteers in· six states must hav.e a release signed by a signed and turned back into the lit992·57l6
ter office before June 10.
.
spohsored by ~adies Auxiliary. at Victory Baptist Church, Sunday, bordering the Ohio River. It will parent or guardian.
Music by CJ and the Country Gen- 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Rev .. James encompass the,entire 1,962 miles
.of the river from Pittsburgh to ·
tlenien. Red Carr and· Melvin Keesee invites the public.
Cairo, Ill
.
Cross, callers.
•
In
Meigs
County,
the Litter·
CHESTER - SOI:O~ (Meigs
MIDDLEPORT· Dbce at. the Singles Group), pollock, Sunday at Control Program, wiU' be coordina: ·
Middleport Legion Annex Friday . Shade River Saddle Shop in tor for the local participation in the
·SAIURDIY
7-11 p.m. with music by George Chester. Call Sharon Hausman,
Hall.
985-4312 for information.
I A.M. nL5 P.M.
Coin Club ~ts Monday at Burkett
Barber
Shop
in
Midalepjlrt.
CHESTER - Special meeting
SUIDIY
·POMEROY - A choir from New
Shade River Lodge No. 453 Harmony liaptist Church, North Social hour and tradin$ session at 7
I P.M.nL5P.M. ,
F&amp;AM Friday 7:30 p.m. Work in Georgia, will perform Sunday at 7- p.m. preCede the meeung. Refreshments.
New
members
welcome.
en~ apprentice degm:. Refresh- p.m. at Firs1 South~rn .Baptist
IIOIDIY
ments.
CHI;:STER - Chester P,lemenChurch, Pomeroy Ptke. Pastor .
tary PTO, special meet.ing, Monll&amp;nliP.M.
Lamar O'Bryant invites the public.
SYRACUSE - Revival continday, p.m., school cafeteria. AU par-.
ues at Syracuse Mission with Saul
ents arid teachers welcome.
MONDAY
DESIS, COMPUTER CBmRS,
TV/VCR &lt;ARTS, MKROWAYE
McGuire, 7 p.m. nightly and SunRACINE - Southern Local·
day at 6 p.m. Rev. Mike Thompson School Board meets .Monday 7
POMEROY - Meigs County
ttc. S.aler, Rlv..W., .lllliln•
CARTS, WARDROBES
iiwite&amp; the public.
Veterans
Service Commission
p.m. at the high school.
95
11
meets Monday, 7:30p.m., Veterans ·
.
STIITIIIAT
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The OH KAN Service Office, PoRieroy.
KANAUGA • Liberty Mountaineers perform Saturday, D.A.V.
Center, Kanauga.

Clilln:ll oreo.t .,....,....,

Church ol Chttst

~School - 9:30a.m.

MIMI

OF

ST~IIIT. •98

POMEROY - Market lamb
weigh-in for 1993 4-H and FFA
market lamb exhibitors, Saturday,
9-11 a.m., Meigs County Fairgrounds. Pay $10 per animal. CaU
992-6696 for information.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains baseball and softball assoc,i;
ation boys 9-10 year old toilmf:
men~ Saturday and Sunday. Eight
teams, trophies. $45 and two baUs.
Call 667-3653, 667-3342 or 9892931 for inform11tion.
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Senior YouJh, spaghetti
dinner, Saturday, 5-7 p.m., $4
aduhs, $3 .50 children six and
under. Advance tickets only from
Francis Florist or call Fern Morris,
992-3356.

MUSICAL EVANGELIST

DOUG

•
)

It

10:00 AM-Sunday SchoolMusic by Doug MtComas
11 :00 AM-Testimony and Musk
6:00 PM-Doug McComas in Concert
carrot AIIWIIIIIII

Pr8aldoii&amp;-AIIIef• ~

,..

•

REEDSVILLE - Forked Run
Sportsman Club, Third Annual
Fishing Derby, Saturday,~ a.m. to
1 p.m. for. ages 0-14. Pnzes and
free hotdogs.

Com-

II giVH 11141 QINI piMiur.lo ..-m·
mend Doug. I haw walchtd him
maluow ao a Chrillllan and mulkUn.

No c:huroh wil be diMppolnlld wld1

Doug. He olanda INa ltVen among

tho

Saturday, Citgo in Tuppers Plains,
by Meigs COIJ!ItY Better Beef 4-H
Club, $2 donatiOO.

STaDIIGIT

$588

11

ptOt.

With 4 Chairs ..ar 6 Oscirs
By Imperial, StiWird,
CQrolla Clualca, Kincaid

~RTIIGIT $288°
BEDROOM SUITES
By VaughaniiMiett; .
Standard, Kincaid

95
$5'
9
9
STIRTIIGIT·

·

149t5

STIRTIIIIT $

,_,Mod&lt;
semc.

England, National

. Flexateel

STAmiiAT

.

1

• But Main St.
5u!tday School · 9:30 am.
Wonbip • 10&gt;.30 Lm.

Flnl

Jllpllli
41812 Pailavy Piko
Putor.Ji. LamorO'Ihyonl
Sundoy School • 9-.30 a.m.

o/ictory 'Baptist Cfiurcn
· 525 North Second .
Middleport, Oh.
Jamin E. KM..., Paltol'
•

r..,... Plallo C1a.a af Cluill
'-:Bill WiDe&amp;
Slmdoy School - 9 a.m.

Wonhip- 9:45 LIL, 6:30p.m.
Deller Cll- af Cllrlol

· PUI«: CuiJ Stowa11

Eu=.

.,

Su-. hod Cluln:ll afCiarllt
' - : 1ooodl B. Hookina
'
Soliday Scbool -9 a.m.
Wonbip • tOun., 71'.m.
WociDea&lt;lay Senicea -7 p.m.

8aDday School.g:4 a.m.
llvtioio&amp; - 6:30p.m.
WodaoJday
·6:30p.m.

som...

~: jl-... B;al Shuler
. .
,_._..., s..kY Sillloal -'10:30 ...... , • ' -.
. . ' W"anlllp - 9:30 .....

.

Old -~~ fno.WII Bopllll Cll.-cll
2,8601 St. Rl. 7. Mjddlqxwt

- y School- 10 a.m.

~~;30
HUIIIdt Boplill Cllutdl
St. Rl. 143 jolt oft Rl. 7
Pa1tor: Rev.lameJ R.. Acree. Sr,
~ Schooi·IOa.m.
~o::!"l; tiLm., 6 p.m.
w
s.m- -7 P,m.

LupolhOoii'•Chrdl
Sanday School- 9::10 ......
W~·ID-.30a.m. , 7:30p.m.
Wodoilday Semce7:30p.m.
H....... GnnCiolrdo
Po.- c::buko Domiam

~Jdlool-10:30a.iD.

MI. Ollftl.lalled Molhodlll ·
Olf 124 bebiDd Willruville
, _ , Olarla.]01101

N-Ciaatar
Alfnd

'

Pulor: Sh.uun H!'PI!D'"
Sw1dly Sc:bool- 9:30 .....
Wonhip- II a.m., 6:30p.m.

~-HIDWID
Pucor: Sban:ll

"!._"':!:% ·

Wonhip-9Lm.
SUDdaySdrGd·IOa.m.
Thunday s.m- · 7 p.m.

F-II•Bopllol

J-·

Paa«:ltniadaWeber

Wonbip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sdlaol - 10:30a.m.
Wednoaday s.m- - 7:30p.m.

Cilw ch ot Gocl

"'""-...

Putor. Rev. Seldae Jolmaon

All~.:;=--

Sunday Sdlod - 9-.30 a.m,
.Wonhip-IG-.30a.m. ·
WedneJdaySorvicel - 7:30p.m.

Worship -10:45 Llll.
Thunclay $CMceJ -7:30p.m.

Putor: Rev. Seldae Jolral&lt;lll

11-Uie

Wonbip ·9:30a.m.
ht ol3nl SUnday - 7:30 p.m.
Sdlaol- 10:30 .....
W
y Service~· 7:30p.m.

=:::,

' · · -SalaDS..
Frto Wllllapllot
'-:Rev. Paul Taylor .
Sunday Sdlaol· 10 a.m.
s--.-7p.m.
w
l*I'Sonoiool-7p.m. .

TII..... PialaoSLPoul

Putor: SlwcaSunday School· 9 LID.

t

.. Wonhip ~ 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

,_

-

Wonbip • 10 a.m.
Tuesday Servic:oo - 7:30p.m.

c.,..... a...,.

Sllll&lt;loy School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip-lla.m.
Wedoeodoy Som.,.. · 8 p.m.

llailoy Rua Roa4
PUler: Rev. Bmmen ~w11011
Sunday Sc:bool - I 0:00 a.m.
B-"'&amp;7p.m.
Thmday Setvi&lt;:c - 7 p.m.

Chun:ll al J - Clarlll,
ApooldlcFallb
1/4 mile put Fori Moip 011 New Lima Rd.

· Pa1101: William Van Motet

w::!!t~~m.

,

Priday-7~.

,__-'-blr

St. Rl. 124. RaciDe
Pula:Willi..l&amp;bac:lc .
Sunday Scboal· 10 a.m.

J!wnina , 6 p.m.
W&lt;!dnelday Somer: -7 p.m .

Ev...,-7p.m.
WedneJday s.m- - 7p.m.
.

~ CommUDIIJ' Cllurdl

'

.

. OlfRI. 124
Putor: lldael Hill
Sunday
9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

School·

DytotllltiC-UAIIJ'CIIurdl '
SuDday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonbip ·10:30 Lm.,'7 p.m.
Cllrilllu Flllo1nlllp C..llr
Salom. St., Rulland
-Robert 1i. Muller
SUDdaySchooi - IOa.m.
Wonhip -II :15 Lm .• 7 p.m.
w........., Setvi&lt;:c - 7 pm.

Middleport Pl'oiiiiJtaian

Sunday Sc:bool • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2acl ol41h Sun.)
Syraaaoel'lnt u...... .......,.......

Mone ~IIPII Claon:ll
P-.: Milca Mallon
SUoday Jdlool- tO a.m.

Sunday Sc:bool-10 a.m.
Wonldp -II a.m., 4 p.m. (IR. 3nl Sun.)

\Vonbip . 7 .......

. w.........,s.m.,. : 7p.m• .

Seventh-Day Aclvenlrst

FoJt,.~­

-

;:ld -

9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Vloilnooday7:30p.m. • \
Sunday

Mt. Olin C..""'IIIIJ Clolrdl

,_, r.a....... 'Bush

United Brethren

Soliday Sdlod -9:30a.m.
Bvemna • 7 p.m.
Wodneday s.m.:. -7 p.m.

Mt.u-.. uowllnCIIa
, lo CbriiiCII-

Tena Communlly oft CR 12
Putor: Robed S....
~y Sebooi • 9:30a.m.
Wonllip ·10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodnolday Servioet - 7:30p.m.

l.lallell Flllll Cb-

RI. 7.., Pomeroy By·Pall
PallOr: Roy. Robellli. Smilh, Sr.
Sunday Sc:bool· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wecbaday Servic:o • 7 p.m.

