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Page

DB Sunday llmes Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ott-Point Pleeeent, wv

June 2o,1993

New management team named to
;bead combined utility operations
to AEP Chairman E. Linn Draper his normal retirement date woulll
Jr., has been elected president and occur just nine months after the
chief operating off•cer of both companies begin implementing sigColumbus Southern Power and niflcant 'changes that will continue
Ohio Power. effective July I. through 1994. Thomas R. Mcc.rCharles A. Heller Jr., who has been frey, who has been president and
president and chief operating offi- chief operating officer of Columcer of Ohio Power, has elected bus Southern Power, has been
early retirement from the company elected a vice president of the AEP
on July I in view of the fact that Service Corporation. Executive
offices for the companies' combined operation will be located in
Columbus, although individual
departments within the companies
will be headquartered in either
Columbus or Canton.
Ele&lt;;ted as vice presidents of the
combined companies were
Lawrence R. Hoover, Harry D.
Post and Peter Splawnylc.
Hoover, who bas been vice president of Ohio Power, will continue
to be located in Canton, and will be
reSponsible for the oom bined com.
panies' marketing, rates, purchas·
mg and materials management, and
customer services departments. ·•
The combined companies' marketing department will be led by
Thomas J. Seeley, who has been
director of marketing and customer
services for Ohio Power. The purchasing and materials management
DISPLAYS EQUIPMENT - Owner Jason Savage stands next
department will be headed by
to some oftbe equipment used by TRI-State Mobile D. J.
.Byron K. Bertram, who has been
director of purchasing and materials management for Ohio Power.
Post, who has been vice presiGALLIPOLIS - A disc joclcey with the mobile &lt;llsc JOCkey scene dent of Columbus Southern Power,
service opened recently in the Gal- since the . early 1980s, head up a will continue to be located in
lipolis-Huntington-1\!hens area.
sulff of four disc joclceys and one Columbus, and will be responsible
for the companies' accounting,
. . Tri-State Mobile D.J. hit the photographer.
regional music scene in May. The.
Services provided include mas- general services and land managecompany serves a large weddmg ter of ceremonies, live entertain- ment departments.
. reception marlcet, as well as other ment, lighting and special effects,
Splawnyk, who has been execufunctions involving music, lighting, . wedding and party photography, tive assistant at Columbus Southand photographY..
and wedding reception coordina- ern, will be located in Columbus
and be responsible for transmission
Entrepreneurs Phillip and Jason tion.
and distribution (T&amp;D) and system
Savage, who have. been associated
operations deP.artments. The T&amp;D
department will be led by James G.
Haunty, T&amp;D director for Colum·
bus Southern, while system operations will be led by Nicholas M.
Champa, who has been head of
system operations at CSP. In addition, each of the comP.anies' five .
regional managers w1ll report to
Splawnyk.
Andrew T. Mulato, who has
been executive assistant at Ohio
Power, has been named executive
assistant for the combined companies. He will be located in Canton
and responsible for the companies'
power plants, as well as environmental engineering.
Also named executive assistant
for the combined cOmpanies is W.
Lee Kelvington, director of transmission and distribution for Ohio
Power, who has been serving with
the first two phases of the threephase restructuring project. In
accordance with plans which were
developed at the inception of the
restructuring project, Kelvington
will continue to serve on the pro·
ject until November, at which time
he plans to take early retirement;
DONATES TO FIRE DEPARTMENT- Lula Cox (righi) assiS·
As part of the restructuring protant manager or the Rax restaurant in Gallipolis, donates a check to ject, the two COJ'!lpanies' 10 operat·
Guyan Township Fire Department chief Ronnie Waugh. The proing divisions are being realigned
ceeds came from the restaurant's fiSh·tank promotion. (Times-Sen·
within five regions. The regional
tine! photo)
managers, who will report to
Splawnyk, are as follows!
David M. Fenstermaker, manager of Ohio Power's Steubenville
DiviSion, has been harned manager
2 out of every 3 years to avoid. per- of the new Columbus Region.
By LISA COLLINS
manent loss of quoui. The fust year Thomas R. Watkins, who has been
Gallia ASCS
GALLIPOLIS - Thursday, July for this requirement is 1994-with manager of the Columbus Division,
1 1993 is the final date for sales the 3 year base period being 1991- will join the AEP Service Corporaa~d leases effective for the 1993 193.
tion as a division manager in the
Tobacco trivia from Bill Pfeffer- · restructured Transmission and Dis·
cr&lt;ip year to be completed. Approximately 200 leases or sales nave Brown County tobacco farmer and tribution Services Department.
been initiated in the ASCS office tobacco ambassador:
F. Darryl KidweU, public affairs
Current tax on I pack of director for Ohio Power Company
which do not have all signatures.
Remember that ALL signatures cigarettes= $.58
and previously manager of Ohio
One pound of tobacco yields 25 Power's Ne.wark Division, has
must be obtained by the July ! date
to be effective for 1993. There is 'packs.
been .named manager of the SouthOne acre of 2000 lb. tobacco em Region, which will have head'
still time to post your name on the
board in the county ASCS office if yield=50,000 packs
quarters in Chillicothe.
Farmers gross income from one
you need to lease or sell your
Tim C. Mosher, manager of
acre+ $3,600
quota-just give us a call.
Ohio Power's ZanesviUe Division,
Total tax from one acre of has been named manager of the
The ASCS office is still contact·
ing producers to be sure they are tobacco= $29,000
Central Region, which will have
Contact Gallia ASCS at 446- headquarters in Zanesville.
aware of the consequences of the 2
out of 3 year rule mentioned in sev- 8686 with any questions concernRichard J. Pelger, manager of
eral prior news releases. Remem- ing the burley tobacco program.
Ohio Power's Tiffin Division, has
ber, the farm must have historv for
been named manager of the West·
em Region, which will have head·
quarters in Findlay.
William F. Sheffield, manager
of Ohio Power's Canton Division,
has been named manager of the
Eastern Region, which will have
ATHENS· Starting Juiy 1,1993, products like mushrooms, pine headquarters in Canton.
a $10 permit is needed before cones, rose hips and fruits like
Departments of the combined
plants can be collected from the blackberries.
companies reporting directly to
"In addition, rare plants may not Erikson are legal, human resources,
Wayne National Forest, according
to Forest Supervisor Frank Voytas. be collected from Nationa! Forest public aff~irs and governmental
This change in policy is due to lands," Voytas said. "Each office affairs.
the great increase m plant collect- has lest of rare and sensitive plants
ing in Ohio's National Forest," and permits will not be issued for
·
V,oytas said. "The permit is those species."
Collection of plants in certain Parks to attend ITT
required for both personal and
commercial use of plants gathered areas of the Forest has also been · Technical Institute
prohibited. Maps showing .the profrom the Wayne NF!'
According to Voyw, the per- hibited areas are available from
mits will help the aJent:Y ~ine each office.
"Since this is a new policy, col·
how much collecting 11 goma on
DAYTON - Aaron Parks, Pattillld whether the level of collecting lectors may want to call one of our
can be suslained over lime without offices to get more information ot, has enrollM in the Electronics
hlrming the forest'' resoun:es.
about whether or not they need a Enff!J~rina :recbnol.ogy program
at
Teclmical Institute, Dayton.
Tbe permits will be issued on an pennit," Voytas said.
This change in policy does not m Teclmical Institute is one of a
annual basis and a collector may
list all the different plants he or she affect plant collecting b scientific ·nationwide network of 40 schools
wishu to collect for the annual $10 or educational reasons. Collecting operated by Indianapolis-b&amp;1ed m
fee. The permits will be sold only for those reasons requires autho- Educational Services, Inc
·
by visiting one of the Wayne's rization from each District (ITT/ES).
offices at Athens, ~etta or Iron· invol.V'ed, but does not generally · . The ·96-week program, which
began June 14, w•ll prepare Aaron
ton. :jbe permits may not be pur- require a permiL
The
Wayne
National
Forest
is
for
an entry level position in the
chued throuJh the llllil.
The Foreat Supervlaor said that the only National Forest in Ohio electronics field
permits ue not Mquiled for small and contains 210,000 acres.
~ts for pellional use of forest

COLUMBUS - A new management organization has been named
to lead the combined opczations of
Columbus Southern Power Compa. ny and Ohio Power Company,
American Electric Power'$ two
Ohio operating companies.
Carl A. Erikson, who has been
vice president of the AEP Service
Corporation and executive assistant

New business opens recently

Update on burley tobacco

Permit needed for collecting
plants in Wayne National Forest

Ohio Lottery

Bulls
retain
crown

Pick 3:
068
Pick 4:
~1

Super Lotto
S-16-24-27-29-31
Kicker:
137824

Page4

Low tonlcht In 60s, cleor.
Tuesday sunny. Hlab In lOs.

•

a1
Vol. 44, NO. 37
Multi....... !no.

MYSTERY FARM • This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to partici·
pate iii the weekly contest may do so by guessing
. the farm's owner. Just mall, or drop orr your
guess to the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipoli_s, Ohio,

Farm Flashes

•

doorstepS.

RIVER SWEEP - Tbla the tcene for
arouP of voluatetn who p.rtidJNlted in the 111'111
annual Oblo River Sweep lu Mel11 Couuty
sponsored bJ. the Ohio River Sanitation Com·
•

Prescription Shop

River Sweep effort will
continue this weekend

r

Poll reveals Ohioans would
spend more on education
CINCINNATI (AP) - A
majority of Ohioans surveyed said
they would support a state sales tax
increase to provide more money for
elementary and secooclary education, the Ohio Poll reponed today.
Fifty-seven ·percent of the peo·
pie surveyed May 3-14 said the
state should spend more on primary
and secondary education, 36 per-

•

JUST

cent said the current spending is the
right amount, S percent said the
amount should be reduced, and 2
percent had no opinion.
Sixty-nine percent of those
questioned said they would support
a sales tax increase from the current S pcn:ent to 6 percent if the
new tax money were used .to suppen local public schools, the poll'

Man killed in accident

NEW SHIPMENT OF THE
"RED HOT" 90'" ANNIVERSARY·
~K

mlulqu. Tlleae workers are pictured as they
clear debrlllrom the bub or the river near the
parkin&amp; lot Willi Ia Ptmeroy.
.

'
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) volunteers picked
up between volunteerS spent three hours workThe Ohio River Sweep may be 2,000 and 4,000 pounds of uash, ing. Sonya Dixon volu~teered ~
over, but the task of clearing said Jim P&amp;niels,local coordinator. pan of a poop from Thin! Bapi1St
garbaae from the river banks ·wiD
Joe Noble was among tbem, Church.
go on- for llleullnotbcr week. . clearing 10111e of the truh lie inay
"We have a Bible study at
- ~llil 'nlrilv on the Ohio have left~ tile riV« lluk llliuelt.~ Etlllilb ~~the river aad we
hydroplane ntCC this weel&lt;end, vol- ·He, his Wife ud i3 Girl Scouts enJoy the llre~ze ·ancl enjo:r 1be
unteers will ditlribure prtJige baas from McGary Middle School said beauty," she said. "So this was our
to spectators. If spectators return they picked up about 300 pounds of opportunity to give a little back.''
them full of Irish, they will get aT· trash, most of it glass bottles and
Charles Besse was at the sm.ne
shirt.
shards
·•
site with fellow SuperAmen~a
The Ohio River Sweep on Sal"I guarantee I busied as many employees to pitch in for the
unlay Ilona nearly 2,000 miles of bottles as anyone -down there 30 cleanup for the fOurth .'IF·
.
shoreline in Indiana, Kentucky, Illi- yWs ago. Now I'm out here pickSince~ has been m~lved With
nois, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West mg them up," said Noble, who the cleanmg, Besse sBid, he has
Virginia nelled tons of truh.
conceded when he lived near the seen fewer ba11 of ~arbatC
. In the Evansville area, volun- riverfront, he llld his friends com- dumped ~~ the banks. But
teers concentrated on the river bank · manly used the' s1t&lt;ns of the:Ohjo', num~?m of tJreS and ~ ~
between the Four~ Monu- for a dumpins ground.
,
notimprov.ed •t ~11,. he sa1d.
ment and Sunset Park. About 100
In Owensboro, Ky., about SO "What the c1ty WO!! t ~k up, peo.
plc'tlump out here.

(.

l..eSabre

SALEM CENTER - A Vinton
man died Jn.an accident on County
Road I in Salem Township Friday
. niJ)It, the Oallia-Meip Post of the
State Highway Patrol reported. Thomas W. Stanley, 25, State
Route 124, Vinton, was traveling

BUICK LESABRES!

southbound on CR 1 and went off
the right side of the TOld after failing to make a curve. ije then c~m~e
back on the TOld, auuing it before
striking an embankment and then a
tree, ovenuminll the vehicle.
Stanley was taken to Birthfield
Funeral Home. .

-....;......Local briefs~
. - ....
Youth listed in fair condition
I( Huriaonville youlb injured in a bicyi:le-automobile -=cident
nunday aflanoon wu reporled in fair condition thil morning at .
Grant Hoapital in Columbul.
.
Rex A. Donohue rode a bicycle into the path of a car driven by
Linda L. Fielda, ~-· the Oallia-Me;al Pall of the State
HiJ)Iway Patrol
Friday, it wu incorrectly reported that
Donohue was ridina a ~le 11 the time at the arddent.
Donohue was lllnlportlld by UfeFliJhl to Grant HDipilll after
the accidenL

NOTA

BASE PRICE!
This cir Ia fully
equipped. Nothing
else to add. Just tax
and title. Trade-Ina

European summit begins
COPENHAGEN, Denmark
(AP) - European Community
leaders opened their summit today
in search·of a.way out of the worst
recession in three decades, but
refu~ees chanting "Save Bosnia!"
reminded them of the war on their

c.attlemen's banquet,
meeting scheduled June 25

Pres~tion Costs

Ex Meigs resident wo'unded

A fumw Melp CountY. Jelideut, who DOW lives in Columbtts,

I

waslltot nllurlllep aalda rn.t pon:b SIUday.
.
Al:canlla&amp; ao •ldlcle lu Saacl*y'a
Di!tpllc~. Mic• 1
Glblil. 28. ~ 204 S. w.,.. Ave., wullpiJIQICbed b)' two unldentl·
fitld !IIIII,- t:l wileD liNd two lhoiL
Deto:d•• uld Gibbl- abat In the polu.
.
Neial'bela deacribed Olblll• a QUiet- wbo did DOt loot far
tniUbll; ... Di 1 h u1tl. Tilly llicf be - • electrida who bed
t.t dina 1111111 - - , blck to Melp County lJel"•t• a( a CCIII·

Col...,...

---· ,.,.....,,,
II

•

I

I·

Glblll wu nnilported to Mount
,_.,

1 Section. tO Pogoo 25 e«~to
A Mutllmodtalnc. Nowoplf 11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 21, 1993

..

45631, and you may win a $5 prize from the
Ohio Valley Publishing .Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone number with your card
or letter. No telephone calls will be acceJ)ted. All
contest entries should be turned in to tbe news·
paper office by '4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
of a tie, the winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County farm will be featured by tbe Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia August 12·15 and will go to Allen- a tour for persons interested in
Comfty Cattlemen's Association town aiid Lancaster, Pennsylvania. "Dairy Intensive Rotational Grazinvites you to attend the annual Features will be Kutztown Produce ing" . The tour group will visit
meeting llli~ dinner Friday e~ening, Auciion, Rodale Institute and farms in Indiana and Wisconsin on
June 25: Thts year's event wtll stan Amish farms. Reservation informa- August 9-12. li'or details contact
Tom Noyes 81216-264-8722.
at 7 p.m. and will be held at the tion will be mailed next week.
Ed Vollborn is Gallla Coun·
The Wayne County (Ohio)
Bob Evans Farms Shelter House at
Extension Service is also planning ty's extension a1ent, agrkulture.
Rio Grande.
This will be more than just
another annual meeting. The dinner
will be a catered beef coolcout. A
very short program including the
election of 1993-94 directors Is
being planned leaving most of the
evening to visit with friends. The
1993 goal is to involve more people. Please consider this your personal invitation to join and get
involved.
Do vou feet vou are paying too much for
vour prescriptions? Then you should be
Reservations should be made
sl)opplng wtth us. With the co5t of medica·
immediately by returning the
nons constantly on the rise. we feel ills
mailed out reservation form or by
our responslbUity to offer our
contacting the Gallia County
customers even; •dvantage possible.
Extension Office (446-7007). DinYou see, we've made It a potnt to kliow
ner tickets are $10 for adults and
when generic equivalents are avaUallie.
$7.50 for children. Annual memThen, working hand·tn·hand wtth your
bership to the local association is
doctor, we fW your prescript ton. exaclly
$5 per member.
as ordered. and you ~ave 1n the proces5.
A special video presentation is
~w p,..c:rlptlon Prices
being planned for a separate
"youth" prograll) at the Friday
•Free Parking IVIcleo Touch Lot)
evening activity. The video pro•Fall &amp; Friendly Service
gram will feature daily care, fitting
•Store Charga Accounts
and showing of show cattle. This
feature was added this year to help
•Free Delivery to Home or Work
make the Gallia County Cattle· (Chaahlre, Bradbury,
men's Association activity a family
Middleport,
Pomeroy, Mason,
event. This follows the winter and
Mlnaravllla, Rutland, Syracuse)
spring activities that focused on
judging. Recent farm work has
--:
' WITHOUT PUTTING
involved many very long hot days.
Plan to take the evening off on Fri·
A LJD ON V4LUEI
day·, June 25 and enjoy the fun,
food, and fellowship. We would
like for you to be a part of one of
Ohio's leading County Cattlemen's .
Groups.
Plans are nearly complete for
992-6669
the annual Gallia County Pride-In253 N. Socand Ave.
MIHoport, Ohio
.Tobacco Association out of state
tour. The trip this year will be

accepted.

•

c.met

Medical Center for

reported. Thirty percent said they
would oppose such an increase, and
. 1 percent had no opinion.
The Universitf of Cincinnati
and The Cincin11811 Post sponsored
the survey.
The university's Institute for
Policy Research surveyed 816
adults by telephone, selecting the
participants 11 random. The margin
of error was 3.4 perCentage points;
When asked to rate the state's
most important.problem today, 33
percent picked the oconomy and 14
percent, education. The other concerns noted were· crime, 7 percent;
health care, 6.5 percent; drug ind
alcoh9l abuse, 6.4 ·percent: and
higb taxes, 5.1 percent.
Respondents lllo were asted to
rate which tues should Ire
incrused if that were necemry to
support public schools. The poll
sa1d 43 percent of those interviewed favored an increase In the
state sales tax only, Nine percent
favored raising only the state
income tax, llld 3 percent supported raisin&amp; ooly property llltes. Fif·
teen pen:ent favoreil a combination
or increases In sales and Income
taxes.

With an unemployment rate
threatening to top the 12 percent
mark next year - the highest rate
in three decades - the leaders face
a touJh choice: how to pay for new
jObs without robbing their costly
social support systems.
"The-heart of the matter really
is that European unemployment is
going inexorably up," 1ohn Major,
Britain's Conservative prime minister, told the opening session of
the two-day summit or 12 EC leaders.
"It is becailse we are uncomp'etitive," Major added. "We must
compete or we shall contracL''
He said labor costs in manufacturing were 20 percent higher in the
EC than in the United States and
Japan.
"Real solutions to the problem
qf unemployment must be found solutions that will create jobs and
stimulate new ec~nomic growth,"

Egon Klepsch,' president of the
EC's 518-seat legislative assembly,
said in the opening speech.
"In this crili!;al situation, skepticism of many citizens about the
European Community threatens to
grow deeper," he said. "The credibility of politicians and EC institutions ... is at stake. We must put our
ability to act to the test.''
As for Bosnia, EC foreign ministers late Sunday effectively
acknowledged the death of an
international peace plan developed
by their mediator, Lord Owen, and
moved toward accepting the division of Bosnia along ethnic lines.
Tbey said, though, that the territorial integrity of Bosnia must
somehow be preserved.
Tbe Belgian, Danish and British
foreign ministers invited Bosnian
President Alija lzetbegovic to meet
with them this evening. They
hoped to persuade him to accept a
modified peace plan that would
allow the survival·of a Muslimmajority state, surroiBlded by Croa.t.
and Serb zones.
"The shame of the EC is that it
is justifying the carve-up of
Bosnia," said Adila Drilberevec,
21, one of 20 Bosnian refugees

who shouted at the EC leaders
arrivmg at the summiL Police limit·
ed the size of the crowd, who held .
banners denouncin~ "the dismemberment of Bosnia. '
On the economy, Jacques
Delors, president of the EC's exec·
utive commission, said the Uniled
States created nearly 30 million
new jobs between 1970 and 1990
and Iapan almost l2 million. By
contrast, the community produced
about9 million during that span, he
said
In his briefing, Delors urged the
EC leaders to invest more in
research and development. He suggested spending up to $8.3 billion
in telecommunications, computers
and other high-tech sectors. He also
urged an investment of $50 billion
over 10 years in transportationllld
other infrastructure projects. ,
In December, the leaders agreed
to funnel $42 billion into large pub-.
lie worlcs projects to create 450,000
new jobs and revive Europe's lackluster economy.
But since then, the EC has fore.
· cast worsening recession, projected
its economy would contract O.S
percent this year and predicted
unemployed ranks would swell to
more than 18 miUion next year.

·uc graduate crowned Miss Ohio
MANSFIELD, Ohio(AP) The new Miss Ohio says her vocal
training J?lliyed a big part in winnin• the title.
·
"I was raiSM as a singer and
1aup1 iow 10 P'-l to au audl·
ence," Titllayo Rachel Adedokun
said after winninjl the title Saturday. "I think the Judges were looking for someone who would look
good on the Miss America stage;"
Ms. Adedokun, 20, the ftrst ·
. black woman to win the title, will
represent the state in September at
the Miss Anierica 1994 pageant in
Atlantic City,NJ.
.
She is a graduate student at the
University of Cincinnati CoUegeConservatQcy of Music who plans.
to study voice in Europe for a few

years, then return to the United
States for an
career.
She sang 'The Jewel Song"
from the opera "Faust" during the
talent portion of the competition. .
Ma. -Adodokun was borp 1n
NasfiYille, Teen., of~ ,...
ents and has lived in l'ligeria and
Europe. She returned to the United
States six years ago and started coJ·
lege at age 14. She is a graduate of
1udson College.
She received a $10,000 scholarship and several merchandise
prizes for winning ~he pa~eant.
During her year as Miss OhiO, she
plans to talk to students and others
abOIJl mentor programs and sex
education in schools.
She represented the Americana
amusement
in Butler

oreratic

. at the pageant, whiclr had ·42 contestants.
The first runner-up wu Robyn
Hanc~ck of Gr,and Rapids, who
was Miss Franklin County-,_-....~ ·•
·
TJie.IOCIJid 111tuvalrmiiiiii'JIII:'''
nen-up, IIIIJIIICdYely, Sflan.
non Lyfltl Scherer of Galloway,
Miss Columb.us: Chris~ Paul or
Bellevue, MISS Mansfield and
Susanne L. Straub of Galena, Miss
Willard
The other semifinalists were
l(eri Kurlinski of Ca~ton, Miss
Cuyahoga Cou!'lY Fa.1r; ~endy
Byrd of Mainevtlle, M1ss Middletown: Amy Jo Brunswick of Cold·
wat~r, M1ss Southeastern Oh!o:
Robm Bobal of Lakewood, M1ss
Lorain County and Sissy Schaefer
of Alliance, Miss ConneauL

Shuttle in orbit
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla .
(AP) -The space shuttle Endeav-

our ducked through clouds and
raced into orbil today ~. retrieve a
European science satellite filled
with an assortment of experiments.
• The 4.5 mil:~:rund shuttle
soared from its
. pad with six
astronauts at 9:07 a.m. EDT. This
time the weather cooperated; low,
thick clouds ruined the fitStlaunch
attempt on Sunday.
Shuttle commander Ronald
Grabe was anxious to be on his
way. "We're going to do it today,"
he insisted before liftoff.
·
Besides the satellite rende~vous
and capture, the mission features. a
practice spacewalk and the unve!lmg of the world's fust commercial
laboratory.
Endeavour safely reached orbit
8 111. minutes intO the flighL The
flight w~ 22 seconds late ge~ing
started because a plane strayed mto
• a restricted airspace near the launch

OPEN HOUSE • Tbe recently completed two miJlion dollar
waste water treatment plant ror the Village or Pomeroy was
opened to !be publk yesterday (Sunday). John Andermn, villqe
admluistrator, coaducted tours of tbe facUlty. He is pictllred bere
in tbe state-of-the-art laboratory where various testing at tbe racll·
ity is performed.

Auction to settle
debts nets $4,500
. CHILLICOTIIE, Ohio (AP) An IUCiion IIIIDUle debtl of a CCIII•
vict.ed Columbat lit deller IIRlulht
$4,500,. benbuDtcY ~lilt{
Tbe !lema Cllile tram the coJJec..
lion rlTeddy Rudder, who ICived
a federal priloa 11111tenc:e for ntll·
~S3 mmtaa Clnclllllld-baetl

rrua:frodt! ~

at
uld be
wu J*ticu.Iy JliiMed with the
sale of three "Picaaao block
linoleum prlata, wblcb broulllt
$310 ..... Saturday' a action.'
"We bed - • real interut,"
Firutenn uld.

......._=..

W.vnNG JOR AWARDS CEREMONYMauyt:ldlaa
t11e ~ Cllllllty

111111 IIIII a-·~·• 25dl·••aal llllh·
~

lui 0.•1 nlted ... tile IWW6t eel I 4 111111
door prfle 1ln·a"aya at Satarda,.•a n•Ul
event.
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Monday, June 21,

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 21, 1993

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The Daily Sentinel
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111 Court Stleet
Pomeroy, Ohio

•- DEVOTED TO THE INTEltB8T8 OJ THE IIEIGS-MMON AREA
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ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manqer

Controlltr

1.ETIERS Of OPINION are welcome. They 1bo~d be 1... than 300
wordl. All lettem are subject ro editing llld must be sisned with name,
, oddiess IDd telepbone number. No unsigned !etten will be publisbed. Lell£n
abould be in good wte, adclleuing iuues, not penonalities.

Letters to the editor
About that Rt. 33 project
Dear Editor,

Did you know that a million
dollars is worth nothing when a
politician is ~nding our tax dollars?
Recendy, the ~overnor and his
highway chief revtved the Route 33
update from Alhens to the four lane
that starts no where and goes no
wJtere.
A past administration spent $1
million for a feasible survey and
now they say it is obsole&amp;e and will
spend $4 or 5 million for a new
one.
··

If a poor worlcing man has good
luck and works 50 years he may
make $1 million, but here, with one
stroke of the pen, a million hard
earned tax dollars are thrown down
the drain.
How many times have we heard
about this being highway upgrad·
. ed? About·as many times as they
inake hamburgers at McDonald's.
I'm afraid I'm like the pmon from
Missouri. You'll have to show me
when it happens. '
Virgil Walker
Racine

Reade~ responds

Sky-bound dru·g interdiction not panning out
WASHINGTON - It has the
elements of a !D()dem-day "French
Connection," except the chase
scenes take place with some
machines borrowed from a U.S.
Air Force designed to_fight the
·Cold War, but whiclf are now
increasingly being conscripted into
the drug war.
This story plays out every day in
the increastngly dangerous skies
over Mexico and Cenlral America
Interviews with law-enforcement
officlllls and pilots paint a picture
of a prosram that can often be
more: perilous to U.S. flietS than to
drug smugglm, while maldng litde
dent in drug traffiCking.
One recent skirmish in the skies
north of Colombia illustrates the
futility many fliers are feeling.
According to our sources, a dru~­
laden aircraft took o(f from a strip
in nonhem Colombia, unaware that
.it would be the focus of day-long
monitoring by six of the United
States' most sophisticated surveillance planes. The bunt intensified
as soon as the plane ventured nor1h
over the ocean.
First there was a U.S. Navy ship
in international waters off Colombia. Next, a U.S . AWACS spy
plane began tracking it from high

above. Then two U.S. F-15 jets
from Panama and a U.S. Customs
Service Piper Oleyenne from Honduras joined the chase. When the

By Jack Anderson
and '
Mich4el Binstein
F-15s ind the Cheyenne ran low on
fuel, ther were replaced by two
backup atrcraft from the Customs
Service. Unaware of the forces
arrayed 'against him, the pilot flnalJy dropped his load some 50 miles
off the coast of Guatemala to an
awaiting ship.
Despite the effort and expense,
there was no seizUre. An American
pilot involved in the chase
expressed frustration we heard
echoed by many pilots in interviews:
"There were no locals (authorities) down there to get it (drugs).
That's the biggest problem we
have. '~'here's no endgame. We can
follow them all we want, but half
the time nobody's down there to
get it."
Issues surrounding sovereignty

preclude the United States from
tnterdicting narcotics flights in
Mexico and' Central America The
U.S. role is relegated to tracking
flights, and relaying the intelligence to local authorities on whom
they rely to apprehend the shipments. The aim is for tJ\ese COlin·
tries to develop their own capabilities.
.
Until that time, logistical night·
mares and suspicions of coouption
play havoc with the interdiction
efforts. A recent General Accounting Office study found that of the
107 suspect aircraft ll'8Cked by U.S.
and Mexican authorities during
1991, only 23 were actually apprehended by Mexican law enforcement officials. In the first seven
months of 1992, there were eight
apprehensions of 59 suspect air·
- craft that landed in Mexico.
"Although the amount of
cocaine seized b)' (the joint operation) appears tmpressive ... it
becomes evident that.most flights
are transitin~ Mexico without being
interdicted,' the GAO report ~oneluded.
·
The joint effort is not without
some notable successes. Officials
point to the seizure of more than 65
metric tons of cocaine in Mexico

to article

Dear Editor,
1 write this letter in response to

State University. His education
emphasized drafting, map design,
the article submitte.d by Commis- map production, interpretation of
sioners Roush and Hartenbach on aerial photographs - all of which
June 8, 1993, regarding 18 percent are vital components to his supervipay raises to only two of the many sory position in the Tall Map
Meigs Co.unty Court House OffiCe. Are you Mr. Roush Or Mr. ·
Harlenbach even aware of the comemployees.
I draw specific reference to the petence you have operating the
following statement made in this office? Is it too much to ask that a
article: " .. .it is our feeling that Mr. litde bit of credit be given where it
Ed Werry be promoted to a house is due here? Pay raises are totally
numbering and tax map specialist beside the point as far as I am con.
position ...and it is our intent to cerned.
equalize the salaries of the two
I end by saying that our family
holds the utmost respect for Ed
employees in this offtee. •
Werry,
and further consider bim a
' Somehow I feel compelled to
true
and
loyal friend. I place no
mention !Oilleone whan Roush and
blame
upon
him for the existing
Harlenbach chose to leave unmentiq~ that is, the other employee conb'Oversy. Dan has .stated many .
cillhis office, Dan Nease. Dan has times that Ed does a fine job in his
worked in the Tax Map Office for posilion.
I write this letter to express my
nearly 15 years.
· In that time he taught those who own anger over this ridiculous conworked ·onder him all he knew troversy. Dan would prefer all be
A great deal has been made of
about mapping. He began his wotk left unsaid, and would never the Clinton presidency's early mis·
with nothing more than roughly- approve of me print)ng this.
handling of the Washington press
However, I consider this my corps and the president himself
skelclted maps drawn in 1928, and
has made them into what they are opportunity to convey love and seems to believe iL There is no bettoday. Our maps are accurate, up to respect for my husband, and let ter explanation for lhe employment
date and the best most Ohio coun- him know that there is someone in of former GOP flack David Gergen
ties have to offer. Just ask any . this county who admires his dedi- . to soothe, stroke and natter the
cated loyalty and 15 years of hard White House reporters and their
auomey in town.
Dan holds a B.S. in geography wotk towards a job well done.
bosses. But if.it IS a mistake for a
from Ohio University and a M.A.
Kellee J. Nease public offiCial such as Bill Clinton
Racine to let journalists know that he, like
in geography from Bowling Green
so many others, holds them in contempi, 11 is a bigger mistalte for the
press to pretend that such contempt
ts unfair on its face. Too often it
•
By The Associated Press
isn'L
. Today is Monday, June 21, the 172nd day of 1993. There are 193 days
It is easy enough for the press tc
left in the year. Summer arrives at 5:00a.m.
fall into self-justifying delusion.
· Today's Highlight in History:
.
The public allows itself to be out- On June 21, 1788, the United States Constitution went into effect as raged by the wrong things. "DisreNew Hampshire became lhe ninth state to ratify it.
spectful" queslions are frequendy
On this date:
.
criticized, to which journalists
• In 1932, heavywei~ht Max Schmeling lost a title fight by decision to reply with merit that tough quesJack Sharkey, prompung Schmeling's manager! Joe Jacobs, to exclaim: tions are a reponer's basic tool.
--we was robbed! ••
Without them, what is called the
In 1945, Japanese forces on Okinawa surrendered during World War news would be no more than the
II.
transfer of handouts from one
In 1948, inventor Dr. Peter Goldmark of CBS Laboratories demon- printing pres~ to another. That is
strated the ftrst successfullon,-piaying record.
why ABC's Brit Home was right to
· In 1963, Cardinal Giovanm Battista Montini was chosen to succeed lhe ask the president to explain the
late Pope John XXIII as head of the Roman Catholic Church. The new zigzag selection process that went
pope·took the name Paul VI.
into the nomination or Judge Ruth
In 1964. civil rights workers Michael H. Schwemer, Andrew Goodman Ginsburg to the SUJI!MIC Court last
and James E. Chaney disappeared in Philadelphia, Mis.s.; their bodies week, and the prcs1dent was wrong
were found in an earthen dam six weeks later.
to fly off the handle because of the
In 1982, a jury in Washington, D.C.• found John Hinckley Jr. innocent
·
by reason of insanity in the shootings of President Ronald Reagan and query.
But an early Cl'mton adm'mtStrathree other men.
tion decision to open the daily
White House press briefing to television broadcast has illustrated why ·
it is so easy to hate the press. The

between 1990 and 1992 .as a result
of·the air operations. Last year virtually .all of the 9.5 tonS of cocaine
seized in Guatemala were the result
of joint efforts with the United
States.
But too often even when drugs
are interdicted locally, their ultimate fate is unclear. "Wben the
dope's seized you don't know if
it •s destroyed or taken off the
streets," on_e U.S. Customs pilot
told us. "There are no Amencans
down there. It's only the locals, and
those guys aren't paid that much."
In 1991, seven Mexican drug
agents we,re killed in a s~oot- out
with Mex1can army soldiers who
wc:re protecting a landing strip for
naroolics trafftclcm.
Danger is always lurlcing for the
pilots - even from some unexpected sources. Pilots point ro last
year's attack by Peruvian government jets on a U.S. Air Force C130 that was returning from a drug
surveillance mission. The shooting
left one U.S. ainnan ~ and four
.others wounded. In 1991, a U.S.
Customs plane was also forced to
land after a Venezuelan F-16 fll'ed
warning shots at iL
Although a Pentagon spokesperson said serious incidents like these
are "fairly rare when compared to
the number of bouts flown," pilots
say near misses are commonplace.
One recounted an episode near the
Mexican-Guatemalin border w~
miscommunications resulted in
Mexican jets giving chase to a U.S.
anti-drug plane. ·A Mexican drug
agent was on board the U.S. plane,
but was unable to clear up the situation. After several tense minutes
the Mexican jets retreated.
Most of the trouble does not
come from "friendly foe" - but
by drug traffickers themselves.
Sources point to an 1991 incident
in which a U.S. Ciwion jet manned
by Mexican agents ~ U.S. Customs pilots took several roun~ of
small arms fire as they circled an
airslrip waiting for Jocal ~officials to
apprehend hostile drug smugglers
below. Hit repeatedly, the Citation
limped off to another Mexican
airslrip.
For U.S. pilots on the front lines
of the drug war, it was just another
day at the office.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Featl!re Syndicate, Inc.

