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Thursday, May '0,1993~

Pomeroy ..ddleport, Ohio

P11g1 12-The Dally Sentinel

Congratulations
To .The District Champio
Southern Tornadoes!
.

.

Ohio Lottery

Reds
slip by
Braves

Pick 3:
476
Pick 4:

9070

Page4

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•n

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'

Vol. 44, NO. 22
. lluHimecl•lnc.

A construction worker 8l the
Gavin Power Plant died Thursday after he was backed over by
a cement truck.
Harold Z. Brown, Sl, Jackson·, was flown by LifeFiigbt
helicopter to CabeU-Huntington
Hospital in Huntington, W.VL,
where he died thai evening following emergency surgery,
Ohio Power Public Affairs
Information Manager David
Hagelin said.
Brown was em~;&gt;loyed by
Kokoslng Construcaon, a fino .
contracted to work on the
Cheshire plant's scrubber pro~ecL The worker had apparently
Just stepped down from a cnme
when lhe truck backed over him
shonly before noon. The driver,
employed by Champion, Inc.
contractors, apparently did not
see Brown, Hagelin said.
Kokosing representatives,
assisted by Ohio Power, are
investigating lhe incident, he
added.

Pictured are (front row, L·R): Jeremy Hill, Robert Kimes, Eric Jones, Billy Jones, Andy Grueser,
Joey Hensler and Andy Fields. In the back row are assistant coach Mike Kloes, David Smith, Kyle ·
Wickline, Jeremy Dill, Robert Beiber, Ryan Williams, Jeremy Northup, John Chaney and head
coach Mick Winebrenner. Absent from picture is ·assistant coach Bill Hensler.

."Sweet I6" Regional PJay
. FRIDAY, MAY 28th
••

Men granted
P!Qbati~!! .• __

Southern t•s-71 vs. Frofttier (17·Il

After paying restitution, two
Racine men who each pleaded
guilty to three counts of burglary
last September were recently gmnt·
ed super-shock probation in tbe
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
John Amos, 20, and Mark C.
Theiss, 19, were gmnled the p'Obation as part of their plea bargain
agreement, Common Pleas Judge
Fred w. Crow m said this morn-

Ohio University's Tra
Field
Ga111e Ti111e: 1.:30 p.~a•.

..

GOOD LUCK, TO
Crow's Family Restaurant
Po•eroy, Oh.

992·5432

'

~ WilliaT:s~r::::ci.ates
108 Mechanic St. 992·3985 Pomeroy

K &amp; C Jewelry_
Po•eroy, Oh.

992·3785 ·

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co•.
Middleport, Oh•.

992·6611

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry ·
Middleport, Oh.

992·2635

Baum True Value
Chester, Oh.

985·3301

Fruth 'Pharmacy
Home National Bank

Racl•e, Oh.

'

992·6333

Syracuse, Oh.

Po•eroy, Oh.

Ewing Funeral Home
992·2121

Po••roy, Oh.

Brogan Warner Insurance
992·6687

Po•eroy, Oh.

Sugar Run Mills
992·2155

949·2493

Po•eroy, Oh. ·

Raci•e, Oh.

p::~~v
867-3181

blrBank~d·

..... FDIC

· 8t S~gs Company
................I

..
..

TUPPERS PLAINS

'

,.

· Quality Print Shop
992·3345

Middleport, Oh.-

Gil THE

Gravley Tractor

SYSTEM

SALU and SERVICE
992·2975 Pomtroy, Oh.

GRAVELY

.,

,.
'

No paper Monday

992·2506

'

'

Po•eroy, Oh.

Chancey's Food
. 992·6542

Pe•eroy, Oh.

The Shoe Place/Locker 219

992·5141

·!

•

Mlddlepert, Oh._

Veterans Metilorlal ·:.

.Middleport, Oh.

The Daily Sentinel
'

992·2155

Po•eroy, Oh.
•

'
'

.

Group will co-sponsor
July Fourth celebration

Syracuse, Oh. •,

Fisher Funeral Home

.

• Tbe D.Uy Sentlael will •ot
be published Mooday 10 tllllt
its employees CIID oblerve tbe
Memorllll O.y bolldlly. RepJar publlcltlou ••d busl•ea
lloun will resume Tuelll8y.

,.

Crow
&amp;
Crow
AnORIRS IT UW
992·6057

Farmers
Bank .
.

Adolph D.airy Ya ey

Rose's Excavating ·

Middleport, Oh. 992·5627

992·6491
992•2210

Swisher·Lohse Phar111acy
992·5141

First·quarter .
growth anemic ~
0.9 perce_nt

•

•
•

PLAQUE PRESENTED • A plilqn to lie
placed 011 tile- .aero.~ ruder
and prllder dedladed to C. E. Bl•bdu, 1011&amp;·
time Library Board mealier, pftllellted to

Ilia Tlllll'lday ' ' Pat Holter, board president,
Pat MiDI, Yice preslde•t, and Mary Yost, secretary, plctund left to rlgbt.

Library's micro-film reader/printer
is dedicated to Charles Blakeslee
The new micro-film/microficbe
reader and printer at the Meigs
County Ubnlry has been dedjcam
to long-time board member,
Cbarlea Blllkalm.
~ plaque ~.be ~ 1111 the
CQUtPB*Il. . . . . . biJ ~

iion 10 the Mcip Coud1y libraries
and their devclopme•l. ID 1949
Blakeslee _,ed as a member ot
the Pomeroy . School District
Library a thcu went oo to serve
on the Melas Local School District

Ll.ln'y and now the Meigs County
At that time Blakeslee thanked
Dislril:t Library. He was president all of the uusrees wilh whom he
of the board lrom 19S9 to 1973 haS worked for their cooperation
wben the J&gt;oiJdot 81111 Mclc!Jtpnrt and SUJIIIOli. He said lhst without
Local School D1stricts libraries ·that COO(iealllon be would DO\ have
mapd.
been named Ohio Trus&amp;ee of lhe
·;...JJ~ WPJeCmtlar • ' •· " Year in 1970. He_mentionedjnnonized: as die orpnizing president, vativeness and effort of Vilma
1969· 1970, of the Ohio 'Valley Pikkoja, fonnerboolanoblle librari·
Ami Liblluies (OVAL) during the an who he said provided the
20th ...m:n.y celebnliou held 81 "spark• to get the OVAL organizaOVAL beadqlllrterS, Wellston.
tion started and funded.

ing.

. The agreement said the two
would be eligible for release in six
months if they paid restitution,
Crow said. The reason they were
not released in six months was
because lhey had not yet paid restitution, he added.
Amos and Theiss pleaded guilty
to breaking into lhe Racine·area
residences of David Diles, Daniel
Hensler and Roger Theiss for the
purpose of committing a· theft
offense. The two have been placed
on probation for five years.
A third Racine man, Shane Circle, pleaded guilty to involvement
in one of the robberies and was
later released from the SEPTA
Cen&amp;er in Nelsonville and placed
under house arrest so he could
aaend coUege.
· According to Special ProsecUUX' .
Linda Warner, one juvenile was
sentenced and motions are pending
to have another, who bas since
turned 18,1ried as an adult

The annual Founh of July celebration in Middl
this year will
be co-sponsorer:; Middleport
Village and the Middleport COOImunity Association.
Plans call for the observance to
take place on Sunday, July 4,
beginning 81 6 p.m. wilh I l)lll1ll(e
through town. There will be a
speaker at 7 p.m. and enlertainmlllt
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at which
time lhe Middleport firemen will
have a fin:WOib dUplay.
AmonJ the enteitalners will be
the Shady River Shuftlers. Others
who would like to perform are
inviled to contact Tom Dooley It
992·3148.
All acdvltlea will like pl8ce this
YC81' In Dave Diles Pult on FroGt
SlleCI. eo.-tons will a1ao be in
the pldt, Dooley aaid.

2 Secllona. 12 P8gM 25 -~~
A Mulllmecblnc. NIWIPifllr

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 28, 1993

Man dies
following
accident
at Gavin

•

• •

Low llllllcJUia 5Go. Partly
doudy. SatlirdaJ, putly cloud7,
hlgb !niiGL

WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer caution 8l home and a poor
trade perfoonance abroad combined to produce a sharp slump in
U.S. economic growih during the
fmtlhree months of the ye;u, the
government said today.
Growth, as measured by the
gross domestic produc~ the sum of
all goods and services produced
within U.S. borders, regisli:rcd an
anemic 0.9 percent seasonally
adjusted annual rate in the first
quarter, the Commerce Depaianent
said. That was less than one ftflh
the robust 4.7 percent ra&amp;e of the
fooMqwmer.
:
The first quarter was lhe weak·
est since' the final lhree monlhs of
1991, e;uly in the recovery period
following the official June 1991
end of the recession. The fourth
quarter had been the best in five

years.

Much of ·the lapse came from a
sharp reduction in lhe' growlh ra1e
of consumer spending. lt was 1.2
percent in lhe fJrSt quarter versus
5.1 percent in the fooM:
"Consumers are convalescing
from strong Christmas spendiqg.
They drew down their savings and
borrowed to finance their purtbasei
and now they're paying Jhe,bins,~ ·
said economist Mart Zandi of
Regional Financial Associates in
Wcst Chester, Pa.
·
At the same lime, two key U.S.
trading partners, Germany and
Japan, are in or near recession, further dragging down the U.S. economy.
The Commerce Department had
originally estimaled first-quarter
GOP growth at 1.8 percent but said
new data not known 8l the lime of
the original repM painled an even
grimmer picture of U.S. trade performance. In advance, economists
were expecting GDP to be revised

down,less sharply, to aboutl.2 IJCl;
cent
·•
"We're becoming more and
more internationalized," sai8 ·
economist Paul W. Boltz of r.
Rowe Price Associa&amp;es in Balli· ·
more. "Exports provide one iii
eight or nine U.S. jobs. If OUJ
exports aren't performing well~
lhen our domestic economy haS a
rough lime."
;
American exports fell at a 2.6
percent annual ra&amp;e while import&amp;
fr9m abroad increased at a 12 per:~
cent ra&amp;e.
Another big factor curbini
growlh in lhe first quar&amp;er wai a
reduction in government spending
at a 7.3 JlCJ'Cent allllual ra1e. Miii•
tary spending plun~ 25.9 (leJte11~
the biggest drop 9IJICC lhe government began tracking lhst ca&amp;egory
in 1972.
Housing was weak, roo. Resi- '
dential construction edged down·81
a 0.2 peJCellt amual ra&amp;e, compared'
with a 25.1 percent surge in tho
fourth
quarter.
However,
economists said unusually severe'
win&amp;er weather, including a bliz-·
zan! lha1 Sl!'Uek the East Coast in
mid·M~h. held down conatruc:
tion and lhey expect a reboiBIII ill
the second quarter. .
,..
. If not for 1 buildup in invenroncs of unsold goods. OCOinllic out. put in the fmt quarter wOuld ldU;·
ally have declined.
·on the bright side, busineis~
investment in new equipment and
machinery surged 81 a 16.S prrcenl .
.annual rate, even better lhan the 8.6
percent originally cstimated. That ·
follows a robust 14.$ percent'
incrcsse in the fourth quarter.
•.
Analysts say the investment•
rate, if maintained, should improve
lhe productivity of American busi- •
nesses and eventually lead to a
healthi&amp; economy.
:.

Patrolfaces busiest ·~
weekend of the yea~ -

.-

..

••1

FIREHOUSE ADDmON • A 11ew
to
acc-•odate two lnldiJ Md provide 11oo -ae
spllee !Ia lies lidded to tilt Cllatcr fire.. 1•
Tbe l8d4 tqqt lllcllllu. II belq bait Mlii'IOD

•.r

-- -----·- .

Bllildm. Tile pablit wiD llllve an opportunity to
- tilt smu:tare •t tbe Cbater Volun'- Fire
Depart.e•t'a clllclten b1rbeeue ou Memorial
Day. (Pboto .7 Dllvid Banis)

Clinton's new tax bill.will
face stiffer test in Senate
.

.

.

WASHINOTON (AP) ~ e,ve l'relidcnt ClinfOn
a badly·
lriumpb wbrn tbcy
muscled his llllllive
tion tax increase tllrouall tbe
House. But the meaaure faces a
mucb - . r llllt in the IIIIR cooservative S: te
"Toniabt. the Houle llicl no 10
gridlock, 110 to the ll8tUI quo llld
no to the apecill u---." omm
aaid Tbund8y nlab&amp;. lllortly . , .
the Hoose ~ouod the $340 billion mill o
lncreuea nd
spe....... ClliB ma • 219-213 'tOle.
"Tomorrow, we go 011 to tbe
Senalc a we go bet 10 the country, .. be llid.
Tbe blll r~ta the very
backbone of .
'1 ec:otJOIDic
pi..-: 1111 boolllllll tile_....,.
enero\Jienalllltln,a4 ....
in&amp; cuts for )fJ fl •• • •• other beaeflt "'"" 7
The lU la:a- ~exempt

ddlcll--.-

tu

'•

most low-incame peap1e, cost mid·
die-income familieS up to about
$400 I yell' 81111 fllll bcavi1y 00 the
well-10-do. ll.tso iaclndes an caerIY 1BX the While Houle llicl may
be subject to compromise in the
SenMe
'
. E veil thout the bill didD' t
lllnltt •liDalc ~k ....... ill
pasiiiC wu • croclal viclllry for
CliDton, wbo baa been doUed of
late by • aeries ol emb8rralio1
revelali0111 about bill HollYWOOd
hain:utiJid bill Cllllllly eft"ortl to
fin: the Wbile . . . . tmellllllf.
"A m WOIIId lla¥e been m-y
domllin&amp; a • vicby is c:leldy 1
f):' ~u," ~ House Budiet
"dee OejnnM Mlrtil s.lio.
D-MiDD. "ADd 11 focmr Mhtioo
blck on ••••· e "
Bl?l k' a ..,... to lib to
Jllllb the
e tltnJu&amp;b the Senlie . . . . . for pstillc IUjljlUOt
such aa C6D1011 made before the
n

HouseVOie.
·
Awaiting lhe bill were seveial
conserVIltive aellllton - chiefly
Sen. David Boren, D-Otla. - who
·would 1i1le 10 chanle or kill Clinson's~ CIICI'8Y tall, and bol· ·
111«
gialorioo with additional
spendina CUlL
..Democrats are 1oing to be
wile enDUih to see thel if we don't
want to allp blclt to lhe mode or
beiDa I IBX·Imli·I(IOSICI pa1J, that
we'lfbeiJ? sedl
this pdiiC,"
Boren sud ~ just mlnu&amp;es
after the House~.
Even Sellllle MaJority Leader .
Oeor1e Mitchell, 0-Malne, has
"'" '"'-!dill cluul8eiii'O lllrdy In
the -IY llltlmll thet extra spending cuts may be ........
Sen• ccmmiur n were expected to flnllh wrililla lheir own - sioa of the bill by lilid-June. Democntic lelllen would like the full
Senate to llJIIIOW' it before July 4. .

The Ohio Stale Highway Patrol
is buckling dnwn for wh8l usually
proves to be iheir busiest time of
the year- Memorial Day week·
end.
The holiday which signals lhe
start of summer with travel and
. g8lherings of all types also has a
down side. More people are killed
in traffic accidents on Memorial
Day weekend lhan any other week·
end ofihe year.
AU uoopers at the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol
will be working durinjl the holiday
traffic reporting penod, Lt. R.J.
Woodford advised in a press
release.
''This is in addition to troOpers
woddng extra hours making a concentrated enforcement effort on
U.S. 35 and State Route 7 ," he
said.
Troopers will be watching for

speed violations, followin" to~
closely, failing to yield and driven,
who have been drinkinjl.
~·
''Troopers are issumg citationr
for safety bell violation 81111 givini'
very few warnings, • WoodforiL.
said. "This made a pronounce:.
effect in reducing lhe numbCr o~·
people killed in Gallia and Mei$8
counties from 22 in 1989 to 10 .IJI.
1990, 10 in 1991 and eight in 1992:
This year ihere has been one death
in Meigs County.•
~
He also said anyone who secs an ·
impaired driver can report to any.: patrol post by cilling 1-800-:
GRAB·DUI.
·
••
"Don't be foolish and assume'
nothing will happen to you or a·
loved one while driving the high- ·
ways, drive defensively; Wood- .
ford said. "Don't drink and drive,.
wear your seat belts and keep your
speed in mind. Have a great holiday."
-

REMINDER FROM THE PATROL- Au 0•1o

Bilk _,· ·

PlltrGitl'lllllreurlllup.-hi~..-IMiolaDiw' t til j 1 a· Z
~e•clrtnnll*y81't-.
e ..... ll.-rtot•wwa •
•·

vuvn &amp; tbe ll8tnJI leedlliE ltlelr ~
ODe of tbe buitest ol tbe yetll':

.

•

•

tilt.M•lrlll .,.,. WI '

J1

~

-

�Friday, May 28, 1993

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

Show~rs,

Saturday, May 29

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, May 28, 1993

Accu, Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
PoaleiOf, Oblo

.

, WV011D TO TD IN l&amp;aaTS OJ' TD IDIG8-II.ASON AREA

.l"l...'Jt'EE¥.tC
. .ROBEJn' L. WINGETr
Pabllllber
CIIARENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Gellei'IIIMv•&amp;tr

LETl'ERS OF OPINION are wek:ome. They •bould be less dian 300
wmll. All 1eaon - IUbject 10 editing 111c1 mUJt be signed witb name.
odllna aod lit~ (tl r•ne nomber. No unsigneclleaen will be publisbed. LeUen
lboald be in p!d wa,lddmliog
not penonllilie&amp;.

iss-.

L,._...;,_..,:_ _.;.;.,~-.;;..--...;.--------..1

·This time it really
is a crucial vote
By WALTER R. MEARS
APSpe !IJICormpiiMeat
WASHINGTON- Among W&amp;Wngtoo cliches, the crucial congressic..t ~is • old -.Iby. That's the close, suspenseful roD call on a
"IIIUSt" me ITIR. wilh major vicllll')' or c:riwling defeat at stake for the

.......,..

To lleigbiCD the drama. the script includes arm-twisting, telephone
calls from the OYII Ollic:e, polilical rewards for the loyalists, punjslunent
bthe~
.
11 is a couvlling plot. replayed more often than really is warranted, at
limes oo bills tbal SDOD are forgOIIen.
.
1bis time it is real
'
Pi sihll CliniiJD c:amot lffool to lose the House votes on his tax and
~ pnl&amp;IE. Defeat would be repuclialion. • the hands of Democrats,
II the a.t of a ctifljc;qJt agenda, pulling his whole program at risk. lme
oe die finl DouuaMic budget in a dozen yem and the odds would soar
apinsr acbievinl odlcr objectives such as health care reform.
OinJOD bas boask&gt;d aD spring of the swift l!flP"Ival of his initial budget
outJjee, uroof. he's Slid. thlt gridloct is ending. The bill up for House
ac0on fibs in the budget blanb with tues and an initial installment of
tpending cwbs.
"We'll have the votes," House Speaker Thomas Foley saitt. Even
RqJublic:lns. !Oiid1y owcsec~. acknowledged thlt the Democrats will rmd
a way 10 m:llim their Sllaying c:onservalives and win.
Oinlon was cajoling, compromising and arguing the case on televisioa; he will line to do more of all Ibm: to get his pliln through lhe Senate. As~ of the elbt 10 JICl'SII'IIe conservative House Democrats, Jliii\Y
I hs J1R11Qi1e dieR will be - . spending cuts later to go wilh the $246
billion. ~yea- IIIX increase in the presidc:pt 's pliln. .
.
'l'hele also will be more compromise, particularly oo the $71 billion
tiiCIIY !IIX, fxing a Senare cballcnge led by two oil-state Democrats. That
I*"
bepn bef&lt;R the bill w&amp;'l introduced, wilh 13 concessions to ease
the bunteD 00 specific industries and legions.
.
'I'IIIK obviously are DKR coming, includiilg export rebates. And while
Foley said the Houle will dell wilh !be: enefiY tax u it stands, he added
Jllere's !!Oibjng wrong wilh implo•ww:nts in the Senate.
·
That c:ould he a sensili~ poinL Any tax-increase villi: is a tough line; a
Vole for the ""POJ'"lar tiiCIIY tax could haunt a House member in the
1994 • ••q•iip, and tbal would be particularly hard to swallaw on a meaSIR tbB ooulcl be ICIIed bid: or sc:•lfiltd in the Senate.
So Ointoo has IISSUled House Democrats that if they go out on the
limb, he'll he there wilh them.
.
The bliDins have 10 be balanced among the competing factions dw
make up die Democratic Party coalition. Centrist and conservati~e
Democrats from !be: Midwest, the South and suburban disuicts feel presSIR from home b lllCR cuts in spending.
Thai p1ompled the push for a ceiling oo lhe cost of entitlements, or
bcntCJU, a cap Ointon rejected &amp;'I unfair to needy Americans. As a more
practical matter, the cap would have stirred a fight with big-city
• Demoal!l, powerful in bolb numbers and seniority. and Clinton needs

lheir-100.

The~ is a c:om1JIIllllise

that IDIOURIS to another JliOIIlissory note:
it almost
• a1-ys bas, the adminiSIIalion and Congress wiD have to deal with it by
cUlling spendint:;;sing IIXes or 'Jilting openly to add to the defiCit
• ClinJOD bas
waging a mini-campaign to pin Jlllblic support for
· his CCOIIOIIIic pllll and mate it fell at the Capitol, but at obviously hasn't
cegistrml. His allies say they still have a problem with the perception that
~·s 100 muc:h rclilnce on taxes and not enough on spending cuts to
- cwb !be: cootinuing ~ defacits.
'
'
. That's not so, the president said Wednesday, and lhe more people
• know lbout his pllll, lhe DKR they like it They lmcw most about it on
Feb. 17, wbtn he poposed it, Clinton said. "What has happened since
• then is that_ there's been a lor of stalic back and forth and the pleSident
• ~·\he on~~:Ievision every night," he said.
.
• Slill, he's been there frequently, he's been on the road to promote his
: ~. and it isn't sold yet. House DemocraJs want him to keep at it, hoping
1t will help persuade their vOla'S they're doing the right thing.
'
EDn'OR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice prtliclent aDd eolumalst for T ..e Associated Press, bas reported on WashinEton and
• u.-.a politics ror more tllaa JO years.

; ·w~~en enlltlc:mcllt spending inm:ales past budget pojecbons, u

•
•

Millions wasted on federal office space
WASHINGTON - Imagine
coming home one night and discovering some burned-out light
bulbs, a leaky upstain faucet and
peeling paint in lhe bedroom. The
averag~son would invest in
some m
tepairs, but the federal government's landlord. the General Services Administration, might
unleash the wrecking ball.
"Tho GSA approach would be
to build a new hOme from scratch
-and pay top doUar," according
to Sen. William Cohen, R-Maine.
"Any private lilndlorcl whO opera!·
ed the way the government is operating would long ago have gone
~''
.
If ' downsizing" is the buzzword of the '90s for government ·
and most corporations, the GSA
still lives in the bonm years. The
nation is currently awash in 400
million square feet of unnoccupied
commercaal office space. But the
government has $11.4 billion of
·offace construction under way that
wiD, by the end of the decade, add
anolher 23 million square feet of
space to an already overbuilt market.
Dallas, for example, is slill digging out from lhe real estate boom
and bust of the 1980s, which left an

,

office vacancy rate of more than 2S
percent Despite bargain prices on
commertialle81 eslate, the Fedeial
Reserve Bank in Dallas just spent

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein
more lhan SIOO million to complete construction on its new office
building.
.
In depressed Atlanta, reeling
under a 30 percent commercial
vacancy rate, the federal government has agreed to lease a new 1.9
million-square-foot building from a
private developer. But the fovemment wiD vacate more than .2 million square feet currently being
~ented by federal agencies in six
buildings, and the result is a 73 percent jump in lhe annwU rent from
$IS million·to $26 miUion.
If the GSA abandons its pliln to
move 10 a new federal center in
Atlanta, according 10 a study by the
accounting finn Arthur Anderson,
the government could save $166
million over 30 years by moving
into modem exisung space, or $505

THlRSL&gt;AY
N\6KTS JUST

AREN'T THE
SAW;

million by scrapping the move altogether.