Eclaa U•Hod ....,..I• Cbr111
2 Ill mi1oa nocdt ol Recdaville
... Stale Route 124
Pulor: Rev. Robert Martloy
~ Sebooi -10 a.m.
"onhlp • 7:30 p,m.
WodoeJclay S'eMooa -7:30p.m.

Ua•-

Fill Gtltlpll
33045 Hiland RDod, Panomy
PutM: Roy a...w
Sunday Sc:bool - 10 Lin.
Evemna 7::10,.,...
'IUelday olThumlay • 7:30p.m.
N - Seltl•tlll Clulrcb

Suaday Wonhip • 2:30p.m.;
Thumlay ..moe. -7:30pm.

~(!I)·

)
~-~N...,...

•

s.mw..~t!L~UIL
- 7:30p.m.

WedaeJday

FURNITURE .
OF

. RACINE PLANING Mill

MATIRESSES&amp;
BOX SPRINGS

•

Mill Work
Cabinel Ma~in~
Syracuse
992·3978

By

01

L:~~·.~,~~
t'·'
..

, K&amp;C JEWELERS··
212' E., Main' Stleet '
992!3715. .P011110y

IAWUNGS..C:OAlS

. FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141 .

· 2M South 2nd

llliiWieparl

Crow's Fantlly Restaurant
"FNtfllln(l

.92.6669

K"'""*' l"tletl a.Jann"

f 17i ......

228 w.lllln St., Pomeroy

Soc-"

....

11•••r•rt,

992-5432

aou
Veterans .
emc~trial Hospital

Wl11t FREE
FINANCING .

II S 1. Memorial

FREE DELIVERY &amp; SEt~P
11 WE REMOVE OLD rrEMS

. Pomeroy

Pameror

EW1NG FUNEW HOME

'

BIDDING OR PURN11URE
•DOWN PAYIIIN'r MAY II RIQUIRED ·
"'wiiH .APPROVID CRIDIT

Na1idnwide Ins.
ot Columbus. 0 .
Moin

•• w.

"Hill Pomerov

..800.00 ll..lMUM PURCHASE
•

••

Co.

, .

Pentecostal

Soao!ay Scboal - 10 .....

w-....,.

~SIRol

Flllll Tabtraocle C.. rdl

1411 Bridpmau s.., sr-u~a
..._,Roy (Mike) 'lbi&gt;mJliOil

,_,..,,lvaoMyon
Suo!laY Scboal- 9:30a.m.
B-ma·7p.m,
s.m... -7 p.m.
'
CooiYIIIel.lallod Melllodlatl'arlllo
, _ , Hellll Kline '
CoolriDo Cllun:ll
Main oll'!fth St.
SIOiclay Sdlaol · 10 a.m.

Hocld...... C·-

.

sr...U.Mioob .

Rllllllld Bible M-Ill

Thelday s.m... -7 p.m.
BoiiMI Cloln:lo . ' .
Towudlip Rd., 46IC
Sunda)o Scibool· 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wodnuday S'cMcel · 10 a.m.

=-'.!.School-

,_,Sam AndonOa

.

Wonhip - 11 a.m.
Lure! Cllr Free M_.ll Cllardl
. Putor: l'eler Tn:mblay
Sondoy Scbool· 9:30am,
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wodnuday Servicm - 7 p.m.

W~ - 9/.m.

,_,La-

575 Peod St.. Middleport
Sunday SchoOJIO a.m.
BvminJ ·7:30p.m.
WodneadaySetvi&lt;:c· 7:30p.m.

' - : RaprGnco
Slmdoy Sc:i&gt;ool-10 a.m.

.

. ReJoklaa Lire Cllurdl

500 N. 2!ld Aw., Midcll~
Fotmiaft
10 a.m.
w
y s.m... -7 p.m.

Mldd'-' ComlllliaiiJ' ~urcb

-

Wonlrip • 9:30 Lm. (IR. 2ad Sun).
7:'30 p.m. (3rd ..... Sun)
WedneJday Sonite -7:30p.m.

~

Sundar School - 10 a.m.
II Lm., 6 p.m.
W
. ys.m- · 7p.m.

llS Bua.mm Ave., Pomeroy.
Sanday sd.ool - 10:30 a.m.

Eoat!Mul
Putor: Roaer o....,
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m ..

eru.. u.w I ' 1 dH

Mep Coaptnllftl'lrllll

· Filii 1loPIItl Cll.-cll
Railroad St., Muon

•

Tile Salnlloa Anar

Putor. ~Balter

Un1tl'cl r.1ett10cl1st

Stlt.....ille Word flF'oklo
Puror, David Dailey
SIOiday School9:30 a.m.
Bvmina·7p.m.
Thunday Servic:o ·7:30p.m.

Wonbip -10:30 a.m .

Canoll
' - : '-tOll! Balter

Sunday Scbool· 9:45 a.m.
Wonlaip ·10:30 Lm.
Thumlay scm... - 7:30pm.

SuDday ScbOci - 900 .....
Wonbip -10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
. 11ninday s.m- -7 p.m.

,Wonbip - IO..m., 7 p.m.
Wedneldays.m-.7p.m.

TrlaltJ Conp-epll...al Cllarcll
P1110t: Rev. Roland Wildman
O.un:h • 9:15 Lm.

' Wonhip. 9IUII. .
Wodneoday Seovk:eo . 10 a.m.

Sunday School- 9:30 ......
Wonbip - II a.m. •
'

WonJiil&gt; ·9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

~.
~
~=J..,.. B. K.._

•

,_, lin. Blac:kwood
Sunday School - 9:30 LOI.

Wednelday ....too -6:30p.m.

S.IIGII
PuJa.; Kmwb Balter. •
Saadojr ~ - 9::10 a.m.
Wonldp · 10:45 a.m. (htol3rd Sun),

.,

Caltlr)' Pllpt• Cloaptl
llarriloovillo Rood
P1110r. Rev. vidor Rllllob
SIOiday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip-11 "'!"·• 7:30p.m.
Wodnaclay Setvi&lt;:c - 7:30p.m.

Sondoy woribip- 10 a.m.

s-ate

l&gt;uri&lt;ia lloodo-JCrva

' Thunclay - - 7:30p.m.

'-:RobeiiVaace

Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
Thunday s.m... - 7 p.m.
SllaC.ter
, _ , Rllll Fien:e
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.

Suodly school- 9:30am.
Wonbip · 10:45 Lm. (2nclol41h Sun)
'
M..-.ID&amp;SIIr

-r

Fallh Fellowlldp ~for C11ri11
Paotor: Rev. PrWiin Dickflll
SeMc:e: Friday, 7 p.01.

(.tllluliDpam chun:h oftiiDw 33)

Our Sa- lAIII- CIIIU'dl
WalnutlllllllotuySU., ~wood; W.Va.
~ : Rev1. Richard ol

''

Olher Chutches
-eH-atPnrer

Pill«:~ Smilh

Wonbip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sc:bool- 10:30 .....

'

Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WodneJday S.m.. - 7:30pm.

Pu!or: Alllluc CDbtroe

W~ · IO:ISLm .

' - : O.O.,e Weirick

'-:DenltSiilmp
Sondoy School · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip - JD-.30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
W....,...ys.m.o.-7:30p.m.

MiulllaoiBo~
Pu1or : Joe N.

·-

Coltlr)' Blblo Cb•n:ll
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.

New Hua ~iln:ll afllio N........
-Glendon Stroud
Sunday Sdlod • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wodneadays.m.o. - 7p.m.

S~mday Scboal- 9:30a.m,

~~o~~~a.,
'-:~Balter
SIOiday School· 10 ~.m.

Fairview Bible CbLewt, W.Va. Rl. I
Putor: Jame11.owia
Sunday Sc:bool • II a.m.
'Wonldp - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
WedaeJclay Service - 7:30p.m.

Portlutt F1n1 Cllurdl aiiM Naanne
Pula: William loutia
Slmday Sc:bool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:40 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wodnelday s.m- - 7 p.m.

Sll!lday Sdlool · 9:JS a.m.
VIonldp' • I0 a.m.
Wecloeacliy SeMwl · 6 p.m.

Pine Grove

St. Rl. 1'24 ol Co. Rd. 5

, _ , Bill Ualo'
SIOiday School - tllo.m.
Wonhip -11a.m., 7:30p.m. ·
W.......y Sfrvicoa·, 7:30p.m.

•

SL JoM La-.. Clillrcll

.,...... c.... afCbrllt

S...... Rua Boplilt

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

Lutheran

.

Wodneaday Seni&lt;:oa -7p.m.

R!ldiSprlllp

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonbip - 9 a.m.

Coolville Roa4
Putor: Rev. Pbillip Ridenour
Sunday Sc:bool • 900 a.m.
Wcnbip - 10:30 a.m.
Wedoeaday Scviao - 7 p.m. '

W~ - 10:30a.m.• 6:30p.m.

PUUJr.KIIilh Roder

Wonhip- 10:30 Lm.
W.........y Sorviooa · 7:30p.m.

Putor:
Uodelwood
SIOiday
• 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a,m., 7 p.m.

Paotor.Samue!Buye

S:,.:(L&gt;

Sllllloy~- 9:30Lm

Wbltt'aCbapol Wealoraa

Sunday Sc:bool· 9:30a.m.

Pa110r.
Keo
Slmday Sdtool - 9:15a.m.
Won!UP - J0:30Lm., 6p.m.
Wednold'ayS.rvicel - 7:30p.m.

P'olllllld·Rocine Rd.
"*-:J
ColliJu

Bald Knob,'"' Co. ltcl31
Putor: Rev. Rcpr Willford
Sunday Sehool • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m.,.7 p.m.
Wc:dneJday Sem.. • 7 p.m.

Rullud Clllll'dl afiM Naunne

P-CUpel .
Pu10r: F!Dm&gt;cr: Smilh
Sunday School· 9 Lm.
Wonbip · 10 a.m.

..

FreodCIIII Gtltlpll Ml I

, _ , Rev. Hed&gt;et! Grate
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II Lm., 6 p.m.
Woclooolay Somoea . 7 p.m.

Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9 Lm.
Wonbip ·10 a.m.

............CIIun:ll tl J-CIIrlll
• Loaer Dar Salnll
.

··-~-afCIII'IIt

Sunday School- 9:30 lUll.
Wonhip - 10:40Lm.•7:00p.m. ,.
Wodneoday s.m- ·7:00p.m.

-

.

Sondoy School · 9:30 LJ11.
Wonbip - ICI-.30 Lm.
w...-y s.m""' -7 p.m.

Radne ..,nl Bapllot
Panor: s.... Fuller
Youlh Pu10r Rick Harri1

•

'

School•

Sunday
9:30 a.m.
B-"'&amp; - 7 p.m.
Wedoeaday Servioo · 7 p.m.

c - a.n:11 ., ... N._.,• ·

MlneMIUo
Putor. Deroa N.......

