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                  <text>~

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Montreal
-wins 24th
hockey title

Family
Medicine
c.

John Wolf, D.o:
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

.......... COtlld
I
e ...oeeat childreD
.t•Oaestion: My husband and I
llllve been cliJc:ussing whether we
l!.nu!c! Jet our 10-year-old sal mow
'IDe anss. He is large for his age, so
l-fbnk he is strong enough to do it
Could you give us some recom•endations on how to decide?
.USwer: Mowing grass is a ritual
Q( the growing·SC!ISOR for city, suburban and rural residents. The
drudgery of this task is often
assillled to the adolescent children
of the family. And 1 understand
your concern. Mowing appears
.deceptively safe and easy, whether
i_t is done with a push-type or ride·
1lll power mower. But, tn reality, it
~ poltl1lially very dangerous. ,
• ;. The federal government
jmpoaed new rules a few years ago
~ have made push-type power
1110wers considerably safer. New
.m&lt;&gt;wcrs are required to automali·
cally stop the blade when the han·
jlle is released. There are also regu·
fiiOO.s that make it more difficult
fur the blade to strike an object and
lltrow it back at the operator. These
'changes have reduced the risk of
injury from thrown objects and the
t:isk of being mangled by a moving
Qlower blade.
• Ride-on mowen and lawn ttac·
iOrs'arc responsible for more
U!juries than push-type mowers.
l'ltc:re are presently about 7.7 million such mowers in usc every
summer in the United Srarts. These
llqer IIIII more powerful machines
arc responsible for more than
19,000 injuries and 75 deaths each
year! Of this frighrening number of
icc:ldeniS, 25 percent of the injuries
and 30 percent of the deaths
·involved children under the age of
IS.
About one-third of these people
were injured while the lawn mower
:was being loaded or unloaded from
a trailer, worked on or stored.
Another common "non-mowing"
Jnjury involves young children
playing on parked mowen.
. When the mower was in opera-

'

Pick 3:
934
Pick 4:
0377
Sujier Lotto:
8-15·16-38-41·44
Kicker:
951516

j

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; 11! :. :.•.•

•

HAir-..

Low tonlgbt In 60s. Roln .
Friday, portly cloudy, hllb In
80s.

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·~ Vol. 44, NO. 30
· ~ MuiUIMIII•Inc.

or carry-out.
Flavors of icc cream are chocolate, vanilla, peach, lemon, sttaw~. banana, pineapple, blackberry, butter pecan and mint chocolate
chip.
.
Anyone that pre-ordered quarts
of ice cream may pick them up
Wednesday between the hours of
10 a.m. and 2 p.m. and 4 and 5:30
p.m. or during the ice cream social.

2 SecUono. 12 Pag• 25 cents
A MuiUmedl• Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo,Thursday, June 10, 1993

•

By JULIE E. DILLON
Reed and Oliveri. the three com- County Board of Elections in the
Sentinel News Stair
missioners agreed to look into the amount of $835.68 for the cost of
The financial situation of the possibility ofusing a portion of the the special 'election b,y the Villa~e
Economic Development Office $30,000 set aside for payraises for of Pomeroy in May. Payments will
within the Meigs County Chamber county employees to assist the be made from the county's contin·
of Commerce was discussed at chamber and economic develop- gency fund.
· Bids awarded and accepted
Wednesday's regular meeting of ment office through their present
A bid in the amount of $25',008
the Meigs County Board Qf CQm· financial hardship.
. CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) was
awarded to Delivery Concepts,
Oliveri told the' commissioners
missioners.
A.guard
who went on a c.igarette
Inc.,
Elkhart,
Ind.,
for
a
new
deliv·
Bruce Reed and Paul Reed, rep- it would take at least three months
break
and
left several doors
ery
vehicle
for
the
Meigs
County
resenting the economic develop. to set up the new saucture for the
blamed for tile
unlocked
is
being
Senior Citizens Center. The 1993
ment office for the chamber, and economic development office.
escape
of
an
ainnan
accused of
The importance of maintaining Chevrolet S-10 four-wheel drive
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs County
shooting
hiswife
to
death
Extension Agent, attended the the economic development was will be equipped with a "Hot Shof' Myrtle Beach Air Force Base.at t!ic
meeting to discuss possible solu· stressed to the board as that is what delivery paclcage.
The Sun News of Myrtle Beach
The board accepted a bid from
lions to the monetary problem fac· the fu1ure of Meigs County
quoted
an unidentified source in a
Sherry
Edwards
in
the
amount
of
ing the economic development depends upon.
report
today as sayingJeromy
$13,300
for
45
acres
of
property
in
No action was taken on the mat·
off'JCC.
Willis
of
Ironton, Ohio, talked the
Columbia
Township
and
tabled
'
The commissioners currently ter and the a proposal for ftnancial
guard
into
letting him watch televibids
for
the
Nelson
property
upon
support the economic development . assistance will be presented at next
sion
after.IO
p.m. Sunday.
clarification
of
mongage
informaoftli:e of the chamber with $20,000 Wednesday's meeting by the eco- tion.
·
Prisoners
are supposed to be
annu811y.
. nomic development office:.
inside
their
ceDs
by 10 p.m.
Ot11er
matters
.
Air conditioners purchased
Reed, Reed and Oliveri proThe
guard
then
took a cigarette
In
other
matters
the
board
. posed "divorcing" the economic
break,
leaving
Willis
alone and'
approved
a
resolution
granting
per·
Arter wit}ldrawing a motion
development office from the chamseveral
doors
unlocked
for about
mission
to
Athens
County
to
with·
ber and making it a part of the made at last week's meeting to
30
minutes,
the
newspilper
said.
Meigs County Extens1on Office. accept three quotes from local su!)' draw from the Solid Waste District
When
the
guard
returned
They slated this type of situation is pliers to secure 18 window air con· Approval was also given to Hock· the break, Willis was gone.from
He
conimon in other counties. This ditioning units and one outside unit ing County to withdraw from the apparently escaped by walking
, QUILT SHOW PLANNED· There wiD be a quDt now and
set-up wouljl Open a wealth of new for the Meigs County lnfrrmary Solid Waste District
Joe Jenkins, a representative o( through the unlocked doors to the
sale at the Melp County Senior Citizens Center 011 Saturday from . opportunities for the economic upon the recommendation of Meigs
of the brig, the source said.
10 a.m. tn 4 p.m. and OD Suuday fro• 00011 to 4 p.m. Ia COD.Iuuc·
development office and a portion County Prosecuting Attorney John the Buckeye Joint County Self rearThe
guard is expected to face
tlou wltb Herlta1e Weekend Ia Pomeroy. Admlssloa Ill $f and
of the funding for the office would Lenrts, the board awarded the total Insurance Council which adminis- disciplinary
deaaerts wUI bl! available. Plctued wltb a portloD ol tbe display Is
come from the extension service. project, now in the amount of ters the coumy's liability insurance, court martial.action and a possible
WID.
The present budget is $50,000 $9,856, to Anderson's for 12. spoke at the meeting to inform the ·
Willis, 23, remained at large.
5,800 BTU air conditioners and six board of recent developments with
annuaUy.
His
trail ended at a culvert at tlte
the
council.
·
The board of commissioners • 10,000 BTU air conditioners.
edge
of the Naval Wcapons Station
Commissioner
Janet
Howard
Money for the air conditioners
was informed that as things are
South
Annex, l,.t. Cmdr. Max Allen
will
be
attending
a
confete~~ce
in
;... , gain~ .POW ..Jhe c:hamber..and «0· is -comi-ng· fi'OQI -Ihe Peters T~ilsl
said
Tuesday.
:
Jackson
on
June
18
with
Congress'
nomtc development office wiD be Fund. .
'.
The
ditch
that
flows
into
the
cui~
out of money by the end of August
The· board also authorized man Ted Strickland to discuss ecoTherefore, an additional $15,000 to Sharon Bailey to purchase new out· nomic development for Southeast· vert is fenced on either side and
there was no indication WiUis had
finisb the year was requested from door furniture for the infirmary em Ohio.
cleared
the fence, he said.
County Recorder Emmogene
the board.
wiih money from the County Home
pictures were distributed
Willis'
Hamilton and two of her employ·
Commissioner Manning Roush Girt Fund.
galvanized
prisoners
to
plan
the
in
his
hometown,
and his wife' s
ees will be attending the OhiO
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (AP) staled he relt very strongly in favor
Requests granted
riot,
the
report
said.
of
Middletown,
R.I.
hometown
"n ll-day uprising at the state's
of going through the extension
Requests for payment were Recorders A:Jsocialion Conference
I!Dd
in
Myrtle
Beach.
'
·There
were
several
reasons
why
maximum security prison was
office and that he, as well as the granted to the Meigs County Sher- at the Lafayette Hotel in Marietta.
the
riot
occurred,
but
the
planned
Marie
WiUis,
30,
was
shot
while
All commissioners, Roush,
cauSed by the warden's decision to
other commissiopers, would be iff's Department in the amount of
ionfme prisoners to cells the next lockdown was very instrumental in very willing to do whatever possi- $3,608 for expenses incurred by Robert Hartenbach and Janet she was in a le!!al office at the
day for tuberculosis tests, invesli· its timing, the official told the ble to make the adjustment
keeping prisons from Athens and Howard, and Clerk Mary Hobstet· MyrUe Beach A1r Force Base .on
Enquirer.
Jan. 4. She had returned from
&amp;ators concluded.
Although ,UIISOiiCited by Reed; Gallia 'CC)unlies; and to tile Meigs ter were presnet.
Other
factors
included
racial
Rhode Island to press abuse
The Cincinnati Enquirer
I
tension
and
double
ceDing·
in
some
charges
against her husband.
attributed that information todiy to
cells
designed
to
hold
one
prisoner.
Willis
was arrested iri
a state government official briefed
The
prisan
was
designed
for
1,654
Brownsville,
Texas, aild broughttq
on a prisal department repon being
inmates
but
held
1,819
when
the
Charleston
where
he was held on
releaSed this afternoon•.The news·
16
charges
ranging
from murder to
riot
occurred
.
. paper did not identify its source.
The
source
said
no
one
from
the
desertion.
· Some Muslim inmates of the
Willis later said he shot his wife
Ohio Department of Rehabiliralion
~outhcrn Ohio Correctional Faciliand
Correction
had
questioned
129
because
he did not want to lose her.
. ty objected to the tuberculosis tests
inmates
who
have
been
identified
The day will begin with a children.
for religious rc~sons . Warden
By JUUE E. DILLON
Prizes will be awarded to the top
parade
at 10 a.m. from the old
Arthur Tate Jr.'s decision to as leaders of the riot, the Enquirer
. SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
three
entries in each category.
Pomeroy
Junior
High
down
impose the April 12 lockdown. said. Those prisoners have been
Saturday's schedule or activities
-confining inmates to their cells, transferred to a state prison in for Heritage Weekend was dis· thrOugh town to Butternut Avenue Judging will he based on appearMansfield.
including accessories, authen-.
cussed at Wednesday's regular where it will disband at the ance
Pomeroy Fire Station. Everyone is ticity and uniqueness.
forms are available
=~::n~e Pomeroy Merchants invited to participate in the parade. at Registration
the
Meigs
County
Extension
Line-up
for
the
parade
will
be
9
A kick-off to Saturday's aclivi·
Office,
Box
32,
Pomeroy.
Ohio,
Carol Brewer was named coor.
lies will be held Friday evening at a.m.
Costume
coil
test
45769
or
can
he
obtained
by
calling
dinator of the Adult Basic and Lit·
7 p.m. at the Meigs County Public
The parnde wiU .be foDowed by 992-6696 between 8:30 a.m. and eracy Education Program (ABLE)
Library
where
the
1993
Heritage
Two men were cited between Wednesday and this moming, the
at Tuesday night's meeting of the
Queen will be announced. The pub- a costume contest, under the difec, 4::i0 p.m. Monday thru Friday.
, . GaUia-Meigs Post of the Slate ·Highway Patrol reported.
lion
of
Cindy
Oliveri,
Meigs
Coun·
Entertainment
.
Meigs County Board of EduCation.
lic is invited to attend this recep·
,·
Paul E. HiD, 47, 22619 Bucktown Road, RactnC, was cited early
ty Extension/4-H Agent. You may
An exhibition of dancing and
Brewer, who holds another posl'lion.
Contestants
are
Angie
White,
• .this morning for driving under the influence, speeding and no seat
wear
an
authentic
costume
or
clogging
fun
will
also
be
presenled lion with the board, was given the
age
17,
daughter
of
Bill
and
1udy
' .. belt, ~d Larry L. Mitch, 19, 461 ~QUth Fifth Street, Middleport,
White, Middleport; Robin Gardner, reproduction of a costume that after the costume judging atll :30 coordinator's job on a supplemeri~
. - was c1ted Wednesday afternoon ror Open container.
age 1g, daughter of James Gardner, would have been worn during :the a.m. with I~ clogging and dance !al contract on recommendation
groups ~c1pulln~.
frort1 John Riebel, superintendent ·
Middlepon, and Jacqueline Han- 1800's.
PaJ:ticipants may enter Saturday ·
Mustcal ente,rtamment J!lrough·
. In conjunction with that the
man, Gallipolis; and Allison Lee,
mornmg
during
line-up
for
the
out
the
day
w!ll
be
prov1ded
by
board
approved continuation of the·
age i 6, daughter mClarence and
·
Jeff Hysell•. Racine, reported to the Meigs County Sheriff's
pilr1lde.
Dee
and
~las.
a
group
~t
fea·
ABLE
jobs program with the
Rose Ellen Lee, Pomeroy; and
Dc~nt on Wednesday that someone entered his piCkup truck
Judging
of
the
costumes
wiU
be
tures
.a
vanety
of
fun
muSic
for
al)
Meigs
County
Department of
. Jaime Counts, age 16, daughter\Of
.. · which was parked at the mterseclion of County Roads 30 and 31.
held
immediately
following
the
types
of
people
and
purposes.
Human
Services
and
the pilot proVictor and Lurs Counts.
·
. He reported a CB radio wQrlh $250 was taken. Entry was thru the
parade
at
10:45
a.m.
All
partici·
The
afternoon
wiD
feature
_
out·
gram
which
operated
at
Racine.
· The maJority of Saturday's
: . wing on the driver's side.
·
.
pants
will
be
jntroduced
an(!
f!ICC
races
at
I
~.m
.
un~er
the
dtree·
,
Also
approved
at
the
meeting
activities wtD take place on Court
awards
~nted
.on
Stage
One
on
uon
.of
The
Daily
Senllnel.
Further
was
continued
participation
in the
Street near the BJIF area and wiD
Court
Street
at
noon.
information
on
these
races
may
be
Council
of
Government
of
Southfeature entertainment, games ,
Categories include authentic obtained by calling ,the newspaper eastern Ohio Voluntary Education
crafters and concession~. The
The Meip Coun~ Sheriff's Department has received a number
costume
and reproduction costume. at 992-2155. AU ~·.8fUUJ?S Cooperative, Southeastern Ohio
Oldies But GOodies Car Club will
_. of complainll reganling mailbc»t vandalism that occurred over the
There
will
be separate catcsories and clubs are urged to partlCIJI&amp;te m Special Education Regional
also be sponsoring a car show on
weekend. Anyone seeing or hearing a suspicious vehicle that might
for
male
and
female adults and
Continued on page 3
Resource Center, the Tri-County
the parking lot.
have been involved is asked to contact the sheriff's ofl"lcc.
Career Development Program, and
the Coalition of Rural and
Appail!chian Schools.
A. school bus driver's ccnifiCBle
~
~es of faDing to JepOJ1 an accident, and failing to control are
for
Etic Diddle was approved
. · pendii!J api11.1t 18-ycar-old David Rhodes, LonJ Boaom. Accord·
.
pending
receipt of a driver'$
· ;,' tnJ to a repon from the Meias County Shcnff'a Department,
Several fisurea on salaries. Linda Warner, ·were paid foi 1992, a year, the auditor's niCOI'ds show.
Rhodes wu norlhboitnd on route 124 in bia I968 Camaro IIIII lost .
abstract. He was approved for a
Lentos says that while be may CarletoD School route.
appcarins in a r:=:rom .$2!1,207.90 and $21,466.89 reapoc:
control and went off the
aide mdie roadway llll'ikiq the Lona
allocate
funds differently, he is
Meiga
County
Com
Bob
lively.
rilther
than
$20,000
u
llaled
Boaom Church with the
t front fender. He left the scene. Mod·
Meeting -with the board was.
Hlnenbadl aDd Munllll Roulb to by Commimonen Hlnenblch and opentlnJ within the 1993 budget Realna Jarvis, a member of the·
crate damage was listed to
vehicle.
for his office. That figure is Athens City School Board, and au:
a earlier letter resardlns an ' RouJh. the I'IICClldl show.
$183,963.76
with additional funds officer in the Southeast Ohio:
employment issue at the court
Oary WoiAI. investlf:; ror the
houae lie not COiiDCt, JCCotding 10 prosecutor, hued on
current of $16,119.80 from the delinquent School Boards Association. She·
the reCOidl of Auditor~ Part- salary will be paid tllia year real estate rund, and $15,314.70 spolcc to the board oo some of the :
.
William Fnx:hUc, Westlake, rcpcl1ed IIi the Meip County Sher·
er
Campbell.
$19,61.5.62, accordiD&amp; to ftgurea from the law cnfOR:CIIIICDI fund.
( .iff'&amp; Dli!WDihllll that aometime durinl the week of )UIIC l propam of the OSBA and C11CC111P
The 1992 prosecutor's budget IJFd continued membership.
The eommenta from ~e two provided by c.mtJbeU. Hlnenblcb
•. toOk ID 11 hoi ~~~poW« Supper rldin&amp; mower, 1 Lawn Boy IIIOMl,
~
commillionon publlahed Tues· and Roush lislecl \Volfe's
Will $178_234.92 with $15,302.)7
. a roll!tnw, ps pill, ~ hula', a ftve bonepower CDIDJI'OI·
Appropriations were modlftld :
clay'a u- of The Dally uliuel $25.000 llld dmdbecl hll
lillll from the delinquent real Mtato to correct for Irick leave, p&amp;* at ·
: . 101'. two 20-pound JlfOPI1iO tank, four wpt, a pick and a sllovel
CUll
in riiJICiillt to I bipanilan
flllld, and $15,314.70 trom the law leave and VICIIion.
, . from hi&amp;~ on Clrpeinea HiD Road.
:
lett« frolil eJected IIDd appokited
cnCol eCIIICIII fund.
"
1osepll RUpe, Colwnbul; flillOIIed tllaJ I refriaenltor, COIIIpul«
Atlelldiq
were
Bill
Quk:tol,:·
·
lime.
.
The llllill ol qa 118 1111* for Bob Bunlotle, Harold l.obe, ...
· . lllblc. weed ...,, and • cUUiitJ toiCh wwc llbn 1ram bia popet1)'
CI1IJiil1 olllco lloldln paoli 11
18 pcltCil~=IIICrCiaru Jhin to . The inveltiptor Wllo worked the~·· alllce In 1992- DobrmaA lltied, momben. De'"'
.. · on Ericklon Rom. 'Acc:ordilll 10 the rqJOrt, the ll.oma were tlbn
. wlthiD the last thRie weeb. .
'
.
.
IWOCOWitf
apn
·
last ~ llilder tllo Camtr pacleca- $22'2,851.99. In 1993 It Is ~to11llll was 11 the mntl• to
~i
The
twO former
proaetor,
ir be bid worlad die entire $215,398.26. All~iftu:O• oamo *"'- • a pan of a eluultil ..
..
'lal'lce. ll1dlla at 01110 Uaivenlty•
cuton. Ooorp McCarthy 111d year, MNltl hive Jeeel¥1111 $18,0110 from _ . . in the

. ··:Legislalars. tour

Lucasville prison

lb.
1/.S. GI?ADE A YOUNG f4·7·LB. AVG.J

Fresh Turkey Breast

Health, safety speaking
contest scheduled Monday
The health and safety speaking
contest for all Meigs County 4-H
members wiD be held Monday at 3
p.m. at the Meigs County Exten·
sion OITICC in Pomeroy.
The experience will give the
members an opportunity to
improve their speaking skills
before an llldicncc and to gain the
confidence that is needed for publiC
spe+i~g.
•
' This year members may do two
to five minUle speach on any topic
of health and safety that affects
family living, whether at home, on
the fann, on the highway, at school
or iJI public: plaoes.

. •

'

Page4

lion, 83 percent of the injuries were
to the operator and 17 percent to
bystanders or passengers on the
mower. The most common types of
injuries were children being run
over or backed over by another
operator and fills from mowers or
from carts being pulled by mowers.
!n. n.early 71 percent of these
t~JIIlleS, there were cuts or amputa·
lions - usually to the hands and
lower arms or to the feet and lower
legs.
A:!. you arc aware, mowing $f8SS
is dangerous. The Amencan
Academy of Pediatrics and the
Council on Child and Adolescent
Health have made some recom·
mendalions about.power mowers
that should help you decide if your
son is old enough to mow your
grass. In summary, they recom.
mended that children should not be
allowed to:
-play in areas adjacent to
where mowers are being used.
~ with the mo~er opel8lor
or nde m carts or traders being
towed behind the mower.
-play on or around the mower,
even with adult supervision.
-operate a mower until they
are at I~ 14 years .old and have
teceived proper training in the
operation of the mower and its
safety featwes.
They also recommended that
young children, particular~
undec S, not be allowed ou
at
all while.mowing is being done:
In light of these recommendations, I feel you'd be wise to let
your son cam his allowance doing
other, .safer jobs for a few more
years. When he is old enough to
mow the lawn, I'd strongly encourage you to only use mowers with
built-in safety features such as
automalic blade break and nculralonly start.
·
"Family Medlehle" Is a weekly
eolamu. To submit questlou,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
Ohio University College or Osteopathic Medicine, GI'OIIVeuor HaD,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

:Ice cream social to be held
Trinity Church of Pomeroy will
sponaor .. ice acam social Thurs·
day and Friday from 11 a.m. to 6
p.m. and Saturday from II a.m. S
p.m ..
Also available wiD be hot chick;
en s.ldwiches, sliced ham, sloppy
jocs. hot dogs, chicken and noodles, potato salad, cole slaw, baked
bean&amp;, pic, cake and beverage plus
homemlde icc cream.
ltt:ms will be available for cat-in

Ohio Lo~tery

.

There will be several award
opportunities available through this
program and more individuals are
encouraged to puticipate.
This program is sponsored by
the Ohio Rural Electric Cooperative, Inc., and Ohio State Universi·
ty Extension, Meigs County.
Further information may be
obtained by caUing the extension
office at 992-6696.

Queen contest ·will open
Heritage Weekend activities
.

:,,.----Local briefs ---..;;...., .

Carol Brewer
appointed to
ABLE post

Two cited by patrol

' : .Theft reported

34.5-oz.
WENDY ANN WOLFE

TERR.Y NEWSOME

Terry Newsome
recent URG
graduate
Terry Andrew N.ewsome his
IJ'ild•ted from the University of
Rio Orude College TechnolOgy
with a bachelor d science degree.
He lw been on the dean's list
hill janior and IICIIior yean.
He plana to/ursue a career in
teclntolOIY an he is the son of
Pnnt and 1oAnn Newsome, Five
Palna.
He iJ a 1988 pad..tc of Eastern
Hilh School.
.

m

Wendy Wolfe
recent URG
graduate

Single

Rolls
112 SHEETS PfR ROLL 1 PLY PRINT

scotrowels

Wendy Ann Wolfe has gradual·
ed from tbe University of Rio
Grande College of Technology
with 1ft II'OCi* of applied aciencc
in early childhood development
She is the daughter of Wilaon
and Ama Wolfe, Racine. She has a

U.S.D.A. CHOICE, GllAIN
FED BEEF f1CI-14·LB. AVG.J
PEELED

She plans on pursuing a career
in early childhood development
and securing a job working with
young disabled and handicapped
children.
•
She is a 1991 graduate or South·
ern High SchooL
·

Pound

sal, Brill

.

. Whole
Sirloin·Tips

can

,.. Mailboxes vandalized

A00f1'10"1AL
OUANTITIES

J4.s-oz

55.00 '

64-0Z.
"IN THE DAft\IY CASE" CHILLED

r;o;;;6rant'e1ulce

: .Charges pending

·

!t

':fN THE DELI·PASTI?Y SHOPPE~'

Dell Style -rurteyHam :
Pound

.

Auditor
-lists correct.figures
.

. Thefts reported

5

"llle ra:'u:':-===~II

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

•'•rant

---------· --... +o--

..

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--

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---- ---- -- -· ·

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-

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohlo
DBVOTED TO THE INTBRBIIT8 OJ' THE IIEIGS-IIASOI'f A1t1tA

ROBEin' L WINGETI'
Publisher

CIIAIU.ENE HOEFLICH
Geuenl Manager

MARGARET I.EJiEW
Controller

LETI'ERS OF OPINION ue wok:ome. They should be lou tb1n 300
wonla. All letters are subject to odilillg and must be liined with name,
oddnoo ,and ~Jepbcne number. No unsigned letters will be pub.lisbed. ~tten
should be in good tas~. acldmling i01ues, not pononolities.

