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                  <text>The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
.

Reds
defeat
Padres

Thursday, June 24,1993

Page 10

"

State Patrol holds open house .

VISITS MEIGS COUNTY • Tbe Robert
"Ray" Jacks family of Brewton, Ala. made a

recent visit to Meigs County, birth place of
Jacks.
·

Robert Jacks family of Alabama
visits Meigs County recently
provided an opportunity for him to
relive some childhood memories.
Highlights of the visit included
enjoying the scenic view of
Pomeroy from the Lincoln Hill
cross, a visit with Beatrice Ponds
Rinehart, 89, Jacks' third grade
teacher at the Rutland Elementary; ·
a cold shower under a stream
falling from the roof of a cave on
The River Valley Herbalists met his homeplace near Langsville, a
recently at the home of Jane Gwis- · trip to the Trolley Station in Middalla and toured her log home sur- . dleport, daily walks along the Ohio
. rounded with flowers and herbs.
Garden reports were given and it
was decided to have signs made for
the Blennemassett and Middleport
A cookout w·as held for the
garden.s.
Betty Newsome reported on
recent meeting or the Hemlock
West Virginia Day at the - Grange with 16 members present.
The charter was draped for Art
Ravenswood River Front Park dur·
ing which 150 fourth graders parShumway.
Helen Quivey gave the standing
ticipated. They toured the herb gar·
committee report in the absence of
den at the log cabin.
A program was presented on
Muriel Bradford . Ziba Midkiff
gave the legislative report on bills
Tussie Mussie's and the history of
fragrant bouquets was given.
The herb of the month report
was given on lavender.
Refreshments of cheese and
sage biscuits, salmon spread with
The Rev. Andrew Hoover will
crackers, radish cheese spread, pepbe
preaching at the Pomeroy Unitpermint ·blueberry tarts. relish tray,
ed
Methodist
Churcl) on Sunday at
iced tea and rosemary mint punch
!0:30a.m.
were served.
Rev. Hoover is a graduate of
It was noted that now is the time
Meigs
High School, Ohio Universito start harvesting the earliest herbs
ty
and
the Methodist Theological
• mints, chives, diU, eiC, and plant
.
second crops of others such as School at Delaware.
He served as student pastor at
cilantro arid to harvest rose petals
Glenwood United Methodist
for potpourri.
. ·
The next meeting will be July 6 Church in Columbus and as pastor
at the home of Paige Winebrenner. of Eastmont United Methodist
The hem of the month report will Church in·Dayton: He is completbe on scented geraniums.
The Roben' ''Ray" Jacks family
of Alabama were in Meigs County
recently for a five day visit It was
the fJrSt trip to Jacks' birthplace by
his ~dchild{en and the occasion

River Valley
Herbalists meet

River, and attending the Richard
and Avanell Jacks reunion held at
the home of Jacks' sister, Betty
Jacks Rupe of Rutland, where 75
family members gathered.
The family was impressed with
the friendliness of the area AcC::Om·
panying Jacks here were his wife,
EllaRee, his son, Wendell Jacks .
and grandson, Shawn, his daughter
and son-in-law, Garnett and Rankin
Madden and two other grandchildren, Kevin and Duree.

As part ?f the O~ik! State High·
way Pai!'OI ~ 60th anmversary year
the Galltpolis Post held open house
on June 20.
. .
Lt. Woodford,_Ga!/lpo_hs Post
Commander, SaJd, This open
house was one of 57 that the Patrol
1s holding at posts throu_ghout the
state: It was an .opportumty for the
public to see f1rst-hand our commitment to public service. We
strive daily to continue the level of
service that the citizens of Ohio
have come to expect from the
Patrol."
Colonel Thomas W. Rice,
superintendent of the Patrol, said
the look of the Patrol has changed
during the past 60 years, but the
mission remains the same.
"Our mission, to provide traffic
services to keep the roadways safe,
to provide emergency response and
SU,Pport services to the public and
cnminal justice community and to
investigate criminal activities on
state-owned and state-leased property, remains unchanged," Rice·
said.
The driving force behi'tld the
creation of the Patrol was 0. W.
"Whitey" Merrell, director of the
Department of Highways (under
then Governor Ge;;&gt;rge White.)
Merrell appointed the fJrSt superintendent, Colonel Lynn Black who
brought the Patrol the principles of
fair, courteous and professional
service.
Today, the Patrol operates 55
regular Patrol posts, four Ohio

Rev. Hoover to preach Sunday

•

ing three years as associate pastor
at Trinity United Methodist Church
in Columbus.
On July 4 he begins a ·new
appointment as pastor of New
Albany United Methodist Church.
Before entering the ministry, Rev.
Hoo11er worked in radio, locally for
WMPO and WBNS-FM in Columbus. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wende\! Hoover, Rock Springs
Road.
The public is invited to the Sunday service.

Pool in Syracuse.' Dates still available for private parties.

invited.

TIJPPERS ·PLAINS • VFW Post
No. 9053 meets Thursday at 7:30
p.m. Members urged to attend.

MIDDLEPORT · There will be
a dance at the Legion Annex in
Middleport on Friday from 7-11
p.m. with music by George Hall.

THURSDAY
CHESHIRE - Crusade for Christ
revival through Saturday at 7 p.m.
nightly. Different singers and
speakers n_ightly. Spons&lt;?red by
Meigs Gall13 Mason countJes Crusade for Christ Public invited.

FRIDAY
RACINE· A potluck dinner and
farewell party for Rev. and Mrs.
Roger Grace and family will be
Friday at 4 p.m. with dinner at 6
p.m. The event will be held at. the
picnic shelter house behind the
Racine United Methodist Church
and is open to the public. Bring a
dish to share and table service.

POMEROY · Revival at Full
Gospel Lighthouse will be held
through Sunday at 7:30p.m. nightly with Betty Baker and the Joyful
Sounds. Public invited.
MIDDLEPORT · Gallia-Meigs
Head Start wiD hold a "Kid' s Car·
nival" Thursday from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. at General Hartinger Park in
Middleport. Call 992-3088 or 4466674 for information.
SYRACUSE - Carleton College
Board of Trustees annual meeting,
Thursday, 7 p.m., Syracuse Municipal Building. All members attend.
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. The Classics Band will perform
Thursday at 9 p.m . at Tu-EndieWei Park in Point Pleasant for
Sternwheel Regatta.
RACINE · The Racine American Legion Auxiliary will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home.
POME~OY

· The Pomeroy
Group of AA and AI Anon will
meet Thursday at Sacred Heart
Church at 7 p.m. Call 992-5763 for
information.
REEDSVILLE • Riverview Garden Club wiD hold a potluck supper
.Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the home
of Nola Young. Bring table service,
a covered dish and a lawn chair.

niPPERS PLAINS · There will
be a round and square dance at the
Tuppers Plains VFW Post No.
9053 on Friday from 8-11:30 p.m.
with music by Smoky Mountain
Drifters. This will be the last dance
until September.
LONG BOTTOM · Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have preaching and singing
Friday at 7 p.m. with local singers.
Pastor Steve Reed invites the public. Fellowship will follow.
MILLFIELD • The Oldies But
Goodies Dance Club will hold a
dance Friday from 8-11 p.m, at the
Rus~ell B~ilding in Millfield .
MUSIC will be provided by Off Seasons."
· BASHAN - There will be an ice
cream social at the Bashan Fire
House on Friday beginning at S
p.m. sponsored by the ladies auxiliary . There will be sandwiches,
sloppy joes, hot dogs, hot sausage
and 10 flavors of homemade ice
cream as well as pie, coffee and
pop. EntertaiiVIlent will be provided by Specks of Bluegrass.
ROCK SPRINGS · Meigs
County Pomona Grange officers
will have practice for inspection
Friday at 7 p.m. at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall. All officers
attend.

BRADFORD · The Meigs
County Women's Fellowship will
DEXTER • Revival at Dexter
hold its monthly meeting at Brad•
ford Church of Christ Thursday at Church of Christ will be Friday
7:30 p.m. Bring a wedding picture. · through Sunday at 7:30p.m. and on
Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Chuck RusPublic invited.
sell, New Hope Street Mlnislry will
SYRACUSE · Adult swimming be speaker. Dinner at noon with
only, Thursday evening, London bible school at 9:30 a.m. Public

SATURDAY
RUTLAND . There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall on Saturday from 9
p.m. to 1 a.m. with music by Pure
Counlry Band. Public invited.
·

RUTLAND · J.W. Eskew
reunion will be Saturday at noon at
Fort Meig s in Rutland. Bring a
covered dish.
REEDSVU..LE ·Eastern Athlet'
ic Boosters will have a yard sale
Saturday and S~ri.day during Super
Weekend fesuvmes. Any families
wanting to donate items may leave
them at the school or call Jill
Holter at 949-2603 for pickup.

4991

TOPICS

Vol. 44, NO. 41
llulll..tla.lno.

Po'"'roy·Middl~port,

Budget committee hits
snag in negotiations

Eapeclally valuable for IliON with extr.--eltive ekln, 1 non-dllllll·
ell eunecreen le now avlllmla that UMI Illinium dioxide to rallaet
light aw.y from the ekln.
·

•••

....M•.,., '\ •

Injection of magn111um glvlll to patlante after bypua eurgary cut
h•rt-rhylhm problameln h•lf and epeaded recovery, eay cloctore at
Sinal Hoapltlllln Baltimore.

...

.

Jessie White presented the liter- .
ary program with a Father's Day
theme. "When You and I Were
Younl! Maggie" was sung by all.
Readm's were "My Husband's
Wood Pile" by Golda Reed; "Help
Mate" by Helen Quivey; and a skit
by Ann 'Lambert and Wallace
Bradford.
Wallace Bradford won ttie
Grange Dad of the Year contest.
The meeting closed in regular
form with Rosalie Story, master,
presiding.

~'"·'

'i

/~~

Lyme dll!ll. ., , . . , flrat In lhll Eaal, Ia now found - - the country. If a tall·tllla rad bulla..ya raah lottowe a tick bite, ... a doctor
promptly lor the antibiotic therapy that avert• aMioue damage.

•

•••

Tranadermal aatrogen patch•• uud •ounci manop1uea to - •
eymptome like hot lluhM 1110 ban.tlt WOI'IIID wall put manopauM,
even thoaa who hiVI oataoporoele, a Mayo Clinic atucly found.

...
...

When

occaalonal el ..p1811R811 11 1 problem, we've got the help you
.

need at...

5W ISHEP LOHSE
Pha,..morv
~-ft MeCoolougn.ll. '"·

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PAESCRIPTIONI

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F.-y()poftW- .......IINI

READYING FOR RACE· Youngsters participadntin this weekend's -P box derby In
Middleport have been busy making last-minute
preparations for the race. Here, 12-year-old
Chris Carpenter, right, and 13-year-old Josh
Carpenter, both or New Haven, W.Va., poUsb

.
\
.
tbelr derby car. Tline trials will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. with I'IICe8 beginning Sunday at
noon. All events will be held on General
Hartinger Parkway near the park. (Sentinel
pboto by Jim Freeman)

. ~-Local briefs------ Third coal
. Juvenile hit by car '
. firm signs
A Middleport youth was injured after being hit by a vehicle on
County Road 3 in Salisbury Township Thursday afternoon, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
.
Jason McCarty, 12, 37800 Leading Creek Road, was injured
when he crossed the path of Linda L. Hanson, 36, 34040 New Lima
Road, Rutland, who was eastbound on CR 3. The Middleport Emergency Medical Service transported McCarty to Veteran's Memorial
Hospital where he was treated and released. The accident is still
underinvesugation.
·

Men indicted in Jackson County
Two men indicted in Meigs Counry on charl!es of aggravated
robbery with gun specifications were recently indicted by a Jackson

County grand jury on related charges.
Randal S. Neil, 19, and John A. Rose m, 18, both of ReY.'_loldsburg, allegedly robbed the By-the-Way Store in Langsv1lle the
afternoon of June 8 and were arrested following a high-speed car
chase involving law enforcement officials from Jackson County. During the chase, a Jackson County Sherifrs Department cruiser
and a motorist's car were struck by the fleeing car, allegedly driven
by ~ose. I~ ~dition, shots w~ apparently fired from the fleeing
veh1cle slrlckmg several cru1sers, Jackson County Sheriff Greg
Keifer said.
The two were indicted in Jackson County on five counts of felo·
nious assault with gun specifications and four coonts of vandalism
with gun specifications. The two are expected to be arraigned
Wednesday in Jackson County Common Pleas Court.
Rose remains in the Meigs County Jail in lieu of $50,000 bond
while Neil is in the Jackson County Jail.

MARK III CONVERSION·VAN

Man pleads no contest
A Middleport man pleaded no contest Thursday in the Meigs
Court of Common Pleas to a charge of obstructing official
bus1ness.
Willi8111 Sorden Jr. was charged with obstructing official busi~ stemming from a Sept. 15, 1992, incident, court documents
mdicate.
· .
A plea of no contest is different from a plea of guilty in that the
defendant does not deny the facts listed on the complaint but does
not adnlit guilt.
Co.~nty

QUALITY AT THE TURNPIKE BEST PRiCE/

ONLY

s

PER MONTH
TO QUALIFIED APPLICANTS

*

Low toalght In 60s, rain.
Satl!l'day, partly cloudy. HJa•ln
80s.

1 S.Cdon. 10 P.- 25 oenta
A MuiUmedla Inc•.Newepapw

Ohio, Friday, June 25, 1993

BY YOUR •
SWISHER LOHSE
·PHARMACISTS

Deputies investigate shooting
A Racine man may faces charges of improper handling of a
firearm in a motor vehicle after being wounded in the right leg
Thursday night.
According to a report from the Meigs County Sheriff's Depart.· ment, George Donald Stobart Jr. was shot when a .357-caliber Magnum revolver lying on the seat of his auto discharged while he was
traveling on State Route 338.
Stoban was transported by the Racine squad of the Meigs Coun·
ty Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he underwent surgery to treat the gun shot.
·

SUNDAY
NEW HAVEN • Descendants of
Sam and Melvina Birchfield fami- ·
ly reunion, Sunday, New Haven
Park. Basket dinner at noon. Call
AI va Luckeydoo, 882 -2090 for
information.

Lawmen probe theft complaints

· Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Deparunent are investigating two thefts which reportedly occuned Wednesday.
Vickie Frye, Hampton Hollow Road, Salem Center, ~epon.ed two
subjects wali:ed out of the Little Coal Bucket store with "beer without payiiiJ for it They ~eportedly left in a white car with damage to
the rear.
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilation Center ~eported ·someone
entered the sewer treatment plant and cut several wires on the con·
trol box. A control swileh was also removed.

RACINE • Descendants of
Albert and Eliza Hill, family
reunion, Star Mill Park, Racine.
Covered dish dinner at I p.m.

Woman cited by OSP

REEDSVU..LE • Whaley family
reunion, Sunday, Forked Run Park.
Bring a covered dish and table service.
POMEROY · There will be a
12-step AA meeting Sunday at 7
p.m. at The Locomotion building
on Mechanic Street in Pomeroy. '

Pick 4:

•

REEDSVILLE • Eastern Super
Weekend, sponsored by the Eastern
Athletic Boosters, wiD be Saturday
and Sunday beginning at 9 a.m.
There wi~ be a yard sale, bake sale,
concessiOn stand, hoop shoot,
games, softball and baseball tournaments.
MIU.FIELD • There will be a
round and square dance Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. at the Russell
Building in Millfield. Music will be
provided by Out of the Blue. John
Russell will be the caller.

014

Page4

Community·Calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must he received well in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.

Pick 3:

tumpi~e i~stallations, as. w~ll ~
Lt. Woodford encouraged anyoperanons m Columbus, CJRC11111811 one interested in a. career in the
and Cleveland. This is ac.com- patrol or a position in Patrol Auxil·
pli~hcd with a staff of over 1,250 iary to contact the Gallipolis Post
umformed officers and approxi- for moce infonnation.
mately I ,000 support personnel
"The Patrol is a one-of-a-kind
including driver exammers, dis- organization. When you have qlllll·
patchers, motor vehicle inspectors, ity people who are committed to
load limit inspectors, technicians .public service, every one wins," he
and civilian specialists.
added
·

p

r---·- - -L....-· ~-~-

Senior cldzene who get regular 11roblc exwciH filii ulnp IIIIer
and have deeper lleap pMiodl th.. non-.rcl. . . do, -.ding to
•••archer• at Duke Unlveralty. ·

Hemlock Grange conducts cookout
pending iii ihe Ohio Legislature. A
report was also given on· grange
convention to be held in Cleveland.
The grange will serve Pomona
in July.
Reported sick were Clarence
Story, Sylvia Midkiff, Elizabeth
·Roberts, .Octa Ward and David
McCOni1ilvhav.
.

Ohio Lottery

Theresa L. Rider, 24, 1039 Second St., Middlepo(t, was cited by
the Oallia-Meigs Pofit ·of the State Highway Patrol early this momina for no operator's llcenae.
Editor'• aote: Name~, aaes and addr- are publltbed u
they appear on ollldal reports. ,

~-

z•nte·n•m
con httnct

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
group of legislators meeting pri·
vately for more than two weeks to.
develop a state budget have hit a
snag in n~gotiations that could
delay an announcement of the
package's details.
Rep. Patrick Sweeney, D-Cleveland, chairman or the six-member
conference committee, said Thurs. day night that final details would
be worked out today on the $30.9
billion plan .
The committee has been meeting since June 8 to come up with a
proposal that recOnciles House and
Senate versions of the two-year
budget.
Top lawmakers say they'll be
able to pass the plan before the new
budget year begms July 1.
In legisl4tive business Thursday,
the House approved a separate budget for the Ohio Industrial Com·
mission.
The move was considered to bC
a backup plan, in case another conference committee rejects a proposal that includes budgets and
' reforms for the commission and the
Bureau of Workers' Compensation.
In other action, the House
agreed to let judges sentence animal abusers to take counseling,
toughen drunken driving laws and
expand a person's right to sue pol, .. Juters.
The House Ways and Means
Cm'nmittee approved 14-0 a resolu-

-Require people to forfeit their
tion that would place a $200 milvehicles
on fourth and subsequent
lion bond issue on the Nov. 2 bal·
offenses.
·
lot If the measure clears the LegisThe House also agreed 89-5 to
lature and if voters approve, the
constitutional amendment would let judges sentence animal abusers ·
authorize an endowment for state to psychological counseling. Curand local parks and natural rently, cruelty to animals is a misdemeanor, punishable by up to 90
resources.
The Senate met briefly to con- days in jaillll!d a $750 fme.
Rep. Rhine McLin, D-Dayton,
sider minor biDs.
Meanwhile, House Speaker said the bill could hel~~vent viouse studVern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, said lence against people
the workers' compensation reform . ies show that most serial killers
package that the Senate approved have a .his~ of abusinl! animals.
"If we intervene w1th psychoon Wednesday needs some work.
"Somewhere in this biD thete is logical counseling we can perhaps
room for common ground, but it's prevent an individual from escalatgoing to require a conference com- mg their violence from animals to
mittee to work it out," he said.
· people," she said.
.Representatives agreed 55-40 to
Riffe said the bill doesn't do
enough to help injured workers and expand a citizen's right to sue a
added that he's concerned about person, the state II' a political subwhat he called scare tactics used to division over pollution problems.
reform the system.
The bill also would reduce from
"Ohio stacks up well against I SO days to (iO days the time that
other states," he said. "There is must elapse before a citizen's suit
still room for improvement and we can be ftled after telling authorities
·need to work out a compromise and the violator about the probagreement that is fair to all lems. The time is designed to give
both sides time to correct a violainvolved."
The House's drunken driving tion.
Rep. Dwight Wise, D-Fremont,
bill would:
-Let authorities immediate!'( argued that Ohioans already have
suspend licenses of drivers who fail access to courts, and that the bill
a blood-alcohol tesi.
would increase litigation and hurt
- . Immobilize for 90 days the the state's economy.
vehicles of second-time offenders.
He said companies need at least
-Impound the vehicles of 120 days to investigate problems
third-time offenders for 180 days.
and talce action.

,..-----Recognized---.. . .

f,l U

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- United Mine Workers Plesident
·Richard Trumka says a third coal
climpany has agreed to break from
the major coal .operators and sign .
an interim contract with the union.
And there are more to come,
Trumka promised Thursday in a
telephone news conference.
Freeman United Coal Mining
Corp. of Marion, Ill., which
employs aliout 1,000 UMW members at four Illinois mines, became
the third Bituminous Coal Opera·
tors Association company to sign
an interim contract with the union.
Trumka said the company's
executives "have rejected the oldstyle; adversarial approach taken
by the Bituminous Coal Operators
Association."
Earlier, the nation's third-larfest
coal producer, AMAX Coa of
Indianapolis, said it was resigning
from the Bituminous Coal Operators Association after announcmg a
merger with Cyprus Minerals,
which has a separate contract with
the union. AMAX employs about
1,700 UMW members.
In addition, a small Pennsylvania company with about 70 UMW
employees, CLI Inc., also withdrew
from the association and signed an
interim agreement.
"And in the next week, there
will be a couple more yet," Trumka said.
The association has contended
that such separate agreements are
illegal, and llas filed unfair labor
practice charges against AMAX
and the UMW. The association said
it has not yet decided what action it
may talce against the other companies.
·Under federal labor law, a com·
pany that joins a multi-employer
bargaining group such as the B1tu·
minous Coal Operators Association
may resigil from the association at
any time. But once negotiations
begin, the company is obligated to
sign the resulting contract.
.
The UMW contends that negotiations have not begun because the
union has refused to recognize the
Billlininous Coal OpenUors Association as its negotiaung partner.
Earlier Thursday, tile chief
negotiator fdr ihe operators held his
flJ'St news conference since the two
sides started talks last November.
B.R. "Bobby'' Brown, the
chainnan, president and chief executive of CONSOL Inc., accused the
UMW of trying to "parlay jobs and
job security into inslitutional secuContinued on page 3
'

.

··.·~

'

Plaques were pre111!nt1ed
Post 128,
American Legion, for contrlbu·
tlons to the Gilts to the Yanks
program, and to three le&amp;lonnaires for their post and coni·
munity service at Wednesday
nigWii meeting.
Cbarles Karr, commander,
above center, gave a Hometown
Hero Award to lealonnalre
Harold Rainer, left, for bls
effort In rescuing an elderly
man from nood waters on
Route 143 earlier this year. It
was the tblrd sncb award
received hy Rah~er. Earlier be
was presented plaques by the
Veterans of Forelp Wars, Polt
9153, and tile Son• or the
American Revolution. Karr
alao pre~ented a pltiClue to 40·
year member, Helll'}' Clltwor·
thy, for his contrlbnd0111 to the
post and speclllcaDy for 111rvilla
16 years u adjutant. A plaque
will alao be presented to Fred ·
Hanel, lon&amp;tlme ser1eant at
arms.
Eighth District Commander
Rntb E. Crutcher, Baltimore,
wu there to recopl~~t the po1t
ror contrlbutlna $2,101 to t•e
Gifts to the Ynka proara•
and pruen:.:.r/aque. Karr
~ptecaon
ottllepodwblcbpYellle_....._.onltl . ...._
F~eney~llennett

•'r••t CAl·

�Friday, Ju.. 25, 1893

Commentary

I

.

.