HJIIIIIIua Hollo•.Ch•~ -.
. Paator..Robell Manley
Slmdoy School · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip-10:45 a.m., 7p.m.
Thuntloy SoMoe - 7:30p.m.

a..a

Putor. Clyde W. HIL.......
I!IIIIIOII"'

QUALlTY

I havo known Doug Iince inlancy. I

DOUG McCOMAS

Wonbip -10:30un.

· Worship -10:45 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wodneoday s.m- . 7:00p.m.
l'1nl Bopllli Cburcb
&amp;hllidPolmorSl.
PallOr. Rev. 11111101 A. Seddon
Sunday School- 9: IS a.m.
Wonbip • 10:15 Lm., ?:00 p.m.
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.
Loni'J s.._, lit Slmday olewryiiiOIIIh.
W&amp;.day Sorvice-7:00 p.m.

Roo0 .,...._ Hoii-Cburda
Now Lima Rood, Rutland
, _ , Rev. Dewey Kin&amp;
Sondoy oc:hool- 9j() Lm.
Sunday wonhip -7 p.m.
Wednel'lay JftYet JMetinl-7 p.m.

Wtlleyon Bible Hoi!- Cbun:h
1S Peod St.. Middlepon.
'-:Rev. Join Nmllo
Sunday lchool- 9:30 LID.
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WedneJday Setvi&lt;:c - 7:30pm.

Slmdoy ~-9:30a.m.

80YEARS OF
TBE 'BEST
DEALS ON

Clnolnnal

•

Sou...,.

Smilh
Sondoy
Sdlaol · 9:30a.m.

5 P.M~

Dr. John W. AMwtlnge
Pator-l.llnciNrk a.a-a r-pte,

have walchtd hlo muolcal okiHo
develop with dallghl and amaamont. Hlo voc.l and inltrurnental
abilitial ara ~ equaled. Doug ie
ouow lo blau .,y ..r:11noa he min·
illlr.lo.

Sondoy Scboal · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - JG-.30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wec!aeJdar SeMwl • 7 p.m.
' I
_ . . , Cll- af Cbrltl
PallOr : TOlD Rmyon

Wonbip • 10:45 a.m.

Til

$3 19'

SPECIAL ORDERS
AVAILiaLE·· .
AT SAlE PRICES.
SEI SKIP,
MITCH OR lEVI

95

1 P.M~

. •

........, Flnt Bopllli

Purar.R,.... w......

MLMoilallllapllli
1'-'&gt; ol Main St., Middlopon
Putor. Rev. Oi1bort Cnia,Jr.
Sondoy Sdlaol· 9:30 Lm.

SUNDlY

Englantl, Mallo~~ Smith
Brothers, Flexsteel
95
STIRTIIIII
.
'

$899

""'-&gt;Y, Horrioalvi11e Rd. (RLI43)

Holrness

Carlttoo I.terJ11 a•'e:tln .. ca.wt~t
. Kinpbury

Putor. a... Tliomu McCiun1
Sondoy School · 9:30 .....
Wonhip • ICl-.30 a.m. IIIII 6 p.m.
WeDaclay SerWu - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonlllp • tQ-.30 a.m.
Wc:dnelday s.m- • 6 p.m.

PloeG""• Bible Hoi- ChIll mile oft Rl. 325
' - : Jtev, O'Dell Manley.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
· WedneJdaySem.. - 7:30pm.

7J.. Cllutdl af Cbrll!

Sunday School • 9:30 IJII.
Wonbip • 10:45 a.m.

,

oru.. N_..e

,_...., Cll- tiiM Naanne

Putor. Fllllk Smilh

Boo.....-llldp Clilln:llfl Cllrill
'-:lack Caleaoove
s.laday School ,g.j() a.m.
Wanllip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wodneaday SC:IVioa · 6:30p.m.

· Rutland l'lnl Bopllot ~-

Putor. Deroa Newman
Sunday Sdlool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Thunclay- . 6:30p.m.
&amp;.... (Midcll..,t)

'

w...,.,.- loa.m.,7p.m.
WllllrleJdOy SoMoe - 7 p.m.,

Rev. GJoan Mc:Mill.m
Sunday School · 9:30 LJD,
Wonhip - t0:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
WeDaclay ~ - 7 p.m.·

F..-IIIRua

Eprscopal

Wonbip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 Lm.

P - : Arilll Rwt
Sunday School - 10 a.m. ·
Wonbip - II a.m.

By

SOFAS

Spring ~ir Back Supporter•

(

,SEOIONALS

ETC: By FleDI_., Callyla,
England, Nldl01111l

I .

VIctory Baptist Church

TUPPERS PLAINS - Car wash,

RECLINERS, SWIVEL
3 PIECE
LIVING ROOM ·sums ROCKERS; WING CHAIRS
By England, National,
FlexRMI, Smith Brothara

Will Perform Sunday, May 23·

LOTTRIDGE - Carthage Township Festival, Saturday and Sunday.
Music, arts and crafts, games,
prizes, tractor pull, refreshments.

*199

x- Cllurdl afCIII'IIt

Free
WDI B~~;~
AlhSaoel,
•
MonOw
Saturday
-7:30p.m.
Sunday School- 10 .....
Wonhip • II a.m.,
. WednudaySom..-7:30p.m.

· c.tt .,•-u

3
. BIG DAYS

w-....,.

ron a.- ar Clartat

Slh ... Main
, '-'AI Hlrbm
y ... ....., Bill Fnzior
Sondoy School· 9-.30 ...... '
Wonbip-1:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
W........ySeMca - 7p.m.

'-oR...
Sunday- - 9:45 .....
W&lt;inbip • II LUI. oail 7 p.m.
w.-.y s.m.:. - 7 p.m.

Revival slated

.

Clilcha'a Home Rd.

s,..-a.urc~o

· Wonhip • II a.m.. 6 p.m.
Thunclay s.m.o. - 7 p.m.

Suodly S&lt;;bool · 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip • 6 p.m.
somce~-7 p.m.

Wonbip • IO..m., 6 p.m.
w...-y~... -7 p.m.

bodr

Annual river sweep project scheduled June)9

Putor. Gaoy lliDeJ

~--Ciilln:llflCIIrlll

-no-~
Sunday- - 9 .....

Sondoy School - 9::10 ......
Wonlip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wocl&gt;elday SeM&lt;u • 7 p.m.

Sundar SChool - 10 a.m.

O...ter

- - I I N e w T -IDI
Sii..,.Rid

Paa«: Jc!lm W. lll&gt;u....

............
Putcr: K.eilh Rader

N"' Lite Cblll'dl t1 God

- f Sdlaol · II a.m.

Birthday observed;

Community Calendar

,,

Wonhip- 10:.30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wecbaday Sorvicca - 7 p.m.

Reed ... F...,aalp
Cll- aiiM N--•

Pill«: K.eilh Rader
Sw1dly Sc:bool · 10 a.m.
Wonbip • 9 ~. 6 pm.
'IUelday s.m- - 1 p.m.

'-:PatHODJOI1
Sllll&lt;loy School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.
Wodaoaday Sem~ - 1 p.m.

, _ , , Clloado orCiuill
2t2 w. Main St.
,._, AaOhew MiJea

'

--··~

OJ. While Rd. elf St. Rl. 160

and ~rt•l.. .411&lt;'11~···
Estalilllbed 1913

FIRE &amp; SAFETY

"Di~llil''

·"

992-7075

992-2121
10. ...."' ....

S¥1S &amp; SERVICE
11 :t llorth S.C.......

'

Olio

•

�21, 1893

Qhlo

Pomeroy,

or,_,._.,.._.

.,••u

1M?

IIYII'S lAWN
UIIYIIIUCI

Clleallellt., ...........

"IMplralioM"
flower Shop

-

4:30 P. &amp; DIY .FOIE
PUIUCinOI
PRICE REDUCED!
Tho pitce hu ~-to S88,1100 IIIII
·
- flnonclng " up to- " ~
_nwy.,..,_for~IJir'
oon to buy wry
homo on 3iol ......, fn

FrMEIIII...._

RepiiCimenl
Windows

'*"

VInyl Skiing

- .. 4BR, 3boiiii. Z--.IWIOd1
BR opt. Pn&gt;plrl)' ""*'dlo •.800 oq. ft. fonn
bldg.

· Public NOll~
PUBLIC NOliCE
Seeled poap=ella wll ...
r ml;;ad by 1he Vlhp of
lllddllport, llllaa County,
DNo In ... Oflce of the
Mayor, Vllageof.drlepart,
· 237 liKe S1Net, Mlr'1JJ rt,
DNo untl JUne 11,11113, Jar

.. tola.tno.........,

llw\'llllaeollllddl port
._,.....,.-......,...Soul
BuaiMMT-PiantlnggNDt
a.-theOIIIoD i - t o f
Natural IIMouJCM Jar the
pui'CIIae and planting of IS
-inthevtlegaofillddleport.
To ' - ile hNitii and
• I n - of the pa.ttnge, lheYIIogeofllldrlep:rt--lnlo•"llno
Y- M..r - • S . Conllact...., • ...U buDneuconcMnlor . .
maln-ofthooe-.
n. 1erm "Smaal llualnaa"
aa UMd henlri _ . •
tMt haa,
Including Ita alflletee, •
nulllbor ol omptoy
not
•"• ring 100.
AI PI op ~~eatelllould outlnoplenelorlhetongl!lmiS
,_, . . . of the tren doetg.
nolled,euc:IIaa-OOIIIIIcare,
. tr.ap ul"' porlode, . . . - •

_..•nrl

llu..._. __...