Ukraine is test case for effort
to stop nuclear weapons spread
By The ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON {NEA) ·. Ross Perot hu been constantly ori
television pushing his new book,
"Not for Sale at Any l'rice." At
the bean of this book, and Perot's
pitch, is his promise·to eliminate
the deficit by 1998 without really
· raisi!IJ taxes. However, his num·
bers stmply do not add up.
Perot is now finding that his
immense popularity has one draw·
back: Policy planners from both
parties are takin!l him seriously.
They arc exarninmg his IJI'I)IJOS8)s
closely, and Perot is findiilg fie can
·no longer hide behind vague
promises mixed with down-home
homilies.
Perot's latest theine is a furious
assault against the CliniOD plan as
just another "Democratic Uix-and·
spend" program that will not eliminate the deC'tciL However, a close
look at his own plan shows that, at
best, the deficit might ooly be a lit·
tie lower a(rer five YCIIfS than under
the Clinton plan.

MICH.

•

The latest group to look at the · welfare. Fin8uy; if inrerest rates $.0 most economists think ·is fairly
Perot plan is the Congressional ' down, then the government wtll solid - his overall deftcit-ssvings.,
Budget Office. They say ~ has · have to spend much Jess on what it projecti.on would bC off by about
overestimared savings and deficit borrows, and its inrerest payments $100 billion over five yem. Then,"
will be reduced.
when you add in some of the really
. - .............................-":'.-. - - - No two economists agree on a arcane calculations on interest costslong-term forecast of economic and the like, you add perhap
growth, tmelllployment rates, inrer- another $80 billioo to $100 billion ,
est rates and other key factors. over five years.
reduction over five years by about Even slight disa!lfCC'!leniS can end
Even this assumption gives
$430 billion,
up in multibillton-dollar differ- Perot the benefit of the doubi. But
There arc jrobabl).' few CJtertis· ences in deficit estimates over a few budget experts take the Perot"
.
es as arcane as predicting federal five-year period.
budget at face value.
budgets five years into the future.
The CBO sa)'S Perot has adoptFor instance, the Perot budget •
One must estimate- "guess" ¢ an unreallSllcally positive out- assumes savin11s of $145 billion ·
would be a better rerm - exactly look,on which to base his revenue, over five years m ineerest payments•
how robust or weak the economy inrerest and spending jrojections.
alone. Most government finance··
will be during the five-year cycle.
Perot has used a set of projec- ' expens - Democratic, Republican.
Government runs on tax rev- tions issued by the CBO in Sanuary and, non-partisian - scoff at this
enues. So the healthier the econo- 1992. These numbers were almost number. The CBO thinks it is
my, the more money people and rejected out-of-hand by .most inflaled by a factor of two or three..:
bllSinesses will make, and the more economists as wildly optimistic; The Clinton budget, attacked by::
tax revenue will flow in. Likewise, they have been downgraded three Republicans as overly optimistic,
the healthier the economy, the times since by the CBO.
assumes $51 billion in inremst savhigher the erpployment rate and the
If Perot were to use the most ings over the same period.
less government will have to pay recent set of projections, issued in
Perot says that he will wring
out in unemployment benef'tts and March 1993 - a set of numbers savings of $140 billion from the
Medicare and Medicaid J".'Ogram
over five years. But, as wath muclt~
of his budget, he simptr gives the--:;
number with no detatls. Every :
~D ~AID
health-care expen is unanimous in •
saying cuts of this magnitude could :
C~TIES.
only be accomplished by major :
benefit cutbacks, which would •
I'D LIKE TO FILE FOR
cause a senior-citizen ~volutioo.
;
Perot is equally vague about ! .
where he would cut discretionary :: . · .
spending by about $110 billion. ·
But he is specific about using the : · .
savings to fund new spending in :
infrastructure and research and : · ·
development. So, even if he can
realize .the massive discretionary ,,
spending cuts, the deficit will nut :
bereduced.
·
Finally, Perot has attacked the
Clinton tax hike. However, he
rarely points out that his budget
contains a 50-cents-a.gallon gaso- .
line hike, about $160 biUion over "
five years, or, twice the revenue of •
the entire Clinton energy tax.
~
Rollert Wagmaa II 1 syadiclt· •
eel writer for Newspaper Eater- •
prise Association. ·
~

HE

I HAV[;

THAT

SEXIW.. HARASSMENT

Ukraine.

Belarus and Kazakhstan have signed lhe S1'ART 1IK'IIls conuol treaty
which will eliminate the nuclear w~ns now on their rerritory, but
Ukraine has not. The official Ukrairllan government position is that
START I should be ratified and Ukraine should join the Nuclear Nonllroliferation Treaty as a non-nuclear Slale.
But the Ukrainian prime minister, Leonid Kuchma, threw a monkey
wtench in the works last week when he carne out in favor of k~ing
some of the nuclear weapons. A sizeable portion of the Ulaainian legislaNot too long ago, I decided I
ture also favors keeping some.
needed
an updated communications
. ' In Kiev on Monday, ~in tried out lhe administration's strategy,
program .for my personal compurer
which is built on four main pillars.
' .
.
· •
The fli'St pillar is the notion !hal by establishing closer ties belween the and, having become somewhat
American and Ukrainian armed forces, Ukraine will feel more confident bored with poking myself'in the
of its.security. Washington has no plans to offer Ukraine a formal security eye with a sharp stick, I walked
guarantee, such as membership in NATO, but it wants to promote into a compurer store.
·The salesmen were fairly friendCJtchanges between American and Ukrainian soldiers, and have regular
ly
until I told them I wasn't there to
meetings of defense officials.
buy
a new compurer, but to see if I
· Cooperation agreements along these lines are to be signed when
could
upgrade my old one.
Ukrainian Defense Minister Konstantin Morozov comes to WashingtDn to
"Uh,
when you say OLD," one
see Aspin nCJtt month.
saleS~~~
an
asked me, "do you mean
•'Pan of the signal you send by au of !hal is that the Uniled States miliOLD
as
in
the one you presently
la!Y is friends with the Ukrainian miliwy," so that the Ukrainians get the
own
vs.
a
brand
new one? Or do
feeling that while Russia may be a big adversary, "they also have a big
you
mean
OLD
as
in n1ore than 2
friend," said a senior U.S. defense off'ICial who spoke on condition he not
years old?" ·
..
be identified.
.
"1 mean OLD as in about 9
• The second pan or the straregy is c~ed "confidence-building measures" - actions that can make both Russia and Ukraine feel less threat- years of age," I answered, and
ened by each othel'. Getting rid of the Ukrainian nuclear weapons and pro- watched the color drain from his
ceieding wilh Russia's planned nuclear reductions can serve this purpose, face. The other salesman said
something about hearing the smoke
o!fJCials say.
·
The third part is establishing a set of official relations through organi- . alarm in the back room and left.
zations and treaties to make it clear that Washington wants Ukraine to The first guy followed me out to
my car like a prisoner to the galremain indePendent.
'
The fourth is improving lhe quality of Ukraine's conventional, or non- lows. When I swung my beloved
. Sanyo MBC-SSS off the back sest
nuclear, defenses.
and into his line of vision, he
lurched forward and caught himself
on the fender. I thought for a
moment he was going to throw up.
· "Uh, ma'am, what you've got
· Thought for Today: "1 am ftrm. You arc obstinate. He is a pig-headed there' is what we call a ... weD, uh
· fool." - · Katharine Whitehorn, British newspaper columnist

•"
"

Growth of computers&lt;is· bewildering
... I don't know what else to do but
"Only 486 gadzillion? No wonto come right out and le1l you: It's der they've 'got it so cheap. In a
an antique. It has the memory of an couple monilia, it'll be a jal~y!
electric pencil sharpener. Not only · What you need is a unit like I Just
- - - - - - - - - - - picked up, a RoboPurer SkadiUion.
Really, Jerry, you need to pay more
attention to the trade magazines
and go to the computer shows.''
In the showroom, the salesman
do we not carry any communicawas
reciting a litaiay of the fantastic
tions software for a unit that sman. .
they haven't even made anY in five software I would be able to use if I
years. The best thing I could do to upgraded to the tune of about
help you upgrade your communica- . $5,000. I IQld hinJ I didn't think I
tions is to tum ycu on to a good ~ a program that worked log•
carrier pigeon."
·
arithm s in four languages and
He convinced me to come take a printed them out in a four-color
look around the c\lmputer show- sep~ntion wan poster.'
"I'm a writer," I explained.
room, and I followed him back into
the store. He started pointing to "Unlike havinll a degree in comunits and saying ~ords like puters, au a .wnting degree enables
"mega-K-Ram-bytes," which I one to do is compete with other
had no idea the meaning of. How- fame-seeking crazies for 15 minever, I wasn't completely losL I'd ores of the auention of some mapheard some of the men in the office zinc editor with the·personality of
using similar words, in the same Charles Manson.
tones they used to use to talk about
"To say I'm not making enough
their cars:
off my writing to invest in $S,OOO
"Yeah, I told the wife it was worth of C0111puter equipment is
about time we traded up. They got like saying Queen Elizabeth isn't
. a great deal on a 486 gadzillion exactly popping her buuons over
byres with automatic potato peeler her offspring these days.
at Harry's Hacker Heaven. Why, I
"Besides, before I got my comcan'tafford NOf to buy iL"
puter I was using a Sears electric

Sarah' Overstreet

~ o~:;::a;a~ ::0~=~

favcred nllion trade status ro Beijing. Countries so delignated pay
sharply reduced wiffs on goods
exported to tho United States.
Almost all trading par.tners are
granled MFN status. Once they've
got it, the matter rarely cornea up
again.
Not so with China. After the
1989 Tiananmori mu1acro - in
whii:h lumdreds if not iltou8idl of
pro-democracy demonlallors were
shot or crushed beneath tanb Con&amp;ress inailted on an annual
review of Chlna'1 trade starus and
on linking it to its reccrd on huntan
rights. Three times, George Bush

•
•

''
J

..

.

"

I

f

Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy

-----Weather----Extmded forecast:
.
Saturclay throu1h Monday:
Saturday, fair. Highs from the
upper 70s to the mid 80s, Lows
~Lfnby,paruyd~yw~ bet,...een 60 and 65. Sunday, fair.
· a chance of showers and thunder- Hishs between 80 and 85. Lows
ltormS. High around 80. Chance of between 60 and 65. Monday, fair.
Highs in the mid 80s. Lows in lhe
. rain 40 percenL
,
mid 60s.
·

Soatb-Ce•tral Ohio
.
Showers and thunderstorms
likely IDnighL Low 6S to 70. Light
northwest winds. Otanc:e of rain 70

---MeigS announcements - - -

portable typewriter !hal kept inchtog itself off the desk each time I
hit 're.tum:. Compared to·&lt;what I •
was used to, my little Sanyo seems
like the control panel on the Starship EnteJprise.'
He looked at me with the ~
expression usually reserved for a •
senile old uncle you catch frying •
his trousen on the range, and then ,
he turned away.
•
I remembered where I'd felt like
this before: It was 1962, and my
parents had sent me into the MFA
to buy a package of cucumber
seeds. AU around me were flll'llletS
buying bushel baskets full of seeds, • . ·
and belts, and grease for.tractors as
big' as our little two-bedroom •
house.'
·
No one cared if I bought my ~
package of cucumber seeds or fell •
mto a bane! and was planrecl on the •
back 80 with the reSI of the com.
"
Yet those cucurnbei'S tasled bet- ~
rer than anything I've eaten from a •
store, shipped in from giant farms ;:
from farmers with big tracun.
;:
Seeds, computers, vegetables or ':
software, sometimes bigger is sim- "
ply overkill. ·
~
Sarah Overstreet Is a syndi- ~ '
Cited ,writer for Newspaper :
:
Enterprise Assol:latlon.
'
"

~

!hal wiD never coddle tyrants, from

hS

pear

pro:

rm:.t-

d
•
h
•
0 ay 10 IStory

...

VBSset
Heath Unirecl Methodist Church,
Middleport, will have vacation
bible school Monday through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to noon. "Celebration Park" is the theme. ·

Slunr plunecl
A quilt and crafllhow will be
held be&amp;inaing at 9:30 a.m. Friday
at the ll:xrended Care Facility at
Veterans Memorial Hospilll.
· A bake sale will be held in conjunction with the show and the
: public is inviled.

Car wash
.Pomeroy Troop 249 wiD have a
cat wash Saturday, 9 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. at Marathon in Pomeroy. Cost
is $S for'cars and.$6 for trucks with
shammy dry.

'

·
SiDilDIRt
Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom will have preaching
'and sinJing Friday at 7 p.m. with
· the Dailey Family and others. Pastor Sreve Reed invires the public.
Fellowship follows

Stop delayed
The bookmobile of the Meigs
County Public Library will be pat·
ticipating: in Saturdafs Heritage
Parade. Therefore the Rutland stop
will be tWo holD!! late.

Board to lllftt
The Racine Board of Public
Affairs will meet Monday at 10
a.m. at Star Mill Plrt.

"

China's ~ status and issued an ~
Baghdad to Beijing," He vowed to executive der outlining the condi- "
tie Chi~a 's MFN ~latus to its lions that ust be met if it is to be ~
human-nghts reccrd, liS anns sales approve
xt year: Progress in ~
and its unfair trade practices.
. buman righ , release o( political ~
Afrer the election, the Chinese priSQners, p tection of ihe "reli- '
1
JOSep ,
letitbeknowntheywouldretaliate gious and c ltural heritage" of
against American tmns if its MFN Tibet and m more.
•
ied h' · If
alllhi
status were revoked er if conditions
Trade wi China is important,
~~inC:s;c: 1 ~:'~:~inese,'•t were placed upon it More that 300 Clinton said but •'we are con~
,_
.
The
, respond corporations and trade associations, cerned thal m~y activists and
..ept re11mg us.
Y won 1
fearful of being shut out of the democracy l~ders . continue to
to ~=:~::C~the butchers in world's fasrest-growing economy, languish behind p;iJon bars in
Beijing undentood !hal their friend dispatched a .letter to the While China for no crime other than exerGeorge understOOd them, he dis- House. impl~g the president not cising their consciences."
. ad ·
to punish China.
Four years afrer Tiananmen a
patched his national secunty VISClinton's decision was president of the United Stares
g.~~=~0~~.!; Solomonic: Arms sales and trade ly stands up for principle. Nice
"resume our important dialogue 00 practicea would henceforth be sev- game, Bill.
international questions of vital ered from the MFN issue, but
JOIIeph Spear 18 a syDcllcated
interest to both our nations."
human ri~hts would not. With writer for Newspaper Enterprlle
And how did the Chinese . exi!ed Chmese students atanding AsiOdatloa.
.
respond to Gccqe'a ptle touch? beside him, the presidertt renewed
They exccurecl, illlpriaOncd lmd tor· T
tured thoUJ&amp;nds more dissidents. .1
They foreed women to undergo
sterilizations and abortions. They
., Tbe Alloclated Pres!
continued their brutal su~
~orlay is Tbunday, June 10, the 16181 day of 1993. There are 204 days
of Tibet. They aold chcmicall used left m the year.
in the manufacture of nuclear
Torlay'a Hlpli~ in History:
woepor11to Iraq. They aold a nucle- On-- 10, 194~ the O.II!JO m'l red 173 male residents of Lidice
ar reactor to Algeria. They sold Czecbollovlkia, in JI'Uli•tion for the killing of a Nazi off'ICial .
Ontblacllre:
.
.
mlssiles 1to Pakistan. They may
bave revaved their germ warfare
In 1801, the North Africln lllale of TriDoli declared war on the Unirecl
pfOilam. They cracked clown on S!l~ in a dilptlle over safe peuage o( merchant veasell through the
relilious ICdvlly.
·
); 1•••• no.
So much for the lenient
In 11165, tbo open ·~-Wid llolde" by Richlrd w. . pnmiered
' ill Munlrb, Gwmlay.
.
IIPJIIOKb.
·
During the 1992 camprtiJn, BUI
In 1892,1he Republlcall Nllional Convention,·meeting in MilllleapOiia
Ointon cutipted Oeorp Blllh for 110111inated President BenJ:.~Harrison for ro-electlOR and WbitelrN
·his indulpnce of Ch~ opprea- Reid fer vk1e pruident.
· , holnver, Jolt the oleclion to former
slon and called for "an America Pmideat CoveliiiiL)
best down efforts to put eonditioos
on China's MFN status. He had
!'eon !!'.e American liaison officer
m Beajmg for a year, and he fan-

•I columbusIaoo I

'

President Clinton hit~ a ·home run .
Sometimes, you just can't tell
how well a person is going to play
the game until he gets to the big
leagues.
.
Take George Bush, for example.
He had aD the credential~ - . wel.lbred, well-sehooled, dtplomauc
exi!Crience. He play~ the annual
Ch.ma Game three ttme~ an~ he
strakes out, fouls out, hats httle
dribblers in front of the plate.
Comes Bill Clinton. Bookish
policy wonk. Minimal foreign poli~ experience. His first Cia ina
ame, ~e steps up and powders
one. Sb'alght over the waD.
I know, the game everybody
wants to_play ritt now is ~led
~ash Chnton. ut I'm takmg a
ume out to reD you he slammed a
home run whCn he put the despots
~~o _govern China on ~lice that
I! s ume to clean up thear human
nghts mess.
.

IND.

Robert}. Wagman

...

In Ukraine's case, the motive stems to be a distrust of Russia's mililary, as weD :as a desiJe to get some payback for the nuclear weipOIIS its
people helped the Soviet Union build but which Russia now claims fer its
own.
·
The administration appesrs to stand a reasonable chance of succeeding
with Ulaaine, but it's far from clear what the saategy will proci.IJCC in
cases such as Iran, with whom WashinJIOII has no diplomatic relations, or
North Korea, whose announced withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty takes effect Saturday.
·
While Russia retains the bulk of the funner Soviet nuclear arsenal, significant parts were inherited by Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan ~
expandina the official nuclear weapons club from five - Uniled Stares,
China, Britain, France and Russia - to eight in the blink of an eye.
There are nearly 2,000 nuclear warheads for long-range missiles in

.-

Accu-Weather' forecast for

.

'

said.

••

Friday, June 11

Perot's budget numbers don't add up

WASHINGTON - American efforts to reassure Ukraine !hal it can be
militarily secure without nucte. weapons arc part of a broader, untested
·CllntDn adminislnllion straregy to conuol the spread of such weapons.
: At the bean of the Sll'lllegy, U.S. officials say, is an attempt to identify
. and address the insecurities !hal make some COtmlries, such as Ukraine,
believe lhal nuclear muscle is the answer to their ll8lional defense needs.
••Always )'OU need to kind of think through what arc the various ... res·
· wns. that mtght be motivating people to acquire nuclear weapons,"
Defense Secretary Les Aspin said Monday foUowing LBiks with Ukrainian
officials in Kiev.
.
· Once you understand it, then you need to eliminale the motive, Aspin

..

Fair weekend forecast for Buckeye State

OHIO Weather
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
June 10, 1993

· Dance planned
The
Belles and Beaus Wesrem
Coun!J M¥1ic Nllht IM!t
The Lotrrid&amp;e Community Cen· . Square Pance C~~b Vl!ill have a
·ler will have c:ountry music night dance Sune 19 from 8-11 p.m. at
Saturday from 7 p.m. to midnight , the senior citizens cenier. Kent Hall
will .be the caller. Casual dress.
AU bands welcome.
Refreshments served.
•
'
Reunion planned
Wolfe and Toler reunion with
gospel country and rockabilly
music will-be Suly 3 at Kerra Parle
; Carlos McCall
in Ravenswcjpd, W.Va., from noon
Carlos M. McCall, 71, Wood- to 8 p.m. Bring a covered dish.
: yard Road, Albany, died Wednes; day afternoon, June 9, 1993, 11 the
DAVtomeet
• VeteranJ Administration Hospital
The DAV and Ladi~ Auxiliary
: in Chillicothe. ·
will meet Monday. at 7: I 0 p.m. at
, Born in Meigs County, he was a the haD on Butternut Avenue.
: son of the late Elza and Lorena
:.VanTre McCall. He wu a farmer
Lealoa to meet
• and an army ve- of World War
Americanl..eP.&gt;n Drew Webster
' II.
Post No, 39- wdl meet ;ruesday.
. He is survived by his wife, Dinner is at 7 p.m. with meeting at
; Helen Neva Newlun McCall; two 8 p.m, Election of ofl'lccn. ·
• dluahten. Beulah CnibUec, ChiUi:.cotlie, Nancy Miller. Columbus;
~ one grandson, and one brother,
~ Robtlt. McCall, Albany.
Divorces souaht
' Besidea parents hC - (liiiCeded
Actions
for divorce have been
in death by hia lltep-rnother, Seuie
filed
in
the
Meigs
County Court of
, R,eeves McCall; two 110111, Fredrick
Common
Pleas
by
Wilber L. Ward,
Eugene and Richard Lowell
Middlepcrt,
from
Sharon
L. Ward,
McCall; and one sister, Thelma
Middleport;
and
by
Roben
Allen
Steinmetz.
Proffitt,
Racine,
from
Raena
Lee
Services will be Saturday at 1
p.m. at Bigony Sordan Funeral Proffiu.l'Qmeroy.
Sudpents awarded
Home in Albany. Burial will be in
Sudgmonts have been awarded'
Little Mound Cemetery in Ron
,County.
. by Jhe Meigs County Court of
Friends may call at the funeral Common Pleu to Telmark, Inc.
from Kenneth Wallbrown in the
··home on Friday from 7-9 p.m.
amount
of $71,439.91; to Colum·
l There wiU be; milillry IJ'IIVeside
bus Southern Power Company
'Sef'Vices.
.
from Sobn Richard in the amomitof
$791.30; 10 F'tnt Depoait Natiopat
The Daily Sentinel
CC Bank from Kennetll Utt in the
(VBPSIII-IIG')
amollnt of $S,l06.4S; to General
P.bliohod ....,. . - . MOnday
Motor Acceptance Corporation
111.-h rn~ m eoart s~L ~·-·
from Sobn M. Spiral in the·arnount
0111o bJ u. 0111a Valle)'
of $3,321.51; to Valley Lumber
CclmPOllriM""' 't• Inc., - • .., and Suppi:Tac;Corporauon
· from Fritz
Ollla 4611111 Ph. 11112-21118. au•..,....,, Ohio.
Sayre in
amount of $3,409.~;
Mombor. ,., - .... Pnoa, and tlut
United National Bank fnm SoAnn
ana N•••P"l"" "'-11tt011, Na~anal Evana and otlien in the amount of
Mverdli"' ..._.n&amp;o~vo. Bnnhom
$3,842.01; and American General
No...,.por Sot•, ?33 Tlllnl ANn..,
Finance frora ·Sohn R. Runnel in
Now York, Now York 10011.
the amount of$4,479.95.
POSTMASTER.• Sobd cba- "'·
Dillolutiollllf'IDtecl
~-~~46'=: lll Court St.,
Diuoludona have been granted
IRIIICIIIPTIO" ltATU
.
in the Meigs Cotmly Colin of Com·
IF Cont• orllotor
moo Pleas to Ban l!dward Thomu
OM Woot..- ......- - - - -.. --*1.60
and Lorella Mlrie Thomu; and to
OM Monlll ................._ ....... - .......l8.111!
Sohn Holman and Alana L. HolClne v. ......... ,..._ ...............- ..taS.JO

~ Area

~

death

Court news

f

,.._pot.

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 10, 1113

....,liold,.

