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Cominunity Calendar

TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE • Har:risonville Senior Citizens, Tuesday,
7 p.m., townhouse. Snacks served.
· All members attend.

•

RACINE • Racine Area Community Organization, Tuesday, Star
Mill Park. 6:30p.m. New members
welcome.

Granddaughter named
RVHS valedictorian

7:30 p.m. at the home of Evelyn
Hollon.

Luciana Lanette Scott, daughter
of Steven and S11ndra Scali,
Cheshire, and granddaughter of
Kathryn Wildermuth of Pomeroy,
and the late Charles Wildermuth,
and Mildred Scott, Cheshire, and
the late William Scott, is co-valediciorian of the River Valley High
School graduating class.
She lias maintained a perfect 4.0
grade point average for her four
years of high school.
ScottisamembcroftheNational Honor Society, Beta Club, Arts
·Club, Key Club, Band, Plag Corps,
French Club, SADD, DARE,
Regional Scholars Prol!ram. Super. intendent's Advisory Council,·and
has played on ihe basketball, soft·
bal~~/:i~l~~~~ activi-

CHESHIRE · Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency, free
clothing day, Wednesday, 9 a.m. to
noon, old high school building,
Cheshire.
THURSDAy
RACINE • The Racine American Legion Auxiliary will meet
Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. at
theposL

ing Program, been a county fair
volunteer, summer 1caguc 10ftball
player, and took part in Clean-Up
Oh1o, Big Brothers/Big Sisters,
Holzer H~ital 's Mock Disasters,
the Gallipolis Developmental Cen·
let Carnival, Bob Evans Farm Festival and Elder.Can:.
As for honors and awards, she
made Who's Who Among American High School Siu4ents, the
National Honor Roll, the U.S.
Leadership Academy, ihe Marsball
Academic Fair Award, and ihe GalIia County Academic Excellence
Foundation. She was named the
LUCIANA SCOIT
Gallipolis Professional Business
Women's Club .Girl of ihe Month,
t&lt;Xik trumpet solo awards, and soft- while still in high school under the
ball pitching awards, and was college options program at ihe Uninamed all-SVAC honorable men- . versity of Rio Grande. She plans to
tion and scholar/athletic award attend Marsball University ibis fall
·
where she will major in pharmacy
wmner.
Scott elected to attend college and minor in computer technology.

MIDDLEPORT. Preceptor
Beta Beta Chaplet, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will hold its annual
potluck
picnic at lhe home of Joann
POMEROY - Big Bend StemCo
dcr
6
Thwsda
wheel Association, Tuesday, 7:30
r
at
p.m.
Y·
. . p.m., Carpenters Hall, Pomeroy.
POR'lLAND • Lebanon TownAflyone interested in helping with
this year's festival welcome.
ship lrUStees will meet at 8 p.m. at
the township building.
.
ties, Scott has take part in ihe Ohio
' RACINE · OAPSE Southern
State
Scholastic Achievement Test· Local 453 will meet Tuesday at 7
REEDSVIT.LE -Riverview Garp.m. a1. Southern High .School.
den Qub will tour lhe Glass House
Works at Stewart Thursday at 6
.WEDNESDAY
p.m.Ameetingwillfollowatthe ·
. POMEROY · Wildwood Gar· home of Delores Frank.
·den Club will meet Wednesday at
The Riverview Garden Club
held its April meeting at the home
of Janet Connolly. Co-hostesses
were Ella Osborne and Nancy
Wachter. '
The meeting opened with the
club song "How Great Thou An"
and the club creed "Who Makes a

R·zvervzew
•
• .Ga"den C/Ub presents gziflt
Maxine Whitehead.
·
Each member received a deeorative book mark and the door prize
went to Mary Alice Bise.
Plans were made to tour tbe
glass house works at Stewart on
May 27.
, .

the meeting and welcomed Debbie

~il~:.wbo presented a program

•
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Mrs. Gilmore told the difference
uses of herbs and how to use them
in cooking. Mrs. Gilmore had samples of different spreads which she
served to the members.
Frances Reed, vice-president,
presented Mrs. Gilmore a gift from
the club for her presentation.
Roll call was answered by members naming a scenic spot in Ohio.
A thank-you was read from Arcadia Nursing Home for Easter favors
the club members had made for the

BRADFORD .PRESENTED AWARD - Wallace Bradford,
center, was presented awards recently for SO years of membership
in .Pomeroy Chapter No. 80 Royal Arch Masons and SO years in
Bosworth Council No. 46 Royal and .Select Masons. Bradford is
retired l'rom iasurance sal~ and is passing his Christmas tree
business to lither family members. Also pictured are Roger Gaul,
ten, Sixth Arch Inspector, Grand CounciJ ·or Royal aad Select
Masons or Ohio, and Robert Carter, right, District Deputy Grand
High Priest, Royal Areb Masons of Ohio.

Refreshments were served by
the hostesses to the above named
and Pauline Myers, Nola Young,
Grace Weber, Betty Boggs,
Delores Frank., Margaret Grossniclcle, Marilyn Hann11m, Marlene
Putman and Janice Young.

Pomeroy UMW holds
mother-daughter banquet

Gar~;~e whitehead presided .at

Three mothers were honored si~r: of "M.O. T.H.E.R." Paula
with gifts to special missions when W
. sang "Prayer is the Key to
the Pomeroy United Methodist Heaven." Faye Wildennuth recited
Women held their annual mother- a poem to mother. A humorous skit
daughter banquet recently. · .
from "One Foot In Heaven" was
Evelyn Clark read a tribute to presented by Martha Hoover, Jean
Faye Wildermuth; Alice Wamsley Werry, Paula Wt!llcer, Dean Barto Dorothy Downie; and Marge nitz, Dorothy Downie, Alice
Reuter to Polly Eichinger. Abbie Wamsley and Isabelle Wolfe.
Sttatton, ,President, presented the ' Tables were decorated with pot·
three ladtes a ceniffcate for their ted plants, Hummel figurines and
work in the church and in the plastic canvas baskets.
UMW.
. Each member was givena pansy
Following a potluck. supper, pot- to put in her garden. Pastor Eunhae
ted plants were presented to Helen Kee·closed the banquet with a !ribFisher, oldest mother, and Tammy ute to all mothers and gave the
Neibert, youngest mother. .
benediction.
Martha Hoover lead in the

patients.
Connie Connolly was weleomed
as a guesL
Flowers at ihe Riverview School
sign are to be planted by Nancy
Wachter, Ruth Ann Balderson and

ID·WEEK

The Preceptor Beta Deli Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, met
recently at the home of Charlotte.
Elberfeld for installation of officers. Joan Corder was installing·
officer.
Officers are Donna Jones, president; Eleanor Thomas, vice-presi-:
dent; Jane Walton, treasurer; Ann,
Rupe, recording secretary; R'o~;
Sisson, corresponding secretary,~'
and Norma Custer, city council. .;
Cards were sent to Lillian
Moore and June VanVranken.
~
Committees announced forth&amp;·
year are : Social : Velma Ruej '
Eleanor Thomas, Maida Mora;·
Belly Ohlinger, Shirley Beegle;• .
Nellie Brown; ways an(! mean$~
Charlotte Elberfeld, Clarice Krapt::;
ter, Norma Custer, Rosie Sisson,•
Lillian Moore; sunshine: Jane WaF~ ·
ton; scrapbook: Norma Custer; ser-~
vice: Joan Corder, Ann Rupe, ReVl!·:
Vaughan, Jean Werry; program :~
Jart.e Walton, Roberta O'Brien;,
Mary Morris, Ruby Baer; calling:
commiuee: Ann Rupe, Maida;
Mora, Clarice Krautter.
;
Several mothers of the chapter
attended the mother's day dinner of,
their daughters in other sorority '
chapters: Maida Mora to Athens ~
Delta Rho Career Chapter; Donna:•
Jones and Norma Custer to Betsy '
Jones, Ohio Eta Phi Chapw, Merri :
Amsbary, Xi Gamma Mu Chapter. •
and Ann Rupe and Jane Wai1011 for •
Linda Faullc and Jerri Walton.
:
The next meeting will be a'
potluck picnic at the home of Joan •
Corder i16 p.m.
·
Hostesses were Charlotte Elber- ·
feld and Vera Crow.
·:

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••

Auxiliary meets

New officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Bashao
Ladies Auxiliary.
;
New officers are: Terri Browning, ueasqrer; Donllll Pullins, seeS
retary.
.
'
Plans were also made for the ice
cream social on Jun,. 25.
·.
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14.5

OZ. CAN

C 4 ROLL
PKG.

DEW FRESH MARGARINE
,-r

7J

c

CAN

FRESH ·APPLES

FLAVORITE ANGEL FOOD CAKE
ILB.

BAG

3LB.

TUB

.

'

· 1 LB. ROLL or 10 OZ. LINK

MOUNTAINEER ·SAUSAGE

C

3 LB.

$1.69
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c

REG. $2.59 SIZE- MR•.BEE

COLBY LONGHORN CHEESE

JIFFY CORN MUFFIN MIX .,

POTATO CHIPS

...~1.49

•

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14 oz.

r---~-~-~-----~-----------,

I TRIPLE VENDOR. c·ouPON I
I Good for 5 Manufacturer's I
I Coupons·of 50 C or Less Value. I

w ELl 'S

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I IOOD .WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1993 ONLY I
I

· IGood At Powell'' Su,.,

v•

Only)

298 SECOND ·STREET

.POMEROY, OHIO ·

I

I

COUPON .:. COUPON - COUPON "' COUPON- COUPON ·-:-wE RESERVE THE liGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
L---~---------------------~

A

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•
By DAVE SKIDMORE
Assodalld Pftll Writer
WASHINGTON - New orders
to factories for "bill ticli:et"
durable goods showed virtually no
·improvement .in April following a
'plunge in March, the govemmeot
saidJOday.
.
Orders, running ll I llfvM•lly
·adjusted $130.3 billion ~ the
mmtb, wae up by a ICUt
mll·
lion, a statialically inliprificant
amount, the Commen:e Depu; V'
silid. Orden bad plummeted 5.7
perceot in March, tho IVOIII in l S
1liOOdl8.
April marked the third month
out of four without an
of •
least O.l percent. HoweVIf. evoa
with the recentlackluatar performance, onlan darin&amp; tbe ·flin four
lllOIIlhs of tho yw • a wbOio llil1
weze • bea!tby lOA peaot IUgber
thin the period of Ilat year.
'Fhat's beca~~~e otc1111 this year
have not entirely Jimt .. ltiOill
pins polled • tho eu4 ofl992.

By CIIAIU.ENE HODLICH
S n.w Newt SWf
Substimto feiCheq 11111-.ca"·
tifled peno1111el for the 1!193-94
~thool r- hftd a Tr 11f17
night'sl'""'tina of tho MeiD Local
Boud of Education bela u the '
Pomeroy Flmnc:nt.y Sdleul
·
Hired aa aubautut&amp; Uli'CMn
were Jeff Arnold. S.... Anold,
JCIIIIie Alb!Dy, RGbln Albie~~·
JlllllliDp
rs B
,
Mary Busb,
· a Cupeater,
Lesley Carr, Jennifer Coach,
Michael Cuckler, T.Q!IYI Cununins,
David Curfmlln, Rick DailcJ, ~
orab D1vis, David DeeRI, Brytn
Durst. Sbaroll Fdlllonda. Cynthia
F~temy~. 1'hamal Flllbcr, Teresa
Fields, Michelle Frazier, Judith
Gannaway, Scou Gheen, Jodi
·Glasa, Ra!ldall OoJdsherry.
Lucille Ha&amp;JCfiY. CJteryl Halley, Vllerie Halqjine, C8rol Rile,.
Pauline Harrison, Komberlee ·
Hemphill-Hood, Sudra Holcomb,
Debra JecJreon, Role AM Jenkinl,
Linda 1alullon, Katby Jooa, PaM
Keunady, Bonnie Xi""'.,_, Rid1lnl
King, T - ICing, TilnotiiY ~son, Vioaa Lee, Beary Lowis,

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Beot;:,:..

CoDeae .. NelloevUie; .Carol Clellaad, bGsplta?
SCHOLARSHIPS PaBieED• Tlte
W-'1 •• If 0 ttl ¥
H•
e..plliJ" •
wiD be atteadiMI Hocki&amp;J Co1p1111
•ana aif:rrrtl t
_.
lele1 lid IQia Mlcllael, val~fctorian ol tills
........
tltn11 "•11.. Iron at
year'~• f1 dq dala a1 Eutera HIP Sdlool
preHIItado:l cen.ts.111 are, I te r, Mlldred
wlte
Itt lttaadlat tilt Ual.enlty of Rio
Bud•, ...,......,
U!tlt;p IPII!Itr,'
Gra · dt ·'l'lte MeiiJ eo..ty Me4bl Society eoatrlbldad $1....1'\leterMI Me•orlal H111pltal,
aulllarJ pr ddilt1 MlltPrtd Pr;p, ~
·
$500,
IIIII tilt atlllilla'y, $1!00, mating It pCIIIIc:••htee; lloiDltal A"""'..:~ L - ;
Pnla HaJIIes, Mlddlepart, a
lzl&amp; Hoekl•• ble to aftrd tltree ldio!anltlpl tlailspriD&amp;.

ma-

::-!.!_,..to

a•·,...,
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proxy
confideace II futuae ecownuc ~formlllce.
.
So far at iealt, ~ bavo not
=lc•~.,.. 10. apur appe.
.
~ ~ It fli»
nea, and the nanon • ~ploy~
ment rate baa IWiiitOd 1iuc1t 'II 7
· per~ent from FebJ'IWY throqb
Apil.
·
· .In a negative. sign for the
)I!JIIJ*t of new blmJ • f:tclariel;
1be bll:klo&amp; cW unfilled Olden feD
_0.6 )ICI'eelll in Allrilto a 'm1mtlly
adjarlrld$444.1'bi11Mmfo7lowinal
l.l pen:ent chp ill Mad!.
It'• the mrl'r~ "rt'oJ Iince
Nove~~ber 1981 lid ll.S peiCiiilt
· leu than ,the SS02.6 b l l =
reacbod iD OciOber 19PO, . Ia
ilre JIIICI ·II' A ""''illina
is an ildict'inn dtll t~~e·OiiilWI fie.
tory W&lt;lltbce ilbnvlriJ little diliculty teeplaJ up with the flow of
new Olden,
In April, 8lnllgth in a,rden for
·nlilillry Jooda and for electrical
equipment offaet clropa io otber'
sectors. Defe11111 ordera 1'011 2.9
percent to a seuonallJ ad)uated
$7.l billiCII. Blectrlcal
~
orden. pulled up by
for
t~~~~muni Miflll equipment, 1011 5.9
percent to a seuonallJ adjusted
$19.2billion.
Orders for prlmaey metal&amp; fell
6.8 pe:telll 10 $11.4 liiDlon, pulled
)lack by a drop ill prod:rcbon a
-8teel mills 1nd blaat fumac11.
Orden for induliriaP ...:lli:lely._.

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... ffl

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

Baatem High School
will • ·lllllth in the
•: · ', '

•

.day.
il"
Moore
flail 'tile J181B
on the "!!P.P•r..)larldaJ lot in
Pow&amp;oy ltiiiO!'I!!I a Dlllde wlaiclt
is 10 begin 11 9 Pl. Itt t.a ..wd
his po1t, ciiatrict&lt;
ud the Deplrt·

wllltPett

IIMII&amp;ofObioaall~ollelder-

~ar1uet;:m.r~1m1 Perf'·

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....

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111111.&lt;

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Bus driven, Dellanb Gr8uc; :
Delila Jlaru, ICallly l1t I Ill, Cj!a- ,
thia McMillan, Den• 5':2,
Deklrrs Surface, Dl u L
,·
XlrtfTajiiL ;
I
I
lid
T

. '

JC.r, I • llli,;
Liada am J;
1•

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a;

Gi!IIN!N;

•
CuaoN-.
St.; ,
Rli:ltanl n ...,, Salll......_.:
Gmld .....,

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fr:c:t.'*-.,.

a.,..· 11t11t:
t1ea l7la cennt
•ll•lll,.,..¥117 1 1pbn -. :