. ... _ele..AI...,~
ond
to-

•A........... -.elf I aladety
owgulatfone. Plopor tnaurwll bo poawlvldod by

- -· ·
·111e auccn•'ut bidder
•ual.,. en Equiif Emptor..-ot Opportuniiy Eonplo.,..
llhlciJ prolrlllte dtecalllllnalion t
cnod,
oolor, notional oalgln, - .
..,., • dlcap, polltlcalefllllallonor.....,..TIIeVI!ege

.-of-

Vlltege of Mldchporl Tho
lerm ""Smaal Bull-· aa
UMd henln _ , . • buD-

County Commlaalonora:
Tho . wrltt•n •••led bide
..,........ lhat liae, lft- ahould Include the bidder'•
eluding lte alfllla..., • num· name, edcl,.a, lalepho~!
bar of .,.pto,_ not ex· number, • daaarlptlon of 1M
ceedlng 100.
property lho person....,_
Tlle!""foaod T- Plant- to bid on, lho prlco the
lng ,..._. ..,nalata oflhe lndlvldUIIIta bldclng on the
puoch-andpllntlngof4Z daaa~property,endlhe
Cattery,_ (Py,... callery doole 1M bid 111 being mailed.
ane)of13/4to2111CMacalf. Tha real property will.,.
pe((ANSIZS0.1·18SIOAmerf. aold to tha hlghoot
CM Standerd lor Nuraery
reeponalble bidder.
Block) at lho project alte et
The two propertl.. to .,.
the aouth •tnnoe to the aold•o:
Yllage of lllddlaport along
(Perry propooty) Begin·
llcb aon Olive lor en eppoaxl- nlng at • point In lhe
-rhlll-of1000Ft.TIIe centerline of Aulhorlord
plentlnga are to bo u ~~q~~~~l Road (T·1) whore It
lnataaapoHibte.wnpped, lnt.raecla lho Eutorly line
etaked,
wired,
and of s...tlon 31 of Columbia
llllllched.Elrlellngtrenatthe Townahlp lllld prooeodlng In
proloclehe wll be .--ved • ...onrlerlngllno llong the
bytheYIIIego,andahe.,....... cenlarllno of Rutherford
ration of ihe planting ..Ia Road to lhe centerline of
( - . I of rock and gnvel, Raccoon CrHk, lollo~!'l
Ill and lop aoll) wiU llfso .,. the -.tartlno of ...d C
prollldod by ... VIllage. The In • Soulh end Eaatarly
llldpropoaeteahouldoutllne rlroollon to lho Northwaat
enr a - I M Jar the ptanl- comer of the EUDIIeth lllld
lnge and follow up _ . to Mt111dal Jorden property;
_ , . ... lle-.di)Mithof !hence In • Northeaaterly
the .plllnllnge.
·
direction along aald Jordan
AteolncludedlnthoproJ- pr-tytothoE•tarlylno
oct lethe purdtunnd plant· of Soclfon 31, 111- North
lngof13 PlnOek(Ouerr:ua tolhepl-olboglnnlng.
Peluetrla)ond10WhlteFiowllelnglholn!enllon of the
eotng Doguro:d (Comua !for. Grantor• to convey 1111 lhe
Ide) In deelgnated locetlona property owned by lhom In
olthe Oeve DIIM Depot Perk Section 38 South of
and the .boat lllunch eraa In Rulharford Road being •5.5
the Vlflloge. Th• Pin Oek ..,.., moreor lf!U.
ar-ld.,.ohmelchlngalu
For••rly doacrlblld ••
(2112to3~callpor)tothe lollon:
oxlatlngPinO.ka-atthe
Sllllatrld In lho County of
aile. TlloWhltoDogwoodare MoiJIII, In tho St.ta o1 Ohio,
to .,. ol 1 314 to 2 !noMa and In th• Townehlp of
caliper. The ptantlnge are to Colu111bla IIIJd boundod IJIIcl
bowrepped, atekad,wlred, d mlbed•!o~:

bid~-

Addltlonol ~olormad n If
r 1'al..., bo o!JIIIIIIed by
• - ta 1 og ... Vllego 6llloe,
.1een Truaael, • 112-C112.
The'VIIegeom ••tMIIght
to Nject enr or el propoaalo ·
..,. to waive uy ~
11M or ~1'1111 IVtJoe In the
Pl"'' i , ..,. ,..,..,....
fred ttollman
llap
~ol Mlddlaport
IIIeY Z1,.2I.Juno 4
Public Nollce
Pullla natloe

Soalod propo1 ........

,.....,.1

au--

andfolloWupcareto_,.. r.•rUcularly daacrlbed •
thelle•dheofthof ... planl- ollowa:
lngo.
Beginning at • point one
The eucceulul blddor hun,..ed. end thirty·flve rode
muat tio an Equal Emptor. north of lhe South ·oast
met Oppottunlty Employ• corner of Sec. 38;
ln.
wlllch prohlblte dlaalmln• • aoulhw•IMn courae to •
t1o11 boceUM o1 rece; creed, merkad atone on the public
- · notional ollgln, nx, highway; thence ..ong Hid
ego, hendlc:ep, political alflll- roed to
- t line of St..
atloll or ........ The Vlllloge Mill lot at lhe
of Mlf'l JOr' 111 an Equal bridge;
Employment Opportunity cenlerllne of
Emp!opr.
thence woat to lho
The poaloot muat .,...,... n_orthw..t corn.- of the ...t
....,bJSoplomber30,11113. half of lho aouthweat
\'hovtttoge--.aathetlght quarter of ..ld aeotlon;
toNject•nyarelpropoHie thence ooull to lha eoulh
and to ..... any lnlonnal- line of Section; t h - ...t
11M or lrregularltiM In lhe to lhe ••lllne of quutor;
propoular heel.
lhonce north 115 rode;
Fred HoHrnon . . _ . - t to lho cent.- of
llayor AaccoQJI Crook; thence .
VIllage ollllddteport
the aemo to the oullet
llay 21, 28, June 4
·
clng In
In •

C.l814-llii:I·711W '"' ......

lhe aobov...a.rirlbed tract
all propeoty lylnt North of
Atdher!onl Roed CTownahlf!
Roed No. 1), whlrih hai
horotofor• been dovletd
(See deed reoorded In
Volume 214, Pllf• 817, .
Molge County o..d
AMOrda.)
.
Refwence Deed: Volume
135, P•a• 510, Melge
CountyDeedReoorda.
The ro•l "late •bovo
deacrM In aubjlot to •II
le•ne, ••••menta and
rlllh• of w.y of record.
(N•on property) P.-cel
No • . 1: The foftowlng
deacrlbed ro•l oeteto,
allllided In the Townehlp of
Columbia, In the ~nty of
Molp end • - of Ohio, towit:
The _lh,..at oornor of
tho aoutbw•t ••rtor of
Section Nu111ber Thirty·Two
(32) In Township No. Nine
(II) ol Aonge No. FIIIMn (15)
of the Ohio Company'•
Purch•n conllllnlng Footy
(40) ec,. more or lee a.
Alao, the following
deecrlbed r .. l oatelt,
comMencing at tha
IIOiltlw..t a«n• of Secllon
No. Thiity·ono (31) of
Townehlp No. Nino (1),
Range No. FlltMn (15) of
the Ohio Comp•ny'e
Purchaae; thence - • Forty
(40) rode, lhenco aoulh
Forty (40) rode; IIMMe weet
Footy (40) rode; thence
north Footy (401 rode to tho
place of beginning,
containing Ton (10) 110raa
more or...._
Exoepllng from lho Forty
(40) 1cre tract abO¥e

Public Not~

above Reiif Eatata.
Thl Board of Co•·
mlaaloneo may roleot any
bide and reidVortlae thla
property until euch property
Ill aold or leuod.
Toirm• of payment .,. u
followe: t,.o peroont of
pJOrcha.. price p•ld
Immediately by c..h or
certified b•nk chock.
Romolnlng bal1nce duo
wlthlri lhlrty (30) deya of
••
MoiJIII County Boo{~~
of Commlaaloners
(5) 7 , 14, 21 , 2a, 4tc

81

·

Lnn Mowing.
Fertilizing. Weeding,
Trimming &amp; Remov•l
Reeldonll. . . Com_. .
FREE ESTIMATES
4111113-Un

E.AGLESCLUB

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER

...
.J.

_ liSP .........

.,.,...

CHARLIE'S

5/1

SHRUB IREE
IRIMand
REMOVAL

Localtd At The lltldoWI
SubciiYIIIon In The Plllns,
Ohio on Connatt Road

a.

Downspo·uts·
Gutter Clunlng

ts

·

n~~!~ng

MIDDLEPORT - 8. 5111 - Haa 8-8 rooma, 4 bedrooma,
and 2 lull belhe. Look lithe e¥tru - haa m.ln.....,_
11M lliding, heat pump, lenced baokyald, opon llliiWII)',
fonnll d!nlng 100m with bey windows, lui b a - . -..1
Ria cloee to lheechoola.
·
141,500 ·
LANGSVILLE - Co. Rd. 10 - 2 acrea of beautiful botiDni
lend. Walor and electric available. A grNt home alta or
mobile home lilo.
11,100
LONG BOTTOM • Haymen Road - ·Thlt 7 year old
modular has 3 badrooma, 2 batha, family room, gan»n
bathtub, fireplace, illand bar in kill:hen, new h..t pump,
and a ""mmer kitchen. Allin good concilion. Alto haa a
trailer hookup. :411 olllia on 3.31 acrea.
145,100
DOmE TURNER, Broker............................... 1112--51112
BRENDA JEFFERS ••- ...................................... 112-aoll

DARUNE STEWART-...................................... 1112 13111
SAHDY BUTCtER .........................:................. 11124371
JERRY SPRADUNG ......... - .......... - ........ (304) 112--3418
OFFICE ..............................................................112-2. .

;a

.

j

I

•

Services

.

: I

FlEE EITIMA111

614·992·7144

992·2259

SR S25 NEAR DANVILLE-12+ acre f*'ll wlto ona11i1e
home wifh added
l.DC - . Clflar. ..,._
118111118. haylanc!, P81ll18 and wooda. PlMid nl8d, nice
laying land. ASKING $72,500.

addldcw•.

\SERVIa
36970 laD R• Raad
· POIIIffGy, Ohio

SKNIEA AD. • Nlc:e conlllruporsoy home wifl 3
bedrooma, 2 brdla. aun pcrdl, der:lrlng, ........
IIP!IIilncea. so.. with awirnmilg &amp; laling pond,
ohed, plus 8lC1nl rullic cabin In .... WOIIdf tor

SIZED LIMESTONE

hun1inglc;empln . . . . . .

992·3470

· R4ctNe BuhanRd. 8.58CI"IIIwifh197812X65moble
home and old houle properly hal two aeplca, TPC

OWNII:

·

SEPTIC IYBTEIII,

Mowrn • CHII Saws
Wattlaatars

1

a'W:.' •

HOlE BfTES and
TRAILER BfTES,
LANDCLEARitG,
DRIVEWAYS INIJAWD

UMQTONE·TRUCKING
FREE ES'I'IIU.TEII '

992·3131'

Jolf Wick.,..

MIDDLEPORT· 1 112 tklly home wl1h 4 bedoaou-. FANG
heat. 75 X I 00 lo~ beautiful Ohio River Wlw. Pbad
ttnllll REDUCED to 832,1100

WlliEI AllEY
Parts allfl Strvke

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
-..1 TAACKI:IOE WORK
AVAII'NF

6Wt211 mo. .

5110193.

MANCO
MINI KARS

,,

WE WANT 10 WORK FoR YOUI
WE WAHl YOUR US11NGI
HENRY E. rn El &amp;JID-- -- - - 7111111
KATHY ClELAND....- ...·-- ------....11

3HP·IIHP

Authorized:
Stratton MTD,
n,
I.D.C. Roprtlr Cent..
PICKUP end DEUVERY
Hour• H· M·F 84 S•t.
Closed Sund.y
949·2104

FOR WE

INa Sumlay Collsl

· Call614-992· ·
6637

412111fn

Backhoe
and small
Dozer Work

I

E•nployment

On,__
·-~111
-toalb-~
........... Diii.IM&amp;Vtlil

•BACKHOE •'
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING .

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

6
2/121921tfn

•

'.

D. A. BOSTON

W. Aloo How
7&amp;12 .

P· R9flilnl '

==..,...