-to

By The Associated Press
Showers and storms are on tap
through Friday for parts of central
and southern Ohio.
Thunderstorms developed along
a cold front inoving through northem Ohio late Wednesday. These
thunderstorms dropped' scattered
rainfaU amounts of a quarter to a
half inch before dissipating shortly
after ntidnighL
·
The cold front responsible for
these storms was expected to
become stationary across southern
Ohio. This will keep a risk of
showers and thunderstonns across
the southern half Ohio through
Friday with the best chance over
the extreme south.
Lows tonight will be from 60 to
65 while highs on Friday will be
near 80 degrees.
The National Weather Service
predicrecl a nice weekend with fair
skies and highs from the upper 70s
to ntiddle 80s on Saturday and 80
to 85 Sunday.
·
The record high temperature for
this dare at the Columbus weather
station was 91 degrees in 1911. The
reccrd low was 41 in 1988.
Sunrise this morning was at 6:02
a.m. Sunset will be at 9 p.m.
ArouDcl the natloo
Skies were clearing across much
· of the nation today, with more hot,
sticky weather expected in the
South and up tbe East Coast.
Many areas from New England
through the Ohio Valley to Texas
were recovering today from a band
of severe thunderstorqts that moved
across the region W~esday.
Scattered thunderstorms were
expecled again today in the soutbemPiainsandtowerOhiovaney.
Tornadoes were ,reported
Wednesday in West Virginia, Kentucky and Oklahoma. No serious
injuries were reporrecl, but dozens
of homes and a truck-driving
school in Oklahoma were damaged.
Gusts up to 80 mph uprooied
trees, downed power lines and

damaged buildings. The winds
were strong enough to send several
farm horses "nying through the
air," said Jennifer Swink of Wooddale, Pa.
An elderly man in Knox Township, Pa. died when he feU down
the stairs while investigating a
storrn-relaled power outage. ·
Sevcnl Southern cities set new
records Wednesday as remperatures

QUeen •••

Sun was also expected from the
northern Plains across to the Mid.die Atlantic Stares, and in much of
the West, with highs in the 70s and
80s. The desert Southwest was

Museum , Sugar Run Mill, S~cred
Heart Catholic Church, Rock
Springs Fair Grounds and Log
·
Ducky Derbl .
Cabin, Rock Springs, Royal Oak
To conclude the day s activities,
Resort, Meigs County Golf Course,
a rubber ducky derby will be held
Schwegman's Comer, site of forat 3:30 p.m. The derby will .take to
the water of the beautiful Ohio
mer MGM Landrnarlc. Grace EpisRiver in an ·anticipated flotilla of
copal Church , St. Paul Lutheran
Church, Trinity Congregational
1,000 ducks.
Church, Meigs County Courthouse.
Anyone ma)' "adopt a duck" for
Further information may be
only $5 and pnzes include a $1 ,000
obtained by calling Charlotte
U.S. Savings Bond, a $500 U.S.
Elberfeld at 992-7486 or Clarice
Savings Bond, a membership to the
Krautter at992-3785.
·
Big Bend Health and Fi~ CenThe
Preceptor
Beta
Beta
Chapter, a "duck dinner" from Krogers,
ter,
Beta
Sigma
Phi
Sorority,
will
and many more~·
also have a quilt show at St. J;&gt;aul
The derby wiD begin along the
Lutheran Church.
·
riverbank in front of PQmeroy VilA craft show will also be prelage Hall with the finish line at the
sented at the Meigs County Senior
levee area at the city parking lot.
Citizens Center. There will be a
Proceeds from the race wiD ~o
quilt show and sale at the center on
to the Pomeroy Men:hants Assocta·
Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
tion to fund several beautification
and on Sunday from noon to 4 ~ .lit .
projects in downtoWn Pomeroy .
~dmission is $1. Anyone wis~ing
Further information on the
to display a quilt should take it 'to
Ducky Derby may be obtained by
the cenrer this week. Further inforcontacting Dick Warner at Krogers,
mation may be obtained by calling
992-5490, or Soan Wolfe at Bank
Alice Wolfe at the center at W2Orie, 992-2133 .
Lottery
numbers
2161.
Other activities
Further information on any fterAll day activities include an
CLEVELAND {AP) - There
itage
Days activity may be
antique show in the mini-pad by were no tickets sold listing an six
Russ and Hope Mocre of Riverine numbers selected in Wednesday's obtained by contacting any Bank
Antiques, games for the public by Super Lotto drawin$ w~ $16 mil- One, Pomeroy, employee at 992the Pomeroy Scout Troop and a lion at stake, tlui Ohio Lotla'y said. 2133. Anyone wanung to display a
putting'green for golfers.
'The jackpot would normaUy be craft on Court Street may do so by
Trinity Chiuch will be serving increased to $20 minion for Satur- paying $25 to Dianna Lawson,
food and ice cream that day in its day, but wiD go to $30 minion with crafrer chairman, at Bank One.
air conditioned fellowship hall on the addition of unclaimed prize
Lynn Street. A spaghetti dinner money from lottery drawings, a lot· ·
.. '
will be held Saturday at S p.m. at tery spokesman SSJd.
Here are Wednesday nighCs
Ohio Lottery selections:
Super Lotto
COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP)8-15-16-3841-44
Direct
livestock prices and receipts
failed to provide.Sustis with a bill
{eight, fifteen, sixteen, thirty- at selecled
buying points Thursday
of particulars.
eight, forty-one, Ccny-four)
by the Ohio Department of AgriAnother entry has now ,been Kicker
. culture:
·
.
filed by Sudge Favreau in which he
9-S-1-S-1-6
Barrows
and
gilts:
sready to.SO
rescinds the order for dismissal.
(nine, five, one, five, one, six)
cents
higher;
demand
moderate
..
This latest entry states that the Pick 3 Numbera
u.s.
1-3,
230-260
lbs.,
country
court held an oral hearing on June
9-34
points, 46.5047.50; plants 47.752 with Toy and WiUiam Safranek,
{nine, three, four)
48.75,
a few 49.25.
attorney for the defendant, and Pick 4 Numbers
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
found that the defendant had been
0-3-7-7
country
points, 47 .7548.SO. .. ·
provided with a bill of particulars
{zero, three, seven, seven)
Receipts Wednesday 7,500.
p~uant to lhe Coun's order.
Estimaled receipts Thursday 7,500.
It further states that all charges
Prices from The Producers Livein the indictment are once again 'Driver injured in wreck
stock
Association:
pending for trial on Sune 25.
· An accident at the intersection
Cattle:
steady.
of Ebenezer and West Main Streets
Slaughter steers: choice 73.00' at noon Wednesday resulted in 80.00; select66.00-73.00.
•
·totaling one vehicle and sending its
Slaughter heifers: choice 7UXJ· Mine No. 31 , Bill Whooten to driver to the hospital.
78.SO; select6S.00-71.00.
PI
v
11 H · 1 11 56
Pomeroy Police reported that
Cows: steady; all cows 57.00
Charles Deem, 31, Racine, was
easant a ey ospata ; :
a.m., Syracuse unit to Old County
anddown.
.
Road 35 for Dale TeafOrd to Verer- operating a 1993 Honda scooter
BuDs: steady; aU bulls 64.SO and
ans Memorial H. ospa··-•
....; 12:16
· p.m., east on West
hil Main
. when he lost
di
dowq.
·
Pomeroy unit 10 West Main Street, contro1 w e trymg to aven a p
mo~cle accident, Charles Ray · in the road, and struck a truck
T
owned by Cremeans Concrete and
Dean 10 V···--· 2 s1
SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA -,
p~rs Plai;;-'u";;~ t~ RJ'~~·7 ~g; Supply and operated by Denzil
446 4524
. ,' "
Harry Wile to St. Soseph Hospital; Yost, Jr., Bidwell, which was com6:31 p.m., Racine unit to Yellow- ing from the McDonald's parking
bush Road, Virginia Hendricks to lot onto West Main.
Veterans; 6:32p.m., Racine unit to
Deem was taken by the
Thjrd Street, Marian Snyder to Vet· Pomeroy squad to Ve~s Memoerans; 6:43 p.m Syracuse unit to rial Hospital where he was trealed
"
.
' Valley Bell Road for Teresa for abrasions and a hand injury.
lUM .. HhliW
Andenlol), treated but not ,tranSJJOr:t· The scooter was demolished and
ed; 7:31 P.l!l·.o Rutland urut to Main there was light damage to dte resr
Street, Patn.caa. Day, treale!l but not bumper of the ~ted· ,
.
lfa!lsported; 7.48 p.m., Middl~
Deem was ca
.or no msurun!t to South Second for Jesstca am;~ an accident at 8:35 on West
Mag.ht 10 ~eterans; 8=47 p.m., Main, Robert Roush, 30, of Nye
R~cme . umt 10 Bald Knob • Ave., Pomeroy, was cited for
Suversvtlle Road, Sohn Ottman .to assured clear diStance and DUI
Vererans; 9:36 p.m., Pomeroy Ftre
Station \o Dark Hoi! ow Road, afler hitting the resr ofa car driven
smoke odor, ~reve Eblin ~X; by Karen Sobnson, 42, Mason. W.
ll:SI p.m., Middleport unlliO Val· .VaPolice said that John.son had
!age Manor Apartments, Sohn Lau- .,~, her )992 Fl""' Explo- at
derrnilt to Veterans.
•.....,.....
uou
·the' Pomeroy-Mason Bridge intersection when it was struck from
Thursday
1: IS a.m. Pomeroy unit to Fish- behind by Roush's 1982 Chevrolet
er Street, Sames Cranlc to Veteraias. truck. There was light damage to
both vel:Ucles.
these races and prizes ·will be

Order for dismissal rescinded
An entry filed in Meigs County
Common l&gt;leas Court last week
ordering dismissal of two charges
, of rape against a Meigs County
man has been rescinded.
Charles Rex Sustis, 24, was
arraigned Nov. 23, 1992 following
an indictment in September by a
Meigs County Grand Jury.
According to the entry filed on
June 1 by Sudge Dan W. Favresu,
sitting by assignment of the Ohio
Supreme· Coun, the charges were
dismissed on the basis that Special
Prosecutor K. Robert Toy had

coasL

expecting lemperatures in the 90s.
Light, scattered showers were
forecast for the Pacific Northwest
and northern Rockies, with highs
l'Cl!ChinR the 60s and 70s. Clouds
were CJtpetled to linger over northem New En~land as well, wil)l
temperatures m the 60s.
The high for the continental .
Uniled States on Wednesday was
104 degrees at Palm Springs, Calif

Continued from page 1

awarded.

of

pushed into the IOOs, and similar
weather was expected today ..The
National Weather Service issued an
excessive heat advisory for today
and Friday near the South Carolina ·

the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church with donations going to a
localfamily to assist with medical
expenses.
A plant exchange will also be
held 10 the mini-park under the
direction of Bobbie Karr. During
this event, anyone who would like
to exchange one of their plants for
something new may do so. Just
bring your plant to the park that
day.
.A tour of Pomeroy other Meigs
County points of interest will be
offered Heritage Weekend by the
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority.•The tour will
begin at McDonald's on Saturday
at 10 a.m. and the cost is $5 per
person. The tour wiD last about two
hours and will conclude at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
where refreshments wiU be served.
Places on the tour include Meigs
County Public Library,' Pomeroy
Church of Christ, Meigs County

Livestock
report

EMS units,.,,l!snond
to 13 call.s
1:'
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to 13 caDs for assistance
on Wednesday and early .Thursday
morning.
.
Weclaesday ·
9:35 a.m. Rutland unit, Meigs

Hospitai news
Veteraas Memorial

~DNESDA Y ADMISSION -

Altce_ Garnes, Dexter; Virginia
Hendricks, Portland.
WEDNESDAY DISCHAR&lt;lES
-Helen Will.
Holzer Meclicll Ceatei'
Aprllll disc:hlrxes
Thomas Carter, Mary Canter,
Cathy
Saunders,
Brian
McCormick, Matthais Simpkins,
Amy West, Glen Hutchinson,
Bessie McCollum, Geneva HoweU,
Donna Oiler, Attarah Dewhurst and
William Guinther
April9 births
Mr. and Mrs. Brent Ervin, son,
Wellston and Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Roberts daughler VintOn
· '
'
·

Announce dates for
summer classes
Summer school offCiing classes
for credit will be held at Meigs
High School, Sune 14 through Suly ·
2, Fenton Taylor, principal,
announced today. '
Classes wiD ,be held from 8 a.m.
to noon each weekday at a cost of
$1780 for a year's course, and $35
for semesrer couries. The classes to
be offered are ninth grade math,
ninth gra~e English, lOth grade
English, and U. S. History.
Those interested in enrolling
should contact the high school.

...

Papers tiled

Anicles of incorporation have
been flied w~ the office of Scqetar:y of State Bob Taft for the
Metgs Morel, Inc. Inco~rator is
IDIOL8 OOPY
man. ' .
Herald, Sr. of Mtddleport,
Dolly. .................. ~~-.......- .211C.ta
A~.: c-panrecl by Frank
who.also servea as the aaenL
cholri"' lopoy u. ..m..
the ...,._ c
Court of Com
• moy nmll In - - to Tho
u~•
~l!l)'
Dolly Sond..t ... I ~~~-- ola or 12
man Pkis ""Olllllt B. Youna from- R ecycIe Day Fr Iday
-~~~ t&amp;uta. CN4i' wtl1 bo at,.. earrior . Dobanth J. Yotlli8Frida fro 9
' .
- -·
___. ••• 1
Maiallltlurm._..
th .._,Y Courn a.Um.1Dlul noon,
t1o ..bocripdono by ...n ,... ·-•- n
Marrlap llt:enaea have been
e ....,.11
nty Ultar Control
_ . wbon " - cam.. ..mo. Ia
iailllld by Mills• Callllty Probale Pioar.. IIICI lito Columbia Town..aMlo.
·
Court to DoUJiu Richard Miller, · ship Board of 1'ntstees wiD condoct
r=:.':.t.'l!:~
3S Pornoro)', .ad TUimy L)'lln a Recycle Day at
Columbia
13 Weab. ............- .......- ........... QU4
VOylu,l6,
Scoi&amp; AJ1Ga fOWillhlp Pile Ileplnment build·
:: ::t:.::::::::~-:::::::::::::::::::::::1::~ w- 33 Poowaoy IIIII I Ollie llll 011 S'lllle Route 143 - CarDe' An b'Udcil., 21 itacme; IIICl penter. MOilliO'
wiU
40 Tmv
ta
........................................
AU.
s,.,.;....;;.,
24,
Welnbe
ncycled,
lncllldlna
cw,
alus.
It • w-...,,.,.,,,.,.,,,,_,.. ,,,,.. .,,,.,,.,,.
#
~
and umber
• ...,..................................... - dale, Pia., aad Calenl Paye Mow·
• IIOWiplpet,
n .
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. ery, 23, Welradale, Fla.
one and two pl"'th.

-bon . .

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=

J\.wor,

•
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the

hold-·

.1ft

.'
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'

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•
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• I

'

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~ports

Thursday, June 1o, .1993

The Daily §!P.~~~,!"

Pomeroy

I

Middleport, Ohio

By C~CK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Mike
Bielecki apparently JOt tile mes-

•

~levcland m~er Mike Har·
grove pulled Btelecki from
Wednesday niaht' s 3-2 victory
over Boston in the fifth inning, one
o11t before Bielecki would have
qualified for the win, because he
was Cjllitinually falling behind hit·
ters. .
It was a sign , Hargrove said,
that Bielecki still lacb IXX!fidence
in his surcically repaired right

I

t!

COLONY THEATRE
STARTING FRIDAY

DRR6Dll
~-~,·.

'

, . BAND TOURNAMENT WINNERS _; Fir.
ma a 12 under par to win the Melp Memorial
Band aolr tournament was tbe team or Pat
O'Briea, Doua Huter, Bob Smith, Tonya
Hunter and Bob Calhoun. Pictured From left to

1

ri&amp;bt are Doug Hunter; Pat O'Brien, Toarnament honoree Jim Vennarl, Bob Smith and
Tonya Hunter, Calh11un .-as not pteseat when
picture wu taken.

Women's
Comfort Ultra

Ala PlDa, Mk:lual Laae. md Mite Td.:
..,.., ~; llmed llulcc, Dolahoo
Bowmm, Trorin Vddez, and Charlea
Unk, ~ Lillcoln MuWI, IIOCCIIId
bueman; Kcnnedt Reod, fita bai5Cmln;
Jame~ POllet, calehet; Jeff Michael and
Rmald Shanlllo., ahanllopt.
CALIFORNIA AN"OELS; Sianed
Matthew Peritho, Jeff Bawlaoa, Geoff
Grcnert, Michael Kane, Job.n Nedeau,
Auan Pu.ft'lll' and &lt;hdl' l!dlcll. pitcbotl:
Jomle B..U,
KAMn Hom,
AaroG Ouiel, Ted Tllfaa.y, Derrin Doty
IIMi Auon hWOli. oudicidc:n; Juan Hm·
denoa and llonr) kina. shdrutopl; and

· · -•Baseball•NATIONAL LEAGUE

• ,.

EMieraDh'*-

~-~-- •........ ..:

~~ .~

;;.::::r:............32

SL Loalo ..............29
C~Jicoao................. 28
l'iUIIIUr&amp;h ........... ..28
Florid. ...................26
N.... Yaok ............. .19

:16

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21
21
31
37

.l18

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.4!6
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GB

1.!1
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11.!1
11.!1
14
20.!1

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4&gt;&lt; Aqoleo ...........30 :16 .l36
..................32 21 .S33
CINCJNNATI ........21 31 .47l

s.o Jlieao ..............23

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()Jiondo ......... .... .17 41

.......
Mo,_,.........
CLEVELAND

~NDIANS :

4.S
6
6

.397
.293

Siancd
K.riltopher Hanaon, SteVe Kline, J..on
tdac:UJ, Ro1md J),!••u, Bna Palm•,
Chrillopbor Plumlee, llolton Dempoey,
ud. laWl DiNwln., pkchon; Jeff Haas,
SW¥• Soliz, Ccny Jobaloa, and Jaton
Manblll, catchcn; Stc.ve Hodson ,

9.!1
14 '
21)

Wodlleodats oc:ores
:

:0

I

.

SCCIU Baldwill. Auan Huber, Tim KUbin·

:1-6), B!J'm: .
. dNaNNAn (lhlchv ,.....) at Alllnta
(Gil .... 7-2), 7&gt;40 p.OL

Mtnniq, Ouil Midtalai:, Dcnon New·
man, J11on Rtjque, Matt Wtllh, Matt
Woidonach, and Ryoo WIUWior, phcbon;

Friday's eames

TOny Bank•, Eric Harris, Mich1cl
Mcl...Md, an.d Matt Reete, autfielden;
Brandy Benaoechea, thortttop; and
William Saunde:n. bt btlernan.
SEATTLE MARINERS: Si1ncd Ed
lloadolph and , .....y c..law, ........,

tlr:i,

Philadelphia (Greene 1-0) It New
Yaok (Sabaliop H), 7&gt;40p.m.
" Monupal (Barnet 1·1) ill Sl. Louit
cf,..Ubwy U), 8;35 p.m.
(WWfield ~" Florioh

-

(Aquino:!-!~ 7;3l p.m.

Phllado!piU• (Sehillina 7·1) "N.,.
Y..t (Sdlounit 2-7), 7&gt;40 p.m.
CINCINNAn (Rjjo 6-2) at A\lfnll
(0. Madel~ 5·.5), 7:40p.m.
)lonC.-1 Glill 6-1 ) "

poe 3-6), S:!l.p.m.
Hc~nton

Sc. Louil (Ma·

{Portuaal 4-2)

An_.

It

Colorado

(lloynooo 3-3), 9;()S pm.
· ~ (a
(OrGas S-4) at San Oiqo

(B..,..;l! ·T), I ();OS p.m.
au..., (IWI&lt;ey s-2) .. s.n FraaoUco
(Willen 3-3). 10;3l p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EuttnDivlflon

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: T.......................3s

· No" Yaok ..... .........32
• Ba~~an .... - .............21
J l -...............21
) 6 1 -.............26
CIJ!VIII,AND .......23

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Wedneodly' soc:ores
S..tde,,Milw. .ecl
CI.E\'EUoND 3, a.... 2
Califamil6, TDnlftiD 4
~ 7, Oakland.
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4
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KMwu Cily JO,N.W\'C:d: 3

Ja~on

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Enjoy great sound

and l'landteme atyting
tl'lat's at nome in any
room. Genuine walnut

finish . A reaJ bargain.

:Is retirement
.~in Gretzky's
.future?

..... 131.H '40·1122

.

By BETH HARRIS
MONTREAL. (AP) .- Losin11
,the Slalllcy Cup may prove more
•costly to the Los Angeles Kings
; than they thought possible.
: . WaYne 0I'Citzky said he's COD·
:sideling redrement after 14 seasons
(~ the greatest player in the game.
·He plans to decide his future by
· n~t week.
: "For my whole life, I always
;put what's best for my league, my
•1Cl1111, etc., rust. Now I've got to
!put myself litst," he said.
: The Kings' loss 10 the Montreal
·Canadiens in the fifth and final
1pme Wedncsda~ night kept Oret\Zky from fulfilling a promise he
;made five years ago. After being
;traded 10 Los Angeles in 1988, he
:promilec! tho city a Stanley Cup.
• It didn't happen, but Oretzky
lived up 10 the rest of his com-

fim

Fonner. third blacmcn: Mart Dorau:z,
t hoN1op; Scott Eidle, Klint Klaa1, John
Vindivich ed Tod Wicczonll, outfield·
on.
NEW YOAJC MIITS: SiJ!!ed Robert

'~·DIEGO PADRES; Fi red Joe

Mcilvaine, acnenl manaaer. Named
Rlftdy Smilh pntnl"""'J"'·
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: Siped
Chriltophu Altm1n, Clark Anderson,
' Steven Bout&amp;ooi•. Steven Day, Doolltt
Drumm, Krlitin fran.ko, Brook Sm1th,
. ' u;bon; Donie! Bunou, Mi&lt;:hoel C=e,
~•ul Reyn oldt, catch.en; Chriltophcr
Ownp, and Jonathan Sbroc:c:o, tec:ond
bi.IMIInCn; Milk Gulseth, fint baseman;
a... Kma. Williom Muclla-, .,d O.vid
T.,ic:iai, •hort.ttopt; AnlhonJ Mtton,

To4d '-ina. and JCeith WillUma, l'llll· .
ftel&lt;len; ood Brion Zolold. l h i n l -;
and •IIJMid lhcm toEwn:ttofthe.Nortbo
wea. Lelpe. Sl8ted luon Canizam, ...
and bucman; I:kr1 Der!bow, cent• fielda; Joel Galaru, c:alcher; Michul Me-·
MuDea and Juon Mycn. pik:h•; lflllu·
~ lhem. to Scottfdale of the Arizona

TANDY~

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:the pmc and help lCD L:A. on tho
:f!.m~ or ilcJ!:ker. 10 help tum tile
!~ orpmzaaon lr'DUIId.
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ATLANTA HAWKS; Aped 10"""'
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HOUSTON OILI!lS ' Siped Clint
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Wlind Cbrillums, defcntive·end;
Moata Cub•, defonain ••ckle; Dale

..............
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Willi-a~.~TonrRand, oor·
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·'fink, the Drllllization beinJ suc&lt;:easful - I really don't hlvc 10
:W011~ thatan)'IIKR. I think
'I've
Ill my obllJI'Ionl."
· 1bc Lal Angeles Tlmea report·
~ IOdiiY dlat Oletzky was mikl111
kevcral demands of tho Klnss
be(Ote he would return for IIIOiher

,~

~.
llufll-l!&lt;lmond.linoboekcr,
- Paul 01-o:U
; c.n.
Swv. Carm•, ••feet, alld John Lcwit,
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS : Slanod
Man:r.u Allen, twutinJ baek, to a th:nle·

By DAVE HARRIS
.
. Sentinel Clll'reiJIOlldent
Seventy-five golfen p~yed in
·the annual Meigs Band Memorial
Golf Tournament beld during
·Memorial Day Weekend at the
· MeigsCountyGolfCoune.
The team of Pat O'Brien, Doug
Huntez, Bob Smitll, T1111ya Hunte~
and Bob Calhoun was the winner
with a 12-under-par score. Four
teams tied at nine under and in a
chip off the team of Ray Redman,
Clyd!: Sayre, Roy Vauahan, Rob
Morgan and Mel Weese came in
second place. The quintet or Adam

Krawsczyn, Larry Kennedy, Mike
Bartrum, Bob Henry and Jimmy
Smitll finished in thin! place.
.
This year's honoree was long· time Meigs County educator and
coach Jim Vennari. Vennari is in
his 47th year as a major league
baseball scout, witll the last 2S
bein with the Cinciruwi Rl'.ds.
~rough the years he has been
instrumental in Signing Ken Griffey
Sr., Don Gullett, Tom Browning,
AI Oliver and the current major
league save leader Jeff Montgomery amilng others.
After tile tournament, touma-

'

'

ment director Mal-, 0 ' Brien .,0,sented a plaque to Vennari ~
O'Brien also read letters froin
lon&amp;time friend and fellow scout
Rex Bowden, Reds owner Marge
Schott and Vennari's brother.
SchoU also sent her loilgtirne scout
a honaary Reds contract.
:
O'Brien also.JRSC11ted a "kc~ lo
the community" tD 1988 Meigs
graduate Mike Banrum. Bartrum, ,
who has played in all three band
tournaments, left for Kansas City
the next clay 10 ?.repare for a P.ro
football career w1th the Chiefs. -· ' .·

•

:
VENNARIHONORED-·
: Longtime educator aad coach
• Jim Vennarl was honored
· recently at the Melp Memorial
: lland Golr Tournament. Ve•·
: narl Is curreutly' Ia bla 47th
; year and a m!Uor leapt base, hall .IICOUt and la his 25tli year
, 81 a Redl IICOUt. Pictured from
: left to rlgbt are amnant Melas
; Bnci director Johu Van Reeti,
: Venaarl, Melp Band director
• Toney Dln1ess, tournameat
: director Mary O'Brien 81d
, tourniiDent partk:lpaat Kennle
' BUI or WSAZ !l'elevlslon 3. ,

..... 31.15115-11104

National Leaaut
OIICAOO CUBS: SiFCld Jm R~illtf
md Wadel Walker, pi1chm; J~ C1iM
and John Rodp , c•tchcr; SteVe Kulpa
•All Ronald Smilh, infiolden; Miebaol
Oiblon, .Millohnlm and Thomas Kin&amp;
outfielders.
HOUSTON ASTROS; Si_.,ed Ch•d
Cto~tley, Tom C:r: ~nttiowtki, Michael
Diorio, Ric hard Humphrey, Rd~srd
Lewis and Jon Pbillipt , pitebert; Brett
Callm Uld Trevor Frl'llth•uer, c:ateher~;
Dank Roal, fim buenoon; Cuy Bridaa.

3.!1

2.S

It's that simple. Replaces
lost or broken r8JTM)Ies, too.

Rafaol Canaona, Briln Sota, John
Daniela, Tun Bruce, Mlu Apaa, Jon U~
dike and kelvin MitdWI, pildlcn: Chad
Dunann. Chria Dwnaa. Joo Berube., Joe
M•this 1nd John Tejcek, outficlden;
MIMy Paul. and RCI)' Miller, infioiAion.
TEXAS RANOERS: SilPled Dom Gat·
ti , audi.dcLer and Joe Morvay, pitcl\er.

2.!1

Marquis Grissom hit a solo
homer in 'the fust, his ninth of the
season, and Tim Laker had an RBI
single in the fourth to give the
Expos an early 2-0 lead.
But the Reds pecked away as
Joe Oliver hit a aolo homer in the
sixtll and Randy Milligan's pinchhit, RBI double lied the game in .~
seventh.
"It was great when we cail!e
back. It's something 10 build on;- •·
Ayalasaid.
..
"It was important to go into
Atlanta on an 11pbcat note;" ·
Browning Sllid.
The Redl left II men on ~
IJid the Expos 12. In the fust, the
Reds had the bases loaded W:ith
nobody out, but didn't sciR a run. .
"There.were some many tim~
tllat we didn 'I execute, inclllding
on a ·squeeze play," Alou said:
"We had the upper hand the whole
way but we didO 't do a good jQJI
fundamentally."