Clinton's pointless feud~ with press·

Today in history

Berry's World

'

American public has been given access to their handlers was treated hot enough commodity, he or she
the oppol'\unity to watch sausage · like a violation of the ABM agree- can dictate who wiD be allowed to
being made, to borrow from an old ment. When Gergen made it a point appear on the same show. I know
cliche, and il hasn't taken long for to countermand the order as one of this to be ttue from both sides of
his fltSt acts, eVeryone was slobber- the aisle - as a !OIIICtime panelist
ingly grateful.
on shows that have canceled
But the point is that nothing sig- appearances by certain feople
• nificant was at issue. The places . because of the demands o others
everyone to learn that it stinks.
where policy-makers, as opposed · and as someone who was bounced
The reversal of a longstanding to the president's public relations as a guest because the newsmaker
policy may a~tually have been team, work are still closed to of the moment obJected to my presmade with malice aforethoughL I reporters except by invitation. The ence. If you are IIDponartt enough
can almost hear the staJI discussion · White Hoose press beat remains and a tough negotl8tor, you can
that preceded iL Why not let the one best fit for kennel dogs rather even extract a promise that certain
public see lhe press corps behaving than hunting dogs; the press release questions will not be asked, no
like irascible children in living is the normal ·form of communica- matter how newsworthy, as the
color? To read about the briefin~s lion. Tbe uproar over the press price of appearing, Remember that
is one thing. To witness them ts office restrictions had everrthmg to as you watch some of those Sunday ·
another.
do with reporters' perks and virtu- morning network programs and
Even the best of writers cannot ally nothing to do with the public late-evening talk shows.
convey fully their pettiness, fre- interest.
As with mpst institulions, the
quent irrelevance and even more
Just about everyone knows Wbite House reporters and their
frequent mean-spiritedness. One about the tempest in a teapOt that parent organizations are their own
side pretends that it expects full was whipped up when some 1diot wont enemies. The chief threat to
disclosure and the other pretends on the press staff asked a local TV effective performance lies less in
that it might someday provide it. reporter in New England to apply overrcactive presidents and vengeV inually no one looks good. Why the president's m8keup before she ful staffs than in their own behavthe reporters, print as well as elec- could interview him. It was a ior. How presidents' feel about the
b'Onic, agreed to conspire in mak· demeaning ·thing to ask, but the press - and not one ever went
ing themselves look silly is beyond reporter's acquiescence was more beyond wary coexistence - is
logic. But they did, and the cat was instructive. For the sake of an interesting but essentially irreleout of the bag. Those omniscient essentiilly meaningless interlude vant. What matters is the way the
.oracles who proclaim the word with .the president of the United press does its job.
·
from the White House lawn each States, she was willing to debase
evening are capable of talldng and herself and her profession.
Hodding Carter III, former
acting like a bunch of spoiled lnts.
But that is only something writ State Department spoke's1,11an
The way the White House small which media heavies routine- and award-winning reporter, edi·
repol'lers went ballistic when the ly write Jarse. Journalistic stan- tor and publisber, is president of
new Clinton team arbitrarily placed dards are regularly diiChed for the MalnStreet, a Wasflinaton, D.C.·
the old press office area off limits sake of access, most egre~iously based televisioa prodactlon comwas equally illustrative. This and often by network tdeviSIOII.
pany and a writer ror Newspaper
infringement of their right to easy
For instance, if a newsmaker is a Enterprise Association.

Hodding Carter III

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Extra prison time for certain
In 1972, Justice ThiD'goOd ~­
shall- in Chicago Pol.ice Depanment vs. Mosely- said with characteristic directness: "Above all
else, the First Amendment means
that ~over'nment has no power to
restrict expression because of its
message, its ideas, its subject matter, or its contenL''
But the Constitution .is a living
document and, according to the
Supreme Court on June II, if a
crime has been committed to the
accompaniment of bigoted lhouJflt,
the pnson sentence lor the cnme
·itself can be doubled or tripled
because of that meuaae. If the
saine crime is caused by avarice,
however, there will be no extra
prisonThetime. .
........... . w ·
unamm0111 ........
on m IS·
consin vs. Mill:heU Yllidaw similar "enhancement" 1tatute1 in 26 .
other 1tates and the District of
Columbia. lnexorlbly, there wUJ
now be moie such laws ~ including federal len&amp;thening of sentences for those already punished

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"Hey, baby, are we on to something,
or what?"

. t

for a crime and then punished a.-;n
for the· same crime if the mouvation was racist, sexist, homophobic
or among other prohibited thoughts

NatHentoff
added by well-meaning legislators.
Kenosha, Wis., is where Todd
Mitchell incited some of his blaclc
friends to beat a white teenager
because of his color. Mitchcll could
have gotten five more years in
addition to the two on the boob for
his invol-t in lgl'lllated bat·
tery. Nothing wrona with that
added sentence for blJotry, said
Chief Jlllllce Wllllam Rehnquist in
reviewinjl the cue, because the'
Wisconstn statuto "is aimed at
conduct unprotected by the Pint
AmendmenL" Only conduct? As
the chief justice himself notes,
Mitehcll firlt llid, "There lOCI a
whilll boyl Go gat hinll"
Readlna the decision, a com;
mander in the Kenosha pollee
l

tho~ghts

force, James P. Farley, told The
New York Times that Rehnquist
and his colleagues have made him
nervous. "I'm very fearful of the
concept of thought police," Farley
said.
So was the Ohio Supranc Coon
. -in another hale crime case. Stale vs..
Wyant (Jm). That court struck
down a stanne
to the penal·
tiel for Vlrious criminal acnons if
they were done "by reason of"
race, color, religion or nadonaJ origin.
Unlike Jtlltice Rehrlqllilt and his
unanimous colleagues in the
Mitchell case - who did not notice
the slippery slope opeainli before
them ~ Ohio's biJhelt eow1 llid:
"The question before us is not
whether the pernment can
late the conduct IIJelf ... the laue is
whether the aovemmcnt can panllh
the c:ondnct more IIWidy bued on
.the thouaht that motivattll the
behavb. ••i
"By elliCtiDI (the hate crime
statute) the 1111e hal infringed on

addin'

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the basic liberties of thought and
speech. Once the proscribed act is
committed, the government criminalizes the underlying thought by
enhancing the penafty based on
viewpoint If the legislature can
enhance a penalty for crimes committed 'by reasOn or racial blgocry.
why not : by reason
oppoiiti6n
to abortion, war, the elderly (or any
other P,olitical or moral view- .
point)? '

or

But whit about the lawl apinsl
disCrimination In employment and
housin&amp;? In those cases, said the
Ohio court, "it Ia the act of discrimination that is tllleled. IIOt the
motive.' ~ And when ihele II proof
or motive, the penalty h not
incre md bee••• Of thaL
Nat Heatoff Is a aatloully
reDOWIIed llltllorlty OD tile J11r1t
Ameadmeat nd t•• rllt Ill tile
Bill of Rlt•IJ lid I writer·for
New1paper EaterpriM .u-taCioa.

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D:ry._~nd .cooler we~th-er

June 22

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By The Associated Press
No serious injuries were report- determine the rain-swollen Black
On Sunday, tile tropieal storm :
A high pressure system will ed from Arlene, which was down- River is receding.
drenched southern Texas, parts of•
bring clear skies to Ohio tonight graded to a tropical depression
Gov . To_mmy G. Thompson
Louisiana and southern Arkansas.:
and Tuesday.
Sunday, but water -was-entering - de&lt;;lared ~mergencies in Jacksoq The storm dr_oppC:d aboui 15 il)ches :
Lows tonight will be from the some homes at ~ion, Texas; tilt · . GOunty lind adjacent Clark Cqunty.
of rain on Henderson, Texas, and:
upper 50s ·to the lower 60s. Highs ' National Weather Service repoited. He plannecLto visit the area and
II inches on Jacksonville, Texas. :
Tuesday will be from .about 80 in
Fprecisters issued flood -an-d .:. s.WY.ey·®nage .today.
Rain spread into lhe lower Misthe northeast to we mid-80s near flash flood watches for a ¥ast area_
The National Weather Service
sissippi
Valley, across the Ohio :
the Ohio River.
of the sJa.te because of the heavy . saidJ he Black River's waier level
Valley and eastern Great Lakes :
. Rainfall overnight ranged -from rainfall.
_ . . .
. was at a!x&gt;JII 19 feet Sunday and 11 _ states . Showers ·also prevailed :
0.03 of an inch at Cincinnati io
"Although Ws in~, it's still was expected to rise about a fool
~cross much of the mid-Atlantic •
1.17 inch at Findlliy.
going. to be slow-IQoving, and that more, ptQvided the. dams at Black
states and New England.
The record .high temperature.for can always b!ing £!ie potentiaHor River Falls and Hatfield did not
It was mostly clear and dry, in :
this date at the Columbus weather hesvy rains in the next few days," giye way. ·
.
the Plains. Extreme heat continued :
station was 98 in 1988. The record Greg Wilk said from the National . · Wisconsin Natio~al Guard
in the Southwest
:
low was46 in 1992.
·
Weather Service office in Corpus troops helped shore nver banks
The nation's high Sunday was •
Sunset today will be at 9:03 Christi.
- with 25,000 sandb8gs. ..
_ 114 degrees at Bullhead City,:
p.m . Sunrise Tuesday will be at
In Black_River falls .and Hat- Strong thunderstorms ·were Coolidge and Lake Havasu City, all .
6:03a.m.
·
fteld, Wis., ~idents w.ere evacuat- expected today across much or the
in Arizona'.
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Around the nlltion
ed after wat~rs froin overflowing · Northeast, So.uth and parts of the ' · Highs today-wc:re forecast to -be :
The remnants of Tropical .Srorm datris on the Black River flooded _ -northern Plams. Warm weather m the 80s for most of the nation •
Arlene deluged southern Texas their homes:
- -- - with thu~derstorms also was ·with some 90s along the East Coast;
tpday, while a rain-swollen rjver in
The residents
evacuated
Suntn the Rocky
and parts of the Midwest and nOrth- :
'- . - - -- ~xpected
- . -· -Mountain
western Wisconsin kept up to. 700 day, won't be--· -allowed:.back
until S'l!tes; .
.. ern
Plains. The Southwest wu'
residents out of their homes.
Much of the West was forecast ·· exiiec~ . to· be extremely bot with
emergency government officials ·
to be_dry and sunny. ·
highs reaching 110 Dell' Phoenix. i

MICH.

...

IMansfield !84• l•
IND.

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•lcolumbus!84•

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The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

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W. VA.

.tA Vandalism, .

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_....._____ Weather
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South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mosdy clear. Low 60·
65. Tuesday, mosdy sunny. High in
the mid-80s.
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wreckprobed
by police·
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Incidents of vandalism and
Extended forecast'
. .
. deslrUCtion of property, along with
Wetin~ay tbrougb Friday:
one acCident were investigated by
Fair through the periodcLo\YS in Pomeroy police over the weekend ·
·the 60s. Highs in the 80s.
Virgini8_Green, 20, of Glillipolis
reported early .Saturd;ly morning
that:her 1987 Mercury park~d
behind the· Sugar Run Mj\1 bad
been vandaliied. All four tires were
Stiin)ey
-slashed, and the vellicle had beeR
Thomas Wayne-Sulnley, 25, Scratched and spray_~intedJrom
Baker Road, Athens, died ·early front to back. The incident remains ·
Sunday morning, Jwie 20, 1993, of . uilder investigation. . .
injuries sustained from a motor
A159 stiU under investigation by
·vehicle accident on Meigs County · Pomeroy police is some vandatism . Road 1. . ·
.
·
at Stiper America on WesLMaiiJ .
B.orn .in Athens, he was the -son · .S.treeL It was reported to police that
·or Russell David and Delores Ann . the line to a cooler hl'd been -broMeredith Stanley. He was ken, that a coml)looe line and' a·
employed by Bobb Logging of compressorbehindthebuildinghad
Mllson •.W.Va.
been damaged.
·
Besides, his parents he is surKenneth Smith, Pomeroy, i~ _·
vived. by a sister, Lori Barnes; a charged with destruction of jirilper,.
brother, Todd Stanley; lll!d a girl- ty following an incident at 12:1S·
friend, Patty Sorrell, Vinton.
a.m. Sunday. Police reported. that.
He was preceded in death by Smith broke a large plate glass .

-----A·
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. ·· death
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Kenneth Lawhorn....

Tbonuis

. : Kenneth L. .iawhor.n, 46, of
Hmftington Valley, Pa. died Friday,
June 18; 1993, in~ the Thomas Jefferson Ho$Pital in J'hiiadei{J!Iia; Pa.
..He is survi11_ed by,his wife, Eliz~ .
. abeth _Ann Lyons, .and two children, ~di "'d.Brendan Lawhorn,
F{onlington Valley, Pa.; two sisters,
Kiuy Babcock and Bonnie McFarland, aild two biQihers, James.and
Stewart Lawhorn, along with sev_cral, nieces and nephews, some of
wl)o relii4e iriMeigs County.
· . Funeral services will be held
- Tuc;sday at 10 .a.m. at the Good
. Shepherd Lutheran Church, South

_
QUALIFYING • L!IW enforcement officers
rrom the Meigs County Sheriff's Department
and tbe MiddlepOrt, Pomeroy, Racine, Rutland,
~y~acuse and GaUipplls p~i~ ~~rtmeotS par·
.hctpated in a gun quaJllYinl session at the 15aac
Walton Farm near Chester oti·Friday. Theses· ·
·· , ·
.
-

shin is conducted yearly b'y the Bureau of Crimi11al Inve_sligation fcir law enforcfmeat o!'fli;en
who must requalif.t .e_~b year to c8r'1 hudcuns
and s~Q.tguns. Tbe stSSlon was conducted by Jim
Hockenberri and MJ. D'Ostropb for·tbe &lt;40-50
officers present.
··

"
•

-

·'

.

. -

.

·'

;'
c

'