111 Court Street

J&gt;omeroy. Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OP THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT"
Publisher
MARGAREf LEHEW
Controller

General Manager

LETIERS OF OPINION arc welcome.. They should

leso lhan 300
words. All letters arc subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telepbooe number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good tute, addressing issues, not personalities.
~

Court backing for a
changed Haiti policy
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Now President Clinton has Supreme Court backing for a policy that broke his own campaign promise. It was a case the
White House needed to win, but not one to celebrate.
In ruling that the government can ~ntinue to intercept and tum back
fleeing Haitian boat people without refugee hearings, the court came
down on the side of practicality. That's just what Clinton did when he
reversed his campaign pledge and decided to enforce a policy he had
denounced. Clinton had caned the refugee policy cruel and appalling when President George Bush adopted it. The justice who wrote die deciSion _upholding it had earlier opposed the forctble return of the refugees, sa)'lng they
faced the pwspect of persecution, terror and even death. .
Each changed his mind.
·
So the 8-to-1 Supreme Court decision upholding the course set by
· Bush became an awkward victory for the Clinton administration. The
court ruled Monday that refugee law does not bar the return of an alien
who never actually gets to the United States.
.
.
Liberal Democrats and the Congressional Black Caucus oppose the
policy and resented the Clinton· reversaL Relations already have been
strained on other issues, and the administration needs those votes for the
Clinton budget.
The emphasis at the White House and the State Department has been
on the expansion of opportunities for Haitians to seek U.S. asylum as
political refugees before leaving their homeland. State Department figures, though, date from the Bush adqtinistralion: since the end of February
1992, nearly 16,000 people have applied for refugee status, 1,025
approved, 5,356 denied.
.
More dian 40,000 Haitians have fled or tried to since the coup that
ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in September 1991.
Mike McCurry, the State Department spokesman, said the court had
upheld a policy "designed to avoid the humanitarian tragedy of people
losing lives as a result of a large boat exodus."
That's what the Bush people said when they did iL Bush also contended that many of the Haitians were really economic, not polilical, refugees.
Clinton had said frol)l the start of .his 1992 campaign that he opposed ·
forced repatriation and that the Haitians should have an opportunity to
make the case for asy!urn instead of being summarily returned.
But with thousands of them setting out in rickety boats t6 try to reach
the United States, that wasn't working. So on May 23, 1992, Bush
ordered !he Coast Guard to intercept the boats and escort ~ back to,
Haiti, for asylum hearings there if they chose. That was posstble under a
!981 agreement that permitted the United States to stop Haitian vessels
carrying illegal ,aliens.
, Under the earlier system, Haitians were interviewed aboard ship and
were not returned if they could validly claim refugee status.
It wasn't working.
.
. "With the number of Haitian emigrants in unseaworthy craft increasing (many had drowned as they attempted the trip to Florida) the government could no longer both protect our borders and offer the Hailian,s even
a modified screening process," Justice John Paul Stevens said in the
Supreme Court decision. "It had 10 choose between allowing Haitians
into thjl United States for the screening process or repatriating them without giving them any opportunity to establish their qualifications as
refugees."
Bush chose the Iauer.
•'This policy must not stand,'' Clinton wd, calling it a sad example of ,
callousness to human tragedy.
But his promise to change it, reaffll'llled as president-elect, raised the
prospect of a mass exodus of boat people, the risk of drownings and
problem of potential influx of Haitians that could have created a refugee
crisis in Florida.
·
So six days before the inauguration, Clinton reversed himself .and
broadcast a message to Haiti saying the policy of interception and return
would stand "for the lime be~" Clinton said he would end the policy
when he could do so without · ·ng tragedy at sea
Clinton has intensified U.S. efforts to pressure the military-backed
gov.emment to yield power, pushing, for example, the U.N. oil and arms
embargo that took effect Wednesday.
Democratic government and international economic aid are the right
way to end the refugee problem, the administration figures, because
Haitians will no .longer be driven to nee.
Meanwhile, the old policy slands.

'

me

--

EDITOR'S NOTE. Walter R. Mears, vice president and coiumnist for The Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
national politics for more than 30 years.

Letters to the editor
intimidation occur? WHAT .were
the results? The partial information
printed seems to imply a judgment
of GUll TY without advancing
solid proof of the whole story. .
The innuendos in this and past
articles are unworthy· of sincere,
objective news reporting, are
exlremely one-sided and should, in
my opinion, justify a notable
decrease in the Sentinel's cl!'culation.
Yours truly,
Sister Fidelis Bell, O.P.

Meigs alumni proud
Dear Editor:
I am a graduate of Meigs High
School and I AM PROUD OF IT.
As I drove through Middleport
and Pomeroy this Memorial Day
weekend, I was reminded of the
recent articles in the new~r to
shop locally. Pomeroy dtsplayed
their purple and white flags. Middlepon displayed their orange and
black nags, but I only !IQticed one
Meigs maroon and gold nag.

John Denver concert tickets and
large campaign contributions.
Weyerhaeuser .sells 25 percent"
of its harvest overseas, and Japan is

By Jack Anderson .
and
Michael Binstein
the biggest customer. That has
hel~ boost the company's profits.
which last year - in the trOUgh of
recession ...- soared to $3 72 million.
Oregon's sawmill operators see
Weyerhaeuser's export-derived
profits as a death certificate
because that means fewer logs for
domestic processing. Hundreds of
mills have shut down or scaled
back in the last decade, throwing
more than 40,000 people out of
work. Congress passed a law banning the export of limber harvested
on federal land.
Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore.• has
embarked on his own arm-twi$1ing
campaign to curtail timber exports

I think it's lime the merchants
stopped livin$ in the past and realize that Me1gs High School has
been here for over 20 years. If you
don't support pur alumni and our
future alumni, why should we supponyoo?
Smcerely,
Heidi S. Beegle, R.N.
Meigs Class of 1986
Racine

on private lands, claiming credit for
the fact that Weyerhaeuser no
longer exports any raw logs harvested in Oregon. He may have
overstepped a line when he began
urging the elimination of timber
exports from private lands in
netghboring Washington.
"I've been threatened by members of the Washington delegation
if I raise the issue of private log
exports," DeFazio told our associate Andrew Conte. "They threatened to retaliate against me politically and in other ways because
they don't want the. issue to (get
raised). They're afraid."
As a Democratic member of the
Washington state delegation, Rep.
Norm Dicks represents longshoremen who deliver the logs overseas.
He chalks up the political conflicts
between congressional delellalions
to the reality of "eapilalism.Y• .
"Obviously, we'd prefer it if we
could get the Japanese to export
only all finished wood products.
But for people who own property
there is a higher return in the
export market .... That's called caPitaliSm and that's the way our eco,
nomic system works - you sell for

Sometimes it seems all the bad
news in the world is coming at us
without let UP- Recently, an editori·
al writer - recalling an old-lime
radio broadcaster - noted: •'These
times were ·made to order for
Gabriel' Heatter, who would open
his nightly World War II commentaries with 'Ah, there's good news
tonight!.' "
.
Heatter had a lugubrious voice
that sounded at fllSt as if he were
the bearer of bad tidings. But the
truth of the matter was that he
began many of his newscasts with
some piece of good news.
Heatter first used the line that
became his signature during a period in the second world war when
everything was going badly for us
- both in Europe and in the Pacific. Then U.S. forces sank a
Japanese destroyer. It was the flfSI
such positive develppment for the
Allies. That night Heatter opened
his broadcast with the wotds
"There's good news tonight!"
The response was immediate.
Something about the words "good

news" caught on with the public in . ·there was still the hope that the
those dark days.
next day would be better."
On each broadcast thereafter,
He remembered a night in 1939
Heatter would try to find a patch of ·when the Nazis were attacking
Poland. In the background, as the
Polish radio was broadcasting the .
bombardroent, listeners could hear
the music of Chopin being played.
Heatter saw that as a symbol of
blue or "even a straw on which to man •s unconquerable sptrit in the
hang real hope." As he did, he face of the worst the enemy could
began to hear from mothers and do. He would try to bring that spirit
.
fathers with sons fn the service, into his broadcasts.
was
a
war
raging.
Yes,
There
thanking him for his optimism. He
there
was
that.
But
there
were
also
also received mail from men in batand
sacrifice
on
the
stories
of
valor
tle, thanking him for helping to
battlefield,
stories
of
someone
keep morale up for the folks back
!!o~Eg out of his way to fight for
home.
"I never tried to hide the bad Jusbce for another.
"Something simple in these
'news of the war," said Heatter.
human interest stories brought
"That had to be told in full."
How did he make the "good relief from the burdens of the
war " said Heaner. "People would
news" stick?
"It was the way in which I tell'me they went to bed feeling
delivered the news," Heatter said. beuer after my broadcasts."
Behind the scenes, Heatter was
' 'The accent was on the better hope
for tomorrow. Even if tomorrow prey to many phobias that kept him
turned out to be worse than the pre- on the brink of one nervous breakvious day, when that day was done down after another all his life.

George R. Plagenz

I·

IND.

•IColumbusl83"

Today in history
·
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Friday, June 25, the !76th day of 1993. There are 189 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 25, 1876, Lt. Col. George A. Custer and his 7th Cavalry were
wiped out by Sioux and Cheyenne fndians in the Battle of Little Big Hom
in Montana.
·
On this date:
In 1788, Virginia ratified the U.S Constiwlion.
In 1868, Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia; North c_,olina and
South Carolina were readmined to the Union.
In 1888, the Republican National Conve111ion, meeting in Chi~ago,
nominated Benjamin Harrison for the presidency. Harrison went on to win
the election, defeatinJ!-Grover Cleveland.
In 1906, a love tnangle came to a violent end atop New York's MadiSon Square Garden as architeCt Slanford White, the building's designer,
was shot to death by Harry Thaw, the jealous husband of Evelyn NesbiL
In 1942; about 1,000 llrilish Royal Air Foret bombers raided Bremen,
Germany, during World War II.
·

Republican one.
But that is nonsense, without
even the merit of being original
nonsense. The media have also
long pointed, with equal pride, to
the hard drubbing some of them
gave the last Democrat in the
White House, Jimmy Carter. But
there are perfectly plausible explanations,·though different ones, in
both cases.
In the case of Mr. caner, it is
widely forgouen that he was acwally, in 1976, the rightmost serious
~ssibility for the nomination: a
'born-again" Christian who ran
openly against the Beltway establishmenL By 1980 a full third of
the delegates to the Democratic
Convention, and probably more of
the media, wanted to replace him
with Ted Kennedy.
As for the media's much-toul!:d
savaging of Bill Clinton, it has
occurred (thus far) primarily in two
widely separated ume frames: the
winter and early spring of 1992,
and the months from February to
mid-June 1993. What did these two
periOds have in common? Elementary, Watson: The liberal media
had no great stake in how Mr. Clinton fared during either of them.
In early 1990, he was just one of
half a dozen presidential candidates
on the Democrats' "B" team, and
by .no means the obvious ultimate
winner. He wasn 'I even the most
liberal among the choices; that
boner was usually conceded to Sen.
Harkin. Like Gary Hart in 1988,
Bill Clinton during the early pri-

l

p.m. Sunrise on Saturday will be at
6:04am.
Around the ution
A thunderstorm in a wide band
from Arkansas to Michigan struck
eastern Missouri early today, and a
high -pressure system in the
Atlantic spelled the beginning of
the end for pleasantly dry weather
in the East. .
It was a stormy morning in St.
Louis and storms were expected
later in the day in Michigan, Ohio,
Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee.

Alabama and Arkansas. Storms
al110 were expected along the Car·

olina coasL

-

A thunderstorm Thursday night
in central Missouri toppled powCI'
lines, snapped tree limbs and
knocked roofs off several businesses.
Humidity was to make a comeback from the Gulf States into the
middle-Atlantic region and the
interior Northeast, carried by winds
from the south and southwest.
Meanwhile , the heatwave in

•

California was expected to break
over the weekend
1-Jighs today were expected in
the 60s and 70s in the western
Great Lakes regiC!n. the northern
Plains and northeast Wasltinston
state; over 100 degrees in celliJIII
California and the Desert Southwest; and in the 80s and 90s elsewhere in the Lower 48 stiles.
The high temperature for the
nation Thursday was 113 jlegrees at
Coolidge, Ariz.

~""'..-.,:
.

W. VA.

------Weather-----

KENNETH L. BAKER

South-Central Oblo
Tonight, showers and thunderstorms likely before midnight.
Mostly cloudy afterward. Low in
the mid-60s. Chance of rain 60 per-

cent. Saturday. partly cloody- High
in the low 80s. Chance of rain 20
percent.
'
Sunday through Tuesday:
. Fair through the period. Lows
near 60. Highs around 80.
.

iessie Irene Martin, 76, of Mid·
dleport, died Thursday, June 24,
1993, II VeteraDI Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
Born Sept. 24, 1916, in Amity,
Pa., daughter of the late Earl and
Nellie Lake Jackson, she was a
homemaker, a member of Calvary
Bible Church Mid a volunieCr with
the Meigs C&lt;iunty senior Citizens. .
She is survived by a 1011, Dennis
of Oarden City, Mich.;
a
hter, Oloria Jean Peavley of
Mi leport; a daughter and son-inlaw, Aldene and Barold Boatman
of Redl~rd, Mich.; seven grandchildren; eight great-grandchildren
and one stepgranclchild.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Lester Martin, in
1973 and two sons, Earl Richard
and Jackie Marlin.
Services will be held Sunday 2
p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport with the ·Rcv. Alan
Blackwood offteilling. Burial will
follo!w in Washington Cemetery in
WashiiiiUlll. Pa.
,
may call Saturday from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
.

The Meigs United Methodist
Cooperative Parish will have a new
director effective July I.
The Rev. Kenneth L. Baker was
appointed by the Rev. Jim Waugh,
district superintendent of the
Athens District, to fill the position
vacated by the Rev. Roger Grace
who has been appointed to New
Meigs announcements
Lexington.
.
Planreuloa
A.
graduate
of
Greenville
High
The Daniel and Catherine .RO!lC
School
in
Greenville,
Baker
comfamily reunion will be held at the pleted the course of siUdy school at
home of I ames and Karen Werry,
Theological
Coon Street Road, Morning Star, Garrett-Evangelical
Seminary of Evanston, lll., in
Racine, Sunday. A potluck diniler ADJust. 1984. He now attends the
will be served at 1 p.m. and all
of Rio Grande.
family 1111d friends are invited to Uruversity
Baker has pastored at .the Yanattend.
keetown and Caylor Chapel Charge
Community education board in Darke County from October,
.to meet
1978, to May, 1983, as a part-time
The Comm·unity Educ,tion local pastor while working for
Advisory Boird will meet Tuesday
Glass of Greenville. He
at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Public Coming
wu
appointed
full-time to the
Library. Results of the survey will Stockport and Oakland
Charge in
be discussed and decisions made as Morgan County from 1983 to 1989.
to classes 10 be offered a1ona .with
While in Morgan County. he
ins~ctors. A recognition dinner served for the last 4 lfl years as the
for the bolrd will be held on AuJ. assistant director of the Morgan
3 at the lilnry, Janet Bolin, coordi- County United Mechodist CooperaJlator. llllnounced.
tive Ministries. On Feb. 12, 1989,
he moved to Meigs County to serve
the Southern Charge which
includes the Bethany, Morning Star
and Carmel/Sutton United
Am Ele Power....................37
Methodist Churches. He has also
Ashland 00........................ 25 518 served with the Meigs Cooperntive
AT&amp;T.................................62 1/8 Parish since being in Meigs CounBank One........................... ~5 314
ty.
.
Bob EVIIll .........................17 518
He and his wife of 34 years,
Oiarming Shop.................. l3
Janice
Hobbit Balcer, and daughter,
Ounp Industries................. 13 lfl Jana, reside
at 48411 State Route
City Holding. .....................25 1(l
124, Racine. They have two three
Feclera1 Motru.L ...................21
children and four
hildrm.
Cloodye.'l'l-.R ..................40 3/8
In
addition,
Baker
also
serves as
Lands End..........................27 518
the
chairperson
of
the
Gallia-Meigs
Urnited Inc....................... 21 1fl Community Action Agency Board
Multimedia Inc ..................34 314 of Directors and chairperson of the
Point Bancorp.................... 14
board o( trustees of Woodland
Rax RestauranL .................. 1/8
Centers,
Inc. He is also on call for
ReJiarg Electric ................ 19 I/8
the
Racine
EMS as a volunteer
Robbins&amp;Myen ................ 16
chaplain
and
has also served as
Shoney's Inc..................... .l7 318
director and Right chaplain
spiritual
Star Blnk·...........................35 1fl of the Chemical Dependency TreatWeridy Int'L.................. ;.. 14 318
Worthington Ind ................29 1fl . ment ~ of the Oood SamariStock reports are the 10:30 tan Ho5p1tal at Zanesville. He also
on the boan1 of directors of
•·•· q•otes provided b7 served
Morgan
and Washington County
Ke•per Securities, IDe., cit
Community
Action for five years.
GaDlpolll.

I

Baker
appointed
----·Area deaths-- to post
Helen WiUiams
Jessie Martin

Ra=Martin

Fri.

"Out of. my struggle with these
demons," he· said in his autobiography, "I developed an awesome
respect for such words as love,
mercy, compassion and charity.
"If a story had 10 be used about
a human beil\g in trouble and publicizing the name would hurt members of the family. I would not use
the name. Someone would say 'But
it's news. You can't lalk about the
birds and bees all the time. • But I
managed for 25 years."
Today, the broadcast media has
no such respect for people.
·
Furthermore, by saturating us ·
with stories of child abuse, scandals and murllers, TV - even :
more than the news itself - is
responsible for our country's
downeast mood.
To be able to tum on our TVs
and to hear "Ah. there •s good
news tonight!" -just the words
themselves might be enough to get
us to swing our lanterns higher.
George Plagenz is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise Association.

.'

•

IToledo I116" I

the highest return. •'
DeFazio says there are some
15,000 "inefficient" mills thriving
inside Japan, while 350 mills are
" struggling" to stay afloat' in the
" timber breadbasket of the :
world." Japan is clearly protecting .
its markets from wood-processing ·
competition in die United States.
. Frank Mendizabal, a Weyerhaeuser spokesman, framed his
company's case in starkly fmancial
terms - a departurt from the fuzzy
"infomercials" in which they've
invested millions. "Truth is, over- ·
seas customers are willing to pay
more for logs," Mendizabal said.
"We want to protect threatened
and endangered species just like
everybody else.· does ,' but at the .
same time we realize we have a
responsibility to our shareholders
and to our employees and to others
to have some kind of return on our
investmenL"
HARDBALL - When Rep.
Jim Bunning, R-Ky., accused
Major League Baseball of trying 10
"bribe" members of Congress
with tickets to next month's AllStar game in Baltimore, the former
niajor·league pitcher beaned the
wrong bauer. Bunning's own colleagues have been deluginJ! baseball with requests for ex!{a tickets.
· To help cope with the crush,
baseball recently offered each
member the chance to buy two
tickets to the game at their regular
price of $60 each. But with legislation looming dlat could strip baseball's coveted antitrust protection,
Bunl)ing thooght the offer smacke(J
of the league "trying to curry
favor." He fired off a "BRIBE
ALERT" to colleagues, warning
that baseball was seeking to "buy
your good will and your vote on
antitrust."
Baseball sources complain that
they decided to offer the tickets
. only after some greedy members
sought "dozens of tickets" eachwith the record set by ·one member
who requested 30 tickets. Even
Bunning told us that he received a
letter from one colleague soliciting
his two tickets, an offer. Bunning
turned down.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstgein are writers .for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

maries was just another .haunch of
raw .meat for a hungry press corps
that had plenty of liberal alternatives to support instead. So they
pursued the successive re¥elalions
about his draft evasion as mercilessly as they had pursued Gary
Hart's antics on the good ship
Monkey Business(LT)p{GT).
Later in the spring, however,
when Mr. Clinton moved toward
the front of the pack and began to
appear likely to be die nominee, the
media closed ranks around him like
a Praetorian Guard. Gennifer Flowers' story was resolutely ignored,
even though additional corroboml, ing details continued to pour in
right through the 'summer. Near the
end of the campai,n, and straight
through the transition, the tone of
adulation was overpowering.
With Mr. ·clinton safely
installed in the White House, however, and three years to go before
the fotces of Chaos and Old Night
would have to be confronted again,
our liberal media understandably
decided they could affonl to relax.
Mr. Clinton's performance in
office left plenty to be desired, and
there seemed little permanent harm
in pointing this oot.
But don't confuse this playfulne~s with neutrality. When Mr.
Chnton faces a Republican challenger again, the media will line up
for him like so many needles in a
magnetic field.
W!Uiam Rusher It a syndlcat·
ed writer for Newspaper Enter·
prise Association.

By The Associated Press
Showers and thundeistoons will
end tonight, leaving partly cloudy
skies for Saturd!ty and only a slight
chance of ram.
Lows tonight will range from
near 60 in the northwest 10 near 70
in the far easL Highs Saturday will
.rise into the lower to mid-80s.
· The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 101 in 1988. The record
low was 43 in 1979.
Sunset today will be at 9:04

•

Market
report

Helen Grace Williams of Syracuse died early this morning at
Scenic Hills Nursing Home near
Gallipolis.
Arrangements
will
be
announced later by Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport.

gr
. ande

Lottery numbers

CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Thursday night's Ohio Lottery
selections:
Pick 3 Numbers
0-1-4
(zero, one, four)
Pick 4 Numbers
4-9·9-1
(four, nine, nine, one)
The jackpot for Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing is worth $8
million.
.

...lip;;~.~., .......,. Ohio.

M.-: Tho Aalodatod - . . and thl
Ohio N•......l"" ""--lldooi, Nadonal .
Advertittna Repr-.ntative, Branham

Nowspopor Sal•, 733 Tllird Avenue,
Now York, New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: 8eJid addl-e.. ella- t.o

The Daily S.nUnel, lll Court St.,

Pen

OHio 41'180.

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Tri-County 'Take Back
America' march slated
A Tri.county nte Back America march and rally has been anIIOIR:ed for the City of Point Pleasant on Sablrday, July 3, beginning at
tO a.m.
Aa:ordlnJIO Butch Greenlee, those wbo think it js the lime to stand
~ • Otriltlanl for God-given riahts are invited to attend.
onentee llid oonpepti0111 from churches in Mason, MelliS and GaUia
CQIIUlee haw beell ~~· u wellu the public.
·
spo1110n111 by the
atizens ot Muon County, those particlpadna Ill the rally
meet in the pidcinJlot ol the old O.C. Murphy lluilillnl on VIand StreetatiO Lm. and march over to the Muon
C:owtty Ulnry cowtylrd. Plrticipanll are asked 10 bring signs and

will

~ wW bC six speakers, elch with a 20-minute presenllltion, on
abortioo, 111)'1 in the military, D.A.R.E. (drug resistance~). porarned Citizens of West Virginia, and labor umons.

10 tbOie orpnlzina the event. it is felt a civil war is taking
pllli:e
CbriltilnJ try ID preserve tiadilional American values, ·
while liblnl bumanilll aeok 10 dellroy them. The mueh is to show that
~ lta¥0 received their "wake up call" and are ready to ''me

Bact A-a.·

. TRUCK WRECK -A State Highway Patrol struck 1 tree. Tile a«ldeat Is still under illftltitrooper investi1ates an accident Wednesday gadon and details wer~ not available at pr- •
afternooa near Salem Ceater after 1 coal truck lime. {Pboto b7 RUSRH H6well, Jr.)

