<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10180" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/10180?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-20T04:12:45+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20620">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/ae6422b542777b3a86f89d1728795fb6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1190093f74b323225a8bf579c0ee47f4</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32519">
                  <text>Pomeroy ..dclllpcJI\ Ohio

Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Monda~June14,1993

Pictured here: Heritage Weekend activities

t

Ohio Lottery

Indians
drop 7-3
decision

•
•

~

Pick 3:

620
Pick 4:

2767

PageS

VIII. 44, 110. 3S

LEGION LEADS PARADE -Members or
American Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39,
Pomeroy, lead tbe procession or the p11rade in

. ..

Pomeror held In conjunction with Heritage ,
Weekend ror Meigs County.
•
•

Nelsonville .firm awarded contract for tree project

"

received a planting grant of · 1be money would be used as a por· By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
$13,400 from the .'National Small tion of the local share on the MidSeatlnel News Starr·
A conuact for planting 65 orna- Business Administration. Funding dleport levee projecL Deadline for
mental trees llong Hobson Drive, from that agency is on a matching applying for some of the $144,000
near the Middleport levee and at basis from the village. Numerous CDBG formula funds is Monday,
Dave Diles Park was awarded at in-kind services and materials on the mayor said.
Mayor Hoffman was also authoMonday night's meeting of Mid- hand will mak;e up most of the
match;
with
the
viUage
to
asswne
rized
to advertise for bids on ~e
dleport Village Council.
·
the
monthly
mainte11ance
charie
paving
of the North Second
Ed's of Nelsonville with a bid of
and
purchase
four
trees
to
be
tn
Avenue from the corporation limit
S9,72S with a one year guitrantee
on the trees was the bid accepted compliance wiih the grant regula- to Mill Street. That project is being
funded with Issue 2 monies.
from the four received. The con , tions.
Councilman Paul Gerard asked
Fire Chfer Resigns
· ttact is for 42 ornamental pears, 13
Jeff Darst, ·chief of the Middlepin oaks, and 10 service berry where the local money for the protrees. Council ·also approved a ject will come from and then voted port Fire Department since 1980
"no" to awarding the contraciS.
resigned from the position effective
mun~rumce~ttactfur~ett~s
Council passed a resolution immediately. He cited the time and
with Hanis Farms at $110 a month
for three years, coming to a 10ta1 or· authorizing Mayor Fred Hoffman effort required for the job as his
to apply for $25,000 in Community
$3,960. .
Development
Block Grant monies.
Earlier this

Pomeroy on Saturday ror Heritage Weekead.
Several entries were reatured in the aaaall
event.

CIVIL WAR REENACTORS- Appearing

in Sahlnllly's Heritage Parade in Pomeroy, was
the Cl¥11 War Reenadlllent Group, Company B,

1 Section. 10 Pagn 25 -.ta
A MuiUmedlalnc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 15, 1993

lluii!Mdla.lno.

PARADE FLOAT- Overbrook Center In
Middleport showed Its community spirit with
this Roat Ia Saturday's Heritage Pat-ade In

reason for resigning. He said that
Kenny .Byer, who has been in the
capacity of assistant fire chief, is
the new chief.
·
The mayor and Councll commended Oars! noting the departmen!' s development under Darst's
lea~hi!l, and gave him a vote of
apprec18l1011.
"He's put a lot of time and
effort in keeping the fire department one of ~e best in the area,"
commented Mayor Hoffman.
Other Business
A letter from Pomeroy Mayor
Bruce Reed announced a meeting
to be held 10night at which time the
proposed water tteatment system to

· serve both Pomeroy ud Middleport will .be discussed. It was noted
that a representative of Burgess
and Nipple Engineering will be
there.
Installation of two new street
lights, one on Ash, and the other
between Headley and Russell were
approved by Council.
.
Mayor Hoffman repor~d that
the village's savings this year due
to the ~p rating on Workmen's
Compensation will be about
$18,000. He also noted that a representative of CableVision will be at
the next meeting to discuss ownership changes and rates.
Cemetery workers were com-

Meigs County will have
250 in river sweep.project

complete with authenllc period style outfits. The
1!1'0110 Dl,rlCilmiM a variety or, demonstrations at:::
Meigs County Museum.

.
Meigs County's 51 miles of river. in Pomeroy at the mini-park, for
Volunteers wiD be working only on those in Racine at the shelter
public owned areas . Those who house, and for those at RcedsviUe
own land along the river are being at Forked Run.
asked to participate by cleaning up
The Ohio River Sweep is contheir own banks. ·
dueled in Ohio, West Virginia,
.
Volunteers wilI gather Ill begu'l
Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Illinois
the bank cleanup at Dave Diles and Indiana It was started in 1989
Park in Middleport, at the Pomeroy in partnership with Ashland Oil,
stage in Pomeroy, at the old ferry Inc., and nearly 50,000 volunteers
Iandini! shelter house near the boat from six states have collected more
ramp m Racine, and a1 the Forked · than 30,000 Ions of trash.
Run River access area in
Ashland on · contributed
Reedsville.
$50,000 10 the project again this
Re~hments will be served to year. That company works in c6opall-lhe volanriCri onc:e the cleitnup enuloil )!illi the Olilo River \Iailey
is completed. For the volunreen in Water Sanitation Commission
Middleport, refreshments will be (ORSANCO) which organizes ~e
served at Hartinger Parle, for those · project.
·
··
.

About250 Meigs Countians will
be among the nearty ·SO,OOO volunteers in six stares expected 10 participale in the Fifth Annual Ohip
River Sweep scheduled for Satur·
day.
·
Joining the local volunteers will
be a group from the Ohio EPA
offices in Logan along with fonr
employees from the Belleville
Locks and Dam and fout from the
Racine Locks and Dam who wiD be
bringing in barges to handle the
bags of debris collected.
. The emphasis will be. on enyi- .
ronmentally acCeptable dispoal of
the anticipated 20 tons of trash
which will be pic~ed up along .

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Lyle Sinclair, Shade.
SATURDAY DISCHARGESJoy Cundiff.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Merle Davis, Rutland.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES •
Lyle Sinclair.

~~
HERITAGE FLOAT- Trinity Church of
Pomeroy participated in Saturday's Heritage
Parade with the fioat "This Is Our Heritage."

MEIGS BAND - The Meigs Band, under
the direction of Toney Dingess, marched In
Pomeroy's Heritage Parade on Satprda)', The

· Several groups displayed their community pride
by participating in the parade.
•

.
group stopped and perlo111)ed ror the apprecillllve crowd along the streeL

';

Cincinnati area hit hard by storm

992-2156
UP GOES THE SIGN - In preparation for tbe Ohio River
Sweep to take place Saturday, Kenny Wiggins, litter control direc·
·· tor for Meigs County pats up the slan.at tbe Pomeroy stage. Abo11t
SO volunteers are expected to work in the Pomeroy group. Nearly a
hundred have signed up ror tbe ReedsviUe project, another .641 at
Mlddleport,.and about Jlht Racine.

'Livestock
report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Monday
by the Ohio Department of Agriculll.Jie:
Barrows and gilts: mostly
steady; demand moderate.
.u.s. 1-3, 230-260 lbs.. counuy
pomts, 46.50-47.50; plants 47.5048.50, a few 49.00.
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
COIDIUJ points, 47.7!1-48.50.
.
Receipts Friday 6,700. Estimated receipts Mooday 4,500.
Prices from ne Producen Live- .
stock A!!!O!'jation:
Clale: steady to 2.00 higher.
Slaughter steett: choice 74.0081.!10: select 1101 available.
Slaaghtez heifen: cboice 71.0082.50; select 1101 available.
Cows: Sleady to 1.00 higher; all
cows 66.00 and down.
Balls: steady to 1.00 higher; all
buDs 73.00 and down.
Shcql and lambs: 2.00 to 11.00
lower; choice wools 48.00-63.00;
choice clips 55.00-60.50; feeder
lambs 72.00 and down; aged sheep
40.00 and down.

..

AMITY ..·
BILLFOLDS

.

Sentinel
Classifieds

RETRIEVING WINNING DUCKS - Several boats took part
iD capturing the winning entries and retrieving the other 500 or so
ducks ia the derby staled as a part of Heritage Weekend acllvitles
Saturday afleraoon. fhe ducks were laupehed several thousand
(eet upriver aDd Ooated to the finish !iDe near the Pomeroy levee.

1/
2 PRICE

COMPLm
STOCK ,

MEN'S COLOGNE AID AFTER SHAVE

25%o~F·

BASIC
CIGAREnES

30%oFF

. Qhio·IottePy jackpot
increased to $40 )nillion
CLEVELAND (AP) - The night, 'there should be more than
Ohio Lottery bet correctly that a enough cash available. The lottery
bigger Super Lotto jackpot would would need $17,961,194 to pa~ lhe
lllltiiCt more players, although not discounted, lump-sum opt1on,
as many as was hoped for, so the which is also the sum the lottery
1ottc::ry is trying the gambit again.
would invest to pay off the $40
ne unc;lalmed $30 milli.on jack- · million over 26 years.
.
pot from Saturday's drawing norMrs. MouniS said the lottery lnlmally would igcresse $4 million ditionally has a sales slump in
for Wednesday. Instead, the lottery June, which she said may ac:eount
increased the jackpot to $40 mil- for the lower· that projected sales
lion.
for the last drawing. She also said
Last week, the prize was the June sales lull was a reason
increased from $16 million 10 $30 why the jackpot has.been boosted.
million 10 stimulate interest.
The lottery often takes money
Louery Director Virgil Brown from unclaimed prizes and uses it
said Monday that cumulative sales to increase jackpots. But the money
. through five conse.cutive Super for these twO Super Lotto inc~
Lotto drawings without a jackpot is coming from increased ticket
winner lip reached $26 million.
sales, Mrs. Mounts said Monday.
But the sales total for specificalThe lottery has a $26 mill.ion
ly Saturday night's $30 million cap on winnings from a single uckSuper· Lotto drawing came to et. A player could-~ the cap
$11 ,780,861. The sales total fell by buying two or more .uckets with
weU below the lottery's projection the same six winning numbers ·last week of sales of $14 miltion to maldnj! each ticket worth less than
$17 million.
.
· $26 million.
Louery spokeswoman Sandy
If a player with all ~ ~n~ing
Le8ko Mounll said loday that even numbers has, the only wmnmg uckthouah sales for the high jackpot et, ·the remaming S14 million goes
were less than projected, there is iniO the next drawing's jackpot.. If
enough money available to handle more than one player has ~ w•~­
the new $40 million jlctpot.
ning numbers, the prize 11 spl!t
She said considering the cumu- among the winners, up to a maxllative total plus uticipated ~ of rm1m.of $26 million per ticket
$14.5 million prior. ~ Wednesday

w._

a,_-·

. CINCINNATI (AP)- Basements were tlooded, a police communications tower was blown OV!'f
and a jet airliner became stuck m
the mud as heavy rain, hail and
hi~h winds hit the region for the
thrrd time in five days.
No injuries were reported, but
ttees were blown down, damaging
property.
Wind gusts of· 58 mph we~e
recorded at the city's Lunken Airport. Rainfall of more than 3 inches
· fell on some areas of southwestern
Ohio and northern KeniUCky, causing flash floods .
Power to about 60,000 Cincin,
nali Gas &amp; Electric Co. customers
was knocked out during rush hour
traffic Mondaf. ~ind ~· f~
tree limbs and hghtnmg stnkes
caused the power failures, mosdy
in western HamiliOn County, But-

Clinton 'not
mad at media'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer prices idpd up a tlfty 0.1
pen:em in May u lhe bliP drop
in lllllq)' CCIIII In more ib4n two
yelt'llleiJIOII o&amp;et alheip·JWI!p in
food prioea, the government said
toda
'
1111111 adVIIICe in the Labor
Depanment'a Consumer Price
Inde11 wu welcome news after a
WOiritome 0.4 perceill Airi IUIJe.
Tile Oinlon admluuGun is hoplnl thlllil euin1 of Inflationary

=

c::;e·~.:v:e.:

,i •MI'IIII.

nati Police Division's main ttansler County and northern Kentucky .
mitling tower shortly ))efore S p.m.
· flooding in some places made it
Emerson North Hospital, which
hard for CG&amp;E's more than 100
emergency crews to restore elec- · is a drug and alcohol recovery center, a Kro·ger grocery io Cold
tricity, the utitity said.
Ky., and The Cjncinnati
Spring,
Power was restored to all but
Enquirer's
printing plant were
about 15,000 customers by this
among
commercial
customers
morning. CG&amp;E expected ' to have
affected.
Power
was
restored
to
..lM rest restored by tonight,
them
in
about
three
hours,
CG&amp;E
spokesman Steve Brash said.
The storm toppled the Cincin- . said.

..
,

mended for the condition ·of the
cemeteries on Memorial Day. A
letter of appreciation will be sent to
them.
It was reponed lhat the recreation committee has an estimate of
$750 for installation of a fence at
Hartinger Park. The fence would
segregate a section of the park as a
play area for small children.
The ·mayor' s report sho.wed
receipts of ~ .661.05.
Attending were Mayor Hoff·man, Clerk-Treasurer Terri Hockman; and Council members Dewey · .
Horton, James Ciatworthy, Judy
Crooks, Gerard. and Jack Satterfield.
·

UMW officials
.
belit~le latest
coal proposal
.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A United MiRe . Workers
spokesman says coal operarors are
using "bogus" figures in their latest pitch to get the union back to
the bargaining table.
"Clearly their numbers are
bogus ... and that's just not acceiJtable," said Greg Hawlhorne in
Washington, D,C.
The chief negotiator for the
operators, CONSOL Inc. Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer B.R. Brown, detailed
the companies' latest job securi,ty
proposal :!¥J:ond.ay ud indicated~
willingness to modify the .JIIOPOIII '
further.

"We have. expressed our willingness to continue to stntcture the
proposal in a way that both sides
wiU fmd satisfactory," said Brown
from Upper St. Clair, Pa
'There have been no negotiations
since a 60-day contract extension
expired May 3. The union launched
a strike agamst selected mines May
10 and has expanded it repeatedly.
About 12,000 miners are on strike
in West Virginia, IUinois, Indiana,
Ohio, Pennsylvania and KeniUCky.
In Ohio, about 90 workers at
Maboning Valley Mine No.36 and
the GermaniOwn Prepantion Center. both near Cadiz in· eastern
Ohio, also are striking. Both facilities are owned by CONSOL.
"We can reach agreement on a
new contract," Brown said. He
said ~e proposal "demonstrates
oar willingness to address, head on,
l,he union •s most imJl0118Dt issue.' •
UMW President Richard Trumka has accused the companies of
failing to live up to the 1988 agreement. which expired Feb. I.
That contract called for the
operators to give three or every five
jobs at their new· mines, including
/lOR-anion mines operated by related companies, to laid-off members
of the union.
In Indiana, Peabody Coal Co.
strikers on Monday began picket·
ing the homes of company officials
after a state judge limited the number of piclcets at the gares of a mine
in Lynnville. Ind.
The UMW set up a picket line
outside the house of mine superintendent Kelly Vote in Boonville on
Saturday, said Russell Stilwell, a
UMW regional representative. He
said the homes of other management and contract workers who
have been ~l:'ating the strikebound mine
may be targeted.
The UMW set up a picket line
outside the house of mine superintendent Kelly Vote in Boonville on
Saturday, said Russell Stilwell, a
UMW regional representative. He
said the homes of other management and contract workers who
have been operating the strikebound mine also may be targeted

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presideht Clinton told reporters today he
is "not mad at the press" despite
cutting short a news conference
with his new Supreme Court nominee after just one question. ·
Aides 10 the president defended
Clinton's reaction to the question
about his decision-making process
that followed his announcement of
federal appeU~ Judge Ruth Bijder
RECOGNIZED - AI part of the Keep Ohio Beautiful proGinsburg as h1s Supreme Court
gram,
Vietor L. Browa, Minersville, ten. bas been awarded a cernominee.
or appreelatlop. Making tbe presentation here on behalf or
tificate
While he was joning this
the
~te
Is Meigs County Litter Control Director Kenny Wlgglas.
momirlg, a reporter asked, "Are
you still mad at the press?" Clinton
responded, "I'm not mad at the
press." The reporter said: "But
you don 'tlike our questions." The
president couluered: "Yea, l do: '
Chief of Staff Mack McLarty
. the prone Ohio ~t of Natural
Brown has been' With
said today on ABC that the .question that bothered CliDton "came Resources, Divtsion of Litter Pre- gram for II years and was a memPresident Clinton met for an right on the hee1J of Jadae Gins- vention and Recycling recently pre· ber of the fust Litter Control Advi· Board O.Ks contracts
hour last week wltb Federal burg' s commenwy, whlch was sented an award to Victor L. · sory Board in 1982.
.
Reserve Otainnan Alan Gm:nspan heat1feh and very personal, and the Brown,of MinersviUe fur his out~e ~ a1so been Ill active ie:'d'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) amid a steady drumbeat from presldenl simply didn 'I ~~ to go standing service to tho Meigs er Ill h1s church and commumty, The state Controlling Board
sch&lt;!"I board member, successful approved nearly $1SO million in
adminlatratlon offlcla1s that ~ey mto a lot of proc::ess quesuons after County LIUU Control Program.
Kenny
Wiggins,
direclor
of
bu~messman,
a. member of the contncts to provide hel)th inlllll'saw no RIIIOIIatlhe present lime to those comments."
be worried about Inflation. .
Meigs
County
Litter
Control,~·
Me•gs
County
His~l.
Society, ance for state worlt:en, lnclildiDI
The question was asked by
. So f•lhll year, cOIIJUIIIC!r prk:es ABC's Bitt H1111«
sen ted the award a• part of the and has reacarched ~ wntren ~v­ one agreement dw drew the con'are rising at an annuli I'IIIC or 3.8
''The withdnlwll of ~ Guinier Keep Ohio Beautiful statewide era! anic~ concemma early Mmgs cerns of Ohio's bigest employee
percent, compared 10 last year's 2.9 · nominatiO!I, sir, and your apparent awards pl'OII'IIII. for Brown's vol- County h1110ry.
.
.
.
union.
B.row~ wh.o r~s1des.tn ~fin·
percent rise. Many analysts believe focus on Judge Breyer,
In other business Monday, the
your unwy contribution town prorectthat the price modcntion saen in tam, !ale it seems, to 1udae Gins- log and preservin1 Ohio'• nlllll'll ersvillc With hts wife, Alice, ts the board authorimd the payment of
the May repon will continue in burg, ~ have Cftllted 111 Impres- resources. The cenmea~e· is siped father or three daughte~;~ and. one $90,483 fot material and aervicea
comina month• and .for the year sion, perlllpl unfair, of a cen,In by Governor Georae v. VoinOvich son, baa ~ever:aJ gnndcbiidlen. and dllrina lhe April riotl at the Southinfiation will be only slightly hi£b- iia-ua quality In the decision- . and Director Frances S. Buchbolz- great,grandchildren.
.em &lt;5bio Correctlonll Faellil)' in
er than 1a1t year.
LucaMlle.
er.
maldng process here.
·

Brown receives ODNR
award for outstanding service

Consumer prices up 0.1 percent

;rae

ANNOUNCING THE WINNDI -Did:
fll Kraien
and Bank One employee~ Jou Willie. left. Mtl Millie MIAil'f
IIIIDc!DDCed tbe wlllaers Ia die 4hlck ....,. .. I , , 'f •• ....
the race Saturday. Tile~~=- lr4ldle Va C111 IJ, a
SJ,OOO avlap boBd, Mtl
r ' •••,
I ......_
The derb)' WB8 a Herftltae W
..... nillr fir...
t G)'
Merebull Aslodatloll Wlai ,....,. to • .... •• 1r 1'- , .
jects, More thuSOO duck&amp; were IGid at $5 _.,
•

Low tcnlgbtln 50s. Clear . .·
Wednesday, sunny, blgll In 80s.

and

' !i

I.

'

\

�..

•
•

· Tuesday, June15, 1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
PomtrQY, Oblo

·

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OJ' THE IIRIGS-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WJNGETr
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLlCH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LE1TERS OF OPINION ore welcome. They should be less ~ 300
words . All letttrs ore subject to editing 111&lt;1 must be signed with name,
address and ttlephone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Letten .
sbould be ih good taslt, addleuing issues, not personalities.

Letters to the editor
No second chance for dumpees
Dear editor
The broken heart of my son will
heal in time, but what abou\ the
deaths that will continue? I have
tried to be. a responsible dog owner
for years, spaying and neutering
our animals and making sure they
have their shots and wormings on
time . We have a lways got our
loved pets from pure breeds and
hobby breeders with one or t)IIO
females.
For some time now we have
heard how wonderful the mutt is
and how precious it is to save a life
of one.
Well, my 9-year-old son and I
stopped by lhe pound Friday, May
14, 1993, to see what they had.
They had many to choose from. A
litter of ni~e mixed breeds was
brought in the day before. The
inother was supposed to be a
miniature collie. Now, I'm not sure
how many ended up at the pound,
but there were about six when I
was !here. I was told that they were
so young that they didn't know
how to cat.
· My son picked out .two pretty
sweet females we called the twins,
Honey Bear and Sasha. He spent
the weekend loving, caring f~r and

sleeping with those two lleart
throbs.
Then came Monday , we
returned from school and work to
find two sick babies. Off to the vet
they go. Honey Bear died Wednesday night and Sasha is holding on
by a string. Telling my son was the
worst thing I has to do. It broke his
heart. Blame the pound, there is no
second chance for dumpees and
careless pet owners.
'
Blame the puppies previous
owners. Yes, the woman who )lad
the female who carelessly let her
get bred, who carelessly gave them
to the pound before they were
ready. People lilce this woman need
to know what happens to those
poor lives.
Some of them are put to sleep
and the others, who are lucky
enough to find a go.od home, die
because they geJ diseases at the
pound, the cause of the death of our
HoneyBear.
·
Careless people who think they
can dispose of living creatures lilce
they do traSh without giving a second thought to who it may hurt.

Const~nt

'
Tuesday, June 15, 1993

wavering may ruin .Ciinton
witb particular speed td abandon
women.) The 1\oltea' tlsc flame, tlsc
quicker the pot is taken off tbc
stove.