~

~~~a:~~ be in tw~~:S~e:·wednesdayatl :~~~~a~i~=:~~~:= Tb:(rty~:eighfJine~ip Meigs· ~ounty Co'(lf.t ·;,

. Memorial .con~buiilms may _be p.m. at Bigony-Jor(lan Fune~al - taken-.10 V~~. Memorial HOSpi.
- - · -"
. -- . _
_ ..... ·
·· ·
,
made to.Jhe American Cancer Soci- Home with Rev. Jim -Evans offici- .tal fpr treabnent of li 1tand lacera- . Thiny-eiglit
j,Je:fi~ea:·' '$10 and- eourt costs; Wendell schoi&gt;J. Si50 oftme.andjail will re;
ety, designated for ,melanoma · ating; Burial will be in Hanning · lion.
&lt;111d seven_pii()phif()ff~ited :l!&lt;mds in. Crockeu ,Reed.•.Salem, Va., speed- suspended, William c;:, Frump,'
research. Funeral arrangements are . Cemetery.
.
.
· . AJ1 tinoccupi~J991 Chevrole! · last weeJc~ Cc)tirt of.Meigs . COurity- _ ing; $21 and court costs; ¥iJil&gt;il R.- -Kimball, w ..va.. seatbelt violaiion,''
;. Friends may call at the fun~ral truck coaslinll backwards from the Court Judge Pat O'Brien. · : · Roush; Pomeroy; ~peedmg, $20 $15 and costs:. Brad A. Bucher,
being handled by the. James J.
Foodland parking lot struck a sta-- · · Those fiped were; . . _ .. : _
and. court costs; Chris ~. S_tephans, Dresden, speedmg, $10-and coun
McGbee F.uneral Home, South .home on Tuesday from 7-9 p.m.
Hamp.ton. Pa.
·
· tion wagon as it ·traveled west on· ·
Muttiel Meie, Galion, consum- · Flli!'field,' speeding, $23 and court costs; SC9!\ M. Tomlison, Weverly:
"Main Street Friday evening.
ing alcohol in a public plaCe, $100 costs; Mary A, Woodrun, Cincin- seatbelt -violation, $25 and .court l
.. J'omcroy police,reported that the and COII\1 costs and one yt;t~~ pn;lba- nati, s)leedi(IB; $24 lllid.court costs; · costs, Jef~ A. Travi1.' Moant•
truck owned· by Cltarles &amp;lake, · lion; Randy . Ro!i!c, ·J&gt;omeroy, "IJtmQS S. Hash, BidweU, 'litteriltg, Vernon; s - ing, ..$23- 811d' coun·
Mason, W.Va. had moderate back- underage consumptiQn; SlO.&lt;ran_d .. , $50 an~ ·cownosts; WiUil!m_~ad= - ·costs. ·- ·_
.- · · ·
~
en·ada.mage when it ~trucl!: th~ , costs, and one year.probation;-J)on-- --,qis,Reedsville, failure to yoil~, $~0
Those forfeiting bonds ·were:
Units of the Meigs County O'Dell wh~ was taken to VMH; front nght of the stat~on wagon aid B. Wallace, S~kpon, speed- - apd court costs; Arthur C. Ritchte, Keith Reeves, Flemington, Mo.,"
Emergency Medical S~rvice . .1:26 J!.m, MiddlepoJt to Coal S~t operated ~Y Ja!l'les S1ss.on, 51, ing, $25 and copn costs; Philip v: ~KingliJont, w.._va .. . speeding $30 _speeding_, $67; :.Ja'l!es. Wolfe,"
re.spondecd to 15 calls for assiStance . •or Rusty ~~~ wbo w~ n":"s- . ~o~erQy. Th~ $tSSO.ll yehtcle ~ad __Houatter, Mi&lt;ldl~pi&gt;rt, sCI!\1&gt;!:11 vio;· ~. ~o:a..:.c,o.~rt cgsts; Thpriliis:Edward- Racine, assured clear distance, $60- ·
during the weekend." Units respond· ported to VMH, 5.39 P·!"· Racme ·· h~ht dam~ge. The.r e were no lation,_$75111\d coon co$, Deal!na _ McDonald, Deb'Oit, Mich., speed- Richw:d Huff, Zanesville, seatbeJI"
ing were: · · .. . ·
.. to .Bashan Road.for Desu:ee ~!BY- inJwj.es to S1~~or llis passe_ngers, - ~: Jones; CQiumb~;seatbel! Vi~la:- _ .irfg, $23.and c~uifcosts; l&gt;Ou~tas, : violation_, $43_; Jaines)loward,"
· Sal!'I'daY -· 3:46 .p.m. Middle- who~ transported to·VMH, 5.44 S!i= ~eed. ,1!1 •. Rudand, or Jody _uon, $25 and ,CO!lrt: ~osts, ~~yp· · ~dep_l!:m§~Mtddleport.:seatliell Columbus,_yns~c.l!re load, $50;:•
port F~ _Deparb_!lent to OJ4 Route_ p.m. ~port. Squad and Volun- - Stsson, 14, Middleport.
K Gnm, Athens, (lidu,re t&lt;l yetld;_.- Vlol~llon;·.$25 and cOI!q'costs:-p:mJ · ~ayn~ Shpakoff, ;l'~ymoth, .Mo.•.~
7 Road m CheshU'C Townshtp, Gal- teer Fm Departmt:nt to Sl!lte ~O!'te
., . , ·
_
- · · ·-- .. · : Adk;ms, Ktmball W.Va.. seatbelt speedtng $65, Ph1111p Hamtlton, ·
·violation, $25 and court costs; Paul Middletown, speeding, $67;''
- lia C:otinty, for a b{USh at tl!e Sue · 7-Jor·an au~tle .fU'C mvplvmg,
Smith Residence; 6;24 p.m. Rut- an al!t0.mo~tle owned by. Ralph
Weaver, Wellst&lt;JD, seatbelt -viola-_ William Hlirdwich, Jr .• Columbus,.,
-· lanftp ,Meigs":~e 2 for Michael McDamel.•: Jason McDamel wa_s
· ·
_
. ·
___ - . · tion, $25-and court costs; Timothy Jeffof center; $6(}.- . ·..
"
... · '- Austin ' who w.a s transport.ed to tr~nsported to VMH; 7:50p.m..
' .· _
· • -:
M. 'Rammy, Cfie.shire, speeding
·
' PieasantValley ·Hospital; .ll:52 . Mtddlepo.rt to ·SO~th FQ,ur. t_ h~
--_ $20andcilsfs;Pau1Hiii,Ra.cin_~.
_..· p.m, Rudand an4 Goltiinbia Town- Avenue for Mary ~1111 who was
·
Driving ~~der the-Innuence, 10 . ·
_ ship yoJunteer fue deparunents 10 transported to VMH,
.
·
-- ~ days in -Jatl suspended_to three,
YETERANS MEMORIAL
. Sal~m Scl\ool Roa.d for a motor
¥onday - I :08 a.m. Tup~rs
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegiiv- late Sunciay. IQ back the tl!rec-way $350 and court costs, Ohio license ~ Saturday ac:\t!lissions - · Bertha
. veh,cJe accident involvin¥ Tom Phuns Squad and Volunteer. Fue ina (AP) .:_ Fig_hting" betwcen gov- di ·-.
d
. . tha B .
suspended ·for .90 days, one year - Bak_e_r, Pomeroy-,. Cora Jewell,
' Stanl~ who was dead on amval;
Department ~~sponded to .the ernment forces and Bosnian Croats
vtston. an yet mslst ~ t ~rua-_ probation, speeding, $21 and costs, Alb
. Sunday - 8:30 a.m. Syracuse Arbaugh A:ddibon for brush and flared in cenlral Bosnia today amid Herzegovina be preserved as a sin- seathelt violaiion, $25 and coun
- any.
.
:
to Rock Sprihgs Road for Richard structure fue at a vacant house,
· 0 f Croat " · · retali
gle state. .
. - . -.
costs, unpon enrollment and com· Saturday dischar~es - Merle
name of owner was unavailable; s1~ns a .
Ou~s1ve m
- .. The meeung qf EC fore1gn mmlett.·o·n Af the RlP schoo
· 1 • $t·· o- of P~vis, Ro_lll!ild; \;'trginla Henh
d
Fin law w 0 '\V~S tran.spot:t.~ 10 333 a.~. Racine ll:iLong Run Road abon for recent gwns by govern- 1sters acknowledged that the peace Ph ·r· v .d ·h . . ii'J
b ~ _ drtc~s •. Pordand; Rtchard Riggle-;
Ve!Crans.Memonal Hospttal; 11:03
"' .
.
mentb'OOps
d 'sed.
b the .. -- edi
1 e me an t e Jat1 w
e sus
man Middl rt.
1
~.m.. Cphimbia Tilwnsliip
Volunfor
Sally
Bailey
who
was
tranS)XlrlT.
I
.
I
died
.
h
..
.
P.
an
evt
m
Jlllll
;Y
If m a- . - perlfi!ll· ... Pauy
Laudermilt
··-·
- Edt' th
..._.,.,
ed to PVH.
.
we; ve ~ e
ovemtg t m tor, Lord Owen, IS dead. T~ey · p - · •
- l"d _
• _ ~s'undayepoadm,·sst'ons
.
~
teet Fire ~nt,~~ to
heavy shelling .of Jablantca, some ' authorized him to discuss die Serb- ~. omproy, no ~a ' . operators O'De.JI, R~ville; RusSell MeadC"arpenter Hill Road. fOr a·rekindled
50 miles west of S!1fajevo, said Croat $11idemenl . :. " .. -. : ' hcense. 3Q ~ys til J~· su.spel)d&lt;:d . ows, Middlep&lt;!.~
structure ftre at the C~l Lyons
U.N. spokesman MaJ. Pe~ Galle- _ On S .... .
. - .. ·lilcel · to 10, 1\11. suspe_!lded 1f VB!Id Oh10 - -S'unday discharg-es_ N
residence; 1.:42 p.iri, PQine~om tli
..
·
c
•
·.f. d
·h lis
un"l'Y• ·~ a meenng - Y ~ hcense m 60 days, $100 and court · _
.. . . .
one.
AP) · Hc:reare .. gos. roat•orc.es . ~
e
s
e
.
...
.
to_arouse
Mushm_fears
that.the
---·
b
.hild
HOLZER
MEDICAL
CENTER
.,
CLEVELAND(
eh
Pome~oy ·Nursing and•R all' ita·
·.
U;N. sourcessatd. .:
.
Serbs and Croais are cl6se to.car\&gt;- .:- ._co.sts,one year pro auon, no c .
.
tiol) -Genlel: _for Daryl COoley whQ. Satu~day night's Oliio Lollery ·. .. A Bosnia-wide truce was sitp- ing,' op Bos.nia, the .lelldets of.. ..rcstramt, c~urt co~ts only; Lomse
June 18 dlscbarga - Shelby,
_ was transported· to O.'Bieness selecuons: . . posed 10 sile_nce guns las.t Fri!lay.. Bosniil:.s Serbs·and ·€roau mei air:.--I11!JS1. ~JICme, :Qnvmg_. Under th~ __ Neal, Mrs. Cha!:lum Arm~ and
.Memorial H_o_s••1ta.J'·, 2:5_l 'p .m .•_·..·· S_opa:Lotto.. . --- -....
·· " '
Slavt'c Muslt'ms who domm'a•· ·the
rt- . M.
S .b. ., ·. ol- - Influence, $350 an!l.court cost,s. 10· son,.-Mr_S.-Edwm.Hodge aiid son,
""
•
.,
5
16-24
27
29
31
.
"'
..
reso
m
ontenegro
er tass e da~s
· ·~
· --.Jat.1 suspended
·
· ·'
.·
-. •. • ·
Bosnian government army and partner in the Yugosl~v federation.
to. three,· ·· Mrs.,R'•c.liiard
_ ~"·-•
~,....· and da~ter.~
&gt;RacipejianS(iorted.Barbara Salym · · -.
to VMH; 2:59p.m. Racine trans(ftve, uxteen, tw~nty-f~ur, their l!osnian Croat rivals are
The delegations led by Bosnian Ohto hcense suspend~d for 90 Knstt Ann Johnson •. Mrs. N!colas .
ported Pam Salyers to VMH; 3:42 twenty-seven, twenty-moe, thmy- engaged in increasingly fierce Serb Radovan Karadzic and Bosni- days, one year probl!ll.on, upon No~an and son, Clinton Pnze~ ...
p.m. Tuppers Plains Squad and one) .
.
. .
fighting for territory as pressure an Croat Mate Bohan left smiling enrollment and complebOf! of the Tn a Lee, Albert ~uschel, lms.
Reedsville ~irst Responders .to
. The Jackpot ts $18 mtllton.
mounts for a three-way division .of after stud in maps in seven hoors Rp&gt; school $150 of the ftne and Corbm, Juamta. Gtl~ore, Rena·
Limberger Rtdge Road for Edith Ktcker
.
Bosnia among Croats Serbs and 0 f iall:
t:lgrade dail Politika Jatl wtll be suspended, left of cen- Potts, Jeffery Smith, Roger Smder,
·
·
1-3-7-8-2-4
Muslims
'
.
. s, . .
·
Y·
•
ter, $20 and court costs, seatbelt ·Evelyn Davts and J\my Th.ornton. ::
(onc&lt;. three, seven, eight, two, . . Members of Bosnia's collective· ~~~~~~Y· Both .r~.fus~d pubhc violation, $25 and court cos.ts; · MiJhone-S19 discharges- Mrs."
fQur)
.
_presidency gathered in Zagreb,
.The 'Bo$t!ian ilrmy,.wh!ch seized.. . D~vtd Laml!'ber, Pomeroy, ftshmg .c ae1. erg~.' and son, ~~ory
D8ily Sentinel
Pic~6-3N8 timberi .
Croatia's capital, to discuss ·the .controlofthecenttaJBosnian.town ,wuhoot a hcens~. ~25 and court Wm~ton, .~IB T~,.Will~
(U8P8 Jli.IIIOj . '
v· Serb-Croat )iroposal .Bosnian radjo ·. ofTravniJI. in a sM4;tac:ui,P. .move_ ~ COsf:S:: TQSha, LI!Dib.tber, .Pol)ler9y, .Reynofds, Braford Filling~r. Carli
Published,. . ine\j' • attei-nOon,_~ ·MOnday .
(zero, .six, eightH
S\lid. . . . . '. . • . ' !WI) weeks ago,.sald.C!PitlorcCs:;· .fiShJng WI~Oot a license; $~5 an'd Wallenfelsz and·Sarah Fellurc.
_ . •lhTOII,Ih Friday, Ill Court St, Pomeroy,
Ohio by the OhJo .• Y•II"Y. Publishing
P~
~
.
N~m
... li.n
- .
· . ~.osnian f'residel)t 1\lija lzetbe- ·began. moving 'in!O ,offensive posk ... c9ur_t c~sts, R~becca_ Saylor, New . June 19 b!tt.J!s __ _Mr. .llld Mn.
· - . ,. 'Company!Mult.hnedia- Jrie., ... J'orueroy,
-gov1c headed for Copenhagen, tiQns and bringing tankS up IQ..Iro!!t .'-;- ~~r.sl!fteld, disorderly conduct, . Tod~.}fcMani'!S· son; Jackson. ·. .
: - . · "• Ohio-46769;- Ph:.QII2-21!!6.. 8ocond cl.ua
.. _,. ·
- ..
Denmark, where European Com~ 1ines in ;/iirioits ·centril B.9snl
.$20 ~ne suspetided to court costs
June 10 d.t~Cb!lrges - Mrs.
· - ;o.taae paiclat Pomeroy, Ohio. ·
S.
munity
foreign
ministers
decided
areas
over
the
weekend;
·
o~IJ::,
_J.Jau
Van
NQstran,
Athens,
Mi.
chael Salse~ and daughter, ~lla
·Me.mbe'r: The A.uoriat.ed Prcl:s, and lhe ·
·
·
·
diSorderly
conduct,
$20
fme
sus·
W!ls~on,
Netl Hotham, Tma
Ohio Newspapr AaaociaUon, National
,pendcd to coUrt costs ·only; Roben Ho~ken, Hugh Gaskins, Robert
Ad¥erti1ins Kcpnlunt.ative, Branham
New1paper Salee, 733 Third Avenue,
AmEllePower....................361/8 - $.- - Caruthers, Middlepon, disorderly Radcliff, Walter Peck and Palricia
New York, New Yorlt 10017.
Ashland 011 ........................25 3/4
c:onduct, $20 fine suspended to Patterson. •
.
POSTMASTER: Send add:tUI chango to
AT&amp;T.................................6!J(l
Le1lon to meet
.
Sternwbeel ftoup meets·
costs only; Shawn Hawley, MidJune 10 bll'tbs- Mr. and Mrs.
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court 8&amp;.,
Bank One........................... 53 SIB
The Racine All!erican Legion
The B~ Bend temwheel Asso- dlepon, $20 fme suspended to costs Jerry Boggs. !on, Oak Hill. Mr. and
Pomeroy, 0Hio46789,
Bob Evans .......................~ .16 7/8
Auxiliary will meet Thursday at ciation w· I meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. _only; Eric Johnson, Middleport, Mrs. John Carroll, son, OalliPQiis.
. BVBICRIPI'ION KA1'E8 •
Charmina Shop..................l3 114 7:30p.m. at the post hom4;.
at the Carpenters Hall in ~y. $20 fmc suspended to costs only;
By Ca..,.•·or Motor Bo•te
Chmp Industries. ................ l3 3/4
Plans for this y~·s ~estival will be _ Danny Buffington,Po!!I~OOy, menOM Week. ........................ - .. ............11.10
OM-Monlh .........................................teJII!
CiiY ~ldlna. ....;,...............2S·
Practice slated
dtSJ:\ISSed, Public mvtled.
, ._. ··-·· acLng, thtee days in jail suspended,
SPRING~Ali!~ CIN!Ml ~
One \'Ur.................. ,...............- .NUO
Federal Moiiul ...... ;............l91/1.
Meigs County Pomona Orange
. , . -. .
. . - . .. ·, .. . :$25 .anil costS, restraining order
:
BINOU: COPY
'
44 6 4)/4
'
·'
PRICE' Gc:NxJye~r~ .........,........38 7{8 ·.Pfficers wUJ 'have ~racticc for
-·: . ,- ,~lu_IIIC! meet -.. . . · - issuep; Mlldl&gt;n Snider, Racil}e,
. . Dally............ ....: .,:.....:.::........... ~.26_(!ia~'
Llnds.En!l............,.............2U18 Inspection Friday ~t p.m. at thQ
R1~ervJew· Oar(!en · Ciub · WllJ •. . dior!I.CtfY conditci,.$25 and costS,
J:.lmitedlnc
.....
;
.................
22SJ8
·Rock
Sprinjs
Orange
Hall.
All
·hold
a potluck 1111111* ~Y. at-·- ~ond~ld Abrams, Lowell, two
Pi7 Uia oont-,
er rn~~y remtt fn advance aftct 1o Tht
Multimedia
Inc
................
:.35
314
offiCetS
to
atlend.
6:30
:p.m .. •! the 11om~ Q.f !"f!&gt;l~ equipment violations, court costs
o.n, Sentinel on • l.hree, .... or 12
Point
BilncoJp
...
:
......
,
.........
I4
·
Youna.
Bnna· tallle._ ~ a cov-__ .onJy_on CI;!Ch; Olarles Geary, Midmanlh boala. Ctodll witt be at..., coniOT
qchw~.
RaxReiiiUIIIIL .................. l/8·
e{e(!dishllldalawn~IWr. -. -, - dlepon,Jtttering, $150 and court
Reljanl:e Blccliic............... .l8 7/8
Ti'ultHa to meet .
.
" · c~ fiiiCS suspended. 3 days in jail
· ··
No oubeaiplioni by malt pounlllod in
· ·' ··Uca when home ca'rrier Mntce ll
Roliblnl.tMya:s
...
,
............
16
·
-·
·
R
IIIIand
Township
'fnl4teOs
will
Renvalllated
suspended , area to be restored; ..
·- available.
~
·
$haney's Jnc ...................... 17 518
meet July 1 at 6:1.5 p.m. at the fire
Dexter Church of Christ will Panice ~land, Pomeroy, complic·
Matt 1 - l l o M
Star B811k ....,......................35 Jfl station. Public inVIted.
hold revival Friday tbrough Sunday ity, 10 days in jail suspended to 3
lnolda llol., llcnonl)&gt;
Wendy Int'L..................... :14 314
in 7:30 p:m. and at 10:30 a.m. Sun- days, $SOw court costs, one year
13 w..u.........................................12t.N
26 woeu. .........................................l43.te
WCIIIhiqtoa Ind. ...............311}4 ·
AA lfOII~eel
day. Chuck Russell,_ New Hope probation; Kenaeth West, Athens,
53 -..o;tiiiwo'iihiiil~ .. tN.1e .
Stock r.eporta 11re tlte 10:
The PoaJCtOy
of AA and
Streot .Min!l~~ner .. Driying Under die Influence, $350
. 1a waau.........:............_..... - .•
Qlt4J. . l~~ltt•.
.
liurada~a~ -: wl!!,llUIMd:Jo. . .._ t-~t::. :mcx~~~~t
.. ll!!@;- lOillys.i!J.ia!J.•us·----Ill Waila, ..;.;.......... ,,.,,"..:........;.;.
o'. ,
l(te!P'IUt~
!
a '7 p.m:-c.Jl ·-,~~~Ct _. : _ ~;IIUt• 91~ ~.·:~ 10 ifuiO';))lllo llcell&amp;"sua;
II~.~;;;;.~ ... ~.....................:.. .;..
.•...
. ,.
·
·!)92:$76 lor
.•
. ... a.m: with
~ea at 10:30: penefed _for 9.0 clays, upon enroiJ·
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.
a.m. Public in'Ated.
ment and completion of R'fP

penpli

~M,.S. Tespondsto

15calls

B OS·Dian
• pres
· · I•d.e·nc_
,-·y -_
. . . ·b-·- . _.-to meet Ill zagre

H ·• .-

. - .
.
OSpJtaJ .DeWS ...

Lotte'ry ·n·u"m
_ ber' s

:f:!

The

3

'.

,.,

I ''

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO-

Accu-weather• forccut for daytime conditions and
"

f · •J

1993

OHIO Weather
Tuesday,

~ ··· · "~

S.toe·k.

• annOUnCemen t
M ezgs

s.-.. . '""ct.iri.,..

t.fH .

l••..

AI.AIIm:Ew
S
. · . . .__

*

.

"

• _.. ____

.:-:•.• j..,. _ _~_

·.:.":_

'

......

,, ·.

. . '· " '

�Sports

Monday, June 21, 1993

The Daily Sentine~
Page-4

With Paxson's clutch three-pointer,

With three AU-Americans and
an 11th place finish for its
women's telllll, the University of
Rio Grande -track program made
history with lhe results of its trip to
the recent NAJA Track and Field
Nationals ,at Abbotsford, British
Columbia:
"Wor~s cannot describe the
feeling I have, and the feeling for
our athletes, because they put on a
show," veteran Rio Grande track
mentor Bob Willey renwked.
"As a coach, you try to get youi
al,hletes to peak at the nationals, but
there are so many factors involved
arising from the regular season.
, This time, however, they did everything we asked them to," he added.

Chicago Bulls three-peat NBA champs
"This is a marvelous finish," quarter wilh 5:51 to go, rtnally.hit instinct. ... You catch and you
_Chicago's fii'St basket of the period shoot. It's something I've done
Chicago coach Phil Jackson said.
Now the debate about the Bulls with 5:21 left, giving the Bulls a hundreds of thousands of times in
greatness can begin. They won the 90-88 lead
my life."
best-of-seven series 4-2, taking all
But Dan Majerle, who had 21
"I've lived out a fantasy of
three games in Phoenix.
points, followed with a jumper that mine."
The Minneapolis Lakers from gave the Suns their fii'St lead since
And Barlcley, who led Phoenix
1952-54 and Boston Celtics "from the first quarter. Phoenix led 98-94 with 21 points and 17 rebounds,
1959·66 were lhe only other teams going into the final minute.
.lived out a nightit\are.
.
·
to win at least three straighi titles.
Jordan, who had the fii'St nine of
"It's ~ust really difficult, you
Jackson pointed out that seasons Chicago's poit)ts in the fourth quar- just hurt, ' he said at the end of a
were shorter then, and Michael Jor- ter, scored on a full-court drive season in which Phoenix had the
dan n.oted that there were only one- with 38 seconds left. Then Majerle best regular-season record and he
third the number of teams as there threw up an airball from the right was the MVP. "We have been .at
are now.
corner, resulting in a 24-second this for six; seven, eight months.
"Winning three championships violation that left 14 seconds in the Now it's over. Just liJce that."
is something that really hasn't hit game.
The Bulls capitalized on
us yet," said Scottie Pippen, who
Trailing by two, Chicago Phoenix's tight ins1de defense to
had 23 points. "But one day we'll designed a play for Jordan but he set an NBA playoff record of 10
realize we're one of the great couldn't get the ball back after . three-pointers. They missed just
teams.''
·
passing to Pippen. Pippen 1&gt;a8sed four times.
Maybe so, but they sure didn't mside to Grant, who was close
Jordan-'s 41.0 scoring average
look like one in the fourth quarter enough for a layup. But he hadn't • broke the Finals mark of 40.8 set
Sunday. Their 12 ·points 1n the hit a basket since Game 4, and by Rick Barry In 1967. , ·
.
quarter was a finals record for passed to Paxson behind the threeThe Bulls dashed to the locker"fewest in a fmal period.
point arc.
room immediately after the game.
Chicago led 87-79 after three
"Hor~e ~!d the !ight thing,"
Champagne corks popped, and
quarters, but .missed its first nine Jordan satd. He m1ssed a layup Paxson was the first Bull to get
shots of the fourth quarter by the the time before so his conrtdence doused.
time Charles Barkley's layup tied was shot."
BJ. Armstrong sat on the floor,
the score 88-88.
Paxson was open because leaning against a folded chair. He
BOMBS AWAY - Chicago guard John Paxson unleashes a ·
"We were out of sync, out of Phoenix's aggressive defense kept covered his face with a newly
three-pointer
from the left wing in the last minute or Game 6 or the '
printed championship T-shin and
rhythm offensively," said Jordan · ~~ng to the, ball move~t.
NBA
finals
a~alnst tbe host Phoenix Suns, who fell 99·98 primarlly
~ ~u _don t ":V~~ to g1ve up ~
sobbed. Jackson. then grabbed his because or thiS shot, which bit nothing )lut nylon. (AP)
who led Chicago with 33 point;
·.
three,
~ge
smd,
but
you.
don
t
.
two hands, pulled bim upright and
and won his third straight finals
MVP award, ''Their defense had a want to g1ve up a dunk ellher. embraced him for 10 seconds.
lot to do with iL"
To~'h play." ,
"This (title) ll)eans more to me
}here wa~ "?. one aro~nd than tb\1 otlier two," Armstrong
Jordan, whose foul shot gave the
Bulls their first point of the fourth me, Paxson satd. That was JUSt said, "because we had to work
more as a team."
ed Billington and forward Troy
Despite beating Reds in latest road game,
By The A5SOCiated Press
The NHL trading deadline Mallette to the Ottawa Senators for
Sidorkiewicz and future considera·
several goaltenders lions.
Teams had io submit a list of
Goalies Ron Hextall, John Vanprotected
players - or~e goalie,
biesbrouck, Craig Billington, Peter
away as the landing spot for one of
By JOE KAY
Piazza, hit the most impressive ' victory Over tiMI Cincinnati Reds:
five
defensemen
and nine fOrwards
It gave the Dodgers somethmg Sidorkiewicz and Mark Fitzpatrick
CINCINNATI (AP) - From Mike Piazza's homers.
of lhe Dodgers' four homers Sunthree
hours
after
the trade deadTake it from Tim Belcher where the Los Angeles Dodgers
day, a line drive into the second nice 10 talk about at the end of a 5_ switched cities as teams maneu- line passed. Whoever was left was
stand today, fii'St place looks as far that's a long way.
deck in center field that set up a 6-3 5 road trip tha~ would be reason for vcred to cut their expected losses in up for grabs by Anaheim and Flori·
optimism under normal circum- this week's upcoming expansion
da.
stances. Despite breaking e!en on draft.
In olher trades Sunday:
the road, the third-place Dodgers
Each club is allowed to protect
- The Islanders sent defense:
only one goalie.
headed back to the West Coast 9
There were 11 trades made man Jeff Norton to the San Jo!ie
am S·S), 10:05 p.m~
Califomia,l8; White, TI:X'Of\to, 16.
'1{2 games behind San Francisco in overall Sunday before the 5 p.m. Sharks for a lhird-round draft pick
- • Baseball • PlTCJUNG (8 doc.ision.1): Wickmaa,
the NL West, matching their season deadline. Four other trades were in 1994 and future considerations.
Tuesday's Eames
New Yotk, 8-0, 1.000, 3.76; Wells, De·
NATIONAL LEAGUE
uoit. 9-1, .900, 2.61; LanJ&amp;ton, CalilorMilwaukee (Bone~ 3-4) at CLEVE·
high.
made Friday and Saturday.
- The Dallas Stars sent forward
nia, ,_I, .900, 242; Hem~. Ton:JnW. ,_
lluk!n Dlvloloo
LAND tN•Il' 2-l~ 7o0l p.m.
The
third·placc
Dodgers
have
"I
knew
the
clubs
in
a
squeeze
Gaetan
Duchesne to San Jose for a
2,
.818,
3.23;
Key,
Ncw
'Ycd:,
8·2,
.800,
Tt•
.
W L PeL ·cl
New York (Perez 4· 6) at Taranto
2.11 ; Doherty, Detroit, 1·2, .178, 2.74;
played· .700 baseball since May 17 would fmd a creative way 19 solve sixth-round draft pick in 1993.
(Mouio4-1), 7:~ p.m.
Philodclphh ...........48 20 .706
Alvuez, Ch.ic•ao, 7-2, .778, 3.12; Su.tDeuoil (Oullicbon 4·3) at Ballimorc
SLI.ooio ................38 29 .l67
9.5
(21-9,) but failed to make up their problems," said Jack Ferreira,
- The Boston Bruins sent
cllft'e, B•llimore.7·1. :ns, 4.70.
MonorW ................36 32 .S29
12
(Muuino '·3),1:3l p.m.
ground. 11!e reason? The Giants are h
1
f h A
STRIKEOUTS: R. Johnson, Seattle,
defenseman
Gord M~hy to DalMinruwou (Dahaie. 1-4) at Botton
ChiooJo..................32 34 .41S
ll
22-9 over that span, the only NL t e genera manager o t e nal 33; Clemen•, BOltOn, 91; Llnpton, Cal·
Pitllb\qh ..............32 3S ' .471 ll.l
(Quonorlll 2-l~ 7:35 p.m.
las
for
furure
consideranons.
hcim
Mighty
Ducks.
lfomia, 97; H1nson: S~de, 81; Appier,
Florida ;..................31 37 .456
11
Teua &lt;Roaen: !ii-!ii) at Chicaao (Fer·
club
with
a
better
marie.
His
team
and
the
F,lorida
PanThe
Calgary
Flames sent forKan111
City,
87;
Ow.man,
Toronto,
IS;
New Yc:D. .............. 20 47 .299 27j
nlt1dol7-4), I :OS p.m._
Pet=, N;ew Yolk, 14.
California (Cane +1) at K~n~u City
"You'vegottotalceyourhatoff thers will stock their rosters in ward Sergei Makarov to the Hart·
SAVES: Monlaomcry, Kan11s City,
Wedem DtviRon ~
(S ....... 7-6), B:~ p.m.
to San Francisco," Piazza said. - Thursday's expansion draft.·
ford Whalers for future considera20; Olson, Ballimorc, 19; Api.lcn, Mino.tland (B. Wia 6-4) ot S..lllc (Cm·
•• S..Fnociaoo ........4&lt;5 23 .667
nCIIotl, 19; D. Wu~, Toronto, 11: Farr,
The dealS involving goalies . tions.
"It's hard 10 imagine them keeping
7.l
vc:nc 1·2),1():05 p.m.
'
Atlania ...................~ 31 .SS7
New Yolk, 17; Ruudl, Bolton, 14; Eck9J
up lhis pace the rest of the summer. were:
Lao AnJclei ..... :..... 3S 31' .S30
- The Edmonton Oilers sentmley, Oakland, 14.
HOUitm. ................. 34 32 .S1S 10.l
National
Leaaue
leaders
You've
got to put it out of your
forward
Martin Gelinas to Quebec
14
CINCINNA11 ........ 32 '&gt;I .464
- The Quebec Nordiques sent
BATilNO: Oalamp, Colondo. .430;
mind.
It
gets
a
little
frustrating
to
Susl&gt;icto .............. 27 41 .397 18.l
for
forward
Scott Pearson.
Qond&amp;, San franci~eo, .366; K.ruk.
,veteran Hextall to the New
- • Transactions * Cotondo ................23 44 .343
22
.look up and see how well they're the
Philadelphia, .362; ,Merced, Pius~rgh ,
·Quebec
sent forward Mike
York Islanders for Fitzpatrick. The
.359; V12caino, ChtCIJO, .346; Piuu,
playing.
You
can't
let
it
distract
Base
baD
Saturday's.scores
Hough
to
the
WaShington
Capitals
Nordiques then protected goalie
...,.RURS:
Aoa'*·Dybtra,
.34l; an... Chiooao•.331 .
Am•rklnLucut
you.''
Philadelphia, 62;
SL Louil6. Chicqo 4
for
forwards
Paul
MacDenllid
and
CALIFORNIA ANGELS: Placed
. Stephane Fiset ahd left Fitzpatrick
Bmda, San Franeileo, ~S; Knlk, Philadel·
Piwbw&amp;h I, New Yotk 3
The
fifth-place
Reds
ha.
v
e
Damion
Ea&amp;ley,
socond
bucman,
on
the
ReggiJ:
Savage.
exposed.
,
phia, !52: Maa Williams, Stn Franci1eo,
CNCINNATI a. Lao Anl'i'" 4
15-4ay cli•abled list, rcuo~etivc to June
played like a distracted team for
51; Daulton, Philadel~hia, 50; Biaaio,
Atlaolo 4,1dlt01n001 3
- Washin~ sent defensernanThe
New
York
Rangers
19.
RculJccl
Rod
Com::il,
infielder, rrmn
Hounon, 41; Jay Bell, PilubwJb, 46.
most of the season. The loss Sun- shipped Vanbiesbrouclc to the Van- Paul Cavalliru to Dallas for furure
Pltiladolphi• s. Florida 2
Vanc:ou\'cr of the Pacific Cout LeaaueRBI : Matt Williarru, San Francilco,
San Fnncilc:o 10, HOUIIton 3
CIUCAGO WHim SOX: Placed Rm
day left them a season-higli 14
63;Doohon,Phlloldpoo,l7;Dondo,Son
Colondo 11, Soot l);qo 3
couver Canucks for future consid- considerations.
Karkovi~;c, c1Whcr, on lhll15-day dia·
Ftanciaco, .54; Onc:c. auc.,o, 52; Oalargames out of rust place. Cincinnati ·erations.
abled li1t. Reulled Mike IAV•llicre,
·- The Philadelphia Flyers trad-'
New York protected
ra.a, Colo'ndo, !52; D. Hollinl, Philadd·
Sun-daY's scores
played only .500 baseball on a
catcher, ftom Suuota of \he Florida Slolle
phi.a,
47;
Piw:a,
l.oa
An&amp;da,
46;
Gant,
ed
the rights to center Greg Johngoalie
Mike
Richter
while
the
Atlanu S,ldonuall
Leape. Recalled Rick Wron1, e1U:hcr,
make-or-break homestand against
Allall.ta, 46.
.
Philadolploi• •• Florida 3
f'mrn
Nuhville
~ lJie American Auocil ·
son
and future consideratipns to lhe
Canucks
exl"lsed
Vanbiesbrouck
Hm: Oolomp, Col&lt;ndo,l6; Kelly,
the Giants and Dodgers, and wound and Kay Wh1unore.
. lAo Azl&amp;deo 6, CINCINNA113
lion. Sent Scou Ruffcorn, pitc;:hcr, to
C~An, IS; Boodl, San Franciaco,
·
Detroit
Red Wings for forward Jim
SL Lou.il7, Chiaso 4
Binningham or the Southetrll.CIJue.
' up losing two games in the stand8.5; Gnoc, Ch.icaao. S4; Matt William a,
Cotando 3, S111 Di'l"l
Cummins.
The
New
Jersey
Devils
tradKANSAS CITY ROYALS : Sitned
San Praneiaco, 14~ Bapell, Hou.ton, 83;
ings.
Sin fnraco·l, HQUI\Qn 5
Gary G1ctti, third buanan. Recalled Bill
by
Bell,
Pitubwjh,
8!.
. Pitui:Jurah 3, New Yotk 2
,.
Sampen,
piu:her,
(rom
Om•h•
of
the
· "When you put a pencil to it,
DOUBLES : Orau, Chicaao . 21;
Ameritan Auoci1tion. Optioned Craig
we
have to play .650 ball and it still ·
Cordero, Montreal, 20; Bicheue, Col·
Wilson, infielder, \0 Omah1. Delian•led
Toclay's games
orado, 20; Dyknra, Philadelphia, 2Q;
looks
bleak," Belcher said. "It's
Haryey
Pulli1m, outfielder, for 111ian·
Chicap (Baytina H)" Piusburah
Caminhi. HOUIICn 19; Bigio, Houston,
(Smith 0.1}, 3:05 p.m.
"""L
not the games behind, it's !he four
18; 8 aR tied wilh 17.
Sl . Louia (Maanne S-6) 11 Florid•
'IlU.PLES: D. Lcwil, San FnnciM:o, 6;
teams ahead of us."
. NaUon11 Luaue
(Aquino4-4), 7:3S p.m.
E . Youn1.' Colorado, S; Mutin, Pitt•·
CHICAGO
CUBS
:
Plued
Mike
Atlant.1 (Maddux. 6-S} a~ Philldclphia
The Dodgers kept their distance
bwah. So Cul;ilJI. Colon.do, 5; Morandi·
Hukcy, pitcher, on ~e IS-day disabled
(S&lt;:hillinaB·l ). 7:35 p.m. ,
ni, Ji'hila:t,~· S; Coleman. New York.
Sunday
by hitting the ball a long
~. mm•clive to June 13. Recalled Ttwn·
Montre.al (Bames 2- 1) at New York
5;6ue
wnh.C.
.
distance
off Belcher (5-5) and Milt
my
Shields,
infielder,
tram
low•
of
lhe
(Cdllt..... 0-0), 7 :40~. -HOME RUNS : Matt William1, Stn
.
CINCNNAll CRiJO 6-2) at Colorado
American Auociltion.
Fraacilco. 21 ; Bondi, Sm Fnnaaco, 20;
Hill.
Cory
Snyder
hit
a
solo
homer
(Reynooo 4-3), 9:0S p.m.
CINCINNATI REDS: Activatod. Kevin
Ba"lilla, New YOlk. 17; Gllnt., Atlant.~, 16;
in ihe second, Piazza hit his
H~ (Poltupl S-2) atl..ol Angdto~
Wickander, pheher. Sent Scau Service,
McOritr, San Dieao, IS; D1ulton,
pitcher, to Indianapolis of the American
.(11.Monin=l-4), 10:~ f·"'·
P!W&amp;ddphil, ll; Piozu, Lao Azl&amp;cla, 14;
impressive
two-run homer in the
Same Day Service
San Di•o (llrocail ·2) at San Fran•
A11ociltiC1'1.
' Ju.tice, AllanLI, 14.
third,
and
Eric
Ka(ros
had
a
solo
"""(Wiioon 4-3), 10:3l p.m.
All Parta Extra
COLORADO
ROCKIES:
RccaUcd
STOLEN BASES: Can, Florid•, 28;
Eric Wedae. c•tchcr, ftom Colbr•do
homer in the sixth off Belcher, who
Coleman, New Yotk, 2.7; 0 : Le.wU, S.n
. lncludta: Cleaning,
Tue.;day's pmes
Springs of the Pacific Coltt l...eaJUc and
Fnnci~eo,l4 ; Jlobens, CINCINNATI,
had given up just three all season.
Oiling, AdJu8bnenta,
thm plate4 him on the lS-day c:liubled
St. Louia (Cormier 4-3) at Florida
22; E. Davil,l..ol Anaelea, 22.; E. Yotmg,
Belcher, who had won his last
GrNalng
liiL
(llammood 7-4),1:3S p.m.
Coloudo, 2.1; A. Cole, Colorado, 20;
MONTREAL EXPOS : Sont Jimmy
Adalna (P. Smith 2-6) at Phil.adclphil
Niaon, Atlanta, 20.
four
decisions,
passed
it
off
on
the
Jonea, pitchu, to Ottawa of the lntemt·
PrrCHINO (I deeilion1): T. Greene,
(D. '""""" 6-3), 7:3S p.m.
TUESDAY. JUNE 22 - 2
4
way the ball carries when Rivertior~ al Lcaf~C ror a 30-cby inNz)'·llth•bili·
OU.caso (Wenddl 0..1) at PittlbulJ)!
Pll~od. . hio, 9-1, .~. 2.l6: Schilling,
ution
aa11ttmcm
.
Gunled
l•ek
Clark,
(Wolltl•l), 7:3S p.m
.
Phila~, 1-1, .189, 3.11; Budu:u, San
front Stadium heats up.
fint h11cm1n, hil u.ncond.itional reluse
Montft:al (N1bhalt. 3-S) at New Yor:ll:
Fnnci.lco,' 10.2, ~833, 3.30; Avery, At·
"Piazza's might llave been out
fran hil minor-la81.1e coatnc&amp;.
(Goodt:ft 7-'), 7:40p.m.
•
lor11a, B-2. .800, 2.&amp;7; G~vinc, Atlanr.o, 9NEW YORK METS: RCCillod Jeromy
CNCJNNATI (Smiley 3·9) at Col·
3, .750, 2.16; Swift., Sm Fnncilco, 9-3,
of
lhe Grand Canyon, but witll lhe
Bumitz, oulficlda, from Norfolk of the
omlo (Ashby o-1), 9;0.S p.m.
.150, 3.10; llijo, CNCINNATI. 6-2 . .1SO,
olher
two, I'd talce my chances in
lntcmotiona!IMp.
·
Houlton (Kile 6-1) It Lo• Anaele•
786 N. Seconfl Ave. • Middle
3.31.
(O...o S-S), I 0:3l p.m.
PI'ITSBURGH PIRATES: Annot.nccd
STRIXEOtff$: 0 , M1ddux, Atlanta,
(See
DODGERS
on
Page
5)
.
San Diqo (Bmm '7-6) ll S111 Fl'lncil·
the retiJTlation or the Ted Simmonl p·
86; Hamiac:h, Houlton, 85; Smolr.:r., Al·
By HOWARD ULMAN
(Three·peat!Cl is a word copywrigbted by Pat Riley, bead
coach or the New York Knicks)
PHOENIX (AP) - The ball
floated toward the basket, history
and the hearts of players and fans
riding on its descent. Their eyes
were glued to it as it cut through
the tension-charged air. ·
Chicago's place in NBA history,
one very long season and six close
games mvolvit\g two determined
teams had come dowri 10 -this.
"It seemed like the ball was in
lhe air for about an hour," Phoenix
coach Paul Westphal said "I knew
we were at the men:y of that ball."
There were just 3.9 seconds left
when the shot John Paxson had
launched from three-point territory
dropped through the net. It made
the score 99-98, and left the Bulls
one play away from becoming the .
fii'St team in 27 years to win three
straight NBA titles.
And Horace Grant, coming off
what he called one of the worst
games of his life, made that big
play.
Grant blocked Kevin Johnson's
jumper from just beyond the foul
line with one second lefL It was a
clean block, Grant suetching his
long arm around from .Johnson's
right side and hilling all ball.
The buzzer sounded and it was
all over. The Chicago Bulls were
NBA champs once again.

Several goalies move on to other
rinks in latest NHL trade:action

Dodgers still can't catch· red- hot Giants

~~~~· and

By SCOTI' WOLFE
, Sentinel Correspondent
Fremont's Paul Weaver took lhe
lead from John Ivy on the third circuit, then led the remaining 171aps
en route to Claiming the season
debut of the PRESS Econo Sprints
at K-C Raceway Saturday night
near Chillicothe.
Charlie Fisher of Columbus
again fought off the bounty hunters
·to remain undefeated in six regular
season tries in the Super Sprint
division, while asphalt bound Craig
Leist of Piketon, claimed the Late
Model main evenL
The northern Ohio-based, open
wheel PRESS Econo Sprints put
on a great show on the super-fast,
high-banked 318 mile ova,! of K-C
Raceway.John Ivy jumped into the
lead from his pole position, only to
have Paul Weaver blast around him
on the third circuit. Weaver and
Ivy, lhe 1992 PRESS "Rookie of
Jhe Year" raced wheel to wheel for
a couple laps before getting into
lapped traffic where Ivy, lost ihe
handle and had to go to the tail.
Mike J,.inder moved into the
runner-up spot, occasionally challenging Weaver for the lend .before
Weaver fmally pulled away. Clay
Keirn rocketed from ninth place to
contend for third, engaging in a
great battle with Brian Neeb.