9

tllder the
AliDa. The ...... bind will pay lbe
National Azltbom, Jllll Oillllore,
cbaPIIla of Drew Wellltet Poll, ·wllf btvl jii)W, IIIII allo plllicipatin&amp; in tlao openiDJ· ceremony
wW be Mary MaiU:l, president of
tbeA.9xillery• . · ·
·
Wayne Milboaa; Poat 39,
~~qeir:i of armt, will btve charJD
of tire Cilia' £lllld IIIII the IIIUID to
tile diad, ·l ftlr which -Navy manorial aervlc:e:: will be held at tbe ·
~~~vee.
Al 1 .45 Llll. ltZ'Yiccl wW be
bold . . . . . a:- Cei.DilleiJ, It
11 a.m. IIdia SertM Htart Cemo·
ltl"yCIIHo!Pyt..l;lltl:30a.rn.at
lloct Sp:ltrp
lerj; It l p.m.
• Neill Ue.'Z')''Ganlens .lll State

·

Don.

Roberts, ~ an Robuae&amp;?e, Car- bad IIcea Ji•CA opporteaitJ to :
olyn Robinson, Susan Roeuler, ~
,.
Emily Rosen. Sberyi Roulll. La:ra!
Iii t11at ~ ~ Jill :
,Sallcr,OayleSIIIyer,KiiiiiScC •· Sl:lb"'
·
f'l
1 JD: :
Joclf Sbipley, Qllllp S•i•, ~ ~ ..... .,i; If 111111 'A'· ~ 1 :
Sm!th• MarJUCl A. ~llidi.Jei!' ~ 1'Jia JJ17, 1fJ71i1111 C
Smnbern, John Snedibr, ~ $it,.,..., u, VCIIdiOeori:l..._ · ,
Taylor, JQIIy TaJlor,• Dllial ·IIIIi 1 1 1:*- N I • Sllllililr:rt, :
'tbumaa, Kimberly Vu MaiR,
iw; • 1 • ;
R~ Waalea, Fllal W..P, ~All¢ Ill. A,nllw Con M, •n I( ~
beth Webster, Ralpll Werry, Pllri·
C I! t 111 .... J .
::

:f:n:;

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Miners eager to ·{
join picket lines ·.·:

ship.~ retnd wilk 21 ,-.of
AJt Fclllle u a
L His mi1lllry
Xcrea and VIetnam where lte . . . aomeroua
awmlllllll~ionl
·
Moore preeady aervea on tile
national NEC Reaolutiona subcommittee JIICI u llai~ to tho
Internal Affalti:'Co•trililioD&gt;on
GII:IUI D L MOORE
MeznlMIIip antPott Acdvilitl;
The parade will fo~m on the
~ tiMetic fJcl4 1:1 Pomen)y 11 RaUID '7.
•
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9 a.m. and IIIDW WouJit towa.
At 1:30 die loponnlltOI will au1oo in limel ofiw&amp;s;· lllid Post
Orud mw 7soW be Leo Stmy, paliclpileill a Pllilll and IICf¥il:cs Co:a•e+r Job&amp; Weeb. ·
' "Merallrial DIJ onw•ted at tho
1 World W•J ~ IU •IIIII tilt only at tho Clleltcr Cemetery where
cloll of tile Civil W11 lllil we of.
aqrvivlq WIIIIMI of drlt W. wllo Moore wW allolpllk. The fiul
is a meniber of l!le JIGil. Ko will be •vloaa Ill' tbo daJ will be beld at the: AMlerican ·Le&amp;ion Ji vo due
~'inn 111 vei"PZZ• ol all wan,"
ace~ bX teYC1111 mombon 3:15 p.:n.ll "m'oct Grove. . .
Slid. He CIK;t•• 0 : ~ IIII~m~ .
of his
• ,:
"Let • not flllrl dltt MemOrial
p
IDifle
to liDeRd IJ1d JIIY respect to
'Music will be provided by the . Day II a day •t uide to pay our
WM'"•lll ....
•
·
re •• ct 10 tiln wilD pro~ec:lell 01lf
lll"lice iri
chief 111111er
service incl

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,..• ,.,.Kirk• ~~.;r.:r; a-L ,J9 =~· "'~-1!11'• ~ :u • _.. . ,I'. •
·
. ~"'· •lit's nt wll1••r t11o
•
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cia Williams-Gollld, Kay W~.
Slr;rlQib W'llloa. Dopne WfM, ltay
Yo11111, All&amp;ela YouJ,
Young.
•~
Noa-cerlifted ~ ill 111111li1111e plllitiON bire4 wae:
,
Aida.
Jonea, Jlllic Mar·
ton, Susie Abbott, I o ADD Wil4- . ,

-rs• ·-· -.. •
ham, Gemld D. NeliiGII, Lila :&gt;ape. kr of 41)'1 t

mtc-.. own,,

·

GRANVILUi, W.Va. (AP)The newest a4lditiolls to a 6,200Sll'OIIJ United Mine Wodr.m Illite
an: lllkiAg to til&amp; picUt !iDes widl
resolve lllll biBb 11piritl, INiioa leiJ.
ers say.
·
WIIIIIO do lbeir put,"
said Dave Myera, presidoat of
UldW Local S429 In Mmwmplia

1

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"ney

w

County

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. ~ ~• ~
· .will force tbc Bi•e•IIOPI Coal ·
'

. Or
• Ameiarioa 10 _ . oon- ·
lnle;l ""e h
;.
n. llrilr.l widated Tllllday,10
iedtnd,c l,250 uioe ••~an ill
PUuyiYMia UII.Uollt 920 in
W•Vizli:liaao
lhNWileiiaJ w .CONSO(, a.Mitcr .1:
Pi&amp;UberJia Coal .Co., lllll C.L.I.
CONsoL is tile ...... No.

a.

"II ~·n: tile pcapl1 tlltl lia\IC l.COII ,.....••.

..=:!
:r.: =:~.::*.:.~,If!!=::=
llltlc.',.._

10 J,et the ball rolliDJIIele, tliCII

·:~•'n npplyiaJ prOUarc

l1al:k 111 lila lllr·

Ow '
UMW r ·' t •an Trurlita is ICIIrtled 10 visitltritiq
minen in MDnoaaalia Coenty
roday, ll!i4 Cadi Tadey, u izlr«.
· Pili-'~ amhr ~ . Dis­
llict 3lle P ·
Ta 7 willljlllk • 1 ally at
tllo 0.. Cr
'cy C: r: r . t
tour two llritah 11 • CONSOL-

~~ll~~f; :J:'

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tesGived and -

gainillr

llill.. ·
·
ne 243 anioa ae•ben at
CONSOL 1uc.'• ArtwriJbt IBizlll
were &amp;IIIORJ tho 2,200 llliun ll 10
operttlons in Welt Vir&amp;laia and
Peanaylvaala wbo joiHd tile
UMW's twO-week aelec:ti" ltlilca
Tuelday.
·
"We liave Ill ciO wlllt ,... llave
10 do,'' said Malt , . , . . , 37. of
Baztlckville. "We liMe wi¥111:1911
llidllll auppan IIIII we're,;.. hR
to allow Q1lf I1IJIIID'\ for till MBillll
IIIII hope b . _ f.b' for C¥a'Y'
bodJ ill IIIia~. '
· Plaia...-, 11 eleetrlciaa 81 lila
miae
7 yean, joined !'!lK
Oilier pictcu 'l''l'idr tl:e Ad:wripl

·

\

• TrlllljiCIIllliali equljica• _ . .
,edJed doW1I O.l to 132.4
biWOZI. Declines 1'iiiii011d dlip
·.hlildiDI ofraet an incre Ill Ia ali-

Bx=

craft.

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Andy Batey, Cllarla L81c•·
Cblrles Hylell, ~ ~
and W'lllilm T. w
.
Seemaric1, Lill7 Kenedy.,
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Tuesday, May 25, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1D-The Dally Sentln8J

Co•mnity Caleadar items
appear two c1a11 before an event
and the day ol tbat eveat. Items
must be received weD1In lldVBJKe
to - r e publication iD tlte calelldar.

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I

...---Local
~briefs--·~
I

�.. -... ~ .. "·.. .-. . -. .. ""'----··--··-...-···. - -- -~-~

...

••

/

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel·

· DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE IIEIGS-IIASOI'f AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
I

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION ar.. welcome. lbey sbould be less lban 300
words. All letters. are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telepbone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Leu.n
sbould be in good taste, sddressing issues. not personalities.

Letters to the editor
Fund~aiser is legitimate
Dear Editor
May I take this opportunity to
· thank the people of Meigs County
who have always sup~Wrted the
Meigs County Historical Society
and the Meigs County Museum,
and to those "new" supporters who
have contributed in response to the
phone campaign being carried on
now. This letter is written to clartfy
ihat the Magic Show ticket
fundraiser is legitimate, to inform
the public more about the Historical Society and Museum, and to
announce additional summer hours.
The Meigs County Museum
Library will be open on Wednesday evening until 9:00 through the
summer months. Summer hours
will be Tuesday, Thursday, Friday
and Saturday - 1:00-~:30 and
Wednesday, I : 00-9: 00 .
The decision to add an evening .
open time was to answer the
request of members and patrons
who work during the day and cannot make the regular hours. The
decision was made possible due to
the willingness of volunteers to be
responsible for the open hours. If
enough interest is shown, additional hours may be added.
The Metgs County Historical ·
Society appreciates the response
the public has shown in supporting
the fund drive to raise •funds for
repair of the damage done by the
landslide in back of the building.
Through efforts of the Meigs
County Commissioners and
Pomeroy Village, most of the dirt
has been hauled away. When this is
completed, the rear steps, ,which is
the upstairs exit of the museum,
will have to be completely
replaced. To help assure that further slippage does not occur, a
retainer wall will need to be built.
This will incur quite ari expense to
the Society, and is why the request
for public support of the project is
being made.
The Meigs County Museum
operates on a very small budget,
nearly 70% of which is earned
through totally volunteer efforts.
The Society pays an employee for
16 hours a week to serve as greeter
and other duties as assigned, and

another person to oopy publicalions
the society has for sale (average 6
hours per week). The museum
director, who is entirely volunteer
spends an average 40 hours per
week overseeing operations,
fundraising, exhibit planning,
answering requests and the many
other duties that go in!O running a
museum and resean:h library_ All
research requests, fund-raising
efforts, and any forms of assisl3llce
or programs given to the public. is
done by volunteers.
The Meigs County Historical
Society and Meigs County Museum is proud of its contribution to
the county. The stated purpose of
the Meigs County Historical Society is to "further historical education in Meigs County, Ohio_ To this
end it shall maintain a museum for
coUectin~. preserving and intapreting archtval materials and artifacts
indigenous to Meigs County;
encourage historical research; issue
publications; sponsor displays,
symposia and special events; be
concerned with the preservation of
historical buildings, and raise such
funds needed to carry on the dayto-day operations and purposes of
the society,"
The Society invites everyone to
visit the museum during open
hours, or on Heritage Weekend June 12 and 13. The theme fm- this
year is Reminiscing ....Meigs County Memories. Local residents are
invited to share their reminisceoce.
by helping create displays of things
from the past that help tell Meigs
County history and brings bact
memories of those days gone by.
The Heritage Weekend commiuee
needs items that portray early
sewing bees - such as a thimble
collection; railroad memorabilia;
sports; clothing; school day activities; photographs; and many Olher
things. Persons having items they
would like to display, please call
the museum, 992-3810 or Patty
Cook, 992-2447,
Sincerely,
Margaret Parker, President Meigs
County His10rical Society Director
- Meigs County Museum.

'

Off~hore

W,O.SIDNGTON - With their
sun-drenched beaches and windblown palms, the islands that comp;se the British Caribbean dependencies are the stuff of tounsts •
dreams. But to Sang Don Han of
Los Angeles, lhe tiny island hideaways have become a recurring
nighh!!are_
Han is the 44-year-old owner of
Han's Uncoal, a service station and
auto-parts store in South Central
LOs Angeles_ He had never heard
of the Turks and Caicos Islands
when be bought insurance for his
business several years ago. But
after his store was looted for three
straight days during last year's
Rodney King ~g; Han learned
t1w these idyllic islands served as
home base for his insuranCe company, and that be would never see
the $40.000 in claims he flied after
the riots.
' "Every lime I called them, they
said "Next weel:: it's coming, next
week it's coming," ' Han said.
" It's been moo: than a year and no
money has CXlllle. " His business in
ruins. Han is left 10 rebuild his life
without insurance money and with
a wife and two teen-agers to suppori.

He is also ftghting for revenge.
Han 1s one of 46 Los Angeles business owners who filed suit last
month against Ftrst Assurance and

By .,ac
1
k A nuerson
..1

and
Michael B•nste•n
•
•

Casualty Company Ltd ., for
allegedly selling insurance policies
that proved worthless when last
year's riots hit. The suit charges
that First Assurance is liable for
nearly $7 million in unpaid claims,
. money that the plainttffs believe
the company never had in the ftrst
place.
"Hogwash," says Jesse J. Maynard, managing director of First
Assw'ance. He argues that most of
the Los Angeles claims are "fraudulent" and that his company has
''paid out sevt'J'al million (dollars)
already.'' Last month, however,
California insurance officials
declared First Assurance insolvent
and banned the company from
doing any more business in the

':-

:iA~.

,-....._

fEe. MAR.

APR. MAY

~~
I(}

(

111:1 by NU. Inc,

'

state. Authorities in Alabama and
Texas have taken similar actions
after receiving numerous complaints.
Small business owners in Los
Angeles !ll'en't the only ones who
have an axe to griild with companics from the British Caribbean
these days. Three years ago, Dr.
George B. Trodella of Fort Lauderdale, ·Fla., met Michael Debella,
president of an offshore bank based
on the island of Anguilla, another
British dependency. Debella later
offered to give Trodella a letter of
credit worth $500,000 to refurbish
some Florida property if Trodella
would agree to pay him $60,000 up
front Trodella paid the sum, but
later learned that no bank would
• honor the Jetter of credit he got in
return. By that time, Debella was
long gone.
Earlier this month, the FBI
arrested Debella in Puerto Rico
after charging him with defrauding
would-be borr-owers across the
nation through his Caribbean bank.
Among his alleged victims was the
Chinese government, which,
according to the indictment, lost
more than $1.1 million to Debella.
We were unable to reach Debella,

but in a 1990 interview with oui
associate Dean Boyd, he dismissilt
the allegations of fraud as "simp!j
not true." If convicted on all
counts, Debella could face up to
445 years behind bars.
Over the years. British ant\
island officials paid liule attention
to the multitude of offshore bankS
and companies that set up shop o'it
the Crown colonies. In time, the lalt
laws and non-existent oversight
turned out to be a criminal's drean'i:
For just a few thousand dollar(;
anyone could get a license to set up
a shell bank or a dummy insurance
company free of legal hassles. By
1990, there were 358 banks and
3,500 offshore companies just oh
the tiny island of Anguilla, whicli
boasts a total population of just
7,000. Few of these companies had
adequate ftnancial backing or regu-:
lar office personnel - some just
had a telephone, fax machine and a
penchant for ripping off Ameri'
cans.
It wasn't WJtil years later, when
hundreds of duped clients tried to
cash checks or file an insurance
claim, that the scams were exposed
and the British authorities moved
in.
"We have gone to considerable
lengths to root out this type of
activity in r~nt years and remain
fully committed to battling it in the.
future," says one British Embassy
official_ Since 1989, British authorities have closed down 320 of the
346 banks once registered on the
island of Montserrat Dozens af
banks have also been closed in
Anguilla. This year, Scotland YarH
officials plan to join forces with the
FBI in an all-out bid to dismantle
the caribbean connection.
Despite British efforts, complaints of fraud continue lli stream
m. And for those who have
been victimized, the crackdown haS
been a case of toO little, too late.
"The Crown has known about this
problem for rears. The fact tha't
they're crackmg down now is no
upside for people who've already
lost millions," says John Mattes, A
Miami lawyer hired to investigate
Debella's bank.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
'

alreadr

WINSToN

CHuRCHILL

..

Taxpayers shouldn't bank on RTC
hands as quickly as possible.
So rather than selling ~rties
individually to investors btg and
small (which would have taken

Come the rebellion, says a
Shakespeare chanlcter in "Henry
VI," the FIISI thing to do is ''kill all
the lawyers." Come the rebellion,
says Joe Spear. the first thing to do
is hang the Health Polioe.
Well, maybe not all of them .
But ccnainly the ones who warned
us off delectable food and drink
and later wmed out to be wrong.
Those peqlle should be hung higher than Haman, the evil Persian in
the Boot of Esther wbo plotted to
destroy all Jews and was strung
from the gallows of his own construction_
.
! hat used to be a saying:
Hemous transgressors should be
hung higher than Haman. So I have
been taking names:, and I keep
them in • file labeled .. Haman .. to
remind me of the lot that wiii be
theirs if I ;wn put in charge of the.
Health Police JIIDIC.
Well, maybe I won't hang them
by the necL But the women will be
hoisted by their scrawny thumbs
and the men wiU have their wispy
liule beards plucked out follicle by
follicle.
I' m not tall::ing about people
who alened us to uuly dangerous
things like calamari in cream sauce

the· real-estate markets of sucb
stateS as Arizona, California, Col'
orado, Louisiana and Texas.
"
For owners of commercial real
estate in places like San Diego or
Denver or Phoenix, times can't get
much harder. The RTC's deep
price-cutting has driven down aij_
property values. Most anyone sen.;
mg a ptece of commercial propenyl•
these days is taking a huge loss. :
. The RTC has about $100 billion!
tn property and other assets r
remaining in its invenll)ry. It wants:
to unload it all by year's end. But:
before the agency gets another•
nickel from the taxpayers, - much :
less $18 billion - it should pro- •
vide assurances that its rmai cfose' ;
out sale will be handled differently •
than its previous giveaways. That:
means no more absurd discounting:
of assets, no more bulk sales and··
no more sweetheart deals to the •
guys with the fattest wallets.
:
The taxpayers probably don't •
care if it takes the RTC a few more :
years 10 finish the savings and loan::
cleanup. They likely are more con-·•
cerned that the treasury recoups::
something close 10 fair value for··
the remaining 35Sei.S on the RTC's:;
bopks and that' smaller investors::
aren't shut out.
·•
Joseph Perkins Is a columnis.1::
tor Tbe San Diego Union-Tri-::
bone and a writer ror Newspaper:•
Enterprise Association.
-'

Joseph Perkins
longer, but which also would have
maximized returns to the taxpayers), the RTC disposed of most of
its inventory in bundles. By pricing
these bundles of assets at$100 million or more. it all but ensured that
only members of the Forbes 400 or
the Fortune 500 could afford to
buy.
Big investors who took part in
the RTC's close-out sale made out
like bandits- The billionaire Bass
brothers, for instance. hooked up
with General Electric Capital toacquire Sl billion in property and
loans from the RTC. They paid SO
cents on the dollar.
A similar killing was made by
Ronald Perlrilan, chief executive of
Revlon Cosmetics. He acquired a
minority interest in First Gibraltar
Savings and Loan worth an estimated $100 million. He paid the
RTC $35 million. It's doubtful that
the women who buy Revloo products ever see such generous markdowns.
RTC officials say that deals like
those are exceptions. As recently as
last faU, the agency's since-depart-

Today in history

~"""'v-.J

Wednesday, May 26, 1993 · •

banks scam unsuspecting investors.·;

Talk about throwing good
money after bad. The Senate
recently approved $!8 billion in
new funding for the Resolution
Trust Corp .. the agency that has
added IeOS of billions of dollars to
the cost of the savings and loan
cleanup by 5dling off the assets of
failed thrifts at bargain basement
prices_
. As a condition of receiving yet
another mulnbillion-doUar subsidy
from the taxpayers, the Senate
asked the RTC to make a. good
faith effort 10 market its holdings
individually. llllher than packaging
them in overly expensive "bundles_" Lawmakers are finally
responding ID criticism from smaller investors that they have been
closed out of the biggest sell-off of
govanment35Sei.S in history.
The RJ'C has tried to keep its
fire sale an exclusive affair. It
By The Associated Press
doesn't want to waste time with
Today is Wednesday, May 26, the !46th day of 1993. There are 219 small fry wbo have. say, SI0 million or S20 millioo 10 spend. To the
days left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History!
RTC's way of thinking, that's
On May 26, 1868, the Senate impeachment trial of President Andrew cllump change. Its preferred cusJohnson ended with his acquittal as the Senate fell one vote short of the tomers have really deep pockets. At
two-thirds majority required for conviction.
least a couple hundred million
bucks liquid_
On this date:
In 1521, Martin 4uther was banned by the Edict of Worms because of
From the get-go, the RTC was
his religious beliefs and writings.
uninterested in recouping the highIn 1805, Napoleon Bonaparte was crowned king of Italy.
est possible return on the half-trilIn 1865, arrangements were made in New Orleans for the surrender of lion dollars worth of loans, properConfederate forces west of the Mississippi.
ty and &amp;«uritics it inherited from
In 1913, Actors' Equity Association was organized.
some 700 failed thrifts. It simply
In 1940, the evacuation of Allied troops from Dunkirk, France, during wanted to get the assets off its
World War II began.

Berryts. -World
)

Orimm, Jackie i.ee Large, John
Neville, Michael Oiler, and Larry
Clark, custodians.
Other Bnslntu
The ,boanl entered into purchases servtces lifllCI!Ients with Linda
Smith and Jennie Doney to tutDr a
handicapped student. Smith is to
tutor the student no more-chan three
boors a week and Dorsey no more
t1wt two hours a weel::, bOth at the
111e of$11 .72 an hour.
: A fteld trip for the FFA, June 47. to Niagara Falls was approved.
·.
Sandy Knapper was given
four dock days for medical rea. SOns. IUIII also approved were eight
dock days for Celesta Coates, The
retirement of Audrey Wood as a
cpok effective May 28 was
a,ctnow !edged, and additional
hours to finish work at the
P.omeroy and Salisbury schools
were approved for secretaries Marilyn Meier and Manlta King.
', Maureen Hennessy, Pomeroy
parent, and Vicki Ferrell, Rutland
parent, spoke to the board regard111g ~ elimi~ of libr:ary aides
·j!t theiT respecttve schools. Both
asked that the aide positions be

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohler:

~

111 Court Street ·
Pomeroy, Ohio

1993

'

'

aspersions on nuts should be lofted who subsist on it and they've got!
an inch .for every nut I didn't eat. rights. The cheese critics go in the·
Higher than Haman.
Haman file.
;
- The people who said even
Notice that I have not even'
moderate amounts of spirits would touched on the fearmongers who:
kill our brain cells, rot our livers like to scare us about things we :
and give us chilblains or whatever. can't control. Like telling us it's ·
Then came "60 Minutes" and a dangerous to dneam. Or warning us :
report on the French who mainline that men tend to die the week ~
cheese and cream sauces and sur- before their birthdays and women i
ten used to skim, substitutes and vive because they also drink gob- the week after. Or mfprming left- ,
turkey loaf. I miss my french fries lets of wine, which somehow acts handed people they will die earlier:
and my counuy ham with red-eye . as an antidote. Now doctors are than right-banders. These creeps·
gravy, but I can live without them.
discreetly suggesting that a couple are in another ftle,labeled "Haman :
No. I refer here to those dour of '!'oderate drinks a day keeps II."
souls who cannot stand to have angmaaway,
For today, we are concerned:
I can't say I- ever denied myself with the Health Police/Food Divi- :
somebody enjoy something. !.
a glass of RCCU!f because the Health sion: Like the people who are;
speak speciftcally of:
Police
didn't approve, but I have wamm~ us that genetically altered ·
·- The people who told us we
shouldn't eat nuts because they friends who did. It is for them that tomatoes mijlht be deadly. This i~,
were full of fats. Do you know how the booze bashers are in the Haman very sensitive because to mess with :
many nuts I didn't eat because of ftle.
tomatoes is to mess with the divine. •
-The people who scorned prothat1 I tried' those godawful soyI am monitoring'this matter. The :
bean substitutes and they tasted cessed cheese products as tanta- slijlhtest hint that something is '
like styrofoam popcorn. But now mount 10 anaial cork. Then came a awry. or that we are bein11 unneces- :
comes some researchers from group of scientists at the University · sarily frightened, will put the per- ,
Lorna Linda University in Califor- of Wisconsin who said that Cheez petrators at the top of my list, and :
nia who say that nuts, and walnuts Whiz is good for its because it con- they shall be elevated by their toe3' ·
in particular, are good fm- the heart. tains fauy acids that inhibit cancer slowly, higher than Haman.
.' :
.
When volpnteen ate them for pro- in lt8ts on mice.
JDHp• Spear II! a syndicated :
This does not concern me per- writer tor Newspaper EnlliprlM! .
. longed periods, their cholesterol
sonally, as I was never a Cheez Association.
·
levels actually fell.
I think the people who c_a st Whiz enthusiast.:but I know people

Joseph Spear

·~

---Meigs

state ·cJisadvantaged pupil program board members.
are no Ienger suff~c:ientlli fund the
Supt.
James
Carpenter
aide jobs, the board last month · announced a change in school closvoted to eliminate the library aide ing days due to additional dates
positions at Pomeroy, Rutland and being allowed as ealamity days due
Middleport. This does not mean to the blizzard. Friday will be the
tlw the lilnries in the schools will fmal day for all schools with the
clore, only that the part-time aide uceplion of Pomeroy and Rutland.
will not be there.
Final day at those two schools will
Hennessy stressed the impor- be Tuesday.
tance of reading, said that many
Bill Buckley, Meigs Local's
children do not have bool::s in their new superintendent, reported on
llomes, mentioned the fact t1w the the status of timber on about 40
district has not dOne well on proft- · acres owned by Meigs Local
ciency testing, and said that if cuts School District and located near the
need to be made they should come high sehool. He said that a forester
from extra curricular programs · from the Department of Natural
including sports and vocational Resources, Division of Forestry,
programs,
had checked the timber and sugFerrell read a letter from the gested that trees suitable for cutting
teachers at the Rutland school. be nwted and then the job be put
They described the Rutland aide as up for bid. The possibility of using
valuable to the school program the area as a school lab was also
promoting the enjoyment of read- · discussed.
·
mg and reducing class size for'
A video on activities at the
teachers when Sbldents spend lime Pomeroy school was !'resented by
in the library.
Debbie Haptonstall, pnncipal.
Paul Taylor of the Ohio School
Attending were Supt. Carpenter.
Board Association, talked about Buckley, Treasurer Jane Fry, and
that .organization and its role of board members, Larry Rupe,
assistance to school board mem- Randy Humphreys, Roger Abbott,
bers. He spoke of the legislative John Hood, and Barton.
updates and of the llllining in legal
and negotiation maw:rs available to,

~Stored.

.- Since the district is in the state
loan fund and funds from a special

Reunion, dance slated
The Meigs High School Class of
'78 will hold a 15-year reunion at
the Middleport Arts Council from
2-4 p.m. Saturday, The alumni
dance will be held Saturday
evening at the high school from 9
p.m. to I a.m.

Friday tbrou&amp;b SUIIday:
A chance of showers a thuriderstorms Friday. Lows in the 50s.
HiJhs in the upper 70s w low 80s.
F811' on Salurday and SWJday. Lows .
in the 50s and highs in the 70s.

Soutb·Ceatral Obio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low in
the low 50s. Thursday, partly
'sunny. High in the upper 70s.
· Extended forecast:

i

Gospel jubilee plaiiDed
Beild Area Gospel Jubilee will
be held June 4 from 6 p.m., JuneS
from I p.m. and June 6 from 1-5
p.m. at the Mason County, W.Va.,
Fairgrounds six miles north of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., with more
than SO groups, some nationally
known, performing. Free admisston.
Chester alumni to meet
Chester High School alumni and
dance Saturday. Banquet starts
6:30 p.m . with dance following at
8:30 p.m. with G'eorge Hall. For
reservations contact Rosemary
Keller, 34856 SR 7, Pomeroy,
45769, or call985-4434 .

..

----Area deaths-.

:·wayne E. Adams
• Wayne E. Adams, 62, of Tup.pers Plains died Tuesday at River·
side Methodist Hospital in Colum. ·'bus.
; . • He was hom in Baltimore, Ohio,
• the son of Forrest Adarlls of
: Reedsville and the late Ray Adams.
:
In addition, to his mother, he is
·: survived by ftve sons, Johnny of
' Groveport, HarQid of Long Bottom,
Edward of Reedsville, Junior of
:: Cutler and Russell of Belpre; one
daughter, Gloria Decker of Long
' Bottom; three stepdaughten, Shiela
' Kelly of Belpre, Debora Leftridge.
, of Cutler and Sharon Clinton of
: ~elpre; 14 grandchildren; six step:· grll!ldchildren and one sreat-grand-

;, son.

. He is also survived by two sis1ers, Charlotte Vecchio of Las
Vegas, Nev,, and Marilyn Swain of
Coolville.
Mr. Adams was preceded in
death by his father and a brother,
Melvin Adams.
Services will be held 1 p.m. Fri~-day at Eden United Brethren
Church in Reedsville wilh the Rev.
Robert Sanders ofrJCilting, Burial
; will follow in the Eden Cerncltery.
: .. Friends mly call from 3-5 p.m.
: and 7-9 p.m. Thursday at White
Funeral Home in Coolville.

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Stocks

The Daily Sen!inel
(llSPS 21 :1-1160)
Published every al\emaon, Monda).
,lh,...h Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiahina
-Company/Myltb...t.la Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio .f576tl, Ph. 892-2166. Second ct . .
, p:-taae ptid a\ Pomeroy, Ohio.
.Member. The Aalociated Pn11, and the .
-Ohio New.,.per A.IIIOC'iation, National
Mverti1inr RepnMnLative, Branham
-~=~:'~~ Sale~, 733 Third. Avenue, ·
~
, Now York t0017.

111

ch.aneu Lo

c...rt st.,

SVB8CIUPI'ION RATEII

By Carrier or Motor Rou.te

o.. - t...........................................suo
-one Month.........................................N .IIl5
Olio Year............................,,. ..,_.._.:.,$83.20

IINGLit COPY
•
PJUCI:
Daily. .......................-...........,_, __,25 C~&amp;a

not d•trl"- Lo pay the CM'I'i·
:.rSublaiben
may niRk tn advanct •treet. to TM

O.ily SonLiMI 11n a &amp;hrw, li• ur 12
"""'th balo. er..tit will bt ~~- wrier
Wtdli wecll.
II)' moll paoJ&amp;,.. Itt
.... ...... "''"' . . . . .,...,. it
l••iJable.

No..,_,.._

Malllo...rt.llo,.

t3

-M•tpC..nty
w..u.......-.....,.....- ................nuw

w-.. ...:.. . . . . . . . . . .

WESD~ Y - 8:29 p.m. Racine
to S.R. 124 for Jina Knotts who
was transported 'to Vetenms Memorial Hospital; 8:34 p.m. Pomeroy to
Scout CJ~mp Road for Goldie ·
Krackenburger who was treated at
the scene; 9:38 p.m. Rutland Vol-unteer Fire Department and squad
to S.R . 143 for a vehicle fire
involving a vehicle owned by
Wayne Cottrill; 10:18 p.m.
Pomeroy to Peacock Avenue for
Mary Seaman who was transported
to Holzer Medical Center.
WEDNESDAY r: 12:27 a.m.
Racine 10 Bald Knob Road for Jon
Barry who was transported to
VMH.
.

Edith M. Lyons, 84, Albany.
Salem School Lot Road, died Monday at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital in Athens.
Born in Mineral, she was a
daughtec of the late Jwe and Mary
Sickles Ely. She was a homemaker
and a member of the Carpenter
Baptist Oturch.
She is survived by her husband
of 68 yean,' Granville; a daughter,
Mrs. Gordon (Beulah "Boots"·)
Lyons Peny; cne son and daughterin-law, Billy 0 . and Polly Lyons,
Lancaster; two srandchildren,
Sharon Ouistian, Albany. and Troy
Perry. of Korea with tbe U.S.
Army; four great-grandchildren;
one brother, James Wilber Ely,
by Bob Hoeflich
New Marshfield.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by a brother, Ernest
Ely; and four sisters, Mildred
A home picnic featuring a real
Buckley, Geruude Marcum, Nellie live band. Now that's Jli~h on the
Lyons and Alice Ellis,
hog_ But that's the way tt was for
· ServicOa will bt.Friday ll2 p.m. · Lloyd and Mildred •Baker . of
·at Bigony,Jordan Funeral Home Chester the other Sunday.
with Rev. Donald Shue officiating.
Weekend guests of the Bakers
Burial will be in Temple Cemetay. were Lloyd's brother and sister-inA meal will be served at the law, Clair and Ruby Bater, of
Columbia Fire HoUJC following the Amlin and his nephew, Kenny and
burial.
Faye Baker of Plain City.
Friends may call at the funeral
· The "Out of the Blue" Band
home on Thursday from S-9 p.m.
members wbo had earlier played at
the Show and Swap event at the
fairgrounds trucked on out to the
Baker home for a picnic and, of
course, entertained since it seemed
like the logical thing to do. Maybe
The following ~lions for dis- we call that singing for your supsolution of mamage were filed per.
Kegny Reynolds, Hockingport,
recently in the Meigs County Comand
Dale Baker, Tuppers Plains,
mon Pleas Court of Judge Fred W.
the
sound
men of the band, set up
Crow Ill:
the
musicians'
equipment in the
May 18 - Eric A. Harris and
Baker
back
yard
and the action was
Jane L. Jeu Harris, bolh of Racine;
off
and
running.
Mary K. Holter of
May 21 - Teresa D_ Courtney
Bashan
was
on
hand and did the
and John M. Courtney, both of
calling
for
a
bit
of
square dancing.
Coolville; Homer Jennings Grimm,
Making
up
the
band were Buzz
Middleport, and A lonna Jean
Sloter
of
Albany,
on guitar, who
Grimm, New Haven, W.Va_; James
also
did
some
of
the
vocals along
D. Howard. Pomeroy, and Cindy L.
with
his
wife,
Ivy,
and
Densil BenHoward, Athens; Harold D. Leach
-nett;
MIUie
Reynolds,
Hockingport,
and Stella R. Leach, both of
on bass; Bill Sharp, Silver Ridge,
Pomeroy;
guitar, and Bennett, Little
May 24 - Helen Shain and Har- lead
Hocking
on rhythm guitar.
vey Shain, both of Racine. .
Others
on hand to enjoy the
In addition, an action for
music
and
dancing were Shirley
divorce was filed May 24 by HarSloter,
Racine;
Sharon Baker, Tupvey James Lambert; Pomeroy, from pers Plains; Bryan,
Lorrie and
Nancy Dawson Lambert_
Bryan Hendrix, Little Hocking,
A pendinf divorce suit by
Hawk of the Reedsville area;
Ernest E. Harris from Roxann Har- .Paul
Virginia
Hedrick of Pomeroy;
ris was dismissed May 21. A
and Katie Kibble,
Arthur,
Cathy
divorce was granted May 21 to
Tuppers
Plains:
and Lucille
Sarah Elizabeth Haning from Rus- Kimes, ML Olive,Carol
and
visiting
later
sell Lee Haning Sr.
were Hobart and Inzy Newell of
the Chester area.

Divorces and
dissolutions ·
-

'

'

Open Meeting to be held
An open meeting of the Chester
Garden Club will be held June 2 at
7:30p.m. at the Chester United
Methodis~

All garden club members and
others interested in nowers are
invite to share the evening with the
club members. Guest speaker will '
be Betty Mizikio, Athens Garden

Hospital news

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VETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admisstons- Ruth
Bush, IUrtfonJ. w_va.; Virgil Carl,
Pomeroy; Ernestine Williams, Rutland; Iva Cremeans, Rutland.
Monday discharges - Harold
Sellers, Portland.

Staging the annual area soapbox
derby in Middleport each year
unfortunately takes financial backing. Response to a request for help
so far has been good, but the treasury is still about $1,000 short. Any
individual, business or organization
wishing to help out should contact
BiD Snouffer at Blue Streak Cab.

Lettie Young, ·former long-time
Middleport elementary school
teacher, will be marking her 90th

Coupkismed
marriage license

....~. __,'t,_..-, . .,. ,

~·· .~- ~ --.

Seems that each year more
scholarships are developing for
Meigs Countians who want to go
on to higher education. And that's
greaL

For the first time this year,
scholarships provided by the late E.
A. and Maxine Winget~ both educators, went into effect as provided
by their wills. And for the first
time, the Racine Area Community
Organization, a relative new group,
took on a schol!ll'ship project and
was able to award two scholarships
to Southern High School graduates.
The Racine organization is doing a
lot of good in the community in a
number of directions.
The Women's Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial Hospital this week
was able to award three $1,000
nursing scholarships. The. auxiliary
got some help on the project with
three students benefiting. The .
Me1~s County Medical Society
provtded $1,000 for the scholarship
program , the hospital provided
S500, and the auxiliary, a real good
volunteer organization, came up
with $1500 to make the three
aw!ll'ds possible.

- --

It's not just the $200 haircut.
!t's the who!e .scenario that is really
ITORIC and tdtottc. But we'll just
have to keep smiling.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
May l5 dlKIIU'Its - Ricke'y
Friend, Mrs. Kelley Hocker and
son, Charles Estep, Michael Mal·
oyCd, Tamara PIIJib, Zachary Taylor, Millard Loaan, Mikdred
Carter, Carl RandoiDb, Randy Scar. ,
berry, MarJ~U'IIlllact, James
Smith, Cleo Chevalier, Kenneth
Parsons and Ch{istina Drennen..
Ma:r l5 blrda - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert HanUan, IIIIi. Pomeroy

... . . . ..-. .....~- -

Performance
The West
birthday on June 6. Her late hus- from
will
band, Charles, was also a teacher
for years. She resides in Middleport_

I

lit Woob. ... - ............ _,,._,.,_,,_ $43,18
a
...$14.,..
O.llll.. lhlp C.o•lf

"'"'"-'"_.... _...., _ _ .,.,_,_. - - ...Ao'-'" fllo ~::_~-·· --"""'- IL ., ~,-

Post 39 to nominate officerS
Nomination of officers for
1993-94 will be conducted at the
regular meeting of Drew Webster
American Legion Post 39 Tuesday.
Dinner wiD be held at 7 p.m. with
the meeting starting at 8 p.m .

'B eat of the Bend...

~'

'Am Etc Power....................34 3/4
' .Ashland Oil........................26 1/8
AT&amp; T................ ,_,,,, .........62
Banlc One........................... S3 S/8
'· Bob Evans ........-................ 17 S/8
'Charming Shop .................. 17 1/8
: Otmp lndustriCS-................14
' ~kling...................... 25
: ,'I&lt; • Mogul....................21
• GoOdyearT&amp;R ................. .39 1/4
-Lands End.......-............. :.. .31 S/8
, :Pmited Inc. ...................... 24 1/2
: Multimedia Inc . ................ .37 3/4
Point BancO!p................... .l4
: ·Rax RCitauranL .................. I/8
: 'keliance Elcctric................ 20 1/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ L7 3/4
• Shoney's Inc ...................... 20 1/2
; "Star Bank ........................... 35 1/2
' Wendy lnt'I........................ I4
Worthinlton Ind. _, ...........28
·· Stock reports are tbe 10:30
.a .m. quotes p~o¥1ded by
Kemper Secuntles, he., o
Gallipolis.

adclre~~~

Edith Lyons

Memorial Day parade to be held
A Memorial Day parade will be
held Monday at 9 a.m. in Pomeroy.
Sponsored by the American Legion
Post 39, all veterans are invited to
march.

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded 10 four calls for assistance overnight. Units responding

were:

Club, who will show
slides from the Ohio
Garden Clubs
attendfng are
favorite pboiO,
type, fa critique.
~. l

Fingerprinting ror children
Fingerprinting for children will
be held at the Harrisonville Masonic Lodge on JuneS from 10 a.m. to
2p.m.

EMS responds
-----Weather------- to four calls

-.

and snails dipped in butter. I'm not
even concerned about the people
who warned us about whole milk,
eggs and marbled steaks. I've got-

'

Ohio

'·Meigs •.. Continued rrom page 1

COmmentary
The Daily Sentinel

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To perform
The Liberty Mountaineers will :1
pelfonn Saturday
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Prta•

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4 The Dal

Sentinel

Wednelday,

Sports

overtime goal pushes
!~ronto to 3-2 win over L.A. Kings
.-

.;'toRONI'O (AP)- The Tm~~~Anderson batted an airborne
lq,;¥_aple Leafs could ~ot have puck past goaltaldr:r Kelly Hrudi:y
asked for a bella' scenano than to at 19:20 or overtime Tuesday night
hive Gl~ ~ alone in the to give the Leafs a 3-2 victory and
in fron~ of the Los Angeles a 3-.2 edge in the NHL's best-ofIC'Iilgs net with the puck bouDCing seven Campbell Cooference final.
toward his stick in overtime. ·
Game 6 is Thursday night in
...,..nere is a reason this man has California. Game 7, if necessary,
;m 'Stanley Cup rings.
would be at Maple Leaf Gardens
:: · I really like the pressure," on Saturday night.
•
said as be sat in ToronAoolher Leafs win would create
dressin,g room describing the lhe first Montreal-Toronlo final
:ro
overtime pia~ goal of his · since 1967, when T111011to last won
l~
. "It 8CCIIIll like I have a Jo1 the Stanley Cup.
·
j&amp;nq_(e fun when there's a lot of
"Glenn kliows what it lakes to
1
on me."
get to a caWII place,'' Leafs CODCh

:so·

:i

r~jicek,

Pat Bums said of lhe vetmn right
winger who wu such a large part
of lhe EdmoataJ Oilers' five SliDley Cup triumphs. "He's not a guy
you have to say much to.''
Anderson was saying a lot to
himself as the puclc sailed tbrough
the air.
"I didn't know whether I'd try
to take and conii'Ol it or just shoot
it," he said of the light-speed conversation he hl!d with himself.
"The last thing that went tbrougb
my mind was: 'Just get 1 shot on
net. There's not much time left in
the period. An)'lhillg can happen if
we get a shot on net.'
·
"I was really luclcy that it went
in," he added.
"I got a ~ieee of it," said
Hrudey. "But1t doesn't reallY matda~- thinlle:rwtGabriela Saba- ter now, I guess. It was a great play
tint, fifth·!I!W!ed Mary-Joe Fanan· by him. He went to the net hard."
Jari Kurri and Gary Shuchuk
. dez and sixth-seedced Jennifer
Caprilti - advanced with ease, had given the Kings a 2~ lead. Los
none losing more than three games Angeles was in conuol. Only the
superlative play of Toronto goalin a set.
The two favorites, Jim Courier tender Felix Potvin was keeping
•
.
and Steff! Graf, faced what the score close.
appeared to be easy second-round
"For 40 or 4S minute\~
s
matches today, Courier against played better than us,.. said
84th-ranked Tomas Carbonell of coach Pat Burns. "We were flat.
Spain and Graf against lOOth· Felix stole the game for us.
"We pulled a rabbit out of a
ranted Andrea Strnadova of the
hal."
Czech .........
"-hlic.

·Monday thru Sunday
IAM-10 PM

20N.12 .0L

By DAVID CRUY
,: l"ARIS (AP) -Richard Kra'!·~ routed Olympic champion
: · Rosset in a batUc of sii'Ong
:~ en today, leading 1 group of
into the third round or the
!french Open.
I• Krajicek, the 12th seed from the
~c~herlands, beat Rosset of
,Swllzerland 6-2, 6-3, 6-1 , Rosset,
•ivho won the gold medal on
:Parcelona's clay courts last year,
:has failed 10 get past the second
nound
'fries of the French Open in four

·•eeds

1: I~ w&lt;&gt;men'~t

second-round . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .

=~~~OS:ai~~:~::

itinger Helgeson 7-S, 6-2 and 12th:teeded Mary Pierce of France
:fefealed Rachel McQuillan of Aus-

~flll!l!
6-4, &amp;.0.
!:.
!\ighth-seeded Anke Huber of

~any had one of the toughest .

IO!atches so for a women's seed,
~ting American Lori McNeil6-l,

UVour.Kids Are Worth ltl"

Re 1•0 I•CIDg
• L•fi
I e
"
ChriS
• t•Ian
· sc h 00I ·

POMEROY, OH.
.WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES
.PIICIS IOOD THIU SUNDAY, IIAY ~' 1993

\cound, dropping a four-set maleh to
:fiule-known Frenchman Stephane
•tl:uet Huet had qualified for only
:One previous pro tour event, and
lfomptly lost his first match to
~·s Goran PrpiC.
i· But on Tueaday, Huet overoame
~ bout or nerves and oUSied teildl,
4J.IIree-time French ~ champi_on •• ~~~~r~t~i~~-rum was
magic,'' the 22-year-old Huct said.
;"Owing the firsl four games, I was

- ~p iho!';~ l=~~has::~

.$ 99
ARGO

PEARS

.~ Lend!, at 33 the oldest player in ,
!he field, also lost in lhe first round
of this year'sofAustralian
He
OO!Iplained
a sore right()pen,
loot and
.wasn't sure if he'd play in Wimble11on next moolh.
The top women in action Tues-

STEAKS/ROAST•.•!·. · ·
..

ZESTA·
CRACKERS
1 POUND ·

Area. Our Kindergarten .Costs Only
$60 Per Month
'
•The 1993-1994 School Year will
8 egIn 0 ur 8th ·Year of Operation '

aII 992•6249

~----~----~----~~

""'1
' Barkley receives NBA~s. MVP honors ·

s

$lit

FRESH PORK BUn ..

I

'

' ·'

'IDE
.
ULTRA
GRADE ·A .
· · .
C
LARGE EGGS...••!!~:... 59 . DETERGENT

'

I

to have a chance not only at an
Al1hou&amp;h Bartley talked a if he
NBA title but lhe MVP awanl. .t . · would ~ nay the ,award, othen
"llhlnk that's unfair, also,'' me said he -lllllll delervin&amp;·
6-foot-6 Phoenix forward aaid.. ' ·"I ihink Charles i!eftoitely
·'Loot • a guy like Dominique clillervea.tile nod just becfti,..., of the
Wilkins. He had a monster year, totality .of what 1 happCning this
and his team's -just not good r,ear,"··CODCb Paul WeStphal sai4.
enough. It's such·a fluctuating way 'I think~ a mOSI val\lllble player
of pictii!J an MVP.'' ·
·
has !)lore to do with making his
A lllliOIIwide panel of 98 NB.A team win than anybody else, and
writers and broadcaaters gave by that stindard I think that Charles
Barkley !19 lint-place votes and hQids up real wdl.''
·
835 to 22 IIlii 647 for Olajuwelll.
The SUDS ICl a fnlnchise recOrd
Jardin, who had won tine timeS, . wilh 62 victories and ~e 8-4 in the
includinllhe lell'two ~ 101 13 playoffs, reaching lbe Western
first-place ' votes, and lfwiQS , Conl'ftal:e finals for the fust time
JeCCMcl,fca
Iince 1990

s t• ( ) l 'l' I )•• ~ I I.( I

..

..

fourtla qumr vi GU.ci l vi tile NBA Eu1en
Coofereaee Plaal• Ia New York'a ~hdl10a
Square Gardn, wEim die KDicki - ·
tq
tab al-l lead Ill tile llelf.ot«WD mlea. (AI')

MJchM ,JardM (llo-•. _ ) auea to tile IIOarlllllia
cllase for tile loole baD wlllle New York pud
Doe Jtlven pnpara to lludle Jor~• Ia tile

1701.

G
RADES KTHRU 6)
o
• t t'
01 SCOUnt Durmg,May
.
•r.~eg1s ra IOn
W ff th e Lowest
· .'JiuIt Ion In the
• e 0 er

(

DOWN GOES JORDAN - Clllcap Pard

\

(

For AQuality Education That lnstdls A
Good Sense Of Ethics And Morals

R.C.
.COLA
PRODUCTS
24 Pl. 12 01. CANS

l: s];~~lh:seeded Ivan Lend! was ENROLLMENT OPEN FOR 1993·1994 .