Hodding Carter III
The Btu tax on energy was
advanced as the absolute bedrock
of the president's deficit reduction
program. But that was before energy-state Democrats such as Sens.
Boren of Oldahoma and Breatlll of
Louisiana announced their total
opposition . When the tax v.;as
thrown over the side last week, ihe
White House simultaneously
betrayed the House Democrats who
had gone out on a long limb to pass
the program and undermined the
president's credibility. Afything
the Senate might devise to raise the
money would be all right with him,
the president ~id. This ~rom t!te
man whose ptestdency's high pomt
was the announcement of an economic game plan fashioned as a
comprehensive whole.
Gays .in the military? The president has managed to catch hell on
both sides of the issue, first by
announcing his support for a toial
change in Pentagon policy, then by
capitulatin¥ to Sen. Sam Nunn's
.stubborn msistence that there

· Laura Childers
Middleport

Li]fes Sentinel

•

· inadequate or too youthful staff.:
should be no real change.
Bosnia? For weclcs !here seemed The president's circle included a.
to be a policy de jour. Now there is number of experienced hands wei~
silence. The Lord forbid that a before the Gergen appointment;
diplomatic historian should ever tty His CabiJJCI is on average quite a;
to fnalce sense out of the twists and · bit older than John Kennedy's, ·
turns which led the administration When Bill Moyers was named
deep into a desen of incoherence Lyndon Johnson's press secretary;
and retreat. It did not seem possible he was still in his 20s, three y~
that anyone could make the Euro- younger
than
Georg ~
peans look lilce models of clarity Stephanopolous. 'bil' .
· and purpose when it came to the
No the responst tty ts cen ,
former Yugoslavia, 'but the presi- ly and squarely tbe president's~
dent has almost pulled it off.
Therein lies the hard truth, but alsq
Health care was ~pposed Ill be the PJOSPCICI for solution. Bill Clin~
the other pillar of the Clinton presi- ton remains, as always; an extraor•
dency's first year, along with dinarily intelligent, resoun:eful an~
deficit reduction, and that is the decent man. He has staml into th.~
way it is still presented. But for abyss before, pulled bacJc and gon.
reasons that defy analysis, the on to success. It is not 100 late forI
White House has prepared the way him to do it agam.
•
for the coming national debate by
But the hour is very, very !alt.
lealcinjl utterly contradictory ideas' Most of his supporterS that I mll_l
wcdi-m and weeko()ul The result is recently in North Carolina, .Missisconfusion, rage, fear and incompre- sippi, Arkansas; New Melttco and
hension, not inerely amOI)g health- Texas 111e on lhe brink of changing
care professionals and the insur- tbeir minds about Bill Clinton, petance industry, but in the general haps for good. They were as one in
public as weU.
saying that tbey arc entitled to far
While this has not been a com- more clarity and consistency from
prehensive review, it is illustrative the White House. Not one was
of an administration that tallcs tOO demanding Bill Ointon be. a mitJmuch before it is sure of what lt cle-maker. All believed that tbe
wants to do and yields too quickly president owes them c~ediblt!,
to forcefully applied pressure.
steady commitment to principles
Washington commentary to the and programs that they can undercontrary, this is not because of an stand and that offer hope of gradual
improvement in the national condition.
What the people nei!her ~~
nor want arc moJe town meeung
presidential seminars and eloque
· · promises. What !hey do want fronl·
the president is a demonstrate4
willingness to set and then stay ~
course. The toirent of lcalcs aboul
policy options must be turned otr,
Until hard decisions have beelj
talcen and programs fmnly adopted;·
silence should be the rule.
•
' '
Outside a few ideolo$ues, not
even his worst enemies wtsh to ~
Bill Clio ton's
presidency
destroyed. But neithei' enemies .npr
friends, stalf noc Congress, control
his fate. The, responsibility is hit
and hiS alone,
· ' 11
Hoddln11 Carter III, lormn
State Deparllnent spokesman
and award-winnio11 reporter, edl1
tor and pssbllsber, is president o(
MainStreet, a Washlnatoa, D.c..
bBSed television production com·
pany and a writer lor Newspapet
Enterprise Association.
~:

Robert }. Wagman

fc"""

1
~!r~e~r!~J'e~:.wn~~~ ~f;':e; ~~~~~:su~~ ~£::

,

•

Enjoys newspaper

J

'

INO.

"

,...
'I

..··-

IS
.

··:!

newspapers strucJc at the very heart sage."
'~
of the most fundamental diversitS'
So that should mean that'psyclii-&lt;
which the university should foster cally injured Jewish students c..nl
- dive;'Si~, of tho11ght, views and des~ cenain p~bl!catioos or tile}
expresston. ·
Nalillll of Islam distnbuted on cam-:
There was a dissent. Law pro- pus.
.
'• I
fessor Ralph Smith, who is bfack,
To rclum to the NCBL position,•
wrote, "The fisht to protest injus- even in "a closed campus envlroll-:
tice and OJlllression deser~es no ment," cannot a ~tju&amp;tl~
· less .protecuon than the nght to the newspaper? No, uys th'l
publish."
,
NCBL, "A student need not Jeaa.
Meanwhile, Shr.ltlnn HA~= the paper. The kltowledp of Uiet
tecelved another letter. II was
ne.wspaper's c:onsisiCnt publlcaiUI\I
t1sc National Conf~rcnce of Black of offensive material llllkea melej
Lawyen and wu 11gned by ~Y
obrervation or its P,fCICDCC a di.fi
Brown, president of ~e Pluladel- ·twbilt&amp; experiente. •
,
pltia chapter.
.
. If that bold itmovation in Fidt;
Among the NCBL argumenll 11 Amendment law Ia ever aff'um~
that the l1llletial publi~~i by dedthe . by the~.~ ~uge IWIIh
student new~ . w~ , oren
cilt tluou!lh alilorta of publ
1
to InDict PIYCIIlC inj~!!_.on black by all 10na of aroupa clalmlna
studenll. And In ~c ....... campus be in ·:closed c~vironments.~' 1
environment th!J 1J not protec~ C~thanne MacKmnon baa new:
speech. Accortli~ly, !II perpetrl
albea.
:
ton cannot hide behind the Pint
~ for the destruction of ~l
Amen~ment. Speech that would
14,2011 newapapm, the Nationjli
ortllnarily bcproteCtedlaaubjectto Conrorence of Black L;;1.t.~~
replldon when the speech InVIdea clelcrlbed dial IIIII II • 'lllo
,
the JDVICY of the unWIIllna 1111eo- ~ ll*l*d
e'(s home, or when ~ unwilling . tho univenl~ _1 Afric:ln·,l,_r~ :
hstener cannot avo!d the mea- commtlllty.'
-'

::J'c!:t
tbl

Pi=

~ I

W.VA.

The Daily Sentlnei-Pa e-3

By Tile AJsociated Press
Dry weather is expected through
Friday, the National Weather Service said today.
Skies will be clear over Ohio
tonighL
Highs will be in the 70s to lower
80s on Wednesday and into the 80s
statewide on Thursday.
· The reconl high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
sl8lion was 96 in 1897. The record
low was 47 in 1959.
Sunset today will be at 9:02
p.m. Sunrise on Wednesday will be
at6:02a.m.
·
Around the nation
Thunde&amp;:Storms hit parts of the
Nottheast and South today while a

seaboard.
The high pressure system was
e~ted to stretch over most of the
Midwest and Ohio Valley. The
South and Southwest wene expected 10 be hot and humid.

high pressure system brought
warm, pleasant weather to the Midwest.
Showers and thunderstorms
were forecast today from the
Appalachians to the Atlantic

Warmer, humid air was expected in the Plains with storms stretch·
ing from Kansas to the Dakotas.
The West Coast was exoected to be
mostly dry and sunny with some
showers in the Pacific Northwest

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND {AP)- Here are
Monday nigflt 's bhio Lottery
selections:
Pick 3 Numbers
6-2-0
.
(six, two, zero)
Pick 4 Numbers
2-7-6-7
(two, seven, six, seven)
The Super Lotto jackpot is $40 ·
milliQn.

I.

.
.'
Over and over, friendly con- insiders' are putting
it starkly: If the
gressmen were told to allay fears health-care plan succeeds, Clinton
· that patients will not be allowed to will lilcely win re-election; if it
chose their own physicians and that fails, he will probably be a one"-!
the quality of health care will suffer term president So tbe Democratie
under the Clinton plan.
National Committee is planning ·i
"There will be less interference $37 million-dollar blitz to whip uP
tban there is by insurance compa- s!IPpon for the 'plan,
·
nies now," the Democratic conOriginally
the
DNC
planned
to
gressmen were urged to argue if announce the formation of a not•
asked al&gt;out physician selection. for:profit foundstlon to fund the
They were told to say that ques- so-called .. National Health Care
lions raised by groups about healthThe money was to ~
care qualt'ty· under the plan "are Campaign."
raised
entirely
from privatt
J'ust scare ~~~~·cs
""' being used ·by spe- sources, and becimse of the not-f!ID'o
ct' alt'nterests tbat proft't from the profit nature of the foundation.
current swus qu·o."
·donations would lilcely be declared
The. talkt'ng paper recogn1'zes tax deductible.
~
that small ln•-nce
comparu'es are
u-~·
The plan brought a groundswell
~•--•y argwn'., the plan - which
"""""
o
of oppositioa, not only front
S81'd to pnm'an'Jy utiltze
' the hu"e
"
healtb-t'nsurance companieS _ will Republicans, but also from inside
the White House where questions
put them out of business. Congress- were raised about the etbics o£,
m
. en were urged to argue that usinll tax-deductible donation&amp; to~
health insurance is onlr a small sell health-care reform.
fraction of the overall tnsurance ·
So, DNC Chairman David Wil•
market, and that "well-managed helm has announced that the
comg:ies will simply~~ greater National Health Care Cam~igrf!
emp is on other lcin of insur- will become an official DNC 'pro-!:'
ance."
ject," which will be financed•
. Democratic political strategists through normal Democratic PartY:
have already concluded that Clin- channels. The DNC will make lil
ton's presidency will be judged in .
great measure on whether the ml\jor effort to sell the Clinton plalt'
to the nation. The future of tht!
health-care plan.is adopted and is
8
Democratic Party in .the Whitt ·
success, or whether it is cut to House may depend on it
', pieces in Congress and fails to
Robert Waaman II asyodlcar.'
bring about the systemic change ed writer for Newspaper Enter-,
Americans seem to want
prise Aslociatloo.
Privately, some Democratic

Balkanizing the First A:mendment
Nat He n .no

IMansfield lao· l•

ttal:

Health-care details become clear

Matron, others
praised

Likes 'Local
briefs'

•

'