LOll. Found

:JIITop
_ _ .,._
Feundlllart
-1713

.C,_,,•.HH.....
. ,rs:- . . . . ,._...,.In,.
Eapwlei ~ I d Nlil8urallll

a ... a.oft
e

112 0117,

Clllfe - - . . . ; ......,, wv.
wl'tl

6-10-111

Jd ·
- ·- IIUDI.M:
...
...,
...... 2:00
Ia,. .....
IIIII.

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

_
'X _
Pad &gt;$,.;r . ..
r

-

--=
::..-z::

111a
a~J
•u• Da

NADA Avg. Retail $3n5 . GOODWIN'S PRICE $3495

1990 NISSA~ SENTRA 2 DR.
Sliver, air, AMIFM Clllltaa, rNr dColl, 4 •P 1 ad.

GOODWIN'S PRICE $3995

1986 CHEVROLET CAVALIER 4 DR.
Withe, •uto., air, 1111, crulle, rear defroel, AMIFM caaean., luiiiJ'IIIII
rack, epon whttll, P/S, PIB.

1987 DODGE DAKOTA PICKUP TRUCK

24 Hour Portaltle Welclbic $erYice

Gray, 4 cyl.., 5-SpHd, AMIFM, Only 83,000 rnle.. CLEAN.

-U;S::-SAVI"Gs-BOMOS fOR-tDUCATIOMGROW-ALMOST AS fAST AS KIDS DO.
For current rate information, call
1-I00-4US BONQ • 1-100.411·HU

NADA Avg. Retail $5000 GOODWIN'S PRICE $4216

. 1988 CHEVOLET-CAVALIER Z-24 2 DR.
Red, air, AMIFM c-.tte, PIS, P/B; tilt, 4-epatd, del~ w~pw.,
r. .r clef~. aunrool.
·

NADA Avg. Retail $370.0
MANY MORI!

'

GOODWIN'S PRICE 13395

GOOD DEALS TO CHOOII PAOli '

(t moJI,IICO mil ••l•llf ~ '·ttl ....... , Ill I

1) _

•

TWJN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING

GoODWIN'S PRICE $2195

•

COMPLETE MACHINE.SHOP SERVICES

!lOUR$:
7:30am · 5 OOpm
Mon • Frl

.

. _ .l.;_.lll9m :.J_2:0Qpm SqJ

IN SHOP WELDING SERVICE OR PORlAB
ALL TPES OF o'IELDING FABRICATlON

!!.~!~~~~·..,
GENERAL
WORK l..,....,.
... . . . . JMCtiiNE
........................
• c.tllt • UI!IDGIS • Plqn 'Cjblr1

---·-·-....

WELDING

.....

• r ibneMion·Abilll¥ 10 RCII &amp; e.nd Metll

17 COLE • POMEROY, OHIO

II

,,

01.

""' ....EaoJ
In
saCNpe
• ...
, Allton.,
RUWIL tad,

. . . . . .KT

NADA Avg. Retail $2450

llllp

..........,, ......
ALL---·-In
.......,_._, __ _
........

(614) 992·7871-

4-1113 !In

,.....,

614·446·0736

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

EICAV4DIG
(614)
667·6621

SprhleTime
Sp41efal

- . ~--

. NADA Avg. Retail $4275

Serv&gt;ces

RDDIERI 1-1 Rill

1988 CHEVROLET CORSICA 4 DR.

$690000

~---­
r·~-a·-....-

- - ..... "r.QI
c.l . .
4Y-~Pwt---

Aat•Raf41b

Maroon, ·auto., air, AMIFM, ,-..r delroll, PIS, PIB.

SIU PRICED

~

St. Rt. 7
C..s.IN,.OH.

W.Lov.You

Jocks, n111lta. SliMp, one owner.

........

129.95 +Tax

614·992·7643

.SIZED UMESTONE

•DOZERS

IIUIIOII AVUMU

TRACY
------ ---112-2211
- • • Ma
OFFICE.BRINAGER--··........_, __,..__ •_ ________

, ,___...... 1 _ _

45720

COMMERCIAL and RESlDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

.-

COMMERCIAL BUILDINO • A belgln locllllld ,.. 2nd St
PomllfO)' lealll'8s conomercial room de r , · a. 2
apar~mr~nts upstairs. ASKING S2Ci,ooo ·

Chester, Oh.

Quallg
Stone o.

JEFF WARNER
113 W. 2nd SL
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
Officelt2--$47t
1-800-742-3868

SMron. Allee, ~
and whole family

J'r11

:

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

UCINI
MOWER CLINIC

HOWARD
EICAVADNG

WICK'S HAUUNG

IIIIAIII, 01.
742·2455 5+93

tnlns., T-IDps, power wl~, powll'

Of

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

915·4111

tfJg

Mom, AIMrt, Bonnla,

V8 11oa10r, aulD.

1

\

who'e•40"

· 1919 POITIAC FIREIIRD

........ -

Homes and
Aluminum Sidklg .
Washing

c..........
Mlllllleport, o•1o

5-S..f3.1

watar. ASKJNQUJ,OOO

Eat. . . , -

•4Prices Start
Ali!·-··
111 at

Interior &amp;, Exterior.,
Paint Mobile

319MI.elllll•t

992·3577

POIEROY - , Rocbprlnge Ad. - A buutlll.il counlry
•tting can • yours when you purdlalll thll3 bedlocm, 1

IINERSVILLE - One !IIOry home wi1ll 2 bediOOIIlt, 1'/o
baths, FANG furnace, TPC weler, lituatad on IPPIOX.
1U acre a. Alto indudod il a email older home at the
iame location.
·
$23,000

9 Wanled to Buy
,
.'l:
.. ,,... -eo.-. '*' ...
"'" I II ... Otilr - .
--.JMJ.
LONILY?_r._A ....

2 Fro•t Struts • Laltor
WltHI

ENtERPRISES

PLUMBING

-...frl. ICh00-2100
CLOSEI IIIISIAY

bell, 1'/o alory home wl1h a lui b111 n.nt; Spanllh look
lnl8rior, vinyl aklng,and large bern 1hat . . lilllhed
100m1 upslaira. Alllhla on IPPf"OX. 4 ac.
PRICED AT 141,100

33JAnnoul;;;;;;;;I'ICII;;;;flllf;lta;;--

3·16-113--lfn

317 L Wit.

-.uddllpon, ofl ~

Vlllfnla. .-

-,(lllllt &amp; -

949·2168

IUY • lEU e'TUDE

205 Norlh Blcancl Ava.

--..- ...,. :::\:;·ori:!"=-·
A1·no u 'lC e l'le '11 s

. 985-3406

FREE ESnMATES

THE BOOK
BARN

Lordy, Loldy Look

Banks Construction
lllly22

36358 SR 7

Painting

SWe IIIIL !Co. 7)

larry"Wayne•
· Banks

btltlelltlalloollllf 11 our

~~;:::====R:ea:I:E:a1:81~8=Gei="WI=ral;;;;;;;;::;

. lllthllrJ,,,,, 1101111

CUSTOM SADDLES, .
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

CIII,.IQC'riOI ,

,Gutters

USED ~AILROAD TIES

Ill•
Ill-•

4-22·'G-11110.

Shade River Saddle Shop

. NEW- REPAIR

BILL SlACK
992-2269

OFFICE 992•2886

(614) 742·2345 '

(614) 992-7878

ROOFING

•FIREWOOD

~====;:;~=~u:s:o:m::er:::a:t/s:~:a:ct:ionr±:'•::O:u:r:G:o:a:l==========::!
Real Estate General

RCIMt!ipWIW,

FREE ESTlMATES

Howwd L Wrltesel

1

•LIGHT HAULING

,_,. , r . ....... •

---=~·:.•-

___

•

COMMERCIAL &amp; RISIDIIITIAL
Lic••••ll, l•surell &amp;· Bo•llell

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

985-4473
667·6179 ·

POIIEIOY, 011.

May 23 1 :00 To 4:00

·s

Rick PL:WI• 1 '
...... . 'I

New Wiring, Rewiring,
lrouble·Shootlng

•

FlEE EmMITEI

992·7553

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

...
.I
.
-&amp;Auction

24 HR. EIIIRGINCY SEHICE

Plumbing Installation .
and
Repairs. ·

Sto~t&amp;Co..-re

'30 HOUR

GRAND OPENING
OF OUR MODEL HOME

c t

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

RWONAILE RATES

~anch~s • Cape C~d~ - Two Stories · ·Split Levels - BI-Levels

FOfl FAll EB11YATEa NCI BA6i:HURE:

BISSElL &amp;

SMALL DOBR WORI,
co1mucno1
DRIVEWAY WORK ..... ao••
IIIIIUMESTONE
·DEUYERY SERVICE . -co.-te · ,

Affordable Family Homes by "CREsr·

VA • FHA • F•HA • HUD Aaarovod

Pi'.ts;UcSall

EBLIN'S ELECTRIC

IU .IJII!a
5tON.2ncl.._
J II\ Olllo

·

• tlsdew'a ..._ _. •

(614) 992-7878
FAX (614) 992-7878

Conwillble Tope ·

lb~==~~~!Jd

·

256·6640

11111111

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

(614) 992-7878
_FAX.(614) 992- 3053

hmlroy, 'OIIIo

NEWLAND ENTERPRISES, INC.
Presents

F.......,.l» ef ......, 1'ra .....,_
IISUIII
Fill

SteQI Fabrication
and Welding

Steel Sales
No order
too small or too large
Orders welcomed

992-6215

Coven. c.pet,

POMEROY
6:46p.m.
·• Spaclal&amp;rly Bird
'f1DD p .....fl
-·ThlaiJCI good for 1
FREE card.
Lie: No. 0051·32

TIIMMING •MI
TREE &amp; STUMP IEIIOYIL

Llct•slll, l•nred ••II h•dtd
C•ll614-992·7171

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

Cu ,..,. ....

IN

Tanks, L"ch Lines
Repair &amp; Installation

8

COIIIUIIIIIO
IPIOUIIIf

EVERY THURSDAY
•.

CAU614-992·7171

. Rocky R•.Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
·
lox 189 ,
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 143·526.