••

' .

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC
(All
. Brands)

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eutml DIYillon

TCUR

W L PeL
l)ocro;L ••......•..•... ,.A3 2l .632
Toronto .....................2 28 .600
New Ycdc ...... _.......41 29 .!lfi

u.-..................3s 33 .m

GB

2
3

I

801klt ....................30 31
Milw•u.koc ......._....29 31

.441
.439

13

CLEVELAND .......27 41

.397

16

W.WnDtv..Oty ........... 3S 31 . 5~
California ............... 34 32 .51'
C!Oa.................. ..34 32 .liS
Saa.le ....................34 34 .500
TeA• ..... -..............31 36 .463

13

-

--·······-----29 36 .446

.406

I
I
2

s
!$

B

Saturday's scores
Dcuoii:IO, Milwaukee 7
NcwY. . I.~4
a.I!VI!tAND 3, DdlimoloO
Torai&amp;D 9, BGikln "
Kotto .. Cltyl. Ooklond 0

LAND, .328; O'Neill, New York, .328;
Cunit, C11ifomia, .32A; Whitaker, De·

RUNS ; MOfitor, Toronto, 59; White ,
Toronto, 57; R . Alolriu, Toronto , 54;
Fielder, D!:lroit, Sl; Oterud, Toronto, SO;
G. Vaughn, Milwaukee , SO; Lofton,
CLEVELAND, 48; Baerga , CLEVE·

LAND,43.
RDl : Fielder, Detroit, 60; Baeraa.
a.EVELAND, 57; Olerud, Tnronto, 57;
Tettleton, Detroit, 57; Caner, Toronto, 57;
Delle, CLEVELAND, 56; 0. Vauahn,
Milwaukee. 53.

HITS: Olerud, Toronto, 95; Molitor,

Toronw, 95; Blerf,l, CLEVELAND, 84;
R. ~ar. TOJ'OnlO, 13: Lorwn, CLEVELAND, I I ; McRae, Kantu City, 81 ;
Gritf'cy Ir, Seattle, 79; Wh ite, Toronto,

au..,..

Colii...U. 5,
Seoule~ TOUI5

79.

DOUBLES : Olcn~d, Toronto, 26;
Wh.i~t.. Toronto, 21; Thomu, Olk:•fO· 19;
Palm•, Tua1, 19; Anderson, Balumorc,
lP; Cuter, Toronto, 19; M. Vau.ahn ,
Da.ton, li; Orifl'cyJr, S..ulc,.ll.
Tll~LES : Hulu, Teu1, 7; Cuyler,
Dctrott, 7; Lofttin, CLEVELAND, 5;

Sunda,f's scores

New Yodt I, Mio •ota 0
o.&amp;rait 7, MilWiukee 3
B•lli mere 6, CL!VELAND 3

T...,.. 3,o-z (12inn.)
OUioad 4,ltonou CUr I
Chico.. 11 Co1ilomio 6

S..W.I3,t...,2

ToniE•t•scam..

American League leaders
BA'n'ING : Olerud, Tortinto, .401;
Molit.or, Tororno, .341; Lof~on . CLEVE- '
uoit, .323: Bt;g~, New York, .322

~

Ookland ....... ,.........26 38

hnUI, 15; Rijo, CINCINNATI , IS; T.·
Grune, Philadelphia, 12; Bene•.• San
D;'llo, 7'1; SdUllio&amp;. Philodclphio, 7l.
SAVES: Lee Smith, St. I...Gui.l, 23; Myen, t'bieato. 2l; Bck, San Fnnciaco. 21;
Mitch Wllliant, Phil1ddphia, 2.1; St.an·
1M, Atlanll , 20; Harvey, Aorida, 20; Be·
linda, PiuaburJh, 1~; Weu.dand, Moru.rcal,13; D. Jcnd, Hw11cn, 13.

·

Milwaukee (N1varro S-3) 1t CLEVELAND~ &gt;-2), 7:0S pm.

(Brlcbon 3·7) It Bolton
4-5~ 7:3l p.m.
· Teall (Brown 3i•5) at Chiuao (Me·
Minnuo~

-

Do...a 10-4~ 1:05pm.
Calif- (PioiOr 7-l) " t t - City
(IW&lt; .... 4-J), 1:3S p.m.
OUiand (Dulin1 1-4) ll S.ulo Olan·

Mc:lao, Kanlu City, 5; ~KfJI, CU:VELAND, 5; L. Juhnlan, Chiclto. 5; 5 •rc
. lied '""' 4.
HOME RUNS: Oonnkz., Tcxu, 19;
Belle, ClEVELAND, II; Fielder, Dctcoi&amp;.l 1: V•uJ1!!!, Mllwa~.. 17; TCIllcstOft, Oetioit, J.7; P1lmer, TeAll, 16;
Orif(oy Jr, Sc.t"-. U; Cuter, Toronto,

a.

ll.

STOLIII IASDS: c.nu, Collfamlo,
31 i Lofton, CI.I!VEl.AND, 21; K. lion·

- . Oaiolond, :!A; R. Alomar, T...,..,

2l: L . Iobn•on, Chicaao, 19; Polonl• ,

all'l"'lnlpt.

Hockey

N1tlonal HOtlcey Leque

BOSTON BRUINS : Tradecl Oord
Murphy, dd'eniCnWI, to 1he. Dallu Slltl
for fUUJte con~identiON.
.
DALLAS STARS : Traded Gac.un
Duchoano, left wint, to the S1n Jp1e
Shatb for a s.iAth·mu.nd pict ln tho 1993
dniL

ON WATCH .FOR AMERICA.

. HARTFORD WHALERS: Acquind
Serp:i Makucw, riaht win.a. frcm the Cal·
,..,. Fl..,.
futUro conddenti0111.
MONTREAL CANADIRNS : Sen1
Donald Durrcsno, defon1om1n, to \he
Tamp. Bay l...i.f,htniq lD oampldc a vade

rot

ror Rob Ram.a1e.

NEW JERSEY DIML!I: Traded Cnia
Billington, "'"'""""· T...,. lotward, and a rowth-rou.nd pick ill the 1993
dnft. lO tho Ou.awa Seaaton f« Pe&amp;er
Sid~ plllnder, and fumre ~­

='"• _..

NEW VORK ISLANDERS: Tntled
loll N-. dol- to the lion r...
Shub for a
'idftn·l ..a.d111 in the
19!10 tlrall. T..-.. ldotk
..-. and.~
illtbal993
dnl\ to t1to Q.- Ncml!qu• r.....
U..toll,
....d:ralt.
- . "." ' · - - pidt
Uuhe 1993

NEW YORIC RANOBRS : Tndod

John V1nbi•broa, toal&amp;tnde:r, to lh•

Vancau\1'11' Cud~ lor r.... CIClMMMn·

......Q!JEDEC

s-

NORDIQUES: Tndod
........ loll ......... tbo ... 011·
en tor Martin GOtial•, t.ft wina. 11'141 1
•Wh· r~U~d pick in Wll993 ......

C.--·

SAN JOSB SHAIU: TnUtl ..._
Ahola, dofenseman, to tht TemPI 811
Uahtnin1
foro,,. CAm'ALl: Trodod
WASHINOTON
P111l MaeDet'l'llW •n4 Jteule San,.,
rilht ...,, to Que. r.llll:a Haup,

!ell ......"T-I'nl Cnolllni, . , _
mart, 141M O.UU Su for 111t:u1t GCIIl8d·

........

'

On ships, planes and submarines, in locations arourid the world, the
men and women of the United Stat~s Navy are on watch. They re
putting _their train,ing to work in jobs that make a difference, while
developing skills they II need for a successful future. just as important,
they redoing it for the!r country. They re Navy people, working hard
for Amertca. And that makes us proud.

.
'

'

Navy. Full Speed Ahead.
1

under 70 each round since Lee
Trevino in 1968.
Stewart nnished at 6-under 274
after shooting 70, and it was another three suokes back to Craig Parry
al)d Paul Azinger, each at 3-under
277. Azinger shot 69, and Parry
had a 68. Watson (69) Sott Hoch
(68) were at 278.
Janzen went into the fourth
round with a one-strOke lead over
Stewart. After 12 holes, both were
5-und.er-par for the toumamein,
and it was match play from there
on.
After a pair of pars at No. 13,
the nnal twosome of the day teed
up at the 415-yard, par-4 14th.
Janzen hit his drive in the left
rough, Stewart was ·in the right
rough:
Janzen plunked a pitching
wedge onto the green about 18 feet
to the right of the hole, while Stewart dropped his in the front bunker.
Stewart chipped up to a foot and
marked it, letting Janzen putL
"I was getting tired, and I didn't
khow if I had enough energy to finish the round and still make good
swin~s." Janzen said. He rolled the
putt mto the heart of the cup, "and
that gave me the surge of ndrenalin
I needed to fmish."

Dodgers win ... (ContinuedfromPage4)
I ·-

'THOMAS HONORED -Henry Domas, longtime Meigs Coon·
ty Fish and Game Aasodation member and fishing derby organizer,
was given special recognition for his dedication to the tournament
and to the kids or Meigs County. Thomas, seated, was given a
plague by Ohio Division or WUdlife representative Mike Dudzik, left
. or Thomas. Others pidured are Terry Hawk, Division of Wildlife;
Meigs County Fish and Game president Tom Grueser, Thomas,
Budzik and Paul King, dub member.

Awards for lhe day went to Pat
Aeiker, Largest Fish (four pounds)
in the boys' division and Angi
Wolfe, Lar~est Fish (1 3/4 pounds)
in the girls division~ Both received
a Zebco 33 Rod and Reel. Montana
Jarrell was second in the boys'
division.
The Smallest Fish in the girls'
division went to Crystal Holsinger,
3 pounds, while John Barnhart won
the boys division with a 2 3/4
pound catch. Aaron Aldridge was
second.
Jeremy Honacher · won th~
"Most Fish" award with 16, whUe
Jenny Mayle claimed the girls'
division with 11 .
. hOD.
Meigs County Fish and Game
: . Every participant received at
:least 'one prize, compliments of the Aasociation president Tom Orueser
,association and many local busi· said, "We'd like to thank all the
kids and their parents who support~nesses.
ed
us this year and expecially the
• '-··-··· .. , Henry Thomas, longtime club
.member and fishing derby local businesses for makinll the
:orgzanizer, was given a plaque in derby a success. One nice ihmg is
·commemoration of his year's of that everyone goes away with a
'service to the club and Meigs prize of some sort. The local busi;County youth . The special recogni- nesses make this possible."
In addition, every panicipant
. •tioil segment of the program and
_ 'pl_llllue pma~tatlon were mlde by · '&amp;ets free pop and snacks w~ .
, .·-·;Milto Budzik from the Ohio State they cartch a break in tho actlon,
•Division of Wildlife. club plelident making the day even more enjoyTom Grueser, and Terry Hawk .
able for the JPds.
: Saturday was a big day on the
:outer banks of the EaSt Shade River
: for 82 Meigs County youngsters
. who took part in the 25th annual
•Meigs County Fish . and Game
: Association Fishing Derby at the
: association's clubhouse and oond.
This year's event was one of lhe
:biggest ever as more children and
: interested parents got involved with
•the event. A huge crowd gathered
:to watch the derby and the post
•tournament award's ceremony,
: which was conducted by club pres'! ident Tom G,rueser, Terry Hawk
. and Keith Wood and other mem: . · ·~-~of the Fish arid Game Associa-

DEI'ROIT REP WINGS: T...re.! lim

sidcrlbonl.

By JOHN NELSON
with Jack Nicklaus and a two- his hands in jubilation, and Stewart
SPRINGFlELD, N.J. (AP)- stroke victory over Payne SI6Wart.
trailed by two.
There were .cops in the bunkers,
The clincher, however, had
Thus came the final transformaphotographers in the trees, and Lee come two holes earlie·r, when tion of the kid from Minnesota who
1anzen standing over a birdie putt _Janzen, a look of grim determina- .,anted to be a shortstop when he
on the 18th1green with a two-shot tion on his face, knocked in, a,30- was 12 - !IDd still idolizes Cal
lead in the U.S. Open. T.hey all foot chip shot from the rough for Riplcen Jr. - 10 U.S. Open chamlooked a little out of place.
birdie on the par-3 16th, evoking pion.
As a mini-tour player until
The cops and photographers still memories of Tom Watson's cbip·in
do.
,
victory ove~ Jack Nicklaus at Peb- 1989, Janzen was was known as a
You know what? Lee Janzen ble Beach in ihe '82 Open.
rtnisher. If he had the lead Sunday
doesn't anymore.
"Actually very poignant!)· it morning, he'd win.
He was also known as the kind
"I never knew if I had it in me r~mi.n.ded me of what happened to
to win the U.S. Open," Janzen me ~n the 17th at Pebble Beach," · of guy who makes quantum leaps
said.
'
said Watson, who was watching on - like from barely making his
Janzen made the eight-foot TV. "I'm happy for him. He's a eighth-grade golf team to becoming
its star with a sub-par average the
birdie putt, giving him a share of nne player.".
The 28-year-old Janzen raised n.ext year. Or like, more recently,
the Open scoring record of 272
going from 115th on the tour
money list in 1990 with $132,986
to ninth last year with $795,279
and his fii'St tour victory.
He won his second tour event
earlier this year, the Phoenix Open.
"To perform at my absolute
best the most important week of the
year is incredible," Janzen said.
"It's the overachievement of my
life."
Janzen fmished with a 69 for his
S-under total of 272 over the par-70
Lower Course at Baltusrol, tyjng
the scoring mark Niclclaus set here
in winning the 1980 Open. He is
the first Open winner to shoot

!Meig~ fishing derby draws 82

CI.II1U1linl, ri&amp;ht win&amp;. and • fouM-round
pick it! the 1993 dnl\ to \he tho Pbibdel·
phil Flym for the fiahta to Orca JOhnson,
c:enter, and fu.twe t:on~iden.tio.. .

ish was lith in 1986; when Willey Smith, a junior from the Ashland - saw both the Redmen and Redtook noted Redmen runners Darren area, was 13th in the !OK. Murphy, women caprure the Mid-Ohio ConMiller and Mark Pierson to the a senior from Zanesville, made lhe ference champioqship, the first
competition.
· semis in the 110 high hurdles at · time both teams have simultane"We took lO athletes this time, 15.91, while the women's relay ously been conference champions.
and for once it felt like a team," team nni~hed 14th nationally in The last MOC title was held by the
men's team in 1990.
Willey observed. "N~rmally we 50.34.
In addition, Lindsey, a fresluhan
take one or two athletes to the
Currently in the midst of an
from
London,
was
25th
in
the
triple
nationals, so I think the team feelag~ressive recruiting program
jump; Sowers; a sophomore from wh1ch may result in 40 additional
ing really he!~ our people."
Along w1th the trio of All- · Frankfort, placed 23rd in the long track and cross country athletes at
Americans, fellow athletes Chad jump; and Ritter, a freshman from Rio Grande, Willey said he remains
Benson, Chris Smith, Tim Murphy Sidney, was 23rd in the triple jump. awed by the accomplishments.
Willey, whose association with
"I just don't think people can
and the women's 400 meter relay
team of Kristy Lindsey, SlaCey Rit- Rio Grande's running programs comprehend what was done there,"
ter, Crystal Cox and Kim Sowers began as a freshman athlete there in .he said. "We ' ve never had a
1969, attributed the success to the national championship 'yet, but
went to the nationals.
team
and to a re,~~;ular season which we're still working on it." .
. Benson, a junior from Glenford,
was 3:58 in the 1500, while Chris

While Weaver was smooth and Chassis has been near perfect in ty claimed lhe B-main. over Snell
steady at the front, Ivy was. racing every start at K-C this season. Sat; andHolley.
·
through the field from scratch posi- urday was no exception. Fisher
The Late Model A-main was
tion to the top five. Following lambasted the competition at the very exciting as Craig "Fudge"
Weaver across the line was Mike wave of the green, .however, the Leist locked horns with. young lion
Linder, Neeb, Keirn, Ivy, Robert reill race was for runner-up and a . Jaclcie Boggs. Boggs led the first
Kraylek, Dusty Rodawalt, Matt spot in the top nve. Dean Jacobs in eight laps !lefore Leist took the lead
Linder, Dan Willey and Wayne the Pete Smith West Virgin ia on laps nine and ten. Boggs came
Buckingham.
Sprinter engaged in a torrid battle hack ·to lead two more laps before
· Heat winners were Ivy and with Jim Nier, Mike Bowling and Leist pabbed the lead for good the
Weaver.
Ronnie Myers.
. next time around.
Charlie Fish'er had the luck of
An early race tangle sent Nier's
Chillicothe's Charlie Seymour
the draw and tl!e right set up to pro- new Schnee to the tail, paving the came from seventh to third ahead
pel him to his sixth regular season way for a nerve-wrenching drive to of Ed Hounshell, Mark Frazier,
win in a row at K·C. Fisher drew the front. Jacobs, Myers and Bowl- John Osmon, Chuclc Wadell, Barry
the number one. pill to start on the ing · battled three Wide for several Bragdon, Scott Wolfe and Tony
. .
pole, allowing him to lead from ' laps until Dewey Castle lost a tire ThrockmOrtOn.
Heat winners were Leist over
flag to flag without much and looped his disabled mount in
resistenee.
front of the field. Myers clipped Mike Wilson and Frazier and
Fisher, a favorite with the crowd Castle to ·bring out the yellow ·on Boggs over Hounshell and Scott
McDonalds
of
said, "I took it easy at fii'St, because lap 18 and was relegated to the tail. Wolfe's
I was loolcing for Dean (Jacobs) to
Jacobs, Bowling, Myers and Galli~oliS/Precision Automotive/
race me once he got through the Nier pushed their mounts high, full Marks Auto Sales, Inc. car #14.
The only mishap of the evening
pack. I knew he was fast, but I throttle against the thread of coshguess it took him a while to get ion·thatremained.
came in Late Model warm-ups
through uatnc. This MC-2 track
Meanwhile, Jacol!s charged when Tad Mitchell was hit by
tire from C &amp; M Racing is the way from 12th to second, Tracy Hoover another car and flipped over the
to go; it put me in the winner's cir- blasted from ten!h to third, Nier turn three bank.
cle tonight and really gets hold. I'd came -from the tail to fourth and
Mitchell was not injured.
like to thank my crew and spon- Bowling faded to fifth . David
K-C entertains the "All Star Cirsors, Gaerte Engines and Superior Snell, the 14th starter, charged to cuit of Champions" Sprint Car
·Tank and Trailer for their help. sixth ahead of Myers, Rick Holley, Division this Saturday, June 26.
,We're not as big as operation as Steve McCann and Mike Adkins.
SUMMARY
some people think, so this win realHeat winners were Nier, Todd
Press Econo Sprints
First heat: Paul Weaver, Joe
ly feels good."
Cramer and Fisher. Daryl DaugherFisher •s own design Fisher .
Keegan, Mike Under, Matt Linder.

p.tn. · p.tn.

erllnwtapr. Namod Cam Bc:wtifay &amp;01«-

classroom.
Additionally, Willey noted, the
!OK was won by Tig~t Moreda of
Wayland Baptist College (Texas),
who finished eighth in the same
event in the 1992 Olympics at
Barcelona.
Peck set a new school record in
the 3000, while Evans shattered
Peck's prior record in the 5000.
Smith, a relative newcomer. to
the program, was sixth nationally
in the long jump at 22 feet, 9.25
inches.Overall, the women's team finished 11th among all NAIA teams
- the highest yet for a Rio Grande
squad - while the men tied for
43rd. The previous top national nn-

-:Janzen edges Stewart to capture U.S. Open

FREE INSPECTION

eo (Swift 9 -3), 10:35 p.m.

The three receiving All-American honors for their times in the
nationals included seniors Renee
Peck of Baltimore, Ohio, Bonnie
Evans of Kingston, and Jerry
Smith, a sophomore from Frankfort.
Peck, one of the most honored
runners in Rio Grande running history with nine All-American rankings to her credit, placed third in
the 3000 meter at 9:50 and sixth in
the 1500 at 4:36 . Evans, who
worked and trained alongside Peck
for the past four years, was rtfth In
the 5000 at 17:35 and runnerup in
the !OK at 36:19. Both she and
Peck were named Academic. AllAmericans for their efforts in the

'

Weaver, Fisher, Leist among K-C Raceway's latest winners

1

FRUTH

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

Trip to nationals earns Rio Grande women 11th place finish

Monday, June 21, 1993

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

,,

12 of the 14 parks,"· Belcher said.
•'I felt lilce I was in a nice fOOve,
on a nice roll, and I still do.'
Eric Davis completed the
Dodgers' first four-homer game
since Mlly 21, 1991 in Houston by
hitting his fifth homer off Hill in
the seventh. But Davis saved his
raves for Piazza, lhe rookie catcher
who leads the club in homers (14),
batting average (.345), hits (80)
and RB!s (46).
. "He's a major-league hitter
with tremendous power. He hits for
average and drives in runs, and
·does all that while squattin~ on his
knees every day," Davis smd.
It's more a matter of lhe hands
than the knees, Piarza said.
"I ' m staying relaxed at the
plate, •• said Piazza, whose homer
was his fourth in 14 at-bais. "At
times this year when I wasn't bit-.

ting the ball, I was tensing up. I
enough stiengt.h in my hands
that I ct111 relax and just jlut the bat
on the ball"
The Reds, coming off a seasonhigli 19-hit performance Saturday
night, mana,ed just five hits off
Pedro AstaCIO (6-4), Pedro Martinez and Jim Gott, who pitched
two perfect innings for his 11th
save.
The only one trying to put a
· positive spin on it was Davey Johnson, who has managed the Reds to
a 12-13 record since replacing
Tony Perez. The Reds have lost 4
1!2 games in the standings under
Johnson. who has spent the last
month reorganizing his pitching
staff.
"Thinfs are going in .the right
direction, ' Johnson said. "That's
all I'm concerned abouL"
·hav~

Second heat: John Ivy, Dave .
Rice, Brian Neeb and Dusty
Rodawalt.
Feature: Weaver, Mike Linder,
Neeb, Clay Keirn, Ivy, Robert
Kraylek, Rodawalt, Matt Linder,
Dan Willey, W11yne Buckingham.
Super Sprints
First heat: Jim Nier, Steve
Bixler, Mike Bowling, Dewey Castle.
Second heat: Todd Cramer.
Dean Jacobs, Steve Bixler, Harry
Garrett.
Third heat: Charlie Fisher,
Tracy Hoover, Ronnie Myers,
Mike Adkins.
B-Main: Daryl _!:&gt;augherty,

David Snell, Rick Holley, Ken
Kimbler, Wayne McPeak, Harold
Beasley, Tim Jodrey, Brian Benson, Randy Fink, Dave Dickson.
Feature: Fisher, Jacobs, Hoover,
Nier, Bowling, Snell, Myers, Holley, McCann, Adkins.
Late Models .
First heat: Craig Leist, Mike
Wilson, MarJe Frazier, Barry Bragdon.
Second heat: Jackie Boggs, Ed
Hounshell, Scott Wolfe, Chuck
VVadell.
.
Feature: Leist, Boggs, Charlie
Seymour, Hounshell, Frazier, John
Osman; Waddell, Barry Bragdon.
Wolfe, Tony Throckmonon.

Special Olympics night moved
to last Friday in July at WVMS
join .38 Special and Kansas. Gates
open at 3 p.m. Show time is 6 p.m.
Racing returns for the Race of
Champions, which includes current
top Winston Cup drivers and legends of the sport. The NASCAR
drivers will stage a match -race in
local Late Model Cars and fans will
have an oppo~unity to see which
pro can master lhe track In record
time.
Back by popular demand, will
be the autograph session prior to
the full racing card. The track has
been notirted that the tentative lineup includes Rusty Wallace, Kenny
Wallace, Dale Jarrett, the 1993
Daytona 500 winner; Jimmy
Spencer, Bobby Allison, lhe original member of the Alabama Gang;
and the legendary Cale Yarborough.
·

A change in the schedule of racing events at West Virginia Motor
Speedway will move the Special
Olympics night, originally set for
Saturday, July 3, to the last Friday
night in July, making it a part of
the Granger Select NASCAR
Drivers Race of Champions on July
30.
The next entertainment event
special will .be a concen by Club
Razzles on Tuesday, June 29 starring 38 Special and Kansas, two
top 10 nationally known groups.
Instead of the sound or race car
engines roaring around the "Monster 5/8" mile West Virginia Motor
Speedway, music will echo from
the hills surrounding lhe' facility on
June29.
The Dixie All-Stars, formerly of
Molly Hatchet and Blackfoot, will

, SMITH WINS EVENT - Todd Smith or Pomeroy is currently
the points leader of the V-8 Pure Stock class at Vinton Raceway
Park In Vinton, where he won last week's event over Ginny -Adkins
of Fraziers Bottom, W.Va. and Rocky Davidson.

Smith points leader at Vinton Raceway
Todd Smith of Pomeroy has
been doing very well this year in
the Pure Stock V-8 division at various local speedways. Smith is currently the points leader at Vinton
Raceway Park, where he won last
week's trophy race and feature
event.
Vinton Raceway runs V-8's and
Four-Cylinder Pure Stocks every
Sunday afternoon at I p.m. This

week a new class was introduced;
the Detroit Iron class, a class that
consists of having a stock production car with glass removed, roll
cages installed and absolutely no
extras to make the cars run better.
Several of Todd's sponsors this
year are Poor Boys Tires, Anderson's Furniture, Greene and Sons
Concrete in Mason and Pomeroy
Sugar Run Ashland.

NOIICIE TO OHIO INIUSTAIE
AT&amp;T LONG DISTANCE CUSTOMIIS
JUAIT COMMUNICATIONS OF OHIO, INC. hereby gives notice
that it filed changes with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
to adjust rates for certain long distance calls within Ohio.

Direct dialed rates are being increased ovet'all 0.7% in,the
Night/Weekend time period for calls over 11 miles and in the
Evening time period for calls in the 11-22 mile band as follows:
PRESENT PRICES
MNNG

DAY

M'l ; _
1- 10
11~

23-55
56-124.
125~·

-- -- -"'"""

ladt
AJd'lional

0.1900
0 .2000
0.2300
0.2500
0.2600

0.1 300
0.1700
0.2100
0.2d()()
0.2600

tnitiol

0.1375
0.1500
0.1540
0.1670
o.1no

lach
Adclilional

0 .0950
0.1150
O.ldOO
0 .1610
0 .1750 ·

NIGHTIWEIKENO
ladt
lnOtOoi
•J:f'IK:aal

0.1050
0.112S
0.1210
0.1310
0.1AOO

0.06AO
O.OBBO
0.1120
0.1274
0.134.5

PROPOSED PRICES
MNNG

DAY

tnitiol

Call Sentinel

CIASSD'It:DS!
882·2158

M" ; _
Mi1-10
0.1900
11-22
0.2000
23- 55
0.2300
56-124
0.2.500
125·-pin. • "·0.2600 .

- -- -ladt

HMrlowl
0.1300
0.1700
0.2100

0.2400
0.2600

tnitiol

0.1375
0.1500
OJ SAO
0:1670
o.1no

lach

' t SSonat

0 .0950
0 .1200
0 .1400
0.161.0
0 .1750 .

NIGHT/WR!tEND

lach

Initial

Hdlfc iUI

0.10.50
0.·1200
0.1300
0.1500
0.1500

0.0640
0.0880
0.1120
0.1300
. 0.1500

In addition, the rates for RealTime Rated Operator Calls are to
be adjusted to make them the same as the proposed
Long Distance rates.
These changes will become effective on July 1, 1993.