WASHINGTON (NEA) - A . The plan was to have been ready
value-added tax to finance the in May; now the White House says
Clinton health-care package is a it will be July at the earliest before
dead idea. It will be paid. for it is unveiled. Insiders are actually
instead by various new taxes and
fees. This and other facts about the
plan were given to top Democrats
as they left town for the 10-day
Memorial Day recess.
· · h1
be ade bli
saying
11
mtg
not
pu bec
.
f
Each Democrat received rom · until November. Themreason
the White House a 10-page, 25- • given is that the additional time is
answer ialking paper marked "con- needed to iron out all the bugs, but
fidential." Its purpose was to allow
· ·
th
.
these
same
tnstders
say
congressmen to begin drummmg
rea11 to allo se two reato
'de
•
Ian
sons
are
w beu ..re
- •the
th
up support for e prest nt s P
be b 'It · k Y
0
to ey ~·
groups
th e most
by being able to answer
1an u1
· announc
and tofurevent
.
b
p
ts
...
,
anticipated quest1ons Y con- ·th Jan's controverst'al nd1' ng
eP
. · ug 'tb
Stituents. Many of the sug~sted mec
hantSms
·
f
· •arf
rom
m..answers reveal parts of the p not
f th budget enn wt
.
passage
o
c paper
· congress
yet publicly confiIJ'l1led •
1 th •tallc'
,.
'at
f
n
c
mg
Editor,
The mos •.conttoverst aspect o
ed to 1ay' the bla memen
were
urg
I like your newspaper! I think it
the health-care package lias been •or the present health-care mess on
would be neat to live in a small
the value-added-tax trial balloon "f.
·11 ·
a · g co ts 100
tve
vt
ams:
so
s •
town with a small newspaper. I live
floated by the White House some much paperwork,nnprofiteering
in Albuquerque, New Mexico. My
weeks ago. It was conflfllled that a ·health-care providers, bureaucrats
teacher is Mrs. Warner. My school
VAT, a kind of national sales taX, and insurance companies that offer
is Hayes Middle Schon!. We are
was being considered as a way of 100 little coverage at too great a
sending away to newspapers all
financing universal health cover- cost
over lhe United States for newspa;tge.
The central theme of the sales
pers and then we can compare
The talking paper makes it clear pitch: "It cracks down on the
!hem. Mrs. Wamer gets The Daily Dear Editor,
that this idea has been rejected. health profiteers who are making a
A wonderful evening was Instead, the plan will be financed k'IJ'
Senti nel fro m her parents. I like
ff h
t
f
.
1 mg o t e presen sys 1em,
enjoyed by all, thanks to the
your newspaper.
matron of the Meigs County Home. _by a series o n~w and hig~er "sm rather then taxing the middle
Sincerely,
class." At the same time, the new
Bruce Stone, a singer from taxes" - on ctgarettes, tquQr -·
Amanda Lyon,
Florida, whose parents live in
Albuquerque
Meij:S County spent the evening payroll taxes, and by fees charged ring ·to malpractice ton reform, a
sing,ng and visiting with resi~ents. to employers and employees who bone being thrown to doctors to
People from The Maples, fntnds, are covered under the plan.
· th ·
employees l\lld family. We all had
/
g8111 err support.
a very special evening. This special
man really cares and so .do .other
Editor,
people.
Recently our journalism class · We arc glad 10 see that the
read editions of The Daily Sentinel. County Home is getting its central
Largely unnoticed in the recent the principle which is most basic to
Your paper is kind of small, but I air. They sure do need it Thanlcs to clashes between black and white the university. It was conduct
guess it's al l right for a small town. the Meigs C&lt;iunty Com missioners. students over free speech rights at which car.not be excused or tolemtI like your "local briefs" because it These people are so special: They the University of Pe.nnsylvania was ed. The fact that the newspapers
te lls what's going on in the town, love company. We spend as much a fundamental confliCt between two
Try and get more local people to do time there as we can. We love hav- groups of lawyers - one white and
t
comics.
the
other
black.
The
First
AmendOJJ
ing parties for them.
Nathan Hallet
ment
issues
raised
go
well
beyond
were
confiscated
as
an act of
We would like for everyone to
New Mexico see the wonderful job done by the the University ofPeMsylvan~
protest cannot excuse it or inake it
Stxteen members of the uruYCI'- any less intolerable. Those who
matron and employees. If anyone
sity's
law school wrote ali open let- disagree, or course, are entitled to
in Meigs County needs a pay raise
ter
to
university President Sbcldon protest but not bJ:' attempting to
I would sa:y the Matron and
fl:ackney
concerning the confisca- silence 'those witli whom they disEditor,
employees of this home do. By lhe
tion
of
a
day's run of the student apec."
I recently read one of your looks of the inside and outside of
newspaper,
The Daily PennsylvaniHackney had responded to the
newspapers. Eve n though it was the building I think the mab'Oil and
an
14,200
copies
by
black
desbUCtion
of the newspaper by not
small, I enjoyed it. It must be nice employees work all the time. There
students
who
consider
the
paper
condoning
the
act, but he a1Jo did
to live in a town where everyone are so good with residents. They
racist
not
condemn
iL
Inslelld he llid, in
knows everyone else.
never know when I'm going to
·
One
of
the
law
professors
toltl
a
pau·
at
even-handednell,
that
Our journalism teacher came drop in to. visit or have a party. I
me
he
could
not
recall
that
many
"two
important
univClllity
value~
from your town. Her name is Jyl know it is always in good runnin_g
Warner and she talks about her order. They are all part of our famt , members of the Jaw faculty ever - diversity and open 011preuion
before publicly chastilins a presi- -_..to be in conflict."
ly.
hometown all the time.
dent
or the university - a presiThe law pror~ would ha~
Sincerely,
Thank you all,
dent,
moreover,
who
had
just
been
none
of that "The tmporta!!l unt·
Thanh Nguyen
Flossie M. Dill
nominated
by
die
president
of
tlsc
venity
values of dlYCllllty and open
Albuquerque, NM
Pomeroy, Ohio
United States to be bead of the expression were not in copflict
Naiional E11dowment for the here. The oft'enslve columns in no
Humanities.
W&amp;y prevented the univenity from
1'hought for Today: "Inject a few raisins of convcrsalion into the lasleThe letter to Hackney bepn by carryma out ill policy of tHvenlty
less dough of cxiSience." 0 . Henry (William Sydney Poner) Amer- stating that •'the removal of the and illlllllly prop~~~~~ to pmmOie
~~~(1~19~
.
'
newspaper ... was a direct denial of understanding. Removal of the

Accu-Weather• foreeut foc daytime conditions and

_:

rt, Ohio

Warm, dry weather forecast for Ohio

Tuesday, Jutle.15

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio :

For five montbs, I have tried to
resist the Washington-based
columnist's overwhelming urge to
make sweeping pronouncements
about the Clinton presidency.
Despite a slip here and there, it has
been a successful effort. No more.
Lilce every other Ainerican citizen I
encountered on a recent three-week
swin·g through the South and
South~est, my concerns have overwhelmed my reluctance to rush to
premature judgment.
At root, the problem that' Bill
Clinton has created for himself can
be attributed to habitual inconsistency. He won't stay fixed, whether
on programs, promises or people.
He apparently believes he can
square any circle. Policies and
nominees alilce. are offered up and
. abandoned with head-spinning frequency.
,
. The president is a "New Demo.crat" one da'/, an old-fashioned
liberal another and, as when he
named former Nixcm, Ford and
Reagan flack 'David Oergeri as
White House counselor, Mr. Coalitionist on the third.
When he and his spokesmen
announce that they are 100 percent
behind an embattled nominee, you
can just about bet the bank that the
poor sap is through. (If I were a
paranoid feminist, I'd wonder why
it is that the administration moves

best to try and help me, and I
would like to thank her for helping
me as best she can. The employees
really do a great job caring for the
residents. The inflTllllU)' is spotless
clean, kept clean, and have a nice
environment to live in. I thi.nk
Meigs County residents should
stand behind the infirmary and
keep it going. I hope the doors are
not closed because then there
would be a lot of people without. a
home. So, Meigs County lets stand
behind our infirmary and keep it '
going.
I would like to thank our Meigs
County Commissioners, Mr. Manning Roush, Mrs. Janet Howard
and Mr. Robert Hartenbach for the
good job they are doing in seeing
to the needs of the Meigs County
Infirmary residents, and also to
thank the matro~ and employees
for doing as good a job as they can. ·
God Bless each and every one and
thanks for caring.
Virginia M. Jaclcs
Middleport

OHIO WcJthet

~

Page 2-The Dally senttner.

Air conditioners welcomed
Editor,
,
I think it is great lhat the Meigs
County Infurnary is finally getting
its air conditioners. It will sure be
nice for the residents and employees. The infirmary does a lot of
good for the residents living there.
I am a G.R. worker, and I work.
closely with the residents, and I see
what good is being done there. It
would sure be a big loss to Meigs
County if the infirmary was closed
down.
The matron, Sharon Bailey,
docs a really good job running lhe
place. I put my application there in
May of 1992, and I s~ would love
to have a job there. Wtth vacallon
time coming up, I would sure like
to work fuU , pan time or just vacation as they are really short handed
there. Mrs. Bailey has done her

....

Pomeroy-Middle

u·

Clarification

Weather

.,

" ' South-Central Oblo
~ • Tonight, clear. Low iii the mid~ 50s. Wednesday, sunny. High 80-

lls.

.

:·,. Extended rorecast:
- Thursday throuah Saturday:
:' .. Fair on Thursday. Highs in the

..

80s. Lows 55-65. Fair again on Fri·
day. Highs in the mid- 80s to the
low 90s, Lows in the 60s. Chance
of showers and thunderstorms Saturday. Highs in the mid-80s .to the
low 90s. Lows in tbt! mid-60s to
the low 70s.

Local brief~----.

- I~

~:' Mtm cited for D.U.J.
.,

An Adelpha man was cited early Monday morning for his second
driving..under the influence offense, the Gallia-Meigs Post of tbe
' Swc Highway Patrol reported.
.
•:
David C. Phillips, 13'94 Walnut Street, was also cited for driving
' · under suspension, driving left of center, failure to~ drive within
marked lanes and no seat belt.
·
,I
'

Editor's note: Names, ages and atldres5es are printed as they
'' appear on olf'tcial reports.
·

Area death
J,

HarryWile

·

Meigs area
announcements

The Dorothy Musser charge
with passing bad' checks in Meigs
County Court is not the Dorothy
(Dottie) Musser residing at 515
Mulberry lfeights, Pomeroy, and
employed at Farmers.Bank and
Savings Co.

. Stocks

RAILROAD DISPLAY- This display by
the Southeast Ohio Railroad Club was one of

Am Ele Power.................... 36 3/8
Ashland Oil. .......................26 1/8
AT&amp;T................................63 5/6
Bank One...........................52
Bob Evans ........................ .17 1/8
A local man has recently been
Charming Shop.................. I 4 1{1.
named to a counselor post at FamiChmp Industries................. 13 3/4
ly Addiction Community TreatCity Holding......................25
ment Services, I 770 Jackson Pike.
Federal MQ811!............,....... 19 7/8
Dennis P. Johnson, a gmduate
GotxlyearT&amp;R .................. 38 5!8
of Southwestern Hi¥h School, was ·
Lands End .........................30 1/4
appointed
to the pos1tion May 17.
Umited Inc....................;.• 24 1/4
Johnson served four years in the
Multimedia Inc.................. 37
United States Navy during the Viet
Poiitt Bancmp.................... I4
Nam era. His experience includes
Rax Restaurant .................. l/8
treatment assistance at Jackson
Reliance Electric................20 3/4
Treatment
Center, Jackson General
Robbins&amp;Myers .............:.. 17
hospital in Ripley, W.Va.
Shoney's Inc.......... .;.......:.. l7 1/4
FACtS provides out-patient
Star Bank ........................... 35 If).
alcohol and drug counseling serWendy Int'1..:..................... 14 5/8
vices to individuals, families and
Worthington Ind. .............. .32
friends.
FACTS also provides these
Stocll, reports are the 10:30
services! education, screening and
a.m. quotes provided . by
evaluations, presentations to groups
Kemper Securities, Inc., iii . and organizations, and educational
GaUlpolls.
materials.

·SWHS grad hired

'" Harry Call Wile, 86, Barton
Road, Reedsville, died Monday,
s J~""" H ·
Democrats to meet
Jone 14•·1993 • at t. .......,... osplThe Young Democrats Club will
tal in Parlcersburg, W.Va.
., Born in Wood County, W.Va., meet at7 p.m. Thursday at the Caron June 12, 1907, he was the son o£ penters Hall in Pomeroy, . '
the late ·David and Emma Cooper
.
Wile. He was a member of the St.
Revlva!·sJated
.
Paul United Methodist Chureh of
Full Gospel LtJ!~thouse, Hi'!Jnd
Tuppers Plains. He wu retitd1from · .~. Pomeroy, will have-~)!l'(al · (
the 0 . Ames Company aftet 37 11!d&amp;Y lhroug~ Sunday at' 7:30 p:M.
\
years of employment
mghtly. Public welcome.
'J'' Mr. Wile is survived byt a
· Legion to meet
daughter, Rosemary Fluharty,
Racine
American Legion Post
by
Bob Hoeflich
Keedaville; a sister, Helen Wile,
. .
'
602
will
meet
Thursday with supParkersburg, W.Va.; three stepgrandchildren; six stcp-great- per at 6:30 p.m. and meeting at 7
'
lfandc!lildrcn; and several nieces , p.m.
lley, Kids! Has the Meigs ago. I never said I was swift, did I?
ltlld nq_&gt;hews.
Werry reuoion
County Fish and Oame Association
Bestdes his parents he was preI've given a lot of thought to
A Werry family ~ion . will be got a good deal for you or what?
~ed in death by his wife, MarMabel,' s death probably bec11use
The association will stage its the Marshall Family is one of the
gueriiC M. Wile, two brothers and held at tbe home of James and
Karen Werry at their home of annual fishing derby foe youags~ first families I remember in Mid11ne sister.
·
; Services will be Wednesday at I Court Street Road (Morning Star IS and under this Saturday at the dlepon many moons ago. Mabel
p.rn. at Leavitt Funeral Home with area) in Racine on Saturday at \ association farm on West Shade. was truly what we call a "cool
Rev. Sharon Hauslll8ll officiating. p.m. A potluck dinner will be The event will start at 8 a.m. and lady" today. Her always calm manBurial will be in Mt Olivet Ceme- served at 4 p.m. All family and end atl:30 p.m. A lot of nice door ner ·was impressive.
•
friends are welcome. Call 949- prizes are 'awarded throUJ!hOut. the
&amp;arY in ParkersbiD'g, W.Va.
I'm sure many of you remember
2746 for information.
day and there are also mce pnzes Mabel's husband, Fred Marshall.
~ · Friends may call at the funeral
'I
, for the boys and girls catching the Fred was a saxophone player and if
home today (Tuesdar&gt; trom 2-4
Fisbinl derby
biggest, the smallest and the most there was a dance you could almost
tiild 7.9 p.m. and unti the· time of
The Meigs County Fish and fish. There's a free lunch at noon. bet your last buck that Fred would
llie service on Wednesday.
Game Society will hold its ftShing There's only one slight drawback be among tile musicians. You could
derby Saturday from 8 a.m. to 1:30 and that is that you have to take also be assured that "The Waltz
1.
p.m. for children age 15 and under. yo\1 own fishing pole and bait but
Saved For Me" would be on
Admission is free. Brin_g a pole and you can handle that for a free o~ll­ You
the
dance
program and !hat the last
bait. No-minnows. Pnzes will be ing can' t you? By the way, mm- song of the
evening would be
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER awarded.
nows are not allowed.
"Good Night, Sweetheart". I'm
,; June 14 dlscba~ges ...,.. William
Close to 200 boys and girls sure Fred didn 'I depead on his
Planning meetin11
l!IIOSODo Alan Blair, Mrs. Edward
attended last year's event and the music for a living, but somehow I
Bosworth and daughter, E~a · There will be a meeting of total should swell to more this year. never knew what he did. Heck, he
~cornfield, Lcra Walters, Mane Racine Fire Department July
The derby has been going on for played great music and that was
Sltafer, Carmen Leport. T~ Love, Fourth planning committee at the years, about2S,I'm told.
enough for me at the time.
1~ Russell Polinsky·, Ktmberly fare station on Thilrsday at 7 p.m,
Now how do you ftnd the fann?
Their only child was Mrs. Yost
~iner•.John Cutlip, Dillan WorkLet me tell you about that Just ao I think sbe's known as Margaret or
ilig and Elmer Smith.
.
Bne sale planned
out Route 7 to Chester and from something lilce that these days. But
~ June l.4 births- Mr. and Mrs.
The Catholic Women of Sacred there on signs will be posted to way back when, she was an auraeRoy Depue, son, Hamden. Mr. and Heart Catholic Chun:h in Pomeroy lead you right to the spoL
live, sophisticated Middleport High
~· 0o11nie Nitz, son, Middleport · will be having a bake sale. at
After the hustle and bustle of the . School student. Everyone called
·
Krogen on Saturday from 9 a.m. to day with all tho~ young people, her Teddy. I've never stopped. Nor
I p.m.
,,
association members will settle will I. There never seems to be a
Th,e Oaily Sentinel
down Saturday evening for a quiet time lapse even thoUgh my encoun.
Critique anoounceil
' CUBMitlolliO) .
barbecued chicken dinner. The ters with her sometimes over the
A ~ublk critique of the May 13 evening dinner is foc members only
Publlsbed oveey aflomoon, Monday
have not been frequent. We
exerctse by the Emergency Ser- and those ·attending are to take a JUSt seem to piclc up where WC left
lh""''h l'rida)l Ill CoaJt SL,. ~~-.
Ohio by 11te Ohio \Ioiiey ....,lilhill(
vices will be held 10:30 a.m. covered dish.
off. I lilce people liJce that.
Compony/Malti.-. lnc.R· t;::•"'Y·
Wednesday
during the Meigs ·
phto 411711, Ph. 11112-2118.
duo
Sounds
lilce
a
winner!
Yes, the Marshall family did
IJooi.Op.poid at Pomenoy, Ohio.
County
Commissioners
mectins.
.
make
a r.wlc on me, a nice memoI
'
M - ,·Tho illooolated Pr.a, an4 the ,
· Lebanon Township Trustees ry.
Dance plaoaed
Oldo Newopopor - -. National
should be /leased to know th)lt
!tulvortiatnl llepnlontativo, llnnham
There
will be a round and they've ha seveml compliments
Just think. The cab~ is' in and
Nowapopor Solei, 733 Thi..S Awnao,
.square
dance Saturday at the Mid· this year on the condition of the the tomatoes are comin . Will that
Now York, N.,. York 10017.
·
.\ ..
dlcport Legion Hall from 8-11:30 township cemeteries. Maybe no · thought make the television reruns
I!OS'I'JIIASTER: Bond eho,.eo Ill
with music by 0 and County Gen- one told them. That's the way these easier 10 accept? Do keep smiling.
rho Daily Sendnol, lll Court St.,
moro)\OH!a4!1789.
,
tlemen. Melvin Cross will be the things normally worJc,
caller. Bring soft drinks and
•'
BU118CRIFI'I!IN RAm
What is known as the Pioneer '
"
By Curl• or Moll&gt;r Roolte ·
snacks. No alcobollc beverages' CCmctery In the township is rePort•. eWeoiL. .......................................... l.80
permitted. Children welcome if ed in cxccllent eonditj()n. This Is 00
_ t Month................... ,..................... M.915
accompanied by an adult
YeaT...:..................................... I83.20
land provided ;r.eara ago by the
• ,
IINGLI! COPY
Bicknell Famtly and Oeorae
. ..
PRJCI
·
. Crusade set
b.fly......................................... -26 Con to
Warth, the pioneer Indian ac:out, II
There will be a "Crustde ror arnona thoe buried lhore. Some
bon .... .. to pay
Cluill"
under the tent on ROute 7 Lebanon Township retJidenll have
ftlfY Nmit In od&gt;anoo to Tho
l1y Senlillol on a ..._ ola or .tl
beside tbe Buon llltion at a1se praised the trusreea for excel~~~~ boaiL Orodtt will be poan esnlar
Cbelblre ~ lllrouab Jane 26.' lent work done at the Brownin&amp;
-hwoelo
at 7 p.m. There wiD be dirfennt Cemetery.
Jio •utoomptlono b7 mo11 parmilted In
Publfc omcltls, It seems, are
'""'"" whore home 01nlor . . , . 1o
•Ytilable.
constantly under fare. It's pleasant
v·
, llalJ .....,..tiOM
to pass on a CDIIIplimenL

Beat of the Bend.~.

..

{Jospltal news

rears

tho--

f&amp;tt";;::::or.~

r.tda . .,.. to.n~F
it1J w..u. ..........................., .....- ... ftl.84
,21 w..u.. ... _.........................- .... Na.t•
"112 Woab........,.........................- ....184. 'II
~'

0.-NalpOcnuo!J'

·---..··-·"'"'""""""""'"Si
1!$
w
...

•

:r.. - ....- .................- -

.h. .... w......... ,_ .. ,.......- J

cr~~a:;l!:v

man, pesident, invltea the pubJ.il;.
' GIMit~e•er
Rev. Bddle BtiffltiJUIII wiD be
IUnt IDIIker at Naomi Baptllt
Climb lo ,_W oe Sunday at
10:45 Lm. Public lrivleed.
,

...

several featured at the Meigs County Museum
durin&amp; Heritage Weekend. ·

I rinally got a card off in the
mail to Mr. and Mrs. David Yost of
Racine to 011preu my sympathy in
tho deatb of Mn. Yoat'• Mather,
Mrs. Mabel Marshall Steveaa. I
know it happenod over two weeks

MAGIC POSTERS FEATURED- Lee Jacobs PrOductions
featured a displa;r of magic posters at tbe Meigs Count¥ Museum
on Saturday and Sunday lor Heritage Weekend, Jacolis IS pictured
here with two Blrc:b posters. Birch bas performed in Middleport
and Pomeroy and Jacobs wnrMd lor him during that time.

------Court news------•

Frye sentenced

Brenda Sue Frye was sentenced
by Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow ill on
Monday to 5-15 years in prison for
the feloniQUs assault of her former
husband, Michael Hubbard. Frye
shot her. former husband at Jeffs
Carryout in Pomeroy on May 19. .
According to Meigs County
Prosecuting Auomey John Lentes,
Frye was also charged $500 in
costs for prosecution and was
ordered to forfeit lhe gun she used
to shoot Hubbard.
Action filed
A Judgment action has been
filed m lhe Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas by Donald 0 . Shue,
Athens, against John V. Perrine,
Belpre, for compensatory damages,
punitive damages, attorney fees
and other costs. The action resulted
from an incident which occurred at
Tuppers Plains Elementary on Nov.
18, 1992 when Perine committed
an assault with a handgun on Shue.
A pamtion of real estate action
has been ftled by Richard A. Rad-

ford, Letart, W.Va., against Alta
May Morgan, Oak Hill, and others.
Judgment awarded
A default judgment in the
amount of $20,108 has been awarded by the Meigs County Coun of
Common Pleas to the State Automobile Mutual Insurance Company
from $tephanie English.
Divorce granted
A di,vorce bas been granted by
the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas to Nancy Campbell
from Robert Bruce Campbell. ·
Marri~ge licenses issued
Marriage licenses have been
issued by Meigs County Probate
Court to Anthony Wayne McGrath,
29, Rutland, and Rebecca Kay
Phillips, 31, Rutland; Timothy Lee
Kerns, 34, Middleport, and Marsha
Lynri Murray, 34, Middleport;
Michael Aaron Willford, 27, Middleport, and Kimberly Lee Taylor,
24, Middleport; and Geen Bos Jr.,
37, Chattanooga, Tenn., and Dawn
Raye Keesee, 24, Chattanooga,
Tenn.

---

Surpriee Father
with a
I gilt

from ·
•RECLINERS
Starting as low as ...................... '265 00

•POOL, PATIO IND LllfN FURNITURE
On Sale...................
25% to 50% Off
'
eCARD' TilLE SETS br Samson Itt
On Sale.............~•• 20" OH Re1ular Price

2"'

-MANY OTIEIGIFT IDEAS
ALL
AIID MORE OFF
REGULAR • RRAIL.
Ea1y Credit Ter"if::

I,

�..
Tuesda~June15,1993

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

,, In AL affairs,

Fielder, friends use homers to give Tigers 7-3 win over Tribe

Tuesday, June 15, 1993
Page 4

By The Associated Press
Cecil Fielder's homers off the roof at Tiget Stadiurn are keeping the Detroif Tigers on top in the
American League East.
Fielder's latest tape-measure shot was one of three
Detroit homers and David Wells won for the eighth
time in nine decisions as the Tigers defeated the
Cleveland Indians 7-3 Monday night. Detroit leads
. . New York and Toronto by four games.
In his career. Fielder has 67 hits' in 201 at-bats
against Cleveland for a .333 average. Twenty-five of
those bits have been home runs, and Fielder has batted in 63 runs against the Indians.
"He just kills us," Qeveland manager Mike Hargrove said.
Fielder hit his 13th homer, giving the Tigers a 5-I
lead in the third. The shot eame within about three
feet of going over the roof. It landed just to the left of
the light tower and rolled back down the roof, falling
into the second-deck seats.
He has put a ball on the lett-field roof three times,
twice this season, and cleared it once. In 1990, bining
against Dave Stewart on Aug. 25, Fielder became
only the third player- and the ftrSt Tiger- to clear
the left-field roof at Tiger S!adium.
Wells (8-l), 5-llifetimeagainstthe Indians, gave
up three runs on nine hits in six innings. Wells has
completed six innings in 10 of his 13 starts. Kurt
Knudsen and Bob MacDonald finished up for
Detroit
Loser Mike Bielecki (4-5) gave up six runs on
nine bits in four-plus innings for Cleveland.
Elsewhere in the AL, it was New York 4, Boston
0: Baltimore 8, Milwaukee 5; Minnesota 4, Toronto
3; Seattle 6, Kansas City 3; Oakland 7, Chicago 3;
and California 8, Texas 2.
Yankees 4, Red Sox 0- Bernie Williams hit his
ftrst grand slam on the ftrst pitch following an unusuat baD check, leading New York past Boston at Yankee Stadium.
. Williams connected with two outs in the fifth
inning on a 1~2 pitch from Danny Darwin (5-6). Just