'

Stocks.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipcs
at selected buying points Friday by
the Ohio I;lepartment of Agnculture:
.
Barrows and gilts: mostly
steady; demand moderate.
u.s. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., eountry
points, 41.00-48.00; plants 48.5049.50, a few 50.00.
Sorted .U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
eountry poirits. 48.00-48.75.
Reee1pts Thursday 7,300. Estimated receipts Friday 6,500.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Caule: 1.00 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 71.0078.25; select 67.00-74.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 70.0077.75; IICiect 66.00-72.00.
Cows: steady; all cows 56.00
and down.
Bulls: 1.00 to 2.00 higher; all
bulls 70.75 and clown.
Sheep and Iambs: 5.75 to 7.5o Hospital news
lower; choice wools 47.00·54.25; HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
choice clips 47.00-54.50; feeder
June l4 dlscbarces - Clealis
lam.bs 61.00 and down; lllled sheep Swain, Alan Bamitz. Florence Fig. 34.00 and down.
gins, Nola Spurlock, Mrs. VCJl!Oil
!sue and daughter, Rebecca Benyi,
Randi Roush, Patricia Martin, Don·
The Daily Sentinel
aid Lyons, Harriet Mays, Helen
Oney, Nina Whaley. Kevin
Teafonl,
Brian Keller, Jake Cook.
Publlohod .-y - · M..,...y
lh._t. Fridly, 111 Court SL._ ~-$
Jllllt
l4
birth - Mr. and Mrs.
Olllo by 1111 Ohio v.n., ruolilld111
Steven
Morris,
1011, Rutland.
c.n.MYIM'ultbMdia Jno., PwiiU"'Y,
Ohto 41'•· Ph. 1182.21111. ._

Are the media mean to Clinton?
It should cause no surprise that one. In this process the president is
President Clinton finally had a being helped by many members of
"good week," or that he will have the White House press COfJIS. .
That's quite a switch from their
others - perhaps even a whole
string of them. There was no
chance whatever that he could
maintain forever his recent gaffe-a·
day pace.
True, it's a bit much to see Mr.
Clinton taking elaborate bows recen I conduct. Those of us who
because the Senate Finance Com- have long condemned the heavy
mittee approved his bud~el bill. liberal bias in the media are
When they got through wtth it, it resigned to being told ad nausewas hardly "his." Yet Mr. Clinton am{LT)p(GT) for the foreseeable
is practically handing out cigars future that the fllSt five months of
like a proud new father. Presum- the Clinton presidency "prove,"
ably Dave Gergen has taught him once and for all, that the media are
that claiming a victory can be every bit as ready to criticize a
almost as good as actually wiMing Democratic president as they are a

oonditio01 and

IIICH.

'Ah, there's good news .tonight!'

William A. Rusher

Upset with article
Dear Editor,
The article published in the
Daily Sentinel (6-11-93) co~cem ­
ing Pomeroy attorney, D. Michael
Mullen, leaves several questions in
my mind.
Any high school composition
class knows that a good reporter
answers the questions WHO,
WHAT, WHERE and WHEN, if
not HOW or WHY.
So, WHO is this witness being
intimidated? Is he reliable?
WHERE and WHEN did this

WASHINGTON - Japan may
be winning the trade war over cars
and computers, but the United
States practically owns the export
market in rnw logs.
Why isn't the Clinton administration, which has been pushing
Tokyo to open up its markets, touting this ''accomplishment' '7
It may relate to the fact that
exponing rnw logs is trade typical
of Third World economies. But
even countries such as the Philippines, Malaysia and Indonesia have
grasped the futility of auctioning
natural resources, and refocused on
exporting value-added products
like furniture.
Japan desperately needs American logs. They want the pulp, not
the final products . Clinton could
propose banning log exportS as part
of the legislation now being drafted
by the White House to settle the
Pacific Northwest limber dispute.
But it's an option Clinton is expected til rejecL
Weyerhaeuser would be a big
winner. The. timber giant bas
fought a potential ban for over a
year - fertilizing Congress with
$1,000 fund-raising breakfasts, free

Storms will end tonight; forecast fair weekend ·

Accu-Weather• forec:ut for

Big timber could be winner in export issue

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

OHIO WoJthot
Saturday, June 26

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, June 25,1993

The Dally SenHnel Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

FACE PAINTING- Angela Maaley of
Meigs Head Start· decorates the r1ce or
Stepbanle Donaldson of LODI Bottom. Pace·
paintln&amp; was onered as part Of tbe festivities

duriDJ the Kldl' C.-.lvai at Harlilleer l'lrt Ia
Middleport ..- TIUtrsdlly. Tile eveut Will ~sored b)' Head Sla'L
'

Serbs and Croats ·
agree to divide Bosnia
GENEVA (AP) - A Serb- inro Serb, ~~ W Muslim states.
Croat agreement that Bosnia should But they made little progress
become a confederation of ethnic Thursday in defining the borders.
The plans include a weak central
· mini-states gives too little to the
Muslims, according to European government with a prime minister.
Community mediator Lord David foreign minister and a multi~
council of ministers, and binding
Owen.
by the lnteniational
arbitration
But despite Owen's reservations
Court
of
Justice
for disputes
- and the outright opposition of
between
the
three
states.
their chairman - members of the
Seven members of Bosnia's 10Muslim-dominated Bosnian presimember
coUeclive presidency had
dent told reporters in Geneva
ignored
the objections of their
Thursday that they were prepared
chairman,
Alija lzetbegovic, and
to at least consider the Serb-Croat
met on Wednesday with SCJb Presproposals.
The leader of Bosnia's Serbs ident S lobodan Milosevic and
said he reached agreement with his Croatian President Franjo TudjCroat counterpart to divide Bosnia man ..
Izetbegovic boycotted the summit and stayed in Sarajevo, reiterating his opposition to an ethnic division of Bosnia that he said would
touch off a new round of ethnic
cleansing.
Middleport Village had a bal- ·
"We are open .to a)l new ideas,"
ance of $123.581.48 at the end of
said
Fikret Abdic, a Muslim memMay, according to a report of
ber
of
the Bosnian presidency.
Clerk-Treasurec Teri Hockman.
•
'We
will
take them back and conReceipts for the month toialed
sult
our
people,
not only Mr.
$120,691.99 while disbursements
lzetbegovtc,'
he
said
at a news
were $147,372.38.
conference.
Balances in the various funds
Underlining the split in the
were as follows: $6,150.41, general
Bosnian
government ranks, Franjo
fund; $1,529 .97; fue equipment;
Boras,
a
Croat,
accused lzetbegovic
$18,744.51, fire truck; $18,168.64,
of
trying
to
concentrate
too muc;h
public transportation; $359.55,
power
in
his
own
hands.
water system improvement·
The office of president is a
$6,512.67, water; $3,346.16, sani:
rotating
position held for e. year by
tary sewer; $1,376.86, cemetery;
each
member
of the collective
$25,711.62, water meter trusts;
$1 ,244.97, ODNR waterways; body.
$17,372 .42, revolving fund;
$7,143.75. refuse; and $28,976.78,
SPRIN6 VAllEY CINEMA ,...,
Betsy Ross subdivision fund.
446 4514
• ;.
Funds showing a deficit and the
amount in the red were $5,991.09,
street maintenance; $917.75, mini. golf; $4,769.50, economic development; $62.51, recreation; $359.59,
arcs council; $512.45, Issue 2; and
$443.84,1itter control.

Village releases
financial report

OPEN HOUSE
George and Sue
Stewart will hold an
Open House for family,
friends, and neighbors
Sunday, June 27,
1:00.3:00 p.m.
The couple requests
. that glfta be omlttect.

IIIIUU Bini

~MIL,.

..

Third...
Coatintted fnint page 1
rity" to as5ure the union's fUIIII'e.
Brown. said that "a key issue"
in the talks has been the union's
demand that newly created jobs be
offered ·to union miners who have
been laid off from other mines
operated by the same company.
"The union proposed to execute
those guarantees in a way that
would also guarantee the institutional security of the union itself,' •
Brown said.
"BCOA will n.ot give every
new job to tile UMWA. BCOA will
not structure the Conll'ICt IS an aid
to union organizing. And BCOA
will not be the guarantor of the
institutional survival of the union ••
Brown said..
'
"We are J?lCjJ8red. however, to
meet the unton part way on the
issue of job opportunities," he
said
.
Trulnka called Brown's charges
that the union - seeking to guarantee its f~ "1111 illteresling way
to sidestep the real issues."
"We ~ve never said that if they
acquire a (new) mine, it would be
automatically a union mine "
Trumka said. "We've never ~d
that.
"What we have said is if there
is a new miQe, you should hire our
members for jobs at thole mines,' •
Trulnka said. "Those are our jobs.
We have earned them."
He rejecled Brown •s contention
that the union wants the BCOA to
guarantee tile its survival.
''The Mi~ Workers are. goina
to survive thts or any other challenle, ''

......,_....,....
una·• -.JMIDilY

81ft caot'IPIQftl AnlloUioll

~

I

.r- :. . '
I •

.''

•

'

. .......-.

•I'IIWI . . . . . . . . . .

, ,,

IN- tJt

-~.,.

I

�Friday, June 25, 1993

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

·

Friday, June 25, 1993

Page-4

In NL action,

Sabo's ninth-inning .single gives Reds 6-4 victory over Padres
.

Kurt Stillwell found the hot comer
a little too torrid.
Stillwell, who hadn't played at
third. base since 1987, let Chris
Sabo's single go by him and down

By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (AP)- Just hours
afler third bllseman Gary Sheffield
was traded away by the San Diego
Padres , temporary replacement

the left-field line in the ninth
Craig Shipley started in place of
inning, allowing Bobby Kelly to Sheffield, who was dealt to the
score the go-ahead run in the .Florida Marlins along wiP.leftCincinnati Reds' 64 win over the handed reliever Rich RodriJ1;1lez for
Padres.

In the AL,

Brewers record 5-3 .victory over Indians

'

'

•

give Ricky some confidence.' '
By CHUCK MELVIN
for the time being with Kansas month. All four teams will play
Bones (4-5) retired the rllSt nine City's George Brett for 13111 on the only Western Division clubs during
CLEVELAND (AP) - Ricky
Bones pitched the kind of game batters, then yielded a double by all-time hit list wilh 3,069.
the rlfSt 25 !lays of July.
Kenny Lofton and .Wayne Kirby's
any fielder could admire.
. OriQies 6, Tigers 2
In other ~-Thursday, BaltiNo long pauses on the mound. home run on consecutive pitches in more knocked off Detroit 6-2,
Harold Baines hit a three-run
No picking at the comers. Just get the fourth before setting down 12 Kansas City beat California 7 -I homer in the fust inning and Mark
the ball, wow it, and make it a more in a row.
McLemore drove in three runs to
and Oalcland topped Seattle 3-2.
strike.
·
·
Bones left after an emit and
send Detroit to its 1Oth loss in l 0
Orioles, Jays ruling AL East
"That's the advantage of a guy Alvaro Espinoza's single put runRound One of the end-of-June games over two seasons at Camden
working quickly and throwing ners at rust and third with none out AL East showdown is complete, Yards.
·
strikes. Guys. are on their toes, and in lhe eighth. Carlos Martinez hit a and the winners so far are the BaltiBen McDonald (4-6), the fust of
we made the plays," manager Phil sacrifice fly off Orosco for Cleve- more Orioles and Toronto Blue four Baltimore pitchers, allowed
Garner said Thursday night after land's final run.
Jays.
six hits, walli:ed three and struck
Robin Yount homered and
his Milwaukee Brewers beat the
Baltimore, Toronto, Detroit and out seven in 5 1/3 jnnings. PenVaughn, who has been battling lhe New York are in the middle of a nin~ton pitched the final three
Cleveland Indians 5-3.
Bones gave up three runs, one flu, hit two RBI doubles for Mil- nine-day span in which 15 games innmgs to earn his fourth save.
of them unearned, and three hits in waukee, which ended its five-game will pit one of those four teams . Mark Leiler (6-4) took the loss.
seven-plus iMings, walli:ing none losing streak and Cleveland's against another. By July 1, or
Blue Jays 7, Yankees 2
and striking out three. He threw . three-game winning strealc.
maybe sooner, the team atop the
At Toronto, the Blue Jays once
Mark Clark (2-3) didn't make it divtsion could be different for the again came up with plenty of runs
just68 pitches over that span.
out
of the third inning, allowing flJ'SI time since mid-April.
Jesse Orosco followed and
.
to support Pat Hen~en.
·
needed 19 pitches over I l/3 five runs, one of them unearned,
The Orioles on Thursday
Hentgen (10-2) tmproved to 6-0
innings, and Doug Henry improved and seven hits in 2 1/3 innings. · became the flJ'SI team to sweep the in his last eight stans, thanks in
on both..of them, retiring the two Three Cleveland relievl(rs blanked TigetS Ibis season, beating Detroit part to Toronto outscoring its oppobatters he faced - Albert Belle the Brewers lhe rest of the way, but 6·2 to move wilhin five games of sition 66-16 in that span.
ftrst place.
and Paul Sorrento - on a total of the damage had been done.
Devon White had a homer and a
Milwaukee scored a nin in the
two pitches. Henry earned his 13th
The Blue Jays moved within ttiple for two RBis and Tony Ferfirst on Vaughn ' s RBI double, .003 percentage points of rus~ by nandez also drove in two runs.
save. .
The three Milwaukee pitchers which followed an error by short- beating New York 7-2 in the decid- Yankees starter Scott Kamienicki
lhrew 89 pitches to 32 bailers, an stop Felix Fermin on Hamilton's ing game of their three-game (2-2) lasted just 2 1/3 innings,
po1ential double-play grounder.
series.
·
average of2.78 pitches per batter.
allowing six hits and five earned
Yount's one-out homer in the
"I got some support, some runs,
The Yankees, who are two runs.
and that let me pitch more third, his fourth, was the rust of games out of rnt, travel to BaltiRoyals 7, Angels 1
relaxed," Bones said. "I just kept five consecutive hits for Milwau- more today for a three-game week:At Kansas City, Kevin Appier
Wowing the ball right at people, kee. Hamilion singled, Vaughn end series, then return home for a (9-4) won his fourth .straight start
trying to make them hit me ball doubled him liome, and Kevin three-game set with the Tigers. The as the Royals stopped Marie
early in the count. I'm not a power Reimer hit an RBI single before Orioles will play host to Toronto .Langston-'s six-game winning
pitcher, so I've got to take advan- Dickie Thon's single finished next week.
streak.
Clark. Matt Young's wild pitch
tageofthal"
All four teams are playing
Rico Ros.sy had three hits and
Milwaukee's defense backed sent hoine the Brewers' fourth run extremely well, but none are peak- wee RBis, Hal McRae -had wee
him with three excellent plays in of the inning:
ing like the Orioles. Baltimore has hits, Wally Joyner had an insidethe rust two innings. Second baseClark was making his second won 17 of its last 20 games, includ- the-park: home run and Jeff Montman Bill Spiers leaped to grab start since being recalled from ing four in a row, to make up for a gomery got his 22nd save.
Wayne Kirby's line driVe, right •Triple-A Charlotie.
horrible 5-13 start.
·
Langston (9-2) gave up four
fielder Darryl Hamilton aashed to
"The double and lhe home run
''These wete three big games, runs and 10 hits in seven innings.
the ground while catching Carlos were both on hanging sliders," but we can't let down just because
Athletics 3, Mariners 2
Baerga's fly, and left fielder Greg Clark said. "That's what really we beat Detroit three times," said
At Seattle, major league strilceVaughn extended and fell as he perturbs me. In my ·two starts in Baltimore reliever Brad Penning- outleader Randy Johnson wasled a
caught Sorrento's fly ball.
Triple A and mY last start up here, ton. "But we'v~ 1!een rolling, and I 14-strilceout performance by walli:"There were some big plays every slider was pretty much where can't see us lettmg down.''
ing home the winning run in the
early in the game to keep them I wanled it. Tonight, I hang two,
.
Toronto has won eight of nine, ninth inning.
from P,Ulling any runs on the and both of them get hit hard.''
Johnson
(9-4)
pitched
a four-hitthe Yankees have won 10 .o f 14,
board, ' Garner satd. "That helps
Yount had two hits, tying him and Detroit had won I 0 of 14 ter but walked four batters in the
'ninth. Dennis Eckersley (2-1)
before facing Baltimore.
The intradivisional rivalies will pi~hed two innings·to g~ the win.
take a 3 1/2-week
hiatus after
this
·-. .

Scoreboar(l

LAND (P. Abbaa 0.1), 7o05 p.m.
Hew Yodt (1. A-\4-7) 11llallimano .
( V - . Z.7), 7•35 p.m.
Darall (W.U. 9·1) "a.-. (Donrin
l· 7), 7o35 p.m.

- • Baseball • NATIONAL LEAGUE
EutemDI.,IIIoft

TW L Pd.
l'hiladelp1Ua ...........50 21 . .704

CB .

.m

9.S

33

.571

36
Chicqo..................33 36
Florida ...................32 39
Nc,.. Ycd. ..............21 49

.486
.471

i S.S.
16

SL Loui1 ................40 lO

-....n ................31

l'lulburP ..............34

.451
.300

lZ
1S
21.5

"Mim,....

c.lilomla (Sprinp 0-1)
(Erickson 3-l), loOS pm.
Seattle (Lacy S'-3) at Olic:aa.o (Alvua 7-2), I :OS p.m.
loronto (Stewart 3-2) at Milwnkee
(Navuro 5""), 8:115 p.m.
Oai:lea4 (Welt:::h 5-6) " Te,_n
(Labnndt 7-&lt;1), 8•35 p.m.

Saturday's games

WMtemDIYIIIolll

San mn.;..o ...... -.49
Allanla ..................40
llouoiDn ................. 37
Loo An.............."36

24
33

.671
.548

9

33
34
C1Ncni!NATI .. ......34 39

.529
.514
.466

10.5
ll.l
15

Sui Diea• .............. 28 ..
Colcmdo ................25 46

.319
.3S2

_·Thursday's scores
--.I,LooAnplaO
CINONNA116, San Di.eco 4

San Francilco 17, Colondo 2

TonJcbt's pmes

Detroit {Qohcrt)' 1·2) It 8~ (Viala
4-7).1o0lp.m.
Scaalc (Hanlon._· !5-S) u Chicago (M.c·
Dowel11l--'), 7:05p.m.

· Kwu Ci•y (Pic:h&amp;rdo 4-4) at c:uv:E20.5
LAN!) (Knmtz 3-2), 7:05p.m.
.
23
New Yodc. (Wickm•n 1·0) at Balti·
m... (Moyer 3-3), 7•05 p.m.
Toronto (Ouun.an 6-1) u Milwaukee:
. (Eid,.d 9-7), BoOS p.m.
Califomie (Finley 8-!5) et Minne~o\1
(B•nb5·3), 8•05 p.m.
Oaklend (DarlinJ 1-4) 11 Texu (K .
81'0W1l 5-6),1:35 p.m.

Monuul (Hill6-1) at Florida (Arm·

....,, 4-1), HS p.m.

Philaddphil (Orecm 9-1) •• Pi.ttabuJ&amp;h
(Nal)o Z.l). HS p.m.
· SL Louil (Otborne 5-3' 11 New Yolk

(S.babo,.. 3-6), 7•40 p.m.
HOUlton (Hamiach 6--4) at Atlantll
(Avory 1·2), 7•40 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Belcher S·S) at San
llicao (Whil4hum Z.3), I 0•05 p.m.

Ooiu&amp;&lt;&gt; (Gumw. 6-6) .. Loo Angclel

(Mto&lt;ia 6-4), 1o.3s p.m.
Colondo (Hauy 2-6) at San FranciJCG

Sunday's games

Dctmi.t It 8011.011., 1:0~ p.m.
NeW Yorll: at'Baltimore., 1:35 p.m.
TOf!Jft\0 .•1 MU~aukcc. 2:05p.m.
Califcmua at MiMCIOU., 2:05 p.m.
Seaale at OUcaao. 2:35 p.m.
Oakland at Teua, 1:0!5 p.m.
Kansas City at CLEVELAN'p. 1:05

p.m.

- * Transactions • -

(Hickmm 0--1), ICUS p.m.

BasebaU

Saturday's g11111es

American

Luau•

St. Louia (Tewksbury 7-6) at New
Yad&lt; (Gaodon 7-6), L40 pm.
. Col~do (Reyn01o 4-3) at San Fran.,... (Will&lt;ln 5·3), 4•05 p.m.
Monll'UI (Botte,tlie.ld l-4) at Florida
(llao)lb J.7), 1oOS p.m.
Philadclph.ia (Schillins S-2) u ~n~ ­
t.qh (Cool&lt;o4-3), 7•05 p.m.
Houaton (Portuaal 5-3) at AtlaJl.tl
(Gl.lvine9-3); 7:10p.m.
OUctp (Cutillo 2·5) "Lo1 An&amp;clel
(R. Mattincl6-4), 10•05 p.m.
CINCNNATI (Rijo 6-2) at Stn Diego
(Brooaill -3), 1~05 p.m.

BALTIMORE ORIOLES: A.ctiwatcd
Shamen Obt.ndo, outfidOcr, from the 15·

Sunday's games

rell Whitmore, outf1elder, from Ed.mantQJI.
of the P.cil'u. Coot t...pe.

HauAcn n Allansa, 1:10 p.m.
Philadt.lphia at Pluatl\qh, 1:35 p.m.

SL _J..ouia: II. New Yolk, 1:40 p.m.
au..ll"" 1.oo An1cleo, 4,os p.m. .
CINaNNATI 11 Sm Diqo, 4:0.5 p.m.
Colondo at San Fnnci&amp;cu, 4:05 p.m.
Mont:rea.latA.tridl , 6:05 p.m.

day diu bled lliL Optioned Paul Cucy,

rm bdeman, to R.ocheaer ofthe lnt.cm•-.
licnoiiMIU•·
CAIJFORNIA ANGELS : Plaood IDI.io
Valera, pitcher, on the 15-day d.iubl~
lilt. Rocll1cd Mike Bu~her. pitcha, from
Vancouver ollhe Pacific Coul Leaaue.
SEATn..E MAIIJNEltS• ()pli..,o4Jim
Converse, pitc.her, to Calgary of the Pac:ific:.Coal\ Lc..l\lCNtt~Laaue

FLORIIlA MARLINS: RocaUod

0.~

LOS ANGELES DODGERS : Fined
Stnwbouy, ouofooldu, $19,230 foomilmJ ~ 11&amp;1\ rla pnie. •
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS : SiJnod !elf
D~l

Bablinpr, aecond b11eman, and auir.od
him \0 Qlenl Falll o( iha New Yock· enn

LOifA'N O!EOO PADRESoTndod Ouy

ShC!Ifield, 1hird bucmen, end Rich Rodrip2._pi~, ~ lhe ~

Elll.a'n Dlv.. lon
TUM
Wl..PcL
DouoiL ................ ..43 28 .606
TOlUnto ..................44 29 .603
Htw Yadt ............. .42 31 .575
8...,..................31 33 .l35
8 .........................33 31 .&lt;OM
Mllwa.
.............30 40 .429
CLEVELAI'IIL .....30 42 .417

GB

2

S

1o

l2.S
13.S

w....... Dl•ldoft
Chieol"-···"" "'""'37 31
IWiou City ........... 37 33

Cllifomil ............... 36 34

S..llle .................... 3l 37

.536

.529
.ll4
.486

Teut ..................... JJ 39 .443
- . . . .............. 29 39 . .426
Ooklond ..... ,........... :1.9 39 A26

.s

1.5

3.l
6.S

7.l
7.l

Thunday's scora

K.uw.u Cily 7, California I
o.&amp;land 3, S..ttle 2

Mi.l.wewt11 S, Cl.BVI!LAND 3
Toron~ 7, N6w Ycd 2

Blldmonl6. D.lrull

z

Today'a aama

'-to Clly (Oudnir -4-ol) " CI£VE·

..