•

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_,.._ . . • _. ., _., _..... 0'~...,....,

Page

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·- --• . . -.. . . . . ..-. ._, . ,. . . .,..
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6 The D~lly Sentinel

~~~-··-·

#p .-... . ••-·-••- ·-· ·..

•- • ~

,.._ . . ••"'- ._, . . . . . ..... . . , ....... -• ,_,. ._ -· .
~

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... •'1"'

I

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...

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,.

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•

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--

The Dally Sentfnei-Page--7

Monday, June ~1, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

~-~:,~,?,:~~ ~1:~.-~---~; ~ &gt;~.

Past Councilors Club elects officers
Officers for lhe next six monlhs
were nominaled at 1he recent meet·
ing or the Past Cowteilcn Club or
Chester Council No. 323, Daughters.of ,-\nierica. · ·
Officers are Opal HoUon, p-esident; Faye Kiikhart, vice pres!den~
Thelma White, secretary; Mary Jo
Barringer, treasurer; Emia Cleland,
flower committee; Betty Young;
sentinel; Mary K. Holler, news
repomr.
,
The meeting opened in ritualis-

ducz:fti!~:l:~mee~~dcon-

Salisbury science-fair winners named,
The fourth, fifth and sixth
grades of Salisbury Elementary
participated in a science fair recent·
ly under the direction of science
teacher, Karen Walker where there
were many educational projects.
Grade four winners were
announced as Grace Kitchen, Billy
Soulsby, superior; Sandi Gilkey,
Brandy Graham, Sherry Haye, Carson Midkiff, Sarah Clifford, Amy
Frecker, Abby Hubbard, Lillie
Tremblay, exceUent; Healher Wha·
ley, Yancey Hunter, Le•h Lonca,
Steven Fyffe, April Blarikenship,
Budd Smtih, Noah Chasteen, Shan·
di Bobb, Bobby Johnson, Devlin
Clemons, Michael Brumfield,
good.
Fiflh ~e winners were Kristy
Six, Maljorie Halar, Morgan Math·
ews, Tiffany Harder. su~or; Kim
Peavley, Christy Phalm, Marissa
Whaley, Anna Story, Ryan Well,
Becky Karr, excellent; Leeann Dill,
Eric Jarvis, good; T.J. Thomas,
Brooke Sin~elton, Andrew
Williams, Dante! Hysell, Beverly
Burdette, Stephanie Jinks, Joey
Patterson, Ashley Rupe, Sh.awn
White, Barbara Owens, fair.
Sixth grade winners wereKelli
Lightfoot, Lacy Banks, Tricia
Davis, superior; J.T. Humphreys,
Becky Collins, Joel Tremblay,
Meredith Felts, Melissa Werry,
Ry'an Ramsburg, Tamra O'Dell,
excellent: Amanda Ralph, Carrie
Lambert, Josh Wilson, Edson Hart.

Todd Billingsley, Shelly Pavich,
Cortney Scarberry, Ryan Pill, Jennifer Ramey, Jeremiah Bently,
Bobbi Stewart, Abby Wilson,
good; Clayton Ohlington, Bobby
Rope, Melinda Clark, Matt Pavich,
fair.
· The following students received
first. second and third place ribbons
for lhe foUowing events which.took ·
place on field day at Salis~ Ele·.
mentary. Grade.one- broad jump
standing-boys- Jonathon Bobb,
Derrik Randolph, Peter Kling;
girls- Felisha Stumbo, Jamie
Stover, Stacy Hysell:· spoon/egg
race- boys- Ben Collins, Joshua
Ralhbum, Wes Fields; girls- Stacy
Hysell, Pamela Martin, Tia Pratt;
ball throw- boys- Johnalhon Bobb,
Derrik Randolph, Justin Starrett;
girls- Jelisha Stumbo, Jamie ·
Stover, Nikki Butcher; · SO Yird
dash· boys- Johnatbon Bobb, Peter
Kling, Joshua Rathburn; girls- Felisba Saunbo, Jenny Profntt, Stacy
Hysell; sack race- boys- Johnalhon
Bobb, Derrik Randolph, Joseph
Marshall; girls- Jamie Stover,
Pamela Martin, Jenny Proffitt;
three legged race· boys- Ben
Collins and Joshua Ralhburn, Josh
Ramey and Wes Fields; Joseph
Marshall and Darin Homt girlsJoy Still and Jenny Profntt, Pamela
MartinandTiaPratt,AmandaKing
. ·
andJessicaRosler.. .
Second grade- broad jump
standing- boys- Richie Dill, Isaiah

'Last Action Hero' not
what it's hyped up to be
Last Action Hero
Rated PG-13
.. 1/2 (out or five)
Columbia Pictures
(Now playing at tlie Spring Valley
Cinema 7. Check local listings for
tim£)
Movie review
By Kevin Pinson

screen and our world.
The ticket falls into the hands or
Slater's glass-eyed antagooist, who
steps over to our side and learns
villainy is_a_lot t:nore fun when
there is ·not a indestructible good
guy to stand in the way.
Hero's biggest p~blem is that it
abruptly changes gears at midpoint.
· Whar starts out as a goofy satire
slamming on stupid action movies
transforms into a serious action
movie.
The audience is ellpcctcd to
make the whiplash transition •from
one movie *enre to another.
It doesn t quite work, however.
Although we would expect the
world on the other side of 'the
screen ·to be a little different than
ours, at times it takes on a taste of
Naked GUll-style satire, only not as
sophisticaled.
AI other times, the movie is
classic Schwarzenegger adventure.
The action sequences work; the
satire doesn't
Columbia Pictures also uses the
film to shamelessly promote its
other productions. Besides cameos
to remind everyone of Basic
Instinct and Terminator 2, one
scene shows Jack and Danny in a
video rental store that carries noth·
ing but Columbia Pictures releases.

Considering all the hype, Last
Action Hero , starring Arnold
Schwarzenegger, was kind of a disappointment
But I should have realized that overzealous Burger King jerk
touting the novelty movie collector's cups is easily excitable. After
all, he almost wets himself talking
about Whoppers.
Schwarzenegger plays a fictional movie character named Jack
Slater, the cowboy boot wearing,
cigar chomping hero of a series of
high-ammunition action sequels.
He's also lh&lt;; hero of a young
boy named Danny, who has seen
all three Jack Slater pictures and
knows enough about the character
to write his biography.
While previewing the latest
Slater ·sequel, Danny is uansported
into the movie thanks to a magic
ticket once possessed by Harry
Houdini. The ticket creates a portal
Kevin Pinson is a staff writer
which permits two-way travel
ror
Ohio Valley Publishing.
between the world of the silver

Comm:unl.ty· Calendar
-

_ _ _ _ _ __..:;.__ _....::.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
contract services and personnel
Community Calendar items
matters.
appear two days bdore an event
and the day or that event. Items
RACINE • The Racine Area
must be received well in advance
·
Community
Organization will meet
to assure publication in the cal·
Tuesday
at
6:30
p.m. at Star Mill
endar.
Park in Racine. New members welcome. Members may pick up t·
MONDAY
CHESHIRE • Crusade for Christ shirts at this meeting.'
revival Monday through Saturday
POMEROY - The First Baptist
at 7 p.m. nightly. Different singers
Church
or Pomeroy will hold a
and speakers nightly. Sponsored by
rummage
sale Tuesday and
Meigs Gallia Mason counties CruWednesday
from.
9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
sade for Christ. Public invited.

UPHOUTERY
UCINE, OliO

Property transfers

Recover Your

To place an ad

i

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M •. - SAr.B-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
. • Ad. wilkie the couty pur M rWll m111l b. prepaid
• R.-iw dilceaatfor ..a. pAicl i• adn.••·
• FneAdu Ci-.wayaad Fo..ad adl uDd•l5 word. will ..
..... 3 ...,. •• .. ........ ...
• Prieo of ..t for •• eaplialleu.n io do..W. price of ad - 1
' • 7 ...... lloo .,......,. ....d
• S..dMI II IMt rMpoMible for error• af.,.r fll'tl clay (ciiKk
for....,. O,.t day ad''""' io poper). Calhelore 2:00 P·"'·
day allor po•liealloo to •ake cor1eelioo
• Ad. tlaat ••• M paid ill .dwaace ar•;
Card of 'l'hub
Boppy Ado

A !fired

a horse. A trip to Wyan\:lot'(ake
was discussed and it was' decided
that ihe trip ni~Y. be po_ss.ible foi· lowmg a fund rrusmg acuvlty,
The troop participated in the
Memorial Day parade in Pomeroy.
After the Memorial Services the
Cadette Troop met with the
Pomeroy Jumor Troop 1309 to
explain about Cadette Girl Scouts.
Various games were held for the
c_hildren who a!tended the festiviues dunng Hentage·Weekend and
prizeS were awardeil. .
:t
G.irls ages 12-14 interes~~d in
JOtnJng should contact Brenda
Neutzllng at614-992-5770.

news notes

Ia M.;..riuo

ad•-..

IULUniiiOAID DIIDLIIIE
4.(30 P. M. DAY IIFORE
· "KICAnOII

· AAUW receives

recognition
.,

INSURA.NCE

Ill Second St., P•eroy
YOUR
INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUHTY
SINCE

Pt Pie

oom:

::!:":"

or

Public Notice

Public Notice

Admlniilralrbl
ollheEo-ol
Guy E. Huftllr, O.CMhd,

,.uu_
vs

THE ESTATE OF
DAVID 0: itUNTER,

Dliboooocl, IIIII.,

Rooponclonlo

CASE NO. H,IOa
Doc...II:S Page 215

ORDER
Upon rovlow ollho ftle, 11
lo horolly ... Ot;IDER of IIIIo
Court lhol oorvlce llr
publlcodon be made upon
lho unknown Helro, Nul of
Kin, DovloMO, L11atoeo,
A.,lnlolrolo{l, E1ooutoro
ond Aoolgno of au., E.
Huntor, Thomao Batley
Hunt•, "· L.ealo J - Rood
~. ~orglirol lomo
lliirall ond Lobbuo Grolool
Qarroil, Addreoooo unknown.
lllo lurthor lhe ORDER of
IIIIo Court thai proof of
publication be lumlohocl !o
Douatao w. Utile, Allomey
lor fho Eotata of Gur £.
Hunl•, decMoocl, 211·213
are
placoclln o Eat Second Stroe~ P. 0.'
ooolod onvelopo morkod Bo1 111, Pomoror, Ohio
"Bid lor llonltoro.•
457n.
·
Tho ouaaooolul blddor
RoM-~ E. Buok, Judge
muallurnloh • ane-llundlocl APPROVED:
poro..l (1110%1 porfonnWICO
w. t..nloo,
liond ond. o olgned Dougloo
Allornoy
for Eololo .
ollllowenl lllal lhe ltlclder
undorotando lhe opoalIN TIE
lloatleno and penally
PROBATE COURT OF
IIEIGI COUNTY, OHIO
The Nolgl Countr JENNFEA
L IHEETI,
Com111loolan. . ....,e 11M ADIIIINIITAATAX
rlallt lo roJoat on1,..ondor oil ollhoEo-of
blilo or 111J p.n
eolond
Jo waiVe any lnlonnollly In OurE.Hunllr, Dtclatlld
Pellllu.ler
any~lil.
.
Mary Hotta..U., Clorll
THE ESTATE OF
llolgiCounl}l DAVID G. HUNTER,
Commloolonoro DECEASED, ET AL,
(I) 2_1, 2t, 210
Aoop11' donta
NOnCE
BY
NOTIFICATION
PubllcNollce

....._.

......

TO: The Ulllalown HH1

·.:........... ......, Ohio
'"Ill 10:00 A.M. en Y~~~y 7, . .II THI PAOIIATI c:oliRT
tiN .... wll be 1pinM at OF-~qttto
10:11 A.M. ot lhe o•e JENIIFEA L IHEETI, ,
•('

..

Public Notice

· NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT

You aro h•ebr noUned
lhol you hovo .,.,. nolioocl
Roopol)dlf\!• In 1 tegol ·
ocUon enUtlocl Johntlw L ·
Shoolo, Admlnlotrotrl• of
lho Etlalo of Guy E. Hunlor
Decooud, ••· The Eotole oi
David G. Hu'llor, llec-ocl
al ol. Thlo aCilon hao .,..,;
aoolgnod Cooo No. 21103
ond lo penctlng In 'the
Common Ploto Court of
M•tgo Couri\y, . ,Ohio,
Probole Dlvlolcin', Socond
Streol, Pomo;oy, Ohio
457&amp;8.

OF FIDUCIARY .
On June 2, 1IN, In lho
! Molgo County Probate
' Courl, Caoe No. 27171,
• Dixie Koll Aauoh, 212117
: Applo Grove-Dorcoo Ad,,
· AIICino, Ohio 4$771, woo
' oppolnlocl Execulor af lho
-. eololo of Orton Aouoh,
• ~ docoliood, lole of 282117
Applo Gr~ve-Dorc•• Ad.,
-- AociM, Ohto 4mt.
'·

Reasonable Rates
Dependable
Service

Wallltlllfl

Aulhorlad: Brlggo l
SlroHon MTD, Rfan,
t.t).C. Alp..r Centor
PICKUP ond DEUVERY
Houro 96- M·F 8-3 Sat.
Cloood Sundoy

SMALL
WANT ADS

J&amp;i HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
Fr. . Fo.dlffow

AU&lt;

AlllPlfm

Roof

Inside ndOut
F- Eoti111111N,
Low Coeta. ,
Work Guarantaed

614•949·2911 or
614-593·5010

Box 189

&amp; fiLl DIRT

Middleport, Ohio 45760
.. (614) 843·5264

YOUNG'S

P-oy, Ohio

6:45p.m.
Special ully Bird
$100 Payoff
Thia ocl ~for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051·32

n~~Jllng

. ;;al
(304) n3-sses
' SUMMER HOURS'
. Sun.·Thur 5·1 0 pm

614·992·7144

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

SMAU DOZER WORK.
DRIVEWAY WORK
alii LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES

'30 HOUR

992·7553
POMEROY, OIL

~'

lt

OFFICE: 9~2~·2:=2:~59'-----f
'•

.-

IYRACUIE - T'MI 1101y flome home wllh,2-3 bedruomo,
ullity, carport, 2 poll:hoo an lwo Iota will lhod &amp; gordon
-- ~5.000.
.
.

UNES
,BASEMENTS l
.HOME SITES
HAUUNQ: Llmeoton•,
Dirt Gnmftllld eq.J

•'

.-..
·'

1'/, ITOAY LOCATED IN · POMEROY on 1wo 1o1o ol
150x100 lUi. 3 bedroom~, oome docking. ASKING

1;.
'

StUOO.

I•

...

Ill 114 - N.• acroo niCI '-Yflll gnuld wllh 1wo elder
hol!tM. LCD
2 oopllco. 11M goo will ~lloe.
..... .......... grutlocllonl Al&lt;b:lect to $101,000.
CGmtt .....maa. en ollrt .
·

•lor.

"
•

•
}
••

•
•

·

~ - 2 lloly frame ,_,. will 3 boclroomo,

~

toor.. nev.Cy paolld Will. new ldlchon

a

botlroom -"" (loolco nloe). Full buemont, firopl-.
new lilc*lc hNt pump.'C.A. 148,1100.
QM! US A CALL 100AYI /
IIIIIIY I. Cl" ..., ___________. . .111

Robert E.~

.PrDiootoJ=t=
IMII K. "-"11'01111,

1'1• STORY HOME will 4 bediDORII, Ia~ l111n1 poldo,
7b100 1111. grllll vlow oltoe Ohio Alvor. NICO and IDORIYf
ASKING ~.ooo.

PONDS
,
St:PTIC SYSTEMS

' I DIATE fiOIIEIItoN ol 1111 2 IIOJY . _ heme
with 2 -"""'"· bolo, flropl-. booomon~ 1 - hont
pon:h. liH,500. MAKE AN OFFER!.

•

.,

UC IICAVAnNG
IUUDOZING

TRACY..cAGIA ..---------1111t•
.EIId MART·--····-·-·-·-··-··--~7414117
KA'I'If'l' CULAND ......:................. - ......._, . . .lit

OFIIICI..----····---·-·····-..··-·--_......

LAHD CLEARING
WATER l SEWER

Ltd!NIIll ....

.,._n

••• 614-992-5591

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Down.,ioutl
Gutter Cleaning

, Pltlntlng ,

fREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
:1, li-P.lin

2 Froat Struts • Labor
e 4 VAlli AliJIIIIIBf

txonc LADIES LIVE 1~85

7110 suo.... tn. IIC-VISA 1·100JIIII-111UZ...,In. 11+.

1400-2111-211112

It 11 Yro, Procoll Ca. 802-631·

0115.
MISTRESS MADONNA UVE 1·

· Prices Start1n1 at

1100·7411-1111 S2 min. 1 7180-IIC-VISA 1h,

129.95 +Tax

1

MYRTLE BEACH RAMADA:
Ocean FIOnl 1 Br., Lux. Cond_!&gt;&gt;
110 Paol, Sloapa 4 To e. $6:JU
Week, CIH Ow.--, 803e-3U7.
mln 11+1111 llfHtya. dateline
!Mit 100'1 of .-ngfealcot.ipln In
your oroatodoy. CCI BOCA FL

Shade River Saddle Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

While, divorced, mall, 12 ~ka

m•rUta. 1nd counlry muek:.
Clll
304475-21. . I:OOano-

Chester, Oh. 45720

36358 SA 7

985-3406

w...... To Tolk With You Llvol
untora-tt•bl• eonv.,..tton.r

Call Tfilo El&lt;olualve 24 Hour Hal·
llntlll 1·100-JII0.33M Ext 3412,
~.n Por Min. Mutt Ia 11 Yra.
Procoll 802~31--15 .

4

FREt; t:!!11MATES

992-3838

· TRIMMING and
TREE &amp; STUMP REMOVAL
J'orlftnl» of.._.,, TN• Snufe•
IISUREI

IIII'WII

256·6640

FREE

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING
IN SHOP WELDING SERVICE OR PORTABLE
ALL TPES OF &gt;VELDtNG FABRICATION AND REPIIIR

no pa,..., block, lo ~ homo.

304-1182·3340.

2 ad0111ble gr11y klttene, ma..,
wormed, lhler trained. 304-1:711114.

3 PuppiH, MothOr lo AKC Gal.
din Aelri•tter, 1,.._1112-2211.

GlvMwar: 1 cain, 1 P•r
ltn. 304-el'll-71'16.

ktt~

Klttono, I Wool' ~ 1 Calico, 2
OfOI' l WloHo, 114-3,..211&gt;4,

24 HOUR EMERGENCY IERVIcE

COMPLnE MACHINE SHOP SERVICES

Giveaway

1 IIIII btocdtd Coclotr Spontol,

SEPllC SYSTEMS,
DRIVEWAYS lNITALl.ED
UIIESTONE·TRUCKING

.von...

m1rketa, 1nd country mu.ic.

AVAILABLE.

LANDCLEAHftl:l,

2:DOpm,llcn.-Frt.
·
'Whh•,
mille. 52, ...kl
oomporo!Onohlp. Saolol drink~
omoktt, IU... complfll, flaoi
304~75·~···

EXCAVATING

HOME SITES ond
TRAILER ~~.!!

THE GAY CONNECTION 1·100JIIG-3337 12.50-noln. 11+ moo1
100'1 of txchlng men In rour
aroo tcnlghl,. Gat ploono f'o. CCI
BOCA FL.:
1
componlonahlp. Soclol annljor
1moker, Ilk• · camping. ,...;

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TAAC~E WORK

24 Hour Portable Weldiri1 Service

Howlfll_L Wrltesel

BEAUTIFUL GIRLS! ElcoRinal
Pualonolol Talk To 'Em U..lll·
I00-'!110o3311 Ell. 1424 $3.M Por
Min. Mutt Ia 11 Yra. Proc.~U Co.

Ext 5371, 13.M Por Min. lluot

HOWARD

. BISSELL &amp;

eCo!IIPMh
......I••
Sto11&amp;C=n
fill IS
I
985-4473
. 667·6179

3 Announcemems

BooutHul Gl~olll

5114/lllllln

COISTRUaiOII

Anno uncemen Is

LIM 24 Howe A Doylli Tolk Ta

CHARLIE'S

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

.

OHIO'S CONNECTION ALTERNATIVE 1·1100·JII0.3337 12.50-

Call u•lor
Special Prlc• on
Siding •ncl Window.
owner

your hand .. :

-~31--15.

2112192/t:'n

(614)'
667·6628

Rooting

K-.

614·992·7643

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG

Windows
VInyl Skiing

Jttrnee

Place your
Classified today
and hol!i out

BISSELL BUILD.ERS, INC.

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

·SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992· 6637
St. Rt. 7
c....ln,

J&amp;L INSULATION

l·

6·9-93-tfn

INo Sunday Calls!

Stone

Proboll Judge

892-2772 .

9x7 •••••••••••

985·4181

Fri·Sat 5-11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

8x7 ...........

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
. Room Additions • Roofing

. 4/29/93 IN

DALTON

These Siz:es

· 31904 l.eatlla1

Creek Road
Mitld.. port, Ohio

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV

WA&gt;'r&lt;r

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

•Painting Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing
FREE EstiMATES
50734 llgloy Rldgo Rd.
Lont lotlom, Oh•. 45743

DAVIDSON'S
PLUM liNG

Replacement

I

DALTON

COLLIHS
ENTERPRISES
C. YOUNG
992-6215

DO IT YOURSELF
&amp; CONTRACTOR
SPECIAL

WAYNE

CARPENTER SERVICE

FrWEIIImatM

You oro horabr roqulrad
lo onawor ·1he · Plllllon
wllhln IW.only-olghl (2'1)
dero oller the laol
p,.bUcallon of lhlo no....
which wilt be putillohlod
once • W..k lor olx 11
ou-lvewoob.lha
pulllloallon WMI be ftioclo
11M 22nd cloy of June, 1 ·
incl lhe IWintr·olallt 1
dayo !or 1n1w~f11g
t.
-anlheldl..,
•••• of ;o'!r failure o
anower or . olhelwl •
~~A':t=""~~ 11 1i
Praaodura, Judgment tr .
del•ult will It~ render~
oflltlnot rou lor 1M re.,.i ·.
clonlandoilln h Pallllon.•
Delocl .lhlo 13th ,., at
llay, IllS.
•_ t

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent

5/10193

. IN POMEROY

5-24-1 ..o.

'

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

lllddloport, Ohio

OWNER: loll Wlckonham

. · EAGLES
·CLUB

949·2104

• ' (IJ7, 14, 21, 3lp

11ld •loll Cllilbe mlde.

614·1112-6163
510 N. ~nd Ave.

LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL

EVERY THURSDAY

Robert E. Buck,

•'

Tho obJect ollho Poilu.,.
lo lo detoimlne lho holro
ne•t .of ~klri . ond poroon:
•UIIId to-.,•.eo loll of Guy
E. Hun!or, Ooooooed, In
order lhol a dlotri~Mollon of

--t •• '·

_____

·,

Crobel Gorrott.

30 yro. uporlonce.

CALL 992·6123

.. ....._

Guy E. Hunler, Thom..
, Bollo' '::;ntor, Sr., Le.ttle
·,... 1 Hunl•, u.ra.rol
lamo Gorrell and Lelilluo

(I) 11,

WALIIR ALIIY
· Puts alii Service
Mtwtn • Ckll Saws

1:00 P.M.
Pleasant Valley Nursing
Care Center

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY.

992·3470

Areas

MOWER CLINIC

.Public lnv~ed

Public Noulie

Headliners;
Convertible Tops

GRAVEL; SAND,

llllllt3/1 mo. pel

304-675·5236

Me•t •I K~l3e'1~: • ~ ...... D;A[Ie . :;,, • : "
Log•teeo,
~·•
,.
'Exoaulafo •rid ooltino 0/
' ·• ,

·'

· FREE ESTIMATES
Take tha paln out of
painting. Let me do It
·
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE AEFEAENt::ES

For Mora Information Call

r~on~tes~t~an~d~the~tluee~~l~eg~g~ed~rac~c~.=;~~~~~=r-=~~~~~;~~·;~a~sa~n~,~~·~,~~~

shot·
boysBilly Souls
by, Steven
er, Lillie
Tremblay;
basketball
foul
Fyffe; girls- Sarah Clifford, Sherry
Haye.
Public Notice
Fifth grade· broad jump running- boys- Eric Jarvis, Matt MilTheYIIIogeoiMicldlopoit
hoan, Paul WiUiams; girls- Marissa lo opplylr)g lo lhe Ohio DoWhaley, Michelle King, Stephanie portm•l of Tro.,.ponollon
an Ofllr~"' ooU.tonoo
J .on k s; spoon I egg race- boys- lor
gronlunclorSocllon18oiiiM
Shawn White, Paul Williams; girls- .. Feclofot Tronoll Acl.oi1H4
Barbara Owens, Kim Peavley, ond 11M Otolo Publki 'tron..Morgan Mathews; ball throw- porllllon.Gronll'rogrom.Tho
boys- Mall Mihoan, Shawn White, aronl wll provjde llnonclol
Paul Williams; girls· Becky Karr, ooololonce lor pulillc
.
lrlnoportollon -vtco lor
Mar1ssa
Whaley, Michelle King; rftld.,ll ollheMicldleport100 yard dash- boys- Ryan Well, Pomeroy oroe durlf1C11tl4.
Sbawn White, T.J. Thomas; girlsThuorvlco currenlly opo
Michelle King, Marissa Whaler. :"'
. .....AM.r:!"J1o P1hrou.M.1DnhdFort-n
Anna Story; sack race- boys- Enc
'
Jarvis, Ryan Well, Matt Milhoan; Solurdor ltorl 1 A.M. lo 5
P.M. Servtco before_ I A.M.,
girls· Marissa Whaley, Becky Karr, oller 1 P.M. oncl an Sunaro
Stephanie Jinks; basketball foul moy be .....dulod. Wheelshot· boys· Eric Jarvis, Ryan Well, choir u~~r~ are prO¥ldecllhe
T.J . Thomas: girls- Ashley Rupe; oome..vtoe~oduleoooll .
Beverly Burdette, Stephanie Jinks . ...olh•. N!l~ll. F~o. ·oro
. Sixth grade- ()ro~d jump run- :!;,~f.:"~:~~:::--:.:r
nong- b_ors· Jeremtah Bentley, anddloobtodrlcleool60oonJ
Todd Btlhnsley, Ryan Ramsburg; por olio;:/, lrlp. Caploo of
girls- Shelly Pavich , Tanya Dill, lhodllo oomcedeocrlpo
Becky Collins; spoon/egg race- lion oro ovolloblo 11 lho
lioys- Steph.an Hysell, Tommy Bur· Mororo Olllco, H7 Roce SL,
11lddloport, Ohio, b e . h·•. gtr
. Is- Mered'lh
son, MaII Pav1c
1
lho houro 01 1 A.M. ond 4
Felts, Abby Wtlson, Aman.da P.ll. llonctorlhrouahFrldor
Ralph; ball throw- boys- Jeremiah
The Vlloge lnvU..
Bentley, Stephan Hysell, Bobby m•ll from 1U lnl-lld
Rupe; girls· Melissa Werry, Bobbi publla,prtvoll,onclporalronJo Stewart, Tanya Dj!l; 100 yard Ill OfllriiOia Including 11111
dash· bor.s· Jeremiah Bentley, operoloro..::.'dlng lho
Dustin .Miller, Bobby Rope; girls- pror~bllo h~ w11 be
Tricia Davis, Tanya· Dill, Melissa hold on Jutr 2t, tftht 7:10Werry; sack race- boys- Edson ·p.u.tnlho-noltaltembon
Hart, Todd )lillingsl!IY· J.'J'. :!,~"!~~ - hoM lor publlo
Humphreys; gtrls- Trlcta Dav1s,
Freel Hollmon Moror
Becky Coilins, Amanda Ralph;
v•ae olllidciiejK;n
basketball foul shot- boys- Canney (I) 21, 21 2TC
·
Scarberry, Bobby Rupe, Joel tremblay; girls- Tamra O'Dell, Tanya
PubliC Nola
DiU, Melinda Clark.
· - · Pu&amp;Uc NoTtc:E:.;.....soatocl propoulo wlll be .
English poet Percy ilysshe Shel- 1
J:O:~~.!.~
_le.:.y_di_ed_m_·_1_822_
. - - - - - o10nen, Third.,._ ., 1M

INTERIOR

THURSDAY, JUNE 24

'

t WV.

Cullom Seat
Covers, Carpet,

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

Middleport,
Po1111roy, Raclae,
•UGHT HAUUNq ; Rutlaad, M11011

Alzheimer's &amp; Related
Disorders Support Group
Monthly Meeting

••I

Liceased, lasured aad Bonded
· Call614-992·7878

UPHOLSTERY

1-17-93-1 mo.

SHRUB
TRIM and
REMOVAL

614·1)15·4110

Suite 112, Valley Dr.,

COMPLETE AUTO

Pomeroy, Ohio

LINDA'S
PAINTING ·

614·446·0736

Tanks, Leach Lines
·Repair &amp; Installation

188

Upper River Road, Gallipolis
446-8154

Country Uned Dancing
Evet)' Thursday.

1

FOREVER
BRONZE

36970 Ball Run Road

'

. FREE

SPECIALIZING IN
~ADULT .&amp; PEDIATRIC
ALLERGY
•HEARING AIDS
·.
•RECURRENT EAR
..
INFECTIONS IN CHILDREN:
•ASTHAM
•HEADACHES
\. '·
•RUNNY NOSE
•SNORING
•MANAGEMENt OF SKIN &amp;
FACIAL LloSIONS
MEDICARE ASSIGNMENT
. f\.CCePTED

WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER

949·2826

(;IASSD'II!:IIS ·
GET RESULTS ·lAST!

419 Stile Rt 7

CALL 614·992·7878

.charged for each day ~ separate ads~

USED RAILROAD TIES

Cllef's Galley

BOARD CERTiFIED

675-1244

RODGERS 1-Z RIDE

$25.00

'l'llcktrvDit R•.
Recine

992•2269

Baby Bad. Ribs pr&amp;pared in
our special Barbeque Sauce
Our Lounge Features

·-EA,R ·NOSE· TI\IROAT ALLERG'f

\

P-gorv...

SEWER PROBLEMS

RaleS are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be

BILL SLACK .

The first section of the boardwalk In Atlantic City, .N) .. was
opened to the public in 1870.

DOW
. NING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

au

UNLIMITED ONE
MONTH TANNING

$ .20
$4.00
' .
$ ..30
$6.00
$ .42
$9.00
$ .60
$13.00
$1.30/day ' $.05/day

•FIREWOOD

House Special:

JOHN A.
WADE, M.D. INC.

Over 15 Words

Yard Slllee

Bl'LLI&lt;TI\ BO.\RD

The Middleport Pomeroy
Branch of the America Association
of University Women has received
special .recognition for meeting a
ftve percent increase in membership forits chapter during 1992-93.
The chapter is one of 492 which
met that nve percent increase challenge.
..
The group will be. honored in
the summer issue or AAUW Outlook and convention prpgram book.

Rate

• A duoUiod
t placed ia tho GallipeU. Dolly
TriiMmo (aoopt Cluolllad Dioplay, B•~ Card or Lopl
N.-) willaloo oppear ia , .. PoiDt Plouut R.p,_. ud
oJ.e Dolly SoouiHI, nocllioc owor18,~ ho-

:1

..

Words
15
1
15
3
15
6
15
10
15
Monthl)

t&gt;ays

Call 992-2156

Sprfnr Tf•e
Speefal
,

w.A......,.

614·742·2138

,

.

.

Auto-KcntGis

JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE T!RUCKING

"Helptag You To

Cadette Troop
1180 meets.·
.

A plannm'fnsesston will be held
at the church . Oc~r.
·
· ' Meigs Cadette Troop 1180
h A contnbuuon wtll be made to which organized in May met
Riffle, Timmy Hubbard; girls- · i:blp g_urchase a fr~ezer for the recentlr.
· .
·
Ashley Fields, Ashley Eblin, Juley
urc
·
Dunng the nrst meetmg, Pam
Eblin; spoon}egg ·race- boys- Mane
Lenora Leifheit had a prayedor Neece was elected troop treasurer
Barr,J?van Eastman, Bobby Haye; thesickoflhecommunity.
~ugh September. The troop also
gitls· Heather Riffle, MelodrFelts,
Dorothy Jeffers gave devotions dectded to work on lhe Horseback
Meghan Haynes; ballthow- bQys· with 8 scripture reading and· con· Rider Badg~ with Terri~ Carsey
Evan Eastrnan, marc Barr, Jonathan ducted a uiz
where the guls are learmng horse
Diddle; girls- Crystal Richards,
Babv ~uilis had been rilade and safety, how to saddle, bridle, ride
Ashley Eblin, Dawna Bl')lmfield; turned ln to be sent to an or aniza· _and ~ for the horse after riding.
50 yard dash· boys- Richie Dill,_ lion for sick babies. . :
g ···
Tlhh~y wt!l !!!SO be Learging various
Bubby Haye; Isaiah ll,iffle; girlS'o er acuvtlies related to cannglor
Crystal Richards, Ashley Eblin,
Meghan Haynes; sack race- boys1
•
Jason Rosier, Chris Haning, ·
·
1 ,
Timmy Hubbard; girls• T.irzah
Compiled by:
Dodson, 'Jennifer Morgari; Juley
Emmogene Hamilton
Eblin; three legged race- boys. Recorder, Meigs County, Obio
Chris Haning and Justin Gilkey,
Josh King and Jason Rosier, · Marvin L. Keebaugh, Marjorie
The Aifrcd United Methodist
Jonathan Diddle and Bobby Haye; J. Keebaugh, parcels, to James
PoweU,
Debra
Powell,
Olive.
Church
held a family dinner at the
girls- Dawna Brumneld and Juley
Evelyn
Carol
Strauss,
Pt.
Lot
church
on Sunday to honor the
Eblin, Lois Still and Crystal
l89,
lb
Evelyn
Carol
Strauss,
Carol
return
of
Rev. Sharon Hausman
Richards, Heather Rime·and ShawA:
Kennedy,
Porn.
Viii.
Special guests were Clara Follrod:
na Manley.
Henry ;0. Johnson, Pamela S. local; Clarence Warner, Athens;
Third grade- broad jump stand·
ing- boys- John Witherell, Clay Johnson, parcel, to Terry L. Garten, and Massa Nori Mori, Rio Grande.
··
Marguerite and Delbert Steams
RusseU. Jacob. Wilson; girls- Beth Mic. Vii. .
Davi"
W.
Haggy,
parcels, to visited their daughter, April in Fair'
Russell. Mindy O'Dell, Ashley
Hoschar; spoon/egg race- boys- Ernest E. Lyons, Scarlet Lyons, born. Their Memorial Weekend
•
Justin Hoschar, Mane Smith, Chris Rutland..
p!CSIS were their daughier and sonCharles E. Pric_e, Jr., Grace m-law, Donna and Howard Stoler
Rupe; girlS- Cindy Six, Amber
Proffitt; ball throw- boys- Chris Price, 75 A, to William Harvey Centerville, Va.
'
Rupe, Zach Glaze, Marc. Smith; Price, Claudia Price, Olive.
Lin~ and Dave Williams, BelHarold T. Sedgwick, dec'd, to pre, vtslled her parents, Thelma.
girls- Ashley Fields, Michelle Riffie, Allison Story; 50 yard dash- affid, Kathleen A. Sedgwick, a~~~; Clarence Henderson. Recent
boys- Chris Rupe, Joe Martin, Orange.
.vuuors of Nina Robinson and
American General Fin. Inc.. Lot, Clara Follrod were Norma Jean and
Jacob Wilson: girls- Michelle Riffie, Elizabeth Russell, Mindy tO Frederick W. Crow, HI, Mid Vii.
Geralc! Swartz, Reno; Janet and
o'Dell; ·sack race- boys- Jacob WilRobert Robinson, Belpre· Vicke
son, Zach Glaze, Zach Davis; girls- Game winners named
and Dwight Ullman, Ross and
Michelle Riffle, Mindy O'Dell,
Cadelle Troop 1180 conducted Brooke, Marietta.
Ruth, Lloyd and Debbie Brooks
Elizabeth Russell; three legged games for the children during Herrace- boys- Zach Davis and John ·
ur k d v ·
vac;.al,ip.!'ed' at ~yrtle Beach. The
Witherell; J.ustin Hoschar and uage "ee el) · anous ga,mes · enJOY~ country music bands and a
were chosen and~ plann.cd by the
-··
Christopher Neece, Levi Gilleue Pomeroy Junior Troop as parfof a cruise a!ong ihe seacoast
and Marc Smith; girls- Bobbie Bur-· badge·activity~
Charlotte VanMeter was called
son and Addie Hubbard, Michelle
F'
to the West due to the illness of her
,trst, second and third place molher, Mildred Janesosofsky· age
Riffle and Mindy .O'Dell, Amber
Profntt Jamie Stover. .
winners (respe&lt;:tively) in each or 89.
•
Fourth grade· broad jump run· the catagories for the 8-11 years
Kevin and Tanya Brooks Halning- boys- .Noah Chasteen, Billy old were Chris Stairs, T.J. King l!e, .Aaron and Heather, are 'vacaSoulsby, Yancey Hunter: girls- :a~ BBee':t &amp;:!;~~~ac~g:~ uonmg at Myrtle Beach.
Brandy Graham, Abby Hubbard, · T.J. l(iitg, sack race; Ben Crane
Shanili Bobb; spoon/egg race- and T.J. Kif!g, Ben Staira·and Chris
boys- Carson Midkiff: girls· Shandi Stairs, e~g to~; Chris Stairs and ·
·
Bobb, Heather Riffle, Amy Freck- Ben Stat_ts, ·p. King and Ben
er; baU tlllow- boys- Billy Soulsby, Crane, wlieel barrow race.
Steven Fyffe, Bud Smtth; girls· ' Winners in the 4-7 year olds
Sarah Clifford, Sherry Haye; 100 were Stephanie Stairs, Elizabeth
yard dash· boys- Bud Smith, Billy Stairs, egg and spoon race; David·
Soulsby, Noah Chasteen; girls· Gloeekner, Stephanie Stairs, sack
Shandi Bobb. Heather Riffle, (lie) race; Stephame Stairs and -Tim
Abby Hubbard and Amy Frecker; Stairs, egg toss; Stephanie Stitirs
sack race- boys- Noah Chasteen, and Tim Stairs, wheel barrow race.
Winners were not recorded
Carson Midkiff, Bobby Johnson;
girls- Abby Hubbard; Amy Freck· (unintentionally) in the whistling
1868

WEDNEsDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The American
Legion Feeney Bennett Post No.
128 and Ladies Auxiliary will meet
Wednesday at the annex. The auxRACINE • Racine Village iliary will serve dinner to members
Council will meet in recess session , at 6 p.m. with meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Monday at 7 p.m. at Star Mill Park. All members, auxiliary, juniors and
SAL members invited.
TUESDAY
POMEROY • Scipio Township
EAST MEIGS • The Eastern
Local Board of Education will Trustees, special meeting, Wednesmeet in special session Tuesday at day, 6:30 p.m., to discuss budget,
6:30 p.m. at the high school. Pur· home or the clerk, Connie ChapIn 17SO destroyed much
pose of the meeting is to consider man, Route 143, Pomeroy. Public the:Fire
city of Halifax, Nova Scotia.
inviled.
REEDSVILLE · Eagle football
camp for junior high players, Monday, 5 p.m . Cal D~ve Barr, 9923302. Register at camp.

.

GUYEL &amp; COAL
Rea101a•lt
Rates

SIODGWS'

The group will hold ~ picni c
July 15 at the home or Frances
Goeglein at noon. ·

Refreshments were served by
Mildred Jacobs yresented the
program on "Faith at the recent Mildred Jacobs and Dorothy Jeffers
meeting of 1he Rock Springs .Unit· in the fellowship room.
ed Methoilist Women.

Majorie Halar, -Tiffany Harder and Morgan
Mathews, rlllb grade; back row, Science teacber
Karen Walker, sixtb grade, Kelli Lightfoot,
Lacy Banks and Tricla Davis.

-~-

LIMESTONE,

Rock Springs UMW to hold planing session
SCIENCE FAIR WINNERS· Studenis pic- .
lured wbo rated a superior rating on tbeir science fair projec:t b_eld recently at Salisbury Ele·
mentary are front row, Grace Kitcben, Billy
Soulsby, fourth ~rade; second row, Kristy Six,

;_,

HAULING

Games were ~ond u c ted by
Dorothy Myers and Erma Cleland. ·
. Attending were Fare Kirkhart,
·Betty Young, Marcia Kell~r .
Pauhne Ridenour, Opal Hollon ,
Mary K. Holter, Margaret Amberger, Ada Bissell, Mae McPeek, Leila
Mae Kraeuter, Dorothy Myers,
Erma Cleland, Mary Jo Barringer,
Betty Roush, Lora Damewood,
Ethel Orr, Inzy Newell, Elizabeth
Hayes, Thelma White, Laura Mae
Nice, JoAnn Baum, Gcldle Freaerick, and guest, Sandra While.

tic form and members opened roll
call by telling where they would
like to go this summer.
Poems were read by Erma Cleland and Laura Mae Nice.
The next meeting will be July
14 at6 p.m. and the annual picnic
will be observed at the home or
Betty Young. Mae McPeek is co- .
hostess. Members bring a covered
dish, table service and gifts for the
games. Soft drinks will be provid·
ed. Guests welcome.

~

:, (

HOU~S.

I .JOam · 5:00pm
Mon . Fri

7:30am . 12:00pm Sot

Jolt Sllo(l Fldlillts

WE LEASE O!jgOII·Ace~·*'""'
•"!0'0!11" •Col Alp • """" • Specillly Gatos

llolt Lob, 7yn ~to 000 ....,
loomo, eo"" wolch -.IOW7118JII.

lllnlolura
· 114
4 112
Gill; traplcal-fish;
1111•.

~ 1 llo~ 1

-In-·

feoMio.

7

..........crou.':,i~~
stx month old lillie poll Colllo,
poll loxor,
14Nelt
...nt,...

IM-

Yonl IIIII M - ,_. ..... Ill

304~754170.

e LOll &amp; Founcr
PI-IIIIId.IM
-~~~-·~-­

• tndO • ~apo Gas • Prop1111• c,tindor1

GENERAL MACHINE WORK l WELDING

-·-m. . . .
~

• Htlllre • AkllftiiWI'JII St.,_.l • Spfay ~
• Mtg Wetdin9 · Stlrll &amp; AluminUm • Wtlcling Sl,pppits
• rabr.c t~ · Ab•litY to Rolli e.nd Melli

Olol l ' w l l 114t•ai7Aiw11

17 COLE • POMEROY, 'OHIO .

.

...

P'oulllf: ... oflleve ..... ,. -

CllltoiD,tM....,.._•

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'

•

\

8

Page

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 21,1993

Monday, June -21,1893 •

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

==Lo=~=&amp;=Fo=u=n=d==r~S::N:-A~F:U::®~b=-y-:B:ru..ce--:Be:a::t:tle~~-----~-::4~1~Housn::=:::=::fo~r~RI~nt===-r:51:=:::::H~o~u=SI~ho=ld====r~K~l;T~'N;'~C;A~R~L~Y~L~F;;®~b:y~La::rry;;\W~rlg;;h;t--~~~71;::~Aul~os~to~r~Sall~:==-,~',
1$

'IWol •-~~-lor-or
ronl,
no..tnd
· -on
dopoolt
6
;elM
~~· ,..'Ired
Nnt.
nolnolclo""'•IM-tl2-3010.
,.....

loll: Gormon ShoDioonl, Bilek
IIIIo, loll On 141, 614-25$.116Z
loll: ~ Block Fomalo, 4

llonlh Pup &amp; looglo F"""'lo,

Adomovllo Ad., Ylclnlly, 114245-11545.

7

=ir i =

Goods

'~--....;;.;..;.;.....;--~
I"0000

42 Mobile Homes

.

~~-,.,.._,
•ol•ltW"1W
Vlni S.I'WIIIE
100 •• 31w.

............. 1-

:::.:::. ..r=. ·=lon~U:.

..-............
er:;---.
.
.
.
:
•
.... Nil!.-··

--

8

10:001.m.

Nloo homo loti lor up to
111110 hofMe briWMn A:lMnl A

ond

Rick,..,_, Auction Compony.
tuH time auctlonMr, complete
oue11on oorYica.
Uconood

"I never serve a stack_ more than 1'0 pancakes
high. I' ") a short order cook."

If.:====:;:=::;:==r.==-~==~=-11
·

_ , VIrginia, -

9

Wanted to Buy
11
Help Wanled
W.nlod To Buy: Abovo Groond
For 7 Yw Old Pool, 11' Wlclo Or Bigger And 4' Sin•
liMp, Muot Bo In GOOd Condi- 8011rd And 8a'-ry, 114 441 ....
Evonlngo.
tion, 114-3.
AU root estate act;orllslng 1n
this no-arlo sub)ld 10
tho Fodnl Fllr Housing Ad
o4 1968 Wlllch- Illegal
1o advertl!le •Bil'f preference,

Oobf llortln,

ho..ohold, call
~14-11112'""'·

Bur Stoncllng llmbor Plno,
~ .,ood, &amp; So• llmbw 114-

Imitation or &lt;IS&lt;rlmlnatlon
bUed on race, color, relglon,

·7311.

sex larullal status or naUonai

Docorolod olonnoro, 011 lomps,

antique furnhura, mall ~
thermometers. general ant...
Riverine Aittlqu•, Ruse
, owner. Wa do . .
prlioslo. ~-~11:!1.

• C.

Rocapllonlotl Oplo!fto!rlo . T-

Applilncoo,

TV'o

Color

Aetngorotoro,

This nowsp- w11 net
totowtngly acoopl
attiertlaamerh lor {881 lillie

F-llioro, YCA'o, MlcrOiftYII,
Air Condhlolloro, Guftor Amps,

wNcl\ to In ~olatlon or tho
llw. Our read8rs are hereby
lnlormod thololl -lnge
Ut.ntled In thl• newapaper
are avaUable on an equal
opporluniiJ bula.

Elc. hl-216-1231.

J I D'o- ..... ond Solvoloo llurlng 1un11 coro I trucb.

304-77W343.

Top -

Polcl: All Old U,S.
COino, Gold Rlnpjj Sllv• ~.
Gold COina. M.T.l. Coin 8/lop,
1$1 - . . t A-uo, QoUipollo.
Wontoc! to buy: uood mobllo

31 Homes for Sale
3.48 acra, 44124, Sbcl1111., 2 112

ttom.LI14 HI 0175

Mtho, lull b o - , wMh olldlna gluo outolclo ontronco, poro
ttolty
1rant pon:h,
•a- Ndwoad deck owrf: king.
roVIno, Iron horu 10·-· buildIna wftft .oomont 10'112"

1u-..,

Employment Services

company. 1-30~-6356.

ASST. DON
80 bed acute care' ho.pllal Is
... king an alllttant ct'rKior.of
nursing.

au.unect

candldale

exp.Mnct.

·. Conlpetltlve salary · &amp; bentlll
pt~ckage. SubmM resume to per·
sane! director, Jacklon General
Hospital, P.O. Box 720, Ripley,

WV 25211. EOE.
AV()fl I All ArNo I ShiJioy
~pu,.,

304-675-1421.·

Avon Wanta Individual• lntarw.
tod In Eomlng $8 ·110 /Hr. No
Door To Door, 1~7-4640.

Bartonder, Apply In Peroon At
Addison Club, state Routo 7, or
Call 614-446-4756.

!t""L;:. :.

DENTAL HYGIEHISTS: Would

OComutt-morloCtlloo ll::...a...: •-• Bull "I•
:::-.1 --rt.-., 8WI:

Llka Dental Hyglentlst To Jain
Our Dent II Tum On A Part And
Or Fulf.Thne Ba•l•. MuM Ba
LI-Hd In The Slolo 01 Ololo. ll

8~11NMi.

·

.

01 : 1M Portable hwm_llll. don't

You Are Willing To Work Hlfd

0111,
2bdrm.1114-1'/1.11111,
apt8., 1a111 Metric,

Eoloy

Working

45631.

Fumlohod Apo~monl. 111&lt; IIIII
to Ullrory, portdng, eonlroi hlolt,

814 4te 0331,

Up

Fumlohod Apl: tar, 1200
Utllhloo Pold, ShiN Both, l'01
Fourth, Oolllpollo, 114 411 Uti
Ahor7P.M.
Fumlohod EH: 7 t/2 Noll, Oo~
lloollo. Sill, Utlllloo Pd, 114"'-441141• 7PJI.
Fumlohod Elllcllncy t161
Utllkloo Pilei Shiro 8oth, 107
Socond, Qoll{potlo, 111 Ill 1411
Ahor 7P.M.
Groclouo Hvlng. 1 ond 2 bod-

t•-•·

-rotoo,I14-MII-2321.

4S

Plnoc-1 • Coro COnlot, ml

Dri"'·

Pinecmt
Gallipolis; Cltda
.a831.114-4415-7'112.

Holr

Styllol

With

Ellallng

For Hlgft
Traffic._ ~IUpolio Solon, 10'11.
Comm...,on PI,. 1K On
Aatan, AU
Held 1n
aientalla

NMCiad

A•c• I" ..~

·~
eonf-nco.

'

7261.

~

Sa-.

="".e,:..O~~~a:~

-·

Rentals

41 HOUSIS tor Rent

Real Estate

Spoodl-longuogo Potholo9lot
3 ....,_, 1 112 both, ....
to ldontlly ond dtog- 31 Homes for Sale
ni\4 Adrian Avo., Go~
chlldNn whh •pNCit and
...... 1400/....,.h. Aar.rroncoo
1onguogo c~o~oyoo ond to provlclo 1112 otorr bftck hoino, 3 bodo 11and
MCU~ drpcMit raqulr-.d,
dlrocl oorYicO lor tho hobll"• roomo, - - lnclud., luM 11.1110254.
lion ond II'IYinllon 01 ..... ~-.
.........
handcap .

lar

.......
eo.-

•.

lncluclldbetulin
3051
t -and
, In - · Col

3

Merchandtse
5I

YrRA F\IANITijRE
e........w1u0rt1t ue u21
'10 DAY lAlla AS CASH
AENT~.owlf(NO

OUTSIDE

DEPOIIIT)

FURNISHINGS:

WI'OUllht Iron T- W/4 Cholro;
Fan Back

~

Chair 151;

O.rden Arch Way'e $121.00

Syraeuee,

•mploy.,,

ONa

EUk

.........-

-=--

- . wll ..... 11'14-

...ml.

,I
'

Condl-

tlon, 6

Ill;, Col ,.._ 4

PJI.

ft

__ __

2317.

Ugly dllok o&lt;

.,.

-?

WOod clac;ko l -

PEANUTS ·

lo Uko

F_..,,-

=-

ttaa,l1t . . . . . .

-c~d~ -

wtlh

•=r

MW, ..; I

2124.
.
Whllo -lroolor wJ ~
deck. lOhp, Nftll · I -cute pod,
1400.S04111W231.

WHITE'S METAL DETlCTORS
1210 Avonuo, lloll{pollo, Ohio, 11'14-

~-.
'~loo Rod I Wltlto FoCod

h Coli 1J 8lclo, MIG.

Cow

116~1·~·~·~~~·-~3~~------­
I·
Building
55
Supplies

uo - .

WMAT 1RE 'fOV
TRVIN'TO DO
VOU TJ.IINK
VOU'RE 60NNA NE~T, RUIN M'&lt;
ITA6AIN .. AmRLIF'E7

~E'I'.

l SlJPPOSE

KID., REMEMBER
ME7 I'M RO'&lt; J.l086S'
6REAT·6RANDDAU6!&lt;TER

:rn-:.:r·
::::.=:o. -•
Con

I '...,:7n~o=,::.::,.:-:440=:;do=,.=,=-.=.,::,=-=.

Roolo&lt;o · ~~

c:l'!e:- ....

,;t;ot

63

onglno. $45011,

11' llorlt -

Trl Hull. MQ hp.
Wllft'-:e JrOP,.
wlnlor -~~~~ In AII/FII a t
~rdfeut~~ aard

LlvBStock

'- clio..

Z roglot- pollod H . . Bullo, ""!IYr old, OM 1 -

-

tnllor ..

FRANK AND ERNEST

I

:.....~"::: 1

old. :IDol 11124o!21.

:e:~ ~-

Cottlo
-llnol:
AnJ!In&gt;o,
Anf"horo. Hlllilloro Oltlo,
liVIr)' Mondoy, ~k Wllllarno,

...

ul...

$2200-1114 Olr , ... 11'' lnboMd, -

,
.
.
.
.
.
Ill--.
.
·-A.

Triolo croott 1n*1ng, l'l4oHio
10M.

...,. ula• 140h!t. wAh hrllw,

1421111; 11441N'121.

Holololn Bul Colt For lolo, No
lundiJ Colt: 114 IIIA:jl.
•.• -11-Q t m . l - Grain
Foci llooll, Col
tor Dirk, - , a . AIIJtlnll

:;.;W,;;ook~ll:;.;ldo.""i-==-=--:::--:::-:
~~~-~u.::':"'. : :'
ho,