before the pitch, third base umpire 'John Shulock
called time and went to the mound to examine the

Sports Probe

Bonds' quest for the possible dream led him to Bay Area
enough. It goes beyond thai.
Baseball's top star of !be 1990s
Today 's questions in !be world
is
making
big headlines on !be field
of sports:
• Wbat is Barry Bonds looking Ibis season. He's gotten off to a
for?
. .. Hall of Fame start with the San
Being rich and famous tsn 1 Francisco Giants. It's the first

By HOW AIID SINER

installment of a six-year, $43.7
million pact. His free-agent deal
averages more than $7 million per
season.
But money isn't everything.

don't think anybody plays only for
!be money. It's .for ~d~.
for
the world charnptonship nng.
For all his success, Bonds has
yet to lead a team to a pennant.

1r.s

"You know." _say~ Bond_s, " I

For Wimbledon,

Agassi, 1\iavraiilova seeded among top five
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- Andre Agassi and Martina
Navratilova can be grateful to
Wimbledon's seeding canminee.
Agassi,lhe men' s defending
champion, was seeded five places
ahead of his world ranking and
~avratilova, a former nine-time
champion, was elevated to No. 2 in
the women's draw.
At No. 8, Agassi is the lowest
seeded men's defending champion
. in Wimbledon hislory. Since ~ings were inttoduced in 1927, no
men's champion who has reiUI1Ied
to defend his title had been se«&lt;ed
lower than No. 6. The previous
lowest-se«&lt;ed defending champion
was Jan Kodes, who was No. 6 the
year after he won the boycott-hit
toumameDI of 1973.
Tbe No. 8 seeding means Agassi
wouldn't· face a top-eigl!l player
before !be quartedinals.
"It was a difficult decision,
bearing in. mind be has ~ played

·much in the last couple or months
because of inj!lry.'~ said Wimb~­
don referee Alan Mills. "But he IS
the defending champion and he
provedhecanplayongrass.". .
Agassi has dropped steadily m
the rankings since surprisi~g !he
tennis world last year by wmrung
Wimbledon from !be baseline. He
has not played competitively since
April9 due to tendinitis in his right
. wriSL
Agassi missed lhe French Open
and was considered questionable
for Wimbledon, but he arrived
Monday in Germany for a grasscourt warmup event in Halle. Agassi was scheduled to play Tuesday
against Carl Uwe Steeb.
Navratilova's wish to avoid topseeded Steffi Graf until the final
was granted when she was elevated
to No. 2abovebigher-ranlcedAran- ·
txa Sanchez Vicario.
'
."I'm thrilled," Navratilova
said. "It makes sense for me to be

are only two for- Stich was No. 6 and lviln Lend!
mer champions in the tournament wasN\). 7. ·
and it's nght they should be in
Rounding out' the rest of the
opposile halves of the draw." men's seeds were Richard Krajicek
"Her past record on grass (9), Andrei Medve4ev (10), Petr
speaks for itself," Mills said. "Her Korda (11), Michael Chang (12),
worst performance here over the Wayne Ferreira (13), MaliVai
years has been losing in !be quar- Washington (14). Karel Novacek
terfinals (to Jennifer Capriati in (15) and Thomas Muster (16).
.
1991). The comrninee thought !hat
The only top-ranked player
for a grass-court tournament she missing was Sergi Bruguera, who
should be marginally favored over jumped to No. S after 'winning the
Sanchez Vicario."
Fqmch Open earlier this month. but
The seeding commfuee also is skipping Wimbledon because of
used its own discretion in malting a dislike for
.·
two-time cham~ion Stefan Edberg · Among ~omen, Sanchez
the No. 2 men s seed behind ·Pete Vicario was seeded No. 3. The rest
Sampras. Jim Courier, who has of the seedings follow.ed the rankwon four Grand Slam titles, but ings, widt Gabriela Sabatini, Mary
had little success on grass. was Joe Fernandez, Conchita Martinez,
seeded one place below his world Jennifer Capriati, Jana Novotna,
ranting at No. 3.
•
Anke Huber, Magdalena Maleeva,
' Three-time champion Boris Manuela Maleeva-~ere. KateBecker was seeded No. 4, last rina Maleeva, Mary Pierce, Amanyear's runner-up Goran lvanisevic da Coetzer, Helena Sukova and
was No. 5, 1991 champion Michael Nathalie Tauziat.
upgraded There

Under Jackson's tutelnge,

Bulls staying focused on task of the moment
By JIM UTKE

. slipping away."
.
CIDCAGO (AP) -At the end,
A few moments earher. as he
his team looked to be about a quart left his cramped office and headed
low. He looked to be even lower. down the narrow hallway to the
Sweat ran down Phil Jackson's - interview room, someone ~anded
race and steadily soaked his shirt Jackson a boxscore .conftrnnn~ that
collar despite a long detour around the result- PhoeniX 129, Chicago
a
frown.
121 -did indeed run into a third
"We bad our chances and they overtim6. In the span of a few
bad their chances," was lhe ftrst postal ~ode-sized strides, he saw
thing he said for public consump- everythmg he needed to see, then
lion Sunday nighL Tben he paused. neatly.f~~ the sheet of paper and
As always Jackson was starting stuck ttm his pocket.
with the ~~ and purposefully
During a brief news conference,
making his way toward !be specif- Jackson smiled wryly and talked
·
·
about "tempo" and "rhythm" and
tc. Jackson became convinced long "energy," the latter a quality .tie
ago that this was his path for learn- cites so often it sounds like his
ing almost anything. And so after a mantra. But had anyo~e asked,
few moments he distilled every- Jackson could have rec1ted every
thin to this: '
significant number produced by. the
''Tbe second overtime. That 63 m1nutes of basketball JUSt
should have been won by us," !be played. and got nearly every one of
Chicago Bulls coach said softly. them nght.

,

"'..,•

deep

•'

•
•

'

"After that, I could reel our energy

Scorelloard
- • Baseball • -

~

Eukni-

NATIONAL LEAGUE
T-

WLPd.
17 .m

l'llilodeJP&lt;;, ____45
St. u..;, _ .... _ ......J3
Monlnol -----......33
Flarido ------··--..:...30
Clli&lt;oao-------......29
I'IUaboqh --------21
New Ycd. ....·-··-···2D

CB

21
:!0
32
31

.!41
.!24

.&lt;IS9

16.5

41

.321

24.5

33

,.OU
.413

ll.S
l:ll
IS
IS

..
••
••
'
·'

San Fnaciam ~·-·Al

22
lAo Aal)lkl ..... - ..33 21
Allonoa ..................3.5 lO
_______ __32 21
CINCNNA11 ........29 3ol
San oqo_ .........25 31

(Onooal ~ 7:1l! P'"·
Ba.ton (Viol• 4-6) IL M•w Yorlt
(W'ublaft7.o), 7;30 p.m.
Tor01no (Guzman 5·1) •t Minne~CIUI
(Topom ~. I :OS p.m.
Babimare (Moyer 1·3) •• Mllwlllkce
(Boneo ).3),1:0Sp.m.
Kanau City (Pk:hlrdo 4-2) •t Se~alc
(Convene 0.2), JO:OS p.m.
Chic•ao (A.lnrcz 5-2) •t O•ltbnd
(Wcldl4-5),10:1l! pm.
Tes.•• (Lcibrandt 6--3) at Califomia
(Foondl2·7). l&amp;lS 1'-"'-

Colondo

·-------·-..20

Wedneoday's&amp;-..

.6Sl
.541
.538
.!33

7
7

7,S

.A60.

42

.&gt;403

.323

12

ll.S
20.S

a.£VEUND 1-2) • Dcuait
(Cullicktal 4,2). 7;1ll p.m.
.
· 8011.0n (Dope:oa 3-!i) • t New York
(Paa ..S), HOp.m.
.
Tens (Bmwn Soot) at California (Fin·
ley 6-l),IO:OS p.m.

l'biloddpiU 10, - - 3

NcwYoot.7,AIWU4
Olicap 6, Flarido 3

K•nua Chy (Cone 3-7)

Sc t.oWol,........,.3

.... Anadoo 9, Colondo4

•

l

•~

.:

'

.
.r•
;

•

-"
.

•

•

T......, (M&lt;xrio :1-7) "~ (E&lt;icboa ~~ 1;15 p.m.
.
Bdimore (M..ma 9-2) 11 Milw.Uec(Nivarro4-l). 2:05p.m.
Chicap (Ncl)owdl 9-4) " Oillond

(llvlinal -3). HS p.m.

MOIIday's SCOI'H

·'

It

Seaule

(IUn&lt;on l~). IO:Il! P-"'-

· Today'sgames

Florida (Hou&amp;h 3-6) 11 ChiCIJO
(Coolillo 1-4), 3ol0 p.m.

PhiJodclolli• (0... H) •
(lbma: J. l). 7:3S p..m..

- • NBA Finals • Wednesday's game

--

A&gt;oonix .. Chicop. 9 p.m.

San FraiiC'ileo (Branlley 3-ol) at
CINCINNATI (Jidohor-4-&lt;1), 7;3.5 p.m.
New y ... (Sobaho... ).l) a Allonlo

PhocrUJ. "ODcaao. 9 p.m.

(0t..vine 7•3), 7;AIJp.m.
I
San Di8ao (Whilelwtst 1·3) atHOUIIOn

(!Wniodl6'3). 1:0S .....
Pitubor&amp;h (Cooke 4-2) at St. Louis
(Tewbbwy 5-6),1;35 p.DL
.... AnJollo (II. ........... l-4) .. Col·

....,. (H&lt;my u~ 9;1l! p.m.

Wednosday'spmes
Pilllblnh CZ, Snlioh 04) " SL Low.
(Mo.,... 0:6~ I ;3S p.m.
florida (Aquino ol-)) It ChiCIJO (Jfjb..
banl7-4), 2;20p.m.
Phil&gt;ddphio (Schillina I · I) II - ol(llill&amp;.l~ 7;3Sp.m.
San Fnnciaco (Wil1on 4 -3) at
CINCINNATI (Rijo&amp;-2~ Bl p.m.
New Yod: (Schawd 2· 1} a1 Atlanta
(0. Mllddu 5·5), 7:A0p.m.
S1n Dicp &lt;B•onil 1· 1) 11 Houston
! ' - " 4-2).1:05 P"'Loo ......... (krio 0...1 l-4) II Col·
..... ( l i e - 3-3), Ul! pm.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

.. Friday's game

Sunday, JunelO
Chi.clao a Pholnia, 1 p.m.• U' neceswy

the series on TV. 'Ilteni are ·plenty
of differences between the two, but
the biggest might· be that Riley
started teaching his team specifics.
"Every time we nlet New York
"There is an awesome intelli- · in the regular season, they made it
gence behind that smile, •• said into a war," Cleamons said. "lf
assi•lant coach Jim Cleamons, who you step back, if you think about
came to Oticago with Jackson four !he ways both teams came to the
seasons ago.
playoffs against each, you can see
"People think because we've wha\ Phil was doing ....
· been blessed with Michael Jordan
· "He kept the seaSon and every
that Phil just rolls the balls out on round of the playoffs in perspecthe floor and everything goes tive. When it came time for the
smoothly from there on out," Clea- Knicks, he focused everything and
CLEVELAND (AP) - Black
mons said. "I wish it were aue."
everybody on that and only that. baseball players were excluded
Jackson did not gel a single vote Nobody should hav~ been surprised from the major leagues until 1947,
in balloting for Coach of the Year, at the adjusunents we made ... or but the players of the era preceding
though that IJI.O.llably best describes that we were able to rake the next Jackie Robinson are represented in
the job he did il) keeping the Bulls step and the Knicks weren't
a 30-by-2S-foot office in Kansas
on course for a three-peat. New
·
"They were so pumped up for City, Mo.
York Knicks coach Pat Riley, who us in December that when it came
The Negro Leagues Baseball
got most of those voteS (and who, time to play for what was really Museum has been in 'operation for
in a nice bit of irony, also owns the important they bad nothing left to almost three years.
copyright on the term ''three- give. Phil made sure we ~ plen- . Tbe shrine is r.ned with memo- .
. .
peat"), is at home now wa11:hin2 ty."
rabilia, such as a uniform·worn by
· Satchel Paige, who pirched for the
Cleveland Indians late in his career,
and a baseball signed by J osb Gibson, a slugger who often was comThe third annual Bend Area an entry form 'contact Elvis Zerlcle pared with BabeRulh.
Jaycees, Red Man, Bud Dry Cat- at (304) 882-2002 or (614) 992"It' s educational," said Don
fish Tournament will take place 7247.
Motley, executive director of the
Saturday.
museum. "We get as many as 70
The tournament benefits the
schoolchildren coming in a day,
Jaycees' Kids for Christmas prolearning about lhe old days."
•
•
gram . Last year, the tournament
The non-profit m~seum is fundraised S 1,500. This money was
ed by donations from coi)JOrltions
used to bring Chrisunas to .21 chilThe Tri-State Junior Golf Cir- and is about to move into larger
dren and ChristnuiS dinner to their cuit, a weekly series of mid-sum- quarters, a 3,00Q.square-foot offtee
I 0 families.
mer golf action for youths l 0 to 18 in the same building.
Registration for this year's tour- years old, will continue Frida)" at
Several books have been written
nament will be from 5:30 to 6:30 Esquire Golf Club at Barboursville, about the Negro Leagues in recent
.
a.m. Tbe ftsbihg wiU start at 1 a.m. W.Va.
years.
and last until the weigh in at 4 p.m.
Tbe rest of the schedule includes
Cleveland had a club called the
The tournament will take place the following dates and courses: Buckeyes who played at League
at the Gallipolis Pool of the Ohio June 25, Portsmouth Elks Country Park and often drew crowds of
River from the Racine Locks to the Club in Portsmouth; July 9, Sandy
mouth of the Kanawha River with Creek Golf Course near Ashland,
entrance being at the Mason levee Ky.; July 16, Lavalette Golf Club
at Mason W.Va.
at l.;avalette, W.Va.; and July 23,
Teams"should consist of two Bellefonte Country Club at Ashpeople. Entry fees are $3S/team land, Ky.
through Wednesday and $45/team
Tee times will be at 8 a.m. for
from Thursday until sign-in. The each course.
.
fees for tlte Big Cat tournament are
There will be 10-12 year-old,
$5/leam 'until June 16 and $7/team 13-IS )'ear-old and 16-18 year-old
after. Fees for father/child teams divisions partici~ting. The junior
ate $30 until Wednesday and $35 division will play nine holes and
after that
pay a $1S entry fee. Tbe olher diviTbe prizes for most weight will sions wiD play 18 holes and pay a
be $350, $250, $150 and $100 for $20 entry fee. The fees cover
first through fourth place, respec- greens fees and lunch .
tively. The prize for first place for
All golfers can either mail in or
the father/child team is $50. Seven- hand in their registration forms,
ty percent of the entry fees from which locally can be picked up at
the Big Cat tournament will be Cliffside Golf Course m Gallipolis.
used as a prize.
All forms must be received at the
Rules for the tournament course of the week (or mailed to
include an eight·flsh limit, an IS- the Tri-State Junior Golf Circuit,
inch minimum length, a limit or P.O. Box 945, .Proctorville, Ohio
two rods per person in use at any 45669) no later than 3 p.m.· on the
one ti~ and a rule that boats must Wednesday before the tournament.
be used and be a minimum of 12 ·
Tbe tournament is sponsored by
feet in length.
. the HWIIingiOII Htrald-Dispalch:
For further information and/or

Junior golf circuit
remams m progress

a -..................29
Mil,.aube ......... - ..21

C1£VEIANI) .......25

••
••

7.s

,41

:M
31

.443

10
II .S-

;«&lt;)

14

w-.Dt-

x.n.. Cily ......__.33

2J

.S41

ColilonU .............. 31 29 .ll7

a.ioop...... ...........31 29 .!17
.............29 :!0 .492
3] .476
Taa - --·-------·..29 32 .47!
Ooktood .... - ..........23 3S ·" '

-

'•

.sot

•

3]

-----·------·-30

VOLUNTEERS WILL MEET at 8:45 AM•...as follows:
u

t .S

3
•
4

1..!

Ma.daJ'IKWa
-

7, a..!\II!LANI) 3

NewYoot.4, B-0

•

~ • . TCitDIIID 3
... . )d . . . . . . . ,

-6,tt-0.,3

Ooldooii7,Qioop3

c.n ··a.T.... z

Toall!bl'lllltna

Q.IVI!I.ANij (P. Alilloa 04) • l)o.

10.000 to 15,000.
,
In 1943, !be Negro Leagues All
Star game drew 51,523 to Cbicago •s Comiskey Park.
The leagues lasted until tb_'e
1950s, although the end began ift
1947, when the Brooklyn Dodgers
signed Robinson, the first black
player in mqjor league history. •
Tbe museum's current contribu.tiqn to baseball lore is a vote taken
to name the Negro Leagues', great.
est players. More than 200 players
and sportswriters who covered the
leagues voted.
Paige received more votes than
any other player. The ·pitcher
s1arred in the Negro Leagues
beginning ill the 1920s, playing for
the Kansas City Monarchs, Pittsburgh Crawfords and Birmingham
Black Barons. He joined the lmJic
ans in 1948.
.
~
Gibson came !fl second. Tbe rest
of the ftrSt team tncludes ftrSt baseman Buck Leon~d; seco~d b~­
man Lorenzo (Pipe~) Dav1s: thtrd
baseman Ray Dandridge; shortstop
Willie (The Devil) Wells; outfielaers James (Cool Papa) Bell, Oscar
Charleston and Turkey Stearns; and
pitchers Leon Day and Hilton
Smith.

Middleport- Dave Diles Park on riverfront.
Pomeroy - Stage on parking lot near levee.

Olda Ferry Landing shelter House
- near boat ramp
Reedavillei
Forked Run - Forked Run River Acce11 Area
Our thanks to all volunteers and area busine1181 for
your aupport.
For Information:
MEIGS COUNTY LITTER CONTROL
Pomeroy, Ph. 992·6380
Racine -

.

hiiJ. including 1

innings of five-bit ball, and Tun Salmon had three
to lead California past Texas

at Anaheim.
Todd Burns dropped to 0-3.

TAGGED- Cleveland's Carlos Baerga
(ri&amp;ht) finds himself tagatd between first and
second base bJ Detroit second baseman Tony

Phillips In the tbird inning of Monday nigbt's
American League game in Detroit, where tbe
Tigers won 7-3. (AP)

.

Tbe defeat W11S the Piralcs' fifth
Van Slyke was hitting .322 and
led the Pirates in home runs and straight and eighth in nine games.
RBls. Now Pittsburgh will have to They had just been swept by the
do without him .for at least eight Flonda Marlins and now they face
weeks after he was injured Monday two months without Van Slyke.
night in an 8-3 loss to the Cardi- · Piusburgh led 3-1 whet~ Van
Slyke went hard after a drive by St
nals.
. With the Pirates 16 1/2 games Louis' Erik Pappas in the fourth.
out and behind everybody in the He got his glove on the ball, but it
division but New York, it wasn't glanced off it and into a row of
looking too good for another title, bushes just beyond the wall for a
anyway. Now It's .as bleak as it two-run homer, Pappas' first in !be
gets.
. major leagues.
Van Slyt.e was down on the
_"We can't lose him," pitcher
Denny Neagle said. "That'.s the warning track for several minutes,
then walked off the fteld favoring
worst thing that can happen.''
his rightside.
"Andy plays· in pain,'' trainer
Kent Biggenlaff said. "But be was
sore in a couple.of places and you
have to Uike whM lte •ys sa:ious1 ..
Y·The Cardiitais lheo went wild as
Gregg Jeffries added a two-run
homer in the ftflh and they added
three in lhe seventh off knucldeballer Tim Wakefield, making his
first relief appearance since being
bounced from the rotation.
In ot1ter games Mooday night it
was: Philadelphia 10, Mon~ 3;
New York 7, Atlanta 4; Chicago 6;
Florida 3; and Los Angeles 9, Colorado4.
·
Phillies 10, Expol3
Terry Mulholland improved to
9-1 lifetime against the Expos IS
the Phillies extended their winning
stfealc to a season-best six games.
Mulholland (8-S) allowed eight
hits, struck out four and walked
three in 8 l/3 innings.
Pete lncaviglia' s two-run single
· in the ftrSt started Philadelphia off
and gave him 14 RBis in his last 11
games. John Kruk added a solo
homer and Jim Eisenreich capped
the scoring with a grand slam in the
ninth.
Moises A1ou drove in two runs
for the Expos.
· Meta 7, Braves 4
New York needed 110meone to
.,._.,,..
presishake things up and rookie Doug
dent Chuck Faulk and Raymond Werry raise tile American flag at
Saunders has stepped up. Tbe IICCtbe Cbester baseball kickoff held at Baum Fields. The llaa wu preond baseman bad the second two- ·
seated to lite association in memory of the late Art Stobart by his
hit game of his two-game career
famDy. Stobart WIIS a longtime supporter or the area's you.lh baseand scored three runs.
.
, ball aad softball programs and was a lonatlme umpire.
l)obby Bonilla twice drove in
Saunders.
Fmnk Tanana (4-S) allowed one
run on nine hits and suuck out
eight in seven innings.
Braves starter Pete Smith (2-6)
gave up eight hits and four runs in
4 '1/3 innings.

By The Associated Press
Any thoughts the Pittsburgh
Piratc;s may have had about a
fourth straight NL East title vanished when Andy Van Slyke
crashed into a wall in St Louis and
broke his collarbone.
The four-time Gold Glove winner in center field was abOut the
only player left from the Pirates'
divisional domination, even though
they never advanced to a World
Series. Barry Bonds and Doug
Drabek left after last season. Bobby
Bonilla and John Smiley departed
the year before.

.

.

I

$13,328°0

Cults" Marlins 3
Jose Guzman (6-S) allowed
three runs and ~~even hits over six
innings before leavinf with a stiff
lower back. HeisS- with a 3.83
ERA at Wrigley F'teld and 1-4 with
a 5.02 ERA on the road. ·
Gl1Z111811'1 linJle in !be-second
made it 3-1 and- M lint RBI
of hia . -lelaue c:aeer. Dwiabt
Smith
iita for Chi I •
JICl: ~ (4-7) Milt five
innings Ud up fM runs. four
earned.
-bU.

•

•

•

:::r11ne

•

-1

1993' Honda del Sol Si

5 0//'0 .

OVER
COST

In Stock

1993
Honda Accord
In Stock
Units

/o OVER
COST

0

~==ATION-

•4.3 V-6 Motor •Auto/Overdrive
•Bedliner
•Rear Step Bumper
.
•AMIFM Stereo/Cassette
•Rear Anti-Lock Brakes
•Sliding Rear Window
•Cloth Seats
•3.42 Axle Ratio

-

ball Darwin had, but kept it in play.
Scon Kamieniecki (1-1) and Bobby Munoz combined on a three-hitter.
Orioles 8, Brewers 5 - David Segui's homer
highlighted a fiv~run sixth iming as Baltimore beat
Milwaukee at County Stadium.
The biggest hit of the rally against Bill Wegman
(4-10) might have been an RBI bloop single by Mart
McLemore, a catchable ball that dropped between
outfielders Greg Vaughn and Robin YounL
Rick Sutliffe (7-2) gave up 10 hits in six innings.
Twins 4, Blue Jays 3 - Shane Mack, who bad
nothing to show for two triples earlier in the game,
snapped a seventh-inning tie with an RBI on a weak
grounder, rallying Minnesota over Toronto at the
Melrodome.
' ·
.
Danny .Cox (S-2) blew the lead in ~ of Dave
Stewart. Larry Casian (1-0), who gave up Pat Barders' sixth-inning go-ahead single, got credit for the
victory.
·•
·
Mariners 6, Rofals 3 - Randy Johnson struck
ou( 15' in eight inmngs as Seattle defeated]Cansas
City for the left-bander's lOth consec:utive viciQI)' in
the Kingdome.
Tino Martinez and Jay Bohner each hit their 12th
home·runs against starter Mark Gardner (4-3). Martinez drove in four runs.
Johnson's IS strikeouts gave him 121 for~ season, most in the major leagues. He improved 10 8-3.
Athletics 7, White Sox 3 - Rickey Henderson
stole two bases and scored two runs. -becominsthe
Athletics' all-time leader in runs scored, as Oakland
beat Chicago at the Coliseum. Henderson has scored
999 runs as a member of !be Athletics, surpassing
Bob Johnson's 997, set with lhe Philadelphia ,\tliletics from 1933-42.
. Rookie Brent Gates and Ruben Sierra combined to
drive in five runs for the A's. Curt Young survived
two home runs to earn his ftrSt win of the year.
Loser Kirk McCaskill (2-7) was staked to a 2-0
lead on solo homers by Frank Thomas and Ellis
Burks. ·
Angels8,Rangers2-MarkLangston(8-l)kept
bis major-league leading ERA at 2.26 with eight

Pirates lose Van Slyke to injury
before falling 8-3 to Cardinals ·

1993 GMC SIERRA PICKUP

. Euknllll......

.S63

In NL action,

Leagues' museum
=
housed ·in Kansa~ City office ..

TWLN.CI
Odmil. .....,., ..,.,._,.39 23 .6l9
New y ... ___________ ]6 21 .S6]
•
TGIIIIIIO.. "•...,_,,_.. l6 21
8 ......................32 ll

mind.

in !be right frame of
"Will Clark, Matt Williams,
Robby Thompson - the gu~s on
!)lis team,lbey're motivated.' says
Bonds.
For his part, be promises tO do
everything he can.
•'All I want to do is the best I
can for these guys," Bonds says.
"They know that I'm going to be
out there every daY for them. They
know I'm ~oing to be on !be field. I
think that s all it rakes. If you're
ouJ there every day and you believe
in yourself, something good has got
to happen ....
- • Wbo taught Barty.Bonds how
to play !be outfreld7
The San Francisco Giants slugger is actually a five-way star.
Not only can be bit and hit for
power, Bonds can al59 run, cal£h
and t,brow. He has won a Gold
Glove Award in each of his past
three seasons.
· As a youngster, he learned from
his father, who was a star for the
Giants in the 1960s and 1970s.
Bobby Bonds is now a coach in
San Francisco.
'
·
"One tbing ·that I loved the
most," says Barry Bonds, "was
having !be ~ity to catch fly
balls with .W1llie Mays and my dad.
"It was something I wanted to
prove to them that I could do- I
could cat£h !be ball, run, I could
throw the ball."
But be credits ex-Pittsburgh
coach Bill Virdon with having
turned -him iniO a big-league fielder. Virdon, once a fixture in the
Pirates outfield, tutored Bonds
intensely as a rookie in 19116.
"I owe a lot of my sutcess to·
Bill Virdon," says Bonds. "He
was the man· that put everything
together on the field. He saw the
ability there."
(C) 1993 ,
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Neg~o

Catfish tournament Saturday

-

w-.DI......

..

And bad anyone asked. he might
have told them that the nurnliers
will be more to his liking after
Game 4 on WedJtesi:lay night.

"I don't know whit it's like to
be in the World Series," Bonds
says. " I wish I did. I can only say
anything about the World Series
from' what I hear. I hOpe before my
career is over that I get there. ••
He has time. Bonds won't be 29
years old until July 24.
Before jumping to San Francisco, he toot the Pittsburgh Pirates to
three National League East titles in
a row. The Pirates lost in the NL
Championship Series in 1990 to the
Cincinnati Reds in six games. Then
they lost in the NLCS in 1991 and
199210 the Atlanta Bmves in seven
games.
"It's very discouraging to play a
whole season and get so close and
come up short and go home and
watch the ot~er players in the
World Series," says Bonds.
"You'd like to have a part in iL I
want to be there. That's my biggest
g~al. I think that's everybody ' s
btggest goal."
·
He's doing his best. Bonds won
theMostValuablePlayerAwardin
1990, finished a close second to
Atlanta's Terry Pendleton in 1991
and won it again in -1992. In fact,
Bonds is only the lOth National
Leaguer tp' win more than one
MVP title. In t11e past three years,
he's averaged .301 per season with 31 homers, 11 I RBis, 103
runs, I 09 walks, and 45 stolen
bases: his ·on-base percentage has
averaged .430 and his slugging has
averaged .S67.
Bonds is well on his way to
those son of numbers this year.
"Nobody has higher expectalions than you put on yourself," be
says. "No person bas higher ex peelations on me than me."
With Barry Bonds, can !be San
Francisco Giants wid it all in 1993?
"We have the nucleus," says
the club's new srar.
·
Bonds also thinks the Giants are

The Dally Sentinel-Page-s