Marlir¥

(or

Tnvor Hoffm.._, Jote Manincz end An-

AMERICAN LEAGUE

dra Berumen, pitehen. Auip.md. MarUno to Le1 .V q:u of the P•c:ific Coa11
Leesuc and BCNmon 10 Wichiu of' &amp;ht
Texu l..eacue. Rec~~Ued Ftllnk Seminen
,.d Tun Womll, pildltn, (""" Lu Vof
111. Roufi&amp;ned Tcm. P•ticvitc:h, pildu:::r,
from llu!c:ho Cucamonp or !he Calilor~

niaLctpLOWidliu.

lbskelbaU
NollGOiilulcelboA AloocloUon
PORTLAND TRAIL 81.1\ZERS ,
Traded Kcvin-Duckwcwth, Qlllnter, aad fu..
lUre con~idontioat to lhc Wuhinaton
BuliN for Ha.tvc.J Otant. forward .
WASHIHOTOH BULLETS: Ro·
no·unced tho riJhll to Loden Saci.lOI,

"'""'

FootbaU
N1....._l FooiNH .......,

PHOEiiiX CARDINALS: S1pd WUl
White, •lf«y 1 l0 • two-)'eer oontraet.

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS : Sisnod

Chria Dolman, ...,.t-....,.

In Wimbledon's second round,

Ivanisevic edges Bailey;
Boetsch defeats Lendl

· "Everything is sore now," the
By DAVID CRARY
Croatian
left-bander said after outWIMBLEDON, Epgland (AP)
lasting
Bailey.
"But this shows me
-· They both exited as secondthat
it's
never
over.
You can fighl
round losers. There the similarities
... I'll play all seven (matches) in
ended.
.
Ivan Lend! slipped away from five sets if I have to, just to win the
the Wimbledon grounds without tournament.''
.Bailey, 25, has. been playing at
meeting the press, his dogged quest
Wimbledon
since 1987, but won
for a title here once again ending in
only
two
first-round
matches
failure, and perhaps ending for
agamst obscure opponents. This
good
.
Britain's Chris Bailey, with a was his first time on Centre Court.
"To be able to perform like that
lifetime record of 14-29 and a No.
very heartening for
is
obviously
263 world ranking, walke&lt;) off
me,"
he
said.
"When I wallced out
Centre Court to a tumulruous ovation Thursday after playing the there, it was great and everybody
was cheering. It was just an unbematch of his life.
He had just battled fifth-seeded lievable experience, and I want to
Goran lvanisevic through five sets do itpext year."
He was still a bit stunned by
of the most tlirilling tennis so far in
. the tournament. The Croatian lvanisevic's match point-saving
resorted to a daring second-serve ace.
ace to sa:ve a match point before · "I've never seen that before on
prevailing 5-7, 7-6 (7-3), 6,7 (7-3), second serve,'' he said. "That was
hit or miss, and he made iL"
6-4,9-7.
Why take the risk, Ivanisevic
"What can you say, apart from,
was
asked.
·
'Too good,"' Bailey said after·
"Why not?" replied the Croatward . "I gave it everything I had
and more, and in the end it wasn't ian. "I have to give it a try. I mean,
if you hit a slow serve and he hits a
good enough."
Lend!, 33, made his earliest exit great return, then you think, 'Why
from Wimbledon since a first- didn't I go for somelhing big."'
Though Jlailey departed, head
round loss in 1981. He didn't stay
two other unsung Britons
high,
around to answer the inevitable
have
reached
the third round: Chris
questions about whether this would .
Willcinson
and
Andrew FoSler. It's.
be his last try at the only Grand
the
rlJ'SI
time
two
British men have
Slam tournament he's never won.
gone
this
far
since
1977.
·
But Arnaud Boetsch, the 24Willcinson's
third·round
oppoyear-old Frenchman who beat him
4-6, 7-5, 6-3, 6-4, was willing to nent on Saturday will be secondanswer when asked if Lendl still ' seeded Stefan Edberg. ·
"I have achance of beating
had a shot at a Wimbledon title.
him
," said Wilkinson, ranked
"The way he played, I don't
143rd.
think so,'' Boetsch said.
A good chance?
"I'm a bit sad. I like to watch
uAchance."
all the players like Becker, like
Edberg won his second-round
Lendl . ... I don't want t~em to
match 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 Thutsday over
leave.''
Did he sense the poignancy Amos Mansdorf of Israel, and the
women's No . 2 seed, M·a rtina
while on court?
Navratilova,
stopped Rosalyn Nid"No, I didn't have time to think
effer
of
South
Aliica 6-0, 6-4.
about that," Boet.s&lt;:h said.
In addition to Lend!, lOth-seed·
GRAVELY TRACTOR
ed Andrei Medvedev was ousled
Thursday. The top 10 women's
SALES I SERVICE .
seeds have reached lhe third round, 204 Condor IL
P-oy, OH.
and the top six men.
IPRIII Ul IIDD
The two No. I seeds, Pete Sam. IIIII
pras and Steffi Graf, appeared to
Mon.-Fri. 8:00-6:00
have easy tasks today. Sampras
Sat. t:OOr12:DO
was paired with Byron Black of
Zimbabwe, ranked I08th in the
world, and Oraf faced Helen Kelesi
of Canada, ranked 87th.
lvlllisevjc hid a rest day Friday.
He will need it after. two straight
five-set matches.

right-handed reliever Trevor Hoffman and two minor leagucts. Stillwell, a bacl:up shortstol', came in
during a double-switch m the seventh.
"A couple of minutes before I
went in, they said, 'Third.' I said,
' third?' I was a little bit surprised," Stillwell said .
"Basically, it faked me out,"
Stillwell said of Sabo's single. "It
was a two-hopper. It's been a couple weeks since I even had a
ground ball hit at me, much less at
third bllse. It ate me up.''
The Reds then loaded the bases
before Bip Roberts delivered an
insurance run with his lhird single.
Manager Jim Riggleman
stressed that the Sheffield trade
didn't affect the team.
"You should put the uniform on
and go out and play," Riggleman
said. "I've never seen or felt a
cloud around this team. P~le can
make excuses, but to me, that's
ridiculous."
The Padres' new third baseman,
Archi Cianfrocco, acquired in a
trade with the Montreal Expos on
Wednesday, will be added to the
roster today.
While San Diego lost for the
ninth time in 12 games, Kelly
homered and singled twice as the
Reds rebounded from a poor showing in losing two of three games at
Colorado.
Cincinnati bent the Padres for
lhe fifth strai~ht time this season
and Kevin Mitchell singled in the
first to extend his career-best hitting streak to 18 games, the longest

current streak in the major leagues.
Reliever Bobby Ayala (3-3)
worked 2 213 innings and got the
win despite allowing Fred
McGriff s homer leading off the
ei¥.hth to tie the game at 4-4. Rob
Dtbble pitched the ninth for his
seventh save. Roger Mason (0-6)
was the loser.
In the only either NL games
played Thursday, Houston blanlced
Los Angeles 1-0 and San F:rancisco
crushed Colorado 17-2.
Astrllll1, Dodgers 0
Greg Swindell won for tlie rust
time in a month, ·and Andujar
Cedeno hit a run-scoring single in
the fourth for visiting Houston.
Swindell (6-7) gave up seven
hits in 6 2/3 innings, struck out
five and walli:ed one, winning for
the first time' in five starts since
May 23.
Ore! Hershiser (6-6) gave up
eight hits, struck out four and
walli:ed two in his third complete
game this season.
Giants 17, Rockies 2
Robby Thompson hit two home
runs for. the second consecutive
game and the Giants erupted for
five home runs and a season-high
20 hits for their eighth victory .in
nine games.
Barry Bonds added a grand
slam. Will Clark and Mark Carreon
each had two-run shots in a rout
thai made John Burkett (11-2) the
National League's first 11-ganie
winner.
Willie Blair (3-5) was tagged for
five rqns and eight hits in 3 1/3
innings.

By STEVEN WIJIIE
The San Diego
Padres wanled to save money. The
Florida Marlins wanled to invest in
the present.
So the two sixth-place teams
made a trade.
San Diego gave up All-Star
third baseman Gary Sheffield and
his $3.11 million · salary in
exchange for three promising pitch- ·
ers, including hard-Wowing righthanded reliever Trevor Hoffman. ·
Because the Marlins are closer
to contending than any expansion
team could expect, they sought
Sheffield for an immediate impact
on offense. The risk is that in ~
to come, Florida will regret gtving
up Hoffman and minor league
righties Jose Martinez and Andres
Berumen.
"I hate to lose these young
pitchers," Marlins manager Rene
Lachemann said Thursday. "But
Sheffield is an outstanding player."
Last year'~ NL batting champion was available because of the
Padres' ongoinll· paring of .their
payroll. Hign-pnced talent Benito
Santiago, Randy Myers, Tony Fer~
nandez, Darrin JacksOn and Craig
Lefferts departed earlier. ·
While happy to be going to the
Marlins, Sheffield ripped the
Padres.
"To have to leave under these
circumstances is tough,'' he said as
he packed. "It's not fair to the fans
or the city. I figure if you can't
afford a team, you should sell it
and .not use us as bait. Basically,
that's what they're doing, and
,
that's what! feel like - bail
The tral\e angered many fans,
who flooded radio talk shows with
calls.
Two season ticket-holders filed
a class-action lawsuit against the
team late Thursday, alleging it had
reneged. on a promise to keep
Sheffield made in a leuer to ticketholders, said local attorney Gregory Goonan.
Padres outfielder Tony Gwynn
was perplexed by his learn's lalest
move.
"To see Sheffield go just crushes r.ou," Gwynn said. "He's 24.
He s everything you're looking for
in a franchise player."
.
That's what tlie Marlins believe
they're ~etting.
.
"He s an All-Star player who
we can build our offense around for
years to come," general manager
Dave Dombrowski said. "To me
he's one of the best players in lhe
MIAMI (AP) -

game.,,

Dave.''

In conjunction with the trade,
Florida called up Edmonton right
fielder Darrell Whitmore, who
'leads the Pacific Coast League with
62 RBis and was hitting .355. He
and Sheffield will both be in the
starting lineup tonight against
Montreal.
Sheffield, acquired from the
Milwaukee Brewers during spring
training in 1992, won the NL batting crown with a .330 average and
was named to the All·Star team. He
had 33 home runs and 100 RBis.
This year he is hitting .295 with I 0
home runs and 36 RBis.
Explaining the trade, Padres
president Dick Freeman said the
team is under financial IJressure
because all teams' television rev·
enue will be cut in half next year.

.Jt:t·t- WARNER
113 W. 2nd SL

PoJMroy, OH. 45761
Office Wo!-547t
1-801).742-31aa

............ ._c...., .., _ ' - '
.._.OIIIta:O. ............... c..e.,.QH'tlltl

day came .Jamie Burcham, Scott forging into the lead with a nice 45
Hussell, Robbie Chase, Jarod to capture first yesterday. The first
Douglas, Jarod Cook, Shannon week found Roush and Karr tied
After the second round of the Staats, and David Bragg. The divi- for first, and now the overall shows
1993 Tri-County Junior Golf Tour, sion is so well balanced lhat every a slim two-point margin as the tour
the chase· at the top of lhe premier competitor still has a .mathemaiical moves into the lhird week of play
15- n age group is just about as chance to win it all in the next two next Monday at 'Riverside. Newtight as it was last week. In the first outings.
' come Brian Sang of Cliffside
round at Meigs, tliere was a threeThe 13-14 age group now shows notched a slim two stroke edge
way deadlock for the lead, and this a definile front runner for the over Nathan Plantz of HVCC in the
week at Cliffside there was a two- leadership of lhe division as David battle for third and fourth, but
person tie for low score in that Anderson of Meigs turned in a very Plantz stands third in the overall,
division. Even more pertinent was sleady round for 43 to snare first just ahead of San~. Trent,
the fact that neilher leader shared yesterday and grab a commanding Schoonover, and Matt Ohver.
that honor, and the third one was lead in the overall. Steve McThe Junior Tour moves to Riverabsent, so it now becomes a very Culloch of Meigs was just a stroke side next Monday for lhe third
snug four, or five-way battle for the behind second place in his first out- round of divisional competition
leadership in the ultra-competitive, ing, while Brad Lilly Qf HVCC and wilh another 8:30 a.m. lee off, and
exciting division. .
·
Jarod Warner of Meigs were one will lhen talce a week off for lhe
This round on lhe , Cliffside · more stroke back, tied for third. July Fourth holiday. After that,
layout found Reggie Prau of Meigs Chad Perry was one stroke back of competition will resume with the
and Cory Miller of HVCC each tile leaders, while right on lhcir final Tour point round at Hidden
firin$ a fine one-over par 37 to lead heels came Clay Crow, Mick Barr, Valley on Monday, July 12, at 8:30
the ughtly bunched pack this week, _ Sean O'Brien, $am S1ephens, a.m. Then, the final Roundup Fun
and moved Prau into a one point Andrew Nibert and Donnie Day will be played at Cliffside on
edge for first place in the overall Cochran.
Tuesday, July 20, with an 8:00 a.m.
standings. Newcomer John O'Bri.en
It was the same one-two finish as tee off. That round will be followed
of Cliffside posled a dandy 38 10 a week ago in the 11-12 division, by lunch, trophy presentations and
JUab third place, while first week and only by a single stroke this . olher awards. The round at HVCC
feaders Mark Georgi of HVCC and time. David Reed of Ri&gt;&lt;erside will also include swimming for the
Jason Hart of Riverside made iden- barely edged Zack Pullin of HVCC competitors, if they wish, and every
tical 39 scores to tie for fourth. In and lhe two lads lc;ad lhe pack by a _ round provides very enjoyable felthe point standings, Miller, Georgi, few points. Josh Price and Ryan lowship and competition, . along
and Hart are second, just one point Pratt, both of Meigs landed in a tie with learning and spectator thrills.
behind leader Prall One of the first for lhird, several strokes back as ~ All local youth golfers, male and
week IIi-leaders Adam Krawsczyn, only four players turned out for the female, are cordially urged to join
was absent yeSierday and stands day in this group.
.·
in for these final weeks simply by
fifth, while O'Brien moved to sixth
Trenton Roush of Riverside and showing up a half hour before leeafter his first outing. Closely Garreu Karr of Meigs continued off time at lhe course of play that
bunched behind the leaders yestcr· their close struggle with Roush
date.

SUNDAY, JUliE i 27, 1993

ALL YOU CAN EAT HOMESTYLE CHICKEN DINNER
Small Drink or eorr.e

Bulls memorabilia selling heavily
~

$'4 ''

Cosby· s sporting goods store in the margin it was ridiculous three years
lobby of New York's Madison ago," he said. "It was outselling
Square Garden, the Kniclcs' home Celtics' stuff." ·
Though the pace has slowed,
court.
"Bulls
stuff will always sell," he
The flJ'SI year the Bulls won the
said.
"Everybody
will always buy
NBA title, in 1991, lheir merchan.
dise sold far better than the a winnin~ ilem."
Especially in the home state.
'Knicks', Root said. Shirts depicting
''We got three-peat shirts in this
Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen
are favorites among New' Yorker morning and we're almost out of
shoppers, and sales of Bulls' them already," said Brad Hicks,
posters also are brisk, said Root, assistant manager with Hibbett
who is expecting a shipment of Sporting Goods Inc. in Carbondale.
merchandise heralding the team's "Anything with the Bulls on it is
going ow the door.''
.
third straight NBA title this week.
Hicks
stocks
some
Phoenix
Bulls' merchandise also sells
well at the Foot Locker store in Suns' items, but. sales are just a
trickle compared to Bulls' merPhoenix's Metrocenter mall.
chandise.
"When the Bulls and the Suns
And in the homeiown?
went to the playoffs, I sold every
"We've
been selling like
Bulls item I had in the store," mancrazy,"
espt~:ially
Bulls hats and
ager Curtis Doucette said. ''The
T-shirts,
said
Sharon
Starcevich,
Suns outsell them. but I think the
manager
of
Chicago
Sports
and
Bulls' stuff is right behind.''
Novelty
downtown.
Disappointment in Phoenix over
What about Phoenix Suns'
the Suns' 99-98 loss to Chicago in
shirts?
·
Sunday's championship game
"I
don't
even have one in the
.
hasn't dampened tlie buying fervor.
store,"
Starcevich
said indignantly.
"Probably the first 10 people
"Of
course
not.
We are
who walked in the store yesterday
to our
Chicagoans.
We're
true
wanted Bulls' three-peat stuff,"
team.
I
can't
even
imagine
it.
Not
Doucette said Tuesday.
·
even
to
make
a
dollar."
He said he has 120 Bulls' championship T-shirts on order, "and
we 'II sell every one of them."
·
Cbicago has a long way to go to
COLONY THEATRE
top the Celtics' eight stratght NBA
FRI. THRU THURS.
titles, but that doesn't seem to faze
HOTSHOTS
II PG 13
Sports briefs
fans in Boston.
SHOW
liMES
"The Bulls are dermilely one of
• FRI., SAT., SUN. 7::10, 1:30
Basketball
my top five sellers," said Scott
MON. TliAU THUAI.
NEW YORK (AP) - Frederick Saklad, manager at Twins EnterONE
EVINII'IG IHOW 7:30
Lacey, a former federal jud11e who prises Inc. in Boston.
handled the NBA' s investigation
ADWIIION 11.10 ~ Ul 0823
"They were my No. I by such a
last year of Michael Jordan's gam·
blin~. will assist the league in its
i~ull')' of the San Diego man who
claimcd.IO have won $1.25 million
in golf liets from lhe Chicago star.
NBA spokesman Brian Mcin·
tyre said the league was not launching a formal investigation, but followin' through on a promise by
-Methoxyclor Spray
'Garden Dust
commtssioner David Stem during
•Thlodan Duat and Spray
oS% Seven Dust and
the NBA Finals to look into
charges by Richard Esquinas,
-Marlate Garden
Spray
whose self-publi~hed book brands
lnaectlcll.le W/P Fertilizer
.Copper Dragon Dust
Jordan a compulsive gambler.
Boxing
" I Lime
BORD,EAUX, France (AP) Wilfredo Vasquez of Puerto Rico
stopped Thiei'ry Jacob of France in
the lOth round to retain his WBA
super banlllllweight title. Vasquez,
MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY
making his fourth defense,
improved to 37-6 with his 30th
992·2115
lmocltouL Jacob !hopped to 30-6.

. By UNDSEY TANNER
CHICAGO (AP) - The Chicago Bulls have proven they're
· champions on lhe court. They also
dominate another arena - sports
merchandise sales.
· They outsell Knick knacks in
. New York and Celtic stuff in
Boston, according to relllilers. And
·.don't tell Charles Barkley, but
Bulls' merchandise is even a winner in Phoenix.
Bulls' hats 1 T·shirts and other
paraphernalia are tile top sellers .
among National Basketball Association-licensed products, NBA
spokeswoman Mary Neagoy said
Tuesday.
Last year, NBA-licenscd prod·
ucts grossed $1.4 billion, according
to Neagoy, who said the league
does not release each team's per·
centage of sales.
"Phoenix ranks in the top I0,"
Neagoy said. "I think we can
expect them to move up."
To be sold legally, any ilem that
depicts an NBA team must ~e
licensed wilh lhe league. And while
Chicago is the big~est market for
it, Bulls' merchandise sells well all
over the country.
"The Bulls are a very popular
team and they're winning. That's ,
the combination you need," said
Jim Root, manager of Gerry

,_

SOMMERSBY PG 13
AND
TED DANSON,
WHOOP! GOLDBERG IN

MADE IN AMERICA PG 13
441-1088

'

•

,uN£ lS
1\\\\U
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Antique
·Farming
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SEE OUR LINE OF•••

••

FRI., SAT., SUN.
RICHARD GERE
IN

Mike Harris of Reedsville tied
with Tommy Thompson of Cleves
for the Abu Garcia Big Bass Award
in the Red Man Buckeye Division
qualifier on the Ohio River at
Powhatan Point Sunday.
Both men reeled in a threepound, 14-ounce bass that earned
each $500.

on Display at ...

A great display
sponsored by the Athens
County Antique Machinery Club!
See how our
grandfathers and
great-grandfathers
farmed their land.

E. State, Athens
10 am-Q pm Mon .-5; :
Noun-b Sun .

•

•

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

Harris, Thompson tie
for big bass honors

SUGAR RUN MILLS

.IRIRLY
IYiflll.

Clifford, Cheryl Jeweil, Laura ·Eastman and
Trisha Davis. In the tbird row are coach Mike
Kennedy, Taryn Doidge, Myca Haynes, Wendy
Shrimlin, Melissa Werry, Cynthia Cotterill and
camp staff member KeVin Logan. In the fourth
row are coach Betty Ann Wolfe, Beverly Stewart, Alicia Haggy, Kristen Dassylva, Candice
Walker, Betsy Houdashelt and coach Ron
Logan. Not pictured is Anne Brown.

JUNIOR CAMP ENTHUSIASTS ,;_ There were 29 prls taking
part in tbe 1993 Melp Marauder girls basketball camp for grades
4-6. Pictured are (front row, L-R) Ashley Hannahs, Andy
Krawsezyn, Stephanie Kopec, Ashley Burdige, Shannon l'rice, Beatrice Morgan and Leah Morrow. In tbe second row are camp starr
member Lee Henderson, Amber "Pete" Vining, Julie Kenned.y,
Tawney Jones, Joeline Allen, Amber Roush, Brandy Laudermtlt
and Amber Blackston. In the third row are camp starr member
Kevin Logan Heather Hudson, Sara )\llanslield, Kati Commons,
Kim Ihle, Ca;a Asb, Arlca BlackWell and Joy O'Brien. In the fourth
row are Jennifer Shrlmplln, Tangy Laudermilt, Julie Spaun, Sarah
Hoiser, Sarah Clifford, Autumn Thomas and Coach Ron LogaJI.
Not pictured Amber Hanning.

IT'S GARDEN TIME!

SUNDAY SPECIAL
Mashed Potatoes &amp; G111vy
G~ Beans with Mushrooms ·
Hot Buttenld Roll

SENIOR CAMP PARTICIPANTS -The
1993 Meigs Marauder alrls basketball camp WitS
held.last week at Meip Hi!lh School. The prls In
grades l'rom 7-10 that took part in the camp are
(front row, L-R) Valeria Karr, Jennifer Vining,
Carissa Ash, Becky Smith, Lori Kinnison, Bridget Vaughan, Jessica Johnson and Sara
Williams. In the second row are Danlelle
Grueser, Erin Krawsczvn. S.tacev Price, Jenny

· By Frank Capehart
Sports Correspondent

.