•
'•

Robort hlcacr. Plul Crow, Cuey CraiJ,

Oonllu&gt;oky, Jolf c ...... ond Bliln Moa,
pitdten; Tad Smith, flllt biaeman; R~•
Perrier, outfielder, ud David Zuniaa ,

witll three putouts 8ild eight assists,
some m very difficult bacthands.

..•

Juat enter a One-time 3-digit

Lawa. Thomtt Luft, Daek

~eeoad buernan; Terry Beyna 111d

It's something to build on."
And defensively, the pme was
flawless WltiJ a 12th-inning throW·
ing error by Montreal tllird beseman Mite Lansing allowed Bip
Roberts 10 score the go-ahead nm.
Lansing was charged with an
error when he threw a ball into the
dirt at fust besc. John VanderWal,
who rarely plays fust. took a stali at
the ball but couldn' t come up witll
iL .
Robens scored from second as
Lansing appeared to throw off balance after fielding a ball hit by
Bobby Kelly against Mike Gardiner (0..2).
"It looked like Lansing was
· going to tag third on the play."
Montreal manager Felipe Alou
said. ·:nen he was flatfooted. It
was a tough throW for him.''
"It was a bed throw," Lansing
said.
"Our llefense made all the
plays, especially Barry Larkin,"
Ayala said.
Larkin had an exceptional game

code for each of your components and start using-

OAKLAND ATHLETICS ; Siped

llitubuq;b (Cooke 4-2) at Florida

~

CUT·81'1t

KANSAS CITY ROYALS ; Siped

l ·3) .. San

MONTREAL (AP) - Davey
Johnson was at his highest point
since returning 10 managing t"\'O
wecbago.
.
Johnson was definitely· happy
with bis Cincinnati Reds' 3-2 VIC·
tory over tho Monlieal Ex~ in 12
innings on Wedncsclay mght, b11t
he was also pleased abo11t the
excitement the game provided and
his nitchii\\:taff.
.
11
Grat~ebeU," Johnson said.
. " Games like that make baseball
the gan1e it is. It was a well pitdled
game IJid it was well played defensively. Tbc bullpen was 90 percent
of the gan1e."
Six Reds relievers, including
Gre' Cadaret (2-1), combined for
· six tnnings of four-hit ball after
staner Tom Brownilll worked six
Strong innings.
BC?bby Ayala .II~ the fmal tw~
outs m the 12th mnmg 10 earn hJS
second save.
"EVenitody did the job," Ayala
said. "We used everybody, it
seems. Everyone worked together.
It was great 10 come back like diaL

~LISI'JC_

Dave Stieb, pitcher, to a minor Jea.aue
~ wilh Omaha of lhc Amcricm lu·
IOCi.ltim .

oloao ('Nhlldmllii-3),4:Ql pm.

elbow. Bielecki mUsed thelut two Indians leadina 2-1. Bielceti
moolhs of last season because of kicked a c&lt;ioler down tho doJOUI
Slqll, llld loud pounding IMiberthe elbow IJIOb(em.
llled
throu~put tho stadium fran\
"It looted at times that he tmtlldve, and he pitdled behind in ~ Indians duJOUl aflel he left the
.
tho count," Har&amp;rovc said. "TIIII fidd.
Bielecki wu not in the loclter
wu disturbing, because Mike has
J00C1 stuff IJid doesn't have 10 be room after the pme.
"I didn't enjoy going out thole
tmlllive. Coming off 11r111 ~,
Mike has tD start trustins hts 10 get him," ~ve said. " He's
.a good person. It s no problem. I'd .
swff.''
Har&amp;rove pve Bielecki an ani- rather have a cuy like that tbao a
mated lectllre on the mound in tho guy who doesn't want to be out
fourth inning, then pulled him with there. We've had enough of those
two outs in the fifth innin&amp; and the
(sft INDIANS 011 Paae 6)

••'

DameD Badl&amp;c. wdicldcn.

Tbunday'scames

•

'• .

Richard Lemoru, Rodney Holland; and

aNC!NNATI3,-2(t2inn.)

• lao ~- (lt. -

team were (L·R) Rob Morgan, Mel Weese,
Clyde Sayre, Ray Redman and Roy Vau1han.

•

c.-.1-LJftWI,~ndPedzo­

..

~i.Ne,.Yaok3

;

TOURNAMENT RUNNER·UP- A cblp off
decided second place In the Meigs j\temorl11l .
Band golr tournament. On the second-place

992-5627

infieJclcn; Etic Olapmart, Robert Kullc,

Houtwln 0
"'""""'.!., 4. Coklado I
I

•.

Middleport

Richud Prieto, Tiaer Kin&amp;, Get1d

s.o Pnaoloco3, Sc. LouU 1
Pi'

I

1hiJd-

w-.Dt.-

s..Froecilc&lt;&gt; ........la 22
.. .............32 2l

Page 5

Meigs Band Memorial Golf Tournament
draws 75 golfers, six teams in top places

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Reds slip past Expos 3-2 in 12 innings

TOPjiClHT

THE SANDLOT PG

CHAMPIONS AGAIN- For the 24th time In NHl. history, the
Montreal Canadleus wrapped up their season on the Ice with the
Stuley Cup In h110d. This year's bunch knocked orr the L.A. Kings
4·1 Wednesday night to take hockey's top 1,1rize. (AP)

The Dally SenUnel

..

Indians hand Red Sox 3-2 defeat

Page-4

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Thursday, June 10, 1993

Thuraday, June 10, 1993

In NBA Finals,
BbHOWARD ULMAN
PH ENIX (Ap) - It •s too
early .to say the Chicago Bulls can't
be stoi)J)Cd in their march toward
history". Wait another day.
"Let' s not go crazy after one
game," ~harles Barlcley said calmly after hiS Phoenix Suns had crumbled. "Let's wait until Game 2. rr
we Jose that, then we can go
crazy.' '
The weapons that gained tile
Suns the NBA's best record vanished with their homecourt advan- ·
tage in Wednesday night's 100-92
loss in the opener of the finals.
· must f'md 1hem .or
• FriPh oemx
day's second home game.
Barkley couldn't hit his shots,
point guard Kevin Johnson
couldn't create, and the highest·
· the NBA
he
sconng team 1n
was ld
21 points below its average by
Chicago's aggressive defeJil!C.
On the other side, the Bulls did
the things that brought them the
last two titles and' put tliem in posiU.on to become onJy the thin! NBA
ream to win three iri a row. .
.Michael Jordan and Scolti·e Pippen scored allllOSt effonlessly, all
.

the
defended tenaciously and the fi~ debut·t·or a team wt'th a BuDs went ahead 73-69 with one
the Bulls
passed
Y
so well t1w four play- roo2ie coach and rookies Dumas .
ers had five assists each.
and Oliver Miller counted on to quarter left.
And they kept their cool when play key roles.
"There's no moral victory in the
their 20-point lead midway through . The Suns ar .
h
NBWA F'mals," Phoenix coach Paul
the ~ond 1Juarter dropped to two having lost a c~ ~~~ sJ:~ fe~~~ said after the comeback
late m the thin!.
confidence with 1m opening vt'cto·
"We never ,Jost our poise and ry.
Jo1dan decided to take over in
that's a part of the ex~ence and
"I think this does put pressure }.he founh and scored Chicago's
maturity of this team,' Jordan said. on them .. Bulls coach Phil Jack- thii'SlSeight points in the period. But
"We don.'t Jose our control, espe·.
'1
e uns stayed close, trailing only
son
saia.
"We've
got
one
game
88
• mmures
·
1e,L
•
cially on the road.
now and the real!
h
· -85 WI'th ,our
"We don'tlose our composure
'
,Y
Y want to ol.d
Then the Bulls' defensive intenand .we do the right things down :;"y~. 011 theu home court on ·Fn- sity heated up as Phoenix went
the stretch "
•
s~reless on its next five possesJordan had 31 points and Pi~ , . Before the gam~. Jordan broke s1ons, th1ee of them ending in
27 Ch'JCago hit· 53 percent o ··1ts hiS
two-week media boycou in an blocks by Jordan, ·Grant
sho'::
in~rview with NBC in which he Williams.
· and Scou
."J .
B·
satd he didn't have a gambling
Ch'
u:tley scored 21, but.made problem. He let ht's teammates
JCago, meanwhile, reeled off
only nme of 25 shots and Richard
·
eight straight points, the last three
Dumas added 20 ·!h
h'gh
make
the
most
noise
in
the
first
on
BJ. Armstrong's three-pointer
1
12 b d
WI a gamequarter- ll points by Horace that made the score 96-85 wt' th
re oun. s. Johnson .m~naged ·Grant and eight by Pippen _
'
only IJ pomts and two assiSts and Chicago led 34 20
as 2:17 remaining.
·
committed five turnovers. The
"Scottie and the other gu
ot 16 While Armstrong, who scored ·
Suns sank only 44 percent of their out of the box qut'ckly "Jyosr g&lt;n .
points and kept Johnson from
shots and never Jed.
a. d , 'I d'd ,
•
~
pene'trating, tended'!o business
"Kevin and 1 both struggled ~ \. ·
t n t want to force the . with !he rest of the Bulls, the Suns
b
• ISSue until I felt I jlad the
fell behind early.
ut. as long as yo,u, 're human,.tlw's ru·ty."
•
gomg to happen Barlcl 881d
' We w~ just going, 'Wow,' "
"M
· '
ey
•
A 15-6 SPurt cut Chicago's 46- Dumas sud of the excitement of
aybe It was nerves and 26 Jeail S2-41
·
· ·
"
maybe it wasn't .. Barlcley said f
to -41. at halftime. And a bemg tn the finals. They were
. . _ •.
o I2-3 run made 11 71-69 before the very composed.' •

.

o
·
p p
.
o n u-

Bengals sign Schroeder as backup quarterback
. !tEVERSE LA,YUP - Phoepix guard Dan Ml\jerle (9) gets past
ChiCago guard M~ebael Jordan and few ot his teammates on his way
to the hoop during the opening game ot the NBA Finals Wednesday
night in Phoenix, where the Bulls wODl00-!12. (AP)

Brown narrows choices
between Cincy, Cleveland
By JOE KAY
ly 100 percent," he said. "But
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincin- instincts will take over for me.
nati has artificial turf. an inexperi- Going after the ball is something
enced quanerback and a team just that's just natural. My instincts just
beginning to rebuild. Cleveland has take over.''
grass, an experienced quarterback
and a jump on its rebuildiJ}g.
Notes: Safety David Fulcher,
Which will it be for receiver · who had surgery on his left heal ,.
Eddie Brown?
three weeks ago, showed up on
"I think if everything is close to crutches Tuesday wearing a walkequal, Eddie wants to be here," ing cast. Doctors removed a piece
Bengals general manager Mike of bone that had caused him pain.
Brown said Tuesday, after contract "I don't have the pain I had
talks with the receiver's agent. before," Fulcher said. "I won't
"We're going to continue to nego- know (for sure) until I start running
tiate with him. They're going to on it.'' ... Top draft pick John
·Cleveland to see what's on the Copeland, a defensive lineman
:table up there.''
from Alaharnll, showed up in better
The free-agent receiver hlls nar- shape than a month ago, when he
rowed his choices to Ohio's two had trouble during mini-camp conpro football cities. After ~yorlring ditionin~ drills. Copel1nd looked
out for the Bengals on TueSday, he slimmer-'- he said he'd IeiSt about
got ready to fly to Cleveland for a six pounds while working out hard
woitout and more contract discus- in the last month. "I knew what I
had to do. I went back and woited
sions today.
Brown, 30, was declared a free out a whole lot on conditioning and
agent last week. He has limited his foot speed," Copeland said. ... Sevimmediate interest to Cincinnati, eral players missed the fii'St day of
where he led the team in receiving the voluntary workouts, but most
for three years, and Cleveland, were expected to show up later in
where he could be reunited with the week.
former Miami Hurricanes teammate !!ernie Kosar.
n lQnS WJn •• •
He agreed with Mike Brown's .
(Continued from Page 5)
assessment that Cincinnati is his
around here."
f~rst choice.
"I like CinCinnati," Eddie · Bieleeki, Cliff Young and Eric
Brown said. "I've enjoyed my time Plunk combined to limit the ~Ullg­
here. I have a house here. To go gling Red Sox to two runs and
through all that moving is not me. seven hits. Bielecki yielded a run
There are no hard feelings here. and four hits in 4 2-3 innings,
walking three and hitting a batter.
Everything looks good.''
Young (2-2) followed and pitched
The main obStacle is money.
Brown made $1 million last 3 1-3 scoreless innings, allowing
year, when he sat out the entire sea- two hits. Plunk gave up a ninthson because of a neek injury. The inning home run by John Valentin,
Bengals tried 10 extend his contract his fourth, before fmishing for his
another season , saying the injury fourth save.
wasn't a result of football. Brown
The Indians are II for II in
objected, and an &amp;rbitrator ruled in save opportunities this year.
his favor last week, making him a
''Eric was silting up here throwing up until about the fourth inning
free ·agent.
But instead of automatically tonight," Hargrove said. "He go)"
heading for another team, the sick about 30 minutes before the
receiver is looking to stay, if he can game.''
Boston has lost four straight ani!
get the money he wants.
. Neither Mike Brown nor agent seven of its last eight games, dropJim Ferraro would say what the ping it to a game Wider .500.
receiver is asking. Ferraro said he'd
Danny Darwin (5-5) had a perlike a two- or three-year conuact, sonal five-game winning sueak
but wouldn't discuss salary ligures. snapped despite pitching well. He
'.'II was a good talk. The Ben- allowed lhree runs and seven hits iJI
gals are clearly interested," Ferraro 7 2-3 innings.
Darwin was 5-0 with a 1.13
said.
Ferraro and Eddie Brown were ERA in his r·revious seven starts.
scheduled to meet with Browns
"Overal I was happy with the
officials today and discuss a con- way I threw the ball," Darwin said.
uact Ferraro planned to call Mike "I gave us a chance to win a ballBrown back after he knows what gBI!Ie. That's what a starting pitch·
the Browns are offering . .
er IS supposed to do. We have to
" We're just going to play this keep battling. We know we have a
out with the Bengals and Browns,'' good ream. We're not playing well
·
Ferraro said. "If the numbers are rightnow."
right, we're just going to do it.
Cleveland sccred twice in the
We're not looking to stan a bidding first on an RBI infield single by
war."
Alben Belle, whose 52 RBis lead
The Bengals evidently are satis- the league, and an RBI single by
fied that Brown has recovered from Reggie Jefferson.
the neck injury . Th11y put him
Wayne Kirby then homered for
through li half·hour workout in 90- the Indians in the ftfth, his f1rst of
degree weather Tuesday. the first the year and second of his career.
day of the team's voluntary two- · The ball· hit the top of the fence in
week camp.
right and bounced over as Carlos
Brown came in at the end of the Quinlana banged into the wall.
day's practice, •nd the Bengals
·"I maybe got too close to the
barred reporters from his workout. wall," Quintana said. "When I
Brown ran sprints and patterns and jumped, I hit the fence. The ball
caught passes.
never hit my glove. It was a
: Mite Brown said the receiver play, but I thought I could get iL'
was out of shape.
Boston scored its first run in the
"He showed us a lot of things fli'Sl when BiUy Hatcher was hit by
we wanted to see,'' he said. a piteh, stole second; went to third
"There '1 still room for improve- on a bunt and carne horne on Mike .
ment. He knows tJw. He's ~J to GreenweU's double-play grounder.
have 10 wort on his conditiontng.
"We need to get the big hit,"
He needs IOIIlC lwd work."
manager Butch Hobson said.
.Eddie Brown
't concl'nled.
"We're not 4otting it quite right,
·.
"I know everything is not total· · but our day will come.''

J d•

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jay
~~hfoeder IS back at the scene of
IS ast great moment as a quarterback.
.
Schr~er threw for 380 yards
asnd a pau of tou.chdowns last
eptember, when his Los Angeles
Raiders lost in Cincinnati 24-21 in
overtime: A week later, he was
benched m favor of Todd Mari-

novich.
else going through iL"
bod
·de
·
It wasn~t the first time for
The Bengals hope to benefit :::.: toid'h!s..': young quarS~hroeder. His nine-year career from Schroeder's tough .times. to a Joi H: has B lo~
w1th the Washington Redskins and
signed him as a free ~tin . ahead of him d 1 •
han
the Raiders included several bench- Apnl to fill their need for a
up d1 the good ~ the~If to
ings on his way to leading both quanerback and give staner David
elt was s~ng dtat Sc:ru=oooer
teams to conference title games.
Klingler a veteran to leart) from.
31 would trade one backup. tole foc
"I think I'm a better person for
"He's been through good times · iJth Afte h·
··
·
having gone through it," Sc~ and he's been through bad times" ~ ..t:;"
r h ts tough season 10
said. "I wouldn't want.anybOdy . Bengals quarterback coach Ken pt:::ew~~ r~11";!sfi~dy for a
·
Anderson said. "It's important for
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• COLUMBUS, Obio (AP) Alaon An Museum, Alaon:
Weekend &amp; Lighthouse CelebraHere is a Jist of current and upcom·
June 10-12, Brown County lion, Lakeside Landing, Lorain.
jpg Ohio festivals and events as Charity Horse Show, Brown Co. 1 June 12- 13, Quintessence
,provided by the Ohio Division o.f Fairgrounds, Georgetown.
'Celebrity Series, Cleveland Play
Travel and Tourism:
•
Jwte 10-13, Mad River Steam &amp; House, Cleveland.
'." ThroughAus. 31,Ponraitofthe Gas Show, Champaign Co. FairJune 12·13, Schue~enfest,
),ron Horse, Depot Museum, Denni- grounds, l.!Jbana.
Bavarian House, Deshler.
;&gt;n_.
.Jwte 10-13, NHRA Oldsmobile · . June 12-13, 19-20, Springtime
. Through June 11, Preserving the Springnationals, National Trail on the Prairie, Bunker Hills
Ohio Studio Craft Legacy, Ohio Raceway, Columbus.
·
Woods, Butler.
Pesigner Craftsmen Gallery, . Jwte 10-13, Spike, Rail, Chip &amp;
June. 12-27, Parade of Homes,
£alum bus.
Cheese Festival, Bimiller Park, . Wedgewood Gold &amp;Country Club,
Througb JUly 31, Thru the Gar- Bre~r..
PoweU.
·
.
'den .Gate, Toledo flotanical GarJune 10-20, "Of Tops &amp; BotJune 13, Antique Wholesale
toms: Tables &amp; Chairs, ... Sauder Mart, Medina Co. F11irgrounds,
.den, Toledo.
: Through June 13; Stark' County Farm &amp; Craft Village, Archbold.
Medina.
.Artists Exhibition, Massillon
June I 1-12, Appollo Ren•
June 13, Arts &amp; Crafts Festival,
Museum, Massillon.
dezvous, Dayton Museum of Nato- Tallmadge.
: ·· Through June 30, Images in ral History, Dayton.
June 13, Home Winemaking
,Architecture, Hayes Presidential
June 11-12, Buckeye Trio &amp; Conrest, Old Mill Winery, Geneva.
·Centec, Fremont ·
Quartet Convention, Crystal
June 13, Kelleys Island 10-K
· Through June 20, The Best of Springs Campground, North Ki'ck&amp;S-KKick,Kellcyslsland.
1993 by Ohio Designer Craftsmen, Ridgeville. · ·
June 13, Larchmere Blvd.
June 11-12, ·Ooran g Bang. Antique Show, Cleveland.
pwens Illinois Building, Toledo.
•· Through June 30, Art in the .LaRue.
June 14-17, Junior Invitational
Garden, Ullman American Crafts
June 11-13, Buzzards Glory Golf .Tournarnent, Country Club of
'Callery, Cleveland, .
.
Festival, New VHienna.
,
Hudson. Hudson.
· ' Through Aug. 11, Hayes PresiJwte 11-1 3• ocking Hills Indi- .
June 14-July 16, "Craftsum·
,dential Center Concerts, Fremont. · an Pow-Wow &amp; Rendezvous, mer," Miami University, School of
Through Sept. 12, John Thomas Hockin~ Hills Family Fun Ce~~ter, Fine Ans, Oxford.
,An Exhibit, J.E. Reeves Victorian Rockbridge.
June 15-19, National Clay
--·Horne &amp; M.useum, Dovee.
June 11-13, Hot-Air Balloon w--t..
"""'• Ubrichsville.
Through June 13, "Smoke on Races, Coshocton County FairJune IS-July 11, "Ain't Misbethe Mountain," Playhouse in the grounds, COshocton.
having," Cincinnati Playhouse in
Park, Cincinnali.
.._:wte 11-13, Miss Ohio Festival, the Pad&lt;, Cincinnati.
Through Sept. 6, "It's All in .......,,sfieJd.
June 15-Aug. 29, "Trumpet in
- Your Head: An Exhibition About
June 11-13, Nature Festival, the Land" Outdoor Drama,
:·:Your Brain," COS!, Columbus.
Logan.
Schoenbrunn Amphitheaue, New
-· Through June 27, "Contem~June 11-13. Nissan Grand Prix Philadelphia
.
rary Prints: Ten Years o(Acqwsi- of Ohio, Mid-Ohio Sports Car
June 15-~ug. 31, Concerts in
. tions, •• Cleveland Museum of An, Course, l.e)tington.
·
· the Pad&lt;, Austintown.
; Cleveland.
·
June 11-13. Poultry Days, Ver'
·June 15-19, Miss Ohio Pageant,
~· Through Aug. 26, Poetry in the sailles.
·
Renaissance Thea~; Mansfield. ·
June II- 13, Stagecoach Days,
June: 16-20, Red Roof !lib Ohio
-Park, Park of Roses, Columbus.
;: Through June 16, Photo '93 FulsRoadPark,NewLebanon.
Aerobic Open &amp;,lAC Flight of
- Exhibition, Stocker Center, Corain ' June 11-20, U.S. National Champions, Bolton Airport,
;i~o. Community College, Elyri&amp;:
Cycling Championshi~, Dublin.
· Columbus.
:: Throu¥h July 4, Zoo Bab1es,
June 11-Sept. 4, ' Tecumseh!"
June 16-Aug. 19, Magical MUsi::cincinnab Zoo, Cincinnati.
Outdoor Drama, Sugarloaf Moun- cal Mornings, Columbus.
:: Through July 11, "Lincoln &amp; lain Amphitheatre, Chillicothe.
June I 7, Senior Citizens Day,
··His Contemporaries: Photographs
June 11-SepL 5, "Bluejacket" Malabar Farm State Park, Mans~ from l)lational Portrait Gallery,'' Outdoor Drama, Caesar's Ford
field.
::Hayes Presidential Center, Fre- Park Amphitheatre, Xenia. ,
June 17-19, Tri-State Pottery
:;mont.
June 11-Sept. 5, Magic Waters Festival, East.Liverpool.
.. Through SepL 6, Quilt National Summer Theatre, Bainbridge'.
June 17-20, Marion County
~ t93, Dairy Bam Cultural Ans CenJune 12, ·A Past Time With Steam &amp; Gas Engine Society
='ter. Athens.
Herbs, Piqua Historical Area, Show, Marion· Co. Fairgrounds,
~. Through Sept. 30, Summer An Piqua.
Marion. ·
.June 12, Antique Fire Mqster, . June 17-Sept. 4, "The Living
- Show, Johnson-Humrickhouse
::Museum, COshocton.
Carillon Historical Park, Dayton.
Word" Outdoor Drama, Cam~ Through July 25, Music in the
June 12, Classic Car Cruise-In, bridge.
-Park. Ni$bett Park, Loveland.
Village Square, McConnelsviUe.
· June 18, National Pike Feslival,
: Through SepL 5, Summer Music
June 12, FunFest: A Children's National R4.-Zane Grey Museum,
:Festival, Hudson.
Ans Festival, Cultural Center for Norwich.
• Through June 30, Ohio Valley theAns,Canton.
June 18-19, Kroger Senior
:Quilters Guild Exhibit, Historic'
Jwte 12, Garden Expo, Williams Expo, SeaGate Centre, Toledo.
:Sharon
Woods
Village, Ice Rink, Oberlin CoUege, Oberlin.
June 18-19, NW Ohio Volunteer
·SiiaronviUe.
June 12, Heritage Weekend, F'Jreman'sFieldEvent,Clyde.
.: Through June 30, Ohio Wine Pomeroy.
June 18-19, Old-Fashioned1
: Monih.
June 12, Kelleys Island Tour of Days, Fire Hall, Mansfield.
Through June 30, "Traditions in Homes, Kelleys Island.
June 111·20, Ciaftfair, Hathaway
Fibera:~,r~s. : · French Art
June '12, Loot Into Middle Brown S~hool. Shaker tfeig!lts.
~Coloily,
' jfOJIS. • '· ~- ·
·• ~Campltogers,i.iiria.
, .... ":' June 18-20, Festi\181 of Fish,
: Through Aug. 31, "Greenhouse
Jwte 12,MissOhioDanceSpec- Victory Park, Vermillion. ·
' Earth," Cincinnati Museum or tacular, Renaissance Theatre,
June 18~20. Glass Festival, Fos- '
Natural History, Cincimati.
Mansfield.
toria.
• Through Aug. 31, "Remember.
June 12, National Collegiate
June 18-20; Herbdays, Gahanna.
June 18-20, Heritage Days Pesing Greene County,'' Greene Rowing Championship, East Fork
County Museum, Xenia.
State Park, Bethel.
tival, ViUage Park. South Point,
Through July 18 Quilt Surface
June 12, Schoenbrunn CandleJune 18-20, Hummel Expo '93,
Design S"ymposium' Cultural Ans light Tours, Schoenbrunn Village Convention Center, Dayton.
Center, COlumbus. '
Slate Memorial, New Philadelp~ia.
June 18-20, June Jubilee,
Through Aug. 28, Antiaue Doll
Jun~ 12, Strawberry Soctal, Memorial Parle, Columbus Grove.
&amp; Marionette Exhibit vlctorian Zoar Village Slate Park, Zoar.
June 18-20, Radish Festival,
PerambulatorMuseum ietrerson
June 12, Air Show '93, McClure.
Through Aug. 26, ·Downtown ·at Portsmouth Regional Aiipon. MinJune 18-20, Summer Fest, Elida.
Dusk Concen Series, Akron Art rordJ.
AI
, . MillS rill
June 18-20, Wic!tliffe Home
Museum Akron
wte 12, . gonqum
p g Days; Coulby Park, Wickliffe.
,., 'I11nliigh June 30, "Artists' But- Festival, Carrollton. .
June 18-20, Zane's Trace ComIOns: Fascinating Fasteners," Saud- , June 12-13, Amencan Revolu- ZanesvmemOillille~n, Historic Putnam Area. ,
er Farm &amp; Craft Village, Archbold. bon, Gov. Bebb Preserve, Ross.
" Through July 18, "Connections
. IIJII!! 12-13, An by .the Falls '93,
June 18-25, Pickaway COuntry
In Time &amp; Place: New &amp; Old Rivemde Park, Chagrin Falls.
Fair, Pickaway Co. Fairgrounds,
'Quilts from Ohio and Its NeighJune 12-13, An on the Square, CircleviUe. ,
·
bors.'' Canton An Institute, Can- Nobwelll.e Co. Courthouse Lawn, CaldJune 18-27, Glass Festival,
Findlay.
!OOThrough June 26, "Wearable
. Jun.e 12-13, ~rt Festival '93,
June 18-July 5, Balloon Fest
..Fiber,'' Wayne Center for the Ans, Rivemde Park, Fmdlay.
'93, Children's Home Field, Ash-wooster.
June 12-13, Black Swamp land.
. Through Au~ . · 1, "Strictly Sream .&amp; G1!5 Show &amp; Swap Meet,
June 18-July 11, "Freedom
Wellington," Spirit of '76 Muse- AuGJaize Village, Defumce. .
Bound," WestLibeny.
· urn, Wellington.
_June 12-13, Blossom Fesuval,
June IS-July 18, Springfield
.,. Through June 2S, June Art Milford.
..
Ans Festival, Springfield.
J;!xhibit, Wassenberg Art Center,
June 12-13, Bonsai Show,
June 18-Sept. 19', Summer FloVan WerL
·
.
DawesArboretum,Newait.
raJ Show, Krohn Conservatory,
::. Through Sept. 6, Music in the
June 1~-13, Country Craft Cincinnati.
·Air, Columbus.
Show, Rollmg Acres Farm &amp; StaJune 19, Best in the Midwest
., June 9-12 Lions Club Summer ble, Delaware.
.
National Invitational Car Meet,
:(:ilebnllion, Heise Park, Galion. .
June 12-13, Fremont. Flea Mar- Harmon Field, Bluffton.
.; June 9-Aug. 1. "Meet Me in SL ket, Sandusky Co. Fatrgrounds,
June 19, Children's Day,
, .- · " C
1 D'
Thea
Fremont
Schoenbrunn Village Slate Memo~. arouse mner
tre,
June i2-l3, Gas Engine Show&amp; rial, New Philadelpllia.
:·. June 9-Aug. 8, Ohio Light ·Flea Market, Twp. ~· Columbm.
June 19, Church Basket Day,
9pera. CoUege of Wooster Woost~une 12-13, Rentage Weeketid, National Afro-American Museum,
Meigs Co. Museum, Pom~y.
Wilberforce.
:&gt; June 9-Sept. s. "The May
June ,1~-13 •. Model Sh1pcrafters
June 19, collector Baseball,
:Show," Cleveland Art Museum, Co~~uuonD1splay, lnlll;nd Seas Auto Trading Cards &amp; Racing Toy
.fileveland.
Mariume Museum, Vermilton. . Show &amp; Sale, Logan Co. Fair.: June 10, Summer An Festival,
June 12-13, Port Awareness grounds, Bellefontaine.