Sen. Cohen is CJUSading 10 stop
the GSA from "building buildi s
we don't need, leasing space r:e
can't afford, and makin~ decisions
whicll anyone in the pnvate sector
with a speck of common sense
wouldn't make." His concerns are
echoed by the General ACCO!Illting
Office, which has declared that
government policy in this area is in
disarray•
Cohen blames part of this on
old-fashioned pork-barrel spending
- fueled in part by political pressure from developers, unions and
members of Congress who can
claim bragging rights over bringing
new office buildin~s to their states
and disuicts. "I think perhaps selfinterest is going on ... it becomes
difficult for Congress to resist," he
said.
"That does happen," says
David Bibb, assistant commission.er for plilnning at GSA. "Look at
the history of the country. Iii 'last
year's appropriations !here were
projects m there we did not request
funding for." Bibb added that most
of the construction in rece11t years
has been for courthouses and burder stations.
II

t I

I Mt';;THAT
WEEKLY BANTER
BETWEEN

SAM~UCCA

Government auditors also single
out arcane accounting rules tliat
give the GSA perverse incentives
to lease and build rather than bu_y
existing strui:lureS, and the result u
that the government has become
America's biggest renter. In 1969,
the federal government owned 90 .
pen:ent of the buildings it occupied
- but that figure has fallen to 56
percent today.
.
The GSA already has jurisdictioo over 260 miUion square feet of
office space in more lhan 7,500
government-owned and leased
buildings. This year the GSA will
pay about $2 billion in rent to private landlords, an amount that is
increasing ·by about $200 million a ·
year. The GSA also collects about
$4 billion annually from rents paid
by federal agencies for bolb leased
and government..owned space.
Another mystery 'is why the
GSA fails to buy any of the office
buildings being sold at fire-sale
prices by the Resolution Trust
Corp., or the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., which alone has 9,000
buildings on the market.
The GSA recently announced
plans 10 build a $20 million federal
office building in Louisiana to
house 400 federal workers and consolidare the offaces of 14 agencies.
Cohen points out that this,. carried out despite lhe fact lhat "a
building whach could have been
acquired in lieu of new constructioo was sold by the RTC for $2.5
· million."
L. Nye Steven, a GAO official
who has been highly critical of federal property practices, told us:
"You can buy existing buildings
fuUy completed on the nunet for
much less than lhefrice of construction because o the vacancy
rates. But the government's answer
is construction." .
According to government auditors. if lhe government has a legitimate need for additional office
space, it should first exhaust the
possibilities of modern overbuilt
office space that exists and acquire
leases, or lease-purchases, of existing buildings that are much cheaper
than new construction.
"There's no free lunch, and
there's no free building," con·
eludes Cohen.
Jack Anderson and Micllael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

South Africa destined for tragedy ·.
During the 40-plus years of the
Cold War the world watched Soulh
Africa with bated breath, not primarily because the stru~e Laking
place !here was fascinabng (though
n was) but because its outcome
would so directly affect the global
battle betwee11 freedom and communism.
On one side, holding this key
strategic location and its immense
mineral wealth fmnly in lhe Westem camp, was a white regime that
was pennanently unwilling ID tum
power over to the nation's black
majority. On the other were black
political groups - notably the
African National Congress, dominated by card-carrying memberi of
the outlawed South African Communist Pany. who would unquestionably. ally the country wit~
Moscow af they could. :ro complicate matters, SOulh Africa's population included lar~e numbers of
Indian-descended 'Asians" and
mixed-ancestry "Cape Coloureds"
with very different agendas of their
own.
Beginning about four years ago,
however, the situation in South

Africa began to change dramatically. As the CQid War came to an
end, greatly reducing the country's
geopolitical importance and

William A. Rusher
· -iiiCle&amp;Sing foteign pressures for liberalization, South Africa's elite
English-descended business interests and its dominant Afrikaner
(Dutch-descended) political leaders
decided to make a delll with the
ANC. Agreement was reached on a
process whereby the government
would be tumed ov,:r to the latter,
in return for continued white ownership of major sectas of the econolny for the foreseesble future. ·
Excluded from the benefits of
this arrangement were lower and
middle-cfass whites (especially
Afriltaners from farm areas), lhe
powerful Zulu nation (which is
• hostile to the tribes from which
most ANC members and leaders
are drawn), and the substantial
Asian and Cape
. Coloured COinmu-'
nities, which fear the ANC.
Let us pause here to note that
this unjust and indeed downright

cynicai deal between the white
regime and the ANC was neither
desirable nor in the least inevitable.
The borders which history has
drawn around South Africa contain
the traditional homelands of nine
separate and bitterly rivalrous black
uibes, plus distinct regions largely
occupted by Asians and Cape
Coloureds, and others that are predominantly white. Common fairness called for the division of this
crazy-quilt into a number of
sovereign states, but this suited neither the economic greed o,f \he
white elites nor the political ambilions of the ·ANc bosses.
So now this beautiful country is
edging inexorably toward civil war.
lt may stiU be argued whether the
armed forces will remain loyal to
the central authority when power .
shifts from the white regime to the
ANC in a rear or two. Apparently
an effort will be made to depict the
new government as a c.oalation of
white a~d. ANC components,' at
least unbl 11 can establish physical
control of most of the national territory.
But the Zulus, who control
much of Natal . province, will

almost certainly ·refuse to bend
their knees 10 the ANC, and it
seems likely that large areas of !be:
Transvaal and the Orange Free
State dominated by resolute
Afrikaner fanners will also reject
its dictation. The Asians and Cape
Couloureds will demand substantial autonomy. Finally, there will
clearIy be a covert movement of
white terrorists in all the major
cities, determined ID assassinate the
leadina ANC figmes. (Chris Hani,
chairman of the SACP, was shot to
death early this year.) South Africa
will be a vast, open-air shooting
gaUery for decades to come.
All this will be treated in the
world's liberal media u an outrageous conspiracy of a few evil men
!0 thwart the D;~&amp;n:h of democracy
m southern Mnca. On the conlllr)',
it wiD be the logical ouiCOIDe of a
cynical effort by greedy business·
men ID keep the1r cash cow producing. It will be a tragedy, but tJw:1ks to ,the end of the ,COOl War
- at won t be. ~ world s tragedy.
Just South Africa s.
W!Wam Rusller Is 1 syndical•
eel writer for Newspaper Eaterprise Association.

came under the heading of good, life. When we watched them, we
clean fun.
felt better.
Based on a play about a smallNostalgia, as novelist John
town judge and his family, the fmt Cheever hu reminded us, cliO be
Hardy movie, featuring young more than a long, loving llllcltward
Rooney, cast Lionel Barrymore as look. It can be, says Cheever, a
the tolerant Judge Hardy and "force of aspiration. Finding our·
Spring Byingron u Mrs. Hardy.
selves not in the world we love, but
The falm was such a bOx-office knowing how deeply we love it,
force, Andy Hardy!" she replies. · hit that MGM decided to make it !here is kindled within us the coo"It's good that way too," says into a series. It became MGM' s all- viction that we will discover I way ·
Andy - with that ever-present time biggest money-maker. The to reiUlllto it in the future."
To realize that lhe things lhat
gleam in his eye. Andy lived for series was a stepping stone to stardom
for
Judy
Garland,
Esther
"belona
unto our peaCe" may lie
cars and girls.
.
Williams,
Lana
Turner,
Donna
more
in
our
past than in our fulllre
Given today's sensitivity to anyReed
and
Kalhryn
Grayson.
may
point
us
''hack ID the fulllre"
thing sugaesting sexual harass- ·
When
Barrym&lt;R,
after
the
rarst
to
the
rediscovery
of some of
ment, we don't even kid nowadays
about forcing our affections on movie, turned down a chance to the secrets we lost in our mad rush
somebody else. But back in the continue playing Judge Hardy, the to now.
We still need to hear the
1930s and '40s, Andy's antics role went 10 the courtly Lewis
Stone.
moralisms of our parents. Judae
Today the Hardy family is all Hardy's man-to-man talks wilh
but forgotten.
Andy were a staple of the film
At lhe library w.here I went to series.
borrow a videotape from lhe Hardy
When Andy comes to his father
series, all 16 were on lhe shelf. aftei breaking up wllh his airl of
.
By Tile Alloclatecl Preu
·
"Nobody e- uts for them," said the moment, the jucllr:e consoles
~oday is Friday, May 28, the 148th day of 1993. There are 217 days
the librarian.
him wit!' this thoulht T"''here is l)o
left an lhe year.
·
.
~
Today's Highlight in History;
That's 100 bad for at least Ibm: sorrow m the worlil, Andn:w, ~a
On May 28, 1934, the Dionne Quintuplets - Annette,
ile, Emilie,
reasons.
lot of other people could 't
The Hardys - like the Arnold match."
Marie and Yvoone - were born to Elzire Dioone iia Calle
, Ontario.
On lhis date;
family on TV's "Wonder Years"
Trite? Maybe. But when J
and !be: Berger family on "Brook- Hardy said it, it IIOUilded wiae
In 1S33, England's Archbishop declared the marriage of King Henry
VIII to Anne Boleyn valid .
Jyn Bridp" -lhowed us the 11ap- comfortina.
pi ness and satisfaction that can · O..p Plapu II a IJ'Bdli:at· ·
In 1863, the first black reaiment from the North left Boston to figbt in
come from a simple lifestyle, eel writer for Nnnpaper ~~a~pr.
the Civil War.
domestic stability and a virtuous · prt. Alloclatloa.
In 1892. the Sie11'8 Club was organi~ in San Francisco.

It's hard 10 imagine there could
possibly have been anything to
censor an an Andy Hardy movie.
The e.ndearing (and enduring)
series of 16 HollywllOd- films ran
from 1937 to 1946. It represented
·the wholesome, sentimental image
of life in America
But those were the days before
sexual harassment was on everybody's mind - so some things that
would have ended up on the cutting-room floor today slipped innocently by.
In a scene from the 1938 movie
"Love Finds Andy Hardy," Andy
(who is played by Mic~ Roooey)
is trying to get his girlfriend Polly
Benedict (Ann Rutherford) to let
him kiss her.

I' I I

She plays coy and S&amp;ys no.
"You let me kiss ypu last
night," Andy reminds her.
"You kissed me last night by

George R. Plagenz

Today in history ..
.

._,_ ....
••

BACK IN FASHION

I .

IND.

I

W.VA.

Pt.
Inc.

_ _.;,.;,..____ Weather----Soutll-Central Oblo
Extended rorecut:
Topight, partly cloudy with a
Sunday tbrougll Tuesday:
slight chance of lhunderstorms
Fair on Sunday. Lows in the low
Low in the upper SOs. Chance of · and mid-50s. Highs 70-80 . A
rain 30 percent. Saturday. partly chance of showers and thundersunny. A chance showers and thun- stonns Monday and Tuesday. Lows
derstorins. High near 80. Chance of in the SOs. Highs in the 70s Monrain 40 percent.
day and mid-70s to low 80s Tuesday.

28 fined in county court
.· Twent)--eighf J)eople were fmed
Wednesday in the Mei's County
Coon of Judge Pauic:k 0 Brien.
Fined were: Nicholas Riggs.
Tallmadge, driving under the influ~~ce, $350 pl\is costs, three clays
Jill, 90 day operators license suspension, one year poblition, $150
of fine and jail suspeniled upon
completion of the residential tteatment program school; left of ceoter. $25 pluJ costs; Ricky A.
Metheney, Vinton, spetd, $23 plus
costs: Kelly Satterfield, Pomeroy
seat belt violation,·$15 plus costsi
· Rex A. Dixon, Stewart, speed, $20
plus costs; Tracy T. Vickery, Creue
Coeur, Mo., speed, $25 plus costs;
Clarence N. Gunningham ,
Williamstown, W.Va, speed, $23
plus costs; Alva M. Wiggins,
Cheshire, speed, $23 plus costs:
- Matlhew B. Haynes, Middleport,
speed, $20 plus costs; 'I'1!oma$ A.
Amott, Coolville, failure 10 ~
medica) certificate, $55 plus costs;
Shawn ('... Binsley, Athens, speed,
$19 plus costs; Rose Marie Jordan,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., assured
clear disiance, $10 plus costs;
Alex. C. Richardson, Warren,
speed, $23 plus costs: Lawrence R.
Lee Jr., Shad~, speed, $20 P.l~s
costs; Jack J.usus. Potneroy, crumnal damaging, ~ve days jail suspended, one yesr probation, l'cstitution, $25 plus costs; Steve Stoacs,
Coolville, no PL. 30 days jail susjlended to Ibm: if vali!l OL presented within. 60 days, $100 11lus costs,
on.e y~ probation; Clyde Lowe,
Miama, W:V,a., DUI, 10 days jail
suspended 111 three, $350 plus costs,
90 da~ OL suspension, one year
probatioo, $ISO or the rlliC and jail
suspended upon completion of the
RTI&gt; school; left of center, $20 plus

I

low was 36 in 1971.
Sunset .today will beu 8:51
p.m. Sunnse Saturday wall be at
6:06am. ·
Aroulld tile nation .
Overcast, wet wealhel!' persuted
over parts of the Rock1es, Great
Lakes and Northeast early t~y .
The ~outheast enJoyed cl~ skies
headmg an to the Memonal Day
weelcend.
Warm temperatures were
expected to gave way to cooler
weather from the eastern Great

tion, restraining order issued;
Jimmie Deem, Racine, failure to
control, $30 plus costs; Vincent
Stone, Pomeroy, DUI, six months
jail, $500 plus costs, OL suspended
indefinitely; Olin H. Kilts, Piuman,
aided and MSisted another in lakin
possession of an illegal wil~
turkey, SSO plus costs; Richard A.
Gaugler, Seville, untagged wild
turkey, $42 plus costs; no wild
turkey (lermlt, SIOO plus costs;
George Cundiff, Pomeroy,. domestic violence; 30 days jail suspended
ID time served, $2SO plus costs, two
years probation, alcohol assessment, family counseting:
John Brillhart, Point Pleasant,
$25 rme suspendW.Va.•
ed, costs; Dean Mays, Chester,
DUI, •six months jail suspended to
120 days, $S50 plus costs, one year
probation, OL suspended indefinitely; reckkss operation, ,costs;
'f.CiitiOOs plaies, $25 plus 'costs; no
valid operators license, six months
jail suSpended to Ibm: days concurre~t with DUI. $100 plus costs.

SDeedin•.

Hospital news
VETERANS~ORIAL

Thursday admissions - Roger
Barker', Letart, W.Va. and Luvenia
Hayman, Long .Bottom.
Thursday discharges - Ernestine Williams, Rutlanil.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER.
May 27 dlscllarges -Ada
King, Sharon Marcum, Michelle
Price, Michelle Bryant, Robert
Hargis, George King, Olive Garrett, Diana Fleming, Cindy Zinn.
William Erickson, Mrs. Robert
Harrison and son, Mrs. Steve Baird
and daughter, Ryan Taylor,
Michael Webb, LiUie Brown, Gloria Fillinger, Lois Layne and.Ernest
Thome.

May 27 births - ,Mr. and Mrs,
Christopher Wallace, daughter,
Point Pleasanl, W.Va.

SIFE TEAM RETURNS - Members or the
University of Rio Grande Studeats In Free
Eaterprlse (SIPE) team returned Wednesday
from tile SIPJi: Natloaals. They are, from left, ·

The University of Rio Grande
Students in Free Enlelprise (SIFE)
chapter retiDlled home Wednesday
from the SIFE Nationals in Kansas
City, Mo., disappointed but satisfied with its accomplishments for
the year.
The Rio Grande team was edged
out in lhe semifinals by the Univer-

Stocks

1

11 fined in Pomeroy court

Dance planaed
There will be a western dance
sponsored by the Middleport Arts
Council on June 5 from 8-11 p.m.
at Carleton School in Syracuse.
Cost is $3 for singles and $5 for
couplj:s. Snacks, sweets and soft
drinlcs will be sold. Boot Scootin •
Boogie, Line Dancing, Texas TwoStep and Achy-Breaky will be fea. tured. Public invited.

10

Truleelto meet
Rutland Township Trustees will
meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Rutland Fire Station. Public invited.
Gardea club to meet
Chester Garden Club will hold
its open meeting Wednesda¥ at
7:30 p.m. at the Chester Unned
Methodist Church. Betty Mizikio
\viU be guest SPeBlcer on prize winning slides of OAOC convention
winners.

KANAUC/\ I1HIVf- IN

·----·

David Fernbacher, who was
active in producing videotaped
instruction for Project CIRCLE at
Rio Grande, which targets high
school students, felt the te~m
• would be "better pn1lared 10 package oour presentation ncxt year.""
Greg Har~ett, last year's SIPE
president, votced thanks to the i 0
team members, faculty, staff, lhe
business advisroy board, Austin
Powder Co. and Bob Evans Fanns
for special assistance in getting the
team to the nationals.
•
The uip IDIIllced the second time
the chapter has made the nationals.
!t qualifaed a!ter becomin~ a finalISt m the reg~ilnal compeution held
in April in Atlanta.
Other .members of the team
included Nancy Arnold, David
Banlcs, Lisa Brown, Eric Leach.
Chuck Moore and Masonori Men
a
.....
...,.lUISDA.,
'"I"
.awan.....,.1
I*'!G~A· IMn.D SAT.

SUM.

CD'fiPreua:

''Your Kids·Are Worth ltl"

Rejoicing Life
Christian School
ENROLUWENT OPEN FOR 1993·1994
(GRADES KTHRU 6)

•Registration D.lscount During May
•We offer the Lowest Tuition in the
Area~ Our Kindergarten Costs Only·
$60 Per Month.
.
.·
•The 1993·1994 School Year will
Begin .Our 8th Year of Operation

....
- ·-··..···
~--

•

7

'

For AQuality E.ducatlon That l~stUis A
Good Sense Of Ethics And Morals

'

••

446 4524

Grange to meet
Star Grange and Star Junior
Grange will meet June S at 8 p.m.
at the grange hall near Salem Center. The national needlework and
state contests will be judged.
Potluck refreshments will be served
following the meeting. All members urged 10 attend.

____ _

OIIIIPc* .

SPRING VALlEY CINEMA

added.

Dance clii!ISeS oiYered
County dance classes will be
offered by the Middleport Arts
Council beginning Wednesday.
Beginners and intermediate classes
starts at 7:30 p.m. and advanced
dancers lire to report at 8:30 p.m.
The cost is $7 per couple and to
register or for further information,
call 992-2675.

HQ'MEWARD
BOUND

&amp;:IWoob.......................................... . .40

Hammond, Pomeroy, $63 plus
costs, no operator's license; Lany
Mitch Jr., Middleport, $88 plus
costs, underage consumption; Alliin
Manley, Middleport, $63 plus
costs, unsafe vehicle;
_
Stuart Currier, Pomeroy, $213
plus costs, petty theft; $313 plus
c®, des!ruction of~· $25
finc on!y, failure to appear; Iaine
Qualls, Pomeroy, $113 plus costs,
public intoxication; James Smith,
Racine, $43 plus costs, stop sign:
Kenneth Collins, Pomeroy, $63
plus costs, disorderly conduct
In addition, lhe following people forfeited bond: Ari1ca Priddy,
Pomeroy, $80, expired plates;
Sylvia Johnson, Clifton, W.Va. , '
$60, failure to yield; Sharon Russell, Pomeroy, $63, speed; Daniel
Henry, Dexter, $60, stop sign;
Everett Grant, Racine, $80, expired
plates; Rhonda Core , Pomeroy,
$60, failure to yield.

Becky Winebrenner, the chapter's vice president, was also disappointed. particularly since it was
her last year with the organization.
"What we have to talce with us
are the memories of encouraging
elernentary and high scllool students 10 study, to stay in school and
to· become conuibuting citizens in
their communities," the senior from·
Syracuse said.
"Then we also have to consider
that by working, traveling, teaching
and speaking to others, we may ·be
the winRelS after all," Winebrenner

•

~

=

sity of Houston and-Clevelandbased Dyke CoUege.
"Last year, we returned with
three trophies and $3,500 to use for
projects and travel," SIFE Pre~i ­
dent Eric Toole noted as the team
unloaded its luggage. 'This coming
year, we'll have to hustle to put
together project dollars."

~·

Eleven people were fined Monday in the Pomeroy Court of Mayor
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Bruce Reed while six others forThursday night's Ohio Lottery
feited bond.
selectioos:
Fined were: John Ohlinger,
Pick 3 Numbers
Pomeroy, $88 plus costs, underage
4-7-6
consumption; Brian McClintock,
(four, seven, six)
Pomeroy, $43 plus costs, assured
Pick.4.N,umberJI,-, • . .
· ~lear·distance: $63 plus:costs, driv'
9-0..7-0
ang under suspension; $SO plus
(nine,zero,seven,zero)
costs, no financial responsibility;
The jackpot for Saturday's Terry Evans, Middleport, $375 plus
Super Lotto drawing is worth $4 · costs, thtee days jail, 90 day operamillion.
·tor's license suspension, driving
under the influence;
Frank E. Young, Pomeroy, $63
plus costs, failure 10 comply; Made

Services begin
at 1:30 Monday

Cbuck Moore, Dave Fembaciaer, Greg Baraett;
L'lsa Brown, Eric: Toot,, Eric Leach, Naacy
Arnold, Becky Winebrenaer and Masonorl
Morl. Absent was David Banks.