Dombrowski
dismissed
Sheffield's reputation for having a
bad attitude.
"When you .hit .330," Dombrowslci said, "you're not surly too
of1en."
The trade changes the look of
both bullpens. As part of the 1\eal,
the Padres gave up left-.handed
reliever Rich Rodriguez.
The 25-year-old Hoffman, a late
bloomer who was used as a setup
man for Bryan Harvey, will work
with San Diego closer Gene Harris.
"I haled lhat the Marlins traded
that guy Hoffman because I hate
facing him,'' Sheffield said.
San Piego's new third baseman
will be Archi Cianfrocco, acquired .
from the Montreal Expos on
Wednesday for piU:her Tim Scott.
' Sheffield's acquisition will
mean that Marlins third baseman
Dave Magadan wiU be benched or
traded. Magadan opled to sign with
Florida last offseason primarily
because he knew he would play
every day.
"It's a touchy situation,"
Lachemann said. "He's not happy,
and I don't blame him. If we knew
this was going to happen, we probably would not have acquired

.

.

1990; Assistant Rio Grande Coach Jeff Lanham;
and Kent Wolre, former Soutbern High School
st11ndout who was a guard for Lawhorn l'rom
1982 until 1986. Wolfe, currendy head boys basketball co11ch at Lo,an Elm High School,
brought graduates or hiS own hoop camp to Rio.
Grande.
·

Pratt leads local junior golf circuit

Padres trade Sheffield
to Marlins for pitchers

1,.11

J

MEETING OF MINDS - Former players
for tbe University or Rio Grande men's buketball team came back Ibis week to assist with the
basketball camp conducted by Redmen Coach
John Lawhorn. Lawhorn, rar right, takes notes
from the discussion between, from lel't, John
Lambcke, a Redmen forward l'rom 1986 until

592· 3574

I.

'

�'Ill!•

~ The Dally S!nttnel

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, June 25, 1893

3

~nnouncementa

llporla Fan? - . . ,.,.....
TriN CallNowtU 1--..r22

/1postol1 c

Uwrch ol Cllw.t

Naw Ll't Cloorcll I# God

Paola: ADdrww Mila

PUI&lt;lr: Guy HiDes
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhi~p.m.
Wo&lt;Niday
·cea - 7p.m.

._..,a
,. 110rr1ot
112 W. Moiro SL
~School-9:30a.m.

33226 CWclreD'a Homo Rd.
. Saoday Scbooi. 11 a.m.
Wonhip · IOLm., 6p.m.
W.........y s.n.;.., . 7 p.m. .

Gna
326 B.

Holy Bucharial ... Sunday Scbooi !Ia.m.
ra~Jooto~ni

·

~!!11
a.m.
7;"m.
~
SeMoo. 7 p.m.
Fno Wlllllllpllol Cllllrdo
Aoh Slroct. Middleport

p_, Mut:Monvw .
Sollllday SeMc. • 7:30p.m.
Sundly School· 10 a.m.
Wonbip · II a.m.,
Wedaaday Service-7:30p.m.
Ru_PI,.BapllltCiourdl
Sundly School • 9-.30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.

.... .,JIInl .......

But Main&amp;.
' Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Jllnl

s........,....

41171 Pun&amp; Of Piko
P-. B. LomorO"Bry•r
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonllip • 10:4' a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedaaday s.m... · 7:00.p.m.
Jllnlloodll Clourdo

&amp;handl'llmorSL
Pl-. Rov. J_. A. Seddon
Sunday School· 9: IS a.m.
Wonl!ip . 10:15 Lift., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.· 5:30p.m.
Lon!'• s.-r ht Sundoy ol ewry mclllh.
Wocliad.oy SeMce-7:00p.m.

Keoo Clowa ofCiortat
Wonllip • 9:30a.m.
Sundly School·10:30 LID.

Putor: Jadt Cclloarow
Sunday School -9:~ a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Savicoa · 6:30p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 1.111.
Wonllip - 10:30un., 7:00p.m.
W - y Sotvica. 7 p.m.

Pulor : Tom RIIII)'QD
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Clo- IICIII'Ial
P -: Chria Slewart
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. ·
W - y s.n.;.., · 7 p.m.

...........

W.....,.y Sotviceo · 6:30P.m.
, _ : ..... Earl Sluller

Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30a.m.
Thunday Soniceo· 7:30 p.ln.
Old ledMI v.. WllllapdiiCIIurdl
21601 SL Rl. 7, Milldloport
Sunday School· 10 un.
.
l!va!ina . 7:30p.m.
'llwnday Sorvi&lt;cl· 7:30
HMiolda Baplllt Clourdo
• SL RL 143 jolt olr RL 7
Pula: !ln. 1..,.. R. Allnl, Sr.
Sundly School - 10 a.m.
II a.m., 6p.m.
W
Sorvicel -7 p.m.

-:.,cx:mk

~~t~
Pu10r.J..., B. K Wonhip • IOLm., 7 p.m.
Weclnesday SotviCOI ..7 p.m.
Bapllot Clo-

-

Raiboad SL, Ma""'
Sunday Sdiool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip ·II a.m., 6p.m.
WeclnesdaySavica-7p.m.
F-l•laptill

Puoor : Ariuo Hun
Sundoy School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.
MI. Morialllllplilt
F-u. ol Main 51., MiMicpol'.
Pula: !ln. Gilhon Cnlia.lr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

_II. .

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodrrelday Savicoa · 7:30p.m.
Cloerdo ofCiorlal

Pula: IOH!&gt;b B. HooUu
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Weclnailay Senic:a • 7 p.m.

LlbtriJ o.-. a..rc~o
Dooner

Secnd Hurt Calllollc Cloerdo

161 Mulbmy Ave., Pumoruy, '192-5898
P11110r: !In. Walrer B. Heinz
Sol. Con. 4:45-5:ISp.m.; Mus· HO p.m.
s.m. Coo. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mau • 9:30a.m.

Doiley Mus · 8:30a.m.

Putor: aoo..., Weiridt

·

Sunday Sc:hool- 9:45 a.m.

.

W'onhip • II a.m.

Un1ted Methodist
Gnlwl u.w )M' " t

MI. 011,. U - M - o t
00 124 behind W"llbrviiJe

H-

O.O..Cioerdo

P1110r: a.dei D&lt;wniam

Paola:CharlooJ.....
Suodoy Sdlool • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Savica • 7 p.m.

Suodoy school • I0:30 a.m.
Wonhip. 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Mllp Coop ...dYt Putlll

........... a...-di of Clll'lal

Pt.Jtor: Shamn Huanan

-Philip Saum
Sunday Sc:hool: 9:30a.m.
Wonhip!lomce: !0:30a.m.
Bible Smdy, W:dnn••y, 6:30 p:m.

Chnst1an Un1on
H - C . .rdo ofCiortot Ill
Clorlad•UPutor: Theron Dudllm
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
.._.., • 7 p.m.
Wednelday Servi""' • 7 p.m.
Hanford Chordl of.Chrlallo

-'

N...-a...

Sunday Scbool- 9:30a.m.

Wonhip • II a.m., 6:30p.m.
CbPaat.or: Sharon HaUIIIWI'
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
' Swlday Sdlool • 10 Lift. ·
Thunday Savioes . 7 p.m.
Joppa
P11U&gt;r: B....S. Weber

Wonhip • 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· I0:30 a.m.
Wodnosday Sorviaoo • 7:30p.m.,

Loora._

Clorlallao Uolo. ·
Hanfood, W.Va.
Pula: Rev. DaWI McManio
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wonhip ·9:30a.m, 7:30p.m.
Wedaooday Savicoa · 7:30p.m.

Po1110r: Rev. Sol... John,...
Sunday Sehool • 9:30a.m.
WonhiD • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvicea · 7:30p.m.

-

Pooler. Rov. Seldon lohnSCXI
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
hl.t 3rd Sunday • 7:30p.m.
Sunday SdJool . 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Sorvicea · 7:30p.m.

MI. Mariah a.- of God

Catholic

Loa-..,

SL Paod
Chorcll
ComCT Sycarorcn .t Socollll St., PumorOf

LupollleO.I '~=wCioorcll
Slllday School • 9:30 a.m. .
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Senoic:e 7:30p.m.

Alltiqolly llopllll

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
e..,.;,1 -7p.m.
Wo&lt;Niday Sorvillll • 7 p.m.

OurSo- Llalll- Clowdt
Wain"' and Hoary SU., Ravenswwd, W,Va.
. Co-pUun: Rovs. Rid!ard .t
l'wicia llanda·Kr,.
Sunday School - 9:30 un.
W'onhip • II a.m.

Worship· 9:30a.m. (hi ol:lad Suo~
7::Jo p.m. (3nl ... 4lh Som)
Wedaooday5eMco - 7:30p.m.

Church of God

1011aoo1 v.. wli 11ap11ot
' Soltm 5I.
P - . Rev. Paul Toylor ·

Wonhip • t :30 a.m.
Sunday Sdlool· 10:30 a.m.

Pu10r. Rov.Janios Souafidd
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
E..runa • 7 p.m.
Wednelday Servica • 7 p.m.
Rollaod Cllorcll of God
Putor: lam P. ConlOnln
~School ·

10 a.m.
Wonhip • II ':"'·· 7 p.m.

Wednucfay Semca · 7 p.m.

Srnewe Church of God
Apple and Seoond Sis.
Pu~&lt;~r:

Rev. David Russell

Swlday S&lt;hool and Wonhip- 9:30 o.m.

Enltrprlat

Churdl of Goil of Proplrecy
OJ. While Rd. of! SL RL 160

Puror: Keilh Roder
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.,6p.m.
Tuesdoy Sorvi&lt;:cs · 7 p.m.

Wednesday Sorvica • 7 p.m. ·

PIIRart P11 Henson
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

Wednelday Service~ • 7 p.m.

Flatwoocb
Puttr. Keilh Rader
Sunday SdJool. 10 a.m.
Wcnhip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Thunday Savioes • 7 p.m.

Harrtam.we Rood .
P.-:Rov. Vi&lt;larltouoh
Sunday Sdoool9:30 a.m.
Wonlrip · II 1.111., 7:30p.m.
W"""""'-ay !1omce . 7:30p.m.

.

Paola: ..... ~Ra­
Suodoy School· 10:00 a.m.

s,.....

···-

Mlooloo
1411 Bricla-s..,s,......
Paola: Roy (Mike) lbompoon
Sunday Scbool- 10 a.m .
l!va!ina-6p.m.
Weclnesdoy Serviao • 7 p.m.

PUIOr. Keomah Baker
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
,Wonhip • 10:45 a.m. (l•.t 3rd Sun)

Posw: ~Once
Sunday Scbooi • 10 un.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Laurol ClllrF'Ift M - Clowetl
Paola:PetorTraablay
Suaclay Sc:bool- 9:30a.m.
Wontip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Savica· 7 p.m.

C\\\;(( S.rur

83 Mill Str•t
Mldllopart, Ohio 457&amp;0
(1141892-11117 - 1898-00KSI
CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES
.~

~\

... lAST IWII

"2-2259

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

Q\,}

..........

111M

I 72 lltrth S.CIIMI Au.
. ...... '· Ohio

•tt•ipert,

,_IOJ, .011.

Ph.llft·2101
Pomeroy

. s.•,.....
271 ....,..

204 Condor St.

J. ltWCUa fuiiZ

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

PRESCRIPnON SHOP

GRAVElY TRACTOR SAlES

992-2975
RAWUNGS.COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

UI.ES &amp; SRYICE

992-7075

'''
•

992-5141

264 Seuth 21141

. • ,........

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF

OF BUDGET HEARING
A Budget He.rlng will be
hold att!OO p.m. an July 1,
11113 ot tho Bhllda River
S - For•by Building an
J:!ta
Road
nur
R . villa. Th• m•tlng lo
for purpoaa al clacuaolan
of the prapotld budset of
Olivo Townohip. All
iniAKullld clta.a wiU hlv•
tho opportunity to give
written or or1l commenl
The blldQot wlll be avlilabla
for publfc lntpecMon at the
homo of the cllfk ollw July
6, 19113.
Kal.., S. Hayman, Clerk
Oliva Townahlp
50305 Uclloklllel Rood
RMclriille, OH. 45772
(6) 25, 1tc

APP.OINTUENT OF
FIDUCIARY
·o~ June I, 19113, In the
Molgo County Probat•
Court, Caaa No. 271130,
Marvin L Kelly, 543 Gr111t
SlrMI, Middleport, Ohio
45710, woo appointed
Executor of tho •IIIIa of
Bernolano M. hlly,
dao r •od, lata of 543 Grant
StrMI, Middleport, Ohio
45760.
Robert E. Buck
PraiNrta Judge, Molgo Ca.
(6) 11, 18, 25, 3tc

More Legals ·
on Page tO

,..

Pa-: Rov.lv• Myon
Sunda¥ School· 9:30a.m.

"'J- Clrlot,
ApootollcFalt•

C-Cioordr
Main A Pi.llh St.
Sunday Scbooi . 10 a.m.
Wonhi~ • 9 o.m.
Tueaday Semces • ~p.m .

1/4 mile post Pon Mtias'"' New Uma Rd.
Pasw: William Va Moler
. Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wedaaday:7:0Clp.m.
Pridoy-7:0Dp.m.
Clift.. Tobtnoadt Clllordo

Clifaon, W.Va.
Sunday Sehoot · IO'a.or.
Wonhip • 7 p.m.
Thunday S&lt;rvic:e.· 7 p.m.

Happy Bewted
15rh Birthday
Teri!
Love,
MoMa&amp;PaPa
DeMo.•

••

Pentecostal

· You're HOUI
Old?
Hapn
Binhday!
The Gang

Hactd111J1011 Cll-

,"
-~ ......JWtao
Swlday School · 9 a.m.
.

s,.....
Fl. . ll..~ '""'~·
Sunday Sdlooi · IO a.m.

~

Wonlrip • II a.m., 4 p.m. (I• A W Son.),

Seventh-Day Adventist

Full Goopot Ll(rh3304$ Hil... Road, Pumoruy
Pula:RoyHunrcr
Sunday Sc:hoot - 10 a.m.
7:30p.m.
Tuolday .t Thunda)' ·7:30p.m.

S.. M·DIIJ A•• 1111
Mlllbeny 1111. ltd., ...._
Paola: Roy Lawtnoky
Salunlay Sorvi&lt;cl:
SabiJooh Sdoool · l pa.
Wonhip • 3 p.m.

Neae Setth•tllt Church

Sunday Wanbip · 2:30p.m.;
Thunday oorvicea . 7:30p.m.
· Sooollllellltl New T - . . t

sa-~~

Pa1tor: Dulne
llrid:er
Sunday Sdlool- 9 a.m.

Wanlrip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wo&lt;NidaySorviao-7p.m.

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE

j
~

985·4181

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVADNG
(614)
667·6628

~JAY,MAR
Quality

Stone Co.

MLihiaaav...........
•• Clorlal Cloerdo
·T..u Coavnuniay olr ~ 12

.

---

$5.~

Sunday 5chool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · I0:30a.a., 7:30p.m.
WedaeadaySorvicu-7:30p.m.

ldoa
.....
· · Clll'lal
2 IllUollod
miloo .-1r
ol-~
... s... ..... ll4

•

ra-; ..... Jt-.Maddey

•

•'

Sundly .School· 10 .....

w........ 7:30 1':"'·

';

'W fn day SOMce. · 1:30p.m..

•
•

•

MIDDLEPORT· B 5th- Haa 8·9 roama, 4 badrooma, ond 2
lui batha. Look at lhe extra•· hu malnlllnonoe lrw aiding,
heat pump, lanced backyard, open allirway, lenNI clning.
room with bay wlndowa, lull beaement. ond h is-'&gt; the
achoola. $46,500.

'

4

.

DOmE TURNER, Brclti.-..................................... ti2-Ht2

SUPPLY

ln1ide and Out

Licensed, l•sured ••d Bonded

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING ·
PONDS
S~PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER

l~Coata.

Work Guaranteed

ADS lET
·ROWs
00
Dl. .

HomeiUe S•ws

,le6i4-99r.5s91

12·5-tfn

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL

lor you.

992·3470

Sundar Calls)

··nil(rtit~·

Established 1913

..

992-2121

1......,, ht.

Main

·

CHARLIE'S

,_ey

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
I OX 189

Miclclleport, Ohio 45760

Recover Your

Veterans

Memorial Holpital
ttt.tl04

, ......

--·

Flllw-

•*

molo

ild.,

~~~~:.-=:on~~'

114-441-4247 Afttr10 A.ll.

Faund: . . .. ...,.. Hannon
Part! tomlo -n!L 304-17533811.
.

s~

Faund: While
Faonlly Dcog, Found On Kilner

Road,QaiiiP!olle,l14-.--.
Lo8t : lfiY. tlaerlomcaf wllh one
whllo aog, Eiolman A - Rd.,
$21 rowan!, IM-IMIZ~. 114Me.al$.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
3 Family F~day, Solurday. lA. II.
4 .11. 120 IIUIIanl Drml. lug.
- · Nloe Clathlno, Plltowa,

RoUMhold • ...,., Mlnr Nc.

n-.

ALL Yard Slits IIUOI 8o Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:.00 p.m.
lho day bolono lht od Ia to run.
Sunday odhlan • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. llonday odhlan • 2:00
p.m. Sorlorday.
Community Yard Saito: Sownl

11ov1ng s.~o: 2021 112 Chalhlm
Avenue, S1twday Ontyl 10 A.M.
.a P.M. lllec. Houoohotcl noma
Somo Clolhoo, Clunoct Out

To

_0u11
RamodatlnoKhchan
"''"' ~
Fumhrn
Equlpmont
Dlohoo~ Juno 301h .July 11~ iii
Lowlo urlvo ......... From High·
WI)' P•trol.

Free Eatlmates

DOZER
DRIVEWAY WORK
aliCIUMESTONE
DEUVERY SERVICE

Windows
VInyl Siding

4 lomlly yard aaao, Sit. Juno 21
t:Q0.3:~1..157 Lynn Drfttle,
HIVIIn, W¥.

Reasonaltle

Roofing

'30 HOUR

&amp; VIcinity

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Replacement

TRIMMING and
TREE &amp; STUMP REMOVAL

Rates

Cell ua lor

Special Price~~ on
Siding and Wlndowa.

992-2772

POMEROY, ON.

Pl. Pteaaant

Jamee Keesee, owner

JOE N. -SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

J'ormerl;p of ......... rr........

IISURED

256·6640

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC

Authorized: Br!ggo &amp;
Slratton MTD, Ryan,
!.D.C. Repair Canter
PICKUP ond DEUVERV
Hours 96· M·F 8-3 Sat.

r

Clot1d Sunday

949·2104

r••·

24 Hour Portable Weldin• Semce

COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP SERVICES
IN SHOP WELDING SERVICE OR ono·u&lt;&gt;•
ALL TPES OF •~ELOING FABRICATION AND REP~~R

a•

A"-""II'IU"" • Welding Supc:Ns
&amp; Bend Melal

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Announcements

FLEA IIAAKET &amp; AUCTIONS
121V .

HOU~S:

7:30am . 5:00pm

Yanl so... Juno Z4 1 21, 14
liM?, 41llm ll., Mllidl 5 L .m.

,

Yard..,._.luno-lall,
~

Mon . Fri

A"l I 1•110

llooo(

7:30am· I2:00pm Sol

llvo 24 Houra A ~I Talk To

;-or· H rolno, will be -

. lH SMp Flldlltltt

- A7l,Olrtolll1
-- ·
Ext.
• • Par llln.
lo 11 Yro, P - Co. lft.Ut.

8

RADIATOR
SERVICE

• ~'"abr iC MIOn · Atlltlty lo Roll

clothM, mllc.

...._-a..---.

GENERAL MACHINE WORK &amp; WELDING
&amp; Steenlett • Sl)fly Wtidtng

Sllwday1 Juno 28, 8:110-1:00,
Z211.11cuan Avo, roln cancolo,
glaaware, Climlng ..ma, fumtfure, toyo, llnllq-

614·446·0736

WE HAVE BUYERS IF YOUR READY TO BELL..
OIVI! UB ACALL TOD,\V Ill

~
• Clrbodo •lolipo Gas • Propw • C)W1clon

s.- I

'

4/26/lfn

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING

• HtNrc • Ahtm~N~m

I :CIO-I:OO.

RODGERS I-I

~~1 .a=.,~=:,.~o.=11~i~:.=,c::..r;;.~I!Jil::l~

· KATHY CLELAND. ..................~...................- ...1114111
()ffii:E. .......................................... - ..........-.111

-"w.~•. ~...

24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE

• Mig WaHttng •

l.llwn Emr~vaganu S.lt: Rt 31
Soulhllda, Ha,_ Baptloi
Church lawn, Sol. JuM 21

Auto-Rafllls ·

.fprfnf
Sp•cf•l

Nft

Fl,_ Tllnt Yard SOlo. 0 cloUt.., llhhw...,_, collec:Ubte
toye, dra~a. houHWif'M, 115
Vllnd St., Sal.

A
Bright Idea!

Fully lnaurael
Job llllop Faollllll

HENIIY 1!. CLI!LAND..- ....... ................- ....-.1124111
TRACY IRIIAGER.-·-··········.. -····-·····--·· It•
_.ERN H,\R't,............................................- •• 741-1117

FREE
CLASSIFIEDS

WE• Co2LEASE
Oxygen•Ace~•NIIJogtll
•
Af90n •._ •5p1cillly Gases

large front pardl. 16 X 2•IJIIIIIII . ..,7,800.

I 1S I. -._let Dr.

Lost &amp; Found

J&amp;L INSULATION

ste11
c=....
fiiiiSt
u

: :..

(M\\

\:S7

2112192/tfn

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

"HelpiDg You To

Paris anti Service

PolltlfOJ· Commercial building an ~ St. com"*l'ioi room
dawnallllra ond 2 a~nll upatan. $20,000.

"2· SIJO Pomeroy

nnd ~t•r• ·k~~ ..flk·an"

6

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and ~:O~":.'::.:'~:'C:
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY JuM
~f.:'·~~'*~~
2tlh. IA.II. -11'.11.

WILKER ALLEY

...,_.,.,. older home wllh 3 lola, lndudn .3 bed! coma,
bath, In rMied ol repair ASKING SG,5QD.

221 W. Main St., Penttroy

EWING FUNERAl HOME

Wlllhl

""'"'
Clolllrlollo
Righi
RaeFamliltt,
Aavto 7Twn
South,
71111•
;===============~~ ....,
Cnafl Rood Ctoaritow &amp;.

UCIHE, 01110

OWNER: Jell Wlc..rshom
5/1

61101113/1 mo. pel

(No

SNODGRASS'
UPHOlSTERY

&amp; FILL DI~T

61'4-915·4110

614·992·7643

~

36970 Ball Run Road

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

COMMERCIAL nnd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

HAUUNG: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

~-----'

FREE ESTIMATES
,Take the pain out of
pain1ing. let me do h

Homes • Vinyl Siding
I.N1ew Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
Ne~

.a~~~~~Wls&amp;

5-24-1

. BISSELL &amp; BURKE

applianeal, bar 6 calinell in kilclle~. alae. heal pump with
CIA, ulllily room, 72 X 72lat. ASKING $35,500.

Crciw's Family Restaurant

..

1 male and . 1

114-11&amp;-3383.
Sllooodoa. malo, .young,

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

UNES

614·949·2911 or
614·593•'50 10

3-16-113-lfn

Oak till Rd. 76.33 IICI8S with 1 1/2110ry home 3 -OOIIIt,
~~~~J appliances, bam, ailo, milk houaa, - &amp; TPC - ·
anea, ponda. once uoad aa daioy farm . $08,000 mako .,
oilerI

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

214 E .

~.

r.ma~,

F&lt;Mifld: IQ1113, Wtlllo on

3-4-93· 1

Raolft.. 11189 aaetianal 24 X 40 with 3 bedroOms. 2 balha,

.