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SILICftOI OF

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•LADIES DRESSES •SWIMWEAR
•SLACKS •SPORTSWEAR •BLOUSES
•LIGHT WEIGHT JACKnS •COSTUME JEWELRY
·•SUMMER HANDBAGS •LADIES SUITS

Pnce goOd 1llril' txchal9

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IPEN lEVEN DAYS A WEEK
--I:IG&amp;&amp;IDip.m. llaoiCIIIt~ ~--

1:10 o.m. to 7 p.m. M

ULLIPILII

ap.m. lli.Od'lY
208 Upper River Road
. 448-3117

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BAHR ·
CLOTHIERS
:145 North Second

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

: Ohio festivals and events

Bulls post 100-92 victory over Suns

~

992-2351

Middleport

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7'

.Meigs property transfers
CompUed by:
Emmogeu~ Hamilton
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Kennith R. Neigler, 1.06 A, to
Guy R. Sargent, Chester.
David Kenneth Yonker, dec'd,
affid, to Satah Grace Yonker,
Orange.
Center Bank, S.5, T-i N, R13W, to Delmar E. Quickel, Hilda
P. Quickel, Chester. ·
James C. Birchfield, 0.3630 A.,
to Warren Keith Molden, Kathy
Sue Molden, Rutland
. Kemeth 0. Markins, Vermont
Markins, parcel T-3, R-12 to
Robert L. Wingett, George K.
Strode, Ruth E. Strode, Sutton.
Nellie Jarrell Crisp, by any-infact, parcel, to Lee R. Burnem,
Stella A. Bumem, Salem.
Leora M. Young, dec'd, John C.
Young, affid, to Richard R. Young,
Sutton.
.
Gary l.. Wolf, Patricia L. Wolf,
parcel, 10 Ff(l()erick R. Held, Olive.
Ronald A. Whiujngton, Emma
M. Whiuington, parcel, to George
W. Chapman Ill, Rita Robb Chapman, Columbia.
Chester Shahan, aka C. B. Shahan, dec'd, affid, to Mary Rose
Mitchell, Lebanon.
M. Charlayne Crisp, E. Kenton
Davis, Beverly A. Davis, Margaret
Evelyn Davis, parcels, to M. Charlayne Crisp, Salem.
Meigs Co. Agricultural Society,
R/W, to Columbus Southern Power
Co., Salisbury.
Jon . M. Grueser, Angela
Grueser, R/W, to Cols. So. Pwr,
Co, Orange.
Golda Radclifre, Lot #13, to
Ronald Gillilian, Janice Danner,
Syracuse, Vii.
Elizabeth McKown, Charles N.
McKown, parcels, to James E.
Smith, Trustee, Letait.
Arthur Ray Martin, Nancy Martin, Lot 113, to Randall Robens,
Judith Roberts, LeWL
Paulilie Thompson, aka, Ruth
Pauline Thompson, Maxine Little,
Lora Maxine Little, Bill Little,
Wilma Parker, aka Wilma L. Parker, Howard Parker, Peggy A.
Thomas, Charles Thomas, 4.25 A,
to State of Ohio, Salisbury.
H. A. aka Homer Cole, Oneita
Cole, John Patterson, Doris Patterson, afid, and James B. O'Brien.
Margaret Johnson, Roy Johnson, Sewer ease, to Village of Rutland, Rutland.
James Gary, Sewer ease, to Village of Rutland, Rudand .
N. S. Marshal So. Dist of Oh.,
Sewer ease, to Village of Rutland,
Rutland.
·

Mary Grueser, Sewer ease, to
Village of Rutland, Rutland.
Janet Nakamoto, Robert
Nakamoto, Sewer ease, to Village
of Rutland, Rudand.
Donna R. Jenkins, Stej?heJI E.
Jenldns, Sewer ease, to Village of
Rutland, Rutland.
Virginia Anderson , Joe AnderSOfl, Sewer ease. to Village of Rutland, Rutland.
Fred J. George, Avanell George.
RIW. io Village of Rutland, Rutland.
Clarence A. Lambert, Sally J.
Lamben, 0.64 A., to Trustees of the
Rocksprings United Methodist
Church, . aka
Rocksprings
Melhodist Episcopal Church.
Bank One, Athens, NA, 2 A., to
Jimmy B. McClure, Angela S.
McCiare, Porn. Vii.
Donald L. Cremeans, Sharon K.
Cremeans, 79.40 A. to David
William Frizer, Bedford.
Floyd s : Matlock, 80 A. F.4 &amp;
. 12, T-4, R-12, tQ Bobs Mobile
Home Serv. &amp; Supply Inc .,
Orange.
Ronald Miller, corrective Sheriff's Deed, to Billy Combs, Betty

I9, Folk Day. Leesville.
June 19, Ohio Derby, Thistle•
down, North Randall.
June 19, Quilt Au&lt;;tion, Geausa
Livestock Commission, Middlefield.
· JlDle 19, Riverfes~ Waterville.
June 19, Sausage Fest, Rudy's
Old Country Sausage, Brimfield.
June 19, Square A'Faire Flea
Market, Chardon.
· •
June 19, Strawberry Social,
Strock Stone House, Austintown.
June 19, Windsurfing Festival,
Lakeview Beach, Lorain.
June 19-20, Art in the Park, Veterans Park, Springfield.
June 19-20, Artfest, Worthing-

GET A LOW
PRICE TAG ON
AMAYTAG!

combs. Portland.
Gary P. Norris, Donna M. Nor·
ris, Lots 11 &amp; 12, to I ack L.
Ri~~:hie, Sutton.
Emma Jean McCiintoclc, tracts,
to Joseph Richard Hill Roush, Sut·
ton.
Stephen Rife, Rhonda Rife,
R/W, to Bqckeye Rural Elect.
, Coop. Inc., Salem.
Theron K. Workman, Mildred
L. Workman. R/W, to Buckeye
Rural Elect. Inc., Scipio:
John L. Hagerty, Dorothea A.
Hageny, tract$, S.3, T-9N, R-15W,
Phillip K. Simm s, Roberta· J .:
Simms, Columbia.
·
Roben Joseph Wilson, 10.357
A.. S.3, T-IN, R-13W, to State of
Ohio Dept. of Natural Resources,
Salisbury.
Donald C. Shaffer, Lot 11103, to
MarciaM. Terry, Midd. Vii. .
Tammy D. Harris, parcel, to
Brian K. Harris, Olive. .
B~ K. Harr,is, parcel, to Jeffrey A. Bissell, Ruth M. Bissell•
Olive.
Richard Merrill Reuter, dec 'd,
Life Estate expired, Wallace J.
Reuter, Salisbury.

..,1'1

DEPENDABLE MAYTAG

WASHERS
• L~sts longer. neeas !ewer
tc;JaJr$ and cos1s less 10
servlCB

·No. l prelerreu brana ·

. l ] une

ton.

June 19-20, Family Frolic Feslival, Hisloric Roscoe Village,
Coshocton.
June 19-20, Great Canfield
Antiques Sale &amp; Show, Fairgro_unds.
·

·oePENOABLE MAVTAG

DEPENDABLE MAVTAG

DRYERS

DISHWASHERS

• No 1 ptelitrred Otal\d•
• Jfii!Hinoi o~ rly p1oVen '"
raur~ones

Financing Avalabl•
wit• Approved Credit

• N~~ gels (li!lnes ~ ;eane•
• 01ill l cltatl•ng

orsl'lwt.Per no1as more

FREE

DEPENDABLE MAYTAG

RANGES
·• E.u.y ro cru,l'l
. ~e r ..ul! ~lyl o n ~
Q./i '''Y fOil

can

90 Dars Same as Cash

Lay·• ways Avalla~lt

.7

ill RUTLAND FURNITURE .z
742·2211
1·800·837-8217
Showrooms MAIN STREETOHIO

,,

POMEROY NURSING AND REHABILITATION
CENTER RECOGNIZES OUR NURSES AIDES.
THANK YOU FOR ALL YOUR DEDICATION TO OUR
RESIDENTS.
OVER 10 YEARS:
Margaret Wyatt
Judy Musser
Alice Tripp
Wi!nda Smith
Norma Jean Sexson

OVER3YEARS
Regina Eakins
Pat Hysell
Jean Starcher
Donna Harper
Bert Hawley

OVERS YEARS
Barb Payne
Carol Young
Carol Justis
Deloris Cunningham

OVER 2 YEARS:
Mabel Brumfield .
Norma Eakins
Brenda Richards
Beverly Eakins

OVER4YEARS
Brenda Hauber
Angle Baker
Trln~ Lee
'Margaret Powell
Barb Alkire

'

OVER1 YEARS
Rebecca Lavender
Myra Obley
· Deloris Cremeans
Johnna Swaim
De!la casteel
Sally Fowler
VIolet Hunnell
Chris Granger
Daine Molden
Latisha Price
Lois Pooler
Jean Hayman

1 YEAR AND LESS:
Sherry Muncy
Lisa Perdas
Melissa Gardner
Linda Cramer
Debra Jeffers
Barbara Rube
Sharon Warner
Lisa Schuler
Amy Huddleston
Phyllis Lattimer
Jennifer Damron
Mae Huffman
Patti VanMeter
. Pam Foreman
Tammy Miller
Debra Oliver
Sandra Brown
. Bill npple

IN APPR,ECIATION OF THEIR EFFORTS, A DINNER
WAS HELD. IN THEIR HONOR •.·
· .
~~ ·

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Recovering alcoholic does
·not want any children
0... Au I "des ll In I receDI
col•- rl. ,aura ia tile Loa AqrJee
'1'1111111. dlcae - I fwiMD"' item
1111&amp;-* me -=ta few yean.
. Rk:blrd Ferris, former cblllrinan
rl. UaiiDd Alrliaes, - qUilled ill'
your Oom rl.lbe Day u havill&amp; llid,
"''be liltiDC Indo~ hu callinly
c._.., Now il il possible for 1

•

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llloc. . _ ond clalhlng, m. .

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heart aches when I read the storieS,

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glimpse at production meetings,
rehearsals and scenes from the ·
play. Also stirred in are interviews
with Kushner, director George C.
Wolfe, and the able cast. IICided by
Ron Leibman as lbe outrllgeOIIS and
loathsome attorney Roy Cohn.
Leibman, a veteran Broadway
actor and star of two short-Jived
1V series, has emerged as anotbet
"Angels" winner: Millions of
viewers saw him Sunday as he
gratefully received the Best Actor
Tony, then called down to his wife
in the audience that "maybe we
can get an apanment with a washer
andAdrier
fewnow."
minutes later, Leibman

=~=~rth~s:;·:
which the megabully Cohn learns
he has lost life's upper hand to
~~-thatan.!::~~~~ his
"It was fast-moving, I'll tell
you that, to get ready to do that
scene," Leibman said the next day.
"It was a complete mood change. I
had to REALLY focus, 'cause I
knew it was going out across
America''

America gets another look at
that scene on Friday's documentary:
"Homosexuals arc men who
know nobody and who nobody
knows, who have zero clout!"
Cohn screeches. "Does this sound
lite me?''
Despite its rage, "An~els"
overall is a waflll and uphfting
wo~, something the documentary
!Sn t IOtalJy successful in CORVI\YIRg with what are disjointed on-

Names in the news
NEW YORK (AP) - Magic
Johnson defended himself against
posthumous criticism or his sexual
exploits from Arthur Ashe.
In a book completed just before
his death from AIDS, Ashe charged
that the exploits of Johnson and fellow basketball star Wilt Chamberlain reinfon:ed I'IICist stem&gt;types of
the black man as a slave to his sex
drive.
" I have always taken full
responsibility for my actions and
rislced public alienation by coming
forward with my story," Johnson,
who is infected with the AIDS
virus, said in a statell!t:nt Wednesday. "It is my hope that by taking
the straightforward approach, I
have begun and will continue to
·educate and bring awareness to the
prevention and spread of this dis-

. ease.''

Johnson also called the tennis
: itar "a role model for all."
. • Chamberlain's whereabouts
couldn't immediately be determined.
· Johnson hu been open about his
promiscuity, and Chamberlain has
. ~ed 20,000 "conquesu." ,
· ••African Americans have spent
decades denying that we are sexual
· primitives by nature, as racists have
~gued since the days of slavery,"
wroee Ashe, who died Feb. 6 at aae
49 . "These two college-trained
black men of international fame
and immense personal wealth do
their best to reinforce the stereo-

. tyPe."

, NEW YORK (AP) - Ivan
Boesky agreed to get by on $20
million in cash and $180,000 a year
fnim his former wife.
Boelky, S6, also gets a $2.S mil-

,.

;

lion California house under the settlement reached Wednesday in his
fight with Seema Boeslcy over her
$100 million fortune.
Boesky said that he had made
Mrs . Boesky "rich beyond her
wildest imaginings" and that she
should now share the wealth. They
divorced last month after 30 years
of marriage.
Boesky, once said to be worth
some $200 million.• claims to be
broke because or fines and restitution atemming from his 1986 guilty
plea to insider uading. He served
almost two years in prison.
Mrs. Boesky, 54, had said the
money she hu is hers alone, earned
legally and inherited from the sale
ofher family's Beverly Hills Hotel.

stage vigneues.
But comments from members of
·the well-spoken company drive
home tbe IIDiion that, more than an
"AIDS play," "An Is" is about
regaining spirituaf\atues and
bringing people together. All peopic.
·
"When we talk about AIDS,
homophobia, repression, oppression of -certain groups, it doesn't
just affect the OJllllllSSed groups we're all bound together," says
Jeffrey WrigHt, who plays the gay
nurse Belize. "We're alllinlted to
each other's problems ~ and to
each other's virtues as well."

To place an ad

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.,- SAT.8-12

FREE ESTIMATES ·

Take the p.~ln out of

palntln~Lat me do It

614-915-4110

POUCIES
• Ada ou&amp;~id.• the eoun.tr your ad rwu NUll.· ba prepaid
• R.eei.ye di.count for ad. paid iD adqace.
' • y,.. Ado: Ci-way ood Fouod oclo uodw IS word! will be
naa 3 daJI at DO cbarp;
• Price of ad for aD capitalletkl~ it double price of ad COil
• 7 poiat liae oype only wed
• S..liatl io ... n!poD!ible for enon .,... r .... clay (cloeck
(or err'Orl fll'tt day .4f ru.DI ia paper). Ca0 Sefore 2:00p.m.
day af&amp;er puhUcalion lG mUe correctioa
• .A.dl that MUll be paid ia ad•aaee are:
Cord of Tb..W
Happy Ado
Ia M. .oria~a
Yard Sal.
, .A clo.,illeol ad..rtl!omenl plocecl Ia tho Callipoiio Dolly
Trilmne (oxcepl Clouil'..d Dioplay, B..~ Cord or Lepl
N.ticeo) will olio •ppoar ill tho Poiai Plouoat Reptor aod
tile Dail7 Seatiael, reaChias over 18,000 J.o....

1:00p.m. Salurdoy
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thunday
1;00p.m. friday

,

36970 BaH R111 Road
r-oy,OhiD

•

'

GRAVEl, SAND,
LIMESTONE. TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

992-3470

Melgo County M11110n Co., vf.v
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
.
'
GaDla County

992-MWdleportl
Pomeroy

671&gt;-Pl. P I -

98S.O.....r
843-Portlooul

576-Apple
77S-M..... ,

247-Lolao( Falo
949-Raellle
742-Ratlond
667-Coohille

~-NewHavea

OWNER: Joll Wltk•5110193

c......

Ul

COMPLITIIUTO
UPIOUTEIY .

895-Lelort '
937-BulFolo

NOTICE
Notloe Ia hereby given
that Amy Shrlvera Smith of
.Beeoh Grove Roed,
Rutland, Ohio 45775, haa
flied ..d Application In th•
Probate Court of M•lge
County, Ohio,
No.
27t61, roqu•llnv ........
of lh• nllllle of her aon
from Bradley Steven
Shrlvers to Bradloy St.v111
lmllh. Thla Appllcallon wll
1M heud 111 :30 P.M., on the
12th cloy of July, 1113.
.
AoiMrt E. Bud~,

c...

Presents

THE STILLWATER BAND
FRIDAY, JUNE 11

Prob... Judge

675-5420

lhlge County, Ohio
Lilli K. N•aelroad, Clerk
(6) 10. 11o
·

PRICE REDUCED!
The priCe has bee{' reduced to $88,900 and
owner Unanclng o4 up 10 80% ol purchase

Public Notice

amount may be posolble lor quallylng per·
son to buy very nice home on 3X. aaes In

NOTICE
Tho d..dllno for . filing
applloationa for the Kibble
Foundallon Scholarahlp le
June 15, 1993. Appll...ttona
rocelved alter that data will

Racine. 4 BR, 3 baths, 2 - · · rented 1
BR apl. Property lnclu&lt;18!14.800 sq. n. tann
bldg.

• .
CaU 614-992·710. lor AOOI.

...........

l"••
CAll 992·6123

985-4473
667·6179

Reasonable Rates
Dependable
Service

fill UJIIIIIES

COlLINS
ENTERPRISES
•Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing

FREE UTIIWES
50734 ...., .........
lo•t lett•!ll· .... 45743

985·4181

NEW YORK (AP) - ~n a
breakthrough recalling "Jurassic
Park," scientists extracted genetic
material from an insect that lived
when dinosaurs roamed the Earth.
The extinct insect, a weevil
some 120 million to 135 million
years old, was well-preserved
because it had gouen mired in tree
resin that hardened into amber.
The $enetic material is at least
80 milbon· years older than any
used in previously repcJited studies,
researchers said today - one day
before the opening of the movie
"Jurassic Park," based on the
Michael Cricblllll novel.
In "Jurassic Park," scientists
extra,ct dinosaur genetic material
from an insect IIIII go on to clone a
dinosaur.
But the newly reponed genetic
material is from the insect itself
rather than an insect's meal of
dinosaur blood. And it's just two
bits of one gene, not enough to create the insect, even if such cloning
wm possible.
The weevil was found in
Lebanon in the oldest known amber
deposits to contain insects.
"I never expected to get DNA
from this weevil" because it was
so old, said researcher Raul Cano
of California Polytechnic State
University in San Luis Obispo,

TREE &amp; STUMP REMOVAl

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

F.......,.l31
INSURED

of._.,, 'l'N• a.rufa

oOOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

Pu~ lor - - y:porl lltt, I neb Old, rna&amp;l I

5pm.

· !quart btiiM of hoy, kopl

born, :J04.175.1204.

In

Ton pol btbf roto ond ~hor,
m. . bring-. 114-IH-Im.
W.lltor ooon ""'-"d, lomalo,
. , . old. - . a l i i .

D. A. BOSTON .
EICAYADNG
(614)
667-6628

1 129.95

614·446·0736
Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy

YOUNG'S

Aaant addlllonl

IIIICI Plumblnv

Covers, C.rpet,
Convertible Top1

not be conaldered for
funding unllllhe aohool y. .
1994' 95. Gracluatee of Melgt
C~unty
High School•
ananding Hocking tachnl~l
College, Marietta Colltgo,
Ohio Stale Unl-alty, O~lo
UniYW81ty, Unlvenlty of Rio
Grande, or Wuhlnvton State
Community Colrege are
onoourag•d to plok UR
appllcatlona at the achool
and get them flied befor'
June 15, 11193.
Scholarohlpa are available
to graduate• of Melge
County High Schoolo or
peraona having a GED,
whoaa laot public achool
attendance '!faa In · II•~•
County. To ba qualified •
oppll.,.nt muot 1M purau ng
an undergraduate d,rte
and mual be a full lm•
atudent oarrylnv at loaat 12
credit hours.
Bern.-d ~ Fultz
T.:Uoitee
·
Kibble Foundation
(6) B, 9, to, 3tc
:
·

··

IOyn..........toe.
et4.U1A
510 N. 2nd Ave.

-

Mlcldlepart,Ohlo

Steel Fabrication
and Welding

CARPENTER SERVIa

r-oy,Oialo

·, HowCI'd L Wrltestl

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downajiouts
Gutter Cltenlng
Painting

,.

EVERY THURSDAY

. EAGLES
CLUB

I&amp;T HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

FRlE ESTIMATES

1:45 p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thle ad good for 1

949·2168

FREE card. ·
Lie. No. 0051-32

.j
..,.,.

Plumbing

lnsi.. and Out
Free Eatlllllllea,
LoJW Coati.

CJ'MkRoJid
Middleport, Ohio

.Work '(;ual'llnteed

614·949·2911 or
614·593-5010

. 4/29/93 tin

Backhoe
and small
Dozer Work

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,

HOMEifTESIIIICI

UMEBTOIE·TRUCKING
F.REE ESTIMATES

992-3838

.

5-10.t3

-.
~

~

~: ~JAYMAR
Quality
StouCot

I

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE

.

•

Call 614·992· .
6637

•

c.......... 01•

.

St. Rt. 7

CHARLIE'S

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV ..
(304) 773-5585

' SUMMER HOURS'·
Sun.-Thur 5·10 pm

992·7553

Fri·Sat 5-11 pm

POMEIOY, OH.

CLOSEO WEDNESDAY

J&amp;L INSULATION
.