fie only seed eliminated in the fust

$ 49

298 .SECOND ST.

Martinez advance
~!t ~. French Open's third round

1: ''-

Knicks' control of the boards
aid in 96-91 victory over Bulls

•

~nderson's

st:%

PEPSI
COLA PRODUCTS

·STORE HOURS .

~'-

4201.

$ 99 '

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•••
,'•

Baldatt,, NDAina bal?k; Mark Fowble.
,;..c:-or; aad Cony Edmon'd,

NewY. . aadoop,"l::IOp.m. '

I

- • NHL playolfa • ....:.

••

re•t•

SAN FRANCISCO 491!RS: Siped ·

Dov14~-h6nle,pu&lt;!.

Tueoda)''IOCW.

Toroo10 3, Loo Aaaoloa '2 (OT):
T---:1-2 .

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GALA
TOWELS
JUMIOROU

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~0:~IIIIJtllhru~a
At Powll'• su~ v.ru
Offer
1813

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oltM
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·.

·

' EXCEPT KEDS SHOES

OHIO RIVER PU'ZA, GALLIPOLIS

SALE ENDS JUNE 6, 1993
STYLES AND SIZES
MAY VARY BY STORE.

441·0104

t

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Announces

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594 Ll.

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Our bright and fun casuals for women, kids, and infams in solids,
prints and multi-colors are now on sale-3 pairs for only $9!

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While the Bulls are relyins
almost exclusively on Jordan and
PipPCD. the Knicks are dilplaying
an unpressive arsenal of offensive
and defensive weapons. All five
New Yark starters scored in double
figures in Game 2, and Charles
Oakley's 16. rebounds helped the

FoolbaU

Sall,-day'•-

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onship.'' , (

Ollan Gilbo Lt-

FrtdiY'opae

,,_,left.

. piggy joined Peoples
I.
Bank Vacation Oub.
•. '
By May 1, he bad SMd
plenty of money and was
ready for some deht.fn!e
rest and relmlion. .

This little piggy
ate roast beef.

r..,,

~roolba!I~Ao&amp;uc
CHICAGO BEA'-': S;p.d John Woj , • a*i, cftJnC¥6 u..Dut.

lrains llllke a lot ollllli&amp;"
~
Knicb fans made alai olllile~
in the third quuter, wltea NJ'IJ
York outsi:Qred Oin•ao 28-14 111 · ·
take I 77-63 ieiJd. But aftiJ!r ~
was ejected widJ 7:34 n:•ai11 "1
and lhe Bulls ll'lilinl by 12. Cbil:ago nllied IIIII clDied 111 93-91 wiD .
Bill Cartwript made oae ol tiq·
free lhlows willllS ..
But Oakley made dlree ol filii'
free lbrows iD lhe fialll2 oeo &lt;*S:
to keep New York in froaL
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Beca"se, tbis liUie

. This little piggy
stayed home.

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1
II

KnickS gain a "S-34 advantage on
the boards. New York has outrebounded Chicago 93-62 in the rust
two games.
Knicts guard Doc Rivers, who
grew up near Chicago, knows it
won't be easy winning lhe next two
games at raucous Chicago Stadium
on Saturday and Monday.
"ll's like playing baskelball in a
subway," said Rivers, who scored
21 poims and was perfect in three
attempts from long mnge in Game
2. "And ·when you'rebellind, the

MOtii1UIAL
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•

B)' RICK WARNER
NEW YORK (AP) - In the
NBA version of Beauty and lhe
Beast, the beast is winning.
The New York Knicks, who
personify power and aggression,
have taken a 2..0 lead in the Easlml
Confemlce finals over the Chicago
Bulls, who are defined by the grace
and athleticism of Michael Jordan
and Scotlie Pippen.
"It's outrageous," Bulls coach
· PhiiJactson said Tuesday night
after his team lost Game 2 of the
best-of-seven series 96-91. "It's
not a WICS!Iing match, it's basket• ball. It makes anybody angry that
' likes basketball, a game .of movement and beauty. It's irritating.''
The Knicks have hatassed Jordan into a shooting slump, pounded
the Bulls on the boards and frustrated lhe normally placid Pippen
so much he got kicked oul in the
fourth quarter Tuesday night for
throwing the ball at an official. ·
New York guard Greg Anthony
got ejecred a few minutes later fr~
a flagrant foul oo Jordan, who was
slillfumlng about the play after the
game.
· "if! ever catclt him outside, I'll
~ my dues to him,'' Jordan said.
'll was totally uDCalled for.''
Jordan scored 36 points, but
missed 20 oD2 shots and had two
consecutive shots blocked in the
ICCOIId period. He is shooting 37%
·in the series, including a miserable
28% in the second ·half.
"I've had to take some tough
shots, especially down the stretch,'.
Jordan explained. "I've been miss·
ina them, bul I'm going to keep
taking lhem."
·
While Jordan continued to
.struggle, the Knicts continued 10
do what they do best - bang bodies, swarm shoole(J and feed off
the ~y of another .sellout crowd
at Madison Square Garden, where
lhey have won 27 in !I row. .,
"We have elevared our game to ·
another level,'' said Knicks center
Paaick Ewing, who had 26 points
and 10 rebounds. "Now we have to
stay al this level to win the champ!·

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Weclnllday, May 26, 1993'

PICII 8 The Dally Sentinel

.

Wednesday, May 26, 1993

The Dally Sentlnei-PIIgt

•

Sports Probe

•

OPEN

DAY

•
•

of Smith Ne.._ Motors with al993 Gralld ~
A bole-la-one 1111any llftbe other p11r three lloles
the golfer will bve his choice ola rouad trip air
line ticket to anywhere In tbe U.S., a three-day,
two-uigbt cruise to the Bahamas, or a three-day,
two-night golf package. For more Information .
on the tournameat caU the Meigs County Golf
Course at 99Z.6312.
·

, HOLE-IN-ONE PRIZES- Aay lucky golfer
taat ~Is a'llole-..-oaela S.turda)"s Melp Band
f'lemorlal GoltT011rumeat wil ,...lk away with
tig prize. Aay toller that aces the 137 yard par
) number alne will drive away In a - car. Pic'-red FrOID ldt to rilht are Brlc:e Turlc:k of Don
Tate Cllevorlet·OkiiiHblle-Cadililac-GEO with
1 1993 0Jc1s Aclllen, Bob Ross of Tri-County
tord witb 1 1993 Ford Tempo alld Mike Martin

12 OZ. CANS

ROCKY.
TOP POP

r':..

wake of Flint probe,

·

'

·l. mp'act,' exte· nt of dam a' ge to osu
*"en's cage program debatable
l.&lt;fl

12 PACK

••

Faldo, food prices, expensive,
trophies abuzz on grapevine

•

-

7 FLAVORS

7

By HOWARD SINER
Today's questions in lbe world
of sports:
• Who's lhe early favorite to win
the U.S. Open golf Jouma,ment1
It looks like Nick Faldo of England is the man 10 beat. He's wideI y considered to be the best golf('J'
in lhe world right now. Picking up
lhe most prestigious title in American golf would dramatically confmn his slatus.
Going into the U.S . Open J~e 17-20 at Baltusrol in Spring· f•eld, NJ. - Faldo is ranked by
Golf Digest as the No. I competitor. It figures lhe odds against his
winning the big tournament at 10-

'

lead. He won die toamamcnt in

1987.
• ~ midi does il COR ro cat

au majol......... ~

Nearly four times as much as it
. docs to bay lbe same IIDOUDI of
food 11 a local supermarket. So
•tptw!S ZiJiions: 0 aqunu Repons
For Kids.

In its Jane-July issue, the magazinc says a family of four could
spend almn&lt;t $30 for haJJpuk food
lba would COR less lban $8 atlhe

m~
Take me but to tbe ballgamc?
Not on an empty SI!Wnaclt.
· 1bc a~ prices at a majorleague stadiaa: Slfm- a less lhan

Golf Magazine also rates the 35year-old Fald6 as lhe favori~e. ·
Even so, unlike lhe Masters, the
U.S. Open hasn't been all that
receptive w foreign stars. The 1ast

6-inch hot doJ; 51.90 for a 17ounoc cola; $l.90 for a 4JkHmcc
bag ol ptaHIIS; SUO f« 15-ouncc
box o1 QUa- Jack.
· Wbydosududit3fweiiiScarJy
biJqucpril:cup?

to win
atlhe inOpen:
Graham
.of
Australia
1981.David
Which
is all
lhe more reason for Faldo to bear

Firs!.
Zillions,cc"you're
paying
rorsays
lhc oonwmier
of bav-

I.

•

mj I vendol- bring food and iki_nb:
right to your scat.
"Second, only one company
sclls food at lbe ballpmt. Without
c:ompeUtion from other food companics, it can keep prices high .•
Fans must either pay the price or: .
gohungry.
:
"'Third, lbe team owncts, who·
share in the profiiS ol food-conces- :
Sian sales, have final approval on
prices. They could set them lower,
but then they'd ma1ce less of a prof- .

it..IOO.""
.
•
• Wha's the most expensive
'phy in big-iimc sports?
:
It's the Stanley Cup. The ster-:
ling silver trophy awarded 10 the;
Nllional Hockey Leaaue's cha!npi-•
on is Wlll1h about $75,000, accord- ,
ing to Inside Sports. ·
The Jhree-foot tankard - which
is llllditionally held aloft by
bers of the winning team - is :
much costlier than iJs ,pro counler· '

Jro.:

mcm.:

parts.

......

:~~~~~9~~w~~~~~~w~: r---M~~~T=H~E=-R....._.S -1--...,

•
By RUSTY MILLER
While Flint looks to his future, problems almost every game Iast the veteran British golfer didn't do
•
:, COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio Stare must measure the dam- season. Ayers suggested that the&amp;- well in lhe Augusta, Ga., evelit this
· •
~pairinJ Ohio State's image in age left by allegations that assistmlt 5 Andeison might shift from the year.
tl!e wate of a recruiting scandal coach Paul Brazeau gave Flint's point or shooting guard to smallBernhard Langer of Germany
•
tliat costlbe basketball program a high school coach money for a forward. Charles Macon also fig. ~~nt~e ~in~~ ~h:S~~~
A NICE GIFT 1=_;'(~\~11.11"""11• POMEIOY
pP%C recruit Monday might require meal and transportation, bought ures into the mix.
y$rs of WOlle. But it might not
Flint and his coach a fast-food meal
If Ohio State can retain' the includes lhe U.S. Open, the Brilish
FII.,MIY21
· :• In 1956, Ohio State was put on and also gave nylon gym bags to scholarship it offered to Flint, Open and the PGA Tournament.
10.7
~AA probation .for a year when Flint and his friends. Head coach · Ayers said thcte is a possibility he But Langer doesn't shine in the
,body Hayes admitted lhat he had Randy Ayers was also found to might give it to 1110ther recruit.
~- ~-r:;,~t/:'~ ;:undcutupm
'
niP personal loans to some of his . have contacted Flint and his family
"We have Jalked 10 a couple of
f9'Jill&amp;U players.
in violation of NCAA rules.
guys this year and we're looking three of lhe previous four Opens. .
The next scuon, Ohio State was
"I don't think it affects us as into seeing what they're going to
Faldo's "game- sttaigbt bitol'fprobation and won lbe coaches' much this year as down lhe road," do," he said. "We'll know some- ting and course management arc
~If natiOIW championship.
Ayers said of lhe loss of Flint, a lhlng in lbe next couple of weeks:" his strengths -is well suited to the
Few people, even Ohio State two-time AII-Ohioan. "This year,
Asked if Ohio State was tainted Open," according to Golf Magaalid Big Ten Conference officials we'll have three or four veteran because of Flint's bungled recruit- zine. It notes that he is usually at
aklced on Tuesday, remember the guards returning and I think we'U ment, Buckeye assistant coach his best in major evenJs.
~be OK.?
Dl!veCecutti said: "I don'tknow. l,
He's been in the top five at the
But photographs or the 1957
Jamie Skelton, whose staning hope not, mostly because of Jhe U.S. Open in three of the last five
,cJ1ampionship team are prominent- position is almost assured by the way it was handled. 1 think that years.
. !fi displayed in the c.urrcnt 'Ohio loss of Flint, wiU be a senior during helps. w~ were open about it"
According .to Golf Digest, the
~ate media guide, in St. John the 1993-94 season. He likely will
Ayers said the impact remains U.S. Open odds against Faldo's top
~rena and in the Woody Hayes be joined in the backcourt by to be seen.
rivals are: Payne Stewarl. 12-1;
All AGat AND FAMILIES
A!hletic Center. ·
sophomores Greg Simpson and
"We've certainly tried to be Fred Couples, 16-1; Greg Norman,
REG. PRIC $18.95 .
•
:··Based on that experience, Ohio Derek Anderson.
straight up with the people we're 16.-1; Langer, 20-1; Tom Kite. 20S,IIuc has already been punished for
But Skelton is 6-foot-2 and talking to right now for next year," 1; Nick Price, 20-1; Jeff Sloman,
NOW .
1111: 17 NCAA violations which led Flint, who was considered a lock to Aycrs said.
25-1; and Scolt Simpson, 25-1.
ONLY
10-lbe loss of Damon Flint Now, as · ~e over the small-forward spot,
Jim Leon, Flint •s coach at
Kite, the defending champ in the
tlie Ohio State coaching staff standsjustunder6--6.
Woodward High School, said the U.S. Open, has had to put up widl
S1.115 DEPOSIT
aitaits further word of possible
.F lint's absence leaves Ohio damage is not irreparable.
back problems this year. But be's
·pjmaltics from the NCAA, it is teft State without an entire recruiting . '_'Ri$111 "?W; 1 ve got a top-100 by far the top money winner in
~- lbe impact of its reauitinJ class - he was lbe only incoming Jumor tn Enc Johnson, •• he said. PGA hisJory ·
GOOO IIIEWS - s+ EW: IIIACtC IACICGROUND IN YOUR PACKAGE
iil(ractions.
freshman for lhe Buckeyes this fall. · "If Ohio State wants to recruit
Simpson may be a good datt
;. flint was releaSecl from his letter
Obio Slate was 15-13 last sea- him, I wouldn't stand in their way. horse ptck in lhe '93 Open.
GROUP PICTURE SUD PER SUBJECT. PAY WHEN TAKEN.
oC intent Monday 11ftcr an NCAA son and dropped out of the Nation- There's been damage 10 the proGoing into the final round in the
• Qae Special l'e&lt; Sub;ect
• Qae Special Per Family
invcstisation. Flint reportedly will' ·a! Invitation Tournament in the gram, but 1 think Randy C8li repair . last six U.S. Opens, Simpson has
cOntinue his career_ bY, stay!ns in _f!r_,t rpund ~ith •.56-53 loss to , ,that. Bpt_~.:s. gtlt 1!1 @,!l.better job. _ ,been within three strokes or 1be
hill hometown and s•gnmg w•th tlie M1amt of Ohto. S~en of lhe top of prepanng thel p~liple on his r--------,-'----:-~---~------------------University of Cincinnati.
eight players return next season.
staff.·· .
·
'
;
Ohio State ran inJo rebounding

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FRESH CALIFORNIA

Cantaloupe

: Foreisn-born drivers occupy
~i!JC of the top I 0 starling posili9DS:A lineup that was dominated
just I 0 years ago by red-blooded
Aincricans lite A.J. Foyt, Rick
~. Tom Sneva, Johnny Rutherfot"d and Gordon Johncock has
been infdtraled by guys with names
li'e Arie, Raul, Stefan, Nigel,
EIIICrson and Teo.
:Even the Caudians have put
ujde their· hockey sticks Ions
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BIG BEND FOODLQD

newv.llueOne.Account -

is all about.

cause with younger son Jeff and
nephew John in the sW'Iing field.
"We have a training ground like
Indy L1gh1S and Fcmnula Atlantics
lhat run on ovals, lhey run on r6ad
courses, street events, they run
everywhere Indy cars run."
Some people say rides' are simply too expensive or go only to
drivers, many of them foreigners,
who come to' the team s with
money.
" To me, those are all excuses."
Mario said. "There 's always a
problem. I know what we're faci ng
with Jeff, trying to promote sponsorship and so fonh. But, ultimarely, I don't think that's the absolute

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Team owner Dick Simon said
American drivers mighl be getting
a little spoiled
"I don't want Jo downgrade olir
own ~merican drivers, but they
feel hke everybody should do
everything for them ... , A lot of
these guys need to gel !heir butts in
gear and go 10 worlc," Simon said.
" I hare 10 say it for fear that if it
comes out in the paper wrong I
might get hurt, but they don't seem
10 have the dcrennination, tenacity
and perseverance. They give up too
easv. That 's what I feel in my
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (~P) There is no sw!mming pool and
DaytOn area had seen JUSl one
there are no tenn1s couru.
~ aolf counc built In lh~
'·yre t~int this is ~mcthing
·20:yean, bat tllrec have opened m that '.~ go!ng 1o be special t~ the
!be: last Jhree YCitS and II10I't are on ar(:.l, Slid Fr~~ Anto,nclh, !he
~way.
. .
~~raJ m~~- _There s nothmg
· ,Construct•on •s under way on lite 11 even m Cmc111111ti.'" _
thll Cenlerville's new courseDevelopers have spent $15 mil:Yankee Trace- and two other lion on the solf course and clubcone. atth of Daytal IR being I!Quse. l'hey expect 10 put $40 mil~!ion intC? t~ entire 4S7-aere pro·
. _ ~eat~, o~ by tbe }Cet, wh•ch •ncludes ptplllation of
of SJX!naboro, and PipeStone, 206 home siles. Homes will cost
OYJ)Ied by. lhc city of Mi8misburs, $350,000-$800,000.
wPOblic cwues.
·
Those joinina CCN must !MY a
C-ry Ollb oldie North, the $35,000 initiation fee, much of
c t p!ec:e of a h!Jh·prnfile llaua- whicll can be which recouped upon
in,tJIIOject, il all'lvlle chill wid! a withdnwal from the club after a ·
~,cmo.yarct Jack MrJrl••
period of ycm. AniRial dues will
aolf COIII'Ie and a 40,000-~quare be $3,800.
root clublloue.
Members arc already playing
l 'Jf y011:n: an avid plf!! tllit SC\Iell of Jhc 18 holes, and the full
)'011 II .Willi to play, salcl coarse should be ready by midC
a11l1tant aolr pro Nickey Mllmer.
~
- ·
CCN i1 be ina built the NBL
.. aplte of ill J!UM• CCN Is not De:velopment Group, a limited
a c;untry club. It 1111rictly for golf. partnership that includeli five dif-

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.!l[hree new golf courses coming for Dayton area .
.ne

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•
•

· IIIIlS

1 2AI9

• •There is some uneasiness among
11!_4 followers or American racing
abptt the seeming dearth of good,
youna American competitors to
'replace the retired Foyt and Mears
aiid .the rideless Sneva, Rutherford

and Johncock.
Just a couple of years ago, it
seemed like' the future of Indy-car
racing was solidly in American
hands, with Michael Andretti following his Italian-born father
Mario, lhe 1969 Indy winner, and
AI Unser Jr. shadowing the foots~eps of his dad, a four-time winner
like Foyt and Mears. Both were in
their late 20s and already winning
races and championships.
But the younger Andretti has
gone off this season to try his slcills
in Formula One. The younger
Unser, the defendin~y 500 winner who will SW'I
the middle
of lbe second row Sunday, says he ·
would like to tackle Formula One
in the future.
"I ~ave a tough time really
rationalizing this thing," said
Mario, 53, who will sW'I from lbe
middle of the tront row Sunday.
"I'd like to think thcte are equal
opportunities out lhere. I know this
country can produce drivers as
good as anywhere in the world ,
thcte's no question lbout it."
Still, all you have to do is look
at the lineup to see lhat lbe American presence at Indy has shrunk.
"I cannot tell you the reasons
arc this and that," said Andretti,
whO is doing his best to help lhe

.,,_,_

Making the most of :

lndy 500 becoming United ,Nations
~f car racing with 16 foreign drivers
·~
By MIKE HARRIS
" INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- The
1i4Cup for lbe Indianapolis 500 has
~4come almost as exotic as the
F~nch Foreign Le~on.
.
~ Thirteen counmes, including the
~itcd States, are represented in
33-c:ar field for Sunday's race.
ere arc 16 foreign-born drivers
~~ _alii! that docsn' t include
1.J9111inic Dobson, who was born in
~rmany while his father was in

EA.

_,,_...

15=~

sg~O~VERY

and virtuaUy any-

ferentcoqiorations at lhe beginning
but has changed significanU since
1990, when consttuction beJn.
Hattori Kowa USA, which
orginally owned 30 percent of
NBL, now owns 92.5 peiCe t
n1

•

~in~v.oid.

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)IQl1r recordkeep-

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lend J.OO an e6t!.'f

Football .
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) SJanford coach BiU Walsh says he
was "out of line'' when be 'ctiaraclerized Washington's program as a
rosuc operation. WaiJh, saying he
felt foolish IIIICI emblrrasaed, said
he called Wuhlnaton coteh Don
Jamea nd apoloaized durina a
five-minute conversation.
. Walsh'• remarks wae made last
week in a speech to SJanford alumni and reported by the SacramcnJo
Bee. Wallh,IICCOI'IIIna 10 the newsJill*, aid Wuhinpln ran an outlaw poJIMI tltat nllled on athlelic
"mercenaries" and cared lltlle
about academic development

•

..

to-understand'
•:
'
!ltlllllli3I'Y (llll!ry month.

•:

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Con1e inan:llllkllbotj .
~One.

h!wbat}'OUI'
1JM[ ill doing ID help. •

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Mid-May sales of trucks,
cars are rip 18.3 percent
DETROIT (AP) - Throughout
the recession, the cars on. Ameri·
ca's highways. grew older and
older. Many people wanted to
uade, but fear for their jobs·and the
higher prices of new cars scared
them away.
· With fingers crossed, they hwig
on and hoped to avoid expensive
repairs.
Now, unable to wait any longer
and .facing the specter of higher
federal taJICS, many are fmally taking the plunge on a new car. The
long-suffering auto industry is
reaping the bellefits.
Mid-May sales of new cars and
trucks rose 18.3 percent over a
stton~ last year and posted
their
sales rate-since late January, automllkers reported Tuesday.
"I think there are ' two things
going on," said Wertheim
Schroder &amp; Co. analyst John Casesa. "The flec:t is finally wearing
ouL The stoclc of cars on Ameriean
roads is just too old. And lower
interest rates have made car fmancing exll'elllely aunctive, for leasing
orbuying."
•
Auto dealers report briSk ~~ttivi·
ty in showrooms, evidence that a
long talked about pent-up demand
is being released. Dealers also say
the quality of trade-ins is low.
"We're seeing some true beat·
ers in as lrades," said Rick Balazs,
sales manager of Lehighton Lincoln-Mercury in Lehighton, Pa.
According to R.L. Polk, a firm
that tracks auto regislrations, one of
every four vehicles on the road is at
least 12 years old.
The U.S. Big Three and
Japanese companies lhat build cars
and trucks in the United States
shared in the strong May 11-20
sales.
·
On an annualized basis, cars
sold at a rate of 7.4 million, the

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesdaly, Mllj 26, 1993

best since a 7.6 million rate in late
January. Trucks sold at an annual. ized rate of 5.1 million.
Including imJK?rts. the annual·
ized rate for vehiCle sales was 14.4
million, well above the 13.7 million sales predicted for the year by
several auto executives.
General Motors Co11&gt;. reported
higher car sales for the fifth consecutive period, reporting a 7.7 per~ent i~rease. Its light truck sales,
mcludm~ p1ckups, minivans and
sport utilities, were up 14.2 percent
for a combined gain of 10 percenL
Ford Motor Co. said its combined car ll!ld truck sales were up
16.1_ percent in early May. Most of
the mcrease carne from light uucks
such as pickups, minivans and
sport utilities. Ford car sales in the
May 11·20 period were up 6 per·
cent and truck sales soared 28.1
percent.
According to estimates by the
trade journal Ward's Automotive
Re(!Orts, Chrysler Co11&gt;. car sales
rose S0.8 percent and light truck