Twa

Tanks, Leach Lines
Repair &amp; Installation

Free Eetinuatea,

992~7553

Rutland· One ftoor frame home wllh 2 bedroOm~ beth, car garoge, gltden aree, ~ull lnlea, applianoH. ~11,900.

992-5432

...

=~,JI:~ ..-·

Pomeroy, Ohio

915-4473
667·6179

.., , , , ~-~~, FIIH C614Au"

itl

-

Prices Starttng at
1 129.95 +Tax

~ 992~~~~

Downsjiouts

JERRY SPRADLING .........., ..,_ .................. (304111N4M
OFFK:E ...........- ...............................................- ...112-2111

SANDY BUTCHER ..........................................~.....tl2-1371

RIDENWR

PI:IARMM:Y
w. F OMion' ·~
JX
Pomeroy

• 4 Wlteell~IJnment

cy

•'&gt;•

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE . .

lor porto, 114-

R..cUed PupDin, • Month•
Old, lllxod, lUI Sholt, C.H 114448·1111, Or 114 411 UIO.

· CAll 614·99 2·7878

Roef

REASONAILE RATES

••

BILL QUICKEL

Ch•lr, aultabiO lor .,..._ y
p&lt;aitcl, 114-11:1-ltll.

IMPROVEMENTS

BRENDA JEFFERS ........................................- .... 1124011
DARLINE STEWART ............................................. t12-t381

•

Preuripttonl

2 Front Struts.• Labor

•

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

3 obondontd kin-. IO good
" -· 304-Ua-1477.
7 puppiM, ,..., Collie, llema!N
&amp; 2 maiM, 5 wko otcl, 1104-4753711.

J&amp;T HOME

Real Eatate General

-~ .

Z dogo: 1 lab, liZ Gorman
" ' - d A Rol-ltor, bolh
blaCk. 304-f7H31Z anylloM.

tover~~. 304-175-1320.

SEWER PROBLEMS

Mowers • Cltall 5tJws
Wttdtaiii'S

104 w. M•in
ttnJII Pomeroy

114 U81380.

RUTLAND- Rt. 884· llaln Street ' A vacant lot -.cilh city
Nice lor a mobile home, ate.

Sunday Scbool · 9:30a.m.
Wonloip-10:30a.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Servicea • 7 p.m.

ot Columbusf 0 .

2 Baa11111111 Lono Hlllrod lOll-

To &lt;load Homo, 1 Oroy 11o~1 _1
Brown Female, IM-441-4IRIII,

HWigl' and wahlr available.

s,..Panor:
._ Churdo
&lt;JI lilt Naanne
Rev. Glenn McMill.,

Nationwide Ins . Co.

Giveaway

Baa;!!1 3 monilia Old,
tamale, 114-102·2754.
Rabbit lluleh • yanl Nlo 10~

Service

F,oll Foundation to

INTERIOR

4

Pa~

Reasonable Rates
Dependable

NEW-REPAIR

WILLS HiLL RD- A large modular, wllh an addition on the
rear. Hn I rooms, ~ bedrooms, and 2 baths. Hu • heal
pump, 2 acnrs of nice laying land, Md an garage. Hal
a apeeiiiCUiar ,.;..,. of the golf coune. $49,000. .

,olwo'

Wlllto, II"""*', malo, sa,~
- P t - l p. hc141 ..........
amokor, IIIIM camplne, ftoo
martltla&lt;. ~'!II c-ry m..lc.
Call
-75-2111
II:OOamZ:OOpm, llan ..frl.

W-1551.

12-311-U·Ifaa l.---:...!:!2!~

LINDA'S
PAINTING

arot tonight. o.r, _ l'o.1:CI
IIOCA FL:

llllod Dog • . . _ To A
Good HotM, Love ChllciNn, IM-

Middleport,
PomeroJ, Racine,
Rutlaed, Mason
Areas
CALL 992·6123

~

. ,.. -

wa-

LAWN CARE

USED RAilROAD TIES

sa.-

1110..~

100't o1 oiCittno man In ~

llayta;
1112-2754.

4-1

BILL SLACK
.
992-2269 · · • !

THE GAY COHNECT10N 1 -

FJM Kill_,. To Good H - : 4
Whtla Onoo, 2 Dortl Blullh Gray,
I Block
Ono,
1 81... &amp; - · 1
,
_ 0..
, 1~41-4301.

•LIGHT HAULING- :'
•FIREWOOD .

IIIDOLEPORT-11111 SlrMI· A Handyman's Speeili-2 lata
ond"' INe roam houaa wllh 2-3 --.a. Needa quilo a lit
in aide, bulthe aulllde looks pretty nice. $6,000.00.

WAYNE
DALTON

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

•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER'
•TRUCKING

. 4/29/93 lfl

949·2168

Middleport, OH

Boll Run Rd.· All by yaursall In lhe oounlry-&lt;111-• IIIia
home with 3 bedrooms, large· living room, dining roam,
sitting an .52 acra. Haa on aider lag houaa acrou the rood
and other buildings. $ 17,900.

DO .T YOURSElF
&amp;CONTRACTOR
SPECIAL

WAYNE
OALlON

38904 Leadhag
Creek Road
Middle'-ort, Ohio
114·992·7144

Ext. Jilt 12.M ,_ llln. . . ,. , .... Old, Pr- 131-Gf15.

~

f!~~)~lng

and Aluminum Siding
•Po•warWashing
FREE ESTIMATES
507S4 lltlar llrlt• Rd.
lotto111, Oh. 45743

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

CLOSED WEDNESDAY

IUWICI

FREE ESTIMATES

HARRISONVILLE ·RL 184- Thii approximallly 5 y- old
24 ·x 36 building has pra,.;ously been a cllUrdl but could be
. used, lor many olher purpasea. With a _1973 14 X 70 rnobi!ll
hom8 wllh a 70ft. addilian. Thrae or posilbl• 4 bedroom&amp;, 3
· window air conditioners, 2 pardl''· ailling an 2.6 ....,., All
fer $34,900.

United Brethren

!!.....,

I....,.FIIaw''
Clo- oflloo N-...i.e
Pasoor: Jam w. DoaaJu
Sunday Scboo1 • 9:30a.m.
Wonloip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wodneaday Servi- • 7 p.m.

'

Wonhip • 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (21111&amp;: 4lh Sun.)

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonllip • IG-.30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wo&lt;Niday Sotviao •.7 p.ra.

Co. Rd. 63

•Pa,intinra Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
Paint Mobile Honnesl

Gutters

RL 7'"' Poro""'f By,Poos

TorciiCiourdl

36358 SR7

Fri-Sat 5·11 pm

'DAVIDSON'S
.PLUMBING

ROOFIN(i

Putor: lin. Robert B. Smilh, Sr.

w.........,

NS
ENTERPRISES

Howard L Wrltesel

U.llod Fallll Clourdo

onnds.r..t
Sunday Sc:bool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.
S.rvicu ·I p.m.

lllddlaport. Ohio

' 1-17-113-1

'

205 Nonh Second Ave.

Paola:La-Buob
Sunda.{. ~·9:30a.m.
vemna · 7 p.m.
W:dnoday Servio;i,. 7 p.m.

Wonhip . 10 a.m.
.
Walnosday S&lt;rvices. 10 a.m.

. 949·2126

Painting

MI. Otlft C•••IIJ a..rc~o

T.....,.., Rd., 461C
Swlday Sdrcol· 9 .....

614·112..163
510N. 2nd Ave.

hcJM

Gutter Cleaning

Lona&amp;oa..n
Suodoy School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
W.........,7:30p.m. ·

. ...... Cioio.....

-r.dlenllle lei.

(304) 773·5585
"SUMMER HOURS"
Sun.-Thur 5-10 pm

Real Estate General

Goaptl Cloorcll

-

FOREVER
DONZE ·

CUSTOM SADDLES, •
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

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

Cuetoms.et
Covers, c.rpet,
Hillelliners,
ConvertiJ)Ie Tops
30 y... oxpar'--.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM ancl
REMOVAL

Cloordo

Pa-.: MibM....,
.Sunday !drool - 10 a.m. '
Wonbip . 7p.m.
Weclnesdoy Servlci! . 7 p.m.

Coabllollollod ~ .. Parllll
llei811Cline

WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER

Call 614-992· .
6637
' . St. Rt. 7
c•es.ire, OH.

M-~ .Ciourdo

lfllllllinJ-7p.m.
w.........,s.ma...7p.m.

$25.00

FOR SALE ·

Clorlollao Ftl......., C.tor
Salenr St.. Rullanct
r.-:RobenB.Musser
Soond.ty Scbool • I 0 a.m.
Wonhip • II:U a.m., 7 p.m.
Wo&lt;NidaySorviao-7p.m.

w-,

Shade River Saddle Shop

COMPLITI AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

SIZED UMESTONE

117-C•••IIJ Cloorcll .
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
a3oof. 1

$100Payoff
Thia lid good for 1
FREE card.
l.lc. No. 0051 ·32

5

... ... . .

c~

6:45 p:m.
. Special Early li)ird

Ill

UNLIMITED ONE
MONTH TANNING

-.La_.,_..
Sunday Sdoool • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servica . 7 p.m.

Huot ea.n"!!IIJ Clourdo
.
OORL 124
P11110r. Bdad Hon
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30a.m.
Wonldp · !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

-I.Aiart .

Pula:JtoFGnce
Sunday Sc:bool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9un.

. IN POMEROY

R~LI'oCioorcll
SOOPa • 2nd A.w.,Mid.a 1 4l

B11111ina7p.m.
Thunday SorvicO • 7 p.m.

Wonllip • 10:30 LDL
Thunday sem.... 7:30p.m.

EAGLES
CLUB

l!veoina·7p.m.

Fallll Ta.....,lda Chord!
Bailoy Rua RDad

M....... St.,PIIIIOr. K.enDolh Baker
Sunday Scbooi . 9:45a.m.

EVERY THURSDAY

Stl......ttio W.-d &lt;JIFIIIII
Puoor. David Dolley
s.....y Sdraol9:30 a.m.

. WodnlodaySCrviao- 7:30p.m.

C-.riCI-

EvaUn&amp; Scrviea· 7·p.m.

Caloii'J ...... Cloopot

Pa-=SamAndoniln

Pastor: Sharon HautmM
Sunday Sdoool · 9 a.m.
Y(onhip·IOa.m.
Tuesday Seivica ·7:30p.m.

onhip • II a.m.
Wednesday Sorviaoo · 7:30p.m.

eo..,.-..

Fallll Ftl......., ~ .lor a...t '
Paaa: llaY. F...!rlin Dlclcau
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

s.....yS&lt;hooiiO a.m.
B..,.;,· 7:30p.m.

Tuppll'lll'lalna Sl. P•l

A....rJ(Sfi'II&lt;Wt)
PUIOr. O.ron N.......,
~ ~ool- 9:45a.m.

w-.,

Mlddlepcrrt Cooi-niiJ' Cloerdo
51$ 51., Middlepon

Wonllip · 111:45 Lm. (21111&amp;: 4lh Suo)

·-..

Sunday Sdraol • 9:30 ......
Wonhip !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Service . 7:30p.m,

liS ~muaAve.,l"omeruy.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip-IO:OOa.m., 7:30p.m.

PUoar. K m h llabr

Rolluolllllloll'41

~ Piko, Co. Rd.
Paoor.lov. Bladtwooil

Tire SUr- ......,

Sunda¥ Scbooi • 9:30a.m.

.

c......, lllblo Cloorcll

Cllorcll
Pasw: Rov. Rclind Wildm111
Crun:b ·9:15a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

' T'rWtJ

c-ot

Loa-.

Cloerdo
Piaollnwe
Pl-. Geoqe Weirick

Paola: Woocly CaD .
Suodoy 11..,.;, - 6:30p.m.
Thunclay SeMco . 6:30p.m.

Wonhip • 10:45 a.m.
Pula: k..in&amp;h Smilh
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10,.5 a.m.
Thunday Semc:eo • 7:30p.m.

SL.Iotro

Wonbip - 10:30a.m., 7p.m.

Pula: Derolt Slump

Woclneoday oervlce - 6:30p.m.

Wonhip • hiL
Woclnuday Stniooo - 10 a.m.

··-CioritiCiorlot

-

Paola: ~ v.....
SUDCky wonhip • 10 a.m.

Sunday Scbooi - 10 a.m.

I. uther ;m

J,.etan. W.Va. R1. I
Paitor: Jamoa Lowis
. Sunday Sdoool • II a.m.
Wonlrip • 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
W~y So~ . 7:30p.m.

Eod-H-ofl'n7• .
(II BurUopam doan:b df ltQu 33)

P.-:~J.IIabr

-

Fal ....... llllrleCIIorcll

Otller ChUiches

Pula: Flonmoo Smilh
Sunday Scbooi • 10 a.m.
Wonbip·9UL

Sunday School - 9 .....
Wonbip ·9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.

Cootoillo Rood
Pula: !ln. Plrillipltldonour
Sunday School • 9:30 LID. .
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
W - y Service • 7 p.m.

Paola:School-9:30a.m.
Sunday
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Sorvicu. 7 p.m.

s. ....

l'aola:BiiiW'UIOI ·

.......... Cloerdo ofCiorlal
SL Rl. 124ol Co. Rd. 5

E....... ·6:30p.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wanbip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
'flllndjy ScMoo • 7:30p.m.

Soi..C.tor
l'u!or: 11oft Fiaooe
Sunday Scbooi • 9:15 un.
Wonllip • 10:15 a.m.

Latter-Day Sa1nls

Tuppii'IIPlalor Cllorcll of Clll'lal

S!IY.- l•lllpllll
Paola: Bill Lillie

' MI."""'-'~
. S.....y School-9:4 a.m.

u,...... s...._o,....

Pula:Anlllrc..a....
Sunday School - 9:30 •.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 LID.
Tlomday ~ . 7 p.m.

--Minley

11n6wJ Cloorcll IICioriat

P.-: &amp;&amp;-B. lludow wwd
Sunday Sdrool- 9:30a.m.

P.- : J.. N.

l'l-.lln. 1ollnNmDe
Sunday oc:bool · 9:30a.m.
Wanbip - !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
.Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

. &amp;181'8211

WIIW.'Ic•tt~· w...,..

Wonhip ·10:40Lm., 7 p.m.
W-.!aySorvi&lt;ct - 7p.m.

.......

7' -51., Micldloporo.

'992-3838

Wedaaday Service , 7 p.m.

PUIOr. W"llliam luatis
Sunday Scbool - 9:30a.m.

w.........,
•

FREE ESTIMATES •

'A/onhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Portlaod Jllnl Clo- &lt;JI lloo N-r•a

p.:~~~r

WtlltJaO Billie Hot- Cburcll

llald Kaal!.... Co. Rd. 31
P.-: Rov. R&lt;pr Willlonl
Suoday Sdoool • 9:30 .....

Sunday Scbool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Sorvi&lt;cl · 7 p.m.

Sunday Scbooi · 9:15a.m.
Wonlrip • 10 a.m.
Sotvica · 6p.rn.

AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES ond
TRAILER SITES,
I.ANOCLEARIHG,
DRIVEWAYS IUTALLED
LIMESTONE·TRUCKING

Fr-.a..ot-

Jtollllnd Clo- &lt;JI lilt N-•••
Putor: Samuol Baoyo

01·-w........,

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK

Bveoiq • 7 p.m.
W - y Service · 7 p.m.

&lt;lrue

Nawlla- Cloordltllloo I"•

I

Paoor.aYdoW. I.__
, Sunday Sc:bool· 9:30 LID.

Sunday Sdoool • 9:30a.m.
~':":"',;II Lm.,6p.m.
w
Sorvi&lt;cl • 7 p.m.

Pn ar•J .
.
PaoiOr.lluorbao (Groc:o) KN
Sundly Sdroal · 9:15 un.
W«Wp • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wodnesd'ay Savioeo · 7:30p.m.

lllmilooiJ RL 325
Pula: ..... O"Ddl Mlllley
Sunday'School· 9:30 .....
Wonhip ·10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wodneocloy SeMco · 7:30p.m.

l'ulor. ltaler Wauon

...-. ..... -

Suodoy School • 9 a.m.
Wonlrip • 10 a.m.

Pille O....lllblo H""- Clowdt

.._.,., HarriacoMIIeRd. (RL143)

C - Cloordl fflllot N.-..e

-~e:-'Smiah

I_of . . . . H._Cioorcll
New Uma Rood, Rudmd
Pula: Rov. Dewey Kina
Sunday oc:bool· 9:30 Lm.
Sunday wonllip .7 p.m.
W-ypnyormoolilla·7 p.m.

Zl&amp;l Cloorcll of Clll'lal

III&lt;IMJI!niBIPIIII
P.-: S... PliDcr
Youdl PulorRidr: Harrio
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
W-.!ay Savica· 7:00p.m.

Sunday School · !Oa.m.
. Wonlip • lla.m., 7:30p.m.
W~y Savica· 7:30p.m.

Hol1ness

. _ _ ...... Cloerdo ofCIIrlot

Healll {l;Jddl.,art)

Ml-..llt
PUIOr. Deroor N...,...
Suodoy S&lt;hool- 9 a.m.
Wonlrip · IOa.m.

Colr•-

helle" a.dl
KirwburY RDad

Wedi day Sem• - 7 P.m.

Wonhip • ID-.30 a.m.
Wednosday Servicoo • 6 p.m .

a......
• Pw"""Y

'

c............

..._, Rov. 'l'llamu McOIIQa
Sunday Sc:bool· 9:30a.m.

W~·I0:30LOL.t6p.m.

Sundly Sehoal · 9:30a.m.

~Fr. BiDLylo

Ml~ Cloorcll., Clorlal

5du1111Moio
Pula:AIHaruoD
Yoouh MiQl-..BiiJ Pnzior
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip-I:U,I0:30a.m.. ?p.m.
W - y Senoica - 7 p.m.

:c: r•

¥J a..-lltiiiM=-•e

Suodoy Sdroal· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9a.m.
Thunday Sorvi&lt;cl - 6:30p.m.
Pill«: Fnllk Smilh

EpiScopJI

11•1 WllllldtCioorrdoiiOniot

P

P.-:Doour-

Cheaoer

Wonhip- IG-.30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedaaday Senoica • 7 p.m.
P

,........

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

ot11.

S U Steel
COMPLETE f{e ,e _,~!
._ ,!l~A"'""-·
""

992-3768
17 COLE • POMEROY, OHIO

IIISTAEII MADONNA UVE 1·
....7111-1111. min. 1-.tt•
7IID-IIC-VIIA 11+.

Public Sate

&amp;Auction

f

�'

••• , •

'

•

•

1

.,

Ohio

sentinel
9

(

June

1193

Friday, June 25, 1993

Pomeroy-M_
Iddleport, Ohio

The

ALLEYOOP

SNAFU® by Bnace Beattie

Wlnltd to Bu.y

NEA Cro••word Puzzle
ACROSS

......__ --a-Lllltlr"e

-

0aun1r

~-a

__

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

'lnlllrllletlr ...........

!!nl-1--

_,
. ..
..--··-I
. -.......
............
a.-.
..........
"""'too:'.,
_....,...,
............

,.,~,

4~,AMFM

w.nted to Rent

~

PHILLIP
ALDER

Oti,AtiOriP.M.

ak

~

NORTH
+AI 2

.,74

t754
+AKQ&amp;!

4 .......

I

: Colo.-lllop,

.Ji09863
t8 63
• 8 s2

..... oTHER.

WIIIIIIM te 1'1111• I • I bt11 ....

EVEN18 ARE
T'-K.iNG ·

::zut•• .
=--=-·-=~

WILL MAI&lt;.E
TMffft LIVES
fflfTmES'TtNG

..._.._~

PUICE THAT

I -

SOUTH
+KQIOSt
., A Q2

WNENTHEY

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

Employmenl Serv1cr~s

BARNEY
JUGHAIO

,.. .......... -llltlgln

thll ..

.. _...,.,..o.....

"AYOM" &amp;U.AAUII._ ,._..
time wt111 .._ You'l ..., . .
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You Alii ....,. To Wall Mont

-And

..... .

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PEANUTS

~_.,....I

..........

........, a ..... ,..

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.........
... ,...
...................

1:\.

42 . Mobile Hom..
far Rent

0141.

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..... M

111111

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torRent

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cam.f*S a
MotorHomaa

-

in a book about a clown. What do you
think of that?

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
MY ~NDF;&lt;\THEI&lt; ~....S
HE KNEW a-li21e&gt;'!Of'HER

HE: eA"re COWJM81.150M-IEP
A PIZZA. 9'-RI..CR IN

d:x.I.IMa.l6.

MerchandiN

(OYifiiUCh}

2 f:Um dlrroc:tor

- Co-ovan

3 Tropical

flower
4 Doe1n'l eKIIt

5 Type of
cHmblng

pepper
6 Per7 Anglo-Saxon
lettar
8 Aulll1n'1

"no"

9 Aa of now

+K

Q. I just read "court gesture" used

Nll~olllpo,tm.

•.

Pass
Pass
Pass

By Jeft'rey McQuain
ENTOJL traps in toils or snaret:
"Labor problems and rising cost!!
en toil the struggling company." Don't
struggle with pronouncing this olden
verb: ENTOIL is pronounced "enTOIL."

TilE WAY I ~! ,._~J:::.-1r\

1I-'~;;;~~~~~~

2t
Pass

OUR LANGUAGE

~Pmt.C.T

52 Sponlng Goocll

2t
Pass

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tor salt

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PICKEIIII'URNII\IIII

oolt:IIOWJS.MM• •

ANIJ

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STRIKE

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NO, 11M 60NNA
DROWN .

j.\A ~ '(OU'RE DOOMED,
KID! 'I'OU'~E 60NNA

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9

STROllI

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I DID!

~EV.