•ncl Seeding.
Shrub •ncl Tree

..

doecrlblld,
one (1) rod,
Slxloen(16)1Mtwldeonlhe
out aide, .,.lng a riGht of 1---~-::--:-:~--:::----..._

way now owned by l.oule
Cottrll and wile.
laid AMI Ealale having
Percol number 05-00517.
P•rcel
No. ' 2: Tho
following deecrlbod real
......, •ttu•ln the County
of VInton, In lie Townahlp
of VInton ond In the St.te o1
Ohio, to41t
Being
tho
Ohio
·eomp•y'• PurchMo, end
bolnglho eoulh hllfl of the ·
eouthea•t quarter . of
Section No. Two (2) of ...d
Townahlp No. Nina (9),
range Sixteen (16),
uoeptlng Forty (40) acrtia
ofl the woat end of aald
premleaa eold by E. P. o.vla
tol.eonderColtrlll.
Alao the north hell of aald
eoulh...t quarter of uld
Section No. Two (2),
axcepllng whllt E. P. Devla
eold and dueled to I..Nndor
to • Cottrill •nd John Mark,
..., to - t containing . .vtlllty (70)
Nne
t1.tca norlh - · more or 1.._
to tile plaao of beginning
Alao ThlotyJ30) IICrM off
containing one hundred ond lho north on ollh• ••t
lolty acre• more or loa•. hell oiiM 110111hoat quarlar
Excapllng from uld laat of Section Two (2~,
above deacrlb•d tract Townahlp Nino (9), Range
NINETY ACRES, mora or Sixteen (18) In tho Ohio
laaa, th• following tract Comp•y'• Purch•o.
altuatod In Sec. 38, Town I,
Aleo • sm•ll troot of land
AanJIII 15 being •II the land altullled In the llllove named
owned by J. A. Aulherlord · Towf!shlp and County,
and Mallie V. Aulhtl'lorlt oonlalnl!lg • spring of atock
- t o r RltCCOOn C«ook and w - daacrlbed • follow•,
bounded on lhe norlh by being at the-"' •d cllhe
lende formerly owned by J. ...t ono·h•ll of the
H. Sutphin l•d; onlhow•t aoutho. . t quarter of
by C. A. Eubenlc -..1 Goarge Section· No . Two (2) of
Peck land •nd on lhe Townllhlp Nino (I) ofRonge
- • by Raccoon Creek and SlxtMn (16) and In the Ohio
on tho lin• of praa•nl Compony'e Purchoncloeure, being ninety
The eboVe deecrlbed r... ·
more or leu.
being lhe ooulh...l
Furthw, excepting from
of tho aoulheaat

K-.

IIWIR PROBLI.I

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health
• Accident • Aonuiw. IRA • Mortgage

- ....

992·2n2 .
Jamea
-ner

PUbliC Notice

........,. ol Soc11on Two (2):
and llei!OJ'tt-t quarter of
the aouth••t quar1or of
Soctlon Two 121.
Bald Real E"alato having '
parool n11111bor 11-011384.
DHd Roferanco: Volume
1a, Page 105 end Volume
214, P•y;: 239, Mt~a
CVoo unty
••d Rae or a.
1umo 13, P... 574 and
Volume 138, Page ·111,
Vlnta~ (:ounly Doed
recordL
·
No warrant!• .,. Jlllldo
• to any llena, mortgag.a
or oncu111brancee on th•

Ill-•

"r ... Yllage of
lllddiiJ rt. IIWge County,
· DIIIo In tM ~of the
...,..,, VllltJIIIof.lrlop ort,
DNo,..•:aoP.II.,J-11,
11113, lor the foiiCiwlng prot.
or:~:.,.,
of Mldd.__
,,..
_,.....
haarallellonaiSmeU
' lk•ln •T,.Piantlnggrent
n. lie Ohio D p ,..,..,, of
p
......, Rr u•cu Jar the
ubllc Notice
puopooaa oi-•IIIICIIrtgwlth
anal ......_
lo purPUBUC NOTICE
ca-andplonttrenonlllnd
Tho MoiJIII County Board
,..... or coo*olod by the of Commlulonere Ia
ecoeptlng -ltten, euled
bide for the purch.. ol
5
cerlaln real property •
J
lt:ed below.
Wttu., Hilled blda muat
be received In lhe llelga
County Commlhlonora
Office, Melga County
eour.touM, Pomeroy, Ohio
45768, no later th•n
"1"1 1 d ,, Juna 1, 111113, at
4:30 p.m. No bide will be
accepted poetdeted l•tor
then Juno 1, 11113. Bide wUI
.,. opened on WMII••day,
J - 2, 11113 at tO:OO Lm.,
at lhe office of lho MeiJIII

:1:

- • --•

Public Nollce

of
llldtd'laport Opportunity
1e.,. Equlll and
Towne,
Rani!!
Ernplor-ont
poulIIIUtc:hod.
ahould The
olllllne any 15S.lng
o!lhoInOhio
Comptlllya
lor the plllndnga Purch . . o •nd more

Eon....,..

Rooting
Cllll uator
8!*111 Prtcel on
Siding •ncl Wl~we

UlERICAN GENEUL LIFE anti
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

949·2391or
1·100.117·1460

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

J&amp;L INSULADON

IMIIIpoft
&amp; VICinity

I

.,

.....

With

N UJ IKJ nlenu..

�..

Sentinel ·

0-The
11

'

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

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

.._, Wanted

21 1993

Q

WMied 10 Alnl

54

1993

72 Trucks for Sail

'I··-----~~

NEA Crouword Puzzle

:::,..~~-·-~

~~-;:.::::.;•:=:
, ... _ . , . . . .

1-

.._.

I on

s•w.

~2

ALDER

47 TreHior

. IIIICNftH

8 Timid

12Evllc1Md
13 SMdow

r.:ercnanGtS2

'

u-..of ·

MW

52P....,

-e•

14- lflw
15 Puah IIIIo nar-

18- lvit

21 -whiz!

••

AIDIIIII .
29ltlllen .....

EAST
+'Q

....,

.AKH 5
IJ17

tusu

• 541

SOUE'B

•u

.J7iU

·•n
-.._ -

Information on baby cl'ldle built

ss

over .toNal cheat, sold It auc-

32.=

tit lpm. 114-852-5301, plUM

kooptrylng.

.......

Wantld to Do

All typoo at rwpolra or rwmadol·
log, grw1o cutting, polntlnl,
hauling off dobolo. 304-1175·792 .
llbyol111ng In lly Homo,
NolghbarhOad Rd. 614M6-U3t

' 3311ra.ln
7lldrlcl
35 Walrd
37 llodty hiH
38 Type oterch
40SOoiNn8

Grwoo high? Will maw, prlco
determlneCI by afra of lawn, 814-&amp;41-27a7.

BROKE
LEG II

.. -

medlc:lne

new

10 -11/L $30,DDO; All Ul Tho

A - Within 3 lillie Of Rio
Grwndo • Col IIIII Connoll AI Donno lum"*l R Fer In-Ion. f1ot.314.

112SI.

01211.

;;.144;.:.4;.:,
• .,---:,.-,..---=LAt Homo Fer &amp;!!!. a 111111

for Sale
1t 112 Ft. L'O -

;r;

_, __,_
4tlllll

'

.

'" FRANK AND ERNEST -

'

1118S Cltrla Croft, 18ft, 144 hp In-

Wlih llorlthly 01 $100
Rent ownot Will BoA All 3

-..;co. ..

Fer P7.000. 11WIIo

II,-·

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

44

53
Antiques · .
~;-;-~f,i;;i;;;i;i;=
au,. or MI. Rhw•• ~

·:

O
-p.m.,
: lfi.T.
• • -·1:10
o.m.
tof·
1:00
........,
to 1:00 P-11'- 1M • MW

54

furn&amp;IMII,

~

r~

...

mAll&gt; rw: rur &lt;»l ~ unu;
1iWC11 WEI611T '10 ~'i
.

~

'

_

All,.eur t.OOK al

~VOO WOM'r llE NEEDIN6 ,_

111£~~!:€...

- DRIVER'~ 510C AI~!

-

ICw

By Jellrey McQulD
CONSTERNATION I "kon·ster·
NAY-shun'') illdicates severewonyor

~ Lolouwt Turbo

STERNATION,
STERN.

......... Llnl&lt;. 2 o-,

I - . - - . $710; 79

C8mpers'&amp;

Motor Homea

. . . . . . . . . .bini,~­

A . . .r .•. 171.
. . ...,.
-

I

' '!OJ ARE HletHL.Y
euea=PT'I&amp;Le
TO DRAFTS.

Dooolp.IOI

RIIM: $17 ~
$27 Dou-, StonOc- ~o1;
a- To Gavin Plont. All .....,
114-446-1137.

11

5T~AWAYFRO'.\
e9'Eiii5TII STRAit-JERe,

~ -""D 6.'/ISea-IEt:ae~

Apo~-.t Country

room with colhod..r oolllng,
Coleman •• ~ Cal1man
:2 112: ton _.,.1 Ale, gu range,
gu hot wllor - · 14.1cu.ft.
2 oolllng wlllghl
kH, vinYl undorjilnnlng, 1«1

trlgor-.

11111'1- "T- 140,-

'

Rupo114417-11131.

r1

Selv1ces

P.ll. 114-

)

·.

Home

fumlohod AporlmoM, lltllldM
Pold, 1 Bedroom, Upololro,
- . . ! A...,uo, Goiiii&gt;OIIe, No
Polo1 bcollonl Condition, 1144414123.

Smoll tNIIor IIOrll wllour moilllo rnorw,I10,JOO, -.at31.

- · a cd bulldlng1, prloed
In tho 30'1, ~sta.

1117, 14171, I bitt.. 3bdrm.,
CIA. lronl dock, Cllh-1 col~
VENOING ROUTE: Fer Sole. $ ~ lng. aRellenl oondttlon, mUll
4000.00 , . llonlh Pooolble. - · 113.100, 304·77Ut30, 114H1gh Troftlc, Loc11 '-otlono. 9124417:
lkyllno Hally Rldgo 14170,
-lqulpmont. t-.at 83e3·
VIdeo 6 Tinning ~MH for
lilac, :2 bailrDDml, AJC,
oolo. Wolff laMing Cloo,..._
..edlll porch, kHchon lolond,
Sorlou&lt; lnqulrwo olnly. 304-27). olorogo - .... lliiCiorponnlng,
11222.
·
Hkl-, 3Q4.1,...34M.

--.,._

Ito.

... 114

full lootllo,leundry -

31 Homes tor Sale

......
ref. dlohw-, .,.,_ loolloo
2C'1 t,.llo!' IIOrll Pi. Pit, 304-17$-

mokl oi!Or,

lard,

$15,000

10 Aor-. Oldor r.o Bod""""
TraJ._, lllinaad, 1Wo Pan*, 114or 311-1017, 'dd'r n TWap. $37,SOO.

M-tlla-7117, 114-

Douttsn . .

n1r agt.

ln---.. _._ TV lorvloo, -'"llzing

:~~- r:.....

-

mollie

Ohio 114411 2454.

-

L..-1$

......
cAlrca
IM41tQrl. . . ....
-..,.,Col

with lind or to bl
- · prlco
_,..,.,
PatiiiOOf . - no
, . lind
114IINm.
-

04horHouoo - · ~--'ra.wv

homo (11111~ , . .,., '

2 liotho, lllddtrp
goo - art
end air
concltionlng.
..., aor Lindo 11waa 1141.

rwd-.

Wll loulld flilllo -

docko

_ _ ..., - · put , . w11Wl
jfd~lng. · 11+

t:Ja: troller

Electrical &amp; ·
Refrigeration

_ . . . . _ ............ In
Rio Gnolldo. I rtrl d Ill
Rldgo - Two L1J
- oaa-.
llilello 11'1111
campua.