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

New Honda Accord LX '

5°/o ~~~

New Honda Civic .LX

In Stock

~501

OVER
/0 COST
·.· In· Stock

onciibl

•

......._

'

Ta a Tltllo Not lltalu hi

.

.

.

'"

~
;-

THROWS our FIRST PITCH -Delmar Baam duvwl oat ~
nna ,~taat t1te , _ , a...r bueball kkkoll' daJ. B - diiMitd
tbe llld IMt tllte lleldllare buDI on, and lite fields were • ld Ill lals
h - · 'lllere. are nine te11111ln the Chester Aaocladon lor boJ'IUd
·alrll rr.. Tee·BIIlt~ Uttle Lea111e, wltlt ta youths 111111111 p11rt In
tile ...........

,,

J

::=.,10·1he
on
1nc1"3: ._

Do .... '· ...... 4
JQdy Reed, who
Roekiel lor llx llilln
dley
IJllded binl eq I • cllaft dly,
had four bill,
1118
homet. nm Wdacll
drO¥e In
three runs • the vilidna ~·
ended Colorado's dde 1',. wianinl aucat. Pedro AiiiiCio (5-4)
ICIWired- hili Wn ........
Jdief belp in the ........
.
Vinny Caadlla bad a two-run
homer for tho Roct101. Alldlei
Oa~~Ulna .425, had loar
hits,'
uololloma'.
+

ATHENS HONDA CARS
"TH£ HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"
81 O·E. State St. • Athens, Ohio
New Car Dept. 594·8555 _

Dept. 594·211J'

..

�'

. •

ByThe.Bend

The Daily Sentinel '
Tuesday, June15, 1883 ·
Page--6

t:· ----~~~~~~~~--------~--------------------~------------~----~----------------

I l l .·

i•l

COIIJILIQ AUTO
UPIOLmiY

•'

Custom &amp;eat

•

Backhoe

· and small
Dozer Work

Covara, c.rpet,

•

10,.. ...,..,...._

'

'

I

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

· Haedllnera,
Convertible Topa

.

t1411M1U
110 N. 2nd Ave.
lollddhp I rt, Olllo ·

-

--

'

''

•

' ' ·~

'

••
'

CANOE RACE WINNERs - Plctur"ed are
wluen or the caooe races held in Pomeroy oo
I Saturday In coojunction with Heritage Week·
end. The races were sponsored by the Meigs .
1 County Park Dlstrk:t. Fli'st place winners In the

!

~lalooi race and the milk run race Will the team

of Monty Hunter and Michael Frymyer. Second
place team in those races was the team or Shawn
Worllmau aud BJ Workman.
,
.

•

•'I

'

OUTHOUSE RACE .SCENE- This was
the scene In the rmal heat or the outhouse races
on Saturday in Pomeroy. The races, sponsored
by The Dally Sentinel for the Pomeroy Merchants Association, were held In conjunction

Compiled by:
Emmogene Hamilton
Recorder, Mel1s County, Ohio
Charles T. Neece, Gertrude
Neece, 5.000 A. to Norman Eugene
Neece, Salisbury.
Virginia E. Sayre, dec'd, affid,
to Ray Sayre, Syracuse Viii.
·
Louise E. Green, dec'd, Celt. of

trans, to Paul E. Green, Frances L.
Green, Marilyn Sue Trout, Scipio.
MMarelyn Green Trout, Slanley
Trout, Francis L. Green, Parcel, to
Paul E. Green, Amanda Green, Scipio.
Paul E. Green , Amanda Green,
33.947 A., to Marelyn Sue Trout,
Stanley Trout, Scipio.
Robin L. Phalin, Kathy J.

i'
I•
j

~

RACE WINNE;R - 'fhe outhouse or
Clark's Jewelry captured the first place spot in
Saturday's races in Pomeroy held in con)unctiou
with Heritage Weekend. Pictured receiv1n1 their
prize from Debbie Call and Joanie Simpson or

The Paily Sentinel, which sponsored tlie race,
are team members. Todd Smith, Dale Thoene
and Tom Hanstlne. Not pictured are Wes
Thoene and Rick Blaettnar. The outhouse rrom
Farmen Bank won for most creative.

Plans announced
for fall festival
At a recent meeting of Racine's
Fall Festival Commiuee. plans
were made f(lf the festival to be the
evening of Sept. 24 and all day on
Sept. 23.
Friday entertainment will begin
BROTHER AND SISTER HONORED - A barb,cue was
held recenttr in honor or Jerr Hawk and his sbter, Sherry Chapat 4 p.m. and Saturday music will
· begin in the afternoon.
man. They lioth completed their studies at Rio Grande In May. He
Other activities will begin at I0
received .his delfee in electronics and she m~Yored In secretarial
a.m. on SepL 25 and there will be · science. A decorated cake and Ice cream we~ served to family and
rrlelidi. Gifts were presented. She received an expense ·paid trip to
craft and food' booths. Space fee
CaHrornla where she will visit Disney Land rrom her husband,
will be $10. There will be games
Monte Chapman and her parents, Ray and Cheryl Laudermilt.
for the kids and a Jlumpkin growing
contest for people of all ages. Giant
Atlantic pumplcin seeds are avail;
able on a fllSl conie basis at Home
National Bank.
..
By Christine Lynne Hysell
Committee members are John
their meeting place
Dudding, 'Bob Hill, Larry Wolfe,
Where the flowers bloom and a
Sam Pickens, Lee Lee and Kathr)'n
Sky blue with while clouds well does sland and prayen can
HERITAGE QUEEN AND COURT- Jaime Counts, 1!193 . Hart. Anyone with any questions dancing
cometrue
.,
across as I walk in a garden.'
may contact them. The next meetHerltaae Queen, sponsored by the Pomeroy Merchants AssociaWon't you follow us to the hill·
Green in all different shapes and side and we'D show you what to do
ing wiU be July 12. After this meettion, and her court, AUison Lee, first runner-up, Robin Gardner
sizes fraP.Dt with the sweetness
ing reservations will be taken for
second runner-up, and Angie White, third runner-up, were rea:
of each httle blossom.
the craft and food booths.
tured in the Heritage Parade on Saturday in Pomeroy.
Cast a rose into the water then
Roses in every color of the rain· bow your head and pray
bow:
G1ve me a stairway you 'II have
reds, pinlcs, yellows, blues.
•
it soon somedsy
Tulips in beds of green neatly
Then we '11 all go together and
on
as for faith there is no speU
each side of the path.
at 7:30 p.m. at the Burlingham for infmnation.
Just believe in the 11ood Lord
TUESDAY
White d9ves coo up above in Jesus for he is The Wisbmr; Well
MIDDLEPORT • Heath United Modern Woodmen Hall. Publit
love
Methodist Church, Middlepolt, will invited.
RUTLAND • Rutland Fire
With the song they are singin~ ·
have vacation bible school through
Department Ladies Auxiliary,
:Turning
to leave somethmg
POMEROY • F.O.E. Ladies Wednesday, 7:30p.m., fue station.
, Friday from 9:l0 a.m. to noon .
CliChes
Auxiliary No. 2171 wiD meet Toes· Ox roast plans.
· "Celebration Park" is the theme.
my eye.
day at 7:30 p.m.
A
man in a white robe is sland·
BRADFORD • Bradford Church
LONG BOTI'OM - Pastor Don ing
CHESTER • The Chester Coun· Miller will speak at the Mt. Olive
of Christ. Vacation Bible School,
··. through Friday, 9·11:30 a.m. All cit No. 323. Daughters of America Community Church in Long Bot- andby the· gate his voice is gentle
will meet .Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. tom on .Wednesda)' !117 p.m ..Pastor
ages welcome.
his eyes are filled with love.
Quarterly birthdays will be Lawrence Bush invites the public.
He
comes up to me and takes
CHESTER • Vacation Bible observed. Potluck refreshments.
me
. School, Chester United Methodist Silent auction .
. SYRACUSE • Night swimming
by lhe hand.
Chun:h, tluough Friday, 9:15· 11 :30
will be offered ·at London Pool on
We
go back through the garden
WEDNESDAY
a.m. for ages two through teens.
Wednesday from 7:30-9:30 p.m. he
POMEROY · All-familf. revival Admission is $1.
Theme: "Celebration Park."
Slate Auto's already
looks at me sflliling as we walk
and vacation bible schoo , Laurel
tow p.emtul'l18 can be
down the path..
.
POMEROY · "Amazing Jour- Cliff Free Methodist Church,
POMEROY.· Pomeroy Safety
I'4IQ IC8d even more by
ney to Bible Times" is the theme of Wednesday through Saturday and Pab'ol wiD have a picnic Saturday
insuring both your car
· Vacation Bible School at the Zion Sunday with evangelist. Rev. Dave from 7-9 p.m. at London Pool.
Tbe Wishing WeD
·and home with the S"te
Chun:h of Christ through June 25 Canfield and gospel music by Jim Family and one friend of safety
By Ceilbert L. Fitzwater, Vinton
Auto CompanieS.
from 9-11 :30 a.m. daily for ages and Kathy Sisson. Bible school patrol members permitted. Bring a
·nursery through high school. Pro- theme is "Victory Station" for ages covered dish, except meat, Call
By an old well on a hillside,
Let us tell you just '
.
•
grim is J1111e 27 at 7 p.m. Kathryn 4-12.
Becky Trlplell at 992-5485, or Jen- three cbiltlren met to play
how much your savingS
' Johnson, 992-5195, is director.
nifer Lambert o~ Jennifer Heck by
And they gazed upon a churchCHESHIRE · The Gallia Mei~s Wednesday if anending.
can be.
house from the hill not 'C. way
.• POMEROY · Ohio Eta Phi Community Action Agency Will
And they danced within the
Cbapler, Beta Sigma Phi, preferen. have a free clothing day WednesTHURSDAY
flowers casllns ~in the wen
till tea, Tuesday, 7 p.m., home of day from 9 a. m. to noon at the old
POMEROY • Pomeroy Group
Rejoicing to the music from the
high sehool building in Cheshire.
Susan Clark.
of AA meets Thunday at 7 p.m. at 110lemn church bells?
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Call
POMEROY - Alzheimers and 992-5763.
. POMEROY • American LeSion ·
They would wish a sbinins rain.Drew Webster Post 39, Tuesday. Related Diseases Support Group
bow acroa the 'valley dale
Dinner at 7. Meeting at 8 p.m. will meet Wednesday at 1:30 p.m.
RUTLAND • Leadin1 Creek
And turn it all to heaven with
214 EAST MAIN
at the senior citizens center. 'Peggy Conservancy District meets Thun- golden stain and winding lrails
Election of officers.
Codding, music department, Ohio day, S p.m. at the office. Public
Then they would follow them to
POMEROY
RUTLAND • Rutland Village Univcraity, will speak on music invited.
the church-bouse and down the
992-8887
Council will meet in special ses· therapy. Everyone welcome.
isles they'd go
•lion Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the civic
REEDSVILLE • There will be a
Won't you follow us to the hill'
POMEROY • SuF Run School Reedsville town meeting Thursday · side and we •n show you what to do
center.
Restoration Commlltee, Wednes- at 7 p.m. at the fire &amp;lation to diJ.
BURLINGHAM • Bedford day, 7 p.m. at Trinity Church in cu11 the proposed gravel pit on
They would place upon the
1:taura~~ee~a
Townlhip Volunteer Fire De)lll'l· Pomeroy. Call co-chairmen, Rouee 124.
Bible three 1111111 halldlln arace
,..-c Committee will meet Tuelday Rachael Downie or Eleanor Smith
And lell the conpepdon about

.Poet's comer

.

.....

!.

. NOllCE OF
. BUDGET HEARING
The Bo8rd of Truo- of
Columbl• Townohlp will
hold • Public H••rlrig lor
11M 111M Budget on July 5,
11t3 at 7:10 p.m. at the !Ire
.~ .

'

(I) 15. 1tc

. NOT1CE OF APPOINTMENT
. OF FIDUCIARY
on May 27, 1111, In the
Melga County Probeto
Court; c... •No. 27145,
Bornlco M. B•ltey, 47510
Scout C•mp Ro•d, Lo~g
Bottom, OH. 45743 w..
toppolnled Admln•tr•tor of
thll •toto at Robert 0 .
l•to of
47510 Scout CIDIP Road,
Long Bottom, ott. 45743.
Freel w. Crow,
Acting P1obete Judge
Uiul K. Neoaelrood, Clerk

....,, m••••d,
(I)

J, I, 15, 3tp

Public Notice
.. 11IE PAOIIATE COURT

'OF IIIICIS COUNTY, OliO
.JENNIFER L. stEm,

u iu •• 111

ol 11M lEal* of
Guy E.

Hun..,, Dur ..·d,

Name omitted
The name of Marjorie Ha1ar

1lE ESTATE OF

was

uni'ntentionally omiUed from the
list of Yesteryear Essay wlriners.
Marjorie is from Salisbury Elementary and is.!he daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Halar. ·

m..

POMEROY • Meigs County
Democratic Executive Commitree
meets Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Car·
penters Hall, Pomeroy.
·,'
'
ROCK SPRINGS • Rock
Springs Beuer Health Club meets
Thursday at 1 p.m. at Rock Springs
United Methodist Church.

Hunter:

..

r l,&lt;~'

t.

Hunter, ........ 211·213

7tJ«d,

.
By

EHt Second Btraot, P. 0.
Box Ill, Pomeroy, Ohio

'

41788.

'

Windows

Attorney for Eotsta
IN THE
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
JENNIFER L. SHEETS,
ADMINISTRATRIX
oltheEotstaol
Guy E. Hunter, Deci8Md

-v..
ntE ESTATE OF
DAVID G. HUNTER, .
DECEASED, ET AL,
AatpDndlftb
NOnCE BY NOllACATION
TO: The Unknoll!ln Helra,
Naxt of Kin , D•vloHa ,

Log•t•••· Ac1111lnlotratora,

Eliocutoro and Aoolgn• of
Guy E. Hunter, Tho.m..
B•lley Huntw, Sr., ~1118
Jane Reed Hunt•, Margarat
lama Garren •nd Lobbu•
.Grllbel a.rren.
You •r• hweby noUftod
that you hev• bun n•med
Reopondento In • loglll
110tlon entlded JennHer. L.
Sheela, Admlnlotratrlx ·of
11M Eolllte of Guy. E. H11n111r,
Decnnd, •· The Eotsta of
David G. Hunter, Deae•ed,
at •L Thlo 1101ion h• been
-lgned en. No. 21,103
and lo pending fn. the
Common tilito.. Court of
Molgo County, Oblo,
Probete Dlvlolon, Second
StrMt, Pomeroy, Oh lo

Roofing
Call ue for
Special Prices on
Siding and Window•

992·2772
Jalll!l• Keeeee, owner
lii2IW3

••ld

- l

......

(No Sunday Calls)

Raal Estate General

Fmlllrt

-gotRODGERS E-1 RIDE

- BILL SLACK

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
.

. ·-

- -~

.

12·3Q.92-Ifo

EAGLES

TRIMMING anti
TREE &amp; STUMP REMOVAl

. IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 P11Voff
Thlo ad good for 1
FREE card.

We . ion people who .. .
Wlthuel••do •bout. hllrd -rk,•
unlell we're -rldng lor lb-.
• • •

II

If• betlet to looll llhelld pnp.,. lb.. look beck •ncl

INSURED

regret.

•••

Geck tlte Paper tills TJM1day
far lxdlfq .WIM '

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COIL

..,..

Reaso•able

Howll'd L Writesel

lAWN CARE

ROOFING

Middleport,
Pomer,oy, Racine,
Rutland, M•so•

NEW -REPAIR
Gutters
Downafiouts
Gutter Cleaning
P1lntlng

JOE II. SAYRE
Areas
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2131 CALL 992·6123
3-4-93· 1

mo.

COLLINS
ENRRPRISES

•Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
w
p · M b'l H
• e amt o t e omes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Wash ing

FREE ESnMATES

Reasonable Rates

949~2168

Dependable
Servic:e

~-16-83-tfn

DOZER W05UC,
DRIVEWAY WORK
a1d UMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES
130 HOUR

36970 Boll Run Road
Pameroy, Ohio

GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL ·
&amp;. FILL DIRT

992-3470

POMEIOY, OH.

OWNER: JeH Wl1kon..m

RIC EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
StiPTIC SYSTEMS

U""NIED oncl IIOIIDED

PH. 614-992-5591

12·5-tfn

Stone Co.

••••n••••·
..
•••
'

.iktor horne with 2 aeplle iys•m•. TPC w••· !Mite g blildlng tltel S23,000 '

'

EA1M E IIIDQE RD.· Two otory fiWM IIOme ~ bedlooma.
ntce yard, Nth. utility,_, t/2 ' - - l ,,8,000

DEXTER·1112atory honHI with 4 bedloomo, ..... gOlden

! 7 ~OOMS

• uaa.lldda!llnaulalion, large Irani porch. $18,000

11 WMiliOUSft

·Jutland Furnltur•
I

lt.124 ......... , .
742-2211

WE NEED LIITNISI

"""E."'"'9111·---·--·----- ......
CLILAHD,.---1---"- """"--tn-1111

..
INHAIIT---------·. - -7.aa-1117
U1MY ~---·· ··-·--· ..·- - -..-.et11
lilAC\'

c:.PIIC:I.-••••-"..-··-·----· .....................- 112-1111

Sun.-Thur 5-10 pm
Fri-Sat5· 11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
lox 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 143·5264

. YOUNG'S

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER

CARPENHR SERVKE

•TRUCKING

D. A. 1051011

CUSTOM SADDLES, ,
· LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406

SEWER PROBLEMS
CAll 614·992·7171

PvtsiiiiS.Ykl
.Mowars • CltHt Saws

w..dlalll'l
Authorlled: Brlag• l

Stratton MTO, Ry•n,
I.O.C. Repair Ceilter
PICKUP .,d DEUVERY
Houro H· M-F 1-3 lat.
Clooecf luncley. ,

t4t-H04 41281ttnl

Min. Mull Be 18 Y~. Procell Co.
102-e:n.oe15.
Entries Baing Accepted For
1993 Bill Hubbard Momorlol
Little Lngue Tournament A1
Syr~cuu, Start• July 5th, Contiel £bar

Picken• Jr. To""ney

Olroc1or, Boa 411, SyrtcuM, OH
4177!1
P"-: 114-112·7111
Entry Foe~. 15 Mtn Roalor.

EXOTIC LADIES UVE 1-BOo.&amp;aS.
7890 $3.50-mln. MC.VlSA 1•1100745-1115 $2-mln. 11+.
Flsh~~rmana Cove Flahlng Lab
Vinton, Ohio, 3 112 MUee Ncmh
On Slota Roulo 325, Opon All
Nlghl Frldoy"a &amp; loluodoy'a.
Live Bah And Tackle, P&amp;Cnlc
Aroo, ==~round, Opone AI: 1
A.M. C
On Thunidoyo, Now

Stocking WHkly Col11ah. 814,
388-8176, No Alcohol Bner•~
Ptrmhlod. IIToko A Kid Flahlngll
814-:JIIO.IIlll.
Homecoming

3:00pm,

JuM

Tanks, Leach lines
Repair &amp; Installation
Lice•sed, l•sure• 11d lo•lled

S. 18 Yro, Proc:oll Co. 102-e:n..

Caii614-H2·7878

Big 11,

Pliny, WV. R•vlval allo ltartlng

Nmo

nl!lllt

Llvo 24 Ho~n A Daylll Talk To
Buutllut Glrtalll H00-2118-21182

Ext.

~371 ,

$3.ft P• Min. Mu.t

0111.

MISTRESS MADONNA UVE 1·
100·745-1115 S2 min. 1-B01).685.
7110-MC.VISA 18+.

ELECTRIC
24 IL UIEIGEIICJ SERVICE

llew Yilrlng, Rewiring,
Trouble·Shootlng

EXCAYAnNG

COIUIIRCIAL &amp; IESIDEITIAL

(614)
667·6621

FREE ESTIMATES

llce•sS41.L lnsuretl &amp; lalltled

(614) 742·2345

Do you nMd eomeon• to e~~re
lor lovod O"!!t Soti1hom Hlllt
Ea.. te, Leon. we hive opening•
IVIillbll. 3()4..4~1003.
OHIO'S CONNECTION ALTER·
NATIVE 1·-JII0.3337 12.50.

min 18+1oll II!Hiyloo dotollno

. - 1CC'a olalngfollcoupr.. In

your oroo 1odey. CCI BOCA Fl

THE GAY CONNECTION 1 · 1110.3337 12.51&gt;-mln. 18+ 100'a of exciting men In rour
1onlgh1. Gel pllor. l 't. CCI
BOCA Ft.:

. M HOUR EMERGENCY 8EilVICB

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING
24 Hour Portable Weldbi1 S.mce
730o~(i()prn
COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP SERVICES
.

WlUllll&amp;liY

BEAUTIFUL GIRLS! bchlngl
P18llonat1l Talk To 'Em Llve111·
IICJ0.740.33H Ext 6424 $3.119 Pol

201h, Slloom Church,

•

Mon · frl

7:30om . 12:(1()prn Sol

. ·UCIII
MOWII CLINIC

Announcemenls
3 Announcements

Shade River Saddle Shop

LAND CLEARING

WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
. HOMESITE&amp;

HAUUNG: Limeatona,
Dt~. Gravel and Coal

(304) 773-5585
'SUMMER HOURS"

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

36358 SR 7

5-24-1 mo.

MIDDLEPORT· 2 etory frame home with 3 bidrooma,

AMERICAN GENEUlliFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

SERVICE

.992·7553

Quality

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

Place your
Classified today
and hold ou1
your hand ...

CK'S HAULING

CHARliE'S

61'4·593·5010

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Maeon, WI/

" with 1071 12 • e5 mobile hOm8 end an
IIACI!IE- 1.1 ..,..

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

FREE

Lie. No. 0051-32

IR 124 88.99 aaea niell laying ground, with two older
hamel, LCCD
2 ..ptict, lrM gill W/royaltlel, greet
locelidh. mM1108d acceul SREDUCEDI$105,000
~dwood n-a, newly ~lnted willis, • - repairs In
kitdlen I beth, lull --~ lltepiq. MW . _ . , hMI
purnp!C.A. 148,800

Steel Fabrication
and Welding

FormniJ of a.nlr•' TN• .terufee

EAGLE LANES

W-.

• 4 Wll"l AliJament
Prices Starttng at ·

, '129.95 +Tax

Cltesltlre,

•••

2 Froat Struta • La.or

Gallipolis

614·446·0736

Stata Rt. 7

St.lt. 7

'

Speelal

6/1019311 mo.

CLUB

6637

·,,

. SprineTf••

W.Aioolllvo
7l12

614·985·4180

·•LIGHT HAULIN~
•FIREWOOD

Call 614·992·

CUI'M

2112192/lfn

Auto-Ratllls

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do It
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

EVERY THURSDAY

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

You nwer ....Sly le~~m to
undl you lam to drive.

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

614·992·7643

liNDA'S
PAINTING

IRIM and
REMOVAL

J&amp;THOME

1

Grate
of

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

1111, 2&amp;;
. • 1, •• 11, 22, etc

Dave

9x7 ........... $189
16x7 ......... $296

SHRUB &amp; TREE

nnt of kin •nd peroono
ondhd to tho Hllllll of Guy
E. Hunter, Dece.. ed, In
order that a dlotrlbutlon of
Millie 01111 be made.
You •re hereby required
FREE ESTIJMTES
to •nower the Petition
50734 II·Je Rid Rd
within twonty-elght (21)
,. Y
1• "
d•yo •fl•r tho laot Leatlollo•, Oh. 4~743
publloatlon of thio nollaa
9 85·4181
which will bo publlehed
6-9·93-ttn
once • w.- lor olx (I)
ouocndn w..U. The l•t · :::======~
publlc•dlln wUI be . . . on
11M 22nd IUy ol June, 1-.
•ncl tho twllllty·elaht (211
uyo tor •n•w•rmg wll
c-m1111a• on thllt eWe. In
Fr011 Foundation to
•••• of your l•llure to
Roof
•nower or othorwlee
rMfiOncl • required by 11M
Inside and Out
Ohio Rul•• of Cnl'll
Free Eotlmatea,
Prooedur•, ludgm•nt by
Lo~Coett .
del•ult will bo rendwed
Work Guaranteed
~~tp~lnol you lor th• rellof
,_.,dedln the P.Uion.
614·949·2911-or ·
Dated lhlo 13th ·dey of

Robert E. Buck, Judge IIIey, 11183.
Robert E. Buell,
APPROVED:
Probete Judge
DaugiH w. LenliOO,
Len• K. NMH!r....,, Clark

~"""

;;;;,a

INTERIOR

VInyl Siding

TM obJect otlhll Pe!itton

ORDER
Upon rwlft el thll file, It
lo!Mnby 11M ORDER of thlo'
Court th-.t ••rvlo• lly
upon
publloetlon be
... unknown Helre, Nut at
Kin, Devl•-· Leg•-·
Adloolnlotr•toro, Exocutoro
•nd Aoolgno of Guy . E.
Hoiolter Tholua B•lley
Sr., ~tile Jlli• Roeil
Hunter, llarg•r•t l•m•
Gomoll end Lelllluo Grabel
G•rretl, Addreooee un·
ltnown.
•
It Ia lurthor 11M ORDER of
thlo Court that proof of
pullllo8Uon be .tumlahllcl Ill
DougiM W. UtUe. Alto,...,
IOI' the E8talll of Guy

Announcements ',

Replacement

·I• to determine the helro,

Dookat 13 hge215

.

4/29/93 tin

Free Eattmatia

' 45718.

DAVID G. HUNTER,
Decntrd, et ...,
Floepon. . .
C:AIE NO. 21,103

614·992·7144

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

;jij
Creek load
Middleport, Ohio

1

Pellllonw

PubliC Notice

31904 le1ding

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

I

J&amp;L INSULATION

Public Notice

' Public: Notice

MARTECH ·INDUSTRIES

[!~~~ping

In Cust0111

8~7 ........... $175

I.

VI'RA FURNITURE
Upper At. 7-Gailipolis
Will Be Closed Until Monday,
June 21 d!Je to the death ¢
our son.

VI

I
'

CaU 614·992-71041or

.,

These Sl1es O•ly!

DAVIDSON'S
PlUMBING

PARTS

bldg.

Petitioner

'

.-~:.....

'

'

~

Phalin, 1. 74 A., to Charles Cundiff,
Paulette F. Cundiff, Rutland.
Charles Cundiff, Pauleue F.
Cundiff, I.74 A., to Jimmy A; 'Oraham, Brenda M. Graham, Rolland.
_Roger L. Manley Sr., Connie M.
Manley. parcels, to John W. Roush,
Sr., Elizabeth M. Roush, Porn. ·ViU.
Pauline L Darst, Mae Datst,
parcels. to Patty J. Massey. Mite: B.
Darst, Olive.
Mae Stout Darst, parcels,. to
Donna J. Story, Mae B. .DaJ:St,
Olive.
Mae B. Darst, Tracts, to Pauline
L. Darst. Mae B. Darst, Orange.
Mae B. Darst, Minerals, to
Pauline L. Darst, Donna J. Story,
Patty J, Massey, Orange.
r
Patricia S. Mills, Robert Mills,
Joyce Mills, ~eels; to Jamd'D.
McDougal, Midd V.
James D, McDou~al, Lot &amp; P.L
lot. to Zelia M. Copp1ck, Midd Vii.
Home National Banlc, Lots 10&amp;
11 to Darrell Michael, Syracuse
Viii.
'.
Paul E. WiD, by P.O.A., Dottie
L. Will, parcels, to Peter A. Brooker, Paula D. Broker, Slllisbury. . ·
Josephine Blevins. Lot 1401 io
Da)las Blevans Jr., Emilia Blevins,
Midd Vii.
.
Josephine Blevins, Lot 1•11 to
Richard D. Blevins, Midd. Vii. 1
· Josehpine Blevins, Lof 'lll !1\o
Donna Joann Blevins, Midd. Vil~,,·

Community calendar

.

f

l:

i

:

;

(614) 992-7878

2-7·92-tfll

WHALEY'S AUTO

PRICE REDUCED!

.•

;

985-4473
667·6179

WAYtH
DALTON

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

--

Tho price has b-. roduood to $6UOO and ·
owner financing ol up to 80% ot purchUe
amount. may be possible lor quallylng por·
son 10 buy ver; nice home on 3Y. acres In
Racine . 4 BR, 3 baths, 2 ga~agea , rented 1
BR apt. Property Includes 4,800 sq. ft . Iarm

with Herilage Weekend. Teams racing represent
Clark's Jewelry, Farmers Bank and The Dal.ly
Sentinel. The photo finish nee was quite nar- ~ '
rowly captured by Clark's Jewelry. Bank One '
also partitipated.

••

j

•i
•

1 '
1 ' .

••

1

-'·..,

Meigs County pr~perty transfers

•

\

I

'

.. ·•

't

DALTON

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

fiiiiSTIMA'rll

DO IT YOURSELF
&amp; CONTUCTOR
SPECIAL

WAYIH

Repairs ~

. StOll•••••li••
&amp; c..........

6181'11211 mo.

5-10.11

--

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE

Plumbing Installation
and

eG.,
....
•Co~lete

. 992·3838

IULUnll IODD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUILICAnOII

••
•

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
- TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,
HOlE SITES and
'TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

(614) 992·7878

Bl LI.ETI\ BOARD

l

EXCAVATING

. • IISSILL &amp; IUIKE
. ' COIISTRUCTIOII
•llewlomes

IN SHOP WELDING SERVICE OR PORTABLE
ALL T~S OF t'IELDING FABRICATION AND REPI\'

o."'"·~·Ni!ogln
5(locilly Gtots

WE Co2LEASE
Ar9Jn ........

• HydrDgOI' •
• Cl~ • MIJIO GIS • Propn• Cylildlls

GENERAL MACHINE WORK &amp; WELDING
e Hl lllrC • A11tml"""' &amp; StJinlinl • Sp'Jy Wetdlng
• Mtg WtldinO · Steel &amp; Alummum • W.ldino ~~
• r abr !CaiiOn·Ablitfy 10 Roll &amp; Bend Met11

Ll

... . , fltllltltt
Filly !neurad

1
s
us'"'"'·t
·COMPLETE 11• ~

Joblhopl'aciiii!IM

~ ~&amp;.1-

992-3768
17 COLE • .POMEROY. OHIO

6, Lollt &amp; Found

·___ ...,...,.
..,_.,..
Found: • -

and,...._-..

LMI: · -. . .

1'1111.._

�'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

~

7

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Yard sale

~

35 Lote • Acre.ge

KIT 'N' CAIU,YLE® by Larry Wright

Fumllhed

II!VI!RAL 7- ACRE PARCELS: Roomo for ..... ar onOnliL
Collnly. · - ......... ~~on~.,. .. 1120/mo. Clolllo Hohll.
M50f ..... ~~e-.. booutlful 1141····
lind; 0 .:~~~lrAIMe one! hlllo.
C.H for
mop. 1-&amp;14-68S-

..,.t-\10 .l"~a~o"&amp;N'I" 0~

•C.,...,.- H"'l ~

C t..\11!. "•~'-

--

11545, AlhOni,OH.

Real Estate
Wanted

__

enalnO. ..

.....__
·--""Nit:-""
WI-.2-Polnl

-1-

Clolm

T - ........ ~~~~~.
11nQ. 2 mil• """' Phllll

Rentals

Plli1l, -

~julian,-

NORTH

TlnlldCol
WIMW.
lion,
tl4o4tl-1411,
'h 1 1 , Dip: 11t t11 01..

....... -

.

'

+Q5
+AQ108132

.

?s

.

Pt. P '--·nt

'v;.;n'y

.,......,.....;..,...;,,....;:......,..,.,

, +JtH

SOUTH

10:011-?.

11

HelpW
nt...,
..;.:;....;,;a;;;.;.;;"";.:
. :.......__

~ -a,;:rt"
~~~=