East

DOWN

Moviemakers use music to set the
mood for a scene, and we respond accordingly. No one hearing tense, Jawslike music expects Julie Andrews to
burst through a door singing some
cheerful tune. Only if the movie is by
someone like Mel Brooks do we expect
the unexpected.
In bridge, we know how to handle
certain suit combinations. But occasionally-a deal sneaks up and finds us
unprepared, - We do the instinctive
thing and - if the Fates (suit breaks)
are unkind - go down when an uncon·
ventional approach would have yielded a more profitable outcome .
How would you play today's spade
combination in isolation' What about
within the confines of this deal? West
starts with three top diamonds against
your lour-spade contract.
South thought he saw 11 easy tricks:
. i( J y
VBMD
K E V D
live spades, one heart and five clubs. 'DNDZX
And to try to accommodate jack·
XJY'ZD
ZDBPPX
fourth of spades in the East hand, AEPV,
South ruffed the third diamond, cashed
OJNDP.'
I
the spade king and played a spade to. _ V B M E o T
dummy's ace.
_
ZELPDX
PIJKK •
However, when East dl_scarded on (lEZDSKJZ)
the second round of trumps, suddenly PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Dance Is the moat Immediate of .,y e•pertenc:e.
the contract perished. Whether South 1 can have an Idea - booml I do II." - Twyla Tharp.
tried the heart finesse or played on
clubs, he was down. ·
"Sorry, partner, • said South. "I sup! should have ducked the first
I tn1mp to East.•
"I
think that's best," replied
North. "Why not casb the K·Q of
spades in your hand? U they break 3-2,
draw the last trump and _claim an
SULYMA
overtrick. But if either opponent dis•
1
cards, play on clubs. The spade ace is
the entry to the rest of dummy's clubs,
and you win 10 tricks. •

I

6

Nortb

Ha1rt
311 College dag.

67 Habrew lettar

In fancy-dress
costume ·

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West

Opening lead:

I WARNED YOU ABOUT
WEARIN' THAT THING
IN MY SCHOOLHOUSE!!

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

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33 Genttln for
34 AttamaHvo
wOfd
35 Bone
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4 Doll IIIOuM
tutllor
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12 Above (poet.l
13 ShlbiiY
14 LubriCIII
Gln'lllny
15 RIH
.
• 51 Snoall bird
17 Drovtln 1
53 Downy duck
troup
55ExcUMt
111 Dtlloll
58 Art pilary
21 Aunt In Spain
61 Vlnllga cer
22 Jtlol IIIII
62 Attemptecl
24DrdlnMtCe
84 Drug•ac,•
26 Alautian
65 A malll
ISland
66 FtrHit lfiOII
211 Person on
In diHrl

"one"

tJ2

ttf'TURN
HOM I!!!

'I went to look like I have • lot of money, etKI
1went to look like I've hid it 1 long time. •

~~Paid:
All Old U.l.
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48 Aoomln
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YIJM liAL..I.f'&gt;,.~ ...

- A. I think the book needs a proof·
reader. A clownish person may be considered a •court jester," referring to
the clown or fool in a royal court.
!These similar nouns are not homophones: JESTER is pronounced "JEStur," and GESTURE is pronounced
"JES-chur.") If you were to wave at
somebody from a jury box, perhaps
that wave would be a "court gesture,"
but only a "court jester" acts like a
clown in front of a judge.

AND- WHEN THe PI.ACe
F-AII..EJ:l. HE"Ta:IK UP 'THE

SEA!74.RING- LIFE:.

1I I I I

I,
2

FINKE

I I' I I I

A friend and I sat on a park
bench watching some children
piaying. "One reason kids are
_ _ _ _ _ _ ::, so happy: my companion
.---------...:,.;, observed, "is that they don't
E N 0 1 0 I
j have to worry about their
WU 0 E N

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.
.
.
_
.
.
bv f.tli r-g in the missing words
L...L.-L.......L......JL.......I..--' you de11elop from step No . 3 belo'f.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
' ·2 ,,
Entice • Showy · Gauze - Invite • VOICE
. After my roommate auditioned for the college musical
f heard the director mumble that if she wanted to make
- a ltvmg by stngong she would have to get rid of her
"':VOICE!
-

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AS!J"RO~ORAPH

which sjgns are rOmantically perfect for
Mail $2 and a long. sell -addr_assed.
slamped envelope 10 Malchmaker. c/o lhis
newspaper. P.O. Box 4465. New York.
,
NY
t0163.
BERNICE
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22} Be wary of inciina· ·
BEDEOSOL lions towards unrealistic thinki ng today.
You could run the gambit lrom wishful
expectations to a defeatist attitude.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Take with a
grain of salt business proposals offered
you by others today. TM presenter's intentions might be honorable. but his/her deal
could be flimsy.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The Impression
you'll make on others today will not be a
soturday, Juno 2e. 1883
good one if you·r~ so self-absorbed in your
own interests that you·re oblivious to theirs.
Conditions that have boon re stricting you SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) ll's best lo should beg1n to dissipate very soon . Your
new freedom and mobollly will substantially understale your accornplishmem Ied ay
1oniMn.ce
..
'
ess In sev· than to have friends think you 're exaggerat1·"
_. your posslbiltly lor succ
ing or being boaslful. In fact the less you
cntical areas.
. say the better
CANCI:~ {Juno 21·July 22) Persons wrlh SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·0oc 21) Jusl
1 ed will tolerate a lot of
·
•
·
you re lnV0\1
because you ·re able to alford something
shortcomings today. with lhe excep· today don'l assume everyone else can as
lion of selfishness. If you're too self-sarv· well Asensit1ve friend won't react kindly if
lng, rl's an automatic turn-off. Know where you -calf his/her lack 10 tht! attention of olhIO took tor romance and you'll lind II. The
Astro·Graph Matchmaker 1nstanlly reveals ers.
'
yo~ .

BUIIIIMI

Opponunlly

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CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19} Don'l del·
.agate your authority today to someone who
might not have your best interest at heart
Whal is omportant to you might not be ol
significance to this person .
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20.Fob. 19} In order lo
gel associales 10 help you today. you mighl
make some rather lavish promises .
Remember. others will take your commit,
ments ser:iou!:;ly. e\len if you don't.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20} II you caler lo
your exlravaganl whims today and spend
more than you should, your day of reckon Ing might come about much sooner lhan
you think,
ARIES {March 21·Aprif 19) Be fair wilh the
your family .and loved ones today regarding
your expeclations ol them . Unreasonable
demands may be met with anger and resis·
tances .
TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20) Cril iclzing
another's behavior could backfire on you
loday. You mlghl be the one branded lhe
disruptive influence and shown the door.
GEMINI (llay 21·June 20) Be e&lt;tremely
careful in both your business and personal
financial affeirs today. II you do things In a
slipshod manner , there 's a chance you
mi(lhl s~ffer a severe toss .

,,

l

�0

.

By
The
Bend
.
Myers.
Racme - Mllrie Bush, Charles
James and William Hobaclc.
·. Commuoity Calendar Items
Long Bottom -Laura Hawley, appeiU" two days before aa efe!!t
Bruce Hawley, Lawrence Driggs, and the day of tlult event. Items
Paula Wood and Oris Smith.
must be received well iD advance
Serving the canteen were the to IIIISure pubUcation In the calRacine United Methodist Women.
endiU".
RSVP volunteers included Dorothy
FRIDAY ·
Long, Joan Sorden, Mary Nease,
CHESHIRE • Crusade for Christ
Lula Hampton, Peggy Harris,
Emma Clatworthy, Golda Freder- revival through Saturday 8l 7 p.m.
ick, Jean Nease, Joyce Hoback, nightly . Different singers and
Jack Sorden, William Hoback, Flo- speakers nightly. Spons&lt;?red by
rence Richards, Helen Bodimer, Meigs Gallia ~ c~bes CruGerald Wildermuth, Beulah Ward sade for ChriSL ,Public mvtled.
and Jane BtQwn.
POMEROY - Revival at Full
Gospel Lighthouse will be held
through Sunday at 7:30 p.m. night·

by Bob Hoeflich

Mr. and Mrs. Toll\ Ables of
Pomeroy are still jaunting and
when they jaunt, they jaunt!
They've returned home from a
two week lrip to Puerto Rico where
they visited their son-in-law and
daughter, Agustin and Carolyn
Montanez and their grandson,
Shawn, in Areciba, and their grandson and his wife, Agustin, Jr., and
Mercedes and their son, Agustin In
Mon1anez, in San Juan.
While in San Juan, Mr. and Mrs.
Ables attended the graduation of
Agustin, Jr., from the Inter-American College of Law. fie is a 1986
graduate of Ohio University and is
employed with a law rmn in San
Juan. His wife, Mercedes, is also a
.San Juan lawyer. Agustin will take
the bar examination in September.
During their trip, the Ables
spent a weekend at the Condado
Plaza Hotel and Casino in San Juan
while Agustin and Carolyn attended a Rotary Club Convention.
Pomeroy Councilman John
Blaettnar has come upon some
. bricks which are inscribed "P. and
M. Block Co.". If anyone knows
the n11me of the company and
which produced the brick and
maybe some background, please
telephone John.
•
Karen Thorne, Nancy Cole,
Herman Carson. Jacqui Jones,
Mike SimmOQs, Roy Cole and Jean
Leonard, all of the Coolville area,
and Martha Elliott, Alfred, made
up a panel to discuss a program for
preserving the clean envuonment
of the area when the Modern
Woodmen of America, Camp
10900, held a picnic at Hocking
River Campground in Coolville.
It was certainly a timely lOJliC
and particularly for the Coolville

Property transfers
Compiled by:
Emmogene Hamilton
Recorder, Meigs County, Obio

area. They've been having some
problems out there, you know.
The serious subject, however,
didn't dampen the spirits of everyone for having a ¥ood time at the
picnic which earned out a theme,
"Welcome to Summertime". Dick
Gillian Milford Griffin and Ralph
Hender'son, all of Coolville, led the
pledge and panel members represented the Coolville Concerned
Citizens Assn. Marjorie Malone, ·
Coolville, led group singing and
prizes in a drawing went to Paul
McPherson and Wilma Gilbert
Weaver both of Coolville.
Next' biggie for the camp is the
annual July 4th celebration which
will be on Sunday, July 4, at 12:30
' p.m., again at lhe Hocking River
Campground. Those attending are
to take a covered dish or dessert,
their own table service and an attitude to re8lly enjoy the day. Some
of the activities will include soft·
ball, volley ball, fishing and a program of patriotic readings and
songs.

Poet's
Comer

REEDSVILI:.E - Whaley family
reunion, Sunday, FCJ"ked Run Park.
Bring a covered dish and table service.

REEDSVll.LE - Eastern Super
Weckend, sponsOred by the Ell$tem
AthletiC Boosters, will be Saturday
and Sunday beginning at 9 a.m.
There will be a yard sale, bake sale,
concession stand, hoop shoot,
games, softball and baseball tourMILLFIELD - The Oldies But naments.
Goodies Dance Club will hold a
MILLFIELD • There will be a
by Josephine Tyree, Middleport
dance Friday from 8-11 p.m. at the
and square dance Saturday
round
Russell Buildin$ in Millfield.
from
8-11
p.m. at the Russell
My heart grows weaker,
Music will be proVIded by Off Seain
Millfield.
Music will be
Building
No love for which to feed.
sons."
provided
by
Out
of
the
Blue. John
My heart grows tougher
Russell
will
be
the
caller.
So hurt no one can see
BAS HAN • There will be an ice
My heart more sad,
cream social at the Bashan Fire
With each IOfM!IY day !hal passes House on Friday beginning at 5 : RUTLAND - J ,W. Eskew
by
. p.m. sponsored_by the ladies _auxil- reunion will be Saturday at noon at
Means more lonely nights I will iary. There wdl be sandwiches, Fort Meigs in Rutland. Bring a
have had
sloppy joes, hot dogs, hot SBIJSI!8e covered dish.
I move here and there, hoping
and 10 flavors of homemade 1ce
REEDSVll.LE • Easttm Athlet·
Each move not be so bad.
cream as well as pie, coffee and
ic
Boosters will have a yard sale
But my heart says not to IIUSI
pop. Entertainment will be providSaturday
and ~~y during S!IJ?Cr
A friend to share
ed by Specks of Bluegrass.
Weekend fesUvtbes. Any fam1bes
The pain of loneliness is mine to
bare
ROCK SPRINGS • Meigs wanting to donate items may leave
The darkness may hide the tears County Pomon~ OranJ!e offic~rs them at the school or call Jill
· Onmyface
will have pracuce for mspecuon Hol.ter at949-2603'for pickup.
·But on a night so lonely
Friday at 7 p.m. at the Rock
The Trinity Church Youth
When no one sees, the tears
Springs Grange Hall. All officers
Group and guests will meet at tile
Do flow and I wonder
at~CDd.
Why?

about a lot of tile good stuff.
I was in Craw's recently when I
met a lady carrying a birthday cake
loaded on top witll lighted candles.
A question brought out lhat. the
cake was in observance of lhe 90th
birthday Qf Mrs. E. F. (Marie)
Robinson of Pomeroy and the lady
carrying the cake to Marie's dinner
table was a granddaughter. Have
you ever seen 90 lighted candles on
a birthday cake? Makes for a lot of
light.

I've had this dream since I've
been fourteen, heading to
Nashville, Tennesee
Where farile and fortune would
await for me ·
It's my dream I've always want·
ed to see

I've always wanted to be on that
stage for the world to hear me as I
played
And the bright love of my farniNow we're getting charts to . ly shining on me
apparently help us comprehend
It's my dream I've always wantPresident Clinton' s family tree. ed to see
Enough, already. Do keep smiling.
t We're here on the highway and
driving along trying to finish by
HMC plans picnic
golden song
Well a few more verses a9d a
The Ohio Valley Ostomy
state
line to go
Association will hold their
Before
I'll know if my dream
annual picnic June 27 at 1:30
will
tum
gold
p.m. in the French Five Hundred
Room of Holzer Medical CenWe arrived in Nashville and
ter. Please bring a covered dish.
hour
ago and we headed for
·
Table service and beverages will
The
Opry
to
catch
the
first
show
provided.
Well our hearts roared with
Ostomates, their families,
excitement
as we walked through.
friends and interested persons
The
doors
it just kept a poundare invited to attend. Billy
ing and crying for more
Ward's band wiD provide entertainment. For more information,
Lord it praised the spirit in me
please call Phyllis Brown, R.N.,
that night
C.E.T.N., HMC Enterostomal
And I played as proud as an
Therapy Nurse at 446-5080 or
Eagle in flight
446-5313.
And the Opry started shouting
and my family for more
As my Golden dream streamed
to the floor
-

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBUC N011CE
BID SPECIFICA110NS

IN THE COIIIMO'I PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS

FOR 188\E 2 PROJECT IN

SAUIBURY TOWNSHIP,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Bid pl'opo..ta lor •t work
claoarlbed herein will be
received by tho &amp;o.rd of
Truota.. of Sallobury
Townohlp In lha ofllco of tho
clark, 41S Hookor StrMt,
Middleport, Ohio until 4:00
P.M. on lhe 5th day of July
11113. Tho bide will be
opened on tho 5th diiY of
July ond rood aloud for lhe
lolowlng lob:
• T-1 115 (Belloy Run Rood)
SR-124 or IA-143
Each bidder muot file a
10% parformanao bond at
the time of tho bidding and
the ouccoaolul bidder muat
file a 100% parlonnanca
bond. A lotiM' •llibllahlng
cartlllad II no of crocllt, In tho
obot.d amount, from a bmk
doing bualna.. willlln tho
ocop• of Ohlcl Bonking
lowo will be accaplod oa
oomplylng wllh tho bonclng

.

COUNTY, OHIO

BANK ONE, ATHENS. NA
·
·
Plolntlfl

vs

CARLA SIIITH, et ...
Dafel\dlllto
C.. No. D CY-141
N011CE BY PUBUCAllON
TO: THE I.INKNOWN Helra,
Next of Kin, o.vta-.
~. Adminlelntol'll,
Ex-ton, Paroonal

Aapt'.oniiiNoo, and
Aulgno ol Dollie L. Smith,

,,..._.nd

O.CIII ...

oddr••- unknown.

Prohibition Party formed in 1874
· in Gallia County ~ James Sands ~ B~6

Page B~l

Dr. Mark Brown, wife return to Ohio
Beat of the Bend - Bob Hoeflich - B-6

Vol. 28, No. 11
Copyrighted 1113

RACINE ~ Southern Local
Board of Education will meet Monday at?'p.m. at the high school.
SYRACUSE • Infant and preschooler aquatic program at London Pool 7-8 p.m. through July 9.
For more information, call 992·
9909. $15 fee.

creta and '1.0 InCh 404 ••
phalt aoncnlll In tho fOllow·
lngareao: North a-nd ~va.
lrolll norlhirn corporadon
ilmlto .aulh 10 Mil StrOOIInd
IIIU Sltaolll'om So.-Thlrd Aw.
-ttothomunlalpllparking
laL All pe-•11 .-vod
eholl be tho~ of ...
vw.go of M laporL
. Engln•rlng aallmolo:
$83,1110.
A bid Ca':."nty, u , .
quirod by
on t 53.54 of
the Ravllod Coda of Ohio,
ehall -peny - " propo..l eubmltllld, ae lollowa:
1I A Cartlflod Chock,
Clehlar'o Chack, or Lottar of
Credit aqull to 10 .,.._.~of
tho bid. A latter of Credit
mey be rev-* only by tho
own• .. Upon onlllrlng Into •
contract with tho ownw, tho
canVIIDIOr muot than ftla 1
bond for the amount of lha
aonln!OI, 111d tho ohoak or
Loner of Credit will than be

port, Olllo."
Tho ,..,..,.. the
rig hi to raloct any or all bide
eubmln.d, and waive any
lrraguiartd...
Fred Hoffman, Mayor .
VIllage of Middleport
(6) 25,(7) 2, I 3TC

. PubliC Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
The Vinton County
Nllllonol Bank,
PlolntiH
Yl•

Donn Ia R. Gllletla, at II.,

SPACE SHU1TLE CREW -The crew or
Space Shuttle Mission STS-54 are (L-R) LCdr.
Mario Runco Jr. (USN), Col. Jolin H. Cuper(USAF), Lt. Col. ~aid R. Moaagle (USAF),
Lt. Col. SUSIIJI J, Helms (USAF) aad Greaory J,

HIU"INtaall. Lt. CCII. HeiJDJ will be guest speaker
duriac· tile GaiiJOIII River Rrecrutlon Festival's JuiJ' l activities In the city pnk. (File ·

1---------

BJ' KEVIN PINSON
and CHARLENE HOEPUCH
:rii"es-~ntlnel Stair .
GAU.IPOLIS - The Ku Klux
Klan's racial rhetoric was for the
most part wasted on crowds gathered Saturday afternoon outside the
Gallia County and Meigs County

courthouses.

· Most of the Klansmen's comments were lost in the shouts and .
jeers from onlookers I who
denounced the group's stance.
The Pomeroy crowd topped 400
· while the Gallipolis ·crowd was
only a little more than 80. The
KKK met in Gallipolis at 1 p.m.
and then traveled to Pomeroy for a
3 p.m. rally.

I'

..;1

.
0

By CHERYL KULAGA,
Times-Sentinel Statr
.GALLIPOLIS - A parade and
fireworks will highlight the 28th
annual River Recreation Festival
July 2 through 4 on the river fronL
This year's theme is "Gallia
County Salutes the Space Program"
with various NASA e~thibits and
speakers throughout the weekend.
Festivities start on Friday July 2
"McDonald's Day" at 10 a.m. with
French Art Colony Youtb Exhibits
in the park until 3 p.m_, and the
opening· of the French Art Gallery
which -has viewing hours unti1"5
p.m. Our House Museum tours will
also start at 10 a.m. with Interpreter ·
Barbara Kemper and continue until

'5p.m.
· Activities starting at noon
include the opening of the NASA
exhibits and speaker which runs
until 4 p.m. and reopens at 5 to 9
p.m., youth games until 5:30 p.m.,
carnival games until 9 p.m. and the
1993 Holzct Baby Olympics.
The Ronald McDonald Magic
Show can be seen at 12:45 p.m.
and 3:45 p.m.
·
From 12:45 to 3:45 there will he
Terrapin races, a frog jumping co.ntest and sack races sponsored by
the Gallipolis Lions Oub.
Children will have a chance to
sliow their art skills at·the Children's Art Activities in the
Park/French Art Golony from I to

).

3 p.m.

Other afternoon events include
story telling by Dough Boy with
Kristi Eblin at 2 p.m., water balloon toSs at 4:1S p.m., flying disc:
golf at 5 p.m., and Gallia Academy
High School Madrigals at 6 p.m.
l!vening cm:monies stan. 6:45
with Master of Ceremonies Skip
Logan followed by the 28th annual
River Recreation Queen Pageant
The highlight of the entertainment on Friday is Annex which
plays at 8:30.
From I 0: 1S to midnight there
will be a lecn dance under the stars
on Boulevard des Francias and a
light and video sho'!"' with DJ
Continued, on A~l

---

Fair to have 911 exhibit

4

110111=100

Middleport officials list July'! activities

-r

15 Sactlon 141 Pogoo
A Uullimoclllltna. MW pI per

..

uu

W.vdAdl

..

Weather. ---..------..A-1

KI8n S)ieakers condemned Commuilism and drug abuse and
blamed minorities for many of the
Uniied Siates' economical and
social problems.
They also voiced support for
segregation and urged whites to
band together, "rise up again," and
make the Uniled States into another
Somalia where the blacks arc
"dying in the streets.•
At both sites, Klansmen spoke
from the cordoned-off steps of the
cotinhouses. The buildings were
roped off by yellow tape witll officers watching the perimeter.
~......
"' '
The crowds stood mostly on the
sidewalks and in the SlfeelS, which
.;..;..-•- ,. ~:.;.~
. had been blocked off for the rallies.
. house parklDg lot moments before a Ku' Klwr
STANDING READY- Law enforcement
At one point during the GallipoKlan rally began. (Times-Sentinel photo bJ'
officers,
some
wearing
riot
gear,-stand
ready
lis rally, a Klansmen walked down
KeviD Pinson)
Saturday
afternoon
iD
the
GaiDa
County
Courtto the grassy area in front of the
sidewalk to respond to comments
from one section of the crowd.
Police officers and deputies moved
him back up the steps when tensions began to rise, however. ·
Only two of the approximately ·
that elaborate.
ing information sys:em:
By JAMES LONG
25 Klan members spoke at the
"ItS
not
that
different
than
what
Currend'f, the 911 comrnittec is ·
Tribune News Stair
rally, but the other Klansmen supGALLIPOLIS - The special they may"'see at Radio Shack as far taekling the queition' of What fil'nd
paned the speakers with cheers, committee worldng to bring 911 to as the equipment In front of you is of computer system the county
applause and Nazi saluteS.
Gallia County will display a work- concerned." he said. "'ts the data needs.
Conflict at the rallies never ing model of the emer~ency phone handling ability that's the 'key to iL
"It's kind of like· buying any
Bailey's committee, specially computer system: you can buy difescalated above angry shouting, system 11 the county fBII, according
designed by the Gallia County ferent programs depending on what
however,lllld Gallia County Sheriff to a committee leader.
James D. Taylor praised the crowd
The exhibit is tentatively sched· Board of Commissionen to contain you want," Bailey said.
for its self control. He added that uled to run Aua. 5-6 at the fair. both emergency set¥ice workers
He added that the commiuee has
local law enforcement agencies Bob Bailey, director of the Gallia and community members, has been had to consider the needs of all the
were braced for the wQrSt.
County Emergency Medical Ser- meeting for a year-and-a-half. The different organizations that would
"We had enough assistance !hal vice and ~ent of the commit- 911 system is expected to be in use the information 911 offerswe could have handled anything tee, said 11 is designed to educate place sometime in 1994.
and these are not just emergency
we came up against." he said.
"It's
difficult
to
progress
in
organizations.
Utility companies
the public about the capabilities of
Officers were stationed at all 911.
leaps and bounds because tllere are benefit from 911 100 because peopoints around the sites of the ral"We're trying to get the peop~ so manr facets to the project,. he ple report problems like water
lies, as well u . on the rooftops of to understand about 9.11 and what 11 said. " anticipate that slow but leaks as well as fires and accidents.
steady progress wiD continue."
nearby buildiJw where video cam- can do for them," he said.
When It reaches a decision on
eras recorded die events.
Among
the
committee's
m~or
the
kind of system the county
When a caller reaches 911, it
No arrests were made, although displays instantly the location and considerations are how to fund 911, needs, which Bailey hopes will be
authorities temporarily -detained utility companies of the struc~ where to store it and how to inte· early this fall, the commitiOO will
two vehicles in the Gallia County from where the call .was made, as grate. it with the the county's exist·
Continued on A-2
Courthouae parking loL
well 11 any special considerations
A handaun - found in one of or potential obstacles relevant to
the vehicles and fireworks were . emeraency service personnel.
found in the other.
Afthou11h 911 provides emerContlaued nn A·l
JeDCY semce personnel with these
vital sradlllics about callers who are
in trouble, Bailey said the equipCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A Senate-House .conference com·
. mittee reached an agreement Saturday on a record, $30.9 billion
ment liself does not appear to be
budget that the members said is balanced and coatalns no new

KLANSMAN REACTS - An unidentified Grand Dragon of
the Ku Klux Kllln ae~tares at tbe crowd Saturday near the the
Gallia County Courthouse Ia ruction to enmmeata shouted by
onlookers. (Times-Sentinel photo by Kevin Pinson)

,......___

)
)•

Sports...................... - ....Cl-8

:Klan rallies ,loud, but peaceful

Rutland ox
roast set July 5

.. - ..