SIFE team returns from nationals

Lottery numbers

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) amount of trash the Parkersburg
- A settlel!lent filed in federal landfiU can accept from 22,000 to
court ended a lawsuit fded by two 30,000 tons a month.
landfall operators against the state.
· The ClarlcsburJ landfiD now can
Landfills i.n Parkersburg and accept up .to 20,000 tons a month,
Clarlcsburg can increase their trash up from 9,999 tons a month. ·
capacities and will not have to pay
The Legishlture earlier this year
higher dumping fees for out-of- repealed a law charging higber fees
stare trash undec the settlement
for garbage brought &amp;om outside a
It was filed Wednesday in U.S. landfill's tegion. The repeal was a
costs;
District Court after U.S: District condition of the settlcmenL
Chris . Spaulding, ·Pomeroy, Judge John T. Copenhaver signed it
In retuin, the landlill companies,
Tuesday night
~ clear distance ahead, $30
both owned by Mid-American
plus costs; Douglas Kling, Canton, .
Northwestern DiSP.CJSal Co. of Waste Systems Inc. of Canal
speeding, ~ plus costs; expired Parkersburg 'and Mid-American Winchester, Ohio, agreed not to'
OL, $75 fine suspended to $SO plus Waste Systems of Clarksburg faled seek reimbursement for up to $4
costs, three days jail suspended; the suit last year. They asked that million in fees they had already
Charles Sickles, Jackson, llilllll1red state officials be blocked from paid under the law.
'
clear distance ahead, $30 plus enforcing new landfill laws and
The companies, state agencies
chaUenged the laws' constilutional- and officials named in the lawsuit
costs; Mary Sheets, Pomeroy, menacing, $100 fine suspended, costs, ity.
agleed not to seek reimbursemenl
The
settlement
increases
the
for
legal expenses.
one yea.r probation,, restraining
order 1ssu'ed; Keith Harris
Reedsville, ll)enacing, $100 fine
Name omitted
suspended, costs, one year probaOmitted from lhe list of relatives preceding Evelyn E. Gilmore
in death was her brother, Marvip
The'Daily Sentinel
Mayer. Funeral services for Mrs.
(VSPS 213-1110)
Gilmore will be held at 1 p.m. SatMemorial Day ·services at the
urday at Trinity Church. Burial will
Publllhecl eveey aDsmolm, Monday
Burlingham
Cemetery will be held
u....,h Friday, Ill Court Sl Pomftoy,
be in Beech Grove Cemetery.
Ohio by lhe Ohio Volley J&gt;.dilllhh'l
at 1:30" p.m. Monday. This will be
ComponyiMIIIII- Inc., Pao....,,
the I03rd observance.
Ohio fll?89, Ph. 9112-21156. Sooond elo.
The Rev. David Bryan will be
pool.tp~d oll'oqitloy, Ohio. .
the
speaker and there will be spe'
' Pr.a, snd lhe
Member:
Tilt -loci
·cial
music by Floyd and Coleen
Ol:lio Newtpa_per Al'lodatton, National
AdverWinc ~tatlve, Branham
Bricldes, Paula Eichinaer, Denver
Am Ele Power.................... 34 S/8
Ne"ljMip« Sole, 733 Third A'"nuo, ·
Rice, and Frank O'Brien.
Ashland Oil........................26 3/8
Ne"Yorli,I'Jss Yollr Ul017.
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
'AT&amp;T•....•.•.....•••..••::-•••••.•.•61 1/8
POSTMA8'11!:R: 8ond odd... eho- to
American
41!ion, assisted by the
Bank One......................... ,.S3 3/4
Tho Dolly Seilllael, l1l Court St.,
Modem
Woodmen
youth will conBob Evans .........................17 3/4
l"arnonoy, OHio 46768,
.
duct
the
cemetery
services.
Channing Shop.~ ............... !? SIB
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One Month......................................... l8.1115
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Subocriben ,.. deolrillcr to por tho DEni~JI'ifii!M
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er may remit Jn advanae dinct. to The
Point B811C01p.................... 14
Dolly ·Senllnel on • lllroe, otx or 12
....,u, buio. C'nodil will be ~~- canier
Rax
Restaurant. ....;............. 1/8
each wttflk.
Reliance Electric................20 1/2
No auboC!1plio111 by moll permillecl In
RobbiUMyers .............,..17 . .
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ShanDy's Inc..• ,.................. 19 314
naflab1e.
THE INCRIDIBU: IOURNIIY
Stir Bank ...........................35 3/4
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Wendy lnt'L .............:........ .I3 718
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of melting snow pack and rain was
expectedtofurtherswelltheriver• .
The high temperature for the
nation Thursday was lOY degrees at
Coolidge, Ariz.
Highs today were forecast to be
in the 70s and 80s across much of
the nation, with a band of 50s and ,
60s stretching from ihe northern
Great Lakes into the Northeast 8lld
in the Pacific Nonhwest The mercury was expected to climb into
90s in the Southwest, and even into
the 100s in parts of Arizona.

Units of th~ Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to three calls for assistance overnight Units responding
were:
Thursday - 2:30 p.m. Pomeroy
to Bashan Road for Luvenia Hayman who was transported to Vererans Memorial Hospital; 6:03 p.m.
Middleport to Overbrook Nursing
Center for Virginia Thoren who
was transported to VMH. ·
. Friday- 12:58 a.m. Syracuse
squad and Olive Township Volunteer Fire Department to the intersection of State Route 248 and
Number Nine Road for a motor
vehicle accident. Dwayne Barber,
Hank Rood and David Barber were
transported to St. Joseph's Hospital.
.

Federal Judge approves
landfill law settle.ment · Meigs announcements

w-. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . ... . .. . ..

Lakes to the Northeast coast over
the weekend.
Afternoon showers were forecast across the central and southern
Plains.
·
The Northwest braced for showers and thundersiorms, but the
weather was expected to clear by
Sunday.
A flood warning was posted
Thursday for the Upper Yellowstone River l\1 Livingston, Mont.
The river was running high because

EMS responds
.to three calls

.

What Andy Hardy still means to us

Berry•s World

IMansfield Ino I·
• lcolumbus!74"

thunderstorms forec:ast next few days ·

By Tbe Associated Press
Scattered showers and thundersronns are expected fro~ the northwest to the southeast1Dna$hl. .
The ~bane~ of ram wall con~n ue, mamly tn southern Ohao,
through SabJ!day. .
.
Lows torught Will _be m the 50s,
and highs Saturday will be from the
~r 60s across the north to near
80 in the far sou~.
.Tbc record high temperature for
thas. date at the. Columbus weather
station was 94 m 1911. The record

MICH.'

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-3

j

Call 992·6249

..
'

••

�•

tSports

The Daily Sentinel

Brumfield's clutch single helps Reds post 5-4 _win over Braves
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds headed out of
town amid celebration. The Atlanta
Braves packed up with a shruJ!.
Guess which one is gettins
ready to play with first place in
sight?
It's not the Reds, despite aU the
smiles after their wild 5-4 victory
Thursday night Jacob Brumfield's
two-out, bases-loaded single in the
bottom of the ninth didn't do much,
for their standins in the NL West
- still in fifth place, 8 l/2 games

•

behind San Francisco.
So why the happy faces? A
downtrodden team finally had
something to feel good about after
a week of firing and fii'Cstorm.
" We're all going to still think
about that a lot," said Reggie
Sanders, whose two-out, two-run
single in ihe eighth made the come·
back possible. " This is a very big
win. It's a motivator, too."
,
All they've been motivated to
do lately is complain - about
Tony Perez's firing as manager on
Monday, about seneral manager

Jim 'Bowden's handling of the situ. ation the rest of the week.
Two wins in their three games
under manager Davey Johnson at
least have them talking and think·
ing about baseball again.
The Braves didn't want to think
too hard about the &lt;wertunity that
slipped away Thursday. They went
into the eighth inning ahead 3· 1
with a chance to move to three
games behind San Francisco head·
ing into their weekend series with
the Giants.
Instead, they head home having

to be content with a 3-3 road trip
and a four-game gap. For the most
· pan. they wem. .
" It's disappointins1,but. it's not
the end of the world, wd Mark
~e~ke, another s~ o~ the late
mmngs Thursday. We ve had a
, .500 road trip. Most teams shoot
for that We'D take 3-3 and not get
our heads down."
They would have preferred the
3·1 they took into the eighth behind
John Smoltz, who once again failed
to break out of his rut Smoltz bas
given up ::t least four runs in each

The only National League com·
ment Thursday was a one-sentence
release: " Mrs. Schott has. been
contacted regarding the terms of
hersuspension." · .
It's the second time Schon has
com~ un~er scrutiny by ~aseball
officials smce the suspens1on went
into effect. On openmg day, she
had a taped messsge to fl!ls played
on t~e scoreboard ~t R1verf~ont
Stadium, another action that raised
questions about her compliance. ·
After the scoreboard message
came to the notice of the executive
council, the Reds assured there
would be no more such messages
fro~J! Schott. That was the end of
that 18Slle.
The latest brush with her restrictions indoctrinated Johnson to life
as the IIIIW Reds manager.

Schott, who's allowed to sit in a
box seat behind the Reds' dugout,
stood up as the team came off the
field following the top of the fourth
inning of a 4·0 victory over
Atlanta. She waved a p1ece of
paper at a batboy, who wa8 standmg in the dugout
· She tossed the paper to the batboy, who caught 1t and took it to
Johnson. The manager read it, folded it up and put it in his back pock·
eL
Schott had no comment when
asked about it. But Johnson con·
firmed she'd sent along a note,
although he wasn't quite sure what
to make of it at fii'SL
•'It was kind of weird •• John·
son said Thursday. "Th~ batboy
started to give me the note.·I ~d I
wasn't taking any, and he srud 1t

With GretzJcy•s last goal,

Kings edge Leafs 5-4 in overtime
By BETH HARRIS
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) With the flick of his stick, Wayne
Gretzky answered his critics and
· put the Los Angeles Kings within a
game of their first Stanley Cup
final.
Gretzky's power-play goall:4~
·into overtime gave Los Angeles a
5-4 victOry over the Toronto Maple
, Leafs on Thursday night and forced '
'" a seventh game in the Campbell
:: Conference final.
· The pass from Luc Robitaille
~ crossed the goal opening and hit
; the stick or Toronto's Bob Rouse
•. be(ore reachinJ Gretz!ty, w~ beat
• rookie sensation Fehx Potvm on
• the stick side.
•

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- • Baseball • - ,
NATIONAL LEAGUE

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...............26 20

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S..Fmtcilco ........31 17
Atlanta ..................27 21
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1nhuroday'osoores
ClllaNIIATI 5, Atlon" 4
H - 1. CokndoO

•PittabuJlt 13, Fl&lt;rida I
Chic.ao s, s.. Franc:iaco "

'•
•
•

Today'• lames
Monuul (H.Uia 1-1) at Chica1o

•

(Cutillo 1-2). 3:20p.m .

•"

!A&lt;Iuinol-2). 7:35p.m.

•

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Pd.
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•
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Houatoa (Swia&amp;ell 5·4) It Florida

· Lo. Ar~tela {Aatacio 2·3)

-

at Pitu•
(f.mlio 2-4), 7:35 p.m.
CINCINNAn (Smiley 1-6) at New

Vod&lt; (Goodott 5-4). 7:&lt;40 p.tll,

San Fnncioco (Btttltc 7-Q) • Atl.u
(Av..y 4-2), 7l40 p.m.
San Dieao (Bonu 7-3) at St. Louis
(Oobamo 2-2),1:35 p.m.
Plliladolj&gt;ltia (Ri...,. 2-2) ot Colorado

•

.

'''

•
,
•
••

•

'••

''
•

•

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''An old coach told me when to. The wiMer will meet the Mooyou're the center of attention trea1 Canadiens in the fmal.
you're going to get checked a lot so
Gretzky broke Gordie Howe's
make sure when you do score it's a NHL career goal record, giving
big goal at a big time," Gretzky him 870 in regular-season and
said.
playoff games.
An;Ything less mighl have cost
Gre~y ~ad just one. goal and
the Kings their best chance in 26 four pomts m the first f1ve games
years of playing for a cham pi· of the series. Those num~ creatonship;
.
, ed talk of .a slump commg on .the
"Nowit'sbest-of-oneandhome · heels of SIX goals and 13 pomts
ice means nothing," Los Angeles against Vancouver in the Smythe
coach Barry Melrose said. "We Division final.
believe in ourselves. Nothing's , "I said, Um ~ot super·h~man .
come easy for us this year, so it I m not somg to get four pomts a
wasn't surprisinJ. that it didn' t night. lt doesn't happen," Gretzky
~ome easy tonight • '
said.
, ,
The Kings face another must·
T.hc:re, was no do.ubtmg
win game Saturday night in Toron- Rob1taille s slump. He had JUSt one
pc)int in the series and l3 points in
17 playoff games before getting a
goal and three&gt; assists in Game 6. .
"It's just a good feeling," he
said. "The last few games .Barry
T..., (Pnlli 1-0) o&amp; a - (a.m..
has given me a lot of.confidence,
5-4), 7:35 p.m.
.
he has played me a lot."
CLEVELAND (M. Youna 0·3) ot
Mio
o (l!.;duon 2-6),1:05 p.m.
The Kings began overtime with
Eo.. Cit~
· ( - 5·3) ot Milw,..
a man advantage after Toronto' s
koo (l!ldnod 5- 1:05 p.m.
Ton:t~~.to ( mnaea 6-2) at Oakland
Glenn Anderson was penalized for
(Witlol-2), 9 : 1~ p.m.
boarding Rob Blake with l3 sec·
B•' ·
(Valmzuela 1-4) at Ctlifgr.
onds left in regulation .
all ~.:::-2-3),10:35 p.m.
t (lolloGn 3-1) It S..ttlo (Pl&lt;lll·
"It was totally my fault for
Uta G&lt;l), 10:35 p.m.
putting myself and mr, teammates
Satlirday's II:IIIIHS
m that predicament, • Anderson
a.ica1o (Alvarez S-0) at Now York
said about the call by referee Kerry
( A - :1,5), 1:30 p.m.
Fraser.
"If I had it to do all over
Toua (Bwu CH) o &amp; - Oletwin
4-4), 3:05p.m.
again,
I
definitely wouldn't have
"''oroato (Stewart 1· 1) at Oakltnd
gone in the comer.''
·
(Woldt+l),4:0S p.m.
CLEVELAND (Xnmor H) 11 Min·
The
Kings
almost
didn't
make
it
....., (BoW 3·2),1:05 pm.
to the extra session. They blew the
· Kama City (Oardnoi 3-2) 01 Mll..,u.
be (lloddi&lt;aer 3-3). 8:05 p.m.
lead
after two periods ror the sec·
Doonoit (Loila 3-1) at s..w. OJanond
strai,ht
game. Ailderson's'goat
5-J), 10:05 pm.
lloltittt&lt;n (Sutclllfe S-2) 01 Collf...U.
in overtime Tuesday night gave
(Pioloy 4-4),10:05 p.m.
Toronto a 3·2 victory in a game
that Los Angeles I(ld 2-0.
Sunday's pmes
TeuaM B011m, 1:05 p.m.
·
"We wanted to attack, go at
QDcqoatNcw Yolk, 1:30p.m.
them,
finish our checks and be very
Cl.EVEI..AND 1t Minneaa, 2:05 p.m.
Kaooa City ot MiiWilllo.ea, 2:05p.m.
aggressive," ·Melrose said.
TCIIGIM atOikland, . :05 P:.m.
Gretzky had the fourth powerBallinae ll Califomil, •:as p.m.
play goal of the game for the
Detroit at Selale,. 1:05 p.m.
Kings, equaling their entire output
- • NHL playoffs • in the first five games.
''Our penalty-killing was atroThunday's sc:on
cious and our discipline was pretty
J.oo ......... S, T0100to 4 (UJ1; 1e0eo
lied 3-3
.
· bad,' • Leafs coach Pat Bums said.
"This club seems to not undersumd
Saturday's sc:on
if you can do a lot of things to get it
U. AnaeJ.a at 'l:oron&amp;o, 8 p.m.
over with, you do it."
Toronto's Wendel Clark com- • Transactions • pleted'a hat trick with 1:21 remainBuebaU
mg to send the game into overtime.
A-IM·•
Marty McSorley, Darryl Sydor
BALTIMOR.E ORIOLES :· Acdv•tcd
Mike Dovereau, ou.lfielcler, and Hlrold
and
Robitaille each scored three
BainM, . . . .llld twla-, tram lhe lS-day
consecutive
power-play goals in
diloblod lilt. s... Mdt Loonord, outfield·
er, to Rochester of the IntemJtional
lhe second period when the Kings
Leap. Amounccd Glenn Davil, fmt
led 4-2.
balem~~t,ltoo ._..son oplionol 15·20-

CH""1 2-S), 9:05 p.m,

Saturday's 1ames

Monueal (Mtrtiacz: 2-!ii} at Chic:aao
(Marpt 3-6),1:05 .2·...
San Fnneilco (Brummeu 0.0) n Atlanta (Smdh 2-3). 1:IOpm.
CINCINNATI (PUp 3· 4) II New

Yod&lt; (Sobodu... 3-5),1 :ol0p.m.

Pltiloddphi• (Mlllltllllond 5-4) 11 Coloado (Blair 1·1), 3:05,...
Hol.lltOn (Xile 2-1 n Florida (Ann-

"""'14-4),6:30!'·'"'

l.oo Aa1.U0 (llMutUME 3-3) otPiOO•
(Otto Z.2). 7:05p.m.
S:tn .Dicao (Grel Htrri1 4-6) 11 St.
lAW (Oli..-1· 1).1:35 p.m.

-

Sunday'• ca-s

HalaRon It Florida, 1:35 p.m.
Loo ~ • PluoburJit, I :3S p.m.
S.,. FnDciJco 11 Adanw,l :~ p.m.

CNrn!NATI otNow Yodt, I:..Op.m,
San~ It~

JAuil, 2:15p.m.

JIIM uli.pm~~~t Wilh Rodlr~~tet.

TEXAS RANGERS : Actiwatcd Jeff
H~ end 'Billllipken, infi.dden, from
the U -_d9' _dinbled lilt, Optioned Jon
Shlvt. inticklw, to Oklahoma aw of lhc
American Asaociation and Bcnji. Gil,
ahortltop, toTuluofthe Tc.ul.elp.

Mott....J ot Chiooao, 2:20p.m.

. N•t'-na~Lea..a

Pbi11ck:lpbla 11Cdonldo. 3:05 p.m.

--

CHICAGO CUBS: Siancd Brent
WoOdall pitcher; Dwon Xniahton, out~ and Arthooy Kin1 md Arid Mar-

tin. idfieldct, tomilux'-lellp QOIItracU.

COLORADO ROCKIE$; ............

AMERICAN LEAGUE

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N-Yad&lt; ... - ...-...25
BD11Ca, ... _............. 7&lt;4
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CIJlVELANIL.... 19

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Ooltlond ................. 11 :M
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frelapt.
.

Basketball

PHILADELPIDA (AP) - Fred
Carter, who directed the Philadelphia 76ers to a 7·19 record as an
interim coach after felllacing Doug
Moe on March 17, s1gned a, twoyear contract .
Basketball

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Golden State coach Don Nelson
was named to coach the U.S. team
in next year's world chlmtp_lonships
in Toronto. The team will likely
feature an ali·NBA roster.

the lead.

It was a night for first-time fait·
ures. Jeff Reardon, 6 for 6 in savCf,
came on1D pitch the ninth and 81\!C
the lead up with two oJif. Lclnte
doubled horne the tying run. fon;.
ing Greg~~ {l-0) f1? f':lDle dp
and get Naon to end the mnmg.
The next big failure was by lhe
Braves. Greg MI:Mich&amp;el (1·3) g!it
the first two outs in the nirith, then
wallted Bobby Kelly, gave up Bip
Roberts' fourth single of the game,
and intentionally walked Barry
Ladrin to bring up Brumf~eld.
~
The move made sense- Brumfield had just two RBis in 35
major-league at-bau. But Brumfield pulled McMichael's second
pitch., off the wall in.Jeft for the
biBICSl hit of his limited career. "
· "I've .been looking forward tb
that situation,'' he Sllid. "'fl!at Wl$
my first opwnunity to come up
with a game on the Iin'e like lhllt.
There•s a lot of presSure with tlie
game on the line. You've- got 16
make the risht play. You can't
make any mistakes." ''
'
.,:

Cincinnati declares Damon ~:
'Our Man Flint' after signing ·,:

Na-·-· .......

Dotta---·
De----·

Toaflllt'••-

Yod&lt;

away~ bags.

· ,·

Oh10 State athletics director Jim
Jones said 'former Buckeyes assi'$-

tant ·coach Pau1 Brazeau sa'(e
money to Flint's,high school roac~.
Jim Leon, to illY for a meal. J9Qes
also said Brlzeau gave·rom' llytoo
training bass to Flint and his leaQ)·
miiiCS.
•

Date
Oppoaent
June 3 .....................McArthur-6pm
June 5 ........... :...W~Uston (2)-l p.m.
June 6 .........Pickenngton {2)-1 p.m.
June 8.............at Portsmouth·7 p.m.
June lO ................. .at 1\thens-6 p.m.
June 12 .............Glousttr (2)·1 p.m.
June I 3....... .at Lancaster (2)·1 p.m.
June l6 ................. :.... Athens-6 p.m.
June 17 ..................WeUston-6 p.m.
June 19 ..................................OPEN
June 20 ..................................0PBN
June 23 .............at Gallipolis-6 p.m.
June 26 ..................................OPBN
June 27 .........at Wellston {2)·1 p.m.
June 30 .................Gallipolis-6 p.m.
July 1 .:...............at WeUston-6 p.m.
July 3.....................................0PEN
July 4.....................................0PEN
July 7 ............at Glouster (2)·5 p.m.
July lO...................................OPEN

.Pag~

Once apin, a time the year Plains church was
:when many of us take time out those statues once more enhance
from busy schedules to visit the the in&amp;erior of Our Lady of Loretto.
,cemetery. We place a few flov.:ers · · The project has been one of
t.hQse "liUle by liUle" endeavors
I ' on the p-aves and for 10me of us
.it's
a
time
of
reflection,
a
time
Mrs.
who is·"thrilled to
.I when we wish we had done more death"Nesselroad
with the resulu. A plaque
I or perhaps, feel regret for some of now hanss inside the church indi·
I the thinp we did dO. A bit of a sad catins that Mrs. Nesselroad was
responsible for the restorstion in
I 'time, l'CIIIy.
memory of her husband.
. Of course, all is not perfect at
, Maybe a bit of an inspiratio~
story IS what we need and llere IS the Long Bottom church. The name
still needs to be placed on the front
one.
of
the structure. The heating unit
In 1970, the Our Lady of Loret·
no
longer works, there is no lightto Catholic Church at·the comer of
Route 124 and Succc:ss Road :was ing, and there is no money. Howev'c:Josed and abandoned. A new er, Mrs. Nesselroad accepts these
l:atbolic church was built at Tup- problems with a "the Lord will pro.
pers Plains to serve the Lons Bot- vide" attitude.
tom area people who lltended the
And what happens now? Well,
closed church. '
for the first time in 23 years the
~ Our Lady of Loretto Church is . doors of the church will be opened
105 years old and it sat there imOC· to the public Monday, Memorial
cupied for many years. However, Day, when the Rev. Father Walter
Mrs. Margaret Nesselroad wbo Hemz, pastor of the Sacred Heart
resides ne'ar Lons Bottom loved the Church in Pomeroy, will conduct
church and vowed one day: "I can mass at 11 ;30 a.m. All interested
fa it and I will." Years of vacancy residents are cordially invited to
had left their mart. The ceiling had atlend.
coUapsed, the plastered walls were
..
_bad, the pews had been 100 long
Oops! Sorry about that.
. JICBiectcd.
.
In a repon on the scholarships
, · After the death of her husband, · awarded by the Women's Auxiliary
:Martin Nesselroad in 1990, Mrs. of Veterans Memorial ·Hospital, I
..Nesselroad undertook tbe job of mentioned that Kim Michael, one
restoring the church. A retired of the recipients, was valedictorian
'worker from the post offices at of this spnng's graduation class at
Long Bottom and Reedsville after Eutcrn High School. Not so. Kim
~27 years' service, Mrs. NeSselroed is the salutatorian of this year's
' hired people to do the work needed class. Valedictorian is Jeremy
to restore the church. She and her Buckley.
' husband had been married in the
'Jiale iiame church on Oct 11, 1969
I hope Pomeroy High School
;and be, too, loved the picturesque Alumm members returning home
church.
this weekend for · the annual
' Little by little accomplishments reunion are pleased with the large
materialized. The foundation was overhead banners used on either
;.reinforced, the ceiling and waDs end of the Pomeroy business sec·
-were repaired and paimcd. The tion to welcome them ·home. It
floors were redone, pews and the should make them feel good that
''floor were refinished. Sometimes their local former sclloolmates at
:'Mrs. Nes~elroad helped a worker; P.H.S. do put forth a srC8l deal or
:~ she didn'L But she did effort to make the homccomins
ofmance the entire project herself. pleasant If it wemn't for the excelTo liven up the inlaior, Mn. Nes· lent work of a lot of home folks
·'lelroad purchased a red aisle run- these alUinni reunions across the
lJer IS one of the fmal ~or her county just wouldn't happen. I
,project. Incidentally, relipous stat· salute these people for hariging in .
· ~!JCS moved from the Lons Bottom there and I !Jape that come Satur·
church to the Tuppers Plains day nigbt 'tlieu sense of accom"i:hurch were returned to their origi- plishment will belp them to keep.
l\al location when the Tuppers smiling.

for

4

fLibrary Lines

a

~

The closing program will fea·
•;ture Marko .the Magic Clown on
;,Aug. S. A~ this year, the South:'easiem Oiiio Train Club will have a
:.'week-lonB display of model trains

Auto., air cond., rar window clefoggel, end morel

FRIDAY

MILLFIELD • Oldies but good·
ies dance 8-11 p.m. at Russell
Building. Music ~y Oft' Season.

by Bob Hoeflich

r41asket crsft; wildlife progn111; and
:'a WMPO Radio live broadcast.