sales rose 22.8 percent. Chrysler
reports its sales figures only
monthly.
, .
Uncertainty over when new federal taxes croposed by President
Clinton wi I go into effect and by
how much has affected business in
many parts of the economy.
But autos sales have picked up
strength in recent months, baffling
economists and analysts who fear a
sales retrenchment because of
slowing consumer confidence and
sticker shock on the part oC people
who have not shopped for a new
car in several years.
"They're going to have to
(buy)," said Bobby Wyatt, sales
manager at Brandon Toyota in
Clarksville, 'renn. "What's going
to happen with the Clinton administration is going to happen, they
can't change that."

GOP cashing

Page.-9 _

i ~teA~;:~:~~ FAIR WINNERS -Pictured
:wtuers lit ~one lbrOiip tbree .

;o;

a.m. klnderaartea 'at Pomeroy

:= ~~.emm_!_tary who participated ·In the academic'

:;; ~~:el

.::

row, lrom .ltft, Lacey KeDDedy, Jaml·
Yoang, JUlianne l':oaDI, Kelly Foremaa,
· ·Davis, Amuda Hoyt, Justlit Klebt, JeD·
Fore.Uan; second row, Aagela Wlbon,

:f\¢a()_~m~c fair
;: - ~ Kfaw~yn won me best

Attdy Kinu, Ryan Terzopptous, Katie Jeffers,
Chrlle Gilmore, Heather Hysell, Nickle
Flueaer, Amber Pierce, Ty Aillt, Andy Wbite;
tblrd row, Jodi.Reeves, Slwmon Soalsby, Mark
- Daley, Allllej Hamilton, Jask:a Davill, Joantban
Wllaon, Darrell Jentlas, Kris Jenkins, Ryan
Krautter, Betb Shlllrer.

POMEROY ACADEMIC FAIR HELD.Aademl( fair project willnen it. Pomeroy Ele·
meatary from vades four tbi'ough six and the
al'lentoon klttderprten are, ftnt ..OW, from left,
Kelll Tatterson, Britlany Bacher, Andrew
Powell, Shaaon Price, Jo . . Wllsoa, J.D.
Grueser; second row, KeUy Caa_on, Heidi Fish·
,

gate.''

"Travelgate is no longer just a
perception problem, it's an outright
scandal," Dole said Tuesday. He
said the controversy - in particular questionable contaCfS between
the White Hou~ office and
the FBI - "takes you back to
Watergate, and as a Republican, 1

qf Jh,e itade~ic fair ~d j!ldges

Lacey Kennedy, ~ a.m.;
A~ew_ Powell, Kelt! Tauerson,
Bnuany Buckner, kmdergart~n
p.m.; Amanda Hoyt, Jaynee DaVIS,
Kelly Freeman, first~ Angela
Wilson Ty Ault, Juslln Klein, first
grade; Charlie Gilmore, Heather

Clf·ihow awlrd ~the Pomeroy. E~- . w~ ~ohn R~ebel, Me1gs County

IJ!CIIWY. acadeJn!c banqueL. C)intpn ·supenntendcnl Of ~hoots; Ri&gt;bcrt
Hoadricks rece1ved an award for · Meier, Southern Ohio Coal Com·
tilt social Blltdies.,Curtis Hanstine pimy; Des Jeffers, Bank One; and
'ion an awird fot best science and Susan Clalt, Clark's Jewelry.
o\ib~CY HamiltOn won for best lai!Winners in each clasa w~~· in

Foreman, secon~; Shannon SouJ:I·
by, ~II Jenkins, I~ Wdson, third; Bed! Shaffm;, Kris.Jenk·
ins, Mart Dalley, thtrd; Amber
Pierce, Andy Kinnan, Ryan Ter·
Z?PJIIOUS, D.H.; Brenna ·Sisson,
M1ssy Lehew, Michael Stacy,

!¥:c~Tri~ivasthedirector ~~f~~~?t~~=dy=~ ~:~}~~!~~~.=~ {.';j:!~;Chris

Shannon

in on

that.''

And while the travel office
episode pales against Watergate
crimes of the Nixon administration
two decades ago, Dole and other
Republicans have not let many
opportunities pass without publicly
needling Clinton.
"He has literally done more to
unite the Republican Party than I'll
ever do," said Haley Barbour,
chairman of the Republican
National Committee. ·
"The White House operation
real Iy has been a disaster from a
very effectively run campaign to a
disastrously run White House,"
said Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.
The White House is accused by
Republicans and other critics of
dismissing the seven travel office
employees to make room for its
friends and then pressing the FBI to
justify the action.
Even Allomey General Janet
Reno, who was bypassed by the
White House when it conr.acted the
FBI, voiced irritation at the tum of
events.
On Tuesday, the White House
put five of the fued travel employees on indefinite leave with pay.
White House spokesman George
Stephanopoulos conceded the situation had been badly handled and
announced an internal White House
inves'tigation into the filings.
Republicans readily concede
that Clinton can still tum things
around if he works hard to regain
control of his image and his message.
''He's only been president four
months. I don't assume anything
except that we ought to fight hard
against (his economic) plan which
· won't work," Barbour said.

WASHINGTON (AP) - .
Mrs. Clinton promised a com. Hillary Rodham Clinton predicts prehensive benefiiS package. It will
health reform will force private feature improved menial health and
insurance companies into a "Dar· long-term care coverage, but they
winian struggle," with only the will not be comprehensive at the
fittest surviving.
stan, she said.
Previewing the still unfinished
The president's proposal would
White House health plan, Mrs. make "a very good beginning" on
Clinton also said Tuesday it will mental health, but not achieve paribolster mental health coverage, but ty with coverage of physical ill·
fall short of treating menial illness- · ness, she said.
es the same as'physical ailments.
For most Americans, insurance
Mrs. Clinton was making a pub· covers 80 percent of the cost of
lie pitch for reform today to the treating physical diseases n01y but
Service Employees International only SO percent for mental probUnion, the nation's largest union of lems.
health care workers.
Mental health advocates, includIn a closed-door session Tues- ing Tipper Gore, the vice presiday with consumer and health dent's wife who chaired a White
groups, the first lady forecast House working group on the prob·
wrenching changes for the insur- tern, have pushed for an end to that
ance industry and hospital clerical disparity.
staffs.
The audience applau~ when a
There will be a ''Darwinian member of the Gray Panthers asked
suuggte" among insurers, she said, why Clinton did not )ust eliminate
and "only the best and fittest of the private insurance~Mrs. Clinton urged h« lillellers
them will survive."
She spoke for an hour from a to be sensitive to the needs of those
stage a1 George Wuhington Uni· who would lose joba at insurance
versity to SOO people gathered by companies and on hospital clerical
FamilJeS USA, an ldvocacy group staffs if the plan is enacted.
Workers must be shifted from
lining up support for the Clinton
plan. Several participants provided paperwork to care-gi~ing, she said.
an account of her n:marks. ·

•

•

•

•

Brown, Jackie Buck, Christopher
Darst, fifth; Wesley Thoene, Julie ·
Sjia.un, Billie Jo Dye, fifth; Kristina
Kennedy Missy Darnell, Jennifer
.' .
•

. BEST OF SHOW - Andrea Krawcz,a was aWilrded lies~ of
sbow ud tbe BOIIIIie Marlene Fllller Aw•d for her project at.1be
Pomeroy Elementllry aadealc fair held recently at tile sebool.
Her project was ''PcJ•eroy Rmslled" ud depicted bow Pomeroy
used tu look ud bow It 1oo1&lt;s IIOW.

- ·l'lcUired 8re top wtnnerl·oNhe Pomeroy
lair belcl reeendyat tbe sebooL From left are
selea~), CUnton· Heodrlc~. (best sodlil stud·
Krawac:z,a (best ol show), attd'Alllley HamUtoa n.....

l!i'll).

Each

.

.

,~

·Texas cantaloupes

·A reunion of students who
attended the Sugar R111 School has
been scheduled for 1-4 l!_.m. Sunday at GraCe Episcopal Q!urch in
Pomeroy.
Former students ~ currently
attempting to secure funds to
repl;lcetheroofoftheoldbuilding.
Jolui C. Wolf, D.O.
The building was built in 1875
~ eight grades were taught there
Associate Professor.
untii · I929 when the junior high
, Medicine
was built. In 1961, a new grade
•.,QilestlOil: My.doc:Ur tells me to women done l!Y the Divisi~n of school was ~uilt leaving the old
1M weight every time I
him. Epidemiology at the University of building 10 waste away.
Local residents have cleaned the
All my f~ily have ~ big ~ Minnesota School of Public Health,
weeds
and brush from the yard and
pJo. My parents and grandparents A.R. Folsom and olhen-compaml
the
grapevines
off theblilding.
I~ to their 80s; Do I really need these'· measurements to determine
Alumni
are
encouraged to bring
10 worry about my .weight?
wh!c.h was most accJJrate at preold
pictures
and
memorabilia to the
f ~Ansioer: Obesity Is a serious dieting the riSk of premaiUJC dcalh
~tb riSk for men llld women, but in a group of women in the age
Busy
a"'i1sk" doesn~'ltee tllat you group SS 10 69/ears:
The Busy Bee·Class of Middle·
develOJ!
lellts. O~ity is .~ They foun. tha~. as !he WHR
port
rmt Baptist Church mea at the
related to. dia ~ tes, ~-ean di~, . 'increased, regardless of the
chun:h
for their May meeting with
hyperteJWOil ~ several other ill· · woman's age or Vleight. the riSk oC
Roscmll)'
Lyons pesiding.
nesses, all or which ean I~ to pre- ·: premature deallt i.nci'eascd 1n this
Openmg·
prayers were given by
~all!fC death. The conf!'ll'!l!. find· study the average WHR was .84
Gwinnie
White
llld devotions with
mg IS that some obese indivtduals and this was associated with aver·
a
Mothers'
Day
theme were given
.::- li~e theJ~ily members you age riSk. An increase of .IS units in
by
Betty
Gilkey.
menu~ "'""' H.ve a very ~ and the WHR wis associated with a
-Roll call was answered with a
healthy h(e, but most don·t; We 1.60 times lncreue in the death
bible
verse.
don!t fully '!ndcrutd why !f'Cre ritte.
Birthdays
of Ruth Ebersbach
.are these dtfferences, but new
1n this same University of Min·
and
Freda
Edwards
were acknowl·
· res.eiich is · helv,klg .I!S prQdict tiesilta SIUdy. die average BMI was
edged.
wh1ch overweight·indiVIduals arc at 2 7, but the differences in BMI
A donation of $200 will be
riSk of premature death· _
between women did not predict
There arc sevenli1ICIISUICIIIC!II increased risk of death as well as made toward rtpairs of the chun:h
that ha~e been UJed to IUeS8 ~ l,he WHR meastirC!J!enlS. Similar air conditioner.
· The June meeting will be lunch
of. premalllfC .dead! usoclated With leiUIIs lulve been obtained in other
at Ponderosa Steak House in Galbody size. I'll give you a brief studies.
desaiJ?Iion of two of~-. body
So, your weight compared to lipolis. A dessert c:otne was served
mass mdex (BMI) and waJstlhip ~: height is nor necessarily the by Betty Gilkey to the following
ratio (WHR).
· ·
•.
predictor of Your riSk of pre· members: Mary Brewer, Lillian
BMl ' is a calculated f1gure . mature death. Calculate your Demoskey, •Belly Denny, Ruth
obtained _by .!fl~dlng_ the individu· , WJiR. If it is ci~' IO .8S, you may Ebersbach, . Freda Edwards,
at's weipt in kilogrims by hia ot not have significant incrcase.d Dorothy Evans, Betty Gilkey,
her height-in. meters, and then healllt riSk just frOm your size. Of Rosemary Lyons, Elizabeth Searother heltth riSks such as les, Elizabeth Slaven and Gwinnie
dividin' this result again by lhe
hei-'h~ m meters. For thos~ not smoking, alcohol 111e and. your White.
failullar with the, metric system, a he(edi!y are important in detmnindies
elose app,roxi~tio.a of tile B~ . ing -your heatth dsk. ~ and we. Critic
can bci calculated by takln$ the know that yoa.al 1cut have good
NEW YORK (AP) - John
weight in pounds and multipl)'lng it heredity.
Ludlow Gould, a TV llld radio crit·
'by 700. Pividc 'thla.number byIn men, the situation is some- ic wbo wrote for The New York
height in inches, and then· divide what more confusio&amp;. The WHR Times under the byline Jack Gould,
thi5 result by the height in inches apd the BMI are about equal in died Monday o( complications
again.
:
..
.
. their predictive ability ~or men, but from a gall bladder infection. He
&lt; The WHR 11 eN*·to obtai~) llld, ncitbcr II .. helpful u II the WHR was 79.
.
-ts. ~y~useful far ~· ·It in'AaeulDJ lhO .increued d~ or.
Gould, who died at a cnnvales·
is cllk01atti4 by dividing your waiat -~ fOr. woatat.' Bec•tsc of this, I cent home in Concord, Calif., is
· Jitea~Umnent (one lncli above the oitly recommend using the BMI on coriSidered to have been one of the
belly b11iton) by the measurcme11.t men. However~~!! BMI most influential television erilics
around the Widest part of your hi(JI. ~~~ DOt I
Sur· during the industry's early years.
Both .the BMI and the WHR uc
indlvldlllll widt the low·

Family .

Medicine

-·

-

12-Pack

c.:
w

:s 12-oz. cans
~

lb.
U.S. GRADE A CHICKEN .TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

Breast Ouarters

·

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, DIET COKE, SPiliTE OR

coca Cola Classic

78 &amp; $10.00 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

I
I

I
I
I
I
I
II

I •

J

~·.·

,,,
'• • I

I

WJ

'

---- ---------·
LIMIT ONE COUPON PE/l CUSTOMER

COUPON GOOO SUN. MAY 13·SAT, MAY 19, 1111

...o.l

. ...

1

DF LIMIT TWO 11·PAKS WITH COUPON/fa

.~

....

,.

.

'

'

"'
,!lf"to

r

•

I 1' 1'

""' -

,•

6·0Z.
ASSORTED VARlET/iS

U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF

Lay's Potato Chips

Ribeye

"IN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE"
READY TO EAT

Deli Fresh
Fried Chicken
8-Pieces

reuuion. If you are unable td aaend,
but would like to be a part of this
project, please seitd a donation to
Chairwoman Rachel B!berfeld
Downie, 4688S Morning Star
Road. Racine, 45771, oc ca1194.9 ·
2289, or &lt;:;hairwoman Eleonor
Smith, 100 Butternut Avenue,
Pomeroy,4S769; orcaU 992-.~~9.
·

ASSORTED FLAVORS

.

'

... :

. -::.c

....
1

•

Ul

' '=:.

16·0Z.

5·0uart Pall

••

.. '·.·''
""

campbell's
Pork· &amp; Beans

Old Fashioned
Ice cream

' \IJ.,t

J'

care ofthe planters at
ty. Church met recently in the
the
church.
• . ... _ _
church social room.
,
Mrs.
Perrin
8J!nQII!!Ced
~lpers
Joanne Wildman had a medi!B· are·. needed"to make-ice cream
on
tion .on "Hands." She stated we use
June.
2.and
3
for
Jhe:ice.cream
our hands for everything we do and
spoke of how soft a baby's hands . sociaJ 011lune JO. 11 an&lt;! I~
The meeting close!l wiJ!t
are.
•
"Lord's
Prayer." A delicious salad
S.hc said to think of every place
was
.
served·
at a table decorated
we "hilve been 811d everywhere we
with
a
Spring
BouqucL Favort or
haye left our fingerprints . S~e
inspirational
clips
8114.candies were
closed her program wtth everyone
given
to
each-person
attending. ·
.joining hands and singing "Blest be
Hostesses
were
·
Maye
Mora and
the Ties ·!hat Bind." In addition, she
Maeda
Mora.
also performed the offratory
prayer. 1be business meeting was con·
dueled by President Qay Perrin.
En• Of The *••~•
She extrissed her. thanks on behalf
of the ladies or the church for their
·Clott·Oiit S1lt
delicious Mother:oaughter Ban·
ALL FU1S••• _ ••,~••••: ••~~..•5
qtjel served. by the men of the
All HAIGIIIIG IASIEIS...15
church. The Father-Son Banquet
Will be June-19.
Ail 4• POTS ••;,._,,,,;••50'
Tluink yOii notes were received
ALL rREEf.:...........
OFF :
'from Evelyn 'Strauss and the Ed
Open
Mon.-s.it.
11-5
kennedy family. Also a thank you
CLOSED ~!JNPAY _..
note w.S rQceived from Pauline
HUBBARDS GREENHOUSE
Mayer for·fiowc:rs. cards and phone
calls she has ·received since her
·• Syrac•~ • 99~:5776
operation. Thanks ~~ expressed

2o"

......,_. . .

·'-.

·~

We remember those who have
away
and art! especially dear to us. .

I

we

will

IJil

cau111 fat to be stored · at an ·hi&amp;ber number - u expected ·'i~ IJIIOUIItln 1he abdomen. produc:es lnc:reued risk.
ADd, there have been lfl\'cnlltlld· , ("Faaally Medlcbae'' II a week·
Ieitha&amp; linbd dte ICCumulalioD cl .,
To •l'rit IIIIJU,
~
fll wlda bicriilf!lll~ ;tt~.,~ wo.~1 D.o.,
llli• illoOd · '-"'~~~~'~ 111gb · . . ·
_
Oilieoclloltuerol, ~ ind'heln dil· ~Qi-.eaor HaD,

I

'

·'' '
""'.,

'

. rot

ea.e.

-._, · • ·

A.di&amp;I,O ·.

:r

.. ar
C)ll•ae

'

ltttDRIIP•ny JOUr tribdtc.

I. Wc huld }«lU in our lhouj!hl~ and

·'

•'

...

•

_
mtrnoric~

(on:'ie:r.

l. M;ay G\d crol\llc yuu in Hi:o.c anns, ~w 01nd t&lt;w.:wr.
J. r... ~r..::wr nli"-'ot.'tl, ncvrr IO..f!uucn. Mll.y God lylld )'OU in ltk!
p:alm or His h&lt;~nd.
.
.a. llunli. you f1lf the wnn&lt;krl'ul day11 .,'C ~;han.-d totclher. My
• [mlyci'S will he wilh yuu until we mc:1.1 again.
5. 1k day. we ..tw.rod were !!"'"eel. I lOft!! 10 !d" you apin in
Cool"" hc.Jvcnly 11-lory. • •
6.. Yaurcoutllgc alk.l hni.Vcry lolill inspire u~ ull, and the memory
of your unilc fills WI wilh joy :uMJ l11ugh1er. ·
7. lbouzh ool nf 'ight. you'll rk"'er be in my heart and mind .
8. 1b: da.)'!l may eo~m: and so. hullh&lt;: times we !&gt;hm:d will
alwaY" remain.
,~
9. M:~y 1he Ill! hi of pea&amp;.-.:: ~hinc ''"your fal."l.' fOI' ·ctemlly.
10. May Cud's an~:cls 1=uidc- yoo and pnMCCI yuu throughoolim~e.
lt. Yau .,·~reg lifhlln nur life 1h:a1 bums rorev..-r in our hean....
l.l. May Oud·~ gt'.K:C!i shine over you l"of all urn..:..
13. Yoo aft: in oor thouJ.hiS al'lll prayers fmm momin1 10 ni,tlt

Andrews, David C
July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

May God's angels
guide you ancl
protect Y«lU
throughout..time. ·
Always Ill our harts,
J ..n IUid M- Andrews

.-:~ ·rmm year to y~r.
' · ·
1.&amp;. We IICftd \hi~ me.ss.ltc with a lnvinJ. kills fqr etc:maf'JH~ and ·
happi~.
.
'
15. May ltk: Lunl h~!i you with llis f!rat"CI( :.and wann.. ltwinz hem . •

andf..Uiy

,

-

ri.neinber your' IOveci'
'this speeii.t way, se~d- SlO.OO ~ ~r 'itstl~g~ Pi'ci"i.t~
optional. Your special tribute wl!l become a pennanent memorial record In our paper.

1b

one' In

!

Fill out the fonn below and mall to:

THE DAILY .SENTINEL
With Fondest Metnories
lliCounSt.
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769

·,, ''

..

,
.
r----------~~.-:-~----~ _::_::.-""':'~---.-~~~-------,
l'leiR peNk•·•:r trlbJite Ia die !p"da' Memorilll D1J1 Sec:don oa M8J 30.
I

.

-I
N~or~.~------------------------------------------~- I
I
Retllionshiptome ___________-::--------Numberofselectcd,v~- -I
Dole or binh :
0.11! of pas.•ing - - - - - - - - - , - - -

.

Acldlli~ tnfmlion '"-'---·__.c:..._ _ _ _ _ _,___ _ _ ___:......,-

Vctioran --------;--:--Rink--------'-,..-- Branch of iiervice ----:;--

• •
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J1.

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Prinl you. nome hen: ---'-------"-----------------,-"--=-I
AddrtJ• -;----------;---'------------Phone INmbcr ------...!..-'-I
.
_
· SUite Zip -•
I
Cil~ ·
,
.
Mi.b c~edcpayable to THE DAILV-SENTIIIIEl. .
c · .• I i·• :

JEFF WARNER
IUW.IndiL
l'olnllor. otL 41711

,....,a.-

Ollloe-~

1.)

: Jn a recent study of Iowa

·are

lr)'O!IIi wish. sdca enr of' the (nllowlnK FREF; \ 'tna below to

Gould

:C'ifil'
::s::w,~W{:=-·'i:.:r~::o~~
IOIIIId" to
- Cjilldldpits thit .
or . AboY.i·lhil po1111, a

aspi:ctai

•

On Sundiy, May 30:
wilt publlSh
seciiilli.devoted to lh05e wiiii
gone but not
forgotten; The names will be placed in alphabetical order and will be simllar IQ the sample
·
·
below: ... :

Bee class meets

col-.

INCLUDES 16·01. POTATO SALAD FREEl
I

Maecia Mora and l:larlcC Kraut·

p~sed

course,

I

lb.

to

ter for taking

see

I

gg

I:ambett!. sixth; .1 e!lnifer Heck,
suth; JeSSica DaYis,Ryjlll I&lt;rauUer, ,
D.~.; I:D· Grueser, John Wilsiin, ,
He1diFisher, L.D.
.
. .. ..
.

-

Sugar Run reunion slated ·.

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

JUMBO 12 SIZE

_

'Fri·en·dly Crrc. le ponde·r·s
meditation ori 'Hands'
The Friendly Cin:le of the Trini-

can teii you of the repercussions of

Mrs. Clinton sees struggle
for insurance firms

.

brings out Pomeroy ElementarY students' best -.. -·

Clinton's blunders WASHINGTON (AP) - From
listening to Republicans, it's hard
to tell they lost the last presidential .
election. In fact, they're having_
such a good lime cashing in on
President Clinton's abundance of
stumbles,. it's almost as if they're
glad they lost.
But with such ready-made mate·
rial as the controversies over Presi·
dent Clinton's $200 haircut aboard
Air Force One and the "firing" of
his travel office staff, the Republican enthusiasm is understandable.
Democrats are now "in a perpetual state of snake bite," said
Mary Matalin, one-time campaign·
political director for former Presi•
dent Bush.
Matalin, now a GOP adviser and
cable TV talk show hostess, says
she recognizes the syndrome from
"having been there . ... One thing
illuminates and exacerbates the
next incident."
The White House about-face
announcement Tuesday that five of
the seven employees of the travel
office really aren't fired at all just suspended indefinitely, with
pay- only gave more ammunition
to the Republicans and added yet
another b1zarre twist to a week of
troubl.esome events.
Senate Republican Leader Bob
Dole gleefully refers to the controversy over the travel offiCe - and
the White House's fumblin¥, efforts
to involve the FBI - as 'travel-

er, Chris Ward, Mlc~l $IIIey, Brenna Sls&amp;on,
Missy Lebew; third row, Julie Spaun, Jeff
Brown; Wesley Thoene, Christopher Darst; BU·
lie Jo Dye, Jackie-Buck; fourth row, 'Jealilfer
Lambert, Missy Darnell, Krista Kennedy, Jenniler Heck, Tara Hawley, Amie Sayre.

,,

L----------~--~---------------------~~~~,
'

..

;

.

'·

...

'

�...

•
•
Pomeroy-Mid~leport,

Wednesday, May 2&amp;, 1&amp;,3

Ohio .

Sentinel Page 11
3 Announctmenta

G•llty
_Stone Co.

·SIZED LIMESTONE

fOR SALE

CGII 614-992· ·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Cllt..lre,OH.

PATROL GRADUATE·

. Trooper Lee .R. Bane• or
. ·.. Daaville, a aradaate or the
123rd clus ol tile Olllo State
- . Hicbway Patrol Acade•y, Is
_ employed 11 tile Gallla-Mel&amp;s
. P011l. BDI'IIea araduttd flnl Ia
: a class or 54. A Meigs Hilla
. _School 1raduate or 1!182, 11t
· ··served lbree yean wltb tbt U.
S. Army Military Pollee at .
West Poiat. He aad bls wire,
· · Eva have three c:lllldfta.

FIIWKIIG AVAIIAIIE

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG
(614)
667·6628

3HP·11HP

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
Side 101 Rd. (Ct. 7)
RUIWID,OI!.
742·2455 5+13

· ... ~ THE lOOK
1 BARN
I

lrif

,...·'

.

'

l
I

•

·. '
..,

....

~

S \\'IF'\ER

(

•'

t'~'•d"ll•..,

Muon, WV
:, . !~J n:3:558~ .
·SUMMER HOURs·
Sun.-ThurS·,Qpm
.
Fri-Sat 5-11 p_m
CLOSED WEDNESDAY .

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
rl'J!'1Jlin9

.

'

...

•f .•

;,ij·•..•.
~

Road

Big Bear

All fv\eat,
Bunsize or Lite

o•1o

16 oz. Can

44

San • ich Ca111pllell'
Eckrich or W1ener Pork&amp;·
Franks
·a eans
Buns

Backhoe
· and small
Dozer Work

...

•

.,: ..

· MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

,.

(614r992~7a7a

'

1

129.95 +Tax

36358 SR 7

Ratts

JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

Pkg.

8

130

614•742•2138

HOUR

992·7553
'
..

3-4-93- 1

Pkg.

!::==~:::::::
UCINE
MOWER CUNIC

WAllER AllEY
· Parts 1nd Strvlw
Mowers - Cltaln Saws
Wlllleaters

14111 State RL 7

loof

SEPnC SYSTEMS,
. HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,

"

992-3838

1111'11211

lEVIN'S LAWN
IIAINTEIANCE
949·2391 or
1·100.137·1460

BILL SlACK
992·2269

Lawn Mowing,

FertlllziiJg, Weeding,
and Seeding.

u·sED RAiLROAD TIES

=HAULING