Return the love Dad's always sent your

FrM Elllmatn

wanive him a Carhon card this

Replacement
Wlndowa
VInyl Siding
Rooting

\

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

Sentinel
Classifieds

EAST MAIN e POMEROY, OH.
992·2955

992-2156

C.llua lor
Spacial Prlcaa on

Siding and Wlndawa
992·2772
Jamee KaiiH, .owner

.

WALIEI AllEY
Parts IIIII Strvlat
Mowers • Chala Saws

Wtldeattrs

Authorized: Brlgg• &amp;
Stratton MTD, Ryan,
I. D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Hours 96· M-F 8·3 Sat.
Closed Sunday
949-2104
4126/lfn

$30 HOUR

511

: R&amp;C EXCAVATING

HAULING

BULLDOZING
PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

LAND CLEARIIG
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
.BASEMENTS &amp;
.HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmeatone,
Dirt, Gravel and C:O.l

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992~7643

LICENSED ond BONDED

81~2$6

8501.

-·~~~ ... - . NOll,
Old 160• ·
ClalhM~_I'IIIfl
llotwl
Frldoy, .,..,....y, 1-4. ·
,

Advortlood lid Nallca: Tho Porch: 3154 Krinor Rood, ~.
AgrlcUjtuow
will occtpl Molod Sotunloy, N, C..n11n1, Yom,
Wool Vltglnlo Doporl . .nt of Ho&lt;loohold nomo, Mony btltOt
biCII ·ontup to 1500 buehlll1 of
·
·
Nl com localod 01 tho Llkln Thlngo.
!11111 Form ond Gentnl Jcoltn
llcCouolond ......... .......
Com . .y bo lnlpoclod I&gt;Y con-

toctlng NNI llllncy .. m - .
All bhle ma ta. IIUbrriltled on
optirovod IDnno to Room 200 ol
tho Adminlltntlon Building or
tho Wool VlrJinlo Doport. .nl ol
Agrlclllluow by 11:00 ... July 1,
11m. Bid 1-1 tnd 1nlonnatlon
bo obt1lnod by ..lUng
5511-221 .

""f.

Ell

ELECTRIC

Soturdly Juno 121~1 Yonl-, 1
lllllf OUI218,1A.II. -? - . .
SotUrdly,

Juno · 11!11\, · '"'·
ChlldNnl, ft. Wome,.., Mtna,
112 Milt OUt IIIII C&lt;ook Rood.

Soturdly, Juno 12th, 1 T1l S.
Kan•uga. a-w. llollahln "Fur.
nltUNt HolM Interior, f'umlhn,
llobf~

Yord I p.;., - : Thui'Odlv
Thru ........., 1211!. 1 ~
On Tlfllf Run Rood on
RouiO 7,
Em ...
talnmont Conl•.t...::-:
.-.
Etc. Dlhtrn.n. ....,.

COMMERCIAL &amp; USIDENTIIL
licensH, Insured I lORded
FREE ESTIMATES

(614) 742·2345

Tanks, Leach Lines
Repair &amp; Installation

CALL 614·992•7878

Lice•sed; l•sured ••d lo1ded

Giveaway

4

1 blook/M!IIo, 1 -lwhito, I
-~ okl kilt- :!M-1711-1111.

Call614-992·7171

:!:,l;

1711.

'"'ll:!:!.

1 llllt, 1 Fomolo,
Balh
, ...It loogto &amp; Port
Chaw, 114-31J.0211.

36358 SA 7
•"·
;': 1-1-UII_N_E~R~R~D. - Brlcltllrllllle apit foyer horne with 4
•, bodtoorn•. 2 batho " - cowr'•'ll•· Cllec. heat I!IJmp

.·,.
:~
·'
·:

;.•,
;

'•

...

Vanl Solo, Junt 11 I 12, Fri &amp;
Sal. Hondtroon 91. follow ligna.
AntlqUI~'J
fumlh.IN 1 clo4_
fiM..
diol*, Mlylag ..._
- -·

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VlclnHy

DEJITER-1112 II"!!'J hamlwllh 4 bedroq!)!!l cellar, garden
- · added irtliAallOn,llrge front pordt. """''NG $18,000 .
MIDDLEPORT- 2 otory " ' - horne with 2 bodroomo, bath,
li~ '-'-ntlmrneda.. poouaaion. $28,500 make
an Ofllrl ·
WOllE PEN RD.- 31+ ocna with 1875 2 -..om moiiiJe
home, It: I' IICII, front pordt, barn, lhed, lancing. $3111100.

..

IYRACUSE· 1Wo 1\0IY frame home with 2-3 baclrooma,

~

•. _., a~. on twa loll with llhecl and garden

••

-·ASKING $211,000.

-~

-.
'

•

1.4111 --ASKING $1111,500.

•

•:

'

. OuR PURPON II TO ii!RYE YOUI

-UIACALLfOOAYt

IIINRY E. CLELAHD.--·- -------·•.etl1
TRACY IRII'PEII-------·--··---1• It•
HRII HART. .•- -..··----····-·····.... -~ 7G-DI7

KA'IHY CLILAHD.- ·-····-·-··-·..·-····-·······112-1111

COMPLm MACHINE'
SHOP SERVICES
.
.

IN $HOP WELDING SERVICE OR PORTABLE
ALL TPES OF WELDING FABRICATION AND REPIIIR

F
lomll
n1 to- 111 ...__
Oil'
Y
on lolloy un Rd. oft IIUQ. ·
Juno 10th I 11111.
·•

!llfolo HoUnd; Full
Pup I llonl.. qkl, Pwtoct
llorklngt, 11+441·1UII.

-·--=

~~

!!.k!~~c~•NM.
I'Tcpene•

• c.bode • Mapo Ga; •

Cylnders

GENERAL MACHINE WORK &amp; WELDING
• HtWrc · Ah.minum &amp;Stlinltts • Sprtf WttclinQ
• Mtg WeldltiQ . SMtl I AIU!tlll'lutn • Willdln9 Supplits
• f"lbi'IUiion·AtMfltv IO Aofl &amp; Bend Mtttl

"~"

-t

a-..

Coolltr lponlol,
Loll/loll• .....

F- 111oc11 molt - - tptnlot

r, •

Hugo yonl Ldln;

bop

,...,_ ·

114 -

ololhl..

-

1

-

'*

rwfr9NW~or, kQ of
ltiMI and
I 11141 IMiul ....
..... Frldoy """· t:ofl.t'l? ..

·--- """"'-........

~:;1~=~~
:
A - . IIIJ 7 I r"l.

wldot---lWm.
~
Oll!eon- .. "'on I ' ~ Kawlll_lll_~
burr.~ worki OOMGII ltai'IIO.

HOUilS:
7:30am · 5:00pm
Mon · Fri
7:30am· 12:00pm Sat

......
~-.....
.........
"
~ rnr....;:,
o=r.
\liiJi .
.........

..... _,., rodlo - . 114- -ltlotln-~

-'711l

-

--llotrtvw&amp; . . . . .
....., I - Old, to good-

iA Sill, Fldlltln
Fulylneur.l
Job Shop FeclitiM

Pald In

8 Wlfl&lt; cold pu-, Engl!oh
W.tot lponloll Llli, ·. - , 114lltz-~•• 10......__

opoyld: -

24 Hour Portable Weldin1 Semce

lo

Soturdoy. .
Bla 1 lily yord lolo Frldey, Juno
11lh. Lato o1 n-. _, ...,..
;:'~• YellowiM.Ielj ~flcl.,

~tol!byoo~molo;

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING

All Yord SoiM -

Advanco. Doodll,.: 1:OIIpm tho
doy · - tho od .. 10 •1\111,
Sundoy odRion- 1:OOpon ~
llond1y
odHion
10:00..m.

1 Oormon Shoplird/Coltlo put&gt;plto, 1 molf, -2 lomalt. 304-11153017.
3 ktltML 301 lie' 3017.

Bloc~ &amp;

CIA, alenge buliiliiill~- cellar, patio, iltcklng, flreplac8.

'·

...

MIDDLEPORT

318/tfn

•'...

'·

BARR CLOTHIERS

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

"

;~

.

New Wiring; Rewiring,
Troublt·Shootlng

""ot

'•

Allrlgonlo:i..

24 HR. EMERGENCY SERVICE

2 Dolll 1 Port Colllt
0...
m1n ShepMnt Part aoa.n L..b
Mtx, loth 2 Ye1ra Old, 1'14.-.

'

Solo: Kldl I J...,l

llovlng

ClolhOO Toyo P10m Dr-o,
ColiN Tobit, Lompo, Nolgh_l!orhood Rood on 21a "' Doijblo
Wldt On Rlg!tl, Frldoy 111h,
Sotunloy 12th, SW!doy 1:kh: ,

~.:.~~'&amp;".~1.

•Windbreakers •Ties
•Levi's Denims
•Socks •Underwear
•Bermuda Shorts
•Swimwear .
•Jiffle Slippers
•Jo.g Suits
•Men's Leather Billfolds
&amp; KeyCases

.

Cfllllhlm, R•ln Or ShiM.

R•tes

3-4-93- 1

::r. ~-Lo.~:-&amp;..:.

C

.

Yanl Solo: ThllrOdoy And Ftldlv
lola 01 Evwythlngl 21211

SEWER PIDBLIMI

614:742·2138

1

3 CUlt, PrieM, 101 Annu.at
PI,.._ Covo Colfloh Conlooll

1111' Supply, Frkfoy, Sol-y,

Su_ndoy.

EXcmc LADIES UVE 1 - S .
7190 SUCknln. lie-VISA 1-!100- 10th
Milt
Jitl-1115 $2-mlft. 11+.

LIME STOllE,
GUVIL &amp; COAl
Reasonaltle

JOE N. SIYRI
SAYRE

PH. 614-992•5591

3 Announcements

2112192/tfn

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC

SMAll DOZER WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK
at1CI UMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U•.•Agent
189
80.,.
a
Mid.dleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843•5264 "'"""''""

1.

(614) 992-7878 .

1111'12/t

Announcements

:;::::======:::::::=======::!1
'

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

TRAILER SITES,

Hugo, EvtrYihlng, FlftwoL 112
Pr!Ot Old Rl. 35 Nul To Hocl-

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

614·992·7144

5-24-1 mo.

~

.AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUIICE COMPIIIY

31904 Leading

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

.,

16x7 ...........$

PLUMBING

Roof

. IN POMEROY'

1JJt]r ••••••••••• $1

DAVIDSON'S

FI'OII Foundttloa to

••"
•·

RETURN TO SENDER

DALfON

8x7 ........... $17

·. J.----=::..1

ROO FIN~

WAYN~

Steel Wood Grained Textured Raised
Panel Garage Doors Complete With
Track, Lock, Spring and Hardware.
WHILE THEY LAST!
These Sizes Oilyl

(614) 992-7878
FAX (614) 992·7878

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6.215

DO IT YOIRSIU
&amp; COITUCTOR.
SPECIAL

WAYNE
OAUON

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

ExWior

.P.tnll
.
(FREE '1:\TIIIATES)

DRIVEWAYS INITAUED

Father's Day.

+Tax

2 Ao:N Flold To CUI For

145 NORTH SECOND

-

2 Front Struts • Labor
• 4 . . . . llligaJJJtRt
. Prices St•rtf•g Jll

t.nC)CIJ!ARIHG,

•Arrow Long &amp; Short Sleeve
Sport &amp; Dress Shirts
•Men's Knit Pullover Shirts
Sizes Small to 4X
•Straw Hat~, dress &amp; casual
•Dress Trousers
•Men's Suits, Sportcoats
and Blazers
•Work Uniforms

304.a2-3316

.

z

Tennessee State Fairgrounds.
"Now I can tell my kids, 'Your
granddaddy's picture is right thm
at the U.S. Post Office, and he's
not a wanled man either,' " said
Williams Jr., who has more than 60
albums and hits or his own, including ''Family Tradition."
The stamp shows a drawing of
Williams in a cowboy hat, holding
a guiw. Williams died in 1953 at ·
age29.

Old F.. IOIITonk, 114-4441-1010.

(614) 992-7878

Fill

256·6640

llalhor Cll • Klllon, · - 1111.

6-9-B:S:tfn

L--.,.---~-~~~---,-----.J--------...L------_:__

Calif. "But when we looked at the
tissue, there was a lot of tissue
!here. So'we wm willing to take'a
chance.''
. He~ the srudy in IOday's
ISSue of the JOurnal Nature with a
colleague at his university and scientists the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta,
American University of Beirut in
Lebanon and the University of California at Berkeley.
Genes are made up of chemical
sequences, and researchers were
able to determine the sequences of
two bits of the weevil gene.
.
The report is "amazing and a
great achievement," said Ward
Wheeler of the American Museum
of Natural History in New York,
co-author of a recent study of genes
from a termite some 25 million to
30 million years old.
The record may not stand for
long. Brian Farrell of the University of Colorado at Boulder said he
!tad "J1Rlliminary _positive resultS"
m gelling a genetic sequence from
the scales or fish some 180 million
to 210 million years old.

TRIMMING and

Plumbing Installation
and
Repairs.

.MillllltiiOrt,
Po•roy, Raciat,
Rutlaad, Masoa

eC·~··
sto,aeo......

Cu.toms.t

Public Notice

Public Notice

THE DRAFT HOUSE

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

COIImUC1101

458-Leoo

Helclllnera, ·

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBliCADOII

UWM CARE

IISSILL &amp;

111C!IIa/1 mo. pel

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

•

Clmaified page• c011er the
following telephone exchange&amp; .••

446-Calllpola
367-Cbeohlre
388-VIaloo
241&gt;-Rio Gnode
256-G.,.an Did.
643-Anhlo Di.t.
379-Waloal

••• oil, 116-1112-UU, llrn-lpm.

.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATICJII

COPY DEADLINE
Mondi.y Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wedneoday Paper
.Thuraday Paper
Fridoy Paper
Sunday Paper

CLOSED SUNDAY

Scientists r.ecov.er DNA'.
f
d•
rom mosaur era

SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)
- Ted Danson and his wife are
getting a divorce after IS years of
marriage.
Cassandra Danson cited irreconcilable differences in the divorce
petition filed J unc 3. The couple
LONDON (AP) - Skating stars
separated in October. They will
Christoph~r
Dean and Isabelle
have joint custody of their daughDuchesnay
are
divorcing after two
ters, ages 8 and 13.
years
of
marriage.
Danson and his "Made in
"It hu been impossible for us
America" co-sw Whoopi Gold- • to maintain our careers and our
berg have been linlted romantically marriage," Dean, 33, said in a
in news reports, but they have statement iuued Wednesday
refused to commenL
through his London publicist.
A publicist for the "Cheers"
He was in Phoenix performing
sw would not comment Wednes- with his ice--dancing parincr, Jayne
day.
Torvill. The British pair won a gold
medal at the I 984 Olympics. ·
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Hank Williams Jr. dedicated one to
his dad- a poslllge stamp, that is.
During World War I, the first
The 29-cent stamp honoring troops of the American Expedicountry music great Hank WiUiams tionary Foree arrived in Franee on
Sr. was unveiled Wednesday at tbe June26,1917.

--

INTERIOR

:"·:..·

in America' documentary
examines a play. and a society
By FRAZIER MOORE ..
AP Television Writer
· · NEW YORK - Hm's a show
· thai, like most things on TV, deals
· wjth winning and losing.
· · But on "In the Wings: Ailgels
in America on Broadway," which
•airs Friday at 10 p.m. _EDT on PBS,
.winners and losers co-exist in an
uiiusual mix.
.
. . lnthe winner's column, first and
. foremost, is the play "Angels in
· America," Broadway's newest darli!Jg, on which this "Great Performances" dncumenlll}' focuses.
· : ~ Also among the wmners .js playwright Tony Kushner, who won
· this year's drama Pulitzer Prize
· arid, Sunday, picked up the Tony
Award for his epic or politics, sexoality aild religion in the ReaganBush years.
Viewers, too, come out ahead.
The hour serves as a crash course
in what's ~ on Broadway IIIII in
the .u. It gives a useful once-over
as 10 what this mammoth _play is
about (only Part I, itself 3 l{l-hours
long, has yet opened in New York;
the second halt arrives in the fall).
And the program is an opportunity
to think about, and re-think, the
issues "Angels" explores.
Losing big, nobly and other:. wise, are the victims of AIDS,
whom the play examines with passion, ~ht and even brave humor..
And don t forget the batlered survivors of the '80s, a period the
pleasant but plain-spoken Kushner
. bramb "a benclunadl: of evil." .
· • Filmmaker Tom Bywater's
· ''Angels" documentary provides a

LINDA'S
PAINTING

• • ·
lor you
:•.;:.
VERY REASONABLE
~::::HAVE REFERENCES

~'Angels

. .

.

IM-"I-7054AII«IP.II.

day aflcr day, of unwanted, abused
llld poveny-stric:ken little ones. rve
decided that motherhood is 1101 for
me. The best thing I can do for this
earth il refrain from adding to.
ANN LANDERS
overpopulation.
"1993, 1M ADatl•
There il no right or wrong on this
Tlmel SyMI&lt;ato
issue.
but I 11USJ1CC1 there are more
Crulon SJDdlcole"
people out there having babies
flight attendant to get 1 pilot
prqp!IDL"
.
because or pressure, rathet than
because they really wailt lbem. Even
:. Far be it from me to 51ep on 1
JOOCIIIDe, bullet's get real, Ann. If Ah, those were the days. -- F.O., you, Ann, couldn't keep from
adding a little 1101c on the joys or
.... - IIXiOIIIpliabcd in-fli&amp;bt, the LOS ANGELES
DEAlt P.O~ Tbilse may have.been children. Please allow us our
. Ollly available places would be the
· COCkpit or 1 Jell room. Eitbet would "tbl days,• but I like it a lot bella' opinion without putting 011 · ""llile lbe agility of a gylllliUt. now - llld so do 99 pcn:cat or lbe pressure. -- CHILDLESS AND
Forty-two,_. ago, when I warted women I know. But tltaDks for FUI.JilLLED IN ICALAMAZOO
for Northwest Airlines, similarly lbarillg that piece' of bislory that
DEAR KALAMAZOO: I C11111ot
dextrous young people could 1011nds like ancient folklore.
iJnaaine a more pei10IW deritim
Dtar ADD LIIDden: This is in than whether or not to have
practice fOf tbeil' next airline flight
in lbe biCk 8CIIt or a Volkswagen responae to the leUer from the man children: You do not "owe• the
who didn't want to have any world children, and feeling u you
bug.
.
In !bole days. all flight auendams children. My mother bas been do, I agree it is best not 10 even
were female, had to be within waiting for 42 years for me to have consideriL
specific height and weight achild. I hate to diuppoint her, but
l'ln IIOIIIpOJogizing for lidding lhlt
it's
1101
going
to
bappen.
pmmc~m. IIIII were forced 10 quit
"little note on lbe joys of children;
I am a recovering alcoholic who becaii8C I hlppen ~believe !bey Clll
on or before their 28th birthday.
They also had to be mighty quick comes from a long line of dnmb. be the best things in a penon's life.
on their feet when delivering rd- Growing up was rough. but I don'! On the olber lulld. they can also be
·me, tea or .milk to the cockpiL blame anyone. It's just the way it the wont - uid my mail aueats to
Today, they call it harassment. In was. It hu taken me 30 ytars 10 that fact on a daily basis.
Thanks for your views on this
those days. the pilots lhougbt of it learn how to live in a healthy
relationship.
My
I
I
-year
nwriqe
u a "diYine righL • After all, hadn't
controversial subjecL l'ln glad )'00
they all Down during World War U is the best thing that ever happened wroee.
("coming in on a wing and a to me. My husband and I share his
Gem or the Day: Inside every
70-)'e&amp;r-old is a 35-year-old asking,
prayer"), and weren't they all grandchildren who are delightfuL
I don't want to have children. My ~What hajlllCIIed?"
considered American heroes?

1

Giveaway

s us,eel

COMPLETE f{e :• -~..Jail'!
RADIATOR
.4wr-·
SERVICE &amp;:

m -. AI catora.l1t 111 a11t:

===

Wort.
........
Y.Uual'•h Rd.. ......_
- ·~

992-3768

· OfiPICE.-········-..···"'·-·.................._......".....11241M
17 COLE • POMEROY, OHIO
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..

Ohio

48 Space fOr Rent

41 Houlil fOr Rllnt

{)

.,.. ' Public Sale
!:: &amp; AuCtion

a-

June 1o, 19tl;r-

OhiO

llddlepOI1
&amp;VIcinity

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PHILLIP

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ALDER

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'llrglnlo.

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13 Cold Adriatic:

eou.lo looiWig Ia&lt; or
InTwo ' t OCWII . . . _ far .... or motill
County. ... 30W75•l'llnl, no land ODIIIb uti, dlpoell 17110.

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WEST
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uu
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24 Chtlnk:al

·

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· 25 Compa11 pt.
26 Timetable

27 Fait

28 llullc:
trltablt
31 Golf""'

S4Modl

Well

Nort•

Eut

tNT

Pass

SNT

AUpaa

31Pig

pluo ultra
41 Unruly chHd
42 Frutt c1tc1y
4411tw
48 leu hoaYJ
48 Rt-bllng

40 -

51 Blvd.
52 Swor..
54 North Caroltcoltge

n•

55- AYI¥
56 AfricMI loa
57 Olcl mualcal

lntlrument

DOWN

32 AlttrnaliYt
word
33 tliblt diY.
34 Female bird

Vulnerable: Neitber
Dealer: South

38 Kind of rock
38 Dewourtd

lhMII

abbr.

SOVTB
+JI5!
.AQ I
+AKI
+Qt4

6 Non-eapreu

trolna

1UKbrudcuttrt
2 Card game
3 Dtlollon

7 Actrtu-

lloran

8 Armed
g- couturt

10. Skater

rntnll ' · ·

23 - cOoklt · '
25 lhiiHII .
21 ~:L..,.

28

SOME OF TH' TlME
THEY OUGHT TO BE
OUT IN TH' YARD

Don't miss
a spot

21

. . . . . -ion -.

Motorcycles

74
f-,,,,,,
44

Apartment

Mollohan Corpoto, At. 7 N. 1M441-1'144
Corpot 110, All
for R.nt
~=---":":~":=":'~= Ylnrf In Stock lUI.
1 llodroom, Qulol a Prlvolo,' Air Ook Furnlluro: TobiN •
Conditioning ,250/llo. 114-441, Cholnl, Hutchao, Curved Clla•
0115, 304-175--.
China Coblnolo, Book Coou,
- · epa, tolol -trlc, op. Elo. Alvor Volloy Cell Fumktn,

: ..?·z =~~ ~4t
In town. iBiiil..ii- """'lolilo 4311.
II: VIIIIIIIO ~cr.... Apia. 841 ar Old Cedar .,_, Ylty FO!I•on~••I:'~• to ':::2

colll14.fla.m1. EOH.
' Fumlohod Aport- 1 Br, 1:111
Fourth Aft-, CloUIIIOIIe, 1210
Ullltllel Ptcld, ~ Aftlr
7 P.M.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES Ia JACKSON
ESTATES. Ul J1abmn Pika

_........__'"_'

32 Mobile Homes

~.

tor sale
14Xe5~= 117111-._
Tolol
Th._h Out

11,110, f14-446.017I, F• s.t~p
1111 mobile harM, lllr, 10 • ·II,
tiiGG.
304-475-2152
ollor
4:30pm.

11o1r
8tyllol Exlollng
0' d....
Naeclld For
H'aft
Tralllc0 ·"pNie ~ ""'
Comau 1 'en Plue 1K On
RIUII, AI AliP UIIN Hekl In

Con-

SOnd 110.,_ Or
1..- 01 lnlonot To: CLA m.
c/o OoiHpolo Dolly Trlbuno, 82i
Tlllnl A-ue. Golllpolle, Ohio
41131.

kwt ·• tlalu 81r;lce Technldln
ForSrfeMoT.V.S!"'-.Elealranlal lwprllncl Hllptul
lut A Will~ To WOrll.
· llohwiJ And ......,. To 1.ooim

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12 -

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Acaoplod.
IIODELS
-_ _ . . .Wonted
, Sludlo,ForIn -Cla~
llpollo~ c.rr EIHo Pholagrophy

IM-44M7VCI.

.

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1177 HOllY Pork 1rolllr, 121111,
s u - 1 - , ol oulljoclo, 1:/A, undl&lt;ponnlng, ronge a 10f,
K-1. For mon liilonnotloo\ coli wuhor
a - · H500. 3Cf4.l7l.
1412 or 1'7W307.

3114~

r..t"'•5 J•::o:3~
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1181 Knox 21M' trollor, I'Mdy for
lmmodlolo
mUtl bo
mond .... ·lot, good·conclllon.
114 112-7107.

H
""""• .... ,
•"•
Wll Do a.br~!fttlng In Mv Home
Off 110, On 8uii¥JIIe Pike, Ex· 1113 llobllo r - w/dook
pooloncod
Aololoo ct1 114- outbuilding, "'Y nlco opprox.

a.

a

lend, VInton, Ohio .....
441 :1141. '
11 \GOO. 304-1711-11778 ar 114111-13112.
wrn
do -~. Hllwn, Point Pl. . .nt ......
14 1: 70 tr~~Uor, 3 bedroo~n,
-41127 or 112·2211, clop 211181
both. 304-171-1338, .......
or evening~. · '
1/4 -

loon.

WUI Do Odd ·~ lncl~
"'Skyllno HollY Ridge 14&lt;70,
Lawn Work. "'' ue '538
oU - · 2 ~ AIC,
llalt.
..... od porch, ldlchon - ·
Would Uu
To Thlo otorogo billa, undoopoo10lng,
Summer
Far 4.. Yr. OW, flU-. 304-17$-2414.
Choolllro Aroo. Exoollonl Rot.
1.. SUnohlno14110 mobllo
114-317·7031.
hotnt. total lilac, J bedaooma. 2
lui bolho,lounclfy 1&lt;10111, .,...