1989 CHEVY CAVALIER

Community Calendar

Beat of the Bend...

:
By RUTH POWERS
::: KIDS! Comc.''hang around" at
~ libraJy this summer. The Sum:.Oer Reading Program sign-up
~ JIIIC l.
.
" Summer Fun activities planned
:'include yeast bread lllllkinB: karate
~monstration; ceramic paintins:
:rocket launch· ~ on wood· ·
J8Ce car; tit clYe T·lhin: pappie in

Meigs American
Legion schedule

.

at the library July 26-Aug. l.
On Heritage W. . .d, June 1213, the library !"iil offer .free space
r~e to display theu ans and
c
, library al has • displa
The
so
.our
y
cases and offer the use of the;te
cases fpr anyone who .wants ro dis·
play • special collectiOn or hobby
they. would .like. to share ytith the
public. JIISt II)QUII'C It the )llnry or
ca11992·5813.
.
The h'bran: has ~y ~ to
offer the pubfic besides ~· Pick
~P a Jln?c~"on your next trip and
check 11 out.

UJiabates Update series
[iset fo.r Pomeroy in June
· .,.. Thele is still time to register for family member or l'riend at no extra
~~ Diabltea UJKiate ICI'ies beins
&gt;&lt;Offered by the American Diabercs
::Association. The Polueroy series is
scheduled for three consecutive
Tuesdays, June 8, 15 and 22 from
6:30-8:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Public Libnry, 200 B. Second St
' The reslstration fee is $30,
which ·includes books and materi·
als. Bach regiltrant may brins a

July ll ...................................OPEN'

July 15 ..............at McArthur-6 p.m.

.
Ou scholarships

Head coach -Chris Tenaglia
(Games are subject to be sched·
uled in the open dates at a later
date)
.

•

En• Of The Smen
Cltii·Out Sale
ILL FLITS.......................15
ILL HIIIIIG IISIITS...15
ILL4• POTS.-.............. 50'

ILL TREES.............20" OFF
Open Mon•.s.t. 8-6

-

CLOSED SUNDAY

!

HUIIARDS GUINIIOUSI
lyriC!" • tt2-S771

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

•
For current rate information, call
1-.us IONO •1.a 411·2663

"'
'

'·
'"

..
"•

,,.,

Na..... - .......
Hockey

aBCAOO BLACJtliAWitS; Sl....
Jflf Sbaaw. c.awr, and Bobby Hov.u,

./

·' '

decided to stay at home and ~­
sent his university," said Cincinnati coach Bob Huggins, wli'o
CCl8dJed the Bearcats t0 the NCAA
tournament's FiQal Four a year aka
.and just missed it this year wiih :,a
loss to eventual NCAA champion
North Carolina. . .,
~
The.Cincinnati Post and Tile
Cincinnati Enquirer bad report$~
that Flint would go to ancinnati.
Flint would take a basketball
~cholarship being vacated I)y
Bearcats freshman Damck For4,
who h.as decided to leave t~e
Cincinnati program , tbe Post
reported.
' ,. .
Louisville, Nevada-Las Vega$,
Arkansas and Kentqcky also h~
pursued Flint
The NCAA cited Oliio Stare ln
Flint's case for 17 alleged violitions including I?aying for meals
and transportation, and giviJ\'g

N..... BnciW ......... - .

d p l w l q . t o - - -·

1

..
•

A puMk MMu ollhh rww.,.,.,

Friday, May 28, 1993

;..

;

l

.•

The Daily Sentinel

,.

did, ';

Footbal

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS ; SIJ•od

-

'
when I fall behind I' have to coi!Jl
in with the fasthaU," StB!Jton ~·
" If YOU can hit it, do it. And lie

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS :

Bllltiaow 4 , - Y01U (101M.)

a.iciF ("&lt;&lt;dii' 2-4)
CJ-r"-ll. 7:30p.tllo

c.lanolo ~~ ...r..w...............
day dlHblod lilt.
MONiliEAL EXPOS : Cloimod Cliff
Bru.tley, pitcher, orr waiven from the
Philadell_hia Philliea. Deaiantted
Jonadttn lfwlt..llitdla', for lllipmi1L

NEW '\'OIX. JETS : Sianed Dlle

ltanoN City 6, Cdoqo 4
•[
• at o.tland. ppd •• nin

Cllil. . . 5, , _ 0

tho-to!OoleMottolty,llllotioldor.
Silftod KIWI Ward, outtid.det, and ••·
oiloed him to Colondo Spmp ol tho p,.
eilic Cout' Lc.apo. PllcOd fun Olande.r,

Sports briefs

ofhisllstfourSWIS.
. .It appeared thia was the breaktJuoup a-ne IS be held the Reds
to .six hiu over ~even innings. A
pill' of solo homers by Ron Gant
off Jose Rijo helped state him to

But a game that had been quick
~clean sot wild and ugly in the,
e1ghth. Center ~elder 01i1 Nix~n
got 1 . bad break on Kevm
Mitcbell's line drive, lctiinB it barcly sail over his slove for an RBI
double dial made it 3-2 and set up
the comeblct.
" That's the way it is, an inch
here, an inch there," Smoltz said.
" I ~I IIJ!IYbe this was ~in~ to
be iL RiBht DOW at least, things JUSl
was from Marge. I said I'd better are ootclicking forme."
They have been .for closer Mike
take that one.
Slanton.
He was 17 for 17 in saves
" At the same time he save me
the note, Reggie Sanders walked by opportunities, until opportunity
with a grin on his face. I guess came aroimd Thursday. He came
everyone 1cnew what was going on on in the eighth with the bases
but me. I read it and it wasn't really loaded and struck out Dan Wilson
from Marge, as far as I could tell. It for the second out. But be fell
said, 'Good luck. We need a win.' behind Sanders 3-0, forcing him to
And it was signed by what looked throw hillable fastballs Sanders hit
like a dog' s footprint"
· the second one to 1:e111er for a twoThat's how Schott signs things, run single and 4-3lead.
"I don't have a change-up, so
a reference to team mascot
Schottzie 02.
She was back in her seat Thurs·
day for a 5-4 victory over the
Braves, but made no attempt to
communicate with Johnson or the
•
players.
By TERRY KINNEY
While Schott got a reprimand,
CINCINNATI
(AP)- Damon
. general manager Jim Bowden sot
Flint,
the
prized
baskelbaB
recruit
rebuffed Thursday by his former
who
got
away
from
Ohio
State,
employer.
·
said
today
he
will
PlaY
for
the
UniThe Pittsburgh Pirates took
versity
of
Cincinnati
this
faiL
exception to Bowden saying that be
Flmt signed a l~uer of intent
learned to fire employees by phone
during
a news conference in the
while with the Pirates organization.
offiCe
of
his at~. Cincinnati
Bowden fued lllliJia8er Tony Perez
lawyer
Louis
Rubenstein.
by phone Monday, touching off a
·
"I'm
thrilled
to announce dial I
flrestorm of criticism.
, He bas defended the firing, but will be playing my collcgc basketsaid he regretted not doing it in ball at the University of Cincinperson. Bowden said he learned to nati," Flint said, reading from a
(ire people by phone during his prepared statement "The decision
years in the Pirates organization was not hard to mate."
The 6-foot-S guard-forward
and his one year in New Ym. He
starred
for Cincinnati's Woodward
· joined the Reds organization in
High
School,
where be expects to
1990, after the Yankees fired him
graduate
soon.
He averaged 29
by phone.
points
and
11
rdJdunds
as a senior.
Pirates spokesman Jim
Flint
bad
signed
With
Ohio State
Lachimia called The Associated
in
November,
but
the
NCAA
ruled
Press on· Thursday to take issue
dial
the
school
had
to
release
him
with Bowden's statement.
from
his
obliption
~use
of
17
''What he said is simply not
alleged,
recrui't£
violations.
Ohio
true," Lachimia said. "The Pittsburgh Pirates organization does not State made ito ial Monday, sayfire people over the telef.hone. ' ing it had made a mistake.
Flint declined to !JDSwer quesEven if we did, that wouldn t mean
it was a universally accepted prac- tions tQ!Say. He sai~ .he had to
tice. Suppose we got the people return immediately to classes at
that we wanted to fire rogether and Woodwud.
--we are
. shot them - would he have han·
died the Perez situation that way?"
Bowden said Thursday that be
stood by his statement that some
Pirates employees were fired by
telephone while he was them from
1984-88.
"That's how it was done when I
was there,.. he said.

White warns Schott about passing notes
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Davey
Johnson won't be getting any more
pawprint·signed messages in the
dugout.
National League president Bill
White warned Cincinnati Reds
owner Marge Schott to follow the
terms of her one-year suspension
Thursday, a day after ~e violated
the agreement by tossmg her new
manager a note in the dugout.
B&amp;Seball sources, speaking on
condition of anonymity, said Schott
,was told not to do it again. No fur.
ther action is planned against
Schott, .who is ~rving .a one-year
SUSPCJISIOn for I!Smg racial ~·
The SU$PCnSJon agreement says
Schott can't communicate with
me~bers .or the team, except in a
social setung.

By The Bend.

Friday, May 28,1993
Page-4

.,

Ohio University bas announced
the names of freshman class schol·
arship recipients for lhe 1993-94
scbool year. Approximately 600
ltUdenu out of a projected class of
3,200 Were selected by the Univer·
sity Scholarship Committee to
receive the academic scholarships.
Kevin Andrew Lambert of
Pomeroy hu been awarded lhe
Grice and CUnton Biddle Memori·
II Sc~and the C. Plul..tl
· Beth K. S
Schollnbip. Limbert, • 1993 aradnate of Meif•
HJah School, plans to major 1n
electrical anaim
Michael Dcnn 1 Evan• of
R.Cinc. wu awarded tbe Creed
J._ Sc:holanbiD. BVIIII is a 1993
11'1"•• of Sotllhen HJab School
with Ill undecided lllljor.
Todd Leroy Grace hal been
awarded tbe Mlnuseb C1t1er
SdJo!I'INp, I merit-bued ICIJolu·
....., Pl""'d iii honor of die univer·
llitj'• hNie11. 011ce. • 1993 pilate of So1tbern Hi&amp;b Scliool,
pia 10 _ . iD CGii1Jii*i Jdv e ·
Bille MlclleU Rulleii·Miaicb

charge. A number of acholarships
for ihe series are available upon

request.

Session I is an overview of diabetes, coverins treatment, glucose
moni!Ofinj, complications and gen. eral hyg1ene. Session II covers
meal plannins, exchan1es and
menus. Session Ul includes smart
shopping, label reldiJJa, eatinJ out
and community-.
111e series is i:onducted by Judy
Hennessey, R.N., CDE. and Robin
Rohte, R.D. For registration or
additional information, contact the
American Diabetes Associatioo at
1-110().232-6366.

LONG BOTIOM • Faith Full
Gospel Olurch, ~ Bottom, will
have preaching and smaing, Friday
at 7 p.m. with David Dailey and the
Dailey Family as. we11 as other
local sinsers. Pastor Steve Reed
invites the public. Fellowship wiD
follow.
SATlJRI)AY

MIDDLEPORT • The Meigs
Hlsh School Class of ' 78 will hold
a 1S-year reunion at the Middleport
Arts Council from 2-4 p.m. Satur·
day. The alumni dance will be held
Saturday evening at the high school
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.

Saturday at 7 p.m., and Sunday at
10 a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill of
Foster, W. Va. will be the speaker
and the public is inviled to attend .
SUNDAY .

.and chicken noodle diMers, other

baked goods, sandwiches, pies and
bread available. Carry-out or ear-in.

Proceeds. go to Bedford Volunteer
Fire Department Commiuee.

RACINE • The Racine VolunRUTLAND • Rutland Garden
teer Fire Department will hold a Club will meet Monday at 7:30
chicken barbeque Sunday with p.m. at the home of Kathy Dalton
servinjf to begin at II a.m. Home- in Harrisonville.
made ICC cream will be available
from the I adies Auxiliary.
CHESTER · The Chester Vol·
unteer Fire Department will hold a
BASHAN • The 62nd annual chicken barbecue Memorial Day
Spencer family reunion will be (Monday) beginning at II a.m.
Sunday at noon at the home of There will also be barbecue spare
Harry Spencer, Bashan. All family ribs and homemade ice cream. A
and
.-e invited.
parade will begin at I p.m. at
Chester Elementary and end at
RACINE • Racine Volunteer Chester Cemetery.
Filre Department chicken barbecue
will be held at the firehoUse Sun.
TUESDAY
day. Serving will begin at 11 a.m
Homemade ice cream will be avaialble from the Ladies Auxiliary.

mends

RACINE • The Southern High
School class or 1988 will have a
!Cunion at the Syracuse Park by the
tennis couru Saturday from 1 to 3
MONDAY
p.m. 1bose 1ttending are to take a
POMEROY • Memorial Day
covered dish. For more information parade, Pomeroy, sponsored by
class members may can 949-2046 American Legion Drew Webster
·or 992·3038.
Post 39, Monday, 9 a.m. All veter·
ans invited.
SYRACUSE- Tom Lowery,
manager of London Pool in Syra·
BURLINGHAM • Decoration
cuse, has announced the pool will Day services, Monday, 1:30 p.m.
open Saturday. There will be free Burlingham Cemetery, with Feeney
swimming all day. Pool hours are Bennet Post, Middleport, assisting
noon to 7p.m.
·
the Modem Woodmen youth. Rev.
David Bryan, speaker. Music by
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. · Floyd and Colleen Brickles, Paula
The Liberty Mountaineers will per· Eichinger, Denver Rice and Frank
form Saturday at the Senior Citi- O'Brien. This is the l03rd annual
zens Center in Point Pleasant, celebration.
W.Va.
BURLINGHAM • Fundraiser
BASHAN • Special services dinner, Memorial Day, ll a.m. to
will be bel~ at the Red Brush 6:30 p.m., Burlingham Modern
Church of Christ, Bashan Road, Woodman Hall, $4. Barbecue ribs

BURLINGHAM - The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment Committee will meet Tuesday
·at 7:30.p.m. at the Burlingham
Modem Woodmen Hall.

'92 lUlCK CENTURY
SALE

Randall Johnston, son of Mr.
and Mrs .. Cecil Johnston of near
Langsville, told the Middl~port­
Pomeroy Rotarians Monday night
that his boyhood dream pf an
appointment to the Air Force
Academy at Colorado Springs,
•

A~il.iary

buys
steam table .
for hospital
A three-well sieam tal!le was
purchased for the nutrition depart·
ment when the Women's Auxiliary
of Vetcrans Memorial Hospital met
in the hospital conrerence room.
The group voted to purchase the
steam table for $64 7 to provide
help for the nutri!ion depar1ment in
keeping food for p~tients hot
During the ~eetin-, preside_d
over by Mrs. L1bby FJSher, prest·
dent, it was also decided to pilrchase two auractive trash cans to
be used at the front of the hospital
in an aacmet to reduce liaer.
Mrs. Mildred Fry, chaiJperson
of the au1iliary •s scholarship committee, reported that three $1,000
scholmhipl are being aw.ded this
spring. The Meigs Medical Society
made a contribution of $1,000
towards the au:oiliary's scholarship
program, Veterans Memorial pro·
vided SSOO and the auxiliary provided $1 SOO to make the three
$1,000 awards J.IOSSible. Winners
of the scholarships are Carol Clef·
land of Pomeroy, employed in 'the
reception area of Veteiahs Memorial; Kim Michael, an Eastern High
School graduate this spring, and
Paula Haynea of Middleport.
Mrs. Fisher appointed a com·
mittee to,Plan the annual "day on
the town outing which auxiliary
members do annually. A pig-in-a·
poke sale was held. A dessert
course was served by Mrs. Marabel
Frecker, Mrs. Rhonda Dailey, RN,
dilector of nursing, and Mrs. Grace
Warner, a contributing hostess, at
the close Of the meeting.

Colo., bas come true.
He said tblt since the fifth grade
he has dreamed of this and that on
June 30, he will head for the
Academy to become one or the
l ,200-member class of 1997.
Johnston said that last year be
staned filling out applications. He
said dial he was graded by a point
system on academics, extracurricu·
Jar activities, sports, community
service and physical fitness. He
said his appointment came from
U.S. Rep. Clarence Miller. John·
ston explained that only about IS
percent of the applicants are
accepted and that for each one
named as a principal candidate
them are nine alternates.
The Meigs grsduare said that Lt.
Col. Chris Gi6son, liaison officer
for the Academy, presented him
with the appointment and his fii'St
set of combat boots at last week's
Meigs awards assembly.
He explained that at the Academy, a cadet has the option of 28
different majors, mosdy in science
and engineering, in small classes of
15 to 20. He talked about the rou·
tine of life there, three hours of
classes in the morning, lunch, an
afternoon of physical activities, and
three hours of study. Johnson said
tbe education is worth about
$230,000.
'
Cadets receive a basic wage; he
said, and his first purchase is a
computer which he owns after four
Yearll· After graduation lbere is a
requirement o'f military service.
Johnston was introduced by Hal

Kneen.

COUNTRY BLEND_s12.59 PER CARTON '
LEVI GARREn••••••••• • 11.89 PER cauoN
I 0 PACK ROLL

SKOAL AND COPENHAGEN_SJ7.20:

.

Gene Riggs presided at tne
meetin!l held at Heath United
Methodist Church. He announced
Ladies Night to be held June 14
and the AdUlt Basic Education blnquet scheduled for June ·29.
Women of the church served a din·
ncr.

PROPANE

WINSTONS and MARLBORO'S

KINGS 513.95 cmoN • IOO's SJ4.29 alTON
AFTER '4.00 COUPONS .

Your Barllecue Grfl~
RV, and Motor Fuel
'

J&amp;T GAS SERVICE
C:yll•tltn &amp; S.nlce

949·2072
Loctte• 2 ....... of
'HSII24

COKE PRODUCTS
12 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

$2.89 '
1986 NISSIN 4x4 PICIUP

AMIFM/Redlo, ....dad .......... Long bid.

.

,,

s11 995

REDMAN &amp; REDMAN GOLDEN BLEND
S13.80 EACH PER CARTON

Fnat R. Mllptlf Sdlollnldp.. .
.U.=l993 pnM' of
AJallldlr
ScbaOl, plana to

•

POMEROY • F.O.E. Ladies
Auxiliary No. 2171 will meet Tues~y ·at 7 p.m. for a potluck. Meetmg at 7:30p.m.

AWFM/Stereo, air, cru.... daley wipers, po- window, polockl, ,_r defogger.

oflleeclnilll ...... , . . . . die

•

· RACINE • Vacation Bible
School will be held at the Racine
United Methodist Church Tuesday
through Friday from 9-11 li.m.
daily. All children are welcome.

Appointee to Academy
meets with Rotarians ·

::f.

Jllljaril

POMEROY · Regular meCtin4,
Drew Webster Post No. 39, Amen·
can Legion, Tuesday . Dinner, 7
p.m. Meeting, 8 p.m. Nomination
of officers.

.,

�P g1

Ohio

8 The Dally Sentinel

1993

Friday,

Pubic Nollce
lnolude receipt of a v.lllecl
comp181nt lfaklllftoent publie lnterMI
public
111MIIng •ay be IMicl. Aa to
any aollon, lncludng rec1ljlt
of verlftad 00111plaln.., any
peraon may ob... n nollce of
further ecUone, lll'ld adellUonlll lnfor111allon. Un'"'•
otharwl'" provldad In
Notlc.. of particular
aoth~na, all oorn•unlcaU..
to: Hurlng
o. lloll1041,
0218 ot•t
Conauh
ORC Chap.
and OAC
Chapa. 3741J.ot7 and 374U
tor raqu~,_..,
Flnallaauance of NoUca of
Reglatratlon
Epllng"a Aahland
S. R. 124
Raadavllla, Oh.
ElfecUva 0... 05121113
Appllcab No(a)
06530111111111 G001

..r..., •

PUBUC NOTICE
••alnMa TrMPianlnggrent Contnlirt with • ...tl buaf. prcpodla recelwd.
Fred Hoftman
8oaled ptopoallla wllbe "-thoOhloo.-tof _ _ ...,.IDriMcerund
·
Mayor
raoaluad .., 1M Vll!_ago or · Nall!rll ~ .... lor .... .rnalnten....- of ...... -

Middleport, 111a1aa County,
Ohio In 1M Olloa of the
Mayor, Vllage ofllldolapar!.
237 RaM s-, lllddl p rt,
Ohio ..,tll ...na 11',.111113, for
1M IDIIowlng aarvloe:
. The Vlllllla oflllddl part
haanallveofaNallonalllmal

fM•rdl•• and planting of Ill
INMinthaVIIIagooflllclclfo.

The 1am1 "8!NNt Bu-•"

port.

==ln:

To 1 - 1M halllth and

1118ln..niii'I08 of the -

planllnga, the Wlege olllldo
claportWIIIen..,lntoe ThrM
Y- lllllntaoiOIIOO IIMoa

Bl' LLFTI'\ B&lt;) \RD
IULUnl BOARD DEADliNE
4:30 P. M. DIY IEFORE
PUILICinOI

:*************************

* This Memorial Day. we join oar : ·

: good friends and nelghbon In :
: honoring all the known ·and :
: unknown heroes. past and :
: present. who sacrlftced their *
: lives to help make this country
*
· great.
*

May 28, 29, 30, 31 ... 9·6

!

available.

LYME DISEASE
INTERNATIONAL MEETING
JUNE 1, 7 P.M.
Pleasant Valley Hospftel
Administralive Room

...

Public Invited

:* Let as all pray for world peace :*
:
:

and harmony In the year to
. ~m~

The au-alul bidder
muat be an Equal Employo
mant Opportunity Employ•
Whloh prohibita dlacrlnll~n ..__of raoa, onad,
. ociOr, national orlilln, ....
ago, handloap polltioalafllll.
atlon or bllll::l.:. The VIllage
of lllcldlaport Ia an . EQual
Employment Opportunity
EIRployw.
AcldiUonal lntonnatlon H
edrd
nl - may be ob...ned by
oontactlng 1M VIHagaollloa,
JMn Tru...U, at ft2.e782.
TheVIUage,...,.. ... rlght
to reject any or .u prcpoula
and to waive any lnlormaltU.. or lrregularllhla In tho

Betty Moore's, At. 7 bypass.