lion, 1114·,

IS Tt4AT TOPAY '.r Tt4t
e.ONGtsT MY Of Ttlt YEA~. Tt4t IAI&gt; /ll~wS IS

Tt4~ 6001&gt; N~wS

/

_.,,..,

~3'JI.I1tb,

f

:. I

" 110 !

..a.t Sidle, 1NI Klw

'100 ~TO AAI/t f#CIC I~~
E\fJe( ()It lYr 'l'le£

And 110 With - · se.-, "\
·--~--~
;)
78
Auto Parts &amp;
''
71 Autos tor S&amp;ls
=-:::-:--:::-::::--:-:-:---:;
Accaesorles
:!.t'::'.:::U~ ~
Budale T........tona. u..J • ~ ;
4dr., t1iiilti or till d~..""::I ,.bull,llllr••~Ina Ill hi; !
IMikl ottw,I1M18 44tt.

:!

awner

77

Oocfa; -or holM, t1:100;

~WIIIIol21i.

1161 - d . 400 Bit Bloc..
Good Condftlont lluni lonll With Extro llclor, Sti,OOO.
1~.

_,

1171, 2 door. Dodgo Dart .....

~. =-~

tm
-

good.

fl4..:~

22U.

I'M Zll-l'IIR1S

~-

,

•

Do,._ AWL

~~-ton. -

•I

flpolfl.

FinancinG nelltance

evallab ... &amp;14-4148~214.

-

1031.
1lll'l Po&lt;ooho tt4, 2.0 W

~~·

1110 Oklo Dolto Exeolonl R~~~o

-SilO, 1114-2M-1AII.

...

'"·

•.''

3
- Of 1..oo.m:an.
OnoiiiCoot _ _ •
Cott.
.Coll - - .. ·~
3811114.

I

rre.e:"XACn.Y

\\/ONDER

WI-IATTIME
1116.

==-.:\=:.:..'t"...:r:':~:~

Aeflt ..a. 114-441-0117.

__ .....,......,,....

-·

•.•. ....,Mel,

-

;

ijack in 1989, two of Britain's top
players, Rlxl Markus and Terence
Reese, :wrote an interesting book enti·
tied "Better Bridge for Club Players" !
(GollanC&gt;:, $11.4~. The Bridge . World,
39 West 94th Street, New York, NY
10025-7124). There are 56 articles cov·
ering all facets of the game. The main
theme of the dealS is that the normal·
looking play doesn't work. You must
look deeper into the possibilitieS and
find a better approach. If you don't see
the answer, you will kick yourself u
sooo as you read the authors'
explanation.
Today's deal from the book would
trip up tbe unwary. Against your lour·
spade contract, West leads the heart
king. What ill your line of play?
Three spades is a limit ·r aise show·
ing about 11 total points and at least
lour spades.
.
The lead is annoying. Without it, you
could have established a discard for
your heart loser on the third diamond.
Most players would win the first trick,
play a club to hand and lead tbe spade
queen with an illqal furtive look in
their eye. They hope that West, with
king (or ace) doubletoo of spades, will
put up his honor. There's not much
chance ol that.
Yet .t here is one possibility: that the
clubs are 3-3 and either opponent bas a
singleton trump honor, After wlnulng
the first Irick, ploy 1 club to your IWI&amp;,
eull your club ace and ovmtUe tile
club jack with dummy's queen. Then
lead ·the 13th club and discard your
heart loser. Either East or West may
ruff, but it costs one of their two
trump tricks.

A. The informal HOW COME is used
as a synonym for WHY, The two-word
phrase probably· started as a shortened form of the expression "how did
il come to be that," and this shorter
has been atound for more than
a century. Is there any good reason,
though, that people don't prefer the :
single,word form? Don't ask me why.

THIR"TY.

1m Storerolt f'oD.UD ~.

IMONDAY
NO.NQ.NO.
YolllOOK

r.:=rt..tllll, ,_

fiNe . I'~

11100. ~ ....:oo.

I

......"""":io:~~...... -""' :-:--"""":-:---....:;:..
" - - 81
Home
1111 llodeo etwvor. IJOW1I.
Improvements

TH'&lt;. &lt;loiE

,

'

WIIO'S &amp;IT
To COIJKT

C.l&gt;.lORiES!...

1727 IMM m1111p.

Ploh Ton.. Z4U

Point

Jookoon ,.,..

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL ·

~

lull llno T~ IIIII,

blnlo,

omoll..-ondotWIIol.

sr

.-n.. . . .

1100 llommlngton -

Modol 21,

s.o.. punop

120: 114-112- 20 """'"' -

loOidng tun. 1lrol

1100, ·-~-

......,

T-y.

__ ,_
· FNitiJ
Vtgltlblll

Mrs LT~ PIR ¥our Own.
Col Clouao Wlntoro, Rio

o-,OIIIo.-.

fne 22. 1M3

New associations and friendships might

ploy ' major ,role •n helping you oct"e•e
·your goals in the year ahead . Some ot

these cont,a ct s you 'll make could be
libeled "ohoelluck."

stranglhen your position in a critical area
tl'lat ha s an influence upon your work or

lope to Matchmaker. C/o this .newspaper,
P.O. Box 4485, New York, N.Y. t 0163.
LEO (July 2~Aug. 22) Do not waste your
lime on ine ignifJcant matters today .

career. Oon'tlat it escape you .
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19) Yo~r proba·
bililies lor success are conside ra bly
enharw:eci!OIIay by merely cloing that wl1ich

because you're' likaty to

b8

far more tortu·

nate with endeavors. Issues or prOjects that
are s~bSIIOtial and maaninglul.

BI~Hiul...

"'£~

fhii:L II
"""'
····11 ...

you do best! which is to get along Well with

everyone from all walks of lite.

VIRGO (Aug. Z3·Sopf. 22) Today you

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) ~eep a
whell1er eye peeled allhis lime lor a new

mighl be luckier than 'usua~ in your com·

development tt)at couk:l provide you with a

m.,-cial or financial dealings than you have

in lheso a/88s as effectively as possible.
LIBRA (Sept. 21·0cl . 23) In order to

second sou roe of earnings or income .
There's a good chance it mighl be revealed
to you IO!Iay.
AlifES (Morch 21 •Aprll 1g) You could be

advance vour setr-1nterests today you must
be bold in situatk»ns that require b6k:l mea-

rather fortunate today in matters that
involve some form of verbal or wriffen com·

sures. Have falll1 in your abilities.
munication. Your skills as a solespefiOII or
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov. 221 You have promoter ore also conaldlrably enltanc:od.
some X·pluses golnt lor you today about · TAURUS (April 2CI-M•Y 20) Don't be dis·
which you might not a van be aware . ma~ IO!Iay ~you gel off 10 allower 111n
Howa"er . li ke the calvary . they' ll arrive

than ·you anticipated . Your strengths are

w1tan you need lltam.
SAOITTARIUI (Nov. 23·Doc. 21)

likely to begin to grow as you get near the
linioh line, or more important, the bonom

are subJec'ed to some types of changes

Agreements you work out with -friends

line.

tOday inStigated by oUislde lorcea. don't get
upset- are ~ending towards favor·
able c()rlCiusions. Know where to lOOk lor
tt&gt;manco end you'h lind it l1he Astit&gt;Groph

today sho~ld beneiil both you and your GEMINI (Miy 21-June 20) Keop al ol tour
pals. Ntgotilte with an IJIIOWirdt mUiull lines ol communication open today ,
gain end all will come oul'cl&lt;ay.
because there lo an excellent chanca you
CAPIIICoiiN (Doc. U.Jon. 11) You could may be getting the good news lOr which
have a marvelo~• opportunity !oday to you're hoping.

CANCER (Juno 21·Julf 22) Even II you

:1111.

58

are romanticall1 perfect lor you . Mail $2
and a long, self~reseed. stamped enve·

been lor quite some time. Try to capitalize

lllslcsl
y..,. Old, pOO:-t1t 441 • .,•.
lnatNmtnts ·
MlnloJOm
Will Mox
10 1111. _.., ...... iGih, -··
Wo&lt;mod, To Lowlnt 0to;nora nol, 110W - · lo9 ipsokoro,
~\ Loovo M•oeo, 114-246- . . - . trr ild. :1044'111'

Do.....,.

Nlor 1 ledrDOIM, 2 SICHy t tome
With Fill - " ' · Clooohlro
VI ....., 1310/Mo. 1200 Dopoolt,

MY610'MCHS
RUMBI..ING .

FIVE-

Motor Homes

a.-

an, ·bloclt.

Pass
Pass

Q. I have heard HOW COME all my
life and still don't understand the true
meaning. Could you deftne it?

Campers&amp;

10Si!oo'U
~
Tlroe OIIIP'!flo
00011 CnoiL
. . On
..
12,
Sorloui
l!&gt;qulrtoo
Only,
~.
'llml
1,1!1
114 441 0141
· .
Run - · 2 ..,_,
1114 GLX T - - · 11,000
I -1 '

1114 YW -

Eo11

34
Pass

' . ~=
· ====~

5CRAM·LETS ANSWERS
. , _,,
· Jurist • Shiff • Imply • Freely • TELL you HIS .
The nagging wif&amp; went on and on to the marriage
counselor about what was wrong in her marriage.
"Thai's .ny side ol the story," she announced, "now let
me T ELL you HIS I"

NEA Crossword Puzzle

.

1ConltrucUon

beem

5 2,100,

Roman
8 Emparor
(ver.)

12TMr11

13 F...cyvlll
14 llllurl
15 Yorklhlre

,_
riYer

18 Aclllll18 lllrfled womtitle
II Actor-

•n'•

·-

Anawer to Pl'ft'ioul PYull

32 Tllon
33 Mlldl34 Copoble of
(2 WdL)
35 llounllln ·
38 , ...., ••
nlcltnM&gt;I
37 Puk
38- ftll

Matchmaker instantty reveals wtik:h algns

'

.

'

•

40Fuel

41 CompUIIr
lbbr.
43 Yn (Ger.)
44 Recount
45 Plutoclium
Qmbol

47 Ad4fl Song• lor
two
20Wirenlll
51 Cr•t
21 ,Mii'e portnor
52 Conc•DI
23 Tltlt thmg
• 54 Kind ol era••
24- O.bleo,
55 SlimFL
51 Oollon'l
28 Poetry loot
coutln
28111de Of I
57 LIHtro of
hlrdwood
lfphlbet
211 fnllrmecllllo
58 Ellclrlcll
(prei.J
unit ·
3D Crowd

DOWN

12 wtla.)
7 Tv co.
8 211hprH.
II Actor Allllllr

1 Oonuif!l
2 Duck lure
3 llonkiJ
4 Ind. monoy
5 WtlpalnUng

....

tO Pellellllke

,

8 TV'e lllklnt
hor..

lrulll

18 Country of

Alii
17 Foltv~r~~
20 Concoct
22-1!111111

.,

25 Glrllle't
COUiln

zec.,...u"
w-t-t--1

27

='

............
11+--1 ·au
•• _....,

of,.,...

31 . , .
33 ~·flloote

34 Rtlllfllt ""'

Hllonerwllle

37 llounllln

311 r;l:,:,:._
40 CoMt.IIIUon
41 - DoMitue
42ZIP- .
44Rip
45Tol

48 Single 111111
41 Fllrgrlde
50 AclrMe

By Jef'ffey McQuain
MUSEFUL ( ,;MYOOZ·ful") means
"meditative" or "thoughtful," as in
"Shake off that muselul mood." Here's
a useful spelling clue for this acijective: MUSEFUL ends with USEFUL.