:":3

'='r--n

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

.i

Rofoown:

Clooi\or Ropllr, FIWI
-K!l'
Doi!""\.Gocorgoo
CNolo
Itt
MI-4H4.

llama
C1M). I ••dr'DOIIM, 2 biiM,
3 room coaeee, "'" ' , nnent, WIFP: ~ olr _,.
101150
lol
Comdon Avo. dlii,;;,/,.l'"'IIIMor ond
.., - . coli
$M,OOO. :i0447J.7771 Ieiva LlridOer.wG.aMi.

-9

~

-

111t1 or~1ftor6:JOPII.

9124327.

=:.-~•.:;

EoUmot-.
•••a.

Oowl1 · ~ lloohlno And

2bdrm., fuU ........... CICIH to
1a9

llopolr,

Aaa"',t. Rlmad1llng, ~

,. . - 1 - 1 0 homi, tota? . . . ' blllrooinl, 2

Real Estate

town.

,_

wjlh.
1M111
. . . . . . . . .....

·

'
23-0ec. 21) Be
ing. Kni)W where lo look for romance and . in matters of the heart loday. ilthere is
uou'll find it. The Aatro-Graph Matchmake·' I"
ASTRO·ORAPB
'
someone to whom you are attracted . let
instanlly reveals which signs are romanh· him or her knoW eli8CIIy haw you feel. The
,cally pertecl for ·you . Mail $2 plus a long. response should pleale you.
sell-addressed . slampod envelope to CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan . 11)
1,4at~:l1maker, clo this newspaper. P.O. Box Persistence in puiSiling ~ is one o1 .
BERNICE
4465. New York, NY 10163.
your mosi admirable aaaels. ncould be the
BEDEOSOL CANCER (Juno 21.July 22) Your posalbili· primary reason tor your sucx:esa today .
lies lor luHilling a secret ambilion look very Follo!o your natural inclinltionl.
encouraging at this lime. This is you AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fall. 11) Look for
should be pushing, hot procraslinaling.
wayo lo ellj)lllll vaur arliltic ond CIMiiwe
LEO (July 23-AUSJ. 221 You might be In lor abilities today. You miglll do aomelhlnl
8 ptea'l"nt surprise today when you dlscovvery _,while that will provide you wilh a
er you have a secret admirer. ~d!Y . it pooitlve..,... 01 ach-.nenl.
could be.a ~~rson whom you"vo always PISCES lfab. 2D·Merch 20) .11 you "re
lhought didn 1hkl you.
_......, inVolved in .somolling thai OOUid
VIAOO ·(Aug. 23·Bept. 221 F( vorablo · P•-'"1 oril.ne or enhenC8 your
·
lilly 22 , 111113
financi81 trends are indicaled in your ~· mal&lt;~ tlck ~ n unti you get the,._;,. t
sent cycle. You could be lortunale aomong
111 you antielpale.
.
.
income fro~ a second sourc.~ . Keep an • ARIEl (Marcil 21 aAprll 11) People with
·rn !lie year ahead you might culllvate ond eye on gcod IIW&amp;SIInant pooslbihlies.
·
. . lved lado are likely 1o
~develop I8Yiral new inleraslt. These ooukl • i.IIRA .(Sepl. 23·0cl. 231 Partnership
=gate the ~ or
~um out to be exclling endeavOrs. *-u~ arrangemant8 roprasent one ol your pnma·
.
le 10 u. They will Innately
you"re likely 10 be quill progrn11ve on ry comfCMI zones, and this lima frwme Is no · -::""'P ro ,
one 10 hMd up lhe
"areas wtlera you were previouiiY lredl1lon· axceplion. Solid alliance. bolh SOCially and
you ra

·::end :..U

)

=

al
GEMINI (lilly 21.June 201 If thlnga hew
:,~~een 1 !rille alow for you in me romiiiCO
department -"Y. don"t delflalr. Tl'ja' ll '
·'1111 time to got out and clrcullte,
. you could mael IOiMOIMi naw and 1 -· 1.

· ==!it.~·==
!

=-==

blca••·

I

'

•

..

u
a

end

:==~u~well;Thelelobsters
other
water creatures,

sheD or crust, Jake U...ir.l..
from the Llotill CRUSTA, wbicb
I ::~·crust or bard covering.· lt.J.
the nupn CRUSTACEAN
only
,een old, the acljeclive fnm• II
CRUSTACEOUS bas been
English for more than three

..

.,.....1711.
.

l

A. The word you probably mean is
CRUSTACEAN: ( "llruJt.STAY·sbun"J,
category that includes shrimp and

IWIM!

Nlao 3a Ft. Kounlry Alrw Trwvol
Comlllollng Soii.CO...

T-,
lllnod,

contains

.::t
o:"'"·

J.:

commen:lally, are fiOIIIibla ·
•
April 20o111y 2111 Your intuitive
ICORPIO fOol ~· II) In llilualionl ~ ~~ towaod your linanc~l aflalow
Whel8 you utilize your lalenll and indullri· •
..., helplui!Oday UN ·
outne~~.' IIII)Ot ICfolel;eillllill M pllltlble · OOUid be IXI1tmorbut doil'l ~;;e·,.;;llnioo!al
today. You mlghl rack up lmpreu ove common - ·
- I n ce~ and finance arau.
. your lnlnga.

I

R E 'F T 0 X

j:

1 I I I

I When

I8

7
6
~L-L--'L-.JL--L-.1
L

1·

starts

c.ll1t
£~11,
-lni:wlea.
-· - Ul •11.
10 rtoop.
~-on

which

L U GI E·

I don't mind being aiticlzad. ' '
I was a kid my Dad ala
. . . . . ~ ways told me that if criticism
L....I...L....J'--..L.-'
.
~ had power to do any rBal harm
t

~--~~~~5;..,;I;;,;r.l-i

Q. I~ there's a' lerm for lo!llrtenl4
that
with c. What is it?

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

-.--. ~ ==·

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTI AT
BUDGET PRICES lif JACKSON
ESTA~~- Jocklan Plko

'

wordl.

to form four simple

YACTOE .

"The girl's injwy caused the
tttnstemation of her perents.• Be
stem about spelling the noun CON·

--........ --loft·

~

Fumlohocl Apo-: 1 Br, 120
Fourth Awnuo. GoiiiDolle 1310
UtiiMieo Paid, 814 ttf441il Allor
7 P.lol.
.

1117 Aedm11n AlverYIIIw, 'MdO,
:zbdnn., 1 IMolh, lorgo ~

low

__,~

. ·-Ceo e•" .. iii!
;:;\ aI r),
•tt•••n ...

coll114.fla4711. EOH.

~CoM Aftoor I

0_ lour
Rearrange '""-" 'of 1M
ocramblod words be-

·t~p~et:

In .town. ~- ...,,_
11: VllllaO ~6iM!i Aolo. t4t or

Elllocl-

WOII

ward dummy's 10.
Don't overlook any chance;11'ilwe..,.
to make your CGDtract.

n

5l'(ltq' .,X)Ir) Hl(

----topllanan

c,.·· • .

FIT IM ()1£. ~ Tl6

-

G

lAME

dummy's ..,. .
.
If it is your lucky day, East wiD
drop the ~· Tben you return to
haDd iD a minor and play a spade to-

.

BORNWSER

111. 1M,

abclnn. oplo., Iaiii ..,.,._ lfi'

XTPG •IR

S X W

FDKO . P a 0 S ·1 X W D 0 •
PREI(IOUS SOLUTION: "I used IO love ·sui Cosby when I was· a young
c:omlc. Watchlng '~lm , I was In hog hea~ . " - Rlcllard Pryor.

ably East, will tate the spade ace to
defeat your pme. SO start by aatull·
ing that East bas the spade queen. But
does that really belp! TbeystiU rate to
colleet two spade !rids.
There is one laiD! chance. Ruff the
third hel!,rt with the spade jaet. Let's
assume West defends well by discarding. Now lead a low' spade and call for

.·'

"".......____
&lt;:a :
' •..,&lt;I
, ...

Apanment
torRent

'W

~1.

spacle queen, lle will overrun at this . v D. L • •
triet. Tben later someone, presum·
'"

=~~':Islow.
hou... f7,20f1.
oft•I:DO Pll.. ,

1ta4 E. ..... - - - -

H D 0

Y1J11 CGDtinue?
ACW
V T.P
a
VKXO
ThiDp loot grim. All the eYiclence T V X H '
- East's overcall and West's lead ~ , ·x w . LGUKTLH
MLRDL.
a
with the heart jaet in the dummy -: 1 _
points to West's haYing started with a :
CM
TH.IaLGOS
KGP
doubleton heart. And if. West bas tile j S L lt V .

CUotol":',

1m Flborform 11 Pt. Sfd.ao.t
With ItS HP u.aoulooor, L'O 614-

=:!1,

Ftnancial

Trailer

=J:l. • -

CELEBRITY CIPHER

" - &lt;1011),
................. crMMd frOm quatatkiM by t.rnous ~*~Pie. p.t8tld
EactllttW 11'1 1M dpher MM\dllar MOiher. TGt:My't W..· V equlllf W.

foor spades. West leads· the heart • queen: three, seven, two. He CGDtinues ' ·
with the heart four: eight, king, nine. ' • G
East now plays the heart.flve. How do

75 .Boats &amp; Motors

Nlao a Bod"""" - l e Homo
From H*- '"·'""' 114-446Fer
- . 8 Roloronco,
Dopoll1
an, 3044'1W331.
Roqulrod.
lllleo out 211,
114RIIICII..,.. homo 3 ....._ 256-12!1.
1 IMolh, oHochod 'gorogo, Nlao -~'lo
homo IHM tar up
~
Allldei~M windows, oentra1 air,
to 11110 homaa blltwaen Alhanl:
1 Pomooor, 1851-.., 114-112Fool•
304-m.IIIO.
~ Roed, (Old 11101 Un- 2167.
s-m.a..e.
doran&gt;und - . Open Ft\:onll Tnllr lor In tho _,.lry,
Y1rd work· mowing ond · trimHuge ~ F,.,. pmly lumlohod with 11M fill.
ml~
and ot~ add jobo, fully
• lome Work, .., ...., 1~.
··•
ElwgyE-, -1751.
.......... 814-tiiU37l

Will Corw For Elderly Lody In
· Hor Homo, Doy1 Only, 614-3782124.
Will do !own work, culling. b
oruoh
6 h~. ouloldo work. odd
Jobe, $5.00 per hr'.- 304..&amp;15-1309.
Wllf glw pl1no leooono In my
homo 11 Apple GIO'Io, WV. 304-

making. But you shouldn't just shrug
your shOulders and accept defeat as
inevitable. Hunt assidnously for a lie
the cards that allows you to sneak

Without peeking at the East-West
·cards, decicle how lucky you feel in

-;;;;;;;;tp;;;;;;:3HO&lt;iHO
I~V-1111~ P~, 3 -

-

f =~;~lllnliDI:
· · apparent bad luck into
1·
gooc1 luck.

t'!".'r

To Cleon: Hou... ,
Dnloel, Elo. 114-256-1218.
Wonllng: job driving truck locol,
31 yoorw o•porlence, hovo CDL,
614-817-t417.
.
Will BobyoH In lly Homo, Noor
Q..., lilemenlory SchOOl, Full
Or Poot~lmo. Coli llorlo 114-446-

11 Still

the glass half full
half empty?