•

Public Notk:e

oontNCtor.

' FLEA MARKET &amp;
GARAGE SALE
Rent

Vllt.go of Middleport
lliy 21 ,D,Juna 4

.. uaad· hllnllf "iMana 0
bualneea oonoern that hu,
lnoludo.... Ita aiHiat.., a
""'
1:,'Pioy- not
All propoula ahould 0111•
una plana lor 1M long term 3
yeer cera oftha deelgnelad,auoh•--'oare.
lnapntlonparloda,prevendUva.....u,.., 010. AUoqulp111 ant 11111 _.tin 1 10 local, ..... endhdnaiNfloty
regulalona. PrOper Ina"""
once w11 be provlvldad by

PUBUC NOnCE
The followlnl! w•• r•
celvadlpraparad Dy 1M Ohio
Environmental ProtKUon
Aganoy (OEPA) lot - k .
EffKIIn dataa of final
aohne and laau- dataa
of propoaad 11011- lll'ld of
draft actlona era atatad.
Final actlona may be ·
appulad, In wrllng, within
30 daya of 1M data of IIIIa.
notice, to The EnvironmentallloJ"I of AwlowCo,Rmlu• bu300,
231 c. Town It,
m a,
OH., 0215. NoU•wlthof~!
ahallbelllad
....
d rector within .3 daya.
Propoaed actlona will
become lnal un.... • wrl&amp;tan adludlcallon hNrlng
roquMt Ia aubmlttad within
SO daya of tho laauence
date; . or the director
ealwlthdr- 1ha
11
A
•• on. ny peraon lllay
aubmlt OOIIIman.. and/or 'a
IIIMdngNglll'dinglll'lyclralt
aoUon within :10 deya of the
deta lndloatacl. "Action", u ,
uud above do.. not

=

:
:

***************************
.
. .. *
'92 SUNBIRD
Auto., air, AMIFMIStarao, powar door loeb.

We Salute Our .Nation's Heroes

SPECIAL .*8,995
DEBBIE ALKIRE

., ' -:....·.
-. ,,. .,
.. ... ' . .

. '

:

....

'

-~

Alkire named to
·academic team .

f .

~

--

•

"

~~ -

...'•- ....

'

Debbie Alkire, a·senior at.Meigs
High School, has been selected as a
member of the Ohio Slate Al:ademic Team sponsored by Bank One
and Ohio Association of. Secondary
School AdministraiOrS.
Team members have been recogni:red for their oui818Jlding academic perform.illee as weU as JeadetShi{' .in ex~cul8r activities
and Citizenship.
• .
Ohio AU Slate Academic Team
· Members are seniors who must be
in the 1q1 five percent of !heir class
and demonstrate extracurricular
'leadership through their involvemeat in at least two clubs or teams•
Citizenship qualities are lhose pro~ pride, spiril and Rsponsible
leadenhip in !heir bigb schools.
Alldte was chosen for the award
by 1 committee m1de up of the
school's principal and two teachers.
"Bank One couldn't be more
pkaS'Id 111 be a part of lhe Aaldem·
lC Team Program; said Pomeroy
Branch Manqer Steven Dunfee.
"We arc proud to be associated
with an award thai recognizes SIU·
dents for their pafor.lUIIICC in the

~ '

/

'

- ·· -

;·,.· . ~~-"' :.'

'

•

'

~

I

'!., "· \ (

' '' .

.

THIS PAGE SPONSORED BY THESE PINE BUSINESSES. • •
t92·2U6
Fs Farmers Bank 6674161
The Shoe Place/Locker 219 "--'
&amp;Savings Company
.
•

POIIIIOY, 01.

Insurance

Middleport, Ohio · · · · · b•rBank1fn,..lifi.M

Ohio 9,, 2·5627

992·2342

Crow's Family Restaura.nt
992·5432

. Po111eroy, Ohio

Blue Streak Cab Co.·
992·7075

Po~eroy,

Ohio

Ohio

Fruth Pharmacy
Middleport, Ohio

Sugar Run Mills
992·6611

Middleport, Ohio

992·5141

Pomeroy, Ohio

Alkire's grade point avenge is
3.952 and she plans 10 attend the ·
Univenily of Rio Grande. Her
activities and honors include the
National Honor Society and the
lllllthing and concert bands.

Pomeroy,
Ohio
..

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

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

Baum True.Value

2CM Condor 8t.

Chester, Ohio

Ewing Funeral Ho•e
992·2121

·.

992·6669

Middleport, O.h

Mlddle,ort, Ohio

......,~-~='
...
01 CorHrof

UNDER IIIW
IWIIIEMEIJ
All your carry•out

Middleitort, o•lo

.......

'

•

..

,,

•J

•

The FoUowlng
IDsdtadons Mil Be Oosed On

••

•

·~

::':'ton, :

1

~f ~=~tro;th~~"Gh

Townahlp Nl"' (ll, IGIIp
Sll!t- j111 In tlia Ohlill
Catt~~~anv• llurohM&amp;
Alao • 1111811 lniOt of larfd
allu I S In lhallbova n-.d
Townahlp and Count),
-lllnlna ....... of ......
ciiHtiiiM •lola 11o
being .. 1M norlllll'ld ., ...
aaat on•h•ll ol tho
aoutheaat quarter ,.,
SacUon No. Two (2) ell
Townahlp Nino (I) ol~ange
8~ (11)111'1d In 1M Ohfll
Cotapany'a Pu...._
•
Tho ....... dn lhd Nil
•tala being ... aoutheaat .
quartar of the aouthq - of Section 1Wo (21:
and tho nor1h1aat..,..... Of
the aouth-t qullrlar of
. .
Bactlon Two (21.
S.ld AMI Eatata having
paroal number IHCXIM. . .
Dead Reference: Voiiiii\J
183, Page 105 and VoiWM
21•, Page 231, llalll!l
County D. .d Reoorde.
Volu111e 83, Page sr• and
Volume 138, Page 111,
Vlnto~
County D..ll
riiCOI'da.
•'
No warrenU• era .......;
a to any IIana, mortgagea
or enaumbrencaa on .. ..
llbove Aalll e......
The Board of Co!llf
Mlaalonan 111ay ralacl anr
bide and r•dvertlaa thlf ·
property unUiauch prap111f
1e aold or IMud.
Tarma of payment.,. Itt
lot'-: 10 percent oil
r.urohaae price paid
mmadlalely by aaah 01
certlllad ban'k oheolr;
Remaining balance dua
within thirty (30) daya cO.
aale.
,
,

w.._

11a11111 County 8oJud

of Convnlalllonaril
(5)7, 14, 21, 21,-.

1--..-------,.
Public NOIIce
~------....,"

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE 1e hereby . , _
that on 8aturclay,lllay 21111,
, ..., at10:00 - · • .......,
wllbe hillel .. llf ....

....
=:".: ~~~":."':£

=

oollallral:
01 L$()()ACH

••

20 FOOT TRAVEL

lRAILEA 8Nfll212
~
The F•mera Bank ani
. ., . . Company, Po•,..
roy, Ohio, ,...,.. .,. rlglit.
10 bid at IIIIa....; and 10 -