~~ In gray"-·
·~
,_to
lltnl
, 10:00oin. MWllo
*121.

Pom."""

••z•

-Far
-.

Dooall. , ' - - ~~
an

-

~--· IIIII ....
~- ...••
-~ •~
Openlnge For T....
IIII!IM llloo ,..,.._ No Ex·
.
tl
ry WI Troln.
11-"1 Shlb Anti-

o o - - • For

,.,.,nollnclcoo"'ICII,...,_.

l;'i!,.DIH;::...":'..!'e·~~:

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

IJeillpatlo, Olllo llullna liOn"" Juno 14 • 1 .. P.ll. 'lo Tl*
!f!ou ,d • A.ll. ·1 P.ll. .. II- I
......... J - ,._., 0
PlL "llonc we~ ' a.bolof lie-, - · 1 nltloo Avelliblo Far Tlioll
' - - .... mtoc:.
To Trove lit" e.o.E.IIIF
AI
a.1oo ...., 11 Pllil 1n romadlc• - - - . . .
-iiiM: 1:00Dm tho lind poy'- , llllftY - · I n 9IY -tho ld 1o lo run, aludlng 11M houllntl, mojor
~ ...1on-1·00pm F'r'tdq mod'·"' ptlawl•ld
I 11

=h

v""

~~ . 10:- ...•

· d,• od
-!I
pnoru
-t

.

All real
ostalelldllo
....... ln
lhio
110-61
II,;,;
IO

- . Dok Hill, WY. :104~ ...... June1,.1I.I-3Din. 1··~~~-~~-~~~-~17.~=,.I:~ •-.
·

noll..

.,.,,.,.,~'"

o1 ....... lftd - . - - .,_ SA 7 011
~ Run •~ · for "'.__
..,.,
1
I:Q0.6:00, .._ 11- 8.

8

of
makas Mlllogol
10lmllallon or•any
P"'lefenco,
&lt;lllcrlmlnlllon
baled 011
oe1g1o

~

1
- ..._
: 10
Por
~~-..._.
::.":"'--.
·
_.,
·01 Dey:
- • 17-12).
Will: f5.ll
- · Fringe
lnoludM. CorUCI:
-~~~ ... . - u~~rory. No

,..., colOr,

Rick PMrlon Auction COmptlnt,

vlla. Oh. 417'84

Wanted to Buy
Wl ..ld To Buy: Above Otooond
Pool, 11' Wiele Or Bigger And..
Doool. le In Oaod CondlUor\ 1JM.Z5M8'13.

This noW!Iflaper wll not
1&lt;n0wtng~ !ICC8!&gt;1

7 w. 1Wonty.Nino Drl,., Nolo.,.

onciUIId hmH

Antlq...
uro, I1CI
Hom 10o Iorge or loa-n, wiN

"*" Clrabr
or oomplolo

buy one
hors1hDid, cal

Martin,

Emptormont

edvertlsementa for realestale
Whim loin violation ollhe

llw. Qur "'adell are heiOby
lnlonnod lhal alldwellngo
ad'lantoad In lhls no-o
oro av-on an equal
opporturilybasls.

Sorv'- o -. A

_........ Job -~~~~ion lo
OVIIIoblo for ro-11 lito OIES
oHice. ONeil,. for opplleallon
1o .._ :IS, 11R P•dng
_,,.,.,
lo
II
lol'
klwl:laaklwrpnllecrMiry
"""""'....., 114,110