~~~

..:

614·992~7698

Shrub and Tree

I~;:::

RINROval

P-oy,Ohlo

ega.

Lay's

Potato
Chi

:· Community
.Calendar

Ice

Pomeroy, o•1o

Downspouts

,

~·

Gutter Cleaning

EAGLES

' CLUB

Painting

FREE ES·TIMATES

I

'

.

.,

Public Notice ·

RIC
BULLDOZING
PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

LAND CLEARING
UNES
.

WATER &amp; SEWER

J&amp;L INSULATION.
Free Estlmataa

t- •

Replacement

.•
"

Windows
Vinyl Siding
Roofing

•

Call·ue for

Special Prices on ·

Siding end Wlndowa

992·2n2
Jemea Keea8e, owner

COMPLETE AUT~
UPHOUTERY

HAUUNG: Llmeetone,
Dirt. Graval 1111d Coal

Custom Seat

PH. 614·992-5591

ConV'Dftlbla Topa •
ao,....,...~.

510 N. 2nd Ave.

Acc•eoMet
Check out my prloee llrat

MlddlpDfl,

14 oz.

Bag

THURSDAY .

RACINE - The Racine Ameri:can Legion Auxiliary will meet
· Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. at
: the post.
MIDDLEPORT - Preceptor
"Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
·,sorority, will hold its annual
'potluck picnic at the home of Joann
:corder at6 p.m. Thursday.
..- . PORTI..ANI? - Lebanon Town··ship trustees wtll meet at 8 p.m. at
""the township building.
REEDSvn.LE ·Riverview Gar·
den Club will tour the Glass House
Works at Stewart Thursday at 6
p.m. A meeting will follow at the
· home of Delores Frank.
;: POMEROY • Free clothing day
.• 1.t The Salvation Army from 10
'·a.m. to noon. All area residenlll in
need of clothing are welcome to
pwticipate.

'

,-------~~--------~~

All Flavors

Open Pit BBQ Sauce

._.......,_....,.
;(; . . . . . . . -

'* ·•·· -

24 HR. EMERGENCY SERVICE

l

/

DELl - Our Finest Quality

Tomato Catsup ..

.

Turkey Breast
Sliced The Way
You Like It

\..

2~

COIIIURCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL
Uctnlttl.t lnt•ttl &amp; lonllttl .

......

...
~.
..~

,_________...__.......,.;.;......;,.:.i ·... ·.." .... ..
\, •

(614) 742·2345

NEW USTING - Roolne - 1989 Cloyton MC1ional
24x40 on lot (ll)prox. 72X72.• Vel)' ·well '!el!l lncludea 3
Mdrooma, 2 liatho, oiiOCirlc h•at pump/central air, '*lc,
ljllndo end curtalna, celllng lana, !IPPilonoeo. $35,500

;,: .

.

FRt.E ESTIMATES

992-2259

",Y/

••

' NEW UI11NG - Syntc... - Two o1ofY frame horne 'MUI
2-3 bedrooma, gu F.A. h•oting, carpel/Vinyl flooring,
lhed &amp; garden .,..., Aluminum aicing an two lola.
IZS,OOO.

Mountain Top - 40 oz. Box

Fresh Whole

Apple Pie

King· Salmon

Plea..

~~-•~........,~..,.....,..,.,,......~~- ·- ·-.-.1.-;...
:t$)0 )

-""· -

. Steak•

4~~

limit 1 Free Per
Customer

r

.. , ..,..

3!.'

Each Slice Wrapped
16 Slices
12 oz. Pkg •

.

'- . .,

, ~ · ·:'

··J/'k

'

'

24 Hour Portallle Weldiii• Service

Us DANVILU- 82+ acre 111nn with
;r;' 1&gt;,; ~== 1R
!Nihil• llddldona. lncludld .,.. "~·
LCD - · Ollar, bern, garoge. Nice flying ground an
povtd rotd. NOW 170,1100.

WE'RE WAI11NQ TO HEAR FROM YOUI

"lnspl.ratlons"
Flower Shop

2 ....., I · ~·Tfluredor
North 01
Cheel1ft,
To 1:00,
&amp;
,......,_

tF-,a.,.g.lole:Fioot
...... ,.. . . . . . . Drh..
ff lgliiNh'tload RoM. FrldlrH.
ALLYn _ _ .. Poldln .
~. DEADLIIIE• 2:00 P·"'tlw .., ............ to lo run.

~-. 2:00 ......

....::::-J
J.

P.lll.
ft'd ..

·
edMiaoo • 2:00

=.::~A::

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health ·
• Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

P1.Pieaunl

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264,

CIMI,KeliJ Dr, 114-441-1021.

a ·VIclnlty
I:IUih
' loi!'IIJ o..111
""' a
S.t. 1:•?.
alii· I'll
Ferry

.---·0

-A.........-on, -- lcltool.
ra-.--,MIIqw4-

-·"::~:--·
......
..,_
-..."'............
-..c
natna. ,...
"""'' Lind' ...
odun, ...,. I chi....,. -

....
~ r.......
monllon.

'

PubiiCS81e
&amp;Auction

TRIMMING and
-TREE &amp;·STUMP REMOVAL

FOI'IINI'IJI of JIGnlr•' TN• 5erllfee

·IISURED ,

256-6640

CALL.614·992·7878 ·

Tanks, leach·Lines
Repair &amp; lnstalla.lon

FlEE
Place your

9

Wanted to Buy

Ani,._

·-11141.

.....
--.- ........
c.-Ai.Uc•.0 l

llltJCIIIIoi I

Classified today tlwaa..,......

and hold out
your hand ...

-....,no

end -

.... too ,.,.. otiOO - . will
bur one piiCNI • _,p'rte
hoo I old, ool Dolor IIWIIn,

-

ae.ol......,

~

anlf..

· we

pralooto,l14-1112-aal. c1o .,..

Announcerne nts

Llce1sed, l1sured ••• Bonded
(111614-992·7878

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING

'

COMPLOE MACHINE
SHOP SERVICES .
' .

REDUCED - Bunlter HIIIIP•ah Fork - 138+
.... ol ground, 2 produdng oil and gu ....
with !llyalliee. Hu 1ft alder houMi on property, ...1,1011.
~·

c-•Aci,M.

24 HOUR EMERGENCY BEIMCB

Food Club Cheese Food "' ·

American Singles .

2 ~ I tpp:ltn cII, Ololhea.
end""'""-.MorllondJO

-.o-=~.-­
..,,
.., 114 On ~..

SEWER PROBLEMS

New Wiring, Rewiring,
Trouble·Shootlng

~

FRIDAY

~
"
"f"

Food Club

~·
oz. ·a~
28 oz.
·a~
~'-----8-t_l_.__~--~~~------'~ ~'-~S~q~u~e~e~z~e~B~t~l·~~~--~~----'~

.,, MILLFIELD - Oldies but good'''ies dance 8- 11 p.m. at Russell
--Building. Music by Off SCUOJI.
~

Limit 2 Bogs Per
Customer, Pleose

/--------------------~~

EBLIN'S

Half
Gal.
Ctn.

&amp;VIcinity

1

Haadllnara,
114.....111:1

Gallipolis

LicENSED endiiONDED

eovera, carpet;

Yard sale

ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

BASEMENTS&amp;
'HOMESITE&amp;

WEDNESDAY

. POMEROY - Wildwood Gar: den Club wiU meet Wednesday at
-.7:30p.m . at the home of Evelyn
Hollon.
•

!;

3·16-93-lfn

FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32

!I ••

II

!'==============:
AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and

949·2168

.
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff '
Thl• ad good for 1

'••·'

Cream

'

Gutters

IN POMEROY

·'·

.

36970 BaD Rua Road

.. .
'

Plumbing Installation
and ·
Repairs.
(614) 992-7878

."

•

olrftlpod, - - -

7

ROOFING

EVERY THURSDAY

-

.

......._. K"'- -~~~~~

NEW-REPAIR

9-1

,t.a"$6'e -

,_ w- .... "'"-.,..,

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

FREE ESTIMATES

Pupp' • to .
chlkl'o pol, .f

4:30pm.

Howard LWritesel

.

,

.'

2 TraiSIIIifters.

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

mo.

992-6215

Wit~

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR
TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.

'

16x7-$450.00

Steel Fabrication
and Welding ·

544-1

. ..

•FIREWOOD .

PubliC Notice

Aopol• Goo

You Won't

DAIVEWAYSINSfAt I ED
UIIIESTONE·TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

. 614·949·2918 or
614·593-5010

OPENERS INSTILLED
9x7.:.$275.00
Y. HP-$200.00

Sl.OO PER n.

LANOCLEAAING,

Free Eellmatn,
Low Coate.

949·2104

•LIGHT HAULING' . .•

'

AVAILABLE. :

lns_i.. _.Out

992-3470

Your Choice of Flavors.

4pu- ... r1P~AT•

riir, *-'11-717\.

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·34Q6

ALSO- RY OUR NEW
VINYL SEAL TRIM

aUUUDOZEA,BACKHOE
and TAACKHOE WORK

Work Gue111nteed

TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

GaiiiJI"IIS

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

Fro..Foundatloa to

PICKUP and DEUVERY
Hours V6- M·F 9-3 Sat.
Clond Sunday

'

614·446·0736

J&amp;THO•
IMPROVEMENTS

Aulhorlzed: Brw:,•.&amp;
Stratton MTD, an,
. I. D.C. Repair Center .

_______________.__ .
'---~--------------------~

Prepriced 2.79

t K"'- _ , t t l :1111111.

'INniLLED PRICES

POMEIOY, 011.

SIZED LIMESTONE

·'

~

12 oz. Can
Frozen Concentrate
Summertime Favorite

.

Ct~

OIYINIWIY

RAISED PANEL GARAGE DOOR

RODDERIE-1

REASONABLE RATES

SERVIa

1 lb.

·

Electllc Aenae, - . _
WI* I&gt; .... Dlyw, . . . m.
IMfll,l...........

Auto-.llentals
'
Sprfn1Tfnae
SpeeU.I

SMALl DOZER
DRIVEWAY WORK
alii UMESTONE
DELIVERY SE-VI(E

Rea101allle

t==

~·

IIOCAFL

~,-T.Uhlh,l~

LIMESTONE,
GUVEL &amp; COAL

. 4/29/93 ...

..

1at. m\

tUI Min 11• UnloW C.. IOI131-411L
THE GAY CONNECTION ....00.
- r w . - •• 11!001
100'0tonlghl.
.. -~~~~~
In ,.....
· oor,._
,.._
ca

OH.

3rd &amp; Pomeroy Straeta

.

w•..

Prices Start1n1 at

· Side 1111 ltL !Co,

(fornier Mason Lanee)

'

CUSTOM SADDLES, ,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

2 Froat Struts • Labor
•4
l&amp;liJ•me•t ·

HAULING

EAGU WIES

•
•

ton,OH-.

Goo Renge, -

. "" '
'(·'~-~~
~~

•
•'

..,,_
:::.:a-1 :J:i 1&amp;

- . P.O. ._ JDCII..llellf.

4

lllo Sundar Calls!

MORRIS ·
EQUIPMENT

'

..

614·992·7643

::.t:::."'::'0.1: ==

Shade River Saddle Shop

FIIWKIIIG AYAIIAill

. s-s-ta·l-

'

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

(614) 9.92-7878
FAX (614) 992- 3053

o£010 TRIMMERS .
..RUSHCUT1IRS
Rilla!" • - .lcl.ls.