:n:=-to~=.:.!; .
F - Bank lll'ld ~v
Company ,...,.. .. 1M
t
~~~~~~"!:::. any or all
· .
F....._, lha above.

ool,.... will be aolclln ""
condition It le In with no
axpra..ed or IMpllejl
............ glvwl.
.. .
For more lnformatloft
Jeff ~. at ~•
(l)lt,l7.21,11o

;';";o'

HOWARD
UCAYADNG "

Backhoe

and small

BULLDOZER, IIACICHOE
lll'ld TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.

Dozer Work

SEPnc 8YS IElilll;
HOllE SITES and

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

TRAILER IllES, '
LAIIDCLEAAM, '

DRIVEWAYIINII:rAUED

UMEITONE·TAUCIIING
FIIU ESTIIIATES

992·3838

(614) 992·7878

8181'11211

YOUNG'S.

SERVIQ
36970 laU R• Road
PlllltlniY, Ohio

SIZED LIMESTONE

992_3470
OWNEI·.
.ltH Yllcbrsl.

dial~~===~=-;:~!;==:==~~~

l=======t
OFFICE . 9f2~2i86

Real Esta1e General

IF~~;l.

Monday, May 31, 1983 In
Observanee of

MEMORIAl., DAY
2115 Nortlt liD and Ava.
. ~~QIL......

!link One.Atbens. NA
ManborPDIC

IIINEASVIW

-one AllY home with 2 badrooma, 1'h

_,. loc:allon.

All lor tn.OOO

CHEBIEA- Appnlr.7U3- with I'/, alory holna, 3
b1 ~~~om~a. palllura m lllable, ponda, lhecla, INuna,lllo, .
1111111 hoUal,
ctiDicln hoUaa, Ml &amp; TPC ·'•
llalc81111,
en olla~

-.ooo.

and Wlltar 8V8ilable. Nice lor a mablo ~. elo. 11,000

-··-will

lA 1M
Zllanw
A - -.y
IIIII
a two aloJY, bcl4h oldar. lnal
dM houMa.
ahad, a1oNp fluid.
1ng. 11M gu ""' I'OI'altlea P.•m'lmb 1 n 111
1115,000.

IIIDOLEPORT - A la9 let with loll of llowart and
A 2 aloJY Ilona home with 2 blldmoma, clnlng
1'00111, 11/1 illltla, and I *'I b I I lmanl. Haa nice .......
In lllahln, and ldlchln Ia oquiDIIad. Loll of lnllllatcll,
.tront and'* pclftlh.
· ·.Cutultd onlY 111.000

PH. (614) Mt-2210

,'

SA 7 - 2 aloJY home with 8 badnloma, bdl, cenballlr,.
--~ 3+1· - · nice la9 tront fiOidt. A11K1NG
138,000.
.

•100.

uca•, OHIO 4sn1

woodbumer, t

applllui08a. 118,1100.

mrago raom.
ONLY
RUTLAND- IIW• ltrMI- Av-.llct wllh oily.._..

POIIIROY IUPPIRS PLIIIS
992-2136 667·3161

fi,._,
•.ooo
.

PO' ICIY - Ona loor lnme home with 2 bedlooma.
N.G.F.A. Ful bau-~ with utlty andiJIIIIIIIO lncMIH,

POIEAOY- LINCOLN HEIGHTS - Naad a lalga yard
. or garden arM, then lhla Ia the plaoa lor ycu. Alae hu •
ona lllcry homO with RI08I of baumant ftnlahad: TUio ID 3
badraorna, loll of large doaata. large utlty ..... and

&amp;. Savings Company

- 10 raom homo, 31:10 aq. ft. oiiWig

.,...., 5 badraomo, 2'/t IMIIha.
oariJIIIIII", patio w.tumltura.

belha. FAIWG .,mace, TPC watar, ailualad on approx.
1.18 · Alae lndudad Ia • ornall oldar homO at tho

. Farmers Bank
.
v ·+w

992-2259

II~PORT

MOBILE HOllE ONLY- a 12X85 Bonana mobile heme
with 2 badrooma, underpinning, now breaker box .,d the
lot can ba 111t1tad lor $50 • month.
ONLY S$,100

POMEROY
992·2133
RUrLIID
742·2888

Whatever it takeS:

Hunt111 &amp; Fishing
Uc...... .
u,........ k•

Mlddle,ort, o•a,

...

1110raorleu.
Real Estate General

992·6661

JEFF'S CARRY·OUT

-.....,=="==,..---

- tPeok
by Racca
Creak
land on
and
on and
Mayor a.
on .... nn.. of preaent
VIllage ofllllddlaport anoloaura, being ninety
llay 21, 28, June 4

MIDDLEPORT

,

the allow dMorlbed tract
aU property lying North of
Rutherford Road (Townehlp
·
Public Notice
Road No. 1), which haa
heretofore been devlaad
PUBLIC NOnCI!
(... daad raoardad In
The Ualga County Bollnl Volu111a 21•, Page 187,
of COIRIIII .. Ionera Ia llelga County Deed
aooepUng wrlttiln, ••lad Reoorda;)
blda tor Ill• puroh- of
Rwlll'lce Deed: Volume
oertaln rNI proparty •• tU, Page 510, II alga
± crlbad below.
,
County Dead Raoarda.
Wr._, Malad bide muat . Tho real aatatli above
be reoalvad In 1M llelga deealbad In aublect to .U
County Co111111laalonera I•••••· ea••••nta end
Ollloe, llalga County rlgh.. olwayofreoord.
Courlhou-. Po111•oy, Ohio
(Nolaon property) Parcel
•1711, no later than No. 1: Tho following
Tueaclay, June 1, 1te3. at d. .orlbad real oatate,
4 :30 p.m. No blda WIH be altuat.d In the T_,..hlp of
accopt.d, f.oatdatad later . Columbia, In 1M County of
than Juna , 11183. Blda wUI 11o1ga and s..to of Ohio, tobe opened on WadnMday, wit ·
June 2, Ul8S at 10:00 Llll.,
Tho aauthweat corner ol
•ct lila oiHcc• of tha llalga
aouthwMt quarter ol
ounty
omm 1•• 1on era.
Nu111ber Thirty·Two
The wrlttan •••lad blda
No. Nine
ahauld lnoluda the blddar'a
name, addr.. a. telephone
nulllber,a-rlphnolllii
IliON or
property tha peraon wlahea
the fo owing
to bid on, th:J:clo• tha
aatata,
=~~:;.;.g.::::::::
at the
-..tho bid le belngiii.Uad.
of S.Chn
(31) of
Tha raol . property wiU be
Nine (9),
aold to the high eat
(15) of
reapo.•natwlbleoprbopld~.. to be lhe Ohio "'"•-mpeny'a
~~:
Purohua; tMnoa ...t Fortv
(Parry property) a~ln· (40) roda, thona• aoutli
nlng at a point 1;;--111 ,
(.O)rode; thane• weat
cantarllne of Rutherford Forty
Forty (40) roda: then.ce
Road (T·1) where It north Forty (.01 roda 10 the
place ol beginning,
~'i!.u:n ~; :rJ:'J~::: containing
Tan (10) aorea
Townah~•nd~:acnd~-ln more or leu.
.._
..
Excepting fl'om the Forty
• ma.,. ring Ina along the
aore tract abova
(40)
centerline of Rutherford
Road to the centarllna ol deaorlbed, on• (1) rod,
R110coon Cr..., foll~::!e Blx1Mn(16) !Miwldaon tho
the oenterllne of aald C
E
1y ••t aida, being • rlltht of
way now owned by 1.oula
In a South and aatar
and wiJe.
::!o:f!:.~!' ~w.: CoUriU
Said Rul Eata.. having
llendal Jordan property;
P•olll number 05-00517.
thence In a Northaa&amp;!N1y
Parcal
No. 2: Tha
direction along aalcl Joi'dan
followl:&amp;,
daacrlbed
rNI
property 10 the E•tertr Una
::.~~.::=
of Seotlon H, thlll'lca North
to tho pi- of beglnnlna.
of VlniDn end In tho 810.. of
Being the ln..,tlon ol 1M
Ohio,
ID-wlt: tha
Grantor• to convey all lila
Baing
Ohio
property ownad by thalli In Company'• Purch••, and
laotian 3&amp; South of baing the aouth hall of the
Rutharford Road being 0.1 aoutheaat quarter of
- . more or leaa.
S.Cion No. Tw.o (2) of ••ld
Formerly deacrlbed aa Townahlp No. Nine (1),
lol'-:
rang• Sixteen (16),
Slluat.d In the County of exoapUng Forty (40) aorM
llelga, In the Ita.. of Ohio, off tho weal end of aald
and In tho Townahlp of prellllaM aold by E. P. Davia
CoJumbla end bounded and to Laanclar Cottrill.
Alao 1M north hall of aa1c1
deeorlbed • follow8:
Being In Town 1, Ran~ aouth...t quarter of aeld.
11 of the Ohio Company • Section No. Two (2),
Purohaae and 111ora exoepting whal ~- P. Davia
perUoularly deacrlbad u
eolcl and dndod Ia l.aander
follow8:
Cottrill and John Mark
Baalnnlng al a point one containing aevanty (70\
hundiacl.,d thlrty-llva r. . -·....,.or
Alao Thirty
north ol the South Nat
corner of S.C. 36; thence In tho north
• aouthweat.m couraa 10 •
1111Ukad atone on 1M public
highway; thence along Nkl
road to the - I line Of 8..,
IIIII lot at tha ooverad
bridge; thance north to the
oantarllne of aald Beclon;
thence woet lo the
northwMt corn• of 1M - t
hall of lha aouthweat
quarter of eald a..Uon;
lh"!c• aouth to the aouth
Una of Secllon; t h - to the -ulna of quarter;
thanoe north • 111 roda;
thence - 1 to tho center ol
Raccoon Creak; thence
down tho Nma to 1M oullat
.of tho flrat ravlna clng In
front of 1M ...t; thanoa In •
northeuterly ooura• to •
alona; thanca - 1 to - t
S.IO«&lt;
llna of...Uon; tMnce north
to tho place of boalnnlng
containing one hundiad end
forty • .,.. Mora or leaa.
ExcapUng lrOIII Nld laal
CARPENTER SERVICE
above daacrlbed tract
NINETY ACRES, 111ora or
Adcltlona
Ia.. , tho following tract
Work
altuatad In a- 3C, Town 1,
and Plumbing
Range 15 being all tho land
owned by J. A. Autharford '
and Malle v. Ru"'arlcr4
- • or Recaoon Creak 111d
boundad on the north by
Iande fonnarly owned br J.
H. SUiphln larid; on "'" - t
,..
by c. A. Eubank and 0aorae
P_,o,, Ohio
your band. ..

Fred Helfman

WELCOME ARII;A

ALUMNI

and hold out

Pubic Nollce

1 . -:~--~--=--......_, exoepllng lr9

992-6.,15

Rlftll

'Middleport, Ohio

Middleport Department
M2·3141

Middleport, llalga County,
Ohlo In tho 0111oe of 1ha
Mayor, VIllage oflllcldleport.
OhlounUI4:00 P.II.,Juno11 ,
11183, lor tha IDIIowlng pro!ect:
The VIII~ of Middleport
haai'ODellMaaNatlonaiSmaU
Bualn-TrMPianUnggrant
lrollltha Ohio llapllrllllent of
Natural Raaourc.n lor 1M
purpoaM ol oonlnlollng with
amaff bualnan.. to purohauandplant-onland
owned or oontrollad by tho.
YUle... of lllcldl:!rL The
.,..
t.rm "Sm.U Bu - · a.a
uaad herein - • a buatnua o o - that haa, Inaludlng Ita aiHU-, a num·
bar of employeea not ••·
oeadlng 100.
'
The propooecl T- Plantlng prolaot oonalela of tho
purdl... and planllng of 42
Callery Pear (Pyrua callery
·ana) of1 314 to 21nchM celtper (ANSI Zt0.1·1110 ~
can Standard lor Nureary
Stock) at the Proloct ella at
tho aou1h antrence to the
Vllt.go of Middleport along
HDI&gt;aon Drive for anapproxl... a.. dl ..._of1000Ft. The
planting• are to ba • 1111ual
In al~ •• podlble, wreppad,
a laked,
wired,
and
m....-.Eldadng-attha
proleot alia will be remowd
Dythe VIllage, and alta,.....
reUon of ihe planting alta
(.-vel of rock and gravel,
fllllll'ld top aoll) wll alao be
prcvldild Dy 1M VIllage. The
bid propoaala ahould oulllna
any guarantee lor tho plant· lnga and follow up cera to
enaure 1M Ulo and health of
1M planUnge.
Alao Included In the proJectlaiM purch...and plantlng ol13 Pin Ollie (Quarcue
Paluatrla)lll'ld 10 WhltoFtowatlng Dcgwaod (Cornua !lorIda) In deelgnatarf location•
of 1M Dave DIIM Depot Parll
and the boat launch a,.. In
u., VIU.ge. The Pin O.k
ahauld boola 111atohlng aiD
(2112to31nchMcellpatjtotM
exlatlng Pin OHa now at the
· al18. The White Dogwood are
to be of 1 114 to z lnoMa
..Upar. The planllngaare 10
be -ptiad, atelled, wlrad,
and 111ulchad. The bid propoaal ahould ouUina any
gullllln... for the pllll'lllnga
and follow up cere
thollfllanclhMitholthoplantlnga.
The 8UCCIMful bidder
muat be an Equal Employo
mat Opportunity
whloh prohibita d
tlon .,_u•• of ,..., creed,
OOior, na~l orlaln, ....
ago, hand. .p, polltioalalllllatlon or bllllola. The VIllage
of Middleport · Ia an Equal
Employment Opportunity
Emplo•,....
Th
muatbe188L

.:t,loyer

I 'I'll
IUVILY

Mill Street Books
992·6657

Public nob
Sealed prapoallla wll be
,....,.d by 'the Yllega of

to--

Sat. 8:00.12:00

Fisher Funeral Ho111e

Pomeroy, o•lo 992·5 I 41

Middleport Trophies &amp; Tees

The Prescr

992·2635

l'olnanly, OH.

Mon.-Fri. 9:011-6:00

Gravely Tractor Ingels Furniture &amp;.

CITHI
GRAVELY
SALES •nd SEmCE
.SVITIM 992·2975
Po111eroy,

Public Notice

classaoo.n.

Adolph's Dairy Valley

Po111eroy, Ohio. 985·3301

Po111eroy, Ohio 992·6128

Valley Lumber and Supply Co.

Swisher•Lohse Phar.,.acy

Middleport, Ohio 992·2506

Ohio 992·6687

992·2210 Ml•lter FDIC .992·6333

992·2115

Quality Print Shop
Brogan Warner Insurance

Home National Bank
992·6491

992·2104

Middleport, Ohio 992·3345

K &amp; C Jewelry
992·3785

Hospital

nPPIII PIIIIIS
. . .hrfDIC

(5) 21, Ito

Place your
Cla,.ified today

CALL TODAYFORINFORIIA11DN
ON UITIIG OR BUVINCI A MOM

•o4sm
PH. (614) MN3U
I.

••
•

•

1

. ••

�'\

I'

f"' 1 :; ! "!!e Dai!X Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

The

Friday, May 28,1983

THE BOOK
BARN

•

••
Apo-,toiiC

•

a......

,.., Clollrdo
. tiCiorlol
212 w...... Sl.

r-:ooryllinea

a326B.
... ~r~
Cillo...
.
,....,_,.

33226 on · w'• Heme Rd.

~ SciiOOI - lh.m.
Wonhip - IO..m., 6 p.m.
Wedoelday Servi..,.- 7 p.m. •

.
Rec:1«: Fr. Bill Lylo
Holy Buch.uiat ood SIIDdoy Scboalllo.m.

Holiness

l'l*r.Rov.
Sunday ocbool· 9:4S .....
Wonbip ·II a.m. and 7 p.m.

"

YOOIIbMDM:BinPnzior
Slm4oy SciiOOI - 9:30 ......
Wonbip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
WedDelday Scl&gt;icet , 7 p.m.

W~y~ · 7pn.

Fret

Will ~~...,.f:";"
AJI!SIIoa,
•
Po-.MaltMouow
SINnlay ~ . 7:30p.m.
" .
Sunday SciiOOI • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • llo.n.,
Wednolday !lervioc-7:30p.m.

Wonbip • 10:4S a.m.
Pwca OJ Ji'lnt lapdlt

..

-

BulMaiaSI.

~

Sunday SciiOOI- 9-.30 a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m.

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

41112 Pomeroy Pite
Pula': B. LamarQ'Bry•
Sunday SciiOOI - 9:30 .....
Wonbip - 10:45 o.m., 7:00p.m.
WodlleodaySm+ioa-7:00p.m.

"

za.. Clllll'dl ., Cllrtot

Wonbip - 10:30o.m.

....._.Plaia
a.... .,
r-:BiDWIDCI

SWiday Sellool- 9 o.m.
Wonbip - 9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.

Sunday Scboql- 9:15 .....
Wonhip -10:15 o.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.- 5:30p.m.
~ Lord'• ~ ht ~ of every mondl.
Wedilesday Service-7:00p.m.

- a .... ofciortot

"

••

..

- . . , . . Bopllll

Po-.SiewiPuller
Youdl P . - Ridt Kuria
Sunday SciiOOI - 9-.30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:40 o.m., 7:00p.m.

Suodoy SciiOOI- 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 ...,,
W.......y.ScMc:eo -7 p.m.

·-a....

- SuodoyBo!i

Lutheran
SL Jollo Lllllooru Clluldl

Pine Oovve
Putor: G«qe Weirick
Wanhip ·9:30a.m.
Sundoy Sdtoal · 10:30 o.m.

ofCIIrtot
~-•Undcn+ood
9:30a.m.

Wonbip- 111'.30o.m., 7p.m.

Sltt.- R• Bopllol
PooiOr: Bin l...iale
Sunday SciiOOI · 10......
Wonbip. llo.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdnea4oy SeMcet· 7:30p.m,

Mt.U-$:

..._:JGCN.

Sunday SciiOOI-9:4 o.m.
B........ ·6:30p.m.
Wednolday Savioa · 6:30p.m.

--·-

...
..

Paltor : Rev. liul SINier
Sunday Scboal·lll'.30 o.m.
Wonbip • 9-.30 a.m.
Thundoy ScMaeo· 7:30p.m.

• :· ;

Old 1o111e1 Fno Wll BaplbiCII:ztliOI SL RL 7, Mi&lt;ldlqm
• "
Sundoy SciiOOI-10 Lift,

"

llWIIIIna-7:30p.a
'111undoy~ -7:30

''

H I - Bapdlt CIISLRL 143juataft"RL 7
Pula': Rov. J-R. Aaee, Sr.
- y Scboal- 10 a.m.
Wonbip · IILI:"·• 6p.m.
WecMeldioy ScMGCI -7 p.m.

VldorJ Bapdoll.......dul
m fl. 211o1 s.. MiddlepOrt
. JIIDCIIl. K Wonbip • IO..m., 7 p.m.
Wedneldoy ScMooo • 7 p.m.
FIIIIIBapdoiO.zido
Roilraod SL, Maoul

'

Sunda1 SciiOOi • I0 IJD.
Wonbip • II o..m.. 6 pn.
Weckleldity ScMaeo • 7 p.m.

.'

FareiiRuaBapt..
Paaor : Ari.u1 Hun

Sundoy SciiOOI- 10 o.m.
Wonbip - llun.

••

ML Meriall Bapllle
Fcunh .!: Moin SL, Midcllepon

..._,Rev. GilbertCnli .. l•.

SL RL 124.!: Co. R4. 5
Putar: Dmk Slump
SWiday Scbool- 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 o.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneodoy Saviw - 7:30p.m.

'

B. Haolwu
SWiday Sc:Loal - 9 o.m.
o.m., p.m.
w
s.m.o.
. 7 p.m.

W_:I"t;!O 7

a..-.

SundoyllWIIiq·6:30p.m.
ScMae • 6:30p.m.

Mtlp Coaporolln Parllll
NorlheuiC!ul...
Alfred

........... Cllurcllfl Cllrtot
l'bilip Slum

Pastor. Sharon Hausman
Sundoy School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -11 o.m., 6:30p.m.

Slllldoy SciiOOI: 9:30 om.
. Wonbip ScMoe: 10:30 o.m.
.
!lilll8 Sludy, WGCIDeldoy, 6:30p.m.

.

Wonhip • 10:4~ Lm.
Thundly s.,.;.., - 7:30p.m.

''
'

.
•'
•

'

A•tlqoiiJ~

Pulor: lCaioeob Smilh
Suodoy SciiOOI- 9:30 .....

··-Fret-

SolemSL Bapdol
r-: Rov. Poul Toylor ·
Sundoy SciiOOI - 10 ......
n-ma - 7p.m.
WecNodly ScMGCI • 7 p.m.

Cathol tc
•
-Hearl Ca- Cloooldl
' 161 Mahny Aw.,l'omen&gt;y, 992-5898
:
..._, leY. Woller B. lleioz
SoL 0... 4:45-HS,.m.; Mu1- 5:30p.m.
s.n. c- -f:45-9:U a.m..
Sun. Mau • 9:30a.m.
Doil&lt;y Mw • 8:30 o.m.

R - ClloldlffiCIIrtot lo
B~' " " UaiOII
Po-= 'lbelon Durhom
Suodoy SciiOOI· 9:30 o.m.
lf-ma·7p.m.
Wecll:

4

ey SeMca - 7 p.m.

Hartford Clluldl ffiCII,.. 1o
Cllrlollu Uolall

271 llertlo

. s.c.M .
Ml.,i,art,

....

-

Rcv.J.... S..l&lt;lfield '

-

SWiday Scboal· 9:4~ o.m.
n-ma-7p.m.
Wednoodoy S.MCCI -7 p.m.

~ Sc:hoal ·

10 o.m.
Wonbip • II •·~ ·· 7 p.m.
WcdneadOy Scmceo- 7 pm.

Apple ond Scaood Stl.
Paaoor, Rev. Dovicl R•..U
Sunday Scbool and Wonhio&gt;- 9:30 o.m.

\

•

lr ·
'

Ph.ll2·2101
Pomeroy

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALIS I SIIYICI
172 !Wth .........
·-~ ...... Ollie

Follll Gaopet Churtlo

Lanslloaom
Sunday School • 9:30 l.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneodly 7:30p.m.

FuU Gaopel L l p -

335)15 Hilood Rood. PameiO)'
Pu-. Roy Hunter
Sundoy SciiOOI- 10 o.m .
B...un, 7:30p.m.
Tueodoy .!: Thundoy - 7:30p.m.

MlddltpGrt Cburcllffl tile N ......e

'"""" o 101ory A. Cundiff
SWiday Scbool · 9:30 un.
Wanhip • 10:30 o.m., 6:30p.m.
WedneJdoy Scl&gt;i1101 • 7 p.m.

Soulh ....,.. New T-ent
SDverRidae

Po..O.: Duone SydonRric:ker
Sundoy School • 9 '·""
Wonbip • 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wodnoadoy Scl&gt;iae- 7 p.m.

Roodrv?!le Fel-p
CIIIIFCbffiiiMN_,....

Wonhip • lla.m.

ror

Fallll F - p Cruaodt
Cllrlol
P1110r: leY. FnOiklia Dicit""
~:

Friday, 7 p.m.

Pl..,_

Cohlarr
CllatNI
lloniac&gt;oMIIe RGod
Po-= Rev. Vidor Rouob
Sunday Sc110019:30 a.m.
Wonlilp • II a.m., 7:30p.m.

W~ySuvico - 7:30pm.

Stl.....aUo W.-d aiFallll

l'u1or. Dovid Dailey
Sundoy Sc110019:30 o.m.
llv&lt;ninJ-7p.m.

and

I

Employment Serv1ces

Repairs.

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

Yard sale

1-24-1

PoiiiOr. La......,. Fonmoa
Sundoy Sellool -10 IJD.
Wedneadly Scnoioel - 7 p.m.

3 HP ·11 HP

'

Clluldlffl J - Cllrtot,
Apaolalle Jl'oldo
1/4 milo put FartMelp an New Uma Rd.
PUtor: William Vm Moler

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

w~::'~
'Frid;{-ocp.
' cun.. Tabtnode cl.ldl
a-.w.v..

742·2455

AulhoriH&lt;I: Brlgga &amp;
Stratton MTD, RYoln.

DODR
DRIVEWAY WORK

PICKUP .and DEUVERY
Hours 96- M-F 11-3 Sol.
Closed Sunday

allll UMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE

'949·iiC!4

RWONAILE RATES

I.D.C. Replfr·een•r

4!.16/lln

1185-4176
. I I" r.

I Co!ftmercl81

FREE ESTIMATES

POMEROY, OH.

Place yout,
craaoifi.ed loda y
and hold oul
your hand ...

188

•FI~EWOOD

992·2269

1

(former Mason Lanes) ·
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Slraets
MUon, WV
(304) n3-5ses

'SUMMER HOURS'
Sun.-Thur 5 -10 pm
Fri-Sat 5-11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

Sunday Scboal· 9:30 .....
Wonbip • 10:30 o.n., 7:30p.m.
Wedaeadoy SeMaeo -7:30p.m.
Edeo U•llad llndonu lo Cllrtot

614·742·2138

2 Ill milel _., ~ a.dovillll
Oil &amp;Ita a-. 124
Rov. ~MOddey
Sunday Scboal· 10 .....
Wanloip ·7:30p.m.
Wf&lt;lli 11day SCMca • 7:30 p.DL

Value!

Pt. Pleasant
· &amp; VIcinity
N.,_,vU!t, Ohio 157114

Job-Ina

Ao&gt;llllaolloll may only

-

ona to ane baela and group
.....,, Evonlng hourw anc?

-ndo.

J&amp;L INSULADON
F.... Ettlmatn
Replacement

LAND CLEARING

WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES

BASEMENTS&amp;

' HOMESITES

HAUUNG: Llmulon,,
Dirt, Gr1val •nd Colli

SEWER PROBLEMS

ThrM (3) fetrl IXperjence In
eomctloha eo&lt;~nMM"'i praterrod.

Windows
Vl!lyl Siding

Town ol Hortlonl !a ......,Ung
opp?lcal!on oncllor , . _. lor
......., youlh IUPirvfalor. Tho

Roofing
Cell u• (or

loll. .
.,.
5 ··..
"rh
willlui
t. 4·to-1·youth
,.ng

992·2772

piiY?tlor'o Job, P.O. Be1 7,
Horllord, WY 211•41. Doadllno tor:

1!11 "' ... trom 12 5o 2t

liCENSED lnd BONDED

PH. 614-992·5591
12-5-tfn

Jllllfl Keeaee, owner

tha appllelitlona Monday June 1,.

11ft.

WoiCod:

IWIMor,

..,.,..

N:::~;~ii;;~yCo.

(I .

PHARMACY
We F 171 Doclors'

Prescriptions

992-2975

"nus

IAWUNGS.COAlS

·rg
~

•.,

. RIUJS

FISHER ,
FUNERAL HOME

1.11

992-5141

- ~~--

MWII""t

v

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

·····-·
•.•.•...••

Public sale
&amp;Auction

:t:r:~

24 BOUR EMERGENCY IERVICE

915-4473
667.. 179

.

'

(row's famill RestaurCMt

"lullll'l 1Cn111 g Fflel C6ld11 "
221 W. Main St., Po1111roy

992-5432

EWING FUNERAl HOME
" Oi!fnil)' nnd .~·ro ·ic·• Alu·ay•·

Eslabllahl'd 1913

992-2121
106 .....rry A•L

DAVIDJOI'S
PLU.IING
flW/JIIIIII
;a~

· 214 E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

f\b\

\S} Veterans
Memorial Holpital
1151. .............

""''o•

,
.
.
.
....
......... ".
31904 ......

• .....,

•j

24 Hour Portable Weldin• Service .

COMPLm MACHINE SHOP SERVIa5- ·..,
IN SHOP WELDING SERVICE OR PORTABLE
ALL TPESOF WELOtNG FABRICATION AND REPI'IF

!!.!-!~~:;~·~
c-

0

0-

Gu I P!apft 0 Cylindlrl

OE~e.fiAL MACHINE WoRK &amp; WELDING
• HtN!rt - Ah '"*Uti &amp; Stl!nlnt • Scw1y WttdlnD
w.to.no . Ehlll &amp; ~ • WltdlnQ Supplies
• rlbrcauon·Abll~ to Rollllencl Mtt11t ,

• JIIQ

" ...,J.tiC4

..

•

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING

'

HOURS:

7:30am • 5:00pm
Mon · Fri
7: 30or:n - 12:00pm Sol

... Sllop hdllttts
FuUy lnauNCI

\

.1o11....,
FaaiiHIM
u stee
COMPLETE f{e Se _ .oJP11-1
1

RADIATOR ~ ;.w.-·
SERVICE

992-3768
17 COLE • POMEROY, OHIO

4/19/tl ...

...

'I

my homo, Alton

Doln-. ,,..._ .

a-.-. 112/hr., mull ?n-

- . Mary

fiiiii!IMI1U

S.ILL QUICKEL

--

Child ..,.,
~~t

Sto~t&amp;C...-n

Homelite S.Jws

Apply At:

18 Wanted to Do

'

FURN?TURE &amp; HARDWARE

~Ired.

W.hrno
Ex-

No

WANTED: part ,limo WOI1t lor
n-, ?ob f~th a X.fay ...... II
....,.._. Hnd re.unw to lox
H-21 %Pt. Pll llegllt11, 200 llaln
81, Pt. PI, WV.

N·H-II!o :

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

204 Condor St.
Pomero,, OH.

SUPPLY .

Cocktoll

Paii·Tirno,

llo?!day !m, Galllpo?IL

. IISSILL &amp; 1-E
· : COISTIUCnOI

·.

yro 01~.

Pl91' up apptlcatton at ~ntord
llunle!pot'lkfg, .,.,.. a Thu...
S.nd tD Town ol Hartford, Su.

Specllll PrieM on
Siding and Windon

Sldt Rill lid. ICo. 1)~
RITWt,OII.

.

Minimum

'"" DogiW 7n -Ill -k,
-~·uollew or phyochofoav,
ortml
10!atod l?tlcl. '

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

RIDENOUR

·

quollllcll?on"' BMIS or llao-

. PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS

•U"'

afflcL Dooullno lor optlllealioM
II Juno 11, 1113. POOling
dooerlpllon ?a · 11 lo?!owo:
COuneelor,
amilal
u.lary$17,21Q.'/U, Provlc?t lnl.....,o1
ahort.....,,
goal
dl-oa
counoo?lng to Dllondo,. on 1 ·

For•erl)t •f ....... TN• Sertlle•
INSURED
fREE

RIC EICAVAnH
BUllDOZING

•EAGLE STAI MOWERS
Check
12 &amp;I I HP
' Mowers
o£010 TRIMMERS
oiRUSHCUTnRS
Rebatts II - JlodtiS.

7oaal Ohio of
Employ.- Olf7ce.
Comp?tlo
..... dooerlpl!onl
...
ani- for rev?tw II tho OBES

TRIMMING and
TREE &amp; STUMP REMOVAL

:IOyro....,...._,
el4·8t2-1183 •
110 N. 2nd Av._
Mkldloport. Ohio .

3-4-113-1 mo.

bo ob-

talilod from ond rotumod to

Covers, Carpet,
Heed linen,

HAULING

Te:zuCc
ilyaft"CR~
-~Sondon

Won•tFindA

Vanl Sole: lotu. .y, 111~1111
Roull
lfl,
.
l.aGnrldo.llt. 141. " '

Annou nceme nt s

Convertible Tope

Mt. Ronulll Uollool . . . . .
I• Cllrtot Cll•rcll

INRALLED PRICES OPENERS INSTILLED
9x7-$275.00
Va HP-$200.00
16x7-$UO.OO. .
2 Tn~~s!Ntters.
AlSO- TRY OUR NEW
VINYl SEAL TRIM
S1.00 PER FT.

CultomSeel

USED ~AILROAD TIES

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Realo1alllle
. Rates ·
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

RAilED PANEL GARAGE DOOR

\

COMPLETE AUTO
UPIOLSDIY

BILL SLACK

Untied Brethren

4130

~W:
EIGU LANES

992·7553

•LIGHTn,....

Seventh -Day Advonttst

"Inspirations"
Flower Shop

Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seadlng.
Shrub and Tree
1~:::: l Removal

It

G•lllpolla

Getting marrle!l? Neall
11-era? Aaa.ii•OriH?
Chock out my pricH llroL

uwn Mowing,

30 HOUR

TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL .

SyraaoM Fl.. Uol~ .,...,.....
Sunday Scboal· 10 a.m.
Wonhip -11om., 4 pn. (hi A 3nl Sun.)

KEVIN'S LAWI
MAINIEUNCE
949·2391 or
1·100.137·1460

1

SHRUI
Sundoy Sellool • 9 .....
Wonhip • 10 o.m., 4 p.m. (2nd.!: 4dl Sun.)

.

614·446-0736

CHARLIE'S

Wledeaters

Middleport l'rllll:rtorta•

t~~tYIM

RODGERS E-1 RIDE

c•eslllire, OH.

WILKER ALLEY .
Parts lllll Strvlct ·
Mowers • Chain SaW$

WtlrWp· a.m.
Sunday School • 9:45 o.m.

7112

P•1

SprfJifTfnae
Speefal

6637
St. Rt. 7 . ·

5-5-93

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC

Sundly Sellool- 10 a.m.
llveoiaa-7pm
Wedneadly ~ -7 p.m.

W.Aioo?tovo

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992· ·

Sldt Hill Rd. ICo. 71
RU1'WID, ON.

Sundoy Sdlaol • 10om.
Wonl!iP -7 pm.
Thundoy SCMcO •.7 p.m.

Auto-RentGb

Quality
Stone Co.

FINANCING AVAILAIIE

FIIWKIIG AVAIWl!

· P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

11

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

(614) 992-7878

614-949·2911 or
614-593·5010

7

742-2455

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

2M South 2111

FraeEatlm81ea,
Low Coatt.
Work Guer~~n1aed

114- I:;:::-;;:=-;;::;7.";;;;-;;;:;-...-

Plumbing Installation

2 Froat Struts • Laltar
•4WIIIaal AHJ•mont
Prices Start1n1 at
· 1129.95 + Tu

Inside and Out

Alilo Tn ..- . Air, Firm:
Actuol Llol Prtoo

~3,000.

=~-w.t---·•* ::;~; ;::~~';l-=~'C:"w.!-:;t-"'= =..llg......., Oulckl.