2 Story Loa HouH, 4
Bid~_ f 111110, - i l
Double ~ o.r.a. On 4.
Ac101. 11WlM3_,, -

purchaM otdtr prflicedUrMi u-

114-H2·lll41..
porlonoo
wllh
111111g
- l d 11_.,., oU lompo, .....-•: ob!llty tio wolli 7734.
IUr 11ure, mol - " routine - - lllloro roflocl·
· - I Ill~ lng lllndord ptOCidWII; All ::!.""·•lo':! ";.~~~ :
Rlvorlno.
R- In lyplng; dolo ontry: 10 kay.... llljlkO ori:f. l14-e'a·7887. 114- · l¥ii dci liP' ,._culll"'ot,:.•Dia::, dutolnd•lno-ludt llfl2.332l
.
114-ll:l~ll:tl.
... "'
palling IIioyllomi
• ~ ... 1.41 ..,.., 441124, 3bdnn, 2 112
Don, Junk II loll U. Y- NaiJ. counting
mol,.alnlng bllho, tun bll-. win olldWortolng ....... Applloo-1, ~!.-I", ·ona,~.~'"""i Ina Iii• -'"" ...ro..., Celar
'!!.!-. Rlhfgall•o, ----.. ~ - .. - - ona !lolly lumlohod, lronl ......,,
F,_,., ...,..., lllct&lt;Mivel, -ling vllllaro; -..ng tor~odw , d clock Gvlllooldna
Air CondKionoro, Gullor Anopo, 1oe111y -llllry ., IYJII~ •
ro
1n&gt;n ""'"" 50'1132' 1ou11o1:
Ela. IM-256-IZII.
·
Mtoii;.um Ina w h · - ' ' - 10'x1:r
J 1 D'o Auto Porto lftd Solvogo, quollllclt'-: """"""'ion of tho utllftr, building, locllld MCOIIIh
oloo buying 1_ ..,. &amp; '""""- 121h grocto Of eqiol- IIIP' Rd.,~,.. ott 91133, 1 mlloo Norlh
304·7n-5341.
c=-"'...;:~lor lftd,_
t.,~~,""=no ~10 Hoi~~
•--"~··
lnoludl
Wl ..ld To
10 Ft. Stock oxporng
U• 114-1141- 10.
-porlonoe uolng _........,.
T I ~. 11
ro lor,-·
ond WORI ,..,.....ng oompulor By owner 1ov1ir hlllortcool Jim
Ptleao Pold: All Old U.S. -romo. lYPI,10 wpm.
Llyno homo locilid •11 Stc:ond
at, Now Hoven. Rntorld 1~m.
... O""' Rim Sliver Colno
.,.. II. ·•·
' Coin Shop,' Vlllogo
01 • llccarthur
Will a. woodwork a dooro wlothor '""
Oold
Colo-.Avon111,
•-·"ptl
o•··11on
111 SOCOnd
Ollllpollo.
~PIIng ~PP
~
• For •~·
prcvomonlo. 3 to 4 bldroomo, 1
porloncod Pallco Olllean. R• 112 bolho, gorbego dlopoool,
Wl,.ld lo buy: uold mobllo qui-onto Art: You llull Hove plonlllul coblnllo, 3 coiling 1ono,
- · &amp;-?S
Ohio Pooco Olllcoro Trolnlng comlorlablo hOmo In nrco
Cootlllcolo And IIIah SchoOl neighborhood, $41,500. coM for
111111 le 'Willing TO op""'ntmtni»H82-3773,
Employment Services Diploma,
Roloeolo lnlfclo VII- D1
,....
llcCarlhll' And Willing TO W&lt;ork Four bldooom, 2 112 both, rive'
u - owo. AID!'~'- ~- Ylow In Pont•~, 568,000; 614•
- - - . ·-..-·~- 112-am
-·
11 Help Wanted
=:.lo~n~'::.m
-~w~~\"
·
•
•· -n Hou,.. Logrondo Blvd, Gr10n
'AVON' ALL AREAII Shore you• I ,81
:;,r:.:111
=·:.,....,,..-,,-.,..-~-=- School, 3 BR, IIIII Rm, Choory
time wllh ... You'l tho w...od: Ellll• - . p.,. Cob, 1 112 Bolh, Goroao, ~
company. 1-800-W2-&amp;35e.
oon F.or A Well Ellobllohod polntmont .•.114-441-4827.
AVON I All .Arooo I Slllrloy Bulin 110• AI! AQu,... C... Millo Millo atllo: nlea 4
Spooro, 304-471-1428.
- I , _ , . Rl..,me To: CLA bodi'OCIIIIO I both, unllnlohod
~~~v!!!'! ~,!:"-,
u....-, polio, IIOich,
=;;::".':.!'::\~.i,~~ :=it:~• ~ -~ CI.IAio lie. OH ~~~·A::~ ~~4ft~~
Ill lito- do.._. '""
I'Jit.3431. '
mldtlloly "" 1111 b
- . ~ 18 Wanted to Do
Nl··"boclroom wHhtllbo
u
oomo. Phone: 12HtN ar ID- cartlllwiDo
l'flvll~ .. Will monld, on Rldg1 Avon111, Rio
••41.
o "',...In v- Homo, 0 ron o, 1 block. from co-uo,
15 y..,. E;;,;:..noo, Excollonl 11._111z.3G33.
···r
Dollr:r;: SI00-12110 Por lily Rl,,IWJI.tcnt.
1
E&amp;A TREE SERVICE. l!:l, 32 . MobiiB Homes
n ..., 11!-771-55011 Ext.K232, T~. Troo - . . ,
for Sale
BA.II.-&amp;P.'I!' CST.
To -.a, ' t
-7111TA••4f&gt;.,IIL
'73
F - Polk, 2 bod...,.,
Dlrootc.- of Educlllon to pion, 1:::,:._..;7-,~~=-::~::-goodcondlllon,614-1112.a8111.
cllroc~ and coordlllllo Ill..,.. _ , ~~-- Pol~
':;
..
IIAIOD -rom orovkllna Ealy c:o..-tcol, -clonlllf, - : $8,110,114-441.0175, FrH'Iei·Up

=.,.,.:'., 4id..,_,

..=...:l

22

1tJ

""""

.._..
--•· •-tn
- -:•-.-oy

-•

-1

~ 'Att"li!:r"\.~~-~:

:::::='"!..:.lvii~H~

lnl_,.lori,
Scl:ccl Age Po0.8chool',
programe lftdl;l~t4;4~41;;111~51~;j;jj;;;jji:;;;;
tor
1m Uberty 'MdD 3

JOII'or lc011:=-"I-::J04.111.:--'--'J.~1l5c.:J:...,..-,,.--

"*e..,.

.;.p:;..;;c.':::'{.;;

om... .

Om~t~~Po'l blole..Ji~don,
houl
to lho mill jUII

Bed~

Talol Eleotrlo, Undwplnnlngl
llurA SH A-lolt, lllduold
~~d Collo Only. l14-44f.

_.. .. 11oy ca.. Cllllor 1
1-WIIIDIHIICOnJo.-, 1185SkyllneJolrllloblloHomol
~~.lly~~ ~~:SO ~~~.II~ OEn Rented l.ol, 3 Bocii'OOIIIo, AI

•-·.

;;-eon:,
p;;'y:: e~~~id0:: ~;rtoN,:Iw :.3=: ~1m:•
~ ~-" ·~
~· ~- _ -· ••
111

:;--~.. '::."!'-"'.!::."· p-- ·-··~11-11 .

,,
•~•
clollllroAgo 1,.._

1224.
I,.-..,..,-,-..,.,..-.,.-..,..=,..,...
~lltM"o~? Wll
81 Do

c;:.,..i!ford a;;;:.
e.-'"""'~ Q
Woft. Rnunallll, AefiNf 1,

45771-!0E.

1,.._7131.

l~iftiij~iiii_;i_ii\ii;:-;f!~~

DISPLAY MODE\:; IIOUin'AIN
STATE H011~~1 .~1 . PLEASANT,
WY, 304-&amp;71-MW.

e.

·

1---------

o.y · c:a.n.r.,,

:::.'r."'""' Clllllpa~~e.

No

Op

44r 1

OIIIC. VALLEY PUIUI- CO.
ro 1 "'""""" IIIII you do . .h,..,... you=k-..,

"=':.__.':

=-~

tllo~

RENT·~
~""""'
._._...," (NO
. ·-·'

120.' SM-t4WOII3•

Truc:ra: full ·•· I' •~
r,
OUTSilE
. FUANISHI-: 11+
•
W""'llhl lion T - W/4 Chllro; lloclol 21 111r1
Fon Bock 11coato1ng Choir $18; ~-~~u."'ntc!•

Blddl~:notnllllllel ..., FUll
lH Si Quoon 1141 Bel; 4
Drowor
.....; car ilad'o,
ltiM llocl'e, - · 10c1o. Pill
Une 01 •- •t II&amp; II - etol1fng AIt20'.GO': IIKiwllenr

noo.

-e. ' -;
.;.r:;..,C

f4.112-

WHAT DO
YOU CALL A
"LOT"??

''*""

Fann Equipment
Clwuollll, I'Gnl,lladgoo
tong. flO , Nil.
IN Ford Tnlatar, And Ptowe, 304-I7Wal8.

I~
AC na flU _, plonl"!! ~ Hoi-

=~=""~~

:!::!."'\...'!

=-:-

JOKER·!!

. "'

-

..,_ -.

ONE TO GIT
ONE II

•

PEANUTS .

NO, I NEVER
KNEW 61LLY

WI-!AT DO 'I'OU MEAN, DID I
USED TO COME HERE
WHEN I WAS '(OON6'?!
I'M
TI-IAT OLD!

IT'S A aEAUTIFUL
SI6~T. ISN'T IT'

no

l.olo lor hoUOM, lrolloro l - .
pore. CourAy .....,, raid I

'

THE KID!

I'IOW. fAYII'IG

'CITY .
BANK

3'.02r7964S8 ~
lrlnUST

•
'

f'AYII'IG MOif~
t&gt;IGlTS TtfAII .
AI'IY OTtftlf ..
BAI'Itc{
••
..... ·• . ' ., ...

··~··~·

•·-'... .

i

~

=......,~''\;.

.,,_rio-

•;I

book--

=

MWOIS.-

=:-

i
~

$

! LLLJlL_t-..~

-~~~•="' choriw,lflll-,
120, " " " 2111.

:nr

lloo.o, - - - + UlllPootdna. N o - Colt ...... ?

P.IU~UI OIM
One ludl 00111 QAMa.lbi,
Wl'lno. h • :111 ......_ fiOO
clopool, no.....-; 1M-

--ucly
4111.

IJ

'ifouw...,,

L• llollll Atilt,
oloctrlc. 1rom 12,110. -1111- .., •·
- . W'L
;:::2111;::.4.::..
Toni T-A •
~:nc::::
Nlea 1o1 10x121, Comp Conley,
fiL ~2~

,.--,,..,.-,.,_=--::,....,..- Ullt•·

AITBO·ORAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

•
1111. ......... . . . . - . -

.-=4r-c.r
-10M7f.a711•17N171.
~~,..

.

.... AI: lllnollollil ,,.._
2lU, ToP--lid.
0... N - ~

M

.., .......

30:IS.
Hull¥ · - - bike, 120: ......
....r- IIYio - ~· ........

-.a; 114-14NSU;

BAGiti'AfiiUS (Nov. ~- 21) Be very
selective today regarding wilh whom you
Grtplt, c/o this nawspapar, P.O. Box 4485, discuu your linancial allalrs . Oon'l l&amp;lk
New York, N. v: 10163. Be sure to stall abOutlacts or ligures thai could be dillOn·
youo zodiaC sign.
ed.
CANCER (June 21.July 21)' Plrlnarship CAPRICORN (Dtc. 2I.J1n. II) Taday in
arrangemen11 might not work out 100 well ho!&gt;B• of plealing another you migllt egree
lor you lodly, blca- 01 your dnlre 10 be 10 do somalhing without thinking lhrough
an independanllhl~kar. Tci'1uccead, you the conseltuancas. This decision could
muol blanel your lhoughll With ~r counter· have unl1vorable eHacts Iaior.
'
parto.
AQUARIUS (Jon. IO.Fib. II} Do~'l lei
LEO (July 23-Aug. 21} Your lnlulllve por, your lhougiiiB drift todoy 11 you aro wort&lt;ing
ctpllonl could be mllltlding lodly lnd Crt· on a task thai requires both mental and
ate cornplicatioito lor you II rou ltl them manuel dulorily. Leek ol 1Henllon could
lake
over your lOgie.
ruin lilt llldta110r.
,
VIRGO (Aug. 23 81pl22) Myou do oomo- PIICII(M. 10 lllroh ZO) A lrlend who
thing lor · - -y In hOPtl 01 gllllng .... dltlppOinlad you provldtllly mlglll do
back more In return, you might be dillp· 10 lglin tcctlly. Sooner'or Iaiii you're 111*19
pointed. Quid pro quo
apiiO be optrl· • 10 haWI Ill 1 diCIIIalo 1b0ut IIIII ell·
lite ,ur ahlld by mailing $1 .25 and alongseH·addi&amp;JSed, stamped onveiQpe to Aslro-

,.-ICI

Allllne Mkl

lulllllni. ......- foil W
bumer-......-. Av' 1111 ...
;~:'"'/: 11 IIIII Aid -

58

lin,

fruha
Vegetables

84

Electr1cal 6

Aetrlaii'Mion

KJ11o - I I luy . , _ -

: ":v.ttt.~..: ~ li!'~~ J.. ., ••~ :1o~~ ..... U£i
.
l:...~tn 3"'"2'"\w.v:."'S:::: rollrlot'-, I12,1G0. Dtrti'M! ~~Y-'-.IDOI-h ,.:,;.-"Pi:.ntotlllllvoH
m-~G~t.
. 1111-11100; ... nlngo104-171-12tl ~=
T• -11, · ~ IL
0.0, 111

-

lt\e1anama..

·:.=

Ill.

~ ! - ~ i7fi

llla\mm .

111-4411211

'Ill'·
~:-"n.,· ::.!..' :.:!m~ ~ :i~'

lo•ll J II~

101. ...

Row to Spot

,., 1111: Klr!Jr IINIIIIr can It

._U!'Int

TOTEU.. MeDITAilN&amp;
FRO\&lt;\ eNOOZlNet.

"''* ..

Cnft....,. Red Toal
-lo, Look llotlorn 1100;

,

MeDITATE FOR
A -WHILE!.

...

w-

~,:: ~~~ ~~:~~.:.:~.w=
~,:u~d~-~w,-l:
· '
l!'I20:r:OPhOne:
130 And
. ~- ~~·..n
- -...
"''" - ~

..-.e
4k011 .........
Compllfty , . ,....,.. -

60\AETIM~ ~HARD

-.·NOO

1 bodo=u - - for _,... ":!'!' '·"'-"-' ·.. ~~
,.,. 1n ...._ '" • ....4 - - ..... ...114 1112 2000. '
cond., t3100. 301 1111-3121.

= •-

. I Tl-IINK I'L.L..

1 1110

OIIToniiUNcl,f40,l'lorol
h 110 Old
I

n

,......

•

...I

P..l!tiat'

II ........ .

•

T

RBD

NEW~PLJP .

L

UIIII'PMIILWG

-

JBIIJB
Jill

.,

WSB

UIIIPLRC

'

..

(VIIIJ

WIIICIWIII. '

NX

TRCIVIJ

•

PLRLJWBI}
ZT~
IIIIAVBJ . .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Thla fleg under wHidt we IIIVO Ia tho emblem 01
our unity, - - · our thought and purpose 11 a nation." - Woodrow
wt-. ..
TIIAT DAILT

S©\\(}lA-l££~s·

PUULII
- - - - - - Edlltod

0

Rearrange

~y CLAT

lAIII

POLlAN

leHers of

four scrambled words
low to form four simplt wooQ•.,,~

L I Y·E A B

I

NUWGR

•

t

•

Bonds wilh 8 peroo~ about whom you
dlePIY cara wiH be llrlt ogllilt IICI in lite yUf live.
lhlld. The increued mutuiiiY ehartd LJIRA (lepl JS.Oot. 23) In onllr to plo·
' -ion will make lhiltn arwlabit reloltiln· Clll IIIOIIIIf llldlly you ~ loki • 1)011·
tion on 1 - r In whldt you dO not truly
lltip
GeMINI (lily 21 ......... 10) Trying 10 k8tiP · K'a - to be honllllhln txptdi·
your budgll in bllariCI oould be .,llduoul lioul.
,
lllk for you lodly, II may bl thl llltll ICORI'IO (Oat. 14-Nov. 23) H you lind n
exptnlll thai gal thlngl out of koltar. nac I ry 10 give iomlona Ylrblll II well
Gemini troal you,.." to a birthday gin. 11 - n inllruelion
be ctrtoln Whit
Send ~ your A1tro-G111Ph prodiCIIatll for you writt or uy ilveoy upllclt,

-y.

~

•'•

lglin-on-.glln ptl.
Alllll (IIINII 21-Aprllll) Thil mlgltt not
be Oftl of your - for IIIIJdng crli·

eel dlclalons, blclul4 you may dial In
ralionllizaliona lnstald Ollacll.
TAURUI (ApriiiHiay 10) Juicy lidiHII
you k,_ to 1111 gotq1 r111ar thin goepel
lhOullln't be *-'inllld 10 alhiiiiOIIIy.
11'1 blUer to 11y nothing thin tO rap11t
~ &amp;110111014.

•

•

Q. My pet peeve is the use of GOT,
as in •:I've got." Would you please
A. ·The spoken GOT does seem to
be out of control. As the past tense of
GET, lhe word may be used correctly in saying, "I got some money yesterday." Usually, though, "I've got" !or
"I've gotten"&gt; shOuld be avoided as a
slangy way of saying "I have ." I have,
however, been a language columnist
looig enough to know that "I've got"
won 't be disappearing overnight.

'

WOlD

PROFFER !"PRAH·Ier"l offers or
presents : "If you hate your job, then
proffer your resignation." Offer this
hint to anybodY. who's spelling this
verb: PROFFER ends with OFFER.

co'mment?

•••

=.:

Ask ll)OSt ezperts about their life
away from the bridge table and you
will problbly uncover some interest·
lng ll!lent. For example, II you had
quizzed Englishman Jeremy Flint, he
would have told you that he was a wizard at idenlifyinc perfumes. He also
used his dilic!!ming sense of smell in
wine-Wting competitions. And he had U •...-1~+­
an ezcellent nose at lhe bricJae table,
as exhibited by today's deal.
Aaalnst Flint's contract of five
hearts doubled, Welt led a ~~:I
East won ,..., tricks In the suit
switchinc to the spade kine. How
Flint continue?
Ill the baiancing posltiop , a
'L . JBI
overcall ·shows a good ·s l,x-card

By Jell'rey McQuain

can ......
:1!=.::.::=--:J:~:o. =~~= .Jr'~ :....iomo.::.:..--~":'=

-..:-a·

I+

3+
Pass
Dbl.

OUR LANGUAGE

-:r;

*•

Dbl.
5+
' Pass
Pass

·@)...a. . . . .APDINILU

==

=•·

..

can

=

Pass
4+
Pass
Pass

Eul

and about 15 bigb-card llf~~~Ji:~·;or~,"d~
was too strong for lhis ac~ttlon.
he doubled first and bid his .sult on
nezt' round.
t
Eait doubled five hearts In the faint
boJ1e that his par!Jier would read it as
asking for a lead of dummy's suit. Not
on lhe same waveltinglh, West led lhe
diamond eight, the middle card from a
low tripletoa. This is known as MUD
(middle-up-down) and is curiously
popular In Britain.
After winnlnR trick three wilh dum·
my's spade ace, Flint cashed lhe heart
ace and played a heart to his king,
dropping .West's .doubleton queen . Why
didn't be !like the finesse, apparently a
~tter percentace play?
'
Because lf East hall st,arted wilh
queen-lhlrd of hearts, be would bave
played a third. round of diamonds,
forcing dummy to ruff.
A good nose knows bow to avoid lhe
no-not.

.,_

FRANK AND ERNEST·

'!IIIII-.

='"·

Pass
••
S•
Pus

N.,_

dly

1 Pinch
8 Legahld org.
9 City In Ohio
10 Yorkthlre

He smelled out
the lay of the cards

"

-

J-

=-·-.. ._.

W.11

lng orgtn
5 Chrlltmu
plont
6- appleo

By Pbllllp Alder

can

=

So.11o

461::;:,... obbr.
50 Revell
51 Owing
53 Tool lor
hUiblnd
boring
15 &amp;len up
55 lil1r1 or
17 Frolckad
_
Venut
111 Sheer f1brtc
58 Conceive
21 l.alt mo.
· 61 ,Agnua 22 Unrulr child
62 SUr to ~ellon
, · 24 Over llltrt
64 C1t.ound
21 Tennlt player 65 .....,
'"Biorn66 lllutlnr - 2g Houalon. .
Bountr
f)ilytr '
67 Ukt (oulf.}
31 &amp;.tore Dec.
33 Groupo!
DOWN
Dhtulfttl
34 &amp;.twMnNB
I WhlltHouu
1ndND
lnlllolt
351~t
..
2 Convent
' 37 Excavotod
rllldent
311- lull
3 01 an lrltry
4D P.l1ywrlght
4 Floh'o breath12 Pllr
13 Potlry loot
1• Jacklt'l 2nd

Oj,eninctead: t 8

IT TAKES

1111-=E-1111
Corllfl.
lion, I
AC, Clll Alii 4
P.ll.
JZ
- - 8 - I , X L T ......
'"oond,1f14.1714111.

o••

r;ui

52 AN' A

73 Vane &amp; 4 WD'I

lone! T ~ llln, tllfR.
-xw,Dilltlomforlltloor-

1

. =
1
=·

W...,, lnformaUon_....on,._

1-......;.::;_;;rtu:::NOil;:;:i:ICE:inF,Hy;;:,......_ =~·,...

=

OR

--or

61

='

LAROE DtSCOUNT ON All

-nl

Cliil .. ilf

~S:.:E~CA~

UH choir &amp; wolklr, PlooM: ·171-tlll.
Uvlng room chair, brown-.

-

"'*'-

2
~·: ~011~~ ~~=~j;';··~~0I~~;.;30;;;jllln.i;;g;;j-;;;i~' ~In

'*"""'

VI'RAFURHITURE

104-4...- -

1tlllkyllnoHollyRidgoMx70,
oil lloo, 2 bodooomo, AIC,
ooverod porch, kitchen lololid,
llorogo blda. undorponnlng. e202. Col~ liOII
"'"' 11ft, 304-1'11-2•114.
.

l!k"'- IUiorlna, oM llollj : .
Do You wont' To A Few K-4. l'or _.. tm.mrAion
- . EICh wllk And 35 Lots Acreage
1100 Or -??? Plo!k y,_ 0Jm I:Tul:,:.;-:
...:;.:.-=::ly=::T---:.:-,.-::011
-,oloo-:K:T1mo ·I A.ll, ·1 P.ll. Or I P.ll. •
Ft
•
• 71 Aero ~'"':/\ .._Ina,
4 4
Ill t.uood .VL :104~Willi To - I n lly Ollloo IW.,.Id to do~ olnnlng. :::::;::;::::;·~:-::~::-7"'7-:::::
Wllh Dlhor
P.,. L.olo: 114-256-- or llorocj: BuAdlna l.olo FG&lt; Stll OJ Will
eon~~~-., c.l ... At 114-441· 1111~4~1~41~1~4~
11~~~~~ Build TO SUit. FIMnclng Avail11114 l'or llore l-Ion, I;
•blo. 114 :111-0131.
Lo.l. 1M'
: : :7. - S114475-14114 FO. a ..... 112 ocrN, high lftd
1oor -11110 I A Poyl ,_.
dry, wood1d In Vllloao of 1111t1NOilllo- A I -· Col
cllit&gt;o!l,. _Drlold for lmmldillo
Totl "-. 1~ ....
ute, ...m.a.e.
m.
Lott a ..... tor home con, _ eaunw ...
rAouctlon 011 Rlybum Ad,
pwlw- Holplul, AIIPfY In ,..,. 21
Bulllllll
,.....,..... _....,._, _ ,
10ft.

u·-·-·····
..... -·
or

~:: ~.:.~;tilling, f..X:ko~":l:=~.!o~;:.o~ =m·~ .

chlklron 1n lltlgo eaunoy.
QuoUIIclllonl InclUde Degrll In lpoc:lll E d roiOIId lloldcit,ou~- _ . ,
· ~1101';::: «loll='="'.:!
11•·-lo• '--· ' - , . ~-~~
yoor ..,,-.
o1porlwooo
~llciJOnwltholo•-••
dloobllftloo ........d.
pot~
live •lilY ......... boF~~o. AI&gt;plicollon cloo -~: ·-Y. Juno
11._...,1-1.
lenda.~.ro~utllo..:
81
llolao
of
, MRIDD, Carlilon
, 1310
Cor1o1on 8t-. Srrocuoo. OH.

Goods
1

F3rm SuppliPS
&amp; Ltvestock

Merchandise

H::,.

31 Homo for Sale

Aequlrll..-ldao oto_.nl·
lng ond IIHI&lt;ImJjing -hodo;
1omlllorlty with roqUloltlon ona

.:3'

Household

prof-. _,.,,

lull ,,,. MICiici)Mr, _,......
aoo•••po-ry
ouctlon nnolco. UcOIIOid A"""""''- moy only "" obIH,Ohlo &amp; Will Ylrglnlo, :104- tolilld 1rom onc1 rotumld to
77W'IN.
your 1ooo1 Ohio· BWIIU of

9

n,

IOXIomllalllaluo or nallolllll
origin, 01 lltf1inlentlon IO
, _ 111'1 suCil
lmllallon 01 clsainlnallon.'

-Colle.Cloolng Dolo: .._

&amp; AuctiO n

,

:::.,v;:,lctl

POSITION OPEN: CUITODW..

-mont Al.,.lhrtP-.lon
Troot·
(8o..o Ctntll),

,

lhoF-IFalr""'••""'ACI
......._._.

211, 1813.

PubliC sal.

54 Mllcellaneoue

5I

Now Anlmol 'Cnlo For ~ Far 1111 Or~ It ·10Ft.
- p , Col-, Dooro Bilh
Wll
Endo, HNvy DUly NO, 114-211- CombiM Dodt!
k
h 12
,...
1111.
• Fl. Fill Stoll Dump ~' 1143814471, I .. A.M., 5 ·7 P.M.
........ ...Yon, 12.0011
4~ Mobile Homes
::.,011
. : : , . , : ~~~d.t'= Hydroultc oU 114 •10 b\lekll "' 10 . Or
Dllor, .COndltonl
11W4Wia.
· ·.
for Rent
f:.~~ ~
botoro1Dom.
toa. Skllnl Equl-.
==--'7,:.7."':='::"'::---:--:-:cl Handeroon, WV. 304-47&amp;-11!21.
'121170 2 bll*oom mobllo honio, Auction Or 4 llllol OUt 141. Nloo Whlo Rlbbh Fur , . _
74 Motorcycles 1
127!/mo.
· pi,.
ClponiA.ll. ToiP.II.IIon..... Excello .. Conilllan ~ llza 8mo11 lnt..... lonol blond br,.h hogo,
=
.....
bolo - · ...
....... nNr 'N YIIIIIIIIIIIIGYX Alden,;;-•••
""
..ITT 0.. dryer, ~ otovo ~ ..., ~~··-~~. •
,_. llrto
43ol21l
lpm.
oU ......,. OOiM/. :J04..I1I. ::
-;:lea~Do::--;oloa;;-;;:.
0::_.'7.~
"d:-::,-::
.:-:
....
1 ~nd,
114-1
•
""'""· 114- n a
011
1 4 4 "'"' 1 _,..r.
.:::L
'l7 ....,_,2 bldlooin turnllhed .-bile
-2't"XX'I•.-.,304-171-Z211.
""""!"'_,._ ww t• :n~••
homo, 304.a7M112.
QOOO USED APPLIAHCE8 PI
olrollol: ~ John Dooro 440 dozar, wit-, - - boll - .
1141
.....
-~
_
IIY
pon,
,
,
Dolroft
d
onglno,
141011,
~-~-~~G~~~~~
2 II droom llol&gt;llo Homo In Rio "'
-r--. 10 1.,.. llrl, Wtlklr, oor - ·
bod, fi4.112·1SII3.
Orondo, 1225 Por IICiftlh PI,. ro-.
Appll-111 owing, - n g lablt, 1110 D p 1,114 241 0012
Vlno-11-,~ 1,.._7311, 1- bllck -:~ oiillqul lumftlft,
~-...
304-&amp;711-4
2 • • ~ lllloll'll QIIO, clly
:::-':-7:....;::=....,----,,.,......
u. lumli..... 1n -w 11oo1r1o 11ongo OlblnrA,
Partoblo
- - IIIICIIIno 63
Livestock
111 111 :11111. ,....,
Gald,IIW41111111
drowori,'"-._ di'CIII .;;,;;_ _,;;;;..:.;;;,;;;;,;;.;,,;,:_..,..._
:,::;==.:..::=.;;:.:;.:,....,,.._,,, u:-'S FURNITURE
IN.!J. wor11 euo1oco, 120, 1144G- 11 Hollllln- will Nil July 1.
2 bod11111111, unturnlohod 12 •
·•30n """"" 100m.
304-&amp;7wm
·
10,112 lillie put H.II.C., ~ ~~- . lumlohlnao.
&amp; reloronoe __
ld. 1,.._ .,_,., MOilll, N, 114-441- Ouortconnlng !low, 12/cloz., 114- 2 Y11r Old Arabian 81ud 8oml ' 18t0 -It CRIOR l!ondo, 1 - .
43111 or 304.e7fl.tl30.
· 0322, a mlloo out luloYIIII Ad. 155-4131.
,
/Fiuon lllno And Toll. Aoody :To lonl C-Ion, Bought ' FrMiDIU_,. ,
Brook,
$150
IM-:IIIIMIIII Fol&gt;rul~ ~:z ti,IIO Or 2 lA unlumlohad. No polo. 1181
le1rol.lwn llowor ~!L Hoovlor EvonlOltr, .
n70.
'
mo. . Wotw lnoludod. 1100 lloUohon CorDill, At. 7 N. 114- - . , . Cloonor "''h AIdopoon. 111 44• :1117.
441-'1'444.:12 Corpol $10, All tllchmonto, 1130 Phone 11+- :lyr. old boy. Oily, ar- ....._ 210 Yomaho 111~ blk.!!t good
VInyl In
k14.48.
8511 Alk For llorll. ·
INdo well. 1500. 304 4511111, .• 1400. 304.e7fl.21n. ·
1
bod";'" •...::;.: ~ Niver Ulld bu..,. pOolloblo; Stmfworo- au.n liz• mnngo
::l:ii.~o
"""" 1~fl s.s. wollrbod, ao; 114-1112- Wale-. Lib - . WhHo 0111 7pm.
· 75 Bo•s &amp; Motora
21i1.
Wllh - - &amp; HNIIIoanl, •-·-·
~~
~rSale
Nice --•~ homo toto for tio
- · · 010, -· ••• ·
_,..
·Olk Fumlture: T.- I ::;~::-::-:-:~·=-_;_'11150._:,:.;~--:-1 ~~m':f.
1exao-.;:;:;;:. blllwNn .u.'::, 1 11 ~- ·leupo'ght Mh Trollor,
P.......,, $8-.,1f4.112./l117. Cholro, HUIChoo, CUrved OliN hi of 4 aluminum ... - .
11171, &amp; WN1 1t17t
ChiM ~ 80111 CU.. fb 1 lug Chevr plck.up.. $70.
llolor, 81 HP, 114 1tl 1111.
Sn!oU 11a1111o 1n eoun~~r; Elo. Atvw Volley 0111 ,_!"". I14-H2·20I3.
Noor N.O.H.S. PorlloiiY Fur- !1113 C1ooraN Crill&lt; Rood.~ ::;-:-7.;-~i:-:::--=-:~1H4 a.- a· CollinWolor, Truh Polo), S200, lloooflo, ,Ofilo Phone: 1,..._ lei ott.._ Homlllon Colloollon
Wllh Trollo!r 11111 Clwlo Croft ,..
.. _ . . ,
Cll.
PtitH,
Aullll
Amorloo
Enolne.._~o HP, _..., Covw,
Storelfonta. $'100. 304~
lwTm l'llllorm Many Clha ,...
Very Nlea: 2 llldiOOiftl, UnlurPICKENIFUANITUAE
llw . . d f!oglll ad · - 2 -1orolo, II.~Q 1\4 Uti 01111
nlohad, Coble, Air, OVortooklng
Nno1JHd
ticlo-l&gt;r- ,.,._"'• port· Youna c-o c.. lr
Dlyo~rllllngl
114.....And Wookontlo.
Or · Ohio River. In Konougo, -hlng. 112 mi. oblo d-.otoar, u~ plono, lido lrodlol.t.. - Olfor, "'- IU3
~!!!'.,"!-llolblllelo•.-11 Apeql!i ~ ~l"='-4!\,dM:li Pteioont, WV, 111m111
0/IL
,..: 114 141
loovo 441-1112.
.
11M 11 Ft. ..... ..............
, florno orll, ~ ;-=:-:;:-:=:.:.'r=-:;-:=,,...,.-...,.._,~
•
1102.
Wllh ,ll Hp Joh_, -lloiar
~.Is.
NoW,uood,,.,; si..ln $;1., ililr Qlillliii; Troctor :!~~~~~,':"\~:: And Troller IIIO,If4.448.4114.
Whlrlpoolllolillo H01110 Control, •II&lt;!-· Ho&lt;o~ tumllltlo~GL FICiory lulft Alklng Ill, Or.
AC, llo
:141000 BTU,- 2 31• Ton 1371, IIOoon, WY. -~
Boll Dllor, 114 141 8021 Or 114- -~lion.::::,:::;:;;:;:==·:...--....
Ill
11433.
441-71U.
11111HP-Jolonooioco
Flbo!lll10
llator
&amp; 1..,;
IWAIN
64 ' Hay • Grain
Good
Condition,
ti,IOO,Apart · t
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. a 1Win Bad lor 8Drlngo I llat44
men
Olive St., OotUpollo.- a~ ,,_NO: Poroh GlkiW-. 114- 0aoc1 ~~- Hor. -.u, 1n 1021.
for Rent
tumlon, _.,., • 44M581.
Flold, 11.00 Por -..~ _ , . 21 Ft. Ctnlpor, Good Condition,
Work-~1710.
I1,1G0, 11171 1 , _ IINM Hitch
1 Bedroom, Quill • Prlw111, Air
!:,!:"~";solo,a:W.-:'~rpo Round - Ono- 1
1800,
a. -IIIII.
·~ 114,
Conollianlna $250/llo. ,,.._ UMd C:~ch Kitchen And
Cloww Hoy flrll c..tlng, l14- llclwoll, OH Br
01165, 304-a'B-1150.
114 4':'4':l Oaod Condl- Ugly clock ar '"'-? -ore 441-7711:
PontoonNo
1mllolor,
'""'""ti,IOO.
24 Ft. With
docke &amp; wllhoul
1o
Uke
1' Room Eft ~Aportmllll WI.,_ I ~Ia' 1110. Stovo I WOOd
Trollor,
114new concltlon
.......
441.f811.
For Ro,. S155111a.,
~. ~~~
bl
EnF
Transportation
Utllllloo Pold Exoopt E*;:~:t 304 ~;_
·for ol.
nJ wHh
Deck Coro.
!It i e r - Required, 1
A
•
Rtllblo
Ha.prdmonPI
HomoPII C....
76 Auto Parts &amp;
101• . 2 8 r - · . •
7130. ·
.53
Antiques
Accesaorles
2bd rm. 1,_,
.... tat •1 -lrl c, opWlddln•• Gown Wllh llolchtrz 71 AutOI for sale
24
pllanc:oo lumlo~, loundry Bur or HI. R.-111 Anllq..., VIII Sill 1-10, 11121. 1148 - Trontml•lono, liNd &amp;
room locllhloo cioN lo ochoOI 1124 E. lloln 8tNol, on At. 12." 1221.
Dol\ I .Cyllncfor, rebuilt, oiiiYpoo, otortlrict 11 IH:
In ICNin. AD!III.Oilono ovolloblo Pomeroy. Ho&lt;oro: M.T.W. 10:w Whl- Wuho~_pryor, ·