'i 992·3577

••

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Steel Sales · No order ·
too small or too large
Orders welcomed

Mow_.,

;
IOUUt
.. ...., •• 10100.2100
; CLOSED TIIISDAY

The American Association of
. Retired Persons (AARP) slrongly
: · encourages all motorists and their
passengen to use safety bel_ts ~
child wety seats on every
ma
motor vehicle. May 24· I is
· ."Buckle Up America! Week"
which highlights the lifesaving
· potenlial of safety belts, child safe·
: ty seats and air bags.
· "Many people don't realize how
much 1M, proper use of safety belts
· ~an reduce the risk of serious injury
· 'or death," said Virginia Carson,
· Rutland, assistant Slate coordjnator
. with AARP's 55 Alive mature
· ·iiriving program.
Numerous studies indicare that
· tap and shoulclcr safety belts signif·
. icantly ~ the risk of fatal or
··· serious occupant injury. It is esti, mated that safety belt use saved
Americans nearly $10 billion last
.. rear atop~ by preventing deaths
and injuries. Currently 42 states,
the District of Columbia and Puerto
· · Rico tuive enacled safety belt use
laws. .
· While people who never wear
'seatbelts are at risk, so are drivers
. who only wear their belts when on
·;'!he highway, in bad weather, or
· · traveling long distances. "A large
· majority of fatal crashes occur during routine trips to or from wort, or
- 10 the grocery store," Carson said
"Drivers who think they don't need
seat belts for short trips are wrong.
Seat belts should be worn every
- time, on every trip!"
: AARP offers the 55
:Alive/Mature Driving course,
.• which helps older drivers sharpen
•· their driving skills and prevent
accidents. This driver improvement
• course entalils eight hours of class; room work for drivers aged SO and .
older.
·
Several major auto insurance
carriers in Ohio offer discounts to
.. graduates of 55 Alive. Interested
·persons ~ con~t their insur.ance earner to see tf such a dts·count is available.
: AARP is the nation's leading
. ·organization for people 50 and
older. It serves their needs and
Interests through legislative advocacy, research, in~ormat~vc pro- grams and commumty serviCes pro. vidcd by a network of local chap• ters and experienced volunteers
:throughout the country. The orga·
·nization also offers members a
:.':wide ran$e of ~pedal membership
· benefits, mcluding Modem Maluri. ty magazine and the monthly Bul-letin.
People interesled in more infor·mation about the 55 Alive course
should contact v;rginia Carson at
.742-2767.

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

CMd! 111 rtt. 12 &amp; 18 HP

:JUY •lEU • TUDI
l· II71.WSt.
' .........,Ohio

:Safety stressed

I

MANCO
MINI KARS

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

·

HOU~S

7:.1()om • 5•00pm
Mon • Frl
7 30om . 12.00pm Sat

Ernployn1r111 Srtv C··S

�· ~"·----·--

...... ...

__ _

,_..__

..

____

...

,_....,.._~--·-

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

...

•

____ ·- - ··---·

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

~-

........_..__,..

___ ____ - -- ·--"'--·- -...

--

...

,......._ -

..

-. ........... - ~ ..-~ ...-._. . ..... . - - ... .. r..-0!':'"~~"' ·

"'~

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

54· Msdi11110U1

~

Wedntlday, May 26, 1993

•

Ohio

... -

The DJI!IY Stntlriel Pa~l 13

ALJ..EYOOP

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

~

t:(~;"

...

=r:t:: =Cell =='I

lh

=··
==.···' .....cc:. . .; =
..
Is

7

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

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

.......... To ..... . . . .
!!' 7 5 . . . . Allr • • law.

ACIOII

\

Cllewr 1-10,-N
.

a.l1tt•a•

.

'
~;

.

.•

PHILLIP
ALDER

~

2 ,

a1

I lk11Jlrora-

l:~

14~­
:...,__ _,, tl
........

••* ......... ....,..
=.-.
OM

......

1 FOOIIIIII Oft.

4'u.l

apL ,..,......_

NOBI&amp;
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9KQ
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21 C.,Oitloft

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SOUTII

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54 M8C81~
Me~handiM

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Paa
Paa

&gt;,.1:1 II•

Opening lead: + 7

,\ 1 !'. (•'/(){ ~

a1 Pill or 11011

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

»r:J:'ll
:....,

1'111 Roo!
5 Cllurcllllw

_.,

111tver
II F.-I

_.

7 Epoch
8 Unlloft

40 Prl CIDIII

42~'. . .

•wu
Dealer: South

.....,...
AtiiR

·aw.

atY-.111.,_

9AU
tAKJ

31 Homea lOr SiJJ

. 2t

17 ...... ~

•Auz

Vulnerable: Both

..... ,.

17 Cllld'• - "

1tar.d-·

IIIK"bga

20 l1nll'l .....:
22Co-.DR
priCIICe
.
23 llllncertlln

IOE-r

-

- ~'==~'

Dill.

21 Fllftlrlpe ·

AU-

~::..~~
-?

31 Enporlla

It points the way
to those who count

All rnl estatl adv1rttslng i'l

... n e - r " Sib jed 10
tho Fodtrll Flir Houlln!IAcl
oll968 Which ....... lllogol
to a,_.enlse ·any prtleNnea,

on l"'ce, colOr, rtllgklfl.

Wben defencllng, wbat do you do as
soon as the dummy comes down?
Yoa lllart to plan the tlefenae, of
course, but you lbcl::1d alweys co::nt
thm:rny's higb-elrd point&amp;. Tbls will
give you an idea ol bow many points
partner CaD be expected to bold.
Ia toclay's,deal, you are Eut. Ia answer to your double of Stayman, your
partner leads the club ~eYeD: four,
queen, six. You Clll: the club ate: 10,
two, nine. Doa't be milled by dec1arer'a false-card. U partner bad lllarted
with 1-s-2 of ctum, either be wooild
bave played the five at lhll tridl or mucb bet• - be would baveled the
two at tridl oae. It II best to leld the
fnll1i a trlpleton Ia partner's
suit when you lutvea't ra!Rd. However, after casl:lag a third club trlct,
where do you go for your fourth trick?
Tbe natural lncliJuttion 1110 awilcb
to your slngletoCI diamond. But cbeck
lbe points. Dummy lw 11 and you
bave 13. Tbat leaftl at maet oae for
partner. The diaiiiGIId switcb is
pointless.
Wilen you bave taken all poalble
side-suit tricks, it Is usually beat to
COIIcede a ruff-and-discard. Lead a
fourth club.
D
bas the e;&amp;ht or niDe of
IIPI'ctes• b1s ruff will effect an upperDummy overruffa, but you will
collect a trump tr1ct by coverln&amp;
bonor when It Is led from the dum·
. Note also that it doesn't belp
ISci::tb to ruff with the 1patle nine. You
a 1rWnp t:ick. .
may parapUale the Bard: I
1co111t myself Ia aothlnc elite so bappy
In a IOUI rememberlac the ~­

se• tamllal Slalut ar. ~ionl.l
ottgln, or any lnlentten 10

matte any such preference,
Nmllallon or discrimination."
Thl~ ~wspapar

will not

knowtngty .....,. •

advtrllsemenla for reat eslate'
wNcn Is In YIOIIIIQn or tfte
llw. OUr reeders art hereby
Informed lhll all dwellq,l
aMttJHd In 11111 nfW1Paper
are a¥aMibtl on an equal

r.lerchJI1dtSC

1 DIDN'i EVEN 6Ei

SNOO~!

TO iiiE JUDICIAAI(

COMMITTEE ..

oppMunly ba!lo.

=

...,..;='~I

~=·

dlr I:DDPII

AND ERNEST

. , _ ............ ,bod-

- =
...
....... zllllly,

~
811'101
on 1'112-1a.....,

Wanted to Do

18

••..,....... In lly - .
Nolghbo&lt;11 I d Ad.IM-111 1121

b

::::m"' IIOIIU /ACRE-

(I• :&gt;'\

d~;t'f

SlrMt, a..e.r. Attw.. _..-. On 17A'1tw~.I.':
eluded, MarY Den 1 ) • .,....._
4:1112.
f.!.~.,~~·:
Child ..... "" ..............

:::;

~

==::,A10n4---

110 'MIL Font:
Wllh 111m. JD 'l1lllllt. 111011 ""'=IL\.130~ AI OfTiti
Wllhln I 11- 01 Rio 111:11, ... '........... • .,..
• , . _ Col . .. Colt~ A I - ......... ~~~.wz ~
, . Mora In-Ion. 114-

Ewlnglon
Lorge
-. Gonojo, Could
. . Dupioz, ......
~~ WIILind Con11ooi,
8tocll Woo: 01 HIIC On,.._ ~"=-For Solo, • Pilla M-F I A.IL -6:JD P.ll. II 1371,~·­
Ouolly And E
...._
lo 11lo
" COncom FGr y- CNid'a llnl 'i I llreaSL . . . . 011 nloe
c-. Coil Uo For A-· la4,111gzw~-=
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llluP-'ol)oyC..Contor1

·--·-!I'oddle,. 114 ttl 1227. ,.,..

. 8224.

........

Trt-St... Troo - · T_.,.,
nt ........ Ft:dlllg, RoinCwil,
Slump - - - . F- btlrnotoo, 1!14-012-2!112.

O'fi.OT

Tr ,mo;polldii011

....... .. .

OGELifTLt

•
~

oG-ft.ITT Lf· I•
JITTY

•

~:at:-·-

IZit.

=:..=.--.

R..
IM--2ill'lo...- .. 127,1110;

32 Mobile Homes.

tor Sale

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

ttl IIDJ.

--- '

_

Will Do Corpontry Wortt Of Ator
Kind, lulkllng F""" G.- up
Or Aen adallf11. PMnUna. ,,..
Eotlrnotoo,
IM-3l'N240
A.,lmo.

-·-

pplata.

(!)IIXJtil~

-'Rll

47 llolllll:e .
41111 Ill -:

. .,...,••h•••... ..

Jefl'rey MeQuaiD

IW6flll
WAATTO

Spell the military noun
SERGEANT carefuUy. Rank amoug
the best epellen, those who remember to Include each E In SERGEANT.
Q. We see signs along the highway
that refer to "HOV-3" and "HOV-4."
What do those abbreviations mean?
A. Tile letters "HOV" stand for the
nhraae "high-occupancy vehicle. •
:~~~~tbele~
arefirst
pronounced
notletters
like the
ayllab1e

"-.... ~tlOCT.

.

~MOOT

114-

-

MORTY MEEKLE
\\OULD'!a.l ~ 'fM

MIIIIJM
...
I
Good Cce •an, etl. .......,.

IMYee"ll-iAT

THE~I&lt;ID

..

.

N.WPCNC.A

E!lUT AT L.E.I.eT I'M
A FINK VtiiTH AU..

FINK .. .

1-t16 TEe'Tl-\.

:-you~

112 v-. -1 ·

14 ConiUIIII

sa un.ror .

571111bll- ' .
5111f0re .

10 Flluhiall ·

AllriiOIIIedall
Ioree

liE

'YGPCP
D' U ,P

PUPC

GIIUPE'Y

GMI

J Ky

DIPM
YGIIY

IXZE

I

During rush boun and
other specified times, an "HOV" lane
is reserved for can that carry at least
three or four riders ( "HOV-3" or
"HOV-4"). CarpooUng is encOuraged
by these reserved lanes, even tbo::gb .
three riders may not·seem like "blgl:"
occupancy.

Will glvo plono too-. "' ""
l1onMi
at Applo Growo, WV. 304'
5711-2418.

Would Ulla To Do -.otoon-

lnra. Have ,..._,,.., 8144455182.

X E

JIIJPC.'
o•MIIA
II•OVXU.
PREVIOUS \IOLUTION: "Tim c...... one of !he motil popular 1*yera
we have had. He enjoyed evetytltlng he did." - Fred Clllre.

IIAI II&amp;ILY
PIZILII

·-

C.li'tl
PI¥

----,._;_~

. O four
Roorrange lotion of
tcrambled words

..,
tho

be-

low 10 form lour simplo words.

1·

lNAVTY

I

I I I 11.1 ..