~-

STRUT &amp; SHOCK

Roof

"""""' lll?t Dal- Doa In

'"=========::;======:::;I.._,- An.-·r

;:-'~.'r:, 4~2,

MANCO
MINI KARS

leJoldol Life Cll,....

500Jol . 2ndAve..~

Putar: K.eilh Roder
Sunday Scboal • 10 o.m.
Wonhip •. II o.m., 6 p.m,
·'lhundoy SeMcol • 7 p.m.

Q3o..f.,

Ro.cky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
aOJ 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264 1111.

POOR BOY TIRES

Fro. Foundation

Loll &amp; Found

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

~

J&amp;T HOME
IMPROYEMEITS

&amp;

wameclto Buy

t

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG
(614)
667·6628

..

Srr..- Cllurclo of lloe N1Z0nae
Putor: Rev, GloM MoMi11an
SWiday School- 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip. 10:30 I.DI., 6 p.m.
Wedneodoy S.Mcet • 7 p.in.

Flatwoodl

FREE c•rd
Lie. No. 0051-32

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE ·
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

Po-: lolm W. DauJ)oa
SWiday School- 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 o.m., 7 p.m.
WedGCaclay Scl&gt;iaeo - 7 p.m.

P1110r. Keilh Roder
Sundoy Scboal - 10 o.m.
Wanhip • 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tueadoy Scrviaea • r p.m.

J.ll : • Fultz

.

Sundoy Sellool • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
W.........yScMco - 7:30p.m.

Enterpri•

\}'

........,

Putor.: Milce ·Motaon
Sunday ocbool· 10 o.m.
Wonhip • 7 p.m.
Wedneoclay Serviae - 7 p.m.·

N - Solllonien&amp; Chun:h
Sunday Wonhip ·2:30p.m.;
Thundoy ICIViaea • 7:30p.m.

Wedneodoy Scnoicea .- 7:30p.m.

r

H..... Senicea· p.m.
w~ s.Mcea • 7 p.m.

Pomerov Pllte, Co. Rd.

Sunday School • 10 ......
Wonhip ·11 : 1~ .,m., 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Scl&gt;iae - 7 p.m.

CeotraiCIIIIIer

s,...... Clluldl tiGtd

Thia eel good for 1

Putor: .... lllodtwoad

Wonbip • 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wadneodoy Scl&gt;ice • 7 p.m.

wo.w...

A...,l1 &lt;Srna.) .
Pucor: Deron Newman
Sundoy School · 9:4S o.m.

CoiYOI'J .... Cllon:lo

Sunday School • 9:30 ......

Co. Rd. 63
SciiOOi- 9:30 IJD.
10:30 ......

Wanhip -IOo.m.
Tuelday Scl&gt;icoa ·7:30p.m.

Wanllip - 9:30 o.m, 7:30p.m.
W........_ySuvico - 7:30p.m.

r-: Rov. Robert B. Smilh, Sr.

T,;...,Cburdl

Tuppon PlaiDI St. p..J
Po110r. Shoron llouan111
Sundoy Schoal· 9 .....

Rollaod Cll.a ffiGtd
Putar: John P. CAxalmn

Clloldlffl Ged 111 PropiiiCJ
OJ. While Rd. 1111 SL RL 160
PUO«:PaH...,
SWiday Sc:hoal· 10 o.m.
Wanhip • llo.m.
Wedaeadoy S.l&gt;icea • 7 p.m.

GrmdSma

Poa10r. Rev. Seldon John11011
Warship • 9:30 o.m.
ht.!: 3nl Sundoy- 7:30p.m.
Smdoy School - I 0:30a.m.
Wedneadoy Scnoioel • 7:30p.m.

MI. M - Cll- ofGtd

Folrvlew Bible Clll..elad, W.Va. RL I
Putor: Jomea Lew
Sundoy Sdlaol· !IIJD.

6:45p.m.

Special E•rly Bird
$100P•yoH

Unltad Fallh Chuldl
Rl. 7 an Pomeroy By-Po11

Sunday Schaal- 10 o.m.
Wonhip-lla.m.
Wedneoclay S.,.;,_ • 8 p.m.

.-....

·

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

Coal'lillo RGod
Putar: Rov. PhiDit&gt; Riclonour
SIO!day Sdlaol ~ 9:30 o.m.
Wcnbip • 10&gt;.30 a.m.
WeG&gt;eadoyServiae • 7 p.m.

Sl. RL 124, Radno
p,_,
William Habodt

ML OIIYO Communi?J Churcll
Putor: Lawrence BUlb
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
!fvminJ • 7 p.m.
Wednedoy Service- 7p.m.

Hodtl_,.t Cllurtlo

Rev. Seldon .Jollauon
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10.30 a.m.
Wednelday Servicea- 7:30p.m .

Cllurch of God

ft2-7075

I

SundiY Sahool - 10 o.m.
Wonhit' • 9o.m.
Tueodoy Sonia~~ · 7 p.m.
Jlelllel Clluldl
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday Schaal - 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 o.m.
Wedneadoy
-10 o.m.

PPIOr.

w...

I

. ,.....

CoalvU?e Un!Ud Melli- Part..
Poo10r. Helm Kline
CoalviUo Cllurcll
Moin .!: Fiflh SL

L,..a-

Honfonl, W.Vo.
Po-. Rov. n..id MI;Moni.c
Sunday SciiOOI· II o.m.
Wonbip- 9:30 o.m .. 7:30p.m.
oChy s.n;.., . 7:30p.m. .

__.. . -MEIGS TIRE
~
CENTER, INC.

PIESCIIP110N SHOP

lf...U.a-7p.m.
.
WedGCaclay ScMcU • 7 p.m.

)-

. IN POMEROY

992·3577

w..,..

CLUB

Giveaway

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUN~E COMPANY

Steel Sales
No order
, too small or too large
Orders welcomed
(614) 992-7878
FAX (614) 992.. 3053

EAGLES

M.,.~Chuldl

scm...

()\\;(( 5tr(ll
83 Mill Str. .t
Mldclopolt, Ohio 41710
tl141882-11117 - tiii-OOKSI
CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

tft-22St

Rullud Blblo Mlllood..
Putor: Rov. Iv111 My.,.
. SWiday Scbool · 9:30 o.m,

,....._GIIpiiMd
Bald ICDOb, • Co. Rd. 31
PUIDr: Reo. l!aior Willford
Sundoy Sdlaol · 9:30 o.m.
Wanhip-10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wacfnejday Senoioe • 7 p.m.

Dyei.l?le c..,muniiJ Cburdl

Chrlollan Fellow.,lp Cent.Solatt SL, Rulland
l'utGr: Robert H. Mu11er

317 N. 2nd St.
Mlddltptll't, Ohio
HOURS:
Mon.·frL 1Odl0·2100
CLOSED THURSDAY

Sundoy Scboal - 9:30 o.m.
E....ma-7p.m.
Wecmodoy Senoioe • 7 pm.

Wlllle'l Cllopol

..

BUY • SEll• TUDE

Kinpbo RGod
Pu-. (]ydo ~- H ., """

Pentecostal
,__A_..,

Suodoy School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm.,.7 p.m.

LMnl Cllft'Fne Melllodl• CIIIIFCb
Pu10r. Peter T=blay
Suncloy Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m., 7 pm.
Wadneodoy ScMcet • 7 p.m.

Pastor: B...,do Weber
Wonbip • 9:30 om.
Sunlloy School- 10:30 o.m.
Wedneodoy SenoiOCI- 7:30p.m.

·n~

... WTIUIII

SIUidoy Schaal • I 0 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 om.

~ l•terltao•'e·d•ll CIIWdl

'Wonbip. 10:30 ....... 7:30p.m.

SuodoySchaol·9~0l.m .

Radae

. Wonhip - 9o.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thundoy Servi&lt;:ca • 7 p.m.

ChtiSitan Unton

OffRL 124
Putar: l!docl Hut

PutGr:RoaerGrxc

•" Cb....

MI_
1411 Bridaemaa Sl., Syroouae
Po110r: Roy (Milte) Th&lt;&gt;mpaaa
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
llvminJ • 6p.m.
Wedneoclay Scl&gt;iae • 7 p.m.
Hael CommualtJ Cllurcll

EutLollrt

Putor. Sharm HaunnUI

F... TabtroodeCbuldl
Bliley Run Rood
Putar: Rev, l!mmett Rowaoo
Sundar School- 10:00 o.m.
IMminl 7 p.m.
. Thuncloy Scl&gt;ice • 7 p.m.

s,.......

Pu10r. RoaerGrxc
s,..~~oy School· 10 ,.m.
Worship· 9o:m.

Wonhip- 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thundoy Servicoa • 7 p.m.

Sunday achaal- 111'.30 .....
Wonbip • 9:30 IJD., 7 p.m.

Putor. Sam Andenon
Sundoy School! 0 o.m.
Ev&lt;nin&amp; - 7:30p.m.
Wodneodoy Scnoice- 7:30p.m.

Putar: Kemeth Baker
SWiday Sahool- 9:30 om.
Wanhip . 10:45 o.m. (I at.!: 3nl Soinl.

Putor: O..lea Janca
Sunday School • 9:30 o..m.

Puoar: Chuloa llamialll

Mldda-t cam-nltJ Clooordl
S15 Petd SL, Middleport .

Suttae

Mt. ou.. Unltod Mol.. dill
Off 124 behind WilkeMile

B.lockGro.. CHidl

Tbo SalnlloD Army
liS Buu.mut Ave., PcmeiO)'.
SIDidoy Schaal · I 0:30 o.m:
Wonhip • 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

M""'loBStar
Putar: Kennolh Baker
Sunday Scboal- 9:45 o.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 o.m.
Thundoy Seni001 - 7:30p.m.

7:)0pm. (3nl.!:4d1Sun)
W.....odoy Senoic&lt;o • 7:30p.in.

Lupde CllrtoliM CIISim4oy SciiOOI- 9:30 .....
Wonhip. 10:30 o.m, 7:30p.m.
W...,.y ScMae 7:30p.m.

TriniiJ Cool"l•!lauol Churdl
Putor: Rov. ROland Wildm111
O.un:h - 9:15 o.m.
Wonbip - I 0:30 o.m.

Carmel
Putor: Kemelh Baker
S~mdoy School- 9:30 o.m.
.. Wonhip - 10:45 o.m. (2nd&amp;. 4dl Sun)

Gn1wB U•llad Malll " 7
Wonhip - 9:30 a.m. (I at.!: 2nd 81111),

Tbundoy

v

PoiiiOr. Robert 11100
SIO!day wonbip • 10 o.m.
Wedneoday oerviae - 6:30p.m.

Putar: Kennolh Baker
Suodly Scbaol - 10 I.DI.
Wonbip • 9 a.m.
Wednoodoy ScMaeo - 10om.

United Methodtst

u..tJ
a....
Dalor
r-:waodYean

Suodoy SciiOOI- 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip- 10:45 o.m.

'

J...,.

Putor:

(lt Burlin&amp;l&gt;m! dlun:h aft" a-. 33)

-.,

St. Poul Lutberu Cburcll
Comer S:fCIIIIOI" .!: Second SL, PtmeiO)'
·
Putor: Gecqe Weiridt
·
Suaday Sdtoal · 9:4S o.m.
Wanbip - II om.

s.c- R..d Cloooldl aiCIIrtot

Other Churches
Eadllalo a- at Pny.-

Putar: Flooalce Smilh
Suncloy Scbool- 10 IJD.
Wanbip - 9 o.m.

. Our SaYiaur Lutll:1ru Cluu'CII
Walnm ond Henry Stl., Ra....,.woad, W.Vo.
Co-,Juton: Revs, Ridwd a:
l'atricia Booda-Kroa
· Suaday School • 9:30 om.
Wonhip • llo.m.

Bradford c - ., Cllrill

s..idoy Scbool · 9:30 o.m.
10:30 o.m .• 7 p.m. •
W«dnesday Se.Mce. • 7 p.m.

s.....m.

Wodneodoy~-7:00p.m.

-

w~ .

Sunday Scbool - 9:15 o..m.
Wonhip - 10;15 o.m.

"'J-

P - . Quia Soewut

Paour.GlendaaSiroud

.... c.....
r-:Ranl'ien:e

............ Cburda
Cllrtot
. a. Lilt.- Dar Salnll
Ponlood-Radne Rd.
Pulor: Jeny Collin•
Suodoy School· 9:30 o.m.
Wanhlp - 10:30 o.m.
W - y Sem.eo ·7:30p.m.

PutGr: Rov. J.,.. A. Seddon

NIW Bona Cburdloflloe No

· so~

Latter-Day Saints

Cllrl•

Wednadoy~ - 7p.m .

Wonhip -10:30 o.m.
Thundoy ServillOI • 7 p.m .

Putor: Robert Monley
Suodoy School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m .
Thundoy- . 7:30p.m.

a.... .,

Wonbip • 10:40 o.m., 7 p.m.

R.Uud
Putor: Anlllr Cnbuor:
Sunday Schoal- 9:30 .....

l!;roell Run H - Cburcll

JineWJ
Cllrllt
..._:TCIIIR' Sim4oy SciiOOI • 9:30 a.m.

Pwllu•JII.-CIIIrdlfflllle N-rene
· Putor. W'tlliam Junia
Slllldoy Sdiocl - 9:30 Lm.

Putar:Keilh Rader
Sunday School-9:15 .....
Wonhip- 10 o.m.
Wadneodoy s.,.;..,. - 6p.m.

I'U«: Rov. John Nevillo
Sundoy achaal • 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneidoy Scnoice ·7:30p.m.

Pulor:R"'etWIIII&lt;ln
Slm4oy SciiOOI· 9:30 .....
Wonbip · IG-.30o.m., 7:00p.m.
W-ySeMcet • 7 p.m.

Worihip -10:30 Lm.,6:30p.m.
Wedniodoy Scnoicea • 7p.m.

loek~np

Weolo71• Bible Hoi._ Cllurdl
75 Pad Sl., Middlepoll.

l'&lt;lmeoooJ. HorrilonvilleRd. (RU43)

..,.. ...... Clooldl
6lh ond Polmor Sl.

•

Ill milo aft" RL 325
Pu1or: Rev. O'Doll Maaley
Soodoy School· 9:30 l.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m .• 7:30p.m.
Wedneidoy Senoic&lt;o ·7:30p.m.

Slmdoy SciiOOI -9:10 a.m.
Wonbip • 111'.30 o.m., 6:30p.m.
W - y Scmooo ·6:30p.m.

Ru!land C b - 111 lloe Nlllftllt
PUI«: Stmuel Buye
, Suodoy Scboa1 • 9:30 o.m.

Pomwo '
Putar: Bonhn (~IOCO).Kee
· Sunday School · 9;1S a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m. .
Wcdnea4oy S.MCOI -.7:30p.m.

,... a ...... Bible Hall- c~•....,

r-:Jad&lt; c:aa....,..

Ml.....aUo

Wanhip - 10 o.m.

SWiday wonbip -7 p.m.
Wednudoy pnyer mGCiinJ- 7 p.m.

~RWpQordoffiCIIrtot

Rllllud Fl. . Bapllll Clllrcll

Sonoloy SciiOOI • 9-.30 ......

Dowey Kina
s- ...doyRov.
adlool· 9:30 a.m.

Wonhip • 9:30 o.m.
Sunday Sc11001-10:30o.m.

Po-. Rov. Hen-0.00.
Suodoy School· 9:30 o.m,
Wonbip • 11 o.m.. 6 pn.
Wodneo&lt;fay Scnoicea • 7 pm.

Pearl Cbopol
Pulor. Flolmcz Smilh
Sundoy Scbool - 9 o.m.

New Uma Rood,liDiland

Jr.• Clooldl ., Cllrtot

Pula': Fnok Smilh
Sundoy SciiOOi • 9:30 IJD.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m.
WednudoyScrviaea ·6p.in.

~

a-111- Riiii-CII.a

Pu-.AI~

C_. Clluldl at lloe Naarea•

Putar: Doran)ol.....,..
Sundoy Schoal - 9 o.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

eo«.. .._ ron-q

Mlddlopart Cll. . . tiCIIIbl
5ob and MaiD

Po-. Rev. 'lldn11 Mc0una ·
SIIDdoy Sc:hoal- 9:30 l.m.
Wanllip. 10:30 o.m. and 6 pm.
Woclrieoday Senic:eo • 7 p.m.

R-~l

Eptscopal

oror Wllllldo CloooldltU:IIrlol

-

_ . . . , Cll- ., ... ..,_,....

Putar: DonJn N,_.,.
Sunday Sd!oal· 10 a.m.
Wonbip - 9 o.m.
Thundoy Seovioa • 6:30p.m.

Sundoy Scboal- 9:30 o.m.
Wonbip - 6 pm.
Wodnoldoy Scnoi001 • 7 p.m.

,._, Alldlow Mila
~ SciiOOI · 9:30 .....
Wonllip-10:30a.m., 7p.m.
Wet illy SeMw • 7 pn.
P

,.........

New Lifo Cllurtlo at God

Ctlllrctl ol Chr1st

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

EVERY THURSDAY

4

Dally

OR TREE SERVICE. T-ng •
Tl!mmlng, TrM RomoWIII, Hedfll ·
Tlinlnllni. FrM Eallmollol ,,._

:tl?ll''l'lf1"Aa. 4p.m.

�. P'IQJ 10-The Dally Sentinel

---........
-.--·..

SNAFU® by Bnree Beattie

18 w.ntlld to Do

S1

....

-,lbo.IMIII,_
Wa•l ........... CIMI I

......
"

c.no.n~

Wll
plono
IJOOiill.,..._l,
~
·

II I 1&amp;1 ConletL Rt. 7 N. f14. ~":...
~..~ teo. All

-~

·-

.....

.,

•'• ·
·~

···••· 11111-....,..

"My ear ha$ an anti-pollution device . I recycle.
Let me be bad for the env1'ronment th1's once.•·

od .___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;.,....j

1.ooo1.........,
-.,
111,200 A ..
_
_.._ _ _ , _

,... _..,.

EstJte

D~._

44

-

Aport,.,., l'1nll
Cedar

. ,

=-~:=::
11.-1 Dn

.:=
GllllpoiiL

c . r . t , - l.oun!lrJ, A.e,
RMldoiot Po,. Elootrle Ulllty
CiniJ. o1une ~RU
11
• Eq
HooolngOppotl....,.
.

~

rel~lon,

based on race, c:oiOr,

sex la mlllal SlaiUS 01 nalianal

origin, or any tmeNkwllo

make arrt 5Ud\ p'ratertnce,

..

Fumlohool

clopooltllq01Nd.II4-MI-'1818

Fumlohool
, Apol'llr-.nt, Utllltloo

33 Fanns for Sale

Pold

41 A, I Room, •• llonoh, 1 ....
~~Jie -11,1
. . . . ---orkohop. 114441 , , .

actvertiYtMnlllor rell . .ale
whk:n Is In viDIItton of lhl
law. Out Nadirs are h8f1Jby
lnlormed that all dwlllingl

aCNtrtlsed in this MWIPJPef
are avaMab'l on an equa~l
oppo~unly basis.

•orr

1112
brick - . 1 llodrooMa. lUll . . t· ............
port, ten a I I I klohen. W

•~~:t~--=
llodmon, z-.
•

111111
onlnl ...... with -

=:"1.=·~~·
e\:
411 t823

I ..,.

lnlllor.
AIM 1111 t4Kll Fla:Ma ad Mill
4 ..,.., H,_., Rd., IMg -

tono,1141ot3-l:lll

-

lplrl- •

lllfn.,- =

-.

~

.

-·

- · County - . •
· 12,100. 3IJ4ol7lo

One . . . lot, ..... lllldrio •

..... -

10WlNIM.

One

tndmom

8Z2IImo. II :1 J

-uottv dopool,

I

182-afS.

.-rt~

udlta.,

no poto; 114-

'

One bedroom apt. Fumlahld,
oloal, no pole, 304-CJ'I.

"',-..,11,110. ;;a_
One

I J1own

FurniMed

Aolli_,. $23llllo Including
Ulllltloo.~, ~o P•o. 251 lloto

....... Ullllpok 11~ 441 ~

----

tM-llla-:a~~:
Pl.,_ Doh ao . . _ 11nr

.-.hOle.;

....,.,..L.._ ...

=·

t

.-

SZ7:

..-.. kit, lllilloln, ttl:
towel - · II; 114-ID-

lor

1827.

W.-'r. .,_, ilolriOoralor, .
Color
F-.~. Air Con- _,.on. _...ttpo•o..,lft
......r,114-2116-"""'.
- - goN, Gl; 114-ID-

.Y.

Pets tor Sale

54 Mlsc:ellanaous

lor

~loodlll,

~·I -

CM

-

:r::..... -·~

ap.,

12 HP, 114-

.

Riding-. 11 h.p.,lllnah,

o,nomorto S3I!O. - - 1!k11n1 For lohlnd

GnolfiW TrociOr $100; bo
lao, FOr SoM lloltlnd Orawtor
"'00
-·-~•• ··-r~•··

lkllna - ·

-

•· cut, Stoo. -'11:11.

.....

S'IOO, l14-

dooll,fll011"nn,I1WII2

Drv• SIOj

ICononcn

011

A

lwltah,1144412240.

=tta,:..c....woom. .......
, I Ft.

,...,__
_ _ _,,

.,.d

..._

4 1'1. 21 h:h RoUnd Above
oquora
QooundPoolltWII-1:1411.
tub. II; I
·
Colvod Antlolue led m·

J.TonHoiCitolniAIC,-ono N;"'' A.-o

IIMD-

$12.50:

Cho(,.

I14-'11124!S7 ot -bol Coudo $1.00 8-, f14.

.

110ft C l - coonpldo _ ,

·~

. . , _ Zt'ie"ll10"
dulyrator$100.304-458-1111
~ P-) 4~-·
~· --nol ,.,.:: Pi.;'.j
Aih'ocodo- Both, TlibWith
•• --· ,,...,

-

=:...::::::::....e:~ ~=F-.;:.z;:=:

2127 Aftor 7p.nt.

, one GnovK.Y FMd With llllld
MI. Dill On 1 - With Hald
Aluonlnum 11om llldlng 4'r10' -p Sl25l!IIIIIIColl World Qo
EI'ICUtlh To Bulkf 24'132' can
saoo: contluHdlng t101 Afler 1:00 Law kNII Mort• MIUr 1 HP ca.
II
go, 114 441 0201.
WOfkJ s-,
~
Brick $100,
~~·. Whlttm" "~oc'
eo.·~
-"~...
rl l f , For
"PI Dowtllo (WI •od)- IllY·
llobllo Hoono 1250. l14-44f. 1 11111,100 Ill~ Wilt RobUlrt Trww
1031
·
1310; · 11111·8tu·obUv 1!181..

c- .......,

d1

1112~1148 or

:"&amp;:'"•
SI!O; 114M4IZ.

II

I d.

._.."lr
--.-.
- •. .,
-, -

-IC

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

rooraold SilO. 114-141-01111

--•1111.........

t•Jde ,.

No....

.
.
,
.
=

......
7:i.-Cioon,
••

a.-..
lnlln:l:

.-

T-.

....

...... only,104-11W421.
2 11 J ooc11 . _ _ tor rene •....,
Brlck Ronch SBR,Eioc. -~ 2 o1o1e J ... 1, I ..... bolow Qol.
11112 both. FR Apolo 1-.1211.
w
• ilt4-4 4411317 I 1t4o

~
lor

oppolnt .....

u1ua

-.----

COUNTRY HOIEI//1/;REACIE

...... 1 - ·

M, ............. - -

--111.

-.111'~

T-

W!J...,._,

-=kin, -

::'~Oklo~

N

n
NC. •u.r!i,.. 'u:
Yllilllho PO"I I • PIR-10 lloc 44.GOO - . 11,41111. ~

lu now
,onnololo,1114471-11ii.

-

koyllOtonl.

1di•IJS.'1211.

·

1111 -.o ~.;,m
liilll. 30M1I4J22 •
.

-

II,OOOAII

4 au

.~-

-

1Win l IIIII- - a - -

-

-.-wv.

Conltructloolllu -lbonow,
Hondlo, S30 AllOr I P.ll.
Or Loove 11-go, t14-44f.

=
.
-.=

46 Space for Rent

1140,GOO; 110 .. ,. 11/L fonn
With Born • • Tlllobll. $110.000;

10 Aoroo IIIL 110,800; All 01 Tho
AboVe 1 lllloo 01 Rio
Qrando • PI- Oil 1111 Connoll AI Donno
For lloow lnluriMIIon.

."

..

11251.
Ewlngoon Lorge H - , With

· Co&lt;lld ... Dupin, Lorgo
. Lat S31,CJO!I~
WIM Lond Controiil,
,,.,....?ln.
Co. Uno.
3 1111
wllh4 tla*aaM
111nch.
~ on

-.a

' Rt. 1, 1\wd
•-A
'""" In ooch rooon, unllnlohoi
" ' · 1 ... w. Yo.
..,_rtloolllaU(,3GW72-511112
ot 1'72..222.

-

-lotolorranl.= ;;o:f!!i :'J"::!
=t.
0201.

1
1141
- • 2 lodrooon . - . 111co •

~!'n:-'l""nl.-= 114-

-......

Smll Two IIJJDOIII

~· ·--

Hau.

Fumlohod,
DoaotDopuort
-And
am,
~
...... Ul f' dad Avlllrlllll
""'- , .. c.ll114 .~~.

•2

•

a.-.

.-..,1044.,._,.

~ Wanted to Rent
Prot.a•larlll
rant

-

OOUpll

In

...U to
Point

Pl-.-oaol.,... 114-

'IIS-2141or 301-037-24113.

Mobile Homea
torRent
Wontlna to IWnl· 2 or I bedroom

30

For Lease

.u

3

l
o
r
141110--n-·
111co

.-.._toto

up lo

Poc•o,. Ill 'nMiu., tM-tiZ-2117.
lmlll 2 bedroom tnlller toc.t.ct

Mel~~ ~
~.... lllddiiP.;;} Ohio, dopa rei ,..

rooon, lolg ~-

El-0¥
114-,.2-1120.

32

• ...,_; . -. - - :l2t7.
..-lmiM 2 I J oocu•, Partllltv
Mobile Homes
Fumlohool, •••. Trooll Pilei,
N.Q.II.I. U00 Pluo
fo Sale

12X!I5--..
r

Dopool.-••·

.........

On llono Two . Condor
tod Lat Good CondMion, S2Z,IOO .,...,
PI F I Of,
aaomto.,
S'IOO
Finn. ~~-. llolotgontor, Coli dopoott,l10pota,ilt4-tl1-114 . . . . . .

'

-a ••·

:llldnn. ....
fwnllhlcl,

=

,. -

.....
~

-'""':'==~to
11.000. JOM7Io In
nalllblt!
IC:
1 APIL 1141 or
--~
....
1111.10H.

.

51

Houaahold

· ~·

tNT, 1411711, I - · ~·
CIA,--k,ootlw...,ll

.... 1101111111
-1 St3.100. IIIIU4I'&amp;

.._

p

~ til, ..._

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1!!'-...Mion Leddtnt 10
~To.11l'ool Ringe 110 Eoch W,

old, f14.111WUI

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By Jeffrey McQuaiD
SMIRK smiles in a conceited or.
•mug way: "Don't smirk aboul your
victory!" Work on. the proper pronun·
elation of the verb SMIRK, which
rhymes with WORK

lloor ,...,

~'!..~rtm.- erwvv

;:--=:,: '
lor

pick-up,

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leN'T THAT A
CDNTRADICTlON

Campers &amp;
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114 245 un
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...... . , . 304 11:11

FRIDAY

'

~-·-

1--..m Q- 114-227to ......... tiiOO. ....,.: ~ Wllapraollng. Eo1112.

OUR LANGUAGE AD-VICE :
Today's Ad-Vice Award goes to a
florist who advertised an April special
on "Easter Lillies. • The name of the
flower is usually lowercased, although
it may be capitalized in advertising.
The problem, though, is with the
spelling of lhe flower. Tbe plural of
LILY is LILIES, and neither the singular nor the plural dou.b les "the
secoiul L. Even the Old English LILIE
and the Latin LILIA, sources of the
modern LILY, have no doubled L.
(LILLY, though, is used.as a proper
name.l Give a bouquet to the proper
spellin of Easter "lil'es,"

..:~ MORTY MEEKLEAND WINTHROP

I

......... IM4w.
WA=-"RP~NQ
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bull, •

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~ ~ ---1Jn....::p~I'OY=-8m8;::;;:;;.:nta.:.;;__

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BUilding
Supplies

55

Plgolor lllo,-NIII'&amp;

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~lt 11111 11Hk Trldar, Aot CoJd.
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I'!WIIa- I:OON.

II••
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1 ,-~+~l;ng;Pill~-;'~;j;~~r.

Equipment •
~onlloo,- oond, 1-:::=~~~~~-~
Ootmpor, niw '"":.:•
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IT'S NOT TtiAT GOOP P01,SN'T
..- niUMPt4 OVf' fVIj., IT S
TttAT Tl¥

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Matchmaker in81andy' reveals which signs insights. Your perceptions could till in blank
ale romanlically perfect tor you. Ma il $2 spots where your praclicality can't.
plus a long, eell·addritsaed, slampad enve- SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc. 21) It you
lope to Malchmaker. c/o this newspaper, are involved with people today who share
P.O. Box 4465, New York, NV 10183. '
your work·world inleresiS, h's OK to oa lk
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) In mailers shop. Bul it you lry to do this wilh pals, lhey
J3ERNICE
you let your emotions djclale your migh! lind you boring.
BEDEOSOL where
behavior, lhe raauhs might not be to your . c•PIIICDRN (Doc. 22-.hon. II) Aclivities
liking. However. you will appreciaoe resulls thai offer elements ot lriendly compelillon
when you k)Qically work oullhe details of • mighl ba extremely appealing tor you
'lho project.
· toaay. The impo:tanl thing Is to involve pals
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) lllhare is some- who lb garnes.as much as you do. .
lhlng spacial you want and you havo bMn AQuARIUS (Jan. 21J.Ftb. 111 II you lind
looking tor a good buy, do your ahopplng yourself in a competitive aitualion today,
eaoly in lho dey. Vout chlncea for getting H oon't despair, bec:lull you have m-1
at lhe rigt)t priolloolo good.
and pilyslcal """'"'" upon which to drow
.'
VIRGO (Aug. 23 lapl. U) Situations you In thfit a:eaa lhal your oppolllion lacl&lt;s.
••
Moyat,1103
pe&lt;oonetly conlrol ahOitld wort&lt; Oul rather PISCO (Feb. :10-llon:lt 20) Don't jump at
well lor you today. but you olill might 0\ler· the first offer today nyou are negotiating an
In the year lhlld you might become look some minor tactoro thai could make • Important conttaet. W you holcl1all to your
•. jiWOIYICI with two dilltncl groupe ol frlondl . llllngleven bitter,
lenni, you might eventually gat lhern.
gooup 'Mil lhn your .l nlftllln 'IIO'Id- U111A (..... 11-001. 23) You lie ...lcel· ARII!I (March 21·Aprll 11) New knowl·
,, , ly 1¥11111, .,. a11ar your inl8..-t '" IIOCial ly 1 companionate ~n~ tolorant peraon Mlga ota practical nltura that you've bien
'-" w1 o11er tlllqUiboitlllll.
Who 11 owao1y to help oe- wnenever poll· UNbll to utiiiH 10 your ~ will bo
~ 1 ....,.,..... 10) Dom l lllt 0111· llblo. When you.exeiiOiH llwo nobloqllll~ beltlr uncleratocd lodey. All of a sudden
- lltDulll .. Qh'lll pot01t1y- your allar 11111 today. hHp your good iiHdl to your· the 1(;11 lilly go on. .
,
eMIIIIDdiiY Mlllllell ollllgatlllnllll 11!1.
·
· TAUIIUI (April...., 20} Thinglln gen.
· ' IIIII. you WIH
frtl 10 epend your SCORI'IO COot. 24•NOY. II) A11e11 erallook very favorlble for you today Willi
·:
yau .... ~ wfiiN to loOk lor ' Cllloetoomentlln 1 loglcel rt11nner today. one ucoptlun -the ,.,....m ol ywr
::'.": and yau'lllnd M. The AIIIO-GII!Ih bul alto give credatiCI to your intuHive - -· 14 cautioulln thla erae.
.t

AITRO-OMPH

t

·-

:··One

be

'

.•

I

Opening lead: t 4

amolid

Cutlooo T w o - ond- ;;;c;jt;r
nw, atlll In bor,

--..-Pill LE,o•.-••.

N l l l r - .r tloni•,IOII,

, . ........ Apartmllll: 1 •• 120

-

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·

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= ~=~:"..:a'fl..:
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Old o:Uo

a'

=~~r:

Apartment
torRent

1977
Holly , ........
-IWI,
·
CIA, ,.,..pawq.
-I

alzlld Md,

:r:,r:~

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r,lerch andiS€

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-.

FRANK AND ERNEST

.:".:.;"".:.;~.:.;.....
=...-~---hllclbooni,St5,114-1112-Z47B. : ,_ -llllcn wlltoul """"'"
....,...... 111111- CloloiiY 1110 iNWoi•MII Elocirlo
Forlolo:T-,FitoAFuiiSizo blna with EnF- Dock C... 63
LivestOCk
Ro I rod, CNok ~.....,
Truck. Folr CGdlon, $25, Coli Avolllblt! - n eon.
Cow llllo1, ~C:O::t:! 111 To
, '
111 :Ms 1110
a.. fl. a ay.P-. Pl. Pl.
2
rr: old raahtttncl •rr ·••
Q.L-IIIrAnd~, -For ....., 11101 Md -=old Md tllOiougllblld l'lly, ~
Serv1ces
··-·
.. .,..
111l1D01'1114Ut.
72 -·ckaforSale

·•·•-

Ronch dyll .._, I bod-.

lol, blg2-~~­

~

11

With lllnorS7,800. 114-311 mo.

7907.

Footorllt, ·
~
,,.. beda oo111 ttou. on nice

..._..::-=
IIi

whlotPool both,

:=re-m.oao..,.....,..
~~~;odb;d;i~~;;;