Frnancral

IILL COMMUNITY 11Edi:

,
CAL CENTER, INC.
, JIG CHARLDTT£ AVENUE
o
OAK HILL. OHIO 411111

•

re"' .

114-482-7717

•

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lol
e.-a .. Un. Ouollllod
(IICIJI
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.., Ohio . . - One Yoor 01
Medical IS,.glcol Exporlonco
~oqulrwd. One Y•r Spoclol
Ooro Unit ElporlooiCO Roqulrod.
AcLS &lt; Skill In llonltorlng C.r·
dloc ~htlhmo And A..,.rolory
Saoklng "

JOa.-oro,lncl...,&amp;:::lor
lo Pootouod.
"

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And
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Cell .Hill ~ -~~
• - c.n..r, lno.
• . - CMrtoae Avenue
· " OokHNI OH41115e
,
(11411i2-7717
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304-4Y.2005
.

Wolll-e.IM-44641H.

Benl"!!, Dlooblod, a Handlcop.
WuhorL D&lt;vw, ~tor,
llod, PMHA lnoorno
eon;
l t o r U - O n - u r Color o.Y. F - .
"'"_.,._
... lnoorno. o\ppllanoH, dft-r.
CoSru
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""""""·
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Microwave,
114Pop Eloclrlc UIIIHy
Only. oluno Ocou-. AU
~nooo-. Inc, 114-33'1-me, 53
Antiques
f1Wlll.42l7, 114-11M111, lqUII -:=:-::-:-:-:::--i~:::-::.-:-=-­
ltol'llfng Opponunlty.
Bur or HI. A._..

Ant..._,

Fumlohod 2 - , both,
---- _.._
pot
1·
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lllllkloo
.
1-noo,
.._rtroquiNd.IM-441-1.1

1124 E. M.rn .-.on AI. 124,
-~,_ llouro: M.T.W. 10:00
..... Ia 1:00 p.m., _ , 1:00
I I oo p.m.•
~-~.

Fumlohod Aport....., 1br n01t
to Ubra,ly, porldng, oontrol heat,

54 Mlscellai'IIIOUS

°:

Merchandlae

eu ue 0331,

21,000 BTU WI- Air eon;
Fumlohod Ap4': 1Br, 1200 dHionor, 12711:!,~.,.. 2 112 Ton
llonor 1110
UIIIHioo Pold, S - Both, 701 Control Ah
'
Fowth. Clolllpollo, .114 U1 4411 .,.... ltol.
Allor 71&gt;.M.
I~ T.V.'o, Ill 41211;
Fumlohod Ell: 7 112 Noll, oa~ .... _...... Hammorld o.;
NDOIIo. till, Ut..leo Pd, 114: aan 1300, i:OOl.O Nlco, -

CoiUo
AIUJ..._&amp;-Una:
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E-r Monoloy. Clluok Wlldomo,

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.
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.
.
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For

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Quaan

- . uu 11ow, With looko.. I "t

Size

0e11 64
Hay &amp; Grain
db:trd, -::-:::-.~~~~==""::'
1210 010, f14.441.71111.
2 ,_ 1101100 Fl.
....... ttloooo lila-*• 114 311' ••••
Sol ol 4 olumlnum tin ........ ~··• · - - .
flo I lua a.., pick-up, $70, llllr In llold, Doni Ftonn, 11WIZ-2f)I:S.
toUTNIIOolor-.
·
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01111'14'-11H117 . . . lpM.

Transportatron

38 8erllldin '.

Air oondlll....,, r.trloogougao, uu now, ezo; old

waa~Pn Ironing board, $10; 114-

112-2111.

11711 Dodao Don, •
1300, 114-fotWZta.

ComploiiYI Fumlohod Smell
Houoio, W71/1no. + Utllhloa"
Porldng. No Pole. CoH Belaro T

Real Estale

aut-~~;:,.- Point
Pl•!lllll.
.

35 Lots a. Acreage

All real es1a1e advertising in
this newspaper ts subjec;t to
tne f ederal Fair Housing AC1
ol1968 which makes 1 Illegal

lo advenise ~any preterence,
limMtu ion or &lt;hcttmlnalion

based on ra ce, cOlOr. religion,

se• familial stat us or nal ional
otl!}in, or any tntenuon to

make any such pmlerence,
tim~auo n or Cllsctlmlnalion."

newspaper Will not
knowingly ICCepl

Thfs

'?5
.
-·

Ceble

adllt niSO&lt;IIn Ihis newopoper

- - · t12,100. Dop lll&gt;
111-'JqO; ..,.ni,..1Q4.171..42tl
SEVERAL 7- ACRI MRCELI:
MeiQI C:OU..y, llelm l'wJ,,

~w,
Ou• readtrs ••• hereby
Informed tnat all dwellings
are I YIHible on In ~II
opportunk)t ba:Us.

teiOI ..,,.,

1141, Alhino,OH.

31 Hom• tor Sale

bell- -

36

1181 Knoo 2
......... wlporoh, ...... poomlng,

---.-Good,

nsc
..........
.
Of'

•

· - 304-475-

A. Today is the 'last day for this
column, and I want to thank all my
readers: I've tried my best 1o answer
almost 2,000 of your questions over ltle
years. My best advice on improving
your English is trite,but tnoe: "Think .
before you speak." To improve your
writing, !ry the daily exercise of keeping a diary or' journal, or revive the
,lost art of writing letters. Practice
makes our language Pfrlect.

IN MYa..ASe.,,AN-(jl-IINCa

011a:2 iaJ 1.-e:T 1 cr:c:e 16
A CQIIoR:)51TION .

P.M. I'M 111 OUI

ono

IIIJU\monto

82211/mo. lnoludoo tORKioo, tiOO
..:.tty dspxt.. no pitt; t'M-

Uaod 0112110 - - · 114441 ~4-vollolilo.

Robulll.

1171~0onl--

=. ,_

campers •

v, 2clr., boo\1111111 .... ovory .,.. 79

u-. 12200. • - ·

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1117.

1ltl T""J ...... orolor,
2411, '""' ...,_,.....,, ....
,_, goo or oloctllc, 114-'JU·
~

AAEN'T
'(0\J
Tt-.~tNG

ONE C~ NEVER TAKE.
~

St;:C.IlRiiY TOO
SERIOUSlY, 1&lt;\Y FRIEND.

'THIS
BURGlto.RY
1&gt;. liTiLE.

100

THEN
WHY

PROBABLY

PRINI NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

6 u~~R~B~N~~~f LETTERS

45

Col

1---

Or f14.ZI7.

Furnished
Rooms

Acoomodat- for throe mon,
ahaww, cable ~ microwave,

-blo.
""''""':'M:;;

rwtrlgoralor, oil otroot porldng,
yory
prlvofo
min- above
Govln,
. ·7711.

-lorrwol - - o r - h .
Storti, "'
Hotel.
1114 MIO

- -·Gallo

--troller-·
a..
-.•-wv.

.._.... roorno wnh -...g.

-m-

Al--upo.
2:00 p.m.,

Coli

Real Estate
. . . . . . . . . . . . . for ....,
7111. wlh - · long, MIY114-

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

=:t=,1114rtlla ~·

-ion

Nhrr 'II r1 q.. "' ,.,. ... ,..

_ , In -

.... For ...,. r;,.
con 114-112-1111 oak

Ia&lt; JoAnn•

.I

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
'"'
ViNfy • Quest • Decry • Dilute • STYLE ·

tt took me an extra hour to get home from work one
day. Traffic congestion has gotten so bad that cars not
·• only run out of gas on the way home, they also go out
,of STYLE:

•

M~

SECURE?
.

=~~~~~~~:::=::::!~ standing the innuences whlct1 are govom·

SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Thonk
ing you in lhe year ahead. Send lo•, very carefully before making any commit·
Gemini's Aslro·Graph predictions today by menls or promises today. However. if you
mailing $1 .25 plus a long, self-addressed, do agree to something, 'treat~ as a sac~ed
stamped envelope 10 Astro-Grltllh. c/o this rrust and do whal you said you'll do .
newspaper, P,O, BoK 4465, New Yortc, NY CAPRICORN (llec, 22-Jen. 11) Treat CO·
BERNICE
10163. Be sureiO srare your zodiac sign .
workers the same as you would treat val·
BEDEOSOL CANCER (June 21·July 22) Associates ued frlends today il you hope 10 goin 1heir
are likely to have more confidence in you support. Anything lesa might be rejecled.
today lhan you do in you1'1Gif. This is one AOUARIUS (Jen. 20·Fob. 11) Your
o1 those inslances where ~ would bil wiser chances for malarial acquisition look lair
IQday, btlf don't raise your e&gt;pectallons up
lolrust their judgmenllhan yours.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A joinl venrura in ro levels that invito dillpllOintmant K they
which you 're Involved could be severely are not achieved.
bruised today il dissension Is allowed to PtSCilS (FG. 20-March 20) Be plllioSoplt·
enter lhs picture . This arrangement IS ical regarding any reversals you mighl
already ralhlr fragile.
uperlenco Ieday. Minimize their aignlll· '
VIIIGO (Aug. 23-lapl. 22) A lur of failure cance and look upon them as stepping 1
•
taUIO! you to postpono making a cr~· atonea instead ol slumbllng bloclla.
,
leal Judgment today. More harm could ARII!B (lhrch 21·Aprtl11) lt's lho end ·
lnatead of looking for fresh llalda to con-. '""""from lndecillivonessthan from mak· 'resulllhat is important Ieday and not
·
·whose Ideas or tactics got you there . II
quer In tho year ahead , toy to figure out ing a bad Quesa.
ways 10 build upon and Olflllnd that whlct1 · LIBRA (Sop!. 23·0ct. 23) Parsons who anolher's lhoughls or suggesllona art
you have already ostablltrhed. ThHO are ahara lila worl&lt; with you IPday should also· superior lo yours, be grotelullhly are and
lhl things that could offer you your Qr8alasl bo allowacl to share in lhl benefits W you11 uoo1hem.
'
IIICC""BOS,
and lhllr eff011s in something to be TAURUI (April 20-lhy 20) Kup a run·
QI;MINI (May 21-.lune 20) There's a poe· diwiedup.
nlng lab on expenses or'tndeavora In
sibillty you could make lhlnga rougher on SCORPIO tOct. 24·Nov. 22) This might wllich you'ie Involved today. H lhly are not .
yourself careerwise lodlly lhan they n8eC nol be one of your bell~r dayo for laking monitored careluHy, thero'a a chi- yoy
1&gt;8 through premature. lmpullliva aclions . risks. especially speculallng in an area could heve soma oorloua budget bverruns.
Be disciplined. Get e jump on ~fo by under· """' whicl1 you hi.. no input or conrrol.

ASTRO·ORAPH

.

'

-~

''

IIIIIl I

Home
I

&lt;

'

you develop from step No. 3 below.

Serv1ces

Improvements

'

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing word s

112-2211.

Spoclol.s 2 bod- '"'"· ....
poling,
~L rohlgorot&lt;&gt;&lt;,
lomiiY 11...-pnoll, on oko
EOH. 30U82-3711
or
-oonoa br· tadoy,
l.ourlond Apto,

..

While attending a dinner
party I overheard one catty
guest purr to another, "They
make a pertect couple. He has
a nice chin and for her that
goes ......."

SEC~~E.

'IO\J1RE NOT PN:I&lt;itl6
OON'T ONe Of 1\\'C.SE. BI\8\ES ...
I ft;:EL to. ~5 &lt;:till Btl! I SE~\ ...

...'

KYLUS

Motor "om•
::11;, .r.:=~liolil~nd:7-;.._..;.:.;pao;;;.,-,_­

· 1.._

Wanted

Q. I want to improve my English.
What's your best advke?

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

ctflndot'•

• .,. lf3*1DIO

IIMitl.

By JefFrey Mdluain
Anything AUREATE &lt;"OR·ee-el")
is golden or looks like gold, as in "au·
reate jewelry." To improve your vocabulary, you may want, to add a
golden adjective like AUREATE,

Mt5e&gt; ROXIE TAU6HT l.le
AN EI6HT'!EeN -1.-E'TTE'R
WORD TODAY.

hn _, hlllo.

-

e:-. ......... &amp;1&amp;

- r 114-245-UTI, 114-3712213.
·
Four 1517 Pontloo Formulo
olumlnum - . :,::;,n1.1L
ongl!ll auto. trono
lor

A8n 11.. IIIMuUfUt 411 Space for Rent

o; J

lond;
d
0
Coli .... 1

WEU.,/M'(8£ ... 1GJJ£ '(A
FQI.JN'?

I

.

I

••

•
- Tronomr..lono, ~ a
r.buTit, alllv'1111 .... trtlng .. $tSI;

:-.: :.t''""""""-......
1171.

y1 ytor lei
_• c:L.ilJIII•No•

. .... ,,..

~=-=-=-:-.,...--,,...-~

~..... 1355 Momh To Month,
114--·7110.

adverUsemenls tor real ettllt
whiettls lnvkHatlon olltte

• .

AcCIISOrlel

a
Ch0vella,l200; 111112 am.
·

ruanpller

41 uton ·u~~nt
42 Cry of a limb
43 Sllllt'Uy

keep

OUR LANGUAGE

No Polo, Elaotlla Not lnoludod.
1320 1 , _ ...... 8130. llonlh

poro. County wotor, rood a
-2114. · trom ~- 3114-175;:;Niao=-:::lol:;-;;:1011;:::::121:=-;eo=.,.:::-:eon=..,
,. ,

FINI$tfEl&gt;".

a.

Auto Parta

IIASEIIENT
WATEAPROOFIUI
LIIIDDI dltiiiMI llflllme ~
-- ...... r•a II fumlaMd.

"*

''N~A~I..Y

UIIIM.

71 Aero Ooorotlno Marina
L.ocotod In Millwood W.V.. 304!
213-4081.

Lea 1 Ml'ttge lor hotM con.
an Rapurn Ad.
Nltanabll ,...rtctiOnl, oouniJ
. . . ., _
lnfonnllllon Nled on ,..
~.,..., 3Q4..171..1213, I*IM no.
ngle
tNIIIn.
1.a111 for hou:tee, t,.lln I carn-

Tt'lt Mlt&gt;l&gt;L£, /tl'll&gt;

Pontoon 11718l/I¥MI 24 F'l. With
Tralllr, No llolor, t1,500. 114-

lth It, Hew HIY«t, WY.

•ruction

FRANK AND ERNEST
,.,y wo,~ IS I&gt;IVU&gt;~t&gt; INTO Ttt~t~t -...._ I
P/t,TSt Ttl~ BEGII'IftiiNCi,
---... \ /"~ _...-

Porllll Saovlco, llgloJo Wotor
Toyo, 1114411'1-7102.

76

11..+-+-

~

By ..... ,.

Tar11 Tawnttou. Apilrtmlnta,
1,111 Sq. F'l. ~1]111 2 llodi&lt;IOIIIO,
Co\, 2 - . DllhWuhor Dlop.

..... 304-maua.

'I'OU FEEL. ...

Alto FUll Uno NloMn Arid

'II acf'M of tot• ,..., oauntv
..ter, road, etectrlc. 304-5712814 .

F&lt;&gt;&lt;. SaiH 112 - . high ond
dey, In VII- o1 Mfli.
dlopoll, llllood .... lnwnodlola

I-lOW IT CAN MAKE

Two llroo, Mloholln P1111110- 13,
........
flllll - · -11oM, l&amp;mOII
~114-441-new,IZI, 114-14M111.

_.l._ _

Mini linn 23 .. ,.., 10 room 2
IICHY houM• omoH oarn, 1 milo

1 DON'T TI!INK T~ERE'S
A WORD TAAT DESCRISES

IMM -1100; 1177 ..... ,

Nlco Dno IR uniumlohod
Apon"*ll.
Rolrla.
p, o•id1d. W.tar, dir..v- PaJa.
IUr Condlllonllll, DooOoK A..
qulrod. 114-4411-4141 Ahar lp.m.

~

TI-IERE WA5A OLUIIAII
IN TI-lE 5K'( LIKE'
I'VE NEVER SEEN
86FORE ..

37 Accuttoma
31 11111 Cln!Uf)

cpMMIOM..,--,...,-

ONI11 t14 211 lat.

~Alor7P.M.

Mit,
qhowr
14~GWMhi&gt;Oii
truck
for

::',"8:~ 33 Fanns for Sale '

-at,-·-OUibooni---

lion, .,._,;:;;;._'

Olml*.

:=: .}':,=·

1... 11 Fl. loot .............
With 71 H p - lotaloi
And TroiiOr teaa, tf4.446.:'1114.
For 8ale: 11 Ft. Fltlrg'a= lolt
lnboonl a Oulboai'd, N.....
Wortc, . . . 114-441-1ea

- . . ... -

:."='"''

~
. :-ran cat
7p.m.

for sare
10 R. John ao.t, I'M t41 1730.

11 1'1. ... .ghl With Trolllr,
1171, • Wkh 1171 Jahnton
Motor, II HP, 111 Ul 1111.

SWAIN
FUAij!TUAE. 12
Oliva St., Golllpolle. l ~
tumnuro, hUioro, Wwlom a
~

21

.,:.:14~--------m
••

.

roam, udllt... lnclucled, "*n2·

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

A. a a. Furnluro. - · Ullld,.,.
tlqwa. Hoi tthokt fumilhlngl.
.,...., wv. 304-7'1N341.

~-. 111,100. locotid

Wonted: :Ill Or .... . 01
Land.--_,,.,,,...
· - llolllne Or l'lil.
2 a«y Log 8ldlng - · 4 And ..
lo Wllliln II llloo 1111.
-"'-...-roc~. ~~a~~-. 2 htfio on u .for _.,._, P.O. lol . AciM, 114-3'11-131C1, 114-11'1- Fnom OollloDIIo, Col 114-441·
1111......._ .. And-

7fN,
,' ., .....,.

bod-

l

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . d'J[I1'81..
~ ll'lr-&lt;;tnr:k
'IT ~ Dlrldun ~.
-·vz-7,13;--..tlon ... dr!ft, 118a0, 11411124142.
..,lm )loklt, 11;11t ~·· M!Z
Nloo While Ro,.. Pur , . _
1111:11 UOA Hondo Dirt . . . 1100
E x - COoldfllon, liM Small 111 Farm Equipment
Finn, 111411111 1425 Allar 5 P.ll.
at,l14 4417201.
I Fl. Troller With ld Hftch 1184 Handll ZillA ~ concl~
O'Sullivan ·~r DIM, Ex· on.r, 111 ut 1aae ar ,.......,..
lion,
1 . .- . i450. 'Phone: ........ ~~ Cllll14- 7'111.
IJI.:IDOiafllf 4:0Gplll. ,
••• ... Gall
1117 F2 7110 Yamaha YMJ - .
One Ulld Allnba• wl au at·
ruldng 12,000 or wrlr 1 - for
,.,..,_,., $500. *-17211.
car llf~uaf value. 30t 171-4001.
piMMIMMm
..
Plwllc .... ....,... ,, """"
75 Boats &amp; Motors
ExDI,.. oluno 11th. - 1 aNtl:l ....,......

ooll 30Ull--.

...-.111111r pooll Pt. PR, 30WJI.
3711ollor 1:30 Pll.

lloura 2:11 . , :30, ... .
1152 tt no ...., lena ,.,..
!"'P-

fAK

OJIIIn-. ono

Eftlclancy

'73 Porte, 2 bodi&lt;IOIII,
gaad-lon,I1WQ2.ca111.

Eooy Worfll Excollonl Poyl ,_.
............ A I - · Coli
Toll
FIM,
- - · Ell.
:til.

c_.111 Ut 2511. EOH.

dhlon tiOO, kkchen olnlc wlh
coblnoloiiO. ..,..._._
PICKENS FURNITURE
.,__.. •1 d
Houoohold "'mle!lfrit. 112 mi.
Jcrrlcho Ad. Pt. PI_,., WV,

Sloppli"'

._
eoovx Roclon, 5100
mU.,114-It2

11M SORR't' I'M LATE
WIT~ '&lt;OUR SUPPER .. [
STOPPED TO ADMIRE
TI-lE SUN SET ..

Qrotlt . .

you drop much as a crumb on
carpet, they rush up with th:e- ,ke-;D Jlt....-&lt;f-Night""
Buster. U suggest that they ta
44 Tumt rlgllt
brid&amp;e, They are ~perts In the mail&lt;· I
45 At far ..
In&amp;. It Is important to
ca~:~~J!
47 FldttafltiiJ,
track of the spot-cards - as In tc
41 And nqt ·
50 Comp Ill pl.
deal.
53 Conearnlnt
West, always the traditiooalist,
fourth·bighest from his longest
strongest.
After winning with the
continued witb the
three, he
Soutbwonin
CELEBRITY CIPHER
_. .
West could do no
cash
~ Clpltlr Cl')lptogrMII . . c:r...a trcn
nil prwn., .. •
spade ace, holding declarer to
EKh .._ In h ciPher ll8ndl tot anDihlr. Todl)''a ~ R ....... II.
contract.
"Why didn't you win the first
'IXW
IVMFADW
YLIX
DLULEN
...
witb the spade king?" ~~Skeel West.
"Then, when you continue with the
GM
DMEN
LO
PMF
ZEMY
OM
' .. .
queen, I wj)l know that you have a
.. '
doubleton."
·
R 'HEP
.IWM.IDW,
HEC
PMF
. "I thought about doing that. But I
.. .
was afraid tbat if South bad the ace
SHE'I
VWRWRAWV
IXWLV
... . . .,.
and won tbe fint trick with it, you
would think he had the queen 111 well.
E H R W 0 • '
I D L E I
W H 0 I Y M M C • ·•
·,
And there was no way I was going
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Being nornlnotocl for on Olear II a cNair,·
win an early trick to clarify the sltua·
betw-• having a YMJ - . vlruo and gtlllng marrttcl." - Emma .
Uoa for you.
Thornpoon.
"I think that you should have paid
cloller attention lo the spade spots,"
TIAT DAILY
.. ' •'
continued East. ·u you overtake my
PUZILII
king with your ace and drive out
·'
South's jack, you set up five tricks for
us. Wben you ·get in with the club aee,
you can cash ~wo spade..winnenr to de-.
' . '•'
feat the coatract. The only time this Is
'
WI'OI~I Is when I have three spades and
"LAGBEM
1::;~; baa elpt red-suit
' .
1•
is unlikely.•
I think you're right, partoer. I
Idi1ln't pay cloee enougb attention to
spade spots;•

PEANUTS

$2,000,
Or on., Good Condition
114-24W152.

......

..

., . .

cltHM
30 Dllottel
34 Roiii.U,

Do you know people wbo keep tbeir
boWieS absolutely spotless? As 80011

so
so,
so

. •

. f.'~m~

By PldUlp Alder

Employment Services

11 Coin . .
20 ••.,.

22 Sporll llnplt-

•·.

I SHORE DON'T
GO ALONG WITH
THAT, L~KEY!!

Holclon .
11 Arfthnlelle, ;
tie. · • · ·
, • Tllanlct, In ·:

lrtllltt

conflict

4 Surround
5 Air rtllt

Opening lead: • 4

BARNEY
\AJOMAN'S
PLACE IS IN
TH' HOME I!

1411Kaw
15 Shoro
17 Orbit
11 Sailor
21 Engrave

ICicl
22 Sporta match

+KQ
orJtOU4

AMWer toi'N¥1111 ,_...

35ConM-

.

"

'
I

·'

;to

-

.

.'

�. ' . . ·-· ' . . -·- .

..

_.... _·~- · · · - ·"""--- ~---·

'

...

~

~

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
•

Pa~12

RSVP 'Yesteryear' essay winners announced
. Bobbie Scarberry,
Anne E.

Scarberry~

daug~rer of
Dena Sa~.

dlushtt.r of Dan and Doma Sayre,
·. lied for first place as well as overall
· Meigs Couniy winners . in the
Y
essay contest.
Sl~Jdcnts who partici. 1181t4·in the Meigs County Retired
Senior Volunteer (RSVP)
. Yesteryear Program, held in conjunction with the Meigs County
Pioneer 8nd Historical Society .and
· ~ Meigs Couitty School System,
subliliued essars about their work
flroject and diCIT visit to the Meigs
Museum. Essays were judged by

ts;rar
Fl -

·~
I

qualif!Cd retirees who based their Cassie Rose, daushtet of Kenneth Rankin, son of Jobn and Connie
d.ecision on the student's own and Ruth Rose, second, Leigh Ann Rankin. Pomeroy, first, Barba~
words and understanding of their Bigley, daqghter of Eddie and . Wilaon, daughter of Phfllis Wilwork project. First and second Jactie Bigley. Rutland, rus~ Josh son, second, Roben Day, son of.
place essay winnen were selected Sorden, son of David and J:Jeidi Eric and )oy Day. I:Jarrisonville,
from each participating class and . Sorden, second, Brool:e Williams, fiTSt, Raina Bennett, daughter of
· their essays will be displayed at the da~fi:~r of Richard and Barbara Sam and Bonnie Turner-Bennett,
Meigs Museum ~He · e · w· · s. Salisbury, fus~ Morgan second, Kyle Smiddie, son of Mike
W•nd. A reception will ben~d . Matthews, daughter of Dr. Craig and Barbara Pore. B~. first,
for the winning contestants and Matthewsand Barbara Crow. Syra- .. ~ lJakrz. son of Clark and Bon- ·
their parents in the fall.
cuse, Autumn Thomas, dal!ghter of. · me Baker, second. Ashlee VaughWm.ners are Racine, First and Jim and Darla Thomas, second, an, daughter of Donald and P!lm
Overall County Wiiulers, Dena .Gene Bing n. son of Gerry E. Bing Vaughan. Bradbury, fiTSt, ~stal
Sayre and Bobbie Scarberry, sec- . 1. Tuppers Plains, first, Meghan Leach, .daughter of Frankltn ~nd
ond Brandon Wolfe, son of Dennis Avis, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. M~lodte Leach, second, Ntck
and Cindy Wolfe. Riverview, firs~ . . Thomas Avis, second, David · Michael, son of Mark A. Michael.