Sal

Conw Lal, Rural Wotor, Natural
Goo, K.,. AIM, oSII,OOO.L Good
Locollon, 114-446-81137 ur 6144111881.
COUNTRY HOliES /ACREAGE
Ex1rw ~ Cont-pory Homo
On 17.1 ""'- 11/L With 2 Barna,
ezz4.
Pool, a P-, tlt\.ooo; 4 lodTri.Sto~ Tr• Sorvlco. ToppinS, ::.:';
t~
Trimming, FOlding, Romcwo , SMO;GOO; 110 ..,,.4 11/L Farm
• Slump Romonl, Frwo Eo- With Born. 30 nHolllo.I11P,OOO;

~~- 114-892-2312.

10 Female bird

Opening lead: • Q

•.:..-

wry
nlc~t
$30,000, 114-141-2203 or 11411411-20411.

1

VMCOdl·

18 ..,..,•• Golde

How do you view clwlce! We bear

Hhe~ala,

=

8

food
The womion

18Explorer

stories about people beioc illcredibly
Judy: for eomple, someone who wins
a muUi·mllliODsdollar lottery. But
l1101necMIM! else loses 20 straight bets at
the race track.
In brioJce, you will sometimes
that your CGDtract bas no cbaDce of

1910 Ctoyton Boctlonol, pump. diCic. three br du ooun, two
bothi, locofod on lol In Roclno

Mlu Paula'• Day _Car. Cenl1r 1
Block WMI 01 HIIC On J•ckoon
Plko 111-F I A.ll. ·5:30 P.ll. If
QuaiHy And E•porlenco lo Tho
11 Concoom For v- Chlld'o
coro. Coli U1 Fer A VIall. lnlonl
/Toddlorw 1~221. P- ·
choolerw /School Ago 614-44&amp;-

Wonled

--TO AUTYGRAPH
HIS CAST!!

YEP··ALL HIS
OL' CRONIES JEST
CAME BY--

I HEAR YORE
SNUFFY'S GOT A

11

knowingly accapl

ElR TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Trlmml,., Tr• Removal. Hldcie
Trimming. FrM Eltlmateal lf43117-715TAftor 4p.m.
coli 304-175-1~7.

f

8 (:allege deg •
7 Smug peraon
8 TIPfocaMke

-Prewtn
4 Chlldleh
5 Sound of
hHit8llon

P us

ac:lvenlsements tor real estat,e
which Is In vtolalton ol the
taw. Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertlsed.ln lhiS!newspaper
are avallm.&amp; on an equal
oppqnunlly basis.

11112-111100.

1. Opp. of NNE

2Hnten
3 Conductor

Pus

This newspapar will not

Corl I Tom'1 Roofing, frio ...
tlmll•, 114-t43-5335 or 114-

G - Paotoble Sowmllli don't
haul ~ kiato to tho m II luot

BARNEY

•zza
7 -

DOWN

·

-

••••
:.:;:..a ==

tion arvunil1tt0, call coiiKI If-

18

---

(lllbr.l

Vuluerable: Both
Dealer: North

.................... _
---........ .
an~r

01

, 30 Tree oflllrcll
flmll

.AKQ!O
.Q7

....

eor.:f
....
lllxtll .....

22F- ..
• 25

• lt.KJID

.A I 5
.QI .

58 a.w window
5I II plua one
118 Mlnerll

17111neM

.ltlt12
.JIIIS
WJ!Sl'• •

55 Convened

row..-:•

NORI'I5

AH aM to P;awla• ,_...

lold

44 Enttrti!M

171111

4WIIMrllalng

PHILLIP

112

.

. =_,

ACROSI

-

A

·

·

·

the skunk would be - --. ·

you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS

'l::r IN ·THESE SQUARES .

•

Compleie the c~uckle quoted
by filling in the miaing wOrds

UNSCRAM8lE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

.

I'

SCJlAM.I.ETS ANSWERS
.
, r · 1o
EtaNr • FtltUs a AMlte a Around a FORWARD TO
Granny blew out lhl candles on her cake and ana
I'IOII'ICed, "How old you really are depends on how many
bir1hday's you look FORWARD TO!•

�•
'

--~---

.

Friday, May 21,1193'

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Mammograms now.available .

The Mobile 'Mammogr~
Unit from Riverside Regional
•
cc:r lulimte of Colnml)ua will be at
lhe Meigs County Heallh Deplrt·
ment to offer low cost mammograms ror )adies 3S yean of age
and older.
A~cor~ng to Norma 'l'orret,
nurnng duector of the health
~t. appointmeniS are now

RUTLAND KINDERGARTEN • Pictured are klnderaarten
students at Rutland Elementary who were honored at the schoot•i
academic banquet recently, FroJ!t. row, 1-r, Peggy Dal'f, Kayla Icen_-

bower, Ashley Baylor, Rpdy Hart. Second row, Robert Cross,
Nathan Grilllm, Kimb~Iy Renolds, Adam Snciwden, Cm·tlt Vari•
an, Zacluu'y Bush, MacU.l Kina, Renee Bailey.
\

spoke of the problems lhat olde~
non-medicaid recipients bave in
accusing adeqliate health care.
Any woouua who Uves on a f!XC4
income ·· Jd lllls never !lllll a mam·.
mopaphy, or :s over ~0 years ol~
and llllda tlllllllJr.ogram

o•rer a ye!ll"

.

.,0, should take advantage of lhi&gt;

new service.
.
t;
MammOJI'aphY. via Ohio Slltq
being liken.
,
Univenity Hospital, Mobile ManFor tbose tmable to pay, lhere is mogram Unit, v.rill continue to hi
a .spec.ial .fund. available from 'offered in August 8lld November a(
R1vers1de bosp1lal, but proof of a cost of $SS. Client&amp; who bave;
income on the day of ~:~ medicare coverase should bring
must .be provided. Any
·
· lheir card,l wilh lhem to IllY breast
sh~&gt;"'lllg IIICOIIle may be used.
screenins they attend; medicar~
Cost of lhe mammopam is SSS, does aiver tbe $SS cost every twq
due die day of lhe test, either I uly yesrs.
·
· .· 1
12 or 13.
·
· Orily at the 1,uly 12 and 1l
This new s~rlice came about Rivenide a:reenlnga will no one bl\
after Ms. Toues attended llll turned away due 10 in ability to
evening breast eahcer town meet· pay. But. proof of income il oeces~
ing in late April. ,.She represented sary. To make an appoinbllent or
Meigs County alon.c with Mrr.. for furlher information call lhe
Gladys Cuinings, They, along wiib health department at 992·6626 ·
·several other rep.resentativea from Monday through Friday .8 a.m. 10 4
other south ea3t Ohio ,;ounties, p.m.
.

Eastern alumni plans announced

· The 1993 Eastern Hi.ch School June 6 a~ Ha~t•'s 76 Station in
Alumili Banquet and Dance will be Tuppers Plains, Kee~h 's Shake
held Saturday, June;l2, at the high Shoppcs, Reed's .Store, Baum .
school.
Lumber, Wesam Construction and
Dinner will begin at 6:30 p.m. 'The Daily Sentinel.
with a meal served by lhe Easrem · You may also purchase advance
Band Boosters. A dance
get tickets by mail from Julie Elberfeld
underwayat9p.m. wilhmusicpro- Dillon, 12 Lincoln Terrace,
Yided by Crossover. •
: Pqmeroy, Ohio 45769.
· Advance tickets, for lhe dinner
Thil year's honored classes are
·
only,
may
be
purchased
for
$8
per
1958.
1963, 1968, 1973, 1978,
er, Brook•Bolin, Brandoi. Black, Jenny Cade. Second row, Joslr
-person; advance ticketl for die din· 1983, !988 and 1993.
Stanley, JR Hawk, Chrlttlna fdiller, Miranda· St,wart, Steven
IICl and dance are $12 per person. •
Offieen for lhe 1993 event are
M~Danlel, Rachael Morris, Mallory Kina, Hollie Ferrell, Allison
· Tickets, for lhe dance only, may be Brian. Co!lins, Jli!'Sident; Leonard
. Williamson, Jeaie Justice, Kerry Allen.
·
purchalied at the door for $S per 'K.oeni$, VJCC-presldent: Julle Elber·
.person.
·feld Dillon, secretary; BMida Cun·
Tickets are requile4 for lhe din· ningbam Venoy, assistant secre-,
.ncr and ·m~ .l!l!~chased until tary; and Lisa Collins, treasurer. · .

will

RUTLAND FIRST AND SECOND GRADERS • Fl:'~t and sec·
ond &amp;n~de students at Rutland Elementary who were honored at
tbe school's academic banquet are: J.r, rront. Nicole McDaniel,
Jamitba Wilford, Heidi Gilmore, Joanna Bowersock, Tyler Barn·

Hocking College president's list

Patricia Hetzer. Middleport, a
Selccti~ is based oo leadership
second year student at Hocking and supenor scholarship perfor·
Collese. has been tapped for lhc ~e and each must .have a grade
President's List, an honor beslowed pomt avmlJC of 3.5 or above.
.
011 no more than one percent of lhe .
Hetzer 1s a business manage·
mentmajor.
.
SIUdc:nt population.

IT'S CARDEN TIMEI
SEE OUR LINE. OF•••
tMethoxyclor Spray
•Thlo~n Dust and Spray
· tMarlata Garden
Insecticide WIP Fertilizer
&amp;Ume

eGarden Dust
oS% Sevin Dust
and Spray
tCopper Dragon Dust

ASSEMBLY PRESENTED ·An usembly was held recently at
Pomeroy Elementary in observance of drug free week. Sayiug
''Do" to drugs and self esteem, were the key topics Mark Ward,
ventriloquist, discusSect.with'the students. Plctured,)·r, are helpen
Amber Armstrong, Mark Wade, Mark Dailey and Donay CalL .

SUGAR RUN

1985 CHRYSLER LEBARON 2 DR.
Power windoWs, door locka, power sail, fllcltory 1111UIIlle,
tilt, cruise, 4 cyl. LM1 then 80,000 miiiL •

·

·

.00
sau• 2300

LLS

MULBERRY AVE.

POMEROY .
9~·2115

•

•

'

Pnli1p Morns Inc. 1993

•

The Marlboro Gear Trutk is

J

Soon

t-SHIRIS . uGHTlRS ,
BlACH tOWELS
sPGRtS BAGS . ~

••
'•
.~

,.

.,'•
•

.,

"

·•1.'
'

Be Sure To Stop By

"''

.,
'

~~

p
v.

?

SATURDAY
MAY 22, 1993
9:00 AM TIL 5:00 PM
'

Marlboro
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING:. Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

•

~ ··-!

.

- - - ·

RIVUSIDE FOOD·
.

'

.,
\
L
'

' '

L
0

· 431 Vi. iiiiN SIREEI ·~

RT

OHIO
,.

I

,,

~

•

"

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