oorn .,._, Oohl

- ....... All goN - .
~

IMve mnufl on machine.

Colidhlon, SilO, Coli · , both, ollocllld gorago, -

·

,.

Avollabll a- Woddlng-w-loiMollp,
!!UIIYIIJ II Rill Aid Phormocy.
t~M, ..... wlnll&lt; - . lur ..;eeo;

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lloglc&gt; Chel Eloolrlc Rango, -

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111

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1

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The Polr,IM 411
.
O.Ootll SIO, 114o41&amp;.3553.

a.- Woloobld With 12
DN•r Pdn't ~1aa'JC811,

110.

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from Phil
Plont, - H I -. 304'
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Ko-·&gt;• ~u:~
•
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6AME CAL~ED
ON ACCOUNT
OF DARKNESS!
W"ERE'P EIJER¥800\"
60'? I CAN'T
..-?~- - SEE f\ _THIN6!

...

=ER. SPECIALS •

-•v

:tl&amp;. .,...

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lllp~ 112

·

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All

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AccuurJea '•I .
T•'-JUoo.IIWifo10GI:
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......, ...- . 10
180.00 .-'IICM
•

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81 FannEqulpment

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11
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·

Pass
Pass

Every rear a surprisingly large
number o bridge books aJIP'ar. But
recently, perhaps for ecoROJIIic reasons, there has been an upsurge in
booklets. These contain around 24
pages and give information about one •
specific topic. Last year saw the appearance of the 10-volume .Bridge
Mini Series by Norma Sands and Jan
Janitscbke (Devyn, $37.9~. 800-2742221). The set coneenlrates mainly on
bidding topics, but there Is advice on
opeainc leads and defensive signals.
Today's deal comes from the booklet 011 defensive signall. West leads the
diamond four. After declarer wins
with dummy's ace, how should East
plan the defense?
, I would OpeJL that North band with
one no-trump, not one club, if my
range were 15-17 points. It is an excellent 14-point band with a strong five·
card suit and good intermediates. I
would treat it as 1~.
.
_
West was right to lead his lowest di·
as he hadn't supported his partner's suit .
East · had to find four defensive
tricks. Well, there was probably one
available in diamonlla. And if West
won a trump trick, a beart switch at
that point would hopefully net the required two more tricks. But how do
you get' West .t o switch to a heart?
The authors recommend East's
playing a discouraglne diamond five
at trick one. An alternative approaclt
is to drop the queen, which tedtnically
denies holding the king. Placing South
witb kin&amp; doubleton of diamonds, West
will have no reason to continue the
suit. A heart switch will stand out like ·
an elephant train in the Kentucky

C::J .

-lor ""' . ..
-

Eut

Learn bridge
in small chunks

p111t""~
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NUMBER
ONEil

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Pass
Pass

I.

llln1111n11

5 - Dtum
6 •alln

NOW FER OL'

w0oo1

Fonl 1llunolorblnl lion' - It !!:...,Four .WI- ....,.
Loodod 'llllly Oooil -Icon,
- • CObin ZIO ,HP
R _r 1Pol Hkth W'-.. Aalolng,: 11,100, !:,~=~=-~ul
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IIEIIORIAL ~y IPECIALI
old, , .
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... ~-.No.._, CObin Wilt 'froiW $12,2CIO;~~
S7
o•'SICal
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Opon-W!JhTrollor$10
mu
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LOwell 1rt11Not . _ In ,
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AN' TH' CAT AN'
TH' COW AN' TH'
. MULE AN' TH'
CHICKENS AN'
TH' HOGS .
AN'--AN'--

sao. :A~~..:,"":ro ~~ 1'1. t.W'o floltlng

d I ....
1 _ . old

oot1 ...._._ .... -

Roomo kll ront • - " ' month.
Stortl;}l•
$1201010. O.llla Hotll.
114 4 8510.
wMh cooldng.
Aloo'trollor
·
AII-"'PI·
Cll aftw 2;00 p.m.,
304·"173o

biro ...... CoiLIIIOIJlOIY On 11.1 ACow 1111. With 2 Barno,
Pool, 2 p ..... $1~000; 4 ....
room Hoono, 2 112 ...tho, Loogo
Porty Room, All 011 4 IIIL

l FED PAW AN'
JUGHAID AN'
TATER AN'
OL' BULLET

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Clootnonco Solo: . 1 HP Choln StOI!,
114 ue 21101 AllOr
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1

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Fumlahed
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PET GNlC•ICII PET BOAIIO- ;..a,aoolllioo,IM

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low.lr,oiDV.IIihlnd 1W20112'Rinka'¥315,~~·
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21 Call Ill deg.
31 v.....
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33 Noll! II
34 FIICitiOII.Ie

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Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

184verlge
2 PIIICelor

27S.W

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SOVTB

11. troD•,

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upa.tiiO~dlp ••• ...,
Tn:lsoio-.~lily
IMvv- AIM'M c....n.;
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Chair
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••
With
FaiiOry
lui
IEiootwla
itio4~1~11~11~-=~=~--GoOd Ccndnlon, SilO, GloM Topoo 1100; a- Ann lroU. tiOO, Or , _,For Hoor, :::;
:
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Tobll, I Cholro, S200. 114-44&amp;- ~~~~':U't =~·.:;: ._l'tll. '
tiiii ~ 1obto: : ; · Cenlilll ~1J
Rentals
T.V. 4llnclt RCA 2 CIUUI II I I
:..:::'
Reluww.l
~·n::_cr.
$1,100. Phono:
•untr
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lp mla .. 2 llediODm . . . _...
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ralllglrator,
- · ,_,104471-t2ft
•
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11.211. .!.. - 41 Houaea for Rent
IIIII $121.' lldonl . . .....,_ ="'l.P· 1oc
110101ii/.oro, on IHo' ~Hu~=·
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30482-3711
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lurnllhtd,

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MJ:; Rlalolond- Tentor ~ou Nlllr Polnl, Nlllr TlrM , ... Honcio ~· tiiii1CX250;
otuoi- only, 114-11:11· SIOO, 'l1llor ~ 1 fl7l, Hot11f Do~ 1111, 114IOU.
114-1'J141M .... " TICgJ
11-~~~·y~~:-:c-=--~=- · 1111
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avi 31,G00 - ·

24 Ia (Sp.)
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71 Autos for Sale

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Antiques

53

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sao' eon o.n30o m •••o .--..
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out Jlnloo
104 ..:~=a lw PG&amp;nt Pooo•or. oaulllpod loll.._
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35 Lots &amp; Acreage
......,.. • . ,...... _ NqUiold,
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Nonh, $10,000 ·WII Conoldor · Dill IR UOIUmllolrla
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po!d. •
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1111130 obove graund ,....; 1:111;

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Whlrliloal Drv• $1111· .........., Jonoon ••• ao bolt opo ro,
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for Rent

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Ali f&amp;al estate attvernslng tn
this newspaper is subted to
the Federal Fair HousingAcl
o1 1968 Wm!cn makes • llegal
to a&lt;tvertiSa . ~ any pralarenca.
limHatlon or diSCrimlnadon

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PICKENIFURNITURE

Bualneaa
Op port unlty

~ ~1111,

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AMWer to Pre¥1rut ,_...

ILLIICitlne

35 ,_ lu, Brule

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Friday, May 28, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

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.

41 DllntilfH
from Job
42 01 -hlno
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CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity Cipn. cryptograms .,, crMIMJ from QUOtaliont by t1rn0u1 people, pM11ftd PfM8nt.
Etch ltntr kllhl CIPMI' ltlndl fof anothlf. TDMY'• chM: M ~ J.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "An actor Is like a child: He wants everybody to
be Interested in him." - Marcello Mastroionnl.
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tho chuckle quoted
by filling in tke missing words
you deve lop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM-Lm ANSWERS
Nimbus· Staff· Quart· Hermit· TANTRUM
The seven year old answered the phone and said
confidently, "You'll have to can me baclu l'm in the
middle Df a major TANTRUM!"

C) 1913 TV Deu. T

L.P.

Ft Worth TX

MAY 28

�Friday, May 28, 1993

••

•

Southern ousted from regionals - C-1·

Memorial
Day
May 31,
1993
GEORGIA
PACIFIC ·
SHINGLES

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•BLACK •GREEN &amp; WHITE

$10.99

ECONOMY•.•••••••••'17.95
.GOOD..................'24.25
BETTER ...............'38.65 .
BEST••••••••.•••••••••••149.95
KITCHEN WITH SPRAY ECONOMY...........'24.95 .
GOOD••••••.•••••••••••'28.95
BETTER ...............'46.95
LAVATORY

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,

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"

.

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'

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:;~~~.}. ~-' . . .

·._

Vol. a, No. 15 ·
Co,.tghted 11t3

WIRE MESH

River Valley High
graduates first class ·

6"x6"x1 0/1 0
5'x15.0'

WELD WIRE MESH
. S43.99ROLL

REBAR

1/2''.........................................~..........s4.00
3/8''~...................................................$3.60
5/8''...........................................:........s6.40

SALUTE - Lellcllua off Saturday's Ceuter·
viDe Puade ud Ben Dimler was a color pard
unit rrom Keut·Metzler Amerleau Legion Post
No. ?.61, Oak HDL Behlud them is tbe car carry.
ina the parade's arand marshal, Roaer .-

DOGHOUSES

Williams. The parade aud beaa dinner was
sponsored by the Ceater\111le Volu•teer Fire
Department, olrerilla t.a • activity for area
families as the Memorial Day weekend aot

By KEVIN PINSON
Tribune News Stall'
GALLIPOLIS • If high school
graduations are mileSIOnes, the one
held Friday night at River Valley
High School was doubly so.
It was more than lhe celebnllion
of a group of 17· and 18-ycar-olds
reaching an end and beginning a
new life. For many, it was the"fiila1
piece of evidence which proved
wrong lhe critics who said, "consolidalion won't work."
~ The four county hiab schoolsSouthwestern, Kyger· Credc, North
Gallia and Hannall Trace -con·
solidated last fall, making the Class ·

of 19!13 lhe flfSt to graduate from
River Valley.
·
And the pride found at most
high school commencement exercises is minuscule compared 10 !hat
beaming from the faces of panmts,
studeniS, teachers and administta·
tors at tile historic event friday
night on RVHS's fOOiball field.
Sui:cess was a theme which was
prevalent in all of the speeches
made at lhe commencement exercise, held before an audience which
packed the borne stands and over·
flowed onto lbe grassy banks.
·
Co-Valedicwrian Sally Saun-•
ders admitted students had to

"swallow some pride 10 consolidate," and overcome old rivalries,
but lhe Class of 1993 adapted )md
forged new friendships.
"Today we are lhe Raiders,'' she
said.
She also congratulated lhe ·GaJ.
lia County Board of Education in
selecting Palrict Stout as pindpal.
"(Stout) made River Valley
what it is today," she said.
·
Speaker Cindy Graham, a mem. ber of the RVHS faculty, praised
the class' abilily to look to the
future and bury lhe pasL
She discussed bow lhe "threat of
Continued on A·3

underway. (T..S pllom).

$17.99
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7/8" • 1 114" • 1 112"

•

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SQ. YD.
RED, BLACK,
AND BROWN

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26x8••••.••.••••.••••••••••••••••••• - ...............15.65

26x10•••••••••••.•••••.•.•••...••.•••.•..••••••.......7.10
26x12•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•.••••8.52

B:r CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tlmes-Sentluel News Statr
EAST MEIGS. The top 10 stu·
deniS of lhe Eastern High School
Ciass of 1993 were named and
scholarships tolaling more lhan

6'x12' WIDTHS

$4.95
PLEXIGLAS
WINDOW WELL
COVERS
AVAILABLE

ROOftND

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26x16....-·······-·································12.35

J/J//ff ·
1/llJD

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:!ESlCEI ...................... ~·············~·-·····~·····~·15!;

26x10
..·-································-·········7.10
26x12.......................·-······--·····-·····.852

26x14................................................1.81

$40,000 w~ awarded at an assem~
bly held Fnday afternoon at lhe
school.
· .·
The studonl!i making lhe list of
the, top academic achievers, listed
respectively first through tenth,

FIRST GRADUATION- River VaDey Hl&amp;b
School held Its lint IJ'aduation ceremony Friday ·
as 185 sealors llued up to rec:eln their dlplom.as.

Praise for the smooth operation of llie school's ,
first year was beard dllriq tbe ceremony. (T·S
photo by KeviD Pinson)

London Pool ready for public
as a result of community effort
By JULIE E. DILLON
TJmes.Sentiuel
SYRACUSE • Through the
efforts of dedicated community
. - ·· •

were 1ere':'ly Buckley, Ki~J!
Michael, Lua Hoffman, Shern
Smith, Karen Morris, Matt
Mich8el, Mike Roush, Carrie M~­
rissey, Nancy Nally, and Bobbie
White.
.
.
Scholarships went 10 Olad Gnf·
.
fith, Ohio Academic Award from
the Board of RegeniS, $4,000, a
University of Rio Grande ROTC
fulllbilion scholarship, and the Rio
Grande Honors Scholarship,
$6,000; 1eremy Buckley, Ob1o
State Univ~rsity. $4.~00; Matt
Micbllel, Umvemity of Rio Gnnde,
•'
$4,000; Bobbie White. Ohio Valley
GALLIPOLIS - Two men
Collese Schollrship, $2,000 the
Ohio.Valley College President's accused of the rape, kidn:~
Leadership Scholarship, $2.000, and attcmp!ed murder of 1 1
Counly woman are both free on
and Hockilla College. $400.
a.Jes Prancis, Hocking Tech· bond.
.
nic:al Coilqe Scholarship, $300;
Accordin&amp;IO a lllOkcswoman at
Kim Michael, Eastern Local the Oallia County Clerk of Coutts
Teachers Association Scholarship, Office, bond was )ICIIIed'Friday fot
$300, VelielliDS Memorial Hospi181, Vincent H. Varney, 23, Rt. 1
$1,000, and Unlversily of Rio E'Yiftgtlll, and GleaorY S. Pic:tens,
Grande, $4,000; Karen Morris, 27, 12283 S.R. 166, Vinton. Bond
Uni-.ity of Rio~ Aaldem· for eaeh mM Wll $250,000 wilh 10
i·c Award, $6,000, and Home pcroolt seemed.
National Bant, Racine, $.500;
Pickens was releaaed that momChuclt CulaliD8biJn. HockiJII Col· ini and Varney wu Rlleued 1atu
lqe accomltblJ IWird. $300.
lhe same aftomoon.
· OtWAw•dl
The allepd IIPisls will be tried
Buckley. valoclictorian, also separately wilh V~n~ey•a ttlal date
received the Air Porte lllllbemalics set for 1uly 12 and Plcteas' for
Aus. 16. Varney ia "4* amled by
c.dailed GB A-3
Mark Musick of 110b0n and Pick·
ens is repesented by Icrry Wiener
of Col11111bua.
·
The
two
men,
former
Oallia
POMBROY - T1le Dolly Sc11·
tiM/, OeJllpolls Dtllly lWhlllllld County sherifrs c!rp•liel, ~Y
Point PI
II . , , _ , wDl not be
Ullld a flashin&amp; e~Jtei IC)'
t 10
3 near ·
publisbed MGaday 10 die MDpioy· stop the woman on
eu of alllbree new~ can Rio Grande, abducted her at JUD·
obiCI ve the Memallllllly bollday. point and qped her. Sbe 1ben
Regular p!lblicatiOII and basi· l8bn 10 I lhc In Vluton County
and shot thnle times.
ness bouriiOIUIDD Tue day.

Two rape

Sus peet S
now free

people, London Pool in Syracuse is
up and running for the year.
·
Things looked bleak when earlier in the season there were not
funds available ID make lhe neces- ·
sary repairs at the pool. After
attempts by Syracuse Village
Council to locate fun&lt;ts through
assistance from . the Meigs County
Commissioners failed, a fund raising program was initiated and

according 10 Janice Lawson, Syracuse clerk-treasurer, the efforts
raised $7,191.27 lhrough personal
. donations, business donations, licket sales, craft space collections, a
firemen's balbecue and craft sales.
. Tom Lowery, pool manager,
said he is very pleased wilh.the
community support and that the
volunteer work has been outstand·
Contiaued on A·3
'

Pickens, Varney
post $25,000

·GRAVEL MIX

26x14••.....•...••••••....••.............•..........•9.89

GALVUIZD COIIUUIID

froot, Jeremy Buckley, Kim Michael, Lila Holr·
man, Slleni Smith, Karen Morris, secoad row,
Matt Mlc:l•ael, Mike Roush, Carrie Morrissey
(Nancy NaDy; absent) and Bobble White.

named; scholarships awarded

VINYL FLOORING
INDOOR/OUTDOOR CARPETING

. THE TOP 10 • ne u=es of tbe top 10 llal·
demlc achlnera Ia the clua ol1993, Eastern
· HJp Sc:boo1, were aimouaced Frldlly afteruoon
at an Awuds Day.-bly, Lilted ac:c:ordlng to
their ranking the class, they are left to right,

Top 10 Eastern students are
.

.

1S Section 152 P. . .
••. • A Multimedia Inc. ••• p PI"!'

• Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, May 30, 1993 .

50 LB. BOX

DOUBLE4 or5
WHITE ONLYI

100'x4"

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8x8

$49.95

.

l'u117-7·HIP..,.75.

Cltuct or roloiO,. o11 t

+

CONCRETE WORK PRODUCTS

1--1--+-+-W-

Bu•fnw'Farm-~---.D1.S

WOOD BUILDINGS

8'. . . . . . . . . . . . . $3.25 ' . \ ·: ··.
12'............$5.2'5

,•

Tippy Dye: Pomeroy's greatest
athlete. • Fred W. Crow • A·6

Clailllled --·------Dl-7
lleatlas. .......................-..A-2
Ed.itorai ........_ ..........---A6
Spoi'ts.........................-Cl.S
Weather................... --...A-2

$525.00

1/2" DRYWALL

WHITE ONLY!

Aioaa the river ~-~-B1·8

$3.99

BEST•••.••••.••.•••••••••5&amp;.95

Inside

Emma Gatewood: 'Queen of
the Trails' • Kevin Pinson • B·l

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