Aolllng: 4710,114-441-'1111.'
~1~~~~~0klo~;"il~oo~"";;;mto.;i;;:-;-;;;;;; ltm 27 Fl. Trani Trd•, /11;, AJ.
kept, ~. piW, p4, ...nin ...,_, t• I:DO P.ll. 114 ttl 1Ga
tilt, cruloo, olr, "'"'· Z7,000
ml-, - 1o -1110. 11111 Pllomlno POIM,ID eom,_, ' ~
=~::-· - t m o r r.::.~~oolloitt l:ondltlon,
"'•'=n::".::a::loO-=.k"::TIII::,.::-,...=.-;T;;·l;:-:::-,1 Cantpollo And Tlollor' On Rac-

mllooon..-~oond..

Nort~

Paos
Pass

OUR LANGUAGE

· ~...
. 11nko, .... •c. D Aroclloloro,
Aulo. AI-.
WV.......
301- 'j

lnloo- 79

noodollottory.

TOWM!

go....,._

Hutoh, 1 YOO&lt; Old,

~. =~·,

by f illin~ in the missing words
you ·develop from srep No. 3 below .

Dr&lt;NJ.. ....I'UIINt:&gt;lt-1

'

""""

'1WoM"-. '
- • - . , 2 - . M"I11".
Fow
201
••
Tlrw. .,_
brokoo, .... - . .. - · - l o r
111t-

botlorr,-rl--2-.
outo., A,OOO llllloo. -

TO NEtl&gt; ,T.

.. --ollw. ...
Mli~no ....... • • 11oc1on I
~

-L====
_,
-.111.
,_M.

11,

-=

-

I,7134::=-~·-,--:-=-.--:-,.,...-:-­

A~ ~01/IIG

'1

Shopo o I llo~lnol AI
PET OAOOIIIIQ/ PIT IOAADSti.OO. 2 ~- .-'lulo Lin choir I walllor.
.
3Q4. ING, 1'14-AZ--.
Auction Or 4 OUI 141. Tn-tllll.
Opon I A.11. To I PJI. Man .....
Uttlo ~ko "'"' Coni• (1 po.),
Kina olio aiilit1 II, 11111.,,:::.•.~ oiOVO. ilnll, lolcl ... 101110, 125,
114o11Ja.2124.
'
bocl: CHI, hlldll Clr'll
,.,... ttOO.•• - . . . . . .
3823.

IM4IJ.

G.OMMVn~s

YOU

·~·
- - LJiotlmoW... .
=~
· L-:
LcatwNIII';g;Ja...:pa and
.,
...._ Ot•llo·~
· , ...
l.lne ..... , hi
....
Roed.114411 11t0. ..

Transportal 1011

Well

It
4t

ACROSS

---~-·-·

01----

CompleJo 1ho chuckle quoted

By PILIIlip Alder

74

R.iini

I

Soot~

I should have
thol:Jght of that

brond -ltogo,

TY
olond, Stl; wfth limo, ' bolo UOoo.; . .. nnlng Jon, IJ.IO Portlond,
dozen: coffee 18Dtl, M: IM--1U- deliVer.

lllrlol - - I l:ltyor, Good
Condlllon, Almond Color, .300;

"":'!!'
Iion~lil~•ool~wl~•"'lot~ol~ooo~,~~~~~ot~CI~•~•

45771.

A..)I -

brlclc. -otc.
ond Canon IIICid,l 420 EZ -lloclt. llnlolo,
WlnMctronlc ~.:',.,. ft MW, loro, Rio Orondo, OH Coli 114g-' prloo,.
-611:13.
24N1U
Ctooronco Solo: 1 HP Clutln
Drlvo 11111r R'L 1311~ 1o1o 56 Pats tor Sale
11
~-.:rlt .::..., b!.'!"., ~ oo.;;;_;;;;"-;.;;;ndi"isu;;jC;ppijlfistii:h;;;op~Pp;ot
i:i;"tt,ota,-AI~d;ft o.-tng. All r - olyloo.
• Thomoo, o2 Cou~ Stroot, 0o1o Julio Woblt. Colli~.
llpoilo.
AKC Cocker lponlot Pllpo 3
For Solo: 3 Hu11r llkoo: 0no - k I Whho, S
1 Bull
lWIIvo- $50 And 2 Racing • Whho, t100 Eoeh. · 1
BIIlft, · One Btu Thot•l•an I ;"';;:
SoiloO 130 And Ono 200 Sorloo !!otJiot- AKC CoCk• Sponlol
no.-.., 114-4-.
Pllpptoo for Solo, 614-3711-2721.
For Solo: Good Uood c.-TToo AKC Clomlon Shoponl - ooe.
$2.50 APloco 114-112~.
bloodll... 304o6JI.I724.
For Solo: RCA ltorOo, 41" Long
Good Condition, 1100, Phonoi:
114-1*1831.
For Solo: 'IWo Clott.. Racko,
Good Fo&lt; Yord · Soloo. Sti.OO
Eooh, an-. a:oo P.M. e--. AKC "--&gt;11 . _ Tlrrlor
4171.
1221.1-ma.
_ . . Nutrition -.cto AKC
lut~~ng Amino Acid lodr Bponlol, block ond · whlo -1
·Building wolaht ond Ill ..-... -.old, 1'14o11U111.
bumor l'arifturoo. Avallollll ox'
aluot..ly at Alto Aiel Phonnocy.
2114 "" tho ont; llooi lick/
Tho life WIJ lo dill.
mon.,~- o¥111- C....
lnoldo will Point, Ono Mint 111M ,.jjASIIANI Qulclt IIIII. LMI
o-n Ono Bolao Dorlt Rooo, k»ntt!· 81 dTgnd11blel Avallo11.10 looh, ~1·1112.
obiOO.T.C.
KIIIO Floooll Buy (...,_ Fl• - - 4 - 2
Kilton lor DOlo, homo l yord .. - J 1 grill'),- old ~una
Ouorontood onoctlvoll Avoilobll
-.no
Poinl ...._ . . Cooop, 11111 to

a- .......;

'
..-.&amp;..- . L . -.1.-.1.-.1.--'

Opening lead: • K

IT'S BOSSIE'S
BIRFDAY I!

ARE YOU GALS DOIN'
WITH PARTY HATS
ON?

nma11111d ldtohan, hMI pump

holdlng "' oiiQlblo lor on Qolo 23001q.ft. tr~ homo, 3 or
Special EdueaDon tiFKMr'e t'M• .......
12 •-•
~~
tlllcala lor
ond holllng -nn., t 1 - · o n - 1
thoropy prolorrod. ~vo ctr flrogl, 2 loJgo outbulldlngo,
81, Roclnl,r
I . ........"2243.
"':2
ond bonoflto.
d...Sina:
f,
na 2• • a
IAI,DDD,
1183. Bind ,......,. to: .........
lllho, ElocJOivo DI~.!'L Molal :1 - - ·· 1 112 both, ottochocl
County loord o1 MtWU, 1110 gorooo, it04 Aclrlln Avo, 0o1o
C1rtaton Strltf, P.O. lox 3~

_,_clor

Whlokof Bonol Toblo Wfth 4
P - For Fomnr

E08 moc1o1

~""T~~...~s,..:.."'I6.,_;;.1...:..··"TI...,...j

.

LOWEEZY ! ! WHAT

Dodge II Top Von. 11111111
IO,'ftlll.,....
TY Cl .... In, I
I roor llr, , _ lloll I 1

guaon ==~--.
wlh ..,.. Flolcl
E 1 lp ••••
arlee, 114- Mowe'a Pllnn
, JMIIr.

r..or;c.us~lr::.~~"= ~

Boddlng ·Twin - l o t ... Full Konowho St.
IIIII SoJ Quoon 4
o..eorlot;
~oc~·., Kftchon Aldo lmporlol portoblo
- - u aooc1,
wkh cuttinl
11oont
Bunk Bod'o, Full ,.,
m, oon
....
It 102 Legion laiTICe,
Line
Storti~
At 120,00; lnolono M.,y ...n
PorMI'OJ• .

Would alro provklll rllnla.r .... lacl,...., f latt., Ia '*"J
v-ic• tor adun. h1 • VOCirlktMI Doulllil Car ca.r.oa On 4;D

·-h

l

-

lqgFI. -

lclu. Ruk IIIOj 'Jiimw

Roglot---

Household

Goods
OA

...... -

..-.. - .

-J
:::0.======;::::=

-=

P'Oil'""'

pot-1111

lllgnoturo

,

V~ntlon, Pr...achoOI and School- •ago progromo In M- County. 2 81ory Loll 8lclod - · 4

•-h~onguoga

Dilc.IM 411 tOM.

a.-··

children' .ttandl"'ll an II FWD w/air-cond, ~ nllahborhoOcl,
providing EorfY - · ,cot
~~Iony1='-c:.:.c3Kfc:..:-:c..·1HIM;.,:.:c:....';,__

training progt'lm. A Ucertlad

-..,

.~

holo,

. _ ..,_

::-:::.,::.·=-=___,=-=_,,.....,.......,
-

....... .

BARNEY

.........
-112'
- '---.... .._air,tot

11
. 11n.

11414161.

Pomrroy.. Mlddltpart· Racine ca.-ld porch. kltc:t.n t.land, ... va - -... on IUCIMe.
Sytac_., 11'111, Nw ax· .. ong• ~dl, und.-pannlng,

moll UniU you hovo lnYMtftotod
tho -~
locol 'Willing Route: t1,200 A
Wook Poiontljl, -Bolt 1 IA-Vond.

Portable

hog-·-

cablnot, dtowwo, doo&lt;o, drap I=--,::-:--:::---:::::-:-:loo~- ou-, 120, I1WUo 100 Ford PI, u ..
1
307i
bolonl
cp~..,~
·
~··~
·
~-~~~~roll~
.
~oo,~~R-=-=
1
:i:'-.:..:C';2"7.;:;:;c'::-:--;-:,=-::c- I ~,IUOO. 111 Ill .._

=

and

Bopondobll
Tronoportotlon. ..nonco ond mlo,_, 1'14- like"""·
~2414.
Only 3 -\':: In 114144111.
~:!':."~r ur.~.:::::,.v~= WIH _n - . 304-I'IMIM 35 Lols &amp; Acreage
Building Lo4t For Solo Or Will
:""'::::ioo:.=At:.:1:..:-:::.71=7-~211::-=-S.'-:-=c I oft• 7:30pm.
Build To Suk, Rnonclng Avol~
lnsul'llnc• aoancr oppor•bll, 814 181 9!36.
tunity In Afhanl for AotncY
DevakJpmant ~ltve.
lota I ocrooga lor homo conReoqulrn IMUrlnte exparianc8,
otructlon on Rayburn Ad,
axcalltnt
communk:lllkM'II,
f'MIOnlble I'MtrldJot., countr
Buslnell
talomarkatlnt Millo, ·al&gt;llfty to 21
WMII, lntonnaUon malt.~ on ,..
.acure OldO Solicitor/ ~
quail, ~ piiiH na
Opportunity
ltconNI. Aeponolbllkloo lnCiudo
olnglo wlclo trolloro.
talophono proo"""'lng, llloo,
INOTICEI
for haul., lrall. . &amp; eanto
llolcl und..wrlllng, now pallcy OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. · L.att
oovlco. Fulllmo Ooolllon. lonCI rocommondo that you .do buol- J»MS. eountr ..,.,., raR &amp;
~. 304-5~
,..uma to: P.O. Ia• ,.4, ,.... with people rou knaw and · oloctrlc. -

-wl!::''l:M.
w omp, ............
k
......
-.
-.--....

bing wftft E""- Doell Coro.
AvollobiO - n Con31" chllllollnlt - . 100ft.,t150. lor, At. 2 lr-P- Fl. Pl.
304-67WIOII ~ 1:00.
• S
Upright
2t Cu.
12 got - ~o. mftft
I I Fl. 1'110 Wrlaltt a..ch . I
11 ..oct I
hL Wolghto PO, 24,000 BTU Air
811 Rftl wolor -nor. :104-6'/lo ConCIH-. 1100 1 Epoon
1011.
Doolo Pnntor, till; 114Ul 1:164.
110 Molino Trootor, - · llonl onll; 1183 Mftoubloltl Upright Konmo&lt;o • -· 120;
Dodge - . . _.t -ion, Upright Euroloo 8w11por 117.10;
utro porto fol olio; 114-1112· Lawii 20 Inch Cut 171,
2415.
1·1~1;4'il4;.:1:..:215~7.;;.;;;;a;;\p;;;;;
A Inch Da-porl, 2 Cuohlon I Uood
La-awr... Plrto,
..._ - · Wlr&gt;~ Choir, All Roorooodo, Moto&lt;o,
• Porto,
.._ COildftlon, ~- f100 for E-yu•'fl· 1*"6131'11 Allot IP.M.
43111. '
•
Admlntl Eloclrlo llongo 30 Inch Whirlpool Moblll 14omo Control,
111· Formlco T - Kllchon ·~ :14 ooo BTU 2 ••• Tan • Toiilo no; lltota ROulo 1181, 1'14- i'U' ue 043:1 ' ~
... .,

Pl....nt. 304-175-4031.

';"'t\" "'!z

utN From Rio Grandi. Rurtl

61

mlcko . - . . 1rr ild. S04-I1II- ~~~~om *
2112. '
·
,
till. 20 -

011111 lara ~ Comn : da a In:
veun Comm :dll14 ttl 0214.

.-c.

:"::-:::::c•O=h:::lo:.4::5701:;;:;·:.:E::OE
::;__ _ NOT to oond monoy ttVOiijj{,iho
1

Fann EauiDment
U
-· ..._. •
AC no ll_,llllnl"!z ·:-: ~ ;
boloro 10010.
T ~ llln, =----:----::-:-lo!l!ll -,_ ·.
~I chon- m I hov hold. AI ,

:104
•
3 Pc. - k Bod...,. SUllo With
lila... l loa - · Moplo
01notto Wlh I thoTro, &amp; 2
Loovoo, Smoll M-vo,
........ lloo!!ftol Bod. lllnuol
Chll• Ontb Boro Fo&lt; Tub,

,.•rm•

munlcaUvr

..
,.,

air, $100.

-Dot.-lo
,_.
..oct, . Ui, I 1~d~.:aoij
'

v.n,_ .u.
... :

'INS F e n l -

and china cloelt, 1210, 1*112- 11on , Am_,

Sprl"l-w.-

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

-

·''

Fonl - - . .- . m
Klclo Clolhoo, ·
· - -nd $1,'110· -

8taoplng - - dh -ng. 2457.
Atlllooi&lt;-upo.
1il0 Wlncloo&lt; s Bod- 2 Alootroltw-.
Sotho, Eloctrlc Ooo, CA. 2 Coli oftot 2:00 p.m., :104·773- llg Fool ( - r whloll), 010
Ao- Moro Or , _
lulldl~
coild, ~. Toy bolL
·~
-.
·~
:104-6711-7124.
Fenced Patura, County W.t11, 46 Space for Rent
lratlw -ng ....,,,., $50, 2
HT
Elcollont Condftlon,
114-...,3.
- I whho
on Choolnul ~..;
lull- "" .... , cor lot 112
lrollor,
Point 11162 CommocloN,
14151, wi canopy, 2 .

AF,

&amp;~.

12.000 btu " - wl- alr-~- t month, $400.

.:,•:..:...;~.:.:.;•.::•33:.::.• ..,--,-...,..,...,.... W.lor. Will Sell Mobllo Homo
. HERE IT lSI
SUmm. tJOorlng, oU oub)octo, Without Land. 1'14-2111-MH Allor
Wanllna to I'WII· 2 or J bedroom
$700 To S1JOOO ' - Woall CoiMng K... For morw lill-""" coli &amp;:110 P,ll,
· On Local
&amp; ~ ShcNf.. ~
ho- ln cloon ond IIOocd oondilng Atrlal PhOiogrophy. Stort
·
1988 9kyllno Holly Rldgo 1411'11, Uon, prolw prlvoto iottl'1lo~'l4o
Earning Your Sac:ond O.y. We W.nl:lnt to do hN 11 c'etnlng, all alec, 2 bedroona., AIC, 182-2428, " no antwer
•

AN'S .. LPN'S
TO $30 PER HOUA
Stoning Or Prlvoto Duty,
Ftoxlblo Houn, Aoolngmonto
Througiooul
Control
Mel
Southam Dlolo. CoH 1~4-M~8398. WESTERN MEDICAL
SEAV!Cf,S

· "'.....,._.,.

a.Laoollllllfl.

ae• Dvnamlrk Rkllng lng ~= and aD
Mower, t300: 21" ...,. Iori 112-.
eon, Ohio,~ Ulltt4.
Blcydo, MO· Good Conolllloril, 111 1icl 1031 Aft• s P.M.
8mon, ........, Largo 1-•1 Hydnlullo 11 ttuo- or eo

on, luot bulft, hiD Nth, Wilk-In
, 1 -~ 14111 IIYina - · ...,
nlco1 ~3,100 or IJolh lor 111,000,
114-M.2121.
Trollor kilo lor nn1. Count~
chaclur l8choOt Agl ,.........., 1881 Oayton Sunnybrook, tlng. 2 mlloo Phillip
•
.;::122=4·:-,..,,.--::--:-=:---::--:- 14d0, 2br., 1 1J2 Mtho, callood- Plant, ,._ Hlv.n. 304-71'3
Naed A Nilw Roof, Siding, Deck. n1l caUingl, Ullflty ";'o':l
13 Wanted to Rent
Or Remodeling? ProtiUional r.ft&amp;gar.tor, etaw, Whirl
11
1 ~dorpln-)
Oualfty. Fr.. "Eotlmotool Col
~'1
ohloo In
114 t11 1113. 114 4411 t22.
~~\:.~ ac • fl~ t v - \nag. ' W.nlod to
Point
.
to
bo
Nood
etoonlng.? Will Do
otriot loool wl-boom la-d
WI~
1911 Feroot Plrll. 3 Bodr- 1 haMing,
tor 3 or 4 tll'blrae.
1
1
............ - .........or, · ":'•, 112 Bathe, an 314 Acr., c.nter- Cln par $300/mo. H ullllll• ar.
. -woot, A -laonlng,
Ylnt ~ Ad• --on
•·-•- County, 10
noblo, Aof-,

Train, All lead• SuppUed. MUll
Be 21 v..,. Old And Hive

llaneo···
- .
Merchandise
SCI

11 . .

t;\l. ';:

~blr~!m~•· NuiWng,

~~;;;;;;;;~=========~ -=·;...~~= i :

Antiquo bullot, ... o1
1
- . llaclt and Oocltor
Rooma
WOf1cb7tnch and ucen:t.r 114441 Ot&amp;S call after 5 p.m.
lioomo lor iont.- or month.
Stlllllll!l ot $120/mo. Gollo .Hatol. Antiquo dlnlna , _ Ill, ln11t UI~OSIO
dudel tatat.. -. Chall'l, bllffel

-.-WV.

"'

~- WIZ au- Blu·W - . 14omo.,.

Furnished

I0

4AKJ
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

-a.-,111211
Hovlna
M!lrchandlse
stcto, 114-4.,..1351.
Hohorid tta
DollY ·Ill
· ooon
m; 14omolnt•
.lohnttr
"Utllo '1111H" Jr. AoiiYtly Sol, .....
lor, Stt;}'.In
o1 1A Wo1- T
-... ~w Hat-... Uood
......,,
Uko o.rbom I Fl. Ploko nut, MJGOiopoot ollor lll'ft.
Ford ....,,........ Mo .J..'.!!;

In Mldd-, ~.
-1137 .... 'For Sholly

t A864
41014

4873

SOUI'II

73 Yans &amp; 4 WD'S

. •!.'::"'.'a-d ohipo. m.. ~~·
~;;:::::::::::::::-;;;-;--;;:;-;;~::;;;;:........... G.E. 24 C.F. With
54 Miscellaneous
1oo And w.tor, 111 c.F. a,

="•

•• ,.,., •
8
...... 7p.m.

olothoo

tAS
•nu

tK
.K Q 10 U
+10753 ·

f' "The

tQ~

w - . - -·

01c1~~

Office culie to co- worker,
walls are so thin in my
~ new apartmen1, you not only
..---------:,~ can h$ar a pin drop neX1 door,
s wy [ L E
but you can ....._dropped it!"

• J4

=-· «;::_..., =

Houolng Opponunhy.
For Ronl: 2 lodrocn Aport·

r·

0 LEEP
I· 1
.I _ . .

EAST

4QJ7153

=-cc---:--:-:-..,...-'- - :
1ft town. Appllcatlone twaltable 1'wln
-~~.
....... brown. •
.,......
:104411-S121.
ot: Vllllao Groon APIL jMI o&lt;
cllll14-f112-37t1. EOH. ·
W.-'r. - · . • ....._._
BEAUTIFUL APARTUENTS AT Color .v. FrMar, ,.., c....
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 131 .lao- Plko
211-1231.
1ront
12081mo.
to - EOH.•
-.loo.
Colli--.
114. :t1
· ..... wl-10
Flnt Hollor Aportmonto, Flrol S/4, t10 ,.
110-.304-1714131.
And Codor It, Oollloollo.
Sonlo&lt;o, Dlublocl, • Hondlcop- ...
Antiques ·
ped, FIIHA lnoDma Rallrk:tad. 53
R - Buod On ll!'lo 01
-hold lncorno. Apptlo,..., Bur or oslt Rlvortno Anllquoo,
Cori&gt;OI. an.ano Lalllidrr, A/C. 1124 E. Moln 111111, on Rt. 1N,
Rooldorll Poyo E-lc Utlfhr - . ,.. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00
Only. Juno Occuponcr. AU
1oP-1'·
1:00I'M-112·2121.
p.m., Sundllr · t:OO
lloriooomont, Inc., 1'14-337-17111. o.m.
to 1:00

1 bath, onoc•·•
N"'
._
'-•
Andarwon wlndawl, central air,
Foolor I~ Muon. 304-773-5150.

. Polio
.
Eam Fu II·11 mo Pay For
· lnlerlor/uterlor pointing, roof
Tlmo Work AI A Chrlotmoo pointing, hon-.h - . . l
Around
Tho
Wo~d. inollll r..t _., odd
Damanstrttor. Free $500 Kh No ~ WHe Wiii do ...,_ . .,..
Collocting Or Oollvorlna; 1110
,.._
F
Booking P1r111r. Call 614·24S.
rMt,';;, ~.· ' r~
5039.
llloo Poulo'o Day Com Cont• 1
full Time Poshiono Avolloblo Block WOol 01 HMC On olackoon
Upon Hire For Cartillod Nuralng Plko 11-F I A.M. -6:30 P.M. II
Aosiotonto. eom,.lhlvo Wogoo, Ouollly And ElpOIIorioo lo Tho
OIHoronllal With Exporlonco, ~
J~ 1 ~l:~
Sign On • ..,. Anlobloc.::: ll'odcllorl 114 4111227. p,...

If t,.ro ASK IJE., TAAT's
THE: lLTIMATh IAIHm:
(a.J.I.R (f&lt;Jf,&lt;£.

t

304-nwtiO•

AUCTION
I I'URNITUAE.
12
81., Oolllpollo.
I Uood
ap- OllwJ
lumM,...
hooltn,
w~o~..
•
Workboota.I~SI
54 Ml

1':::',:,1111:':':::; 10':I:J

With lloul fCJur toao 10 tho ""'1 )lilt
11tn
· ChUdran Sand Your Reaume For =-co::oii:..:31J4.17S.;;;.:,.=I-..:;
~·:--:-:---:=-1
Consldorollon To: 995 Jockoon Ho.. vocancr ""' lody, homo 32 Mobile Homes
Piko, sun• 101, Galllpolio, OH ,octul co,. In mr homo,
tor Sale
And

-

wrsr

-.-, .....-.2

Go-

muat Mve • M18ttrs D.gr• or
eomplet\119 hour• lowarda 1
Masters oegr.e and prt't'ioul
administrative

.... -ng mochlno, com44
Apartment
plete fullotlzi bod, couch •
for Rent
llmpo, TY. 304-77W841.
1 .-acnom. au-. l Prlftta. Air
BWAIN
COnditioning $2!CIIIIo. 1*"6-

utDh~ bullclll!fL 1-od MCGrath "'""'
.
lpirtmenta It Vlll•ae
Rd.. uot oil SRSI. I mlloo Nonh lllnDI"
lnd
Rlvarskle
DRIVERS LlmMod o1 _ , , l4omo Notlonol ~p_artmentr In Mlddlapart, F~
Bonll, Roolno, Dhlo 411771. ...2. C.IIIM-41112...... EOH.
gponlrip .tockoon CouniJ -114-841-22111.
Truoltlnil c-{s,:O OVoro
night lro..t. An I
nt Opo • , lor
lovotf hlotortcll .11m Nico S bedroom '::'.:::;"'IISI,
ponunhy
Fo&lt;
~orm u.,.. homo -od 414 Socond ronl In.......,,
8'14-IN-2000.
Emptorfor OUillllod
lhYon. - - trlm,
Drt...... ........ .......... It, - I doo&lt;o w/ot~ lm- Nlco 0no BR Unlumlohod
Bond - - To: DRIYE~ 1 ·
P•ouiMIInta. 3 to 4'bedi'GOfnJ, 1 Aportmont.
Aong., Aalrlg.
P.O.. lox 101, Jacklon, utt 112 botho, ......._ , , Provlclod. Wotor,
411140.
plonllhll-o, J colllnt hiM, 111tt Conditioning, DopOoMPold.
R•
oo&lt;nlartoblo
homo In nlco qulrod. ~- Ah• &amp;p.m.
W.nlod: Rollallllllloluro Aduft
To Coro For . 4 Chllclron, rte~ghbartlaa~r.aro· 01111 ior Complotly Fumlohod Small
-3772.
Re........ Requlrwd, ·~ oppot-.
Houoo, l2751mo. + Utllftloo,
3637.
Fo&lt; "'"' by ..,. ., wrr old oolft Portdnf No. Polo. Coli Boloro 7
lntiJ houOo In OIHIIbrlor b- P.M. 11 ue '33'
12
Situation
11t... IL L 0"_. brick, 3br, 2
112b, IIJ!II tr. wJ wblp, 2 cor One bedroom aputmenta,
, Wanted
gan~ga, caw/ hp,lnground pool, l22111mo. lncludol utllltloo, 1100
Will lor -.ty In lholr 2 . - , Ul owlouo 1,.. -urltr clopooll. no polo; 114~- •- __
·~~·qulrloo · cal
304-17W711 IN-2211.
·-·~· OM•• ,_....... - · .I:OOom-I:OOpm.
:13!18 or 304-77M310.
;::--:'.,-':'!:..-'-...,.,'-:--..,.Nloo 2-oom Wftft lull bOlo18 Wanted IO Do
mont, on Aldao Avonuo, Rio
Orancll, 1 bloo'k lrom carnpua,
- 1 Molntononca, Pal~ 1'14o'R24033.
Ylnl Work
I
Rench •r1o homo, 3 bodroomo,

11 · Help wanted
•AVOfl• ALL AREASISMra pur TRUCK
lime whh ... You'll lo~• 1he

'&gt;

- . 4llC. M aW.., 11:, ..,_, ;

hl-3111-4237, I14-3T.I-6111, Equol

nlcton pooltlon
• - ot lho
Roclfto
Opt nolrlo
Clinic.
A..um• ca" bt· Hnt to P.O.
........ Racl.. , Ohio.

Don' Junll ftl Soli Uo Your NonW...tlng · Mojo&lt;

origin, or any lnl:tntlon lo
mateo onr such prefe.....,.,
limitation or dlsaimlnatlon."

Fonl ""-• XLT. lui*"

a a. Fumlhn. Nllw, ueed, .,.
llquoo. Hoo hold lumlololngo.
• _, wv. 304-77H341.

t...,.,...-, Nit",!' II!!.lurrtleo.IIJ,OIIO BTU

· Antique• and uud turnhure, no
hem too Large or too email, will
boly ono ptoco o&lt; complllo

:

coll304-871-R.

tKJf
4QU2

4al1#:1 ,

~\-.:!: Alklntl:

1-l~U

•u

;

- ..... -

t2.100.11t .......,.

Pomoroy, SHimon., ~-~117.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

~•

NORTH
410142

~-=~

C

PICKENS FURNITURE
S bodroom t-lor ront. . - ·
NnoiJood
mo., dopooll, c:-.y Houooholcl lumlol*lg, t/2 mi.
Mobllo ltomo Plrk. ~-21~ JotTieho Rd. Pt. PI-nt, WV,

loiiA'diiJ.

Fkoh'o,L&lt;Ing Boltom.

ALDER

·--(no
......., ....... t;IIDO. ....

llundor ...lono 1:00pm Friday,
Juno 21·?. 1om-? , _ . .

\l

4114, 7•-.....,._
o l · ::-·...,
co.:•·:•

homo, 304-17U812.

Ylnl 8o Pilei In
tho
dor
- ·.- tho ..
Old, 1:DGpm
lo to nm,
ediUon

PHILLIP

""i!i]i~~~ii;;~;e;·
!Ill Clausulll -.:..e- DIIUx J:

..

All

L*l

on,---.
ttUIIIIII, ~

72 Trucks tor Sill

2· bo*-" furnlohod nJObllo

&amp; VIcinity

OlD,

~~--....
..._.

ltlll. . . .

=t1,~;&amp;.~ ...

Pomeroy,
MiddlepOrt

I

11

for Rent
--~-ns.N11.
14xl'll F - . 2bdrm. 1 Nth, ~

Yard Sale

-· ~

- - - ....

APPIJAiral

USED

11&amp;1 DAILY
PI IIIII

51=

53~~

115 Son oll'ldlo

CELEBRITY CIPHERPIOIMI.

~ . _ ....,)p..
IDO'i....... .,. Cl..-d frOM .,otattonl b)' fMMIUI

~ lnll ~ .
~..._1ft the . . . . - - blnllltw. TOdlt"• eM· F .quM W.

• E M

K 0 J

LUKL"X

LUB

EW

KAA

FZHAJ ."

LWMIFHVLipi,

vx

VG

VXKKP

KXVEZI ., _._

PREVIOUS SOLUTIOH: "EVer)' lime you perform onaloge llvo, It ..,_
from the heart . It can't come from ony place eloe." ·- Tommy Tuno.

JUNE 211

I

�The Daily· Sentine~

By The Bend

Indians
triumph;
Reds lose

Monday, June 21, 19~;
PaQt-10:

----~--------------~~~~------~~--~~~~-------·
1953 Pomeroy
Medicare beneficiaries, home •
class holds
•
health
care
costs
may
be
paid
40th reunion
•
Submitted by
and • 80 percent of the approved :
•

The Pomeroy High School Class
of 1953 held its 40th reunion at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Don
(Frances Evans) Hunnel on Rose
Hill Road, on Saturday May 29.
Hosting the reunion were
Frances Evans llunnel, Mary
Holter Huddleston, Shirley Smith,
Sue Struble Cramer and Marlene
Moore Wilson. Decorations were
purple and white balloons and pur·
pie irises.
Attending froin out of town
were: Barbara Wehrung Martin,
Jim Falls, Wisconsin; Ted Scott,
Westland, Michigan; William and
Veronica Roush, El Paso, T~as;
Jerry Snowden, Narcross\ Georgia:
William Kitchen, Palmbay, Aori· ·
da; Louis and pat Osborne, Mel·
borne, Florida; Barbara Halfield
Scarberry, Henderson, West\ Vir·
ginia; Glen and Shirley Rus~ll
Stollar, Toledo, Ohio; Sue Struli~
Cramer, Marion; Sally BartelS
Ayers, Athens; Ralph and Mildred
Stockton Bernard, Coolville:
Harold and Daisy Russell Gillogy,
Albany; Don and Marilyn Dickers
Graham, Columbus; Robert Rein·
hard, Alhens; Gene and Patty Cli~te
Hall, Marietta: James and Betty
Leonard Conkle, Cheshire: Roger
Winebrenner, Gallipolis and Mary
Holter Huddleston, Racine.
Others attending were Shirley
Smith, Jack Raub, Barbara Still
James, Frances Evans Hunnel, Ed
and Carol Kennedy and Marlene
Moore Wilson.