~_ I 1 I I .
~u;_c-r:-;..;R,.:.H;...:N:;......~I·

I
lhat~~~~=
I' I I I l~z :::~-~~.l!fh~
c o'a

TH

~~~;:::~~.... 10 know how ilie got ~- She

I

F 0 G N IF

~--hherseffl'

.1-5::-rl;._;.1...:::.1,..:..:....;1;-.:.,1"''~

L -L-L-..JL-..1'--.1.......1

e

.Complete tho chuckle quotod
by. filling ;n tho m;uing -d•
you d~olop lrom step No. 3 below .

I' I' ,. r ,. r I
• ~~·~N~~r lfm•s I I I 1 1 1 1

•

PR~~~~~!~~sLETTERS

IWEDNESDAY

IN

SClltM-UTS ANSWIU
r-.r
Ufllhod • Elder • Feint • La..,., • HIS WIFE
"I'm • Mlf IMIIII man, • 1he millionaire bragged "The
one IIOOd thing mout that," lrtOiher fellow grinn8d, 'Ia
1hat M can ll8YII' blame it on HIS WIFE."
' •

F111anc1al

.... .,

_

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

+'· nwrnc

Business

21

Opportunity
INCITICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLIBHINQ CO.
..,,..., .......
""' do - ""'
,
_ . .~ poaplo
NOT 10 Hilcl -througnllto
..u ...:N you !lave ln.... lgllod
tllaolforing.
$2,000 llone~ Pc 11lble Aa-....,blngPnohicto A I -· No

...•

EKpt~rtrlrice tit II MY1 Ruth
SOH Addrwood S:o- 1110

.

Eno.... To: · DIA Supplt.e
Box 11, HHitboro, OH m»:
'

~i!
''e!!!!!!!e!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!~~ undlerstand what to do 1o make

---

=

Locll ..nclng Rou1e: 11,200 A

Woolll&gt;oi.,.lal.lluli SOli. 1-800-

•

ASTRO · ORAPH

Real Eslate

BERNICE ·
BEDE OSOL

31 ttomn ror Sale

olio-..-.

1112 olory brick ......... 2 1u1
carpori, Nmadllld kitct.n. . .

pump
w/alr'COfld,
good
~hborhood, call anytimi3Q4.

~... ...,.a 11111~ •1111, 1
u ........
..... au .....
W
ooncltloi~'M ' t
. . .,ul Undii..._IMI..

·
1111Rodman,

34

-

21111,1 - •
mini lorm wMh rtnill ltlllor

Al10 1111 1b71 Flwlw ad

llrtd

4 ~. Hoymon 1111. Long tom, IJM..a43.-5288.

pump,-.·-........

*

~.7:':.'1·

252tl.

t

...-•• ~,

~ ....... . ' " ·

11110 Clo~on - · -two
........ . . loi In Ro....., echc Gil, '1!1!1 -.,

.....

Moy 27, 1113
In the year anead. your cha~ indK:alas that
yoo're likely 10 dlllocl~te yourself from
endeavor&amp; lhll have lolled to produc:a the
type t&gt;f rti81111a y011 hoped for. Your,_ atti·
tude will be 1 majOr contributor to your ouc·

S30,100i 114-1141 1201 ., ...

_.

c:eU.

OJ- lilly 21-.IIIM ZOI 01ltora will only
re.,iact y011r op;n1on1 today Hyou nrst lind

'''·

I

some merll In lheirs. II you dllcount thllr
viiWII, 1tioy won'l put any sloek In yours.
T'fll'ii 1n patch up' a brckln romance? ,Tho
AsiJ9·Clroph ~atchmakor can Ito~ you to

0

2

l06ET

z Inion: lor .... In . .
,.._..,-. ... --DIZ

= . . . ,.._,

Cl-.......... ....

Ir-E~

'l4 OtM Atvw In
Dopiaoll lltl . . .

'IZxll----loiOn- .... I II J UWii llotle HorN
tod ........C&lt;incllllon IZ,IID ,., - . Ro....... llopooll
Firm. · - RolllgortOr
11tt••i
._ ~- A 1 irect. I . . . Oul 211, fl4.

I-

4111Mrlll
Ger!Mnr :
41 011111 Nell

~AYer

llmWatlan or dilcrtminaHon ·
~ased

31 IUIROI-

41-etNk :

relatkln·
· a rather
• but today
sh ip work . Mail $2 plus a long, Self · your mental focus could be on negatives
addressed , stamped enVelope to rather than positives . Where you place
Matchmaker. c/o lflis newspaper, P.O. Box emphasis has a great influence over the bol·
4465, NawYorl&lt;, NY 10163.
lorn line.
CANCER CJune 21-.July 221 There is a pos- CAPRICORN (Die. 22-Jon. 11) II y011r presib•lily that someone who took advantage of sent financial positkln ;s a bit shaky. don't
you previously migm try to take advantage take on any new, long·term otJI;gltions at
of you again Ieday, II you are roped in a this t;me. In a 1;"1e while, thmgs will be more
second time. ;, will be yoilr own taull.
lucral;ve.
LEO CJuly 23-Aug. 22) Be carefulloday not AQUARIUS CJon. :10-feb. 111 You are one
to tiring up an issue upon which you and ol1he signs that got along well will1 people
your male are diametrically opposed. This from aM walks of hte. Today. however. )'011
i~sue ha$ tha polenllal to creale an extrememight have a chip on your shoulder and
ly serious argument that will be difficult to oxpariellCj! """"'abrufve encounters.
resolve .
PISCES CFIII:. 20-llltl'llh ZOI Things might
VIRGO CAug. 2:1-hpt 22l II your motives · not worl&lt; out too well lor you todi:y if you
are too sell-serving
malerlali_stie today, attempt to be the power behind tho ttuane,
this could have a deleterious enact on an guiding evenll from behind the ICIIIlH. Be
objective you hope 1o achieve thai raquinls an ilplronl person and let peoplo know
twpport from others.
where )'011 Sland.
. UIIIA CSapl. 23-0ct. 23) E•pansiva, plea- · ARIES Clleld: 21'4prt1111l n you IN going
surable pursuHs aren't guaranteed 10 pro- to lake a gamble on anyone lod:ly,- I on
vide you With happinelltoday, In laci, your yoursell ond your obitiliel, Thon IN otrong
best chance lor !laving fun is limply bl;ng indieationl thot your ' with your good lriencll.
migltl be dultod blftlng on pelt.
ICOIIPIO tOe!. 214-No¥. ZZI You will have TAUIIUI CApllt 20-ltllr :10) Guord lglinll
tho mouvatlon and drive loday. bul you using melhodl or 1ICiicl on ~·
coukllall llhort of lullill_
ng your txpeetationl · today thai lind to bl • bll heavy.,._.
by doing tninga the htrd way. Don'l make
The results could be undlalrable and,
problems lor yourseti w11tre nonu•lal.
belidel. mono can bo occ:ompffeltod will1 a
IAGITtAIIIUS tNov. 23-0ec. 21). UsuaNy ligl11 touclt.

1

and

and._,....,.,.

•
· · -~

•

......_ -·

�14--The

26,1993

Ohio

Sentinel

10 youths
participate
in institute
One-hundred percent natural no drugs added.
That was the theme of this
year's Middle School Teen Institute held April 23-25 at Canter's
Cave 4-H Camp in Jackson where
10 students from Meigs County
joined approximate! y 65 students
from six .other southeastern Ohio
counties.
Teen Institute is a program,
sponsored by Health Recovery Services, geared toward youth in
grades six through 12 that promotes leadership and the prevention of alcohol and other drug
abuse. It also encourages participants to help other students make
healthy lifestyle choices through
positive peer role modeling.
The weekend featured basic
education, in-depth substance
abuse prevention strategies, team
building, organizing .and lcadmhip
skills training. Students also participated in skits, group games and a
druf,-free dance.
• These students hsve leadership
potential to teach lheir peers about
drug and alcohol abuse, and spread
information they've learned at TI
back to their communities." said

Reedsville UMW takes vote
The
Reedsville ' United
Methodist Women met recently
with Mrs. Emma Dunl. oor-n.
The n.eeting ope11ed with prayer
by Mrs. Frances Reed. Readings
wete given by Mrs. Gnce Weber,
"Five Stars For Mother,M"Only
One Mother, Mand "Bumps and
Bruises Doc:un."
Mrs. Nina Bo.ston presided at
the meeting during whiCh 32 shutin calls wete reported.
The group voted to seU llll*ins.
Trays are to be purchased for the

church basemenL
A game was played with prizes
given.
Refreshments were served to ·
those named and Mrs. Mamie :
Buckley, Mrs. Diane Jones, Mrs. :
NeD WiiJon, Mrs. Gladys Thomas, ·
Mrs. Nancy Buckley. Mrs. Pearl
Osborne and Mrs. Lillian Pic~ns.
The next meeting will be with ·
Mrs. JQI)CS.
'
Mrs. Nancy Buckley won the

Belcher
blanks

Pick 3:

Braves

Pick 4: .

615
7630

Super Lotto:
1-10-14·15-17-36
454578

PageS

Enrollment deadlines for some
All of die progi-ams .e free and
or the Easter Seal Society of the ate open to children and youths
River Cities' lhe\'llpelltic recteation with physical disabilities from
programs for children and youths Athens, Meigs, Morpn, Washingwid! disabilities are appiOLhing.
ton,llld Wood countJes. •
The deadlines are as follows:
Residents may call Easta' Seals
Washington County horseback at 374-8876 or 1-800-93-EASTER
riding, May 28 for the four-week for llclditional serv~.
sessions June IS and July 13.
Washington County swimming,
ATTEND TEEN INSTITUTE - Meip
s.idl; entllr, T-7 Ottau, Je~~~lca Counls
31 for the six week session ·
County students atUadecl doe rtft. . Middle
... THJ MOler of HRS, Misay Coppltk ud
beginning June 14.
·School Teen Iastit•k spoaserall • ., Heal ..
Skn P!ltter-; aad batk, Sommer Groves,
Wood County horseback riding,
·
Recovery Services {HRS).I'idaiall an, rn.
Raqwel M'MI • ._, Lyt~ Hofflllan, Jason Counts,
June
18 for the four week session )O:'K:ar winner AleC Guinness met his1
lert, Aimee Lealey, Curie ....... ad ...Bili Jo Ottala alld Sna Cline.
· beginning July 6.
lwife. Mcrulah , in a 19~ R production!
Later deadlines exist for the lui" "Noah." He played a wolf, she al
Kim Mastrangelo. Titv~Mii • • .
O.io. HRS is lltaedited by the and Menial Health Services Boards overnight camp/bus trip · and ·
ti gress .._Th~Y.~ ~!'fj_e~ -~al~-~ ~~~-~ear._ .
Health Recovery Services .JcDt 0
- . • - Acaedilllian of Athens/Hockinatvinton and · wheelchair tennis programs.
(HRS) is a non-profit ..p•••im of Beallkare Organization GaUii/J.:kloi!/Mei&amp;J counties.
·
which delivers sul!dww: allose :a- QCAHO} _ , is 1*1ially fuaded
vices throughout southeasu:n by die AkoW, brae Addiction
Real Estate General

Mar

TRIVIA

1

Bl I.LETI\ BO \RD

.,,,
II

SERVICE PLATEAU- Holzer Clinit
employees wbo have reathed their service
plateaus were honored at a recent cerem011y. In
the front row, from left, are Evelyn Swain,
Randy Filkins, Shirley Engle, Gladys Eisnaugle,
Roy Kincaid and Karen McCall; second row,
Pat Woolum, Charlotte Thompson, Coaaie
Drummond, Jackie Wallen, Lori Burdette,
Nancy Dowell, June Stout, Phyllis Pope, fiarla

Alzheirners &amp; Related
Disorders Support Group
monthly meeting
Thurs., May 27, 1:00 P.M.
Pleasant Valley Nursing
Care Center

OFFICE 992·2886

Eml!r,l
..... - Ad....
... V"ICti
Wilcox; t•irtl r-. Dne a2,'!..11, Carel
Mclbaiel, J••iD Nor, Jan~
••
Etllla
Huu, D..-.. r..r-. Jan~ HilT" ' Ji'a,e
Dow ••ter,N.rJM
,,_A '
' Au
Wickli!le u4 NUCJ Dye. Net Jiehred ~re
Frums M•llim, LJIIW R•a, Sn!ly SIHdapr

205 North S I CI ncl Ave.
~,OIL -- ·
IIOIIILE HOME ONLY- a 12d6 Bonan~a mollie home
with 2 bodn&gt;Omo, undorpiMing, new braal!or box .nd tho
lot ..,. be ranled for $50 a monlh.
ONLY $3,500
MINERSVILLE -One olory horne will 2 bed!DCIIIiO, 1'/•
bdio, FMIG ~-. TPC wator, li\lalod on -wm.
1.16 ac..a. Aloo included is a ornall older horne at Ilia
...,... location.
All lor sza,oao

POMEROY - LINCOLN HEIGHTS - Need a large yard

or ganlan • - · then thio io tho p-. for you. Aloa hao a
one iiiDfy horne with moot of baa•"""" · · - · T...... 3

Representative for
Atzheimers from Charleston
wil be attending.
304-675-5236
PIJllic Invited

T

alldRassSianr.

bedroomo, lo111 of large
alorage room.

MIDDLEPORT - A largo lot ,.,., lots of flowrs and
•-•· A 2 otory olona horne .,;111 2 bedlocma, clnlng
. room, 1112 Iidia, and a W ~- Has nice c.liiftell
in ~. and kitchen is ""'ipped. Lot. ol ln. .tion.
front and ..., pon:h.
Culli - only au,oao

"Your Hometown ea.pel &amp;
Upholstery Cleaning

••••Oil

DOTTE ~A,
······~···········-········~-BRENDA
JEFFERS&amp;r-.
...........................................
-3011
DARLINE STEWART.............................................

FO~~a~~

CALL
TODAY
And Remewber When We

Noe, David Reymond, Evelyn · PaWonhm.
Swain , Jackie Wallen; IS Years:
In Iris remarls, DI. Strafford
Nancy Dye, Gladys Eisnaogle,
the pc:wle for their years
Shirley Engle, Karen McCall, of dar •m He said. "It is gteat
Dawna Parsons, Lynn Rutt;
to be bete ., honor you who have
10 Years - Shel Dawson,Coo- servaiiiUm OiJK far so long\...
nie Drummond, Ann Wickline;
5 Years -Joan Anderson, make
it is d!d;
1 people
like you who ·.
the Clinic
sDCcessful,
Laura Bobbins, Faye Bonecutter, make the medical profession
Lori Burdeue, HOOa E.utslet, Randy ~n~adin&amp; 11111 filll.
Filkins, Etha Hanna, Jean Harrison,
...lolza Oinic .lSI dynam'
.
1C and·
Nancy Mullins, Phyllis Pope, Jean popessive CllplliDtim.~ he said.
Sammons, Russ S haw , Sandy -u is IDIIIc ._ way lhrough your
Snedegar, June Stout, Cbarlot- dedicari(,o Wid bard work teThompson, Vicki Wilcox, and are the .,.,..a- behind lhe orgaruz.a-

do-. largo ONLY
idllty a-. and
$211,100.

RUTLANO - lllln Stnet- AVac80JI lol with city N 111g1
and watar available. Nice lor a mabN hllma, ale. $5,0110

QUALilY CARE
CLEANING

Holzer Clinic employees are honored ··
upon reaching.number of years served

Vol. oM, NO. 21
llultlmacla Inc.

As part of 'Buy Recycled' program
"

ByJIMJilm~

~

Sentinel News Stall'
Trash can be transformed into
useful items.
State officials cle:!nonsttlrcd dill
point Wednesday aftemooa w1icw
It llb:s 42a•w of came w
they ptesentcd the Meigs Couaay
Board of Commissioners with a IQ . . . 2 1/1. ..... a { - oil,
park bench made entirely .of n:cy- be Slid. ~.... RC)dill&amp; 2 1/]:
. qaii1S a{ wa ail Will yidd 2 If]:
~led plastic.
'
.
Officials of the Obio Depart- qaldSof-ail.. .
Silla: ili:Ma leu nng and
ment of Natural Resources • Diwiraw
•atnials 10 -wflltlme
sion of Liller Prevention lid Rrccy-·
n:qdal pr•...,s. R!:JCh&amp; also
cling made lhe presentlllion ill
Meigs County Common Pleas .... " - . . liilily ... tulll_
Courtroom as part of l!be lq1llar iuats - J be nl I -1 iii!O !lie g!3111S.
"By using recycled products,
eawin
S.lle Slid.
weelly commisslmcrs' mMiat&amp;
like
lhe park bench, Meigs County
Darill&amp;
Ill!:
m
1
.
ODNR
Paul R. ·Baldridge, acti!l&amp; dlicf
is.
encouraging
its citizens to close
••
1
d
lllf
its
....,
Itcc.ydcd"
of the DLPR, explained se'Vellll
die
recycling
loop,"
he added.
•
I
-,.
wl!idt
-.=s
)llllllic
lplt~ns why recycling is........_
The
five-foot,
gray,
wood-like
Recycling is impcrtant from c:ics - 10 pudasc.
-.le
rw)dalbcnclt
given
to
lhe
county
was
perspective or enc;rgy COilSCIVIIioa.
lills.
_
.
.
}IIIIa
.......
,
ofi:e
made from I 00 percent tecycled
Baldridge said. Using paper as •
plastic - the equivalent of 1,050
example, he explained it !tak;es 65

...,.._IS

Road,, Beech Gr_ove Road, Happy
lkllklw Road, Kingsbury Road and
Pomeroy Pike. A total of 18.92
miles lR scheduled for paving.
Eigllty-nine percent, approximately $500,000, of the original
estimated project cost would be
paid foc from Issue n funds. The
remainiug $61,995.99 would be
pllid with local funds.
lf IK lliglier b!~ is accepted,

By JIM FREEMAN
eaclt . . of mpMh bul:d • an
Senti!lel News Stldf
•q ·
'20JIP :48- • k d
Meigs County Commissioaen
Die bid Ill!: . ..,. o~~e
tabled a bid proposal Weduesdly •a "ud.
from Tom Mayle and Sons OoaDe Mcip eo.ty JliP1118J
strt,1ction Company, ·B·artlett, 10 llqJa
. . - . - I A a JMDcompleie five Issue n pavillg pm- jccl c r'ct:i• cast of
jects.
· $561,.991.99 m 44 • •
'J $28
.
.
al
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. f or the five ID..._ad!
T_ota I b1.d ~nee
-5 •
. PIIVtng prOJeCtS ~me to
nc fiwe 181ds, 01' poniows
· '$618,927.85 ot $31.07 w]llace 0
1. -..bF•iic-l'l:.us

CALL 441 -0755
675-6610

Howie Caldwell was hired as

adiietic director and coaching positiuns at Southern Junior High and
Higli Schools wete filled at Mon-

~

day night's meeting of the South-

em local Board of Education.

EXTRA! EXTRA

-.~•" s.l?~~
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~~~~
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Friday,
June 4, 1993

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Hurry, Picture Deadline is Thursday, May 27.
The Baby Sentinel is a Special Section filled with photographs of
local kids, ages newborn t9 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, (encJose payment with picture)
'•

P•••••••••••••••••••~•••••••••••-~•••••

RESOLUTION- Gov. George Voinovich
presents a copy or a resolution celebrating the
25th anniversary of legislation that created local
mental heallb boardl to Ronald F. Adkins, center, director rA the Gallia-JacU..-Meigs Board
or Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health
Services, and Barbara F. Woltord, _tbe board' ~

dcpotJ director. nc .... lloud lias t't'oh&gt;td
into lk pi • L u I !" . . prilurJ l'ndin&amp;eatiiJfor•
ceaJ.c
sa wica ill tk trkc . , - ' h e ,.
11111oa
was ~ !l!tril!cof" ~':. I th • I ••, tk Olilo
AssoetatiH A
Ill, Dn:1 Alhllictlo• 11d
Meatalllealtl! Sa vite ••• IPL

Church slates ice cream social
Ali ice cream social will be held
at Trinity Church on Heritage
Weekend, June 10-12.
In addition to ice cream, san(lwiches, cakes, pies, and other irems
wiU be sold for dining-in or carryout between the hours of I I a.m.
and6p.m.
Meanwhile, orders for homemade ice cream are being taken and

may be placed by calling 992-3222,
992-3777 or ~-5480 bcfole J 1. Flavors of ice cream available
are chocolate, vanilla, peach,
lemon, banana, pineapple, strawberry, butter pecan, and bJai ""'''·
The price is $2 .50 a quart. Ice
cream will be availlble for pid:ap
on June 3 between noon and 6 p.m.
or at the social.

PARENTSNAME,_~----------------------------

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1111............

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CITY" S1ATE.______________-:--------------CHD.D'S NAME(S) II&lt; A G E - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - ·
\

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TO PERPORM • Bpilrel.,flle ., ·' ' 7 1·....,
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actlotltll let lite tilDe for lk I' a a'
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alld "'11e Plrl,.en."

s.tmoluet~ar -------~~---__.___

IISIIWICE

--····------------·-----~-----·········

111 Seu Ut. Ps•er•y

SEND TO:

TOIL IIDEPIIDEIT
AIEIIS Sllllll

Dally Sentl.nel
P.O. Box 729 • Ponieroy, Ohio 45769
. BABY SENTINEL
Pictures Mut Be I• By May 27, 1993

81CE 1161

Pictures can be picked up after J\lne 7th.

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-

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•

·

'

Delayn.added to opening
acts for Cartwright concert
Country music's new up-'
caning female country .mst.
Sheela Dela}11 ~ l.)e 'V"illl
,for Lionel cartwrigllt 011 May
29, 1993 at 7:10 p.m. :at die
Mason County Failp:amds.
Backed by,the group, Sedma,
directly from Nltllbville. Shed•
plans 10 put her CDeiiY ·llll'ival
perfonnance ido acta Ill die tone for lbc Co11awiJt1 ow-ina 8CII, ."'dletymea" and "The
Pia
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Cia was bam and niiCd in
Lanpvi1le. ObiO, lnd ... liwce

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~e-Jocared 10

-lUIIIUSSII

Nltllbville. 10 . --

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Issue II will still pay about
$500,000 leaving $118,927.85 to
be paid by local funds.
According to a highway depart·
ment spokesman, the options are to
rebid the projects or to complete
them in-house. The highway
department plans to contact its
Ohio Public Works teptesentative
to examine its,options, be said.
Contfiwed on page 3 .

RECYCLED BENCH· Provlag that one man's trash li IIIICJth.,
er man's treasure, Paul Baldridge, actinc chief or the Ohio Depart·•
meat or Naturjll Resources' Division of Litter Prevl!ntlow
Recycling, presented Meigs County with a park be•tb ma&lt;ter
entirely or rec:A!Ied plastic - the equivalent or 1,050 plastic
bottles. Here,
drldge displays the new bench. (Sen~l photo
.•
Jim Freeman)

Southern-board names
Caldwell athletic director

JERRY SPRADLifQ ···-···········-·..·-···(*) 112-M•
OFFICE ..................................................... ;............. .

Is Coming
Soon!

plastic milk jugs.
"Not only does the recycled
plastic originate in Ohio, but it was
manufactllted by an Ohio company'
as weU," Baldridge said.
Baldridge presented several
other recycled items to the commis. sion including thtee steel uays and
lunch boxes, paper, post-it notes,
plastic clips and containers for aluminum cans ancj used office paper.
"Recyclin~ is becoming very
~Jar in Ohto," he said. "Look at
labels and increase the demand for
products made with recycled materials," he urged.
~ximarely 30 tesidents and
officials aucndcd the presentation
cetemony.
Following the presentation, the
commission discussed placing the
bench in the yard behind die courthouse along with a plaque.

Meigs Commissioners table Issue II bid

.

..

,

supplies and plastic lumber products.
"Recycle, Ohio! focuses on the
dlrce Rs - reducing, teusing and
recycling, and we are honoring
Meigs County for its·commianent
to dlcse important aspects of the
Recycle, Ohio! program,"
Baldridge said.
Baldridge explained that the
RecyCle, Ohio! program, targeted
at Ohio's public agencies, also
focuses on the imponance of developing new markets for materials
tollected by local recycling pro-

r------....---~---------...;.-----------.

rou

A Muldlliecla Inc. Newspaper

County presented recycled park bench

SANDY IUTCHER ... - ............................,..._ • •-6171

Sa~unts, C,OUnt
When Oualily,
on Oualily care Cleanmg

2 llectlona. 12 -Pagea 25 cont.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 27, 1993

*

.

blahln80s.

•

Easter Seal recreation activity

WANTED: At least 3 bed·
roorn house with some
acreage to buy on land
contract or rent In Meigs
Co. Call614·669-3051

Low loaf&amp;htln 60s. Partly
cloudy. Friday, partly cloudy,,

door prize.

BUwnll BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUIUCADOII

At a recent ceremony, Dr. J.
Craig Strafford, president of Holzer
Clinic and Robert E. Daniel, clinic
administrator, honored 34 Holzer
Clinic employees who reached
employment milestones. The luncheon meeting was at the Holiday
Inn.'
Each year Hotztr Clinic honors
those employees who have teached
a five-year plateau in their career.
Honoted this year wete:
25 Years- Nancy Dowell;
20 Years - Roy Kincaid, Carol
McDaniel, Frances Mullins, Juanita

Ohio Lottery

Caldwell besides being named
adlletic director, was hired as head
W':etball coach and head softball
ciJICII 81 Southern High with David
Gaul being ·employed as head football coacb and Michael Winebrenner 11 Jlead,baseball coach •
Assistant coaches hired were
Scou Wickline, basketball; James
A. l.aWtence, softball; and William
Hemler, blsebaD.
Junior bi$11 coaches hired were
Soott Wicklme, football; Michael
Winebrenner . and James A.
lawmiCe, basketball.
Sandra Baer and Romaine Fredericl were named bead cheerleader
IIMsors with Barbara Lawrence to
be die juni~ 1\igh cheerleader advisu.
Oilier supplemental contracts
wete awarded to J0111 Hudak, yearllooi; Kim Phillips, Tide 9 c&lt;impliance officer; Donald Dudding,
DDPF (disadvana,ect and disabled
JiUI1il fund), coordinator with Dennie. Hill as DDPF treasurer; Jan

Hill, Cllapter coordinator, with Hill
tteasUter and Grace Griffin, secretary.

.

.

'

Joyce Thoren, food servtce
supervisor and handicapped coordinator; Daniel Riffle, transportation
superv.isor; Leah Ord, guidance
counselor, 10 day extension; Dan
Smith, vocational bus route; Larry
Smith, special education route;
Thomas Hill, handicapped route.
Aaron Sayre was given . an
extended service contract for 60
days for vocational programs, with
a 10 day extended service program
JEREMY BUCKLEY
for Diane Rice, home economics
VALEDICTORIAN
teacher.
In other action, die hoard
- approved Leah Ord for a
rempotary position of coordinator
for high school scheduling and
EMIS teporting;
- awarded acontmct from the
district to ETSEO (Ed,ucational
· The Eastern High School Class
Television) for $728.10 for lhe dis- of 1993 will receive diplomas in
trict;
combined baccalaureate and com-approved a contraCt for driver mencement exercises on Sunday at
educauon with AAA for $105 per 6:30p.m. iri the school auditorium.
student with the student to pay $55 Rev. Bob Sanders wiU give the
and die school, SSO;
invocation and benediction.
-accerted Brogan-Warner
Jeremy William Buckley, son of
Insurance s proposal for student Bill and Twila Buckley, Lover's
Continued on page 3
Lane, Pomeroy, has been named

K~ERLY NHCHAEL
S~Ltrr ATORIAN

:

Eastern commencement •
services scheduled Sunday~
class valedictorian, and Kimberfy
Anne Michael, daughter of Gai_y;.
and Sharon Michael, Pomeroy
Pike, Pomeroy, has been nameg,
salutatorian. They will addres·~
their classmates and the community
at the graduation ceremony.
.
The top I0 scholars of the senior
class will be named following the
Continued on page 3
•

•

..-----~---Local briefs------....:.;;~

Prisoners transported to ORC

Deputies ot the Meigs County Sherirr s Department uansported '
dltec prisoners to die Orient Reception Center Tuesday.
Transported weie W'tlliam D. Lemasters ll, 26, of Racine. Douglas E. Freeman. 25, o( Pomeroy, and Ronald L. Newland, 26, of
W8sbington Court House.
Lemastm is to begin serving two life sentences, dlrce to-year
SCDII:Dtes and two three-year gun charges for aggravated murder,
robbery and kidnapping.
Freanan was sentenced to 12 months for fDrJery and Newland
received a two-year sentence for gross sexual impOsitio!i.

Man cited in accident
A Pomeroy man was cited early tbii morning foUowing a onevehicle accidellt in Salem Township, the Gallia-Meip Post of lhe
Stale HiabwaY Palrol IqJOrted.
l'emiice 1'&gt;. Conlin, 62, 32709 Hyaell RIDI Road, was cited for
fail'ft to conl!ol after he went off lbo !Old in a curve. Conlin told
aoopus we was eastbound on Stale Route 124 when he fell asleep
and' na off lhe !Old.
_
No injuries wete teportcd. The vehicle sustained heavy disllllinlllanl&amp;e and was towed from lhe aceno.
' .

Anon suspected in blaze~
Anon is suspected ill a blaze which deatrOycd 111 unoccupied
._on Dater Road Sunday.
David Wrllht of Southern Oblo Coal Como.ny reponed the
blaze at lbo ofd Earl MeiCJiiglu residence, which is owned by lhe

~I· Tuelday.

noe~~~ ~.,.~ respo!lded to lbo acene. 'J'brg was

,.

'

An investigation into the blaze is continuing, according to asher.
iffs department teport.

Articles of incorporation filed
Secretary of State Bob Taft le.Jl!&gt;rtcd recentlf that articles of '
incorporation have been filed wtth his office m Columbus by
Michael D. Davenport and Gary E. Grueser for Riverfront I;!arbell
Inc.

Man escapes injury in accident
An 18-year-old Portland man escaped serious injury Monday
afternoon in a one-vehicle accident on State Roure 124 near Great
Bend.
According to a report from Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, Milford Bowens Jr. was eastbound when the right-front
tire blew out on his 1973 Ford pickup auck.
The pickup auck went off the left side or the roadway, sauck an
embankment and flipped over onto its top, the teport stated. Bowens
was helped out of his seatbelt by a passing motorist.
Bowens was cited on a charge of falling to display a license
plate.

·

Van fire investigated
A Pomeroy man 's 1989 Dodge van was destroyed in a blaze
Tuesday evening on Sta'te Route 143.
.
.
Denver Cotterill reported he was southbound when die engine
started sputtering. He pulled off the road near Zion Chun:h Road,
checked the wiring under die hood, restarted die mota and noticed ·
the flickering of flames when be pulled out onto the roadway.
·
The Rutland Fire Departlllent responded to lhe blaze. No injuries
Co•ti•ued 011 pqe l
.
,J

~

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