Hollywood can pacify TV violence, but not society
By .DIANE DUSTON
Associated Press Writer .
WASHINGTON - Hollywood
can eliminate gratuitous violence
from television shows, but it's not
to blame for real-life brutality, a
top industry spokesman told
Congress today.
Before TV, there was "religious
intolerance, distorted piety, racial
bigotry, ethnic quarreling; tribal
discords and familial disputes
which have all resulted in murder,
assaults, genocide, fratricide, pillage, plunder," said Jack Valenti,
president of the Motion Picture

Association of America.
·
"I refuse to believe that.most of
the cruelties of this·republlc can be
blamed on television," he said in
testimony prepared for a hearin~ of
the Senare Judiciary subcomnuttee
on the Constitution.
Executives from three of the
largest suppliers of TV programming - Lorimar Tel.evision Co.,
Paramount Pictures and Universal
. Television - were also testifying
before the subcommittee, chaired
by Sen. Paul Simon, D-m.
·
Ii was the second hearing called
by Simo~ to impress upon the TV

industry Congress· determination
to ~et some action under the Televiston Viole~~te&lt;AcL
The law, passed in !990 and
expiring this year, gives the television networts an anliuust waiver to
talk among themselves about
reducing TV violence. ·
Broadcast and cable television
executives who appeated before
Simon last month assured senators
that future programming would be
less violent
The TV executives and the
motion picture industry have
sehedule&lt;f a major meeting A~~g. 2

in Los Angeles to plan a course of
action.
Meal)time, Valenti said he
would meet over the next several
months with unions representing
directors, writers, actors and producers, along with studio fill!l
development executives, talent and
lirerary agents and movie companies that are not part of the mouon
picture association.

Pioneer costume
contestplanned

Community Calendar

It's time to dust off your pioneer
costume in preparation for the 1993
Heritage Weekend Costume ConPomeroy Parking Lot Public invit- Saturday at 7 p.m. at the south- test. This event is scheduled for
THURSDAY
bound roadside park on Route 33 Saturday morning at Stage One in
REEDSVILLE - Riverview . ed. .
for Father's Day. Everyone wel- Pomeroy. It will begin immediately
Community Vacalion Bible SChool
following the parade, and feature
TUPPERS PLAINS - Round come. ·
through Friday, 6:30-9 p.m. ni~ht•
categories for male and female;
ly, sponsored by Reedsville Umted · and square daOce Friday, Tuppers
POMEROY - Quilt show and · youth and adult and authentic and
Methodist Church, Long Bottom Plains VFW Hall, 8-11:30 'p.•m.
reproduction categories.
United Methodist Cburch, ?.1usic by Happy Hollow Boys. Red · sale, Meigs County Senior ~ntt.r,
will take place at 10:45
Reedsville Church of Christ and Cart and Melvin Cross, callers. Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and a.m.Judging
and
)iarticipants
be inuoSunday noon to 4 p.m. Desserts duced to tbe B!ldiencewill
Eden United Brethren Church. Call Public welcome.
and
judged
Brian· Reed, director, for informaavailable. Admission is $1.
on
their
appearance,
authenticity
PARKERSBURG, W.VA. tion. 378-6338.
Return Jona!han Meigs Chapter,
MILLFIELD - Round and and uniqueness. Awards will be
to fn~ second and third
· cARPENTER - Vacation Bible DAR, wiU meet Friday with a pic- Square daOce, Saturday, 8-11 p.m. presented
places
in
each category. Awards
School at Mt. Union Church, Car- nic lunch at noon at Blennedulssett Russell· Building, Millfteld. Music
penter Hill Rollj!, will be through Island. Guests w.elcome. Bring by Out of the Blue. John·Russell, have been sponsored by the
Pomeroy Merchants' Association.
table service.
Friday from 9-11:30 a.m. daily.
caller.
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs County
Extension
Agent, Home Eco. SATURDAY
MASON, W.VA. - Teaford
· RACINE - Vacation Bible ·
nomics/Community
Development,
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Volun- reunion, SatUrday, family dinner,
School will be held at Racine First
and
c~ail
of
the
contest indiBaptist Church through Friday teer Fire Department Open house Mason Family Restaurant. Meetcates
that
entry
forms
will be availfrom 9:30-11:30 a.m. daily for chil- Saturday noon 10 5 p.m. Ufetlight ing, Sunday at Star Mill Park with
able
on
the
morning
of
the contest
will be there at 2 p.m. Refresh- dinner at noon and meeting at I
~n. age rwo through hi~h school.
during
the
parade
lineup
at 9:30
ments and hotdogs will be served. . p.IJI.
Everyone welcome.
a.m. at the football field. ParticiBalloons will be available. New
pants who are not walking in the
recruits
for
volunteer
firemen
are
SUNDAY
RACINE - Vacation Bible
parade may also enter the contest
also
sought.
MASON,
W.VA.
-Eastern
AthSchool at the Racine Nazarene
by obtaining an entry form at Stage
letic
Boosters
will
hold
a
golf
Church wiU be through Friday, 6One
beginning at 10:00 a.hl. until
POMEROY
There
will
be
a
scramble
Sunday
at
Riverside
Golf
8:30p.m. nishtly.
spaghetti dinner at the Pomeroy Course in Mason, W.Va. with sign- the time of the contest
POMEROY - Pomeroy Church United Methodist Church on Satur- . up at 1:3.0 p.m. and tee-off at 2 . The public is invited to attend
the contest and announcement of
of the Nazarene wiU h&amp;ve vacation day from 5-7 p.m. in conjunction p.ni. The cost is 535 per I!CfSOII.
with
Heritage
Weekend.
Donations
the award winners, immediately
bible school through Friday from
will
be
takea
10
assist
an
area
famiCHESHIRE - Family reunion of following the activity.
6-8 p.m. with Patty and Scott
ly with medical expenses.
For ackjitioilal information conElbert and Della Gillilan will be
Anderson and puppet, Lennie.
Sunday at qoon at the Kyger Creek tact the Meigs County Extension
HENDERSON - Gallia Twirlers Power Plant Club House. Bring a Office at 614-992-6696.
CHESTE!t - Shade River Lodge
Wesrem
Sq11are Dance Club
covered dish.
No. 453 F&amp;AM.will meet Thurshold
a
daOce
Saturday
from
8-11
day at 8 p.m. WQTk in the master
MIDDLEPORT - Open house
mason degree, ~efreshments· will p.m. at the Henderson Community
Cenrer
in
Henderson,
W.Va.
Keith
for
Rose Reynolds 90th birthday
be served.
Rippeto will be the caller.
will be Sunday 2-4 p.m. at Middlepan Church of Christ No gifts.
POMEROY - The Meigs Band
FAIRPLAIN,
W.VA.
-Liberty
will practice ThurSday and Friday
KINGSBURY - Kim Herdman,
from 9 a.m. to noon each day for Mountaineers, Saturday, Jackson
gospel singer, will perform Sunday
the Heritage Parade in Pomeroy on County Jamboree.
at 7 p.m. at Carleton Church,
Sallirday at 10 a.m.
BURLINGHAM - Burlingham Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy. Public
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup· Modern Woodmen, potluck picnic invited.
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
Members urged to attend.

It's your world

· TUPPERS PLAINS - Free community immunization clinic at :ruppers Plains Fire Department Fnday.
9-U a.m . for ages two months
through ldnderg81'Jen. Parents bring
child's immunization record.

Pick 4:

0993

Inside today

Low tonlgb1 Ia 60s. Paft)y
· cloudy. Saturday, p1111y cloudy,
blgb Ia 80s.

Forked Run State Park
already

The Ohio Division of Parks &amp; cotS and cooler,
set up and
'bl ~ th ready for use upon amval; Each of
Recreation is responst e or e these four units are avatla.bl.e.by ·
man)lgernent and operation of seventy-two Ohio State Parks. Offer- reservation. A large p~tmtltve
ing such diverse recreational ~- camping area is al~ av111lable by
vices as resort lodges and cabtns, reservation for organtzed groups.
an_d · Nature lovers can enj~y t~e
golf courses, nature centers
h
abundant Dora and f111111a while hik-.
camping and swiiDJDing, eac sUite ing the two mnes of_ trails on the
park $!rives to balance the recre:r
ational desires of the public with park. Interpretive nature p108f8111S
· ·
1
th
are also available to ~oups on a
:the extstm~natura resources a.1 limited
. basis. Visitors JUSt wanting
are av81.1ab . The spect'fic goal of to enjtiy an afternoon outdoors may
the Division is to provide the pub- use any of the four picriic areas free ·
lie with a quality reciealiOnal experience which meets or exceeds the of charge. Two shelter houses are
visitor's expectations.
popular sites for family reunions
Forked Run State Park, near · and may be reserved in advance by ·
. Reedsville, is Meigs County's only contacung t!te park offi~. nteJ:e IS
state operated recreational park. · a ~ee r~qu.tred for th\5 servtce.
Often referred to as "Ohio's best . GnUs, ptcmc '!lbles, rest ~ms ~d
keptsecret", the park offers .a wide water fountati!S are pr.o~1ded m
variety of quality recreational ser- these day-use areas. V1sttors are
vices: ·
often surprised to lc:&amp;rn that all
· Whether you choose to enjoy a Ohio waterCraft, hunung ..d fish;
leisuretr canoe trip exploring the ing licenses may be purchased at
many hidden coves on the Jake, or the park.
. ·
..
just sitting around the nightly
~member of~ park~ IS
campfire enjoying the peaceful commt~ ~ fulfilling the RUSSton
serenity, Forked Ruil is sute to of the Diviston ~f Parks. Althoush
exceed your expectations.
small by companson to m~t other
Water enthusiasts can enjoy Ohio state parks, the quahty !IJid .
boating and fishing on either the diversity of Forked Run's sem~
105·acre Forked Run Lake of the is,often unmatched. Whether tt s
nearby Ohio River. The newly delivering a Ia~ '!ight mes~e to a
opened Ohio River Access launch camp~r. a~Ststtng ~ dtsable~
mmp now affords public access to motonst or Simply keepmg the parli:
the Ohio River. The. swimming grounds clean and safe, each serbeach ·is open from dawn to dusk vice is gladly performed. Our. ~oal
for those wanting a cool, refreshing is to ensure ~t each ~k VJSttor
dip ..Rental boats, bait, tackle and receives the .htghest q'!allty recre·camping sqpplies are available at ational expenence posstble. .
the park col) cession during the
.
Submitted by Randy Wachter
summer.
.
Campers may. select any of 198
spacious and shaded campsites
, suitable for either the recreational
vehicle or tent Clllllpet, Two. shower hoUses witl1 coin operated laun. dries offrz a welcome relief after a
busy day's activities. One extreme. ly popular service available at the ·
park IS the ''rent-a-&lt;:amp" program.
This program offers .overnight
guests. a spacious cabin-style tent
E.. Of The S~tten
equipped wilh a cookstove,lantern,

Cfue-Out Sele

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

ALL

•urs......~..............-•s1

THE UNFORGIVEN R

ALL HIIIGIIIG IISKETS... 5
ILL C• POTS ..............~...SO'
ALL TIEES.............20% OFF

AND
,.
CHUCK NORRIS IN
. SIDEKICKS PG

HUBBARD$ GREENHOUSE

FRI., SAT., SUN.
CUNT EASTWOOD tfil

'

Open Mon..Sat. 9-S.
CLOSED SUNDAY

SyracaH • 992·5776

444-1o88

Vol. oM, N0. 31

2 S.Cii(!lll. 18 Page. 25 cenla

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 11,1993

Mul11rnedlalnc.

A!4uldmedlalno. Newapaper

Museum displays part of
Heritage ·Day observance
Displays depicting life in the needlepoint, laces, cross· stitch;
early I 900s are beinj! featured at quilting and. crocheted pieces from
the Meigs Museum this weekeud as the mid-twenties.
a part of the Heritage Day obserA children's comer is another
vance.
·
feau~re of the special week.end
A sitting room using authentic exhibits. The comer features an
antique furnishings and accessories antique 11¢, numerous toys from
. with mannequins costumed in tum- · the 1920's including a metill airof-the-century clothing is featured plane, a tin butterfly push toy, a
in one of the downstairs room.
wicker doll buggy, an antique doD,
. Kitchen urensils of yesteryear and a bandmade rocking horse.
are also e)ihibited along with an
Also included is an extensive
extensive display of sewing materi- display of children's clothing and
als. The display includes a collec- · sboe~, early books and games.
tion of thimbles, unique butlons
In addition to these special diswith stones, and sewing supplies. plays of antiques and anifacts,
Also on exhibit are samples of there will be a display_of reproduc-

tion~. of early Twentieth Century
magtc posters by Lee Jacobs Produclions, and model railroads, artifacts and memorabilia of early
Meigs County railroads by the
Railroad Club of Southeast Ohio.
Again this year the 91st Ohio
. Volunteer Infantry will camp 1n the
area across· from the museum and
will be doing demonstrations and·
drills during the ~·
'"~~."ll
Music Sunday afternoon will be
by The Classics. Garnes at 1 p.m.
Saturday afternoon .will be con•
ducted by Girl Scout Cadette Troop
I 180 and refreshments will be sold
both days.

Bond, a $500 U.S. Savings Bond, a menibersbip
to the Big Bend Health and Fitness Center, a
"duck dinner" trom Krogers, and many more
.prizes. The.derby wiD begin along the riverbank
in rront or Pomeroy Village 'Hall with the ftnlsh
line at the levee area at thedty parking lot. Pic· ·
lured with F11cemyer are Dianna Lawson and
.
Joan Wolfe or Bank One.

DUCKS PURCHJ\.SED - Rob Facemyer has
purchased 50 ducks for tbe Pomeroy Ducky
Derby on·SIIturday at 3:30 p.ln, during Heritage
· Weekend. The ducks are available at Bank One
or Kroger's ror $5. The derby will take the
water of th Ohio River ia an anticipat~ flotilla
or 1.000 ducks. Anyone may ''adopt a duck" ror
oaly $5 and priUII include a $1,000 U.S. Savings

w

Racine to get secondary water
-supply from TPC's system

Council apfroved a request
Steps for Racine to hook' into ·. of a community development block
the Tti~rs Plains-Chesrer Water gran.t aplllicatio,n f'?r sidewalk from Fire Chie John Holman for
District s system as secondary repatr. The apphcatton must be the purchase of a stacking tip: He
reported that this equipment.is used.
Wl!ll:r supply were taken at a recent filed in June.
meeting of ·~me Village·Coun-·. •·Tile second reading of an ordi- when doing pressure tests. The ~
nance prohibiting semi trailers deparltl)ent also asked Council to
cil.
Council adopted an ordinance from parking on village streets consider declaring the 1955 Dodge
authorizing Mayor Frank Cleland except for loading or unloading pumper as surplus equipment, but
no action was taken.
to·enter into an agreement with the was given by CQUDcil.
A
petition
signed
by
several.
resDale Han. Yellow bush Road,
Tuppers Plains-Chester Disttict to
idents
of
Vine.
Street
requesting
·
·asked
council for a .decisi'on on
supply water as needed to the vilCouncil
place
speed
bumps
on
accepting
a private road sectiop
lage. This agreemCT!l is necessary,
Vine
Street
was
presented.
Several
into
the
villa~e
system. After a
it was pointed out, as a part of an
alrematives
to
speed
bumps
were
lengdy
discusSion,
including quesapplication for a $37,315 State
Issue II grant to provide materials di,scussed as a means of elimil)ating lions as to why the village sbould
accept an unimproved road, memand labor to do a water improve- speeding.
Council authorized the purchase J&gt;ers declined.
.
ment (XOject The village will proof several sign limit signs and also . • Filing for a Community Develvide a10 J!Crcent match.
Counctl itlso approved the filing . traffic paint.
·
.Continued on page 3
'

.

a

THE CHILDREN''S CORNER • Nathan
Cook aot a special look at tltlngs In lbe cbll·
dren's corner Thursday afternoon ill the Meigs
Museutn wblle his grandmotber, Margaret
Parker, museutn director, nnillbed arranging

some o_r. tbe. diapla1•· ·He dltnbed onto tbe
antique bed 1nd e!IJOyed the noise that came
from Ibis antique tin chicken when (le turned
the handle. (Pitoto by Charlene Hoefticb)

.

.

•

Priced from

$

· A Pomeroy attorney and two with his parents while the .charges where alcohol,is served or ~ld. ·
C:olumbus men were indicted by are pending against him. ~ullen. is
A restraining order was also
the Meigs County Grand J11ry slib,JCCt to an order resb'lllntng him issued ordering Mullen to avoid
Thursday.
from consuming alcohol or being · contact with the II year old and the
D. Michael Mullen of Pomeroy in any location or on .. Y premises
Continued on page 3
was indicted on charges of having a · ,--;._------:-::--::-- =-:-=-==.::.::...;:......:::..::.:..:__ ___:.,
weapon while under disability and
Heritage Weekend
of intimidating a crime wibleas.
Downtown Pomeroy Activities
According to ~uting Attorney John Lenres, Mullen is prohib(sponsored by the Pomeroy Mer:chants Association)
ited from pn•• uing a gun because
of his March indictmeat on a drugFRIDAY
related charge.
•
The charge of having a weapon
while under disability is a felony of 7p.m.
Public reception at Meigs County Public Library
the fourth degree, carrying a muito announce 1993 Heritage Queen.
mum poisible penalty Qf five years
in prison and a maximum fme of
$2,500.
SATUBDAY
Mullen was also indic.ted on a
second charge of intimidation of a
crime witness which is a felony of 9 a m
Parade line-up behind former Pomeroy Junior
the third (Iegree. carrying li penalty
. .
of one to 10 years and a possible
High School. Everyone welcome.
mw,n~ fine of$5,000.
·
10 a.m.
Parade starts.
·Mullen was arraigned on the
charges Wednesday ..d Judge Fred . 10:45 a.m.
Pioneer Costume Contest at Coun Street stage.
W. Crow III' ,et bond at SS,OOO 11:30 a.m.
Dance and clogging exhibition at the stllge.
cash with an. option of residing
1 p.in.
Music by Dee and Dallas at tlie stage.
1 p.m.
Ol!thOt!se races on Second Street near Coun
House.
, ..
3:30p.m.
Ducky Derby from Village Hall to levee area on
parking Jot.
· · Louise Durs~ 58, 27615 Morning Star, Racine, was cited early
this morning for driving under the il\fluence as well as drivin,(_ ~
of center and no seat belt, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Stale HighOIUER ACfMTES
way Patrol reported.
• Crafters and concessions on and near Court Street. ·
. ·~ Antique show in the mini-park by Russ ~d Hope Moore.
A Long Bouom man was injured.early Thursd&amp;y morning when
• Games for the public by Pomeroy Scout Troop.
his vehicle rolled down au ombantment in Chell« Township, the
Gallia-Meigs Post eX the State Highway Patrol1epotted.
• Plant exchange in the mini-park by local herbalists.
Jarne~ M. Bbur, 34, ROWe 1 SCout cam~_Rnad, was 1illt1I(JOl'ted
• Tour of Pomeroy and other Meigs County points of interest
by private vehlcfe to VOierU.S Memorial Hospital whert he was
by the Preceptor Beta Beta SororitY. · Bcgilis at McDo~'s in
treated for minor injuries and ideased.
.
A«onnii!!to the accident report, Bing was eastbound on Sand
Pomeroy at 19 a.m. · This group will also have a quilt show at
Ridge Road (Township Road 67) when he lost c:onttol in a ~· .
St. Paul Lutheran Church.
The vehicle went off the left side of the road and rolled down an
embanlanetit belen coming to a Tell on ita wheela.
, • Quilt show. and sale at the Meigs CountY Senior Center. · .
No cilatlona ,laued. The patrol listed unsafe ~ as the .·
• Icc cream social and food serving at Trinity Church on Friday. ·
contributing factor. 11te vehicle sustained heavy, disabling damage
" and was towed from the acene.
' · and Saturday.bcginning at 11 a.m. · ,
• Spaghetti dinner at Pomeroy Methodist Church at 5 p.m.
Editor'siiOlel Names, llfl and lldd..- are printed u!Hy
appear 0111 ollldai ftJICIIII •
.

By Kathrya Crow

We've got a
soft.spot for Dad!

Thursday night
ment for the remainder of
Sentinel Correspondent
Williams has served on council Williams' term which expires this
Jack WiUiams, long-time mem- for over II years, a portiOn of that year. Kalhryn Cro.w cOmiJ!ended
ber of Syracuse Village Council, time as president. Ciluncil has 30 Williams for his work on council.
resigned from his seat on council days in which to name a replaceMayor James Pape issued a
statement regarding the unautho-.
rized use of dirt bikes and all-terHeritage Weekend
rain vehicles in the village. He said
Meigs County Museum Activitil!ll
that "unauthorized use of din bikes
(sponsored by Pioneer and Historical Society)
and ATV's on the streets of Syra·
cuse will not be tolerated. Juveliiles
will be taken to juveaile court and
FRIDAY
adults will be taken to mayorrs
c.oun and be prosecuted."
7 p.m.
Dinner at museum.
A bid from Tom Mayle aild
Sons Construction, Inc., Bartlett,
for the paving of streets in the vii·
SATJJROAY
!age in the amount of 575,762 was
accepted,
7 a.m.
Civil War Reenactment Company activites.
contingent on approval of Ohio
. 12-5 p.m.
Museum opens. EXhibits and demonstrations.
Public Wotks Commission.
Meeting with council was "(om
Children's games by Girl Scout Cadette
Lowery, manager of London Pool.
H!&lt; reported that attendance is
SUNDAY
good, everything is running
smoothly, and the facility is in
12-5 p.m.
excellent condition. Also meeting ·
Museum opens. ?ood stands open. Exhibits
Continued on paae 3
md demonstrations begin.
'
1:30 p.m.
'The Classics" perform.
·

TrooP

'

.

'

I

I

.

1

.---Local briefs-~

DISPLAYS
As members of the largest
jewelry buying group in the world, we buy
for less and so we sell for less. Check Us out. Do it
after you have looked around. You'll
be glad you did .

R.EBITAGE WEEKEND SPECIAL

GOLD CHAINS.~ •• 30% OFF

A. .. C....,." Recline-Rocker®
I'Kllner or Recllna·War® wall recllnar
Surround Dad with softness! Deeply
custlioned transition~! recliner even
· has a unique, p~dded footrest
f

8 ... New Genetatlon" Rwcllna•lttiatow•
recn- or Rec!I•-W•ll"' . . . raalur ·
Treat Dad to the ultimate In comfl;lrtl
Supple pillow channel deli&amp;!' provtctet
, eKtra support and extra aoftneM.

212 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
992·3785

POMEROY • Hillside Baptist
Church, hymn sing, Friday, 7 p.m.,

•

MASON F
2nd Str11t

.. .

Williams resigns _Syracuse post ·_ Three indicted by Meigs Grand Jury

ROCK SPRINGS • . Rock
Springs Grange meets Thursday a~
8p.m.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - There will ~ a
public reception at the !-fetgs
CounlY Public Library on Fnday at
. 7 p.m. to announce the 1993 Heritage Queen.
·

436

Special to The Dally Sentinel

POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA will meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
at Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
Call 992-5763.

RAVENSWOOD • The Ohio
River Festival will be held at
Ravenswood, W. Va., !une 9-13.
Activities will include ndes on the
i&gt;.A. Denny, petformanc~s of the
Dare Devils on warer skts, stem·
y;h~lers on diSplay, and raft races.

Pick 3:

Meigs County

will

POMEROY - There will be an
evening dinner at the Senior Citizens Dinner in Pomeroy on Thursday with serving from 5:30-6:30 .
p.m. 1'he menu will include baked
steak, mashed potatoes and gravy,
tossed salad. biscuit, beverage and
strawberry shortcake. for 54 p~r
meal. Followin' the- dinner, '!'uSic
of the 40's 50 s and 60's wtll be
played by The Classics. A free w~l
offering will be taken for the mustcians. Public invited.
·
. ·

The Daily
Sentinel's
baby tabloid

Thursday, June 10, 1993

'A ' .

Ohio Lottery

I.IURI CO. ......_,.,
....... wv

l4lo O'II"..,.;,Caod~·

• Reproductins of early 20th cenfury magic posters from Lee
· Jacobs ProduCtions.
·. • A typical early sitting room and early kitchen containing
·
many artifacts from earlier days.
• Model railroads, artifacts and memorabilia of early Meigs
County railroads by the Meigs 'Division of the Rkilroad Club
of Southeast. Ohio.
.
• Winning essays of the Yesteryear contest swsorcd by the
Meigs County Retired Senior yolunteer ~gram and the
·
historical society.
• Winning essays from the "Teachets Make and Difference"
conte·;t sponsored by the historical society.
,
• A variety f other displays and' demonstrations will be
featur.:d at )he musucm and on the grounc:!s.

COME JOIN THE FUN !I!

Woman cited for D.U.I.

Man injured in accident

.

.

COME AND ENJOY THE FUN!!!

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