Writing is thought to have been
originated by the Sumerians in
Me!lopcotarrlia about 4000 B.C.

. JOSIE DOERFER

Celebrates fifth
birthday recently
Josie Doerfer celebrated her
fifth birthday recently with a party
at McDonald •s in Pomeroy. .
Attending were he~ parents,
Ginger Doerfer and David Doerfer,
grandmother Julia Darsl, Gina and
Chris Duncun, Gwen Folmer and
Tiffane, Angie and Larisa and
Colby Hood, Mary and Annett
Sheets Andie, Trista and Bubby
Doerfer, Rachel! ~avidson, Summer, Sonny, Can! and Donny
Folmer, Vicky Hill and Shawn
Gilmore.
·
Others presenting gifts were Mr.
and Mrs. Rick Taylor and Nisha
and Tasha, Mary Doerfer, Pat and
Sam Tompson, Betty and Tody
Dill Butch, Lori and Sheldon Mercer Md Tim and Becky Davidson.

How to make child's final ~" s happy ones
Dear Ann Landers: . This is in

m;polise to the parents whose child.

Ann
Landers

"Kathy," 1s incurably ill. They
wanted to know how to make her
ftnal days happy ones.
ANN LANDERS
Forgive me for being critical, but
"1993,, ll..oo~~~
I'm afraid you are missing the boat.
TJma s~
Indulging Kathy with a "dream lrip"
Crnton Syodklte"
or other luxuries will not help
prepare anyone for the inevitable. It advance for organ donation. I(s a
would only add to lhe tension and marvelous way for your child's
drain lhe energy of the entire farn· beauty to live on.
ily. Since this lovely young girl will
In short, help Kathy be part of a
not be able to m•e conlributions in lasting memorial that will bring other
future years, you must now help children a more fulfilling life.
ma1cc her brief life as purposeful and Purposeful living is the bell .
productive as possible.
preparation for dying. -· A
Use the money you would have CARING ROTARIAN
spent on indulgenca, and 1ry to llile
DEAR fRIEND: What a beauti·
additional funds to build !OITlething ful concept. I received thousanda of
thai will provide health, educarioo !etten suggesting ways to make
or recreation for deprived children. Kalhy'slinal days more pleasant, but
Perhaps an aquarium in a ghetto yours was the most aative and
school, a playground for handi· constructive. Keep re.ding for more
capped youngsters, a nature walk, on the same IUbject.
an immunization clinic or a sports
Dear Ann Landen: This letter iJ
center. Get Kathy's friends and for the parents who are faced with
classmates involved in the project the lou of a daughter who is
she ftnds most &amp;ppWing.
terminally ill. They asked for your
Let everyone see that this is guidance.
Kathy's gift to other children. It wiU
You, dear parents, have incred·
give her a gm11 deal 'of pleasure and ible sttmgth lhat you are not yet
might even lengthen her life.
aware of. Once you get past this
Ask for help. Perhaps the local honendous shock and the "why me?"
Rotary, a church youth group or phase, allow yourselves to IBY,
another organization will join in the "Why /IQI me, becall"" I have the
project and make it larger and mm strenglh 10 make each day a good
enduring than !OITlething you pul one for her."
together on your own.
Let each day be calm,Jovins and
And pleue consider ll'flll8ing in ordinary. Do lhe SOrt of things the
.

~-

,...,..

..

. ... ...

whole family would do anyway, as
weU as other things you may have
been putting off. You will get much
advice. That's OK, but trust your
instincts.
When I finally Jolt my dauahter,
my onl)! child, I wu able to wort
through my grief,
I know I
had given her a good life, howew:r
brief, and that 1,- privilepd 10
have had her.
Parents who have lost a child by
accident or ,murdei: cr sudden cieath,
whatever the reasan, had no chance
to p~q~~re. Uec what time there Ia 10
the fullelt. It will become dear 10
you what ia truly impc:alllltanclwhlt
illrivial. May God blea you. You
are in my prayers. - SWAR1H•
MORE,PA.
DEAR READERS: The leucr
about the tenninally ill child pnc~r:
ated mere maillhele last two weeb
than all the other leuera combined.
My tilankJIO all whole aenaitlve IDd
caring words were wonby of prinJ,
but unfOI1UIIalely. JIPICC would not
permit me 10 UIC them,
Wlrcn pltlllllbtg 11 wedtfi•g, who
fJ4YI for wltol? Who iltwb wltiT•1
'Tire AM LoNim Gllltk for Brldu"
lras all the IUIIWVI. Sell!l a "lfoQd·
drdsetl.lollf,IHI.Jblus-llu Ollltlopt
IUid 11 check or 111011ey ortkr for
$3.65 (this irtelllilel pollllgt flllll
lltutdlbtg) to: BrUin, c/o AM IAn·
ders, P.O. Boz 11562, Chicllgo,/11.

......_eo

60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$4.45.)

.

-

.

Mr. and· Mrs. Charles Blakeslee
have recenlly returned from attend·
ing the graduation of lheir grandson Jeff Butcher from South
Spenser High School in Rockport,
Indiana on Saturday May 29. Jeff is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Butch·
cr.
Other family members who
attended the graduation were his
grandmother Ira Butcher, Texas:
his aunt Patricia Circle and cousins
Marianne and Mark Circle and
friend Lance Harra, Kansas, and
sisters, Julie, Jessica and Joanna.
Jeff was recognized as being in

the top 10 percent of his class, a
member of the National Honor
Society and received a special
diploma of academic excellence.
The Blakeslees will return to
Rockport the weekend of Jpne I 9
and 20 to attend the Hardee All·
Star Banquet and football game
among outstanding high school
football players of Southern Indiana. The game will be played at
EvansviUe. Jeff has recdved a foot·
ball scholarship at Western Kentucky University and will start
pncbce in early August. ·

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel NeW!l Stall'
Members of the Pomeroy Village Council Monday night voted
unanimously to close the Pomeroy
Paating Lol from Thursday, Oct 7,
to Sunday, Oct. 10, to provide
space ·for the annual Btg Bend
Sternwheel Festival.
Larry Banks, representing the
Sternwheel
Association,
approached council asking their
continued suppon fer the event. In
addition to asking for usc of the
parking lot, Banks also requested

•'

.....

extra police pairols and permissiqn
to sell beei on the parking lot
· "The Big Bemf Sternwheel Festival has been a real success,"
Councilman Larry Wehrung said.
"I go along with everything you
(Banks) ask."
"~I might cause !OITle publem,"
Wehrung added, "but just for one
weelcend."
In addition, Banks and council
members discussed the possibility
of upgrading the elcciric service in
lhe parkin$ lot.
Councalman John Blaettnar

made the motion that council
approve closing the parking lot for
the festival. All council members
approved the motion.
Council members also viewed
plans for a proposed baUflCld 10 be
located between the old Pomeroy
Junior High Building and the
Meigs High School Football Field.
The plans presented to council,
drawn up by Eugene Triplen, call
for two back·to-back f1elds.
Retirement
discussed
A representative from the Ohio
Public Employees Deferred Com·

Other ·buSiness
Council also discussed amendments to several village ordinances
. pertaining to dogs at large, yard
sales, trailers and tanning beds.
A section of the proposed traiJer
ordinance involves prohibiting
landowners from setting up traiJers
within the village for use as rentals.
Blaennar, opposed to that section of the ordinance, said, "It is
Council members agreed to let not cqrrecting the problem, the
workers meet with a program rep- problem of improper maintenance."
resenlative to see if they would be
Rentals should all be addressed
inierested in the program.
he said. "I don't like this

.,ian

.

Germany's demand turned down
COPENliAGEN, Denmark said arming Muslims would worsen
(AP) - European Community lhe bloodshed, mean withdrawing
leaders today blocked a demand by UN. humanitarian forces and risk
Germany to arm Bosnia-Herzegov- widening the conflict.
French President Francois Mit·
ina's embauled Muslims.
terrand
said that the Europeans
Producing a letter of support
should,
instead,
send more b'OOps
from President Clinton, German
to
protect
U.N.designated "safe
Chancellor Helmut Kohl urged the
havens"
for
Muslims,
which are
community to press the United
still
being
shelled
by
Serbs.
Nations to lift an arms embargo in
Some 60 Bosnian demonstralas
orde~ to help Muslim forces repel
booed;
whistled and shouted
advances by Serbs and Croats.
.
'~killen!"
and ~~shame, shame" as
"If we don't help them, then we
have to give them the chance t.o the west European leaders arrived
help themselves," Dieter Vogel, a in motqrcades on the flll!li day of a
spokesman f&lt;r German Chancellcr two-day meeting.
The community stance in
Helmut Kohl, said today. "It is not
just a question ofpolitic:S, it's ques· Copenhagen effectively piled pressure on Bosnia's Muslim president,
tion of morals."
But Britain, backed by France, Alija Izetbegovic, tb go to peace
called the proposal a "recipe for talks in Geneva on Wednesday and
chaos.'' Prime Minister John ·Majer negotiate a Serb-Croat proposal to
•

..--Local briefs----Counsel appointedfor Lemaster$
Attorney William N. Eachus of Worthington was appointed
Monday by Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W.
Crow Jli to represent William D. Lemasters in his bid for an appeal.
Lemas!Crs, 26, was found guilty May 15 in the Feb. 8, 1991,
shotgun slayings of Jeffrey L. Halley, 36, and 12-year-old JeffreyS.
Halley, both of Gallia County. In addition, he was found ~ty of
aggravated rob~ and !'NO counts ofki~!Jg in the incadent
He is currently servmg two consecuuve life sentences for the
murders. During his trial, Len\asters was represented by attorneys
Eachus and B~ McLane.

Man charged in burglary
A 19-ycar-old Long Bottom man is being held in the Meigs
County Jail on a charfe of receiving stolen property.
Brandon Shuler o 46842 Showalter Road was charged Monday
for his aile~ connection with the theft of a safe from the Robert
Deemer resadence on CoUege Road in Syracuse.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes said Monday
that charges are pending against three juveniles. Lentes said a second adult, who is cooperating with authorities, has yet to be chlrged
and is expected to plead guilty to a charge of receiving stolen property.
A preliminary hearing is scheduled Friday for Shuler, Lentes
said.

Man pleads innocent
A man charged with ~vated burglary with ftrearms specific&amp;·
lions pleaded innocent during his arraignment Monday.
·John Alfred Rose m, 18, of Reyno~urg. is accused in the June
IS armed rob~ of the By the Way Gr0ctzy in Langsville.
Meigs Coun~ Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes said Rose's
trial is schedu~ for July 20 at 9 a.m.
Rose remains in the Meigs County JaiJ in lieu of $50,000 cash
bond.

1993 royalty forms available .
AE'cation forms for·the 1993 Meigs COIDity Junior Fair King
and
Contesl may be picked up at the Meigs County Exten·
sion
Applications are due back at' the extension office by 4:30p.m. on
July 30. No applications will be accepted after that date.
The king and queen mUSl be at least 16 years old as of Jan. I,
1993 not married nor have been married, l)or have borne a child.
FOr more information, please call Chip Haggerty 'at the Meigs
County Extension Office at 992-6696.

Man cited in wreck
An 18-ycar-old Pomeroy man was cited for faiJure to control following a two-car wreck near the junction of Ohio 124 and College
Avenue in Syracuse IIIOUIId 6:30p.m. Monday.
Nathan M. Brown of 210 W. Main Street, Pomeroy, was soulh·
bound on Ohio 124 11 a high rare of spee4 when be lost control of
the I985 Oldsmobile Della 88 he was driving, acconling to a report
fron1 the Meip County Sheriff's De!llnment
Brown's car slid left of ccntec arnlstruck a northbound car driven
by Richard L. Butcher, 42, of 32844 u.s. 33, Pomeroy, the repon
indicated.
.
Butcher was transported by the Syracuse Squad of the Meags
County Emcrge11cy Medical Service 10 Yererans Memorial Hospital
where he was treated and released.
Brown and a pas~ger in his vehicle, Kevin Arnott, 18, of
Racine, were reportedll uninjured in the accident
Damqe to llrown 1 car was listed u heavy while damqe to
Bu!Cher~s 1984 Cadillac Eldorado was listed as moderate.

•

Editor'• am: Nama, 11ft alld llddreun are pablllbed u
tbeJIPJIIII' OD olllciii reporll.
·

carve Bosnia-Herzegovina into
three ethnic regions.
.
In a draft communique, the EC
leaders offered supportive words
including, at the inSistence of Kdll,
a declaration of support for the
Muslims' call for a cease-fire. But
they made no mention of the arms
embargo.
Mitterrand urged lhe community
nations to conUibute to a 7,500·
strong U.N. force to patrol six
Muslim "safe areas."
The Netherlands announced it
would send 400. Britain and France
already provide most of the 10,000 ·
U.N troopS in Bosnia. Two diplomats quoted Mitterrand as sayinj! that if the EC
couldn't commn itself to sending
enough troops to protect Muslim
civilians, then the arms embargo
should be lifted and U.N. troops
withdrawn. ·

Former First Lady
Pat Nixon, 81, dies
WASliiNGTON (AP) - Pat
Nixon, the uncomplaining silent
partner in Richard Nixon's quarter
century of political triumph and
disgrace, died of lung cancer today
at the Nixon home in Park Ridge,
N.J.
She was81.
She had suffered from lung disease for years. ,
. The former president and their
daughters, Tricia Nixon Cox and
Julie Nixon Eisenhower, were with
the forrtier fmt lady when she died.
Funeral services were set for
Saturday at the former president's
library in Yorba Linda, Calif.,
according to a statement from
Nixon •s office that announced the
death.
In their 53 years of marriage their anniversary was on Monday
-through the dark years of Watergate, throu&amp;h the pain of his resig·
nation from the presidency- the
former Thelma Catherine Ryan was
at Nixon •s side, never showing in
public how much it hurt.

,.

DIRECTS TRAFFIC • Aa Italian United
Nations soldier uses bls pistol to direct 111 bus
railed. with Somali resldenll at a cbeckpoiQt ill
MogadWau Tuesday. The situation ill the Somali

capital Is calm foUOwfag last week's altacb by
U.N. forces on Somali warlord Geaeral
Mohammed Farrah Aidid (AP).

Officers say stress part ofjob at prison
CINCINNATI (AP) - Guards
in Ohio prisons receive relatively
good pay and have job security, but
a study says many of them quit
fairly quickly. ·
.
The Criminal Justice Institute, a
trade organization, found that 13.8
percent of Ohio corrections personnel - including 352 ~ among
the 661 employees 11 tracked didn't make it through a six-month
probation period in 1991, the latest
year for which figures were avail·
able. That compared with a nation·
al ave~ge of 9.6 percent, the institute satd.
"I think it's· pretty clear. It's .

extremely sb'essful," said Ohio
Civil Service Employees Association spokesmll) Peter Wray, whose
uniOn represents the guards .
"There's a lot of baggage that
comes wilh the job."
With the danger and stress
inherent in the job, some people
might wonder why anyone would
want to work as a c~~T~~Ctions officer. But Troy Lynch, 28, a guard at
the Warren C~~T~~Ctionallnstitution
in Lebanon, said he could think of
at least two good reasons.
"Better pay, better benefits," he
responded when asked why he left
a municipal utilities.job four years

ago in nearby Blanchester to
become a guard.
Guards' pay in state prisons
averages $21,000 a year, a figure
that frequently is atttactive to people who live near prisons, which
usually are located in economically
depressed areas, Wray said.
But job stress sometimes causes
health problems for guards and
tension in~ family life, he

::.:J::

Ernest Clark, 40, a guard at the
Mansf1eld Correctional Institution,
said his first marriage failed•J P
years ago panly because he lried;tp
ease his wife's fears by not talking
about work.
·

Racine celebration theme announced
· "For God and Counlry" will be
the theme of the Racine July 4 celebration featuring a parade at I

p.m.

The parade wiD form at South·
ern Hi'h School at 12:30 p.in. and
.Jhen will take a route of down Elm
to Third, to Vine, then Fifth, back
to f;lm, returning to .the high
school.
. First, second, and third place
cash prizes will lie awarded for
floats. A $100 prizC for fii'Sl place
is being provided by Home Nation·
al Bank, while the second prize of
$1S and the third prize of $SO ane
being provided by the Racine Fire
Depanment
Individuals or lfOilpS planing to
enter the parade are asked to con,
tract Scott Hill at 949-2231. A .flag

raising by Racine Post, American
Legion, 'will take place at 12:45
p.m.
.
The holiday in Racine will
begin at II a.m. with a chicken
barbecue by the fire department In
addition to chicken, the group will
also sell snow cones, and the fire.
men's aUxiliary wiD be selling ice
cream. Food will also be sold by
the Star MiD Park Board, hot dogs
and sausage dinners with beans and
salad, the Youth League, and
RACO.
.
The Big Bend Farm Antiques
Club will sponsor an antique trao·
tor pull at Star Mill Park at 2:30
p.m. and at the same time there will
be a volleyball tournament, spo!l·
sored by the Racine Baptist
Church. Anyone wanting to have a
team in lhe tournament should con·

tact Rick Harris at949-2867.
At 3:30 p.m. Gary Norris will
have a home run derby for the kids,
and at 5 p.m. Dan and Ted Smith
will have a kiddie tractor pull. The
Racine American Legion will have
a bean dinner and also have bingo
at the hall.
Life Flight will have a helicopter at lhe park from I to 2 p.m.
for local residents 10 view.
. Entertainment at the Star Mill
Park stage will begin at 3 p.m. and
continue each hour until the fireworks. The Kingdom Kids will perform at 3 p.m., the Specks of Bluegrass at 4 p.m. the Born Again
Believers at 5 p.m. the Rambling
Country at 6 p.m. the Out of the
Blue at 7 p.m. White's Hill Band at
8 p.m. and Rock Mountain Blue·

grass at 9 p.m.
Craft booths will be along the.

park building and anyone in~

tn setting up should contac
Kalhryn Hart at 949-2656. The set
up fee is $10.
'
Donations are also being taken'
for a fireworks fund and checks!
made payable to the Racine Firei
Department Fireworks Fund .
should be mailed to P. 0. Box 246
atRacine. ,
,
The celebration will be concluded with a I 0 p.m. fireworks dis- :
play.
j:
All activities following the 1 •
parade will take place at Star Mill, :
Park and the fire department build- ·
ing area. Those attending are '
reminded to take lawn chairs. Pan;.
ing space will be available.

Area retailer disqualified from food
stamp program
.
.

C &amp;: D PennzoU II 34099 State
Route 7. Pomeroy, owned by Timothy Jenkins, has ~II permanently
disqualified from the Meigs Coun
Food Stamp Program, the
Department of Agriculture
announced today.
The firm was charged with
exchanging cash for food stampl. a
practice commonly referred to as
trafficking and for acccptin!! food
stamps in payment of inehgible

u.f.

ilems.

,

A llulllmeda Inc• .....,..,.,

pensation Program met with councilto explain in optional retirement
plan for public workers wh.o pay
mto Ohio retirement funds.
The program allows ·workers to
defer part of their income before it
appears on their pay checks, the
represenlative said. They do not
pay taxes on the deferred income
until they receive it at a later date.

,.

1. . .7424111

•

1 Section. 10 Pagee 21 a.ta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 22, 1993

Council OKs use of parking lot for festival

113 W. IIIII 11.
OIIM~7t

7328

MultiiMdlalno.

JEFF WARNER
STUDENTS OF THE WEEK - TJae followlnglltadeall trere
selected lor behavioral or acad•lc reuona to be tht studeatl or
the week at Melp Junior Hlab Selaool ror tile m1111th or May. They
are Eddie Saner, biltGrJ; WenciJ SbrlmpiiD, readiDI and speiUng;
Sandra Yoang, art; and Chad Folmer, ~elence.

Low toDJabt In 601, clear•
WedDetday sUDDy. High In 101.

.)

Airman Todd M. llarrison,
Racine, enlisted in the US Air
Force after completing two quartetJ
of ~dies at Ohio Slate Umversity
in Columbus. He graduated from
Basic Military Trainjng on May 21.•
at Lacldand Air Force Base in SBJI
Antonto, Texas.
·
He was a member of Basic Mili·
tary Squadron 331 and llonor
Aight 286. Following seven weeb
of trainin~ u a Computec lnfanna~
tion S~aalist at Keesler Air Force
Base an Biloxi, Miss., Airman Har·
rison will be srationed at Otrut Ait
Force Base in Omaha, Ncbnska.
Todd is the son of Crail and
Judy Harison of Racine. Grandpar·
ents are Ed and Helen I une Kelly
of Syracu!!C and Richard and Pat
Harrison of Duncan Falls. His
fiance is Miss Jody Hayes also of
Racine.
Scott Whitlatch
· Scott W. WhitJitcb, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Max Whitlatch of Mid·
dleport, enlisted in the Air Force
recently, according to TSGT Rllldy ·
Frisby. Air Force recurilier, ~.
. Upon IUCCCIIfully campleling
the Air Force's six-week bail: mlf.
itary ttainlng at I Jlckland Alr Fort,
Base, near San Antonio, Texas,
Airman Whitlatch I• ICbeduled to
receive technical training in th~
Mechanical Career field.
.
Airman Whitlatch, a 1993 lfld·
uate of Meigs High School, will be
earning credits toward 10 uiOCiate
degree in applied science&amp; throu.lh
the.Community CoUege of the Air
Force while attending basic and
technical trainingiChoola.

Pomero,, OH. 4l7le

Pick 4:

Vol. 44, NO. 31

Rose
Barrows
earns
Mt Zion Church of Christ
holds mother-daughter fete first plac~ in contest

. FIVE .G~NERATIONS- This rive generation family
mcludes, satttng, great-great-grandmother, Henrietta Hayman·
holding baby, William Folmer is grandmother Ella Roush, wbil;
mother, Samantha Folmer, stands in center. At right Is greatgrandmother, Blanche Stewart

922

•

Sa1' bury
Elementary
holds ac adem1' c
banquet

Blakeslees attend
graduation of grandson

Pick 3:

Page4

you: and • The agency providing
EdPetenon,
your home health services must cost of durable medical equipment;
Sodal Security
participate in Medicare.
· (including items such as oxygen.
IDIDIJ&amp;er ID Athena
If you meet all four conditions, equipment. wheelchairs, 1111~ other:
"Medicare may pay the costs of Medicare will pay the full medically necessary equapment
treatment by a participatint~ home approved cost for all medically prescribed by your doctor for you
health ~ncy for beneflcianes who ·required covered home health ser- to use at home).
·
need slcilled la1th care services in vices, When ~ou no longer .need
Mr. Peterson notes that "If you
their l)wn home," according to Ed intermittent slciDed nursing care or receive home health care, the home
Peterson, manager of the Athens physical or speech therapy, Medi • health agency will submit the claim
Social Security office. "If you think care will continue to pay for cov· for payment directly to Medicare.
you may be eligible for thts ~ Of ered home health services if you You don't have to send in any bills
service," Mr. Peterson said; ask continue to need occupalional ther· · yourself."
your doctor to refer you to a local apy.
Medicare participating home health
"It's important to remember that
agency to sec if you meet the general
household serviceslS
· TREE AS TRIBUTE • This cyprus tree Will planted at the Sal·
requirements. That home health
to do the ~. prepare
isbury Elementary School as a tribute to RosaUe Story, left, and
agency will evaluate your case free someone
mealS, or do your shOIIIIJRg- are
Dorothy Chuey,long time teache~ there. Both teachers retired at
of charge."
.
not covered my Medfcare." Mr.
·
the end of the school year.
A home health agency may be a
poiniS OUL "Nor are other .
public or private agency. Its spe· Peterson
home care services that mainly
·.
.
.
cialty is providing skilled nursang
services and therapeutic services- =~rsonal, family. or domestic
like physical therapy-to homeHere •s what Medicare covers:
Salisbury Elementary recently were donated by the Meigs County bound individuals.
• Part-time or intermittent . Salisbury Elementary recently ·
dedicated a Bald Cypress !lee as a Utter Control Office. The students
According to Mr. Peterson, to skiUed nursing care (including up held their academic banquet w!th.
living tribute to ROialie Story, who were given bidges, pencils and var- be eligible for home health visits, to 8 hours of reasonable and neces· students being served a steak din-.
taught there for 37 years and ious trinkets with an Earth Day you must meet all four of the fol- sary care per day for up to 21 con- ner by the Salisbury PTO. The'.
·
Dorothy Chaney, who has taught logo.
lowing conditions:
secutive days-or lont~er in some meal for the students was provided· ·
The
sixth
gr8de class continued
for 29 1/2 years. Story and Chaney
•
You
must
need
care
that
circumstances): • PhySical therapy; through a grant from Effective·
were also honored lit a tea held at its monthly dean-up of the school includes intermittent skilled nurs- and • Speech therapy.
Schools.
·
·
the school on May 16 for the com· playground and surrounding area. ing care, physical therapy, or
If
you
need
any
of
these
covered
Principal
Halar
spoke
to
the
munity. They were honored a~ a They also started a newspaper speech therapy: • You must be services, Medicare also pays for:
audience about the importance of
retirement party held at Dale's wath recycling program which they plan confined to your home (home•
Occupational
therapy:
having the elementary school years
the faculty and staff of Salisbury on to continue.
bound); • Your physician mUSl say
•
Part-time
or
intermittent
home
as
foundation for education.
The fourth grade class turned that you need home health care and health aide services; • Medical Asaagood
June 2.
.
part
of this good foundation;
As part of the Arbor I?ay ce.le· · their lOOm into a II'Opical rain forest must set up a home health plan for social services: • Medical supplies: the math and science parent work·
bration, the classes were giVen pme and decorated T-shlrts with a Save
shops, with hands-on materials,
seedlings to plant. The seedlings Our.Earth theme.
which were conducted as part of
the Effective School program this
year were explained.
Harlar explained the Effective
School seven components; a sense
of mission. stronl! building leader·
ship, high expectations for all stuRose Barrows received first to have a table at both the state fair dents and staff. frequent monitor·
The Zion Church of Christ held Lambert. Garnes were played and · place in the crocheted rable cloth, and the county fair. She will have ing of student progress, a positive
a mother-daughter banquet iecently several potted flowers were given baby set, counted cross stitc)l, mis· background ready for work at our learning climate, sufficient oppor· .
cellaneous, holiday wreath and Fun Night on June 19.
at the church .. The theme for this away as prizes.
!Unity for learning and parent/com·
Johnson and Dummitt served as stuffed toy categories at the judg·
year's banquet was hospitality.
Eldon Barrows, legislative mumty involverru:nt. ·
•:
ing held recently at the Start chairman, repof!ed on the Dove
Program booklets and table co-chairman for the event
Grace Kitchen and Tricia DaviS •
arrangements were decorated with
Gra~$e 11778 me~ting. Oth~r
Bill. He also reported lhat the abor· were announced .as the Meigs~
recetVJng fU'Sl place m the embroa-· tion and casino gambling bills will County honorees in highest aca· .~'
pineapples, which are a symbol of
dery categories were Maxine Dyer.
hospitality. The program opened
· demic achievement. Harlar also··
Franklin D. Roosevelt vetoed more Patty Dyer received fmt place in . be up for vote soon.
with Kathryn Johnson giving a
announced that students who were·:
The
Ohio
State
Grange
Convenreading "Thoughts of Mother." A congressional bills than any other the embroidery cateaory and count· tion in October was discussed. on the honor roll all year will have,;
president. His &amp;35 vetoes far outdis· ed cross stitch categories. Opal
song was sung by Kay McElroy lance
the 414 of his 'nearesl competi- Dyer received first place in the Meigs County is responsible for the their names engraved on a plaque •
and Bonnie Arnold. Charlotte Lam· tor, Grover
table favors for the youth luncheon. which will be posted in the main ';
Cleveland.
plastic canvas, young adult pillow Opal Dyer, county youth chairman, hallway of the school
bert spoke on the hospitality of dif·
:
ferent women in the Bible, and the
contest
and
county
cross
stitch
reported work on them will take
The biggest gainer in congressionhospitality she receives as she ttav· al reapportionment after the 1990 catagories. Freda Smith won the place at the next meeting.
els.
Dyer announced that Meigs
census was Californi'!, which picked piUow contest. Judges for ihe COR·
Other readings were given by .up seven additional seats. The biggest test conducted by 1aile I Morris County Pomona Grange will meet
Tammy Dummiu and Bonnie loser was New York, whose congres- were llazel Davas and Mildred on Friday July 2. The meeting wiD
Arnold. A comedy skit was pre• sional delegation shrank by three Morris.
begin with a potluck supper at 6 .
Hazel Stanley and Ann seats.
Winners of the the state baking p.m. followed by inspection and
contest judged recently at the lhe fifth degree in fuU form at 7:30
Grange Deputies Conference held p.m. Any fourth degree member
in Zanesville were Chelsea Mont· who would like to advance to the
gomery, fmt place in the junior 5·9 fifth degree should attend. Pomona
age group with brownies: Alan officers were reminded of a pracSmith, fmt place with youth tice session on June 2S.
1 crunchy brownie bars and Patty
Janis Macomber, deaf chainnan,
Dyer, fourth place in the young presented a' program on deaf and
adult banana muffin contests.
hearing. She showed a video and
During the meeting conducted discussed various types of aids for
br Mastec Patty Dyer. the commu- the hearing impaired.
mty service project was discussed
Forty-two members, juniors and
and I anis Macomber reported that visitors enjoyed potluck ·refresh·
she will take the food from the bar· ments following the meeting.
rei to a local food bank after our
The next meeting will be fun
next meeting.
night and work session on Saturday
Dyer discussed the fair booths June 19. It will ·begin with a
and reported that we are signed up potluck supper at 6:30p.m.

Trees dedicated to teachers

Ohio Lottery

A USDA offacial explained lhat regulations governing the Food
food coupons can be used only to Stamp Program. Woods said that
buy food for human consumption ·any farm which violates the regulaand for plants and seeds to grow tions, and anyone who pressures a
food for the household.
fum to do so, weakens and endanMonroe Woods, Midwest gers the whole program which was
Regional Administrator of the eslablished to combat hunger and
USDA's Food and Nutrition Ser- malnutrition.
vice which administers the proAs a means of protecting the
gram, explained that before being integrity of the Food Stamp Pro·
authorized to accept food coupons, gram. each retail food lion:: autJto..
firms must agree to abide by the rized to accept food stamps is
required to post in a suitable and

.

.

.

conspicuous location in the Store a
sign which provides information on
how persons may repon abuses
they have observed in the operation
of the program.
1
Food stamp fraud can be rqx_~~~,
ed to USDA, Food and Nutrition
Service, 200 N. High Street, Room
S03, Columbus, Olilo. 43215 or by
telephone 11 (614)469-(j864 or the
Ust&gt;A, Office of InspcciDr Clenera1
(toll ftee) 1-~24-9121.

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