•I
at18.
ownor 114-2411-5177, l~
01: VIIIIIIO 'Ort~n Allll. Ml or o.m. IO t:OO ~lunclly 1:00 Concl-lon, Both ,..,; hQO, II+- 1fN :-.:: for porto ar =Zitl:.;.::3.:-;----c::-:. -,--.,.=,-01111144112·3711. EOH.
lo 1:00 p.m. I - aa.
••• •m.
w1U Nlft, Oo_od It!! ........,. - - ;
~
0110. ~- • · - -l'or Bolo: rol bor lor LWI I'Gnl
BEAUTFUL APARTMENTS AT 54 Mlacellaneoua
WHifE'811ETAL DETECTORS
or CIIIYY plokup, 135. ~U ·ESBUTD!-ETES~SJ~•~onCKSOIIpt•·
Ron Allloonl 1210 11ooonc1 1111 Ford Von. A- OoOct, -'458;;.;~..;1515=-SZ'.:-::--::--.-.,-~·
-Merchandise
.......... 0111 potto, Ohio, '"' ....., Good liDO; 1m-"" "
lrom
/mo. Wolk tio ....., I
441-1331.
--·~
Four 11&amp;7 P.,..loc Formulo
moviN. Coll614 4412511. EOH. :11,000 8TU Air car..
_.-,
1
-.
· · - ~.'"lnolnu m, w-..
trone!!IGi 1.~
dll'-r, 1211L1 IJIId 2 112 T• 55
-··
........, Floot Holzor Apootllllrll:lh Flrol Control Air cooMIIIol., 1110,
Building
11111 Grond Pl'bl, good Ch0vollo,l200; f14.1112.4177.
And Codor - 81,
111 Ull301
Supplltl
- . . . , 1100; ooft biwn NIW~ - . orlo ton '""*
=~~l"t':;'l,;,.' Ro.U.:~, Air -~~~-. ""'-or
110"':""... eii'i ~ W
·rocllloro, 111111,
llonio On 3011. "' 11._, Uke I:IG: old Bloclo, brlok, wl,. IM'IIa 30:11~ ouOJtlngo, .a.; Ole. D AA":::flllov, WY.Hoo·11hold 1n0omo. API&gt;IIonooO, -Ironing looonf, iii!; 114- - . lint•, oto. CloUdO Win- .::.37Nna-::-::=:.:ar;,;1;_;;::.m.t:IH.=.::;::::.._
On-Silo Lluoiclry, AIC. 112-21141.
·
~~ llrlftdo, 01! can l14- ;;; ,.,_ -bu ~ ~ Sol at running llollrdo, IIIIo '!"'o
Oni•"",.JunoPoyoOa~ltclr:ri UtRIIHy 1on Clolhll 24 llonlho To
5&amp;
_... ':'..':!~ _ ,
:-t file Ford fllnOtr, PO: Wllor•·
w PriMo 12.10 ABogTota
p eteforsale
--.
'"r.!L.
~ I - .· - 111111,...
..- . ""; •~+Molllgoment,lnc.,
M711,
.
;
1
1
4
M
111.3lll-4m, 114-:tlM111, Equol log, 114 441 5110.
----· .
Houlling Qpportunlly. .
.
g...,. ond ~r 1110 Dido 1 . .11on1 UMd GII:IIIG
_ Trona_,_,_ ~~
lrond 0111oon · - - Goooo..lna.AII
......,..., ~
Fumll~ 2 ........ both, lpl,_ Clultor;"ii'.::ii
·~···,....
_
=- -··~
..,.., ~-••sa.
·~-·
4414GU, ClluroniHd Albullt I
ohowor. C'-o quill no poto. Pold 1100
loll: 110 JulloW
Colli
1112 A11C =\:O~mlil!"" 4Wh111Avolloblo.
Goal- •
C8mpera &amp;
79
- 0r
H.
ilfl4.47l.all0.
,
, . . Blook. -r..n. Arn, T·THo
Fuml1hod Apo~monl. 1br, llllll
301ilooV-I !lnglno, 11ila
Motor maa
t.'1. U'-,.,_
-a:.~n,CoeUr
.......... Only, 1tml T - . 20 Fl Lona. Fill
--.. po.-..,control-.
plllt,·
IlL
tra h Nil:;
Blooll&amp;
_ . ,~~~~~
L t ..,II 12.
114 Ul lorlouio
014L
1
114
-· rolww
Ut G:l3t .....,
a...,. cr111 WI 1 Whlo, " 00 a-.
loll Caralntd, 11,000, 1~
1Br,
-304.a7Wtlll.
4110.
N17.
t
UtiiiiiN Pold, Sloaro lOll, 1'01 a..,.,_ - : 5 II&gt; Clllln !!ttill- Nil:; Cookw ......... - - - · m t
Plltmlno Pop-U~ Conopor,
llowth,
,_• ....,,_ Ill u 144111 S2tt;
Dlfvo 'llllor,_Reg
·~ ~L b- ~
Aflw71t_....--.
12 ,... • 1311;_
lncn lelo
Cui PujplooFor-,1~ ,_..
...,. I 11, 11112 Dol.. 81............,7S41.
!lot 11.21t. N«;St. llomonl,-011-, ..,IOD 114411-1107.
F•rnlohod Ell: 7 112 Nil~ 011- Silo: 1\011. -A1Wom1ldortl lllnloturo Plnohot, Jlug, CoeUr 1N4 T - 4 CIRI"":ou_l
Se1 VICCS
:r.o~ 1111, UIRIIoo Jill, 11+ l Thonioo, 112 Coull - . 011'
l'oldnaOOL...!,~' ~ .._ f1oiN1. ......
u•w7P.II.
llpollo.
SOWlt-8o7~--0 r - 0f1xr; 114furnlohod Elllo~ , l1ll Complolo . ltlll 11p bod- - . . . , . _ '-lo S714141,0r1141111117.
Utllllloo ~ s,"':'"
h, · beord, ..., 114o lpodo,- Ollor.l14 Ul 4001 1w ....._ 011,... -~ 81
Home
-.....II.Go
114 Ul
dog:l!oegto~;::outoa..otgood robbll 1727.....-,;;111101 . ~••
lmproveme!'ta
Allor7P.
w-~ ~~~
••
~-1210.....
1~11111,!~·-=rod,IUfll4good,-·
--living.
bOJI.
Condlllon,1144....1D. ~oOG~ToA-IIotno:
-· "''
room
~-1 IIIII
l4 2
Vllllao
11oftor opo lftd
.......a. Croft- IIIII
Ill Collie
In r ,,.,..,.. ,...,. ICIINd~...
....
""""' "*- .•
Old, t1WilL
Two b1*oom - , Autlond,
lftd - - ,..
qaul..d., .n o-.. 11+1112--\

... -- -"""t..:.::

-, - - =

r.1ercilandise

~=n::.:=~-· OonltnArchw.r·..121.oo

~·

FrllloJ - . It/bog, 3
north
.
. _ o1 Chlltw,

- . -tnol·

Houle l'or Rent: Fumlohod, 1
-L.acal,.;;;jlllllil.
~ng R11out•~J:,200-A 112 lllloo 0U1 D1 Alo Gronclt,
Ult- , 1
, Coli (114} 24112;17.
1153•
Nice 2 lllclroom Far
WOLFTANNIHO 8ED8
Rent, llllloo Out 218u\root-"
c-..-11~ Homo Unb, - • Dopoott Req , 11+
lrom
IIH.OO, l.tmpoo, l.ollono, 2III-42SI.
AcCIIIcriM,monl:hlypey.,..,...
._ 11 "l.oo, cllll. .! FREE Thr11 bedroom - , 2 eor
NEW Color Colo'"" 1 - 412
....... 121&amp;'mo, 1141121l'il3.
·
-..
11117.
Two bodroom for ar

cllllr, bed, """"""' ~I loll Avonl 11,.. u.. In
,,_, k - woroJ._ ~~ ldlnc, OoH!.oj&gt;llo Clly Umh
OJ - h
- . _ 1-. - - · cllalii 01 Ill 311 Oiollo Counly. Still
IIW,- - · .......... &amp;
AUmllod nmo,·t-IOC).

.._,_

~U::~~r9r~Soulh

• ... ~

,..._
Opportunity

Nal To Lito To llltke El(lra

.......

+&amp;3

.KJIOts•
+10 7 2
+K4

r.-------,-=======1
;;.,oc;:;;~::.:!::"=.!'=•·::;.::.IOWIZ-M13.==--··
7 R - • . . . "'. Country,
21
Bull-

,..,..h, __

2llmllrJiftl-.-oiN
111 stroll &amp; - . . .

•· ..

tp

2 Bid.- lloueo FG&lt; Rent In
Oolllpollo, Ronl: m5/llo., 1235
0..-11, A"'- R"''UU..d,
114-4W-7130.
2-3 b dWn .... Pomeroy,
"No wonder we couldn't sink her.
She's got a load of cork on board ."

.?

EAST
+KQJ74
72
+AKH•

852 .

47 Wanted to Rent

41 HOUIMI$ for Rent

..a.,.

• ... 6

AND MEEK.

44 VIPOft
46 Soclol lllltfll

Ofl

.. . .

TUJtoo.
-Latve

""""'•til

noblem.,

tetlol (81* .}

4 Alltc:., lind
I Confor • title

ALDER

triM

- Betti
42 F.--h

1 Genetic .....

PHILLIP

....
1111.
_.
&amp;111,11100
- - -...
·"
"
"!II"'J" "114'.....
Flml.
......
•.n.o.
N ~ IIMIJX.
...nt... l
I odo.

111111 le -Wllfiln 11 UU. 11/L
From IJeilloallo, can 114-441· lloblle " - ""' For - .
me. ~.~a.. u-.. And Phone Wllor &amp;......, Fum-. 114IIJ-111111.
-

••

ACIIOSS

1tll -111.2\
"""' .......
. _.,1ft!
trlaUr, &amp;WI&amp;ui*:
U

46 Space for Rent

Wl,.ld: ZO Or II.,. D1
Lind.Have Raid Frontoge
And Be lloelly RoiUng Or Flit.

11'111, ....

;,;:;.
iiOOol010, -h i ;,
"l,bdll
114•nn_

""-""' ''

Sentlnei-Page-9

NEA Cr-ossword Puzzle

.

,__

"T"E

The

•

OOP

,. , -=. ·".......
'

Rooma

llolgo

36

June 15, 1993

Tuesday, June15,-1993

A PRINT NUMIIERED LETTERS I' r
~ IN THESE SQUARES
_I j

6

~:c:~~. lETTERS TO

11

I

rI

15

I'

I

fiT

IIII II II

SCRAM·lETS ANSWERS
,.,,
Caught • Rainy • Hobby · Pledge · BIGGER
"Fifty dollars tor a small bag of groceries is outrageousr the man bellowed to the cashier. Smiling the
:cashie' asked sweetly. ·oo you wantthem in a BIGGER
bag?" , •

�Pomeroy-Middlepcirt, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Reds
defeat
Giants

Pick 3:
039
Pick 4:
7555
Buckeye 5:
7-24-25-32-33

Low tonlabt In 60s. Cltu.
Thlll'lKiay, sunny, hlah·ln 901.

Page4

•
Yol44,NO.M
lllultl............

THE CLASSICS - The Classics provided
musical entertainment at the Meigs County
Museum in Pomeroy on Sunday afternoon. Sev-

·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 16, 1993

•

eral displays and demonstrations were featured
at the museum which observed its annual cele·
bration of Heritage Weekend.

Conferees await state
budget instructions

· People in the. news-··- - -

M!~NEAP!)us (AP) .. week rhat he wants to be referred to
What s m a name? A ~t of publiCI· ~irh rhe symbol that combines the .
ty fo.r the former P~mce, whose s1gns for male and female. It's also
deciSion to change h1s nan:te to an . the ti tle of his latest album. But
~npronounceable S¥J!100.1 IS keep- there 's no spoken word for the
mg everyone .guessm~ about what symbol and the former Prince, born
the pop s~ will call hunself.
Prince Rogers Nelson, gave no clue
That S•gn Guy, HeShe, Purple how to pronounce it
prima donna and Andy- short for
The newspaper ~eported MonAn~ogynous- are among sug- day that a few caUers said they'd
gesuons made by more than 400 go along with whatever Paisley
pe?ple who have called t~e Star 'Park, the Minneapolis-born popTnbune newspa~r, w.hJCh mv1ted star's record studio, deeided.
readers to nam.e that Prince.
But most caners were cynical
~rock smger announced last
"Prince's new moniker can'be

OSCAR MAYER

SHOP.-ERS VALUE

JERUSALEM (AP) - The
times they are a cbangin' for Bob
Dylan. The rock legend apparently
had to wait in line u!'On arrival in
·Israel on Monday, JUSt like any
other tourist.
•
Dylan's passpon was handed to
the head passport officer at ,Ben
Gurion Airport. Airport officials
said the officer refused to process it

.

99 C
c

1/2
..GAL.

on

...
~

•
·

.
-. . .
~d told the smger to Wllll'ln hne
l~.every~y else. . .
.
There s no ~vo~USJ!I w1th us:
He shoul~, stand 111 hne like everyone e!se; the officer was quoted
as SliYID$· • ,.•
. The pubhcuy-shy Dylan, who

was met ·on tlie tannac wirh a special car that brought blm to ihe terminal, took his place in line, the ·
officials said.
.
Dylan could not be reached for
comment an&lt;J his publicity. agent in
Israel said she knew nothing of the

49

GATORADE

c

RIVER SWEEP SATURDAY· The fillh
annual Oblo Rlvtr Sweep will take piJ!(e lip and
down tbe Oblo Rinr Saturday. Above, Paul
Saucleree, Huntington, W.Va., pitched in to help

oz.

DURKEE

·. MIKE·SELLS

·

II OZ.

79

4

GROUND BE·EF

•

(With Triple Vendor Cow~~ttn .At Left)
1001 FOR FIVE MANUFACIUIER'S
COUPONS of SOC OR LESS VALUE

•

298 SECOND SIIEET
WI IISIIVE Ill

IIIIi TO
•

..

...._.._Local brief·-Three injured in wreck

GOOD WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16
ONLY.

ALL
AVAILABLE WHILE
SUPPLIES LAST.
NO RAINCHECIS.

who make, design and r.. artificial
eyes.
Rep. William Thompson, RDelphos, the sponsor, said while
Ohio has only about 20 ocularists,
the number of Ohioans who need
or want their services has reached
aboUt 2,000 a year and the profession is growing.
.
.
His bill requires the Optical Dis-· ·
pensers Board to issue licenses
under prescribed national standards. It now goes to the Senate.
In other business, Voinovic:h
signed into law a bill prohibiting
corporal punishment in schools
except in districts rhat adopt pollcies to pennitit by Sept I, f994.
Voinovich did not comment on
the proposal, which finally passed
the Legislature as a compromise
after opponents of corporal punishment had fought for years to enact
an outright ban.
·
. . Although it sets a deadline for
$Chool districts to adopt policies on
paddling, they could review and
change them after SepL 1, 1998.

.

-

1

r.::.on.

. TRIPLE COUPONS

c

d

Ion'

2 LITER

4

July 1 deadline.
· "We think the decision-making
process will be completed this
week," said Aronoff, who had eartier targeted June 18 as the date for
final passage. He said he now
hopes for action sometime next
week.
Meanwhile, in floor session
Tqesday, the Senate approved a
l!andful of housekeeping bills,
including one requiring cosmetolopsts to take eight hours of continumg education to renew their Iicenses.
Sen. Richard Sc:hafrath, RLoudonville, won 26-6 approval
after telling colleagues that the biU
is needed for safety.
He said hairdressers and others
use chemicals that can be dang'erous ·if used in combination with
each other must keep up to date on
such pitfalls, as well as other
changes in their field.
Schafrath's bill ~as sent to the
·House, which had JUSt appf&lt;1ved
90-3 a bill to license ocular1sts,

Former Texas Gov. John Connally dead at 76

RC COLA or DIET RITE

CHEESE PUFFS

. other state deparUnents, local' gov- may tee of(~ 8.30 AM lll!d,con- .. . - ,_.... • ·r .th "H 1pp1
emments and public-private orga- tinue rhroughout the day.
·
.-.~~.ntatton o , e·
-a ness
nizations.
·
The dinner meeting wiD be pre- Is Helpmg Others awar and a
Prior to his appointment as ceded br a hoSpitality hour which talk by Carl Dahlberg on n.otary
Director of Development, Jakeway will begm at 5:30 p.m.
Foundation hig.hlighted the .Manserved the 9ity of Cleveland in sevG. Kenner Bush, chairman of day mght meeung of the Middleera! economic development capaci- the SEORC Highway Commiuee, port-Pomeroy Rotary. Club held at
ties. His most recent position was has called a meeting of the High- Heath Um~ Meth~t Church.
·that of Director of Development way Committee for 4:30p.m. prior
Gene Riggs, pres1dent, presentServices for the city 9f Sarasota, to the evening festivities.
ed the award to Lloyd Bl~lcwoo&lt;!,
Florida.
·
· Tickets for the dinner meeting club treasurer. Blackwood m addiEvans added that it was antici- may be purchased from local tion to his regular duties and at!Cnpated that Jakeway would talk Chambers of Commerce. Golf dance. at. the. club, was ~1ble
istration.
.
about current and future develop- reservations may be made by mail- ~thor brinlastgmg mnewtomemmbershibersp .1JJ( of
As director of the Ohio Depart- ment initiatives in southeasten ing the entry fee of $45 per golfer
e
seven
l!le . ·
ment of Development Jakeway is Ohio.
to the SEORC,PO Box 271, ·WeDD_ahlberg who hves. m. WeUston
responsible for promoting and
Golfers from throughout south- ston, Ohio. The entry application and IS a pas! Rotary di~t ~ver­
planning programs to assure eco- eastdn Ohio will compete in a Cal- should request a tee bme. The first nor, a longume execu~ve dir~tor
nomic growth; rhe creation of and . Joway Tournament for a variety of 80 entries will compete.
of the .sourheastem OhiO.Regional
retention of jobs ~nd ·to provide nn•es. Gary Keller will be the tour.
Council, and currently VICe pres•,..,.,
dent for Rio Grande Community
College
and serving on the board of
'
directors, emJ?hasized the club's
purpose, "ServiCe Above Self'.
He said that \he Foundation is
. HOUSTON (AP) - John Con- something Texas definitely needed
just one part of the world-wide
·
nally was a three-tenn governor, at rhat time."
Rotary organization which has
Coonally
was
in
his
first
tenn
as
former Cabinet member and a busi1,166,454 members in 26,201 clubs
ness tycoon who.made and lost a governor when a sniper f~red on
in 187 countries and geographical
fOI'I\IIIe- Tall, handsome and a war Kennedy's presidential motorcade
areas.
as it ·passed through downtown
The Foundation started in 1917,
hero, he cast a
shadow.
But to a certam genemtion of Dallas' Dealey Plaza on Nov. 22,
made its first ~rant in 1930, but
.
Americans, he was always rhe nian 1963.
with the depress1on and World War
He was struck ioo and the bullet
wounded in the gunfll'e that tiDed
II, not much happened, Dahlberg
President ·Kennedy that fall day .in . passed throug~ his body, leaving
said. In 1948 rhe Foundation raised
. him with scars on his back, chest,
over a million dollars and today
·~3.
Coanally died Tuesday of' pul- wrist and thigh.
ei~ht programs are funded worldmonary fibrosis. He was 76.
Reflecting 20 years after the
• w1de rhrough rhe program.
Dahlberg said that probably the
He and his close friend and assassination, Connally said, "It
one project which has achieved
POlitical
• rhe late Pmident m~ you realize in a fleeting sec·
• Lyndoo
were dominant ond you could be gone, so you realworldwide publicity is Polio Plus
forces in TeXIS POiiticl for decadel ly don't have any time to waste, to
whose goal is to eradicate polio
until the _,,. 1c)10s.
from rhe world.
fritter. away on petty things or
Above all else, friends say, the frivolities."
Other projects include scholar• 6-foot-2 Connally was a Texan,
ships for graduate study. Meigs
Cpnnally was governor from
from his silver mane down to the 1263 to 1968. In 1961 be served for
County had one of these when
Vicki Spencer Merryman recei..-1
· tip of his W111em boocs.
a few months as Kennedy's secrea scholarship to study in Germany.
"He personified wbtlt the people tary of the Navy but left to run for
, of TeXIS WIIU.ed their~ to governor. He was 'treaSury secre·
More re~ent rrojects have been
. loOk I~" said Ben B1111CS, Con- tary for Plaident Nixo~ from 1971
recognition o the need for clean
water in Honduras where money
. . naUy's former politicaJ protep llld toim.
.
his
popularity
waned.
was provided for equipment and
buaine11 partner. "He looked . After Johnson's dearh in 1973,
Connally's
1974
indicunent
by
a
training
and Rotarians of Honduras
Texas. He 10unded Ttxas. He Collllally switched from the DemoWatergate
grand
jury
further
erodprovided
the manpower.
exuded confidence. John was cratic lp the Repul?lican Party, and
ed his political power, thouah he
Other progri!IIS include marchwas acquitted of charges that he
ing gran11 and group 'study to pro~ted a $10,000 bribe from milk
mote better world understandmg.
prOducers to persuade Nixon to Dahlberg concluded his talk by
raise price SU111l011S.
saying !hat there are given and Ilk·
.RegiOIIN
sliJ'IImer 111eeting
IIlii 'JOif IOUIIIIIDBDt will be bald on
Thunday, July 8 81 the Fairgreens
Country Club in Jacklon County, it
was limounced by Robert L. (Bob)
Evans, president of the SEORC.
Evans also said rhat Donald E.
Jakeway, Director of the Ohio
Deplrlment of Development, will
speak following the golf tournament IIJd dinner. Jlkeway has been
, director of development since the .
beginning of the Voinovich adinin-

'

•

during the volunteer project two years ago.
Activities will take from Piltshurgb., Pa., to
Cairo, Ill. (AP file photo).

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
joint conference committee that has
worked on details of the $30.9 biliion state budget for a week apparently is ready for guidance from
Gov. George Voinovich and the
Legislature's top leaders.
Rep. Patrick Sweeney, D-Cleveland, used a basketball analogy
Tuesday when asked if decisions
had been made about education,
welfare, prisons and some other big
issues that divide the Senate and
House.
•'Those things will be decided
by the committee tl!lt plays above
the rim," said Swe!ney, meaning
that Voinovich, House Speaker
Vern Riffe and Senate President
Stanley Aronoff will slam-du~k rhe
budget once they compromJSC on
the issues.
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, said he
is awaiting the governor's call.
Aronoff, R·Cincinnati, said he
would meet today with his majority
clUICus in preparation for a meeting
Thursday wirh Voinovich.
The two-year budget faces a

Rotarians Iionor Blackwo{o d;
S!!!!lf!~!m.!~[~~~~f!.R~!!~f!"!.
Dahlberg
guest
speaker
Council

SEASON SAlT

99

.. .

'

DURKEE'S

1.25

·-

-..,.'Sit ''

•

PKG.

3 $1

901.

c

79

'
.,

MUSTARD.

STOKELY CATSUP

LITE SEASON .SALT
2.87
4
oz.

••

PLOCHMAN'S SPOONAILE

320Z•.

32or.

incident
:~
The singer, scheduled to per:
form three concerts during the triPt
was last in Ismel in 1987, when h'i
gave two concerts that critics caUe(
disappointing.

.c 1601.

.-

'

''
'•

FLAVORITE FROZ.EN PEAS,
CORN, MIXED VEGETABLES

.c

60Z.

ICE CREAM

•

game of croquet as ·part of Heritage Weekencr:
festivities at the Meip County Museum
Sun.":':
day.
·
·
',

CROQUET ANYONE? - This group of
authenticaUy dressed members of tbe Civil War
reenactment group, Company B, ga~ered for a

FLAVORIT·E YOG.URT.

WIENERS
1601. PIIG.

traced back to old Persian script.
Roughly translated it means gimmick," said Tom Shaughnessy of
Minnetonka.

2 s.ctlon. 14 P-voe 25 cenla
A Multimodlalnc: ....,opaptr

Tlu.e people Al1ained minor

injuries Tuesday afternoon when

their veltide llnlCk 1 tree in Cheater Township, the Gallia-Melgs
· Post of lbe su. Hlabway Pllrol ftliiOI1ed.
.
Driver Alay B. RldoYiaa, 16, 35749 Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy,
and w par mpn, Belnna M. Lisle, 15, S)'lloCUID, and Nicole, D.
Nelson; 14, 35!141 Flatwoodl Road, were trllllponed by private
vehicle to Velerlnl Mmllllrial Holpital where they were treated and
rekased.
Acooldin.lto the' aeeldent report, Rcdovian was 1011thbound on
New Hope ROid (foWIIIblp Road 91) when she lost control, went
off tile Wlllde of tile road and ~ a tree. The patrol listed
. . -1J11111 • the coalribulinl factor.
No c:iiatlalllwtn iiiUid. Tfie vdlicle sustained heavy, disabling
dlmap IDd- towed from the~.

I

·' '

I

I

••_,
•'

I

N--. ... and ldclrellesare printed u lhey

ldhw'l 110te1
.,... -. oftldll npar11.

PRESENTED PLAQUE • The "Happiness Is Helping 00 1 t'
award was rresented to Lloyd Blackwood, right, by Gene R11B,
president o the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club at the chili'i
Monday night meeting at Heath Church, Middleport.
ers in the world, and that Rotary
stands for giving to others. He also
pointed to the "power of one".
Guests were Anna Blackwood,
Betsy Parsons, Sara Owen, Rowena
Young, Betty Newell. Linda and
Jay Warner, Judy Riggs, Daisy
Blakeslee, ~ita Dahlberg, Anna
Rice, Tom Brigle, Betty Fultz,
Amy Perrio, and Ruby Vaughan.
Women of the church served the
dinner.
SPEAKER
Carl
Dahlberg talked oli the pro·
grams of the Rotary Foundation when be addressed those
attending SpoUies Niaht or the
Middleport-Pomeroy Club
held at Heath United
Methodist Church Monday

'

Meigs, Gallia to benefit from $500,000 .grant
Families employers day care
roviders .U.d communities in 28
~ppalachian co\mties, including
Meigs and GaUia will benefit from
a grant of mor~ than $500,000
awarded by the Ohio Department
of Human Servicea thil waet 10 the
Corporation for Ohio Appllachian
Development, with offices.located
in Athens.
·
Tbe pant Is one ot six awarded
to child day care resource and
referralqenciel in Ohio to prcMde
comprehenlivc child day care
Information, ODHS Director

Arnold R. Tompkins announced.
Resource and referral informalion is critical 10 fl!niliol who need.
life and reliablo child day care so
that parenu can bold jobs and stay
off public assistance programs,
Tompkins said. The need II ospecially felt in Ohio Appalachian
counties where unemployment
tends to be higher and there are
fewer dlly cart cenetliaiMD•ble.
The paoli will be uetiiO provide counaeliliJ IDd lnformali?n
for parenu on chooalna a quality
child cart amnpment that meetS

their needl, referrals to available ·
child cart providers, deveiO!ll!'~t
and ex~aon of ~.Y care ~~emcea,
and wntten educauonal mat.llrilll
on day care.
. ·
.
.
The grants will also be ~ 10
recruit new day care provulers,
help eltisting pro~ to Dllllqe
their centerS. and J)!Oytde
•t
uaiatance and trunmg on topics
relatled to chiidlf:n.
Employers willl!Cnefi~ hmlbe
grants as the qencMII ,wiD lie lillie
· to assess a company • day care
needl, design benefiti*OiiiiiiiO

*"""'

,J

=

·

IMit a eoniPMy'a needs, provide
referial ,services to a
COBI
'1 employee~. and help
design on sue care dlly

care centers.
.
Tho aa~cies will also use the
anat money 10 analyze the day
Clll u.b of 1 ~ commu!d_ll,lll!l inaelse publiC a'lolaeJ

·

Of thole Melli.
ODHS awarded the granu. in
complilllce wltb H.B. !SS. whicll
Mill in10 ~in J~. 1991.
Orant JeCllliellll wiD lie able ID
·~~~WintheirJIIO.IecUonluly l.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="349">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9661">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32521">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32520">
              <text>June 15, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6396">
      <name>wile</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