Datbi ..- -.. - - -....A-7
Editorai.-.........-----.A6

' J!ltoto) .

Names in
the.news

Darst reunion to be held

JD~7

, Parade, fireworks will
highlight Gallipolis' 28th
River Recreation Festival

SYRACUSE • Swimming
lessons at London Pool will be
Monday through July 9. David
Deem is instructor. Call 992-9909
to register or for information.

O.londanto
You ora hereby nallllod
c.. No. tz cv 272
lhot you hw• .,_, nomad
Purouont to en Orclar of
Dolondanto In ologll oallon
Sola from tho Malga County
antlllod Bonk One, Athano,
Common Pia•• Court, I will
NA, vo. C.lo Smith, at ol.
after lor · oolo at public
Thio action hoo boon
auction a1 tho lronl etope of
oooignocl Cue Ita. 113-CV·
th• Courthauae of Maigo ·
141 and II pending In tho
County, Pomeroy, Ohio on
Common Pla01 Court of
tho 23rd day ol July, 111113,
Uelgo County, Ohio, Court
11 10:00 A.M. tho following
doocflbocl rail _ _,
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
r.turned 1o the euccueful
45761.
Sit~ata in lh• r-n•hlp of
Tho object of t~o and unouaaooolul blcldare Columbia, County ol Maigo
Complaint Ia judgment when lha oontroat ie ••• and Slala al Ohio:
requlrementa.
Baainnlng lor raferMaa at
Ao a praroqulolte lor agolnot tho De..,donbo In culad.
or
the lnteraection of the
bidding, only certified the aum of $1,760.11, wllh
2) A Bond for tho full center ol Slate Aauta No.
mlnorlly bualna.. ontor· tntar•llh-n at a rota of
pri.. conlrectoro that •• 53.34 par ...,, from May 10, omountoflhlabld. T h o - 143 ond Rood No. 5; being
qualified ODOT BIDDERS 1813, ond aootl of thio will ratoin tho bond of tho lho Narthw•t earner al •
will be conolderod for tho .atlon; th,. thallortgago be a• ueful bidder .but tho .75 oora treat awned by
foraaloo•d and that tho wiH ratum tho bond of Lauro P. Krabo, being Parcel
roourleclng work.
Tho euccoaeful ean-r Ilona and/or intarnlo In or -h uno-elul . bidder Thr.. ·(3) doocrlboclln Daod
inay be r.qulrocl to turnleh on aold pl'oporty, if any, IJa altar 1 canttoct h11 boot) Book 211; Pogo 251; thanaa
South 5I deg. 15' ...t
any lab work • required by m•roholled and tho root aucutod.
Bldclaro ora required to obout 266.5 leat along the
tho llolp County Engln••· aobolo quieted and aold
The envelope aonloinlng prop•rty oald in the comply with tho Minority oontar at Slala Route No.
tho bid muot be marked farealoaura action and all Bueln•o Enterprl• (IIBE) 143 lo a ot•l pin; thence
"Roourfooing l. . ua 2 amounto duo PlolniiH be raqulremanlo eat foJth In Bauth"33 dog. Wool 126.5
Project". Bid opaallloolloll• paid lrom tho procaoclo of Section 184.07 of the Ohio ,_t to a hodge fanaa an 1M
may be picked up at the tho aalo, cools end ouch Ravlood Coda, end Aula 164- South line al the eold .75
Sollabury Townohlp Clark'e other relief aa may be 1-32 altho Ohio Admlnlolro• ocr• tract to • oteoi rod;
dveCode.ln pert, lhle moan• thence North 65 dog. Wool
' That's when I woke up to a Olfloo, 413 Haoker llr..t, n_..ry and proper.
You are horlby required lhltony bld.W, 10 th. .xtont 2115 1..1 elong tho hodge
Mtclcloport,
Ohio.
knock on my door
The 8-d al Truat.a of to anawar tho Complaint that h oubcanVIIOio work, lance to tho conl8r of Rood
It was an invitation to Nashville. Salisbury
LOS ANGELES (AP) - "BevTownohip, lhip within twenty-eight (21) ahollowordoubMnllnCIIIO No.5; lhonce North 32 dog.
erly Hills, 90210" bad boy Luke
County, Ohio reeorva tho dayo after th• tat Clt1lllod Minority BuoiMoo E101 153 loot elong the
right to oacapt or rajact any publication ol thia nallca EnterprloM In on oggi'Oiflllo cantor at Rood No. 5, to
Perry has asked the city for pe_rmislhln place of begin nlng,
or
all bido ondlar any pl!fl which .will be publlohod dollar wluo of no sion to keep three potbellied p1gs.
once a w. .k for alx (I) ftvaparaont(5%)ollhlprlmo containing .53 ocroa, more
lher110f
and
wil.
occapt
tho
"He's applying for this permit
beat bid lor the Intended euc-llva w..... Tho loot aonlroat. Bid.._ praou,. or Ina, oftor exaopdng all
so he can keep his pigs, his petS, at
publication wHI be IIIOda on . mont oothllloo,to tho aKllnt logol rlghte-ol-woy and
purpoll&amp;
his house," Leegie Parker, the real
tho
11th day of July, 1113, thalh ,_.,.ma111fatoondl ooMmento of record.
.
Approved By:
Thli rul utota baing tho
estate agent who sold Perry his
Robert H. E-. P£., P.S., and tho twenty-eight (28) or - olcoo, ehaU -un In
lhiae County Engln- dayo for onowaring will tho - r d of p10011ramant a•m• roal aabota that woa
suburban Tarzana home, told the
Rlch•d Solley, Clerk commence on that clot.. In aonlrocto to Cartlllod lllnor• excepted from the dood
Los Angeles Times this week.
Boord of TN•- ol oaoa of your folluro to lly lualn•• En..,._ In oonvoyoc1 by Lauro P. Krabo
.
The
Rutland
Volunteer
Fire
Ms. Parker filed the permit on
Sollobllry Townohlp anowo-r or atherwlao on •nragata dollar vallua of to Lillie Aupa by dood dot.d
Department will hold its annual ox
behalf of the star.
roapond •• required by the nolouthan-parconi(Z%) October 31, 11161 and
(I) 18, 25, 2tC
Potbellied pigs m~y be kept in roast on July 5.
recorded in Val. 240, Pogo
Ohio Aut.. al Civil of tho prlml cantriCL
The day will begin with a
All controctoro end eub- 1021, an the Daod AIIGordo,
p'roceduro, ludgmanl by
Los Angeles only w1th a spec1al
parade at 9:30 a.m. with line-up at
Public Notice
daleult will bo rendered aontreciOralinlolvodwllhtho Moiga County, Ohio, ol
permit.
·
agolnot you for tho relief praltct wUI, to lila oxlllnt which 111loronce Ia hereby
9 a.m. at Depot Street in Rutland.
Ohio prod- modo.
PUBLIC tEAAI'tCI . clamondod in tho CompllinL pnotiaabla
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actor
Events taking place will include
ucta,motorlole,MrVIaae,llld
Excepting oil coal and
Doted
thlo
7th
day
of
Tho
Vllltlp
of
lyroau
..
Danny Glover was a pilot in music by Dec and Dallas, kids'
labor
In
tho
IMplamontellon
alh•
mineral roaorvollano
JIUIO,IIMI3.
hold 1111 _.... Bldglt
"BAT-21" and a detective in the games, other games. A garden trac- wll
lorry
E.
of
their
prolaot.
Addlllanolly,
end
Ill
lollot, If any, on
at tho municipal
.
Clerk of Court aonlrociOr
"Lethal Weapon" movies, but he ior pull will be held at noon and a Hearing
wllh rocard In the Recorder'•
Bulldlnll on Julr 1:1, 1-. al
t Op- ·Offlaa; Molge County, Ohio.
lhigo County, Ohio the Equal Em
says his most important role is · celebrity.auction will take place at 7:10 p.lli. All lntarHtad
Lui prior oanvayonoa:
portunlty raqul-to of
· helping kids.
8 p.m. w11h fiieworlcs at 10 p.m.
invited. Tho (I) 11, II, 25;
Ohio
Admlnlotrotlva
Code
\loluma
327, PlfiO 83, Melgo
(7)
2,
I,
11,1to
Glover takes several weeks off
Food will be served all day IMidgal wlllla •wlllo~la for
Chaptor 123,tha OoWfiiOI''• County Deed Aoaordo.
pulllla_iMpUIIon
July,
14,
each year to speak to the nation's including beef sandwiches, hot
Public Notice
Exoautlve0rderof1t72,1nd
Sold rul oobolo iocotad
11, 11, II, 1111, at the
youth on the dangers of smoking. dogs, sloppy joes, ice cream, snow ....
EXIIGUIIw
Ordw
at:
21531 St. At. 143,
Qovarnor'e
lolpaiBulldng.
ADVERTIIEIIENT
" It's just one of those issues I feel cones, cotton candy and popcorn.
114-1 ehaU be 11111uired.
Albany, Ohio 45710.
POR 1108
Blddorellluatoornplywlth
Tho property opproloocl
very strongly about," Glover told . Further information on any of
Ctark-rr..•ue
2
PROJECT
prr;ollng
wage
l'lllo
on
lor
S1,161.00 llld cannot be
tho
The Wave Newspaper Group.
these events may be obtained by (I) 21, 110
...... bldo will ... ,.. publlo Improvement• In oold tar I•• than ''• ( - ·
·
contacting the Rutland Fire Depart·
ollvod by tho VIllage of llld- lltlga County, Ohio, • dee thlrda) of the opprolo'd
mentor an auxiliary member.
dl•part •• lhe afftoe of dw lllftllnadby11iaQhlo O..rt- voluL
Mayor, m RoM tlnat,llld- lnont ollllllu8lrlalltlldana.
The Rutland Volunteer Fire ,..... ..... ~Ilion
Torma al Sole: 10% oooh
olopart,Ohlo417•,.,tii:GG
The Darst Family will hold a Department will hold a celebrity
No b..._
wllhdr8w · or oarUIIad chock, cloy ol
Thay
o'alodlp.M.IIondoy,July12, hie bid wllhln olxty(IO) dlya oola and bel once on
reunion for the descendants of the auction in conjunction with the
;-,'1,1.
1-llld
than II tho olllaa of oftar tho 1ctull dote at open- dol Ivery of dud.
late Rev. Budd and Gertie Darst. annual ox roast on July S at 8 p.m. ·
tho
Mayor
tho bldl will be lng ~f.
-.=··
......
JoHrey L. Slmmono/
'~--:-':;;l :·-~ ,·, ".
The reunion wiU be held 1une 27 at Items will be available &amp;om Garth ·
publicly _.... ond -d
. ~.__;· '- ..J.I.·";"'-AI bide lhllllla properly H. Robart Grillo .
• --;::::.:t::l, ,- _-. - - •• J r
the Kanauga State Park, Kanauga Brooks, Alan Jackson, Brooks and
• '.,
. ,_......I I,'
8laud for Ilia following:
elgnocl by 1111111horfaod ,.P. A~ lor Plllndif
__.;; '.'.~r.
' :.' ...... r:'·,t,..
Nanh teaand Aw, piiiJo ..,._..,. of lha llldclar.
from 10 a.m.·2 p.m. All family Dunn, Pam Tillis, Sawyer Brown,
VInton Caunly Notlonll
.. ·,; ...... L:..,;
lng 111411 ..-.tlolng.
AI bide e~~~~~· be ...... Bon11
members are welcome. Please Aaron Tippon, Billy Dean, Billy
,..·~-\.~
~--.._~"Cr
'
Tlle~~ aludnpa,.. end plllnly merklll "Norrh
...............
,..... .. . ••
JIIIIOO M. loullby,
bring a covered dish. For more Ray Cyrus, Forrester Sisters, BelJ..i.
.-..
,-~
111111t Ilion
IIIII tho laying lnand Ave. Pllllln! and
Molga
County
Shlrifl
information call 367-7557 after 5 lamy Brothers, Ricky Van Shelton
of 1.6 ln. 2 eiPIJait can- Roewfoointl Pnl ar;llld•• (I) 11, 25; (7) 2, '· It, 3tc
p.m.
and others.

r....... ..

.........._. . __

Mlddleport-Pomeroy~alllpolla-Polnt Pleasant, June 27, 1993

MONDAY
P0MEROY • The Meigs County Veterans Service Commisisl:!n
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. m
the Veterans Service Office in
Pomeroy.

PubUc Notice

a,.._,

4long tbe nver ""-""'"81·8
Busillfti!Fil'III...""-"".Dl-8
c~

POMEROY - There will be a
12-step AA meeting Sunday at 7
p.m. at The Locomotion building,
on Mechanic Street in Pomeroy.

Public Notice

1--------

Inside

RACINE -' Descendants of
Albert and Eliza Hill, family
reunion, Star Mill Park, Racine.
Covered dish dinner at 1 p.m.

LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full
Gospel Church i~ Long B_otl!Jm
will have preachmg and smgmg
Friday at 7 p.m. witb local singers.
Pastor Steve Reed inviteS the public. Fellowship will follow.

My Golden Dream ·
By Gilbert L. Fitzwater Jr ..

l'l'llh

Major League baseball results - C-1

SUNDAY
NEW HAYEN • Descendants of
Sam and Melvina Birchfield, family reunion, Sunday, New Haven
Park. Basket dinner at noon. Call
Alva Luckeydoo, 882-2090 for
inCarnation.

Loneliness

l keep forgetting to tell you

Daniel A. Blazer, R/W, to Leading Creek Conservancy Dist., Rutland.
Harold H. Blackston, Helen E.
Blackston, R/W, to Leading Creek
Conservancy Dist., Salisbury.
Rose of Sharon Holiness
Church, R/W, to Leading Creek
Conservancy Dist., Rutland.
George Earold Dean, dec' d, to
June Bryan, Lewis H. Morris,
steve Morris, Paul Morris, Kenneth
Morris, Wayne Morris, Scipio.
. Charles V. Strauss, dec'd, affid,
to Evelyn B. Strauss, Porn. Vii.
Ronald K. Browning, Judith
Browning, parcels, to George Francis Gail Francis, Salisbury.
Randy Ebersbach, Jennifer Lynn
Ebersbach, S.2, T-2, R-13, to ~li
· David White, Evelyn Irene Wh1te,
Jennifer Lynn Ebersbach, Sutton.
Yvonne Graham Bareswilt, parcel, to Thomas E. Hoffner, Mid.
Vii.
Franldin M. Rizer, dec'd, affid,
Wanda M. Rizer, Meigs.
Frank Herold, J., parcel, S.l6,
TIN, R-13W, to Meigs Motel, Inc.,
Salisbury.
Trustees of Sucess Church of
Christ, 1/2 A., to Charl.es Weber,
Judy (Young) Weber, Olive.
R.A. Hagerty, Dorothy Hagerty,
Dedications of Additions by Owners to Susan Addition, Columbia.
Gretta Carnahan, dec 'd, Cert. of
Trans, to Mildred Carnahan, Ruth
Simpson, Sutton.
Ray Edward Proffitt, dec'd,
Cert. of Trans., to James E. Diddle,
TrusiOO, Lebanon, Sutton.
. Ida Cheadle, Life Estate, to Rex
H. Cheadle,- Unda S. Morris,
Columbia.
Thomas R. Roush, Dorolhy Mae
Roush Lot 4, to Thomas R. Roush,
Dorothy Mae Roush, Middleport
Viii.

chwch at I 0 a.m. Saturday to pre·
pare fCJ" the trip 10 Noah's Ark Ani- ·
mal Park. The group will leave at
10:15 a.m. Those that are going to
drive ahead should meet the group
at the gate.

ly with Betty Baker and the Joyful
DEXTER • Revival at Dexter
Sounds. Public invited.
·Church of Christ will be Friday
through Sunday at 7:30p.m. and on
RACINE • A potluck dinner and Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Chuck Rusfarewell party for Rev. and Mrs. sell, New Hope Street Ministry will
Roger Grace and family will be be speaker. Dinner at noon wi!IJ
Friday at 4 p.m. with dinner at 6 bible school at 9:30 a.m. Pubhc
p.m. The event will be ~ at the invited.
picnic shelter bouse ~ebmd the '
MIDDLEPORT . There will be
RaCine United Methodist Church
and is wen to the public.. Bring a a dance at the LegiQn Annex· in
Middleport on Friday from 7-11
dish to share and table setviCC.
p.m. with music by George Hall
TUPPERS PLAINS • There will
SATURDAY
be a round and square dance at the
RUTLAND
- There will be a
Tuppers Plains VFW Post No.
dance
at
the
Rutland
American
9053 on Friday from 8-11:30 P·l!l·
Legion
Hall
on
Saturday
from 9
with music by Smoky Mounwn
p.m.
to
1
a.m.
with
music
by
Pure
Drifters. This will be the last dance
Countty
Band.
Public
invited.
untii September.

75

'Country
Roads'
tour

Lan~sville- Ellis

Beat of the Bend.._.
I know you join me in extending
congratulations to Mr. and Mrs.
Otis Casto of Long Bottom. The
couple quietly observed their 64th
wedding anniversary on Monday.
Guess you could say Mr. and Mrs.
Casto don't get around much anymore, but ther hang right in there
giving lire theii best shoL Good for
them.

Friday, June 25, 1993
Page-10

Community Calendar

Bloodmobile gets 28 pints
Twenty-eight pints of blood
we!): donaled Wednesilay when the
Red Cross Bloodmobile visited
Meigs County.
Donors included were from:
Pomeroy- Jeff Warner, Steven
Martin, Howard Logan, Margaret
Harris, David King, Mary Spenc~.
Billy Joe Spencer, Barbara Crow,
Gerald Rought, Patricia Barton ,
Virgil Windon, Carolyn Charles,
Stacy Shank, Madhra Melhotta and
Dav1d Graham.
Middleport - Angela Sellers,
Norma Wilcox.
Rutland -Donna Davidson.
MinersviUe- Kenny Wiggins.

Sentin~l

The Daily

Sunda_,

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Statr
MIDDLEPORT • Parades on
land and water, entertainment, ahd
a speech, aU carrying out a patriotic
theme will be featured at the Fourth
of July celebration to be held in
Middleport next Sunday evening.
Final plans for the observanCe 10
carry out the theme "Patriotic
Reflection, Red, White and
Boom!" were IIIIIIOIIIIC«i Friday by
Tom Dooley, presidellt ci the Middleport Community Association.
Dooley, two members of the
celebration commiuee, Mary Wise
and Jeaneue Thomas, and Mayor
Fred Hoffman met Friday to discuss pilns fCJ" die 11111ual evenL
Kictolr for the oelebrallon will

'•

be a parade through town 11 6 p.m.
The parade wifi form on Aali
Street. move to Art Lewis SL, lben
to General Hartinger Parkway, up
Second Avenue tol&gt;ave Dilel Put
where an awards ceremony will
take place.
Patti Pickens has chiU"Ie of
organizing the parade and 11lvi101
that units sbould be in line and
read1 to~ at6 p.m.
uopnica fCI' firll place in five
categones will be awarded--walking unit (to include lwlds, scout
groups, 4-H clubs, twirling groUps,
and ball teams), bicycle, horse,
flo&amp;t, and moto~tycle. The committee empblsiw tbll all iud&amp;lna will
be hued on the palriolic theme.
Special emphasis is being
t

It:

Conferees agree on budget

placed this year on getting youth
and adults to decolale their biC}'I:Ies
and motorcycles and ride in the
parade.

A boal panllle wiD be held 11 8
p.m. Deccnled bolll are to congre..
Ja.tc onder the Pomeroy-Muon
llriltge, then parllle downriver 10
the ead of Front Slllel iD MiddJo..
port. The boats will be judsed,
agam on the parade theme, and a ·
trophy will be awarded to the best
decoJated boat.
Parade marahala are Sen. Jan
Michael Long and Bob Gilmore
immediite puc preaident of the
Middleport Communi!)' AIIIOC:iation and an early orpn;. ol tbe
July 4 celellrltion ill tho ftllaae.
Condoned 011 A-2

Man dies
in ~tabbing
GALLIPOUS - A Bidwell man
died early Saturday morning alter
1!einB IIIB&amp;bed by his brother, Gallia
Couitty sheriff's deputies reported.
Dllnicl R. Berry, 31, 14947 Swc
Route SS4, was dead on arrival at
Holzer Medical Center. His brother, Donald R. Berry, 38, also of
Bidwell, Is being held in the Gallia
County jail. He has been charged
with volunrary manslaughter.
· The alabblng occurred d~ a
quarrel between the twO at the YIC·
tiat'a homo. deputies 1..,orted.

~

in~or taxe~.

The cllalrmn, Rep. Patrick Sweeney, D-Cieveland, said the
conferees will vote formally til approve the packalle ott Monday
cleariDg tile way for floor votes in both houses before a Jnly
llscai deadliae.
LeP!atlve aides said the spending bUI - an ltlcreue from
$17 blllloll In the current biennium - wUI take two or tbree
days to prlnL
.
·
Sweeney 81111 tbe othera reviewed at a news conference tile
cbaages t1lf1 llllde darlna nearly two weeb or c'-d meetktp.
"lt'l • JOOd badget. WODid have liked to bave cut or
tbe spelldlJta Ill bert, bat It JOU are plna to dlllce, ,au have to
COIIIp..-lle," said Sen. Rldaard Pl•n, R·Cinclnaatl, tbe topranldnl Seaate ennteree.
The eba~ge~lndacled some lut·mlnute reductions iD Senate- ·-·
approved spending levels needed to d- a projected, $185 lllii-

i

r

IIOD

reveaaea:z·

Bat tbe
nt1 said tbey manqed to Ina
fucllaa tar
pr._., ... IIICOildary edaeatloa fly $10 miU':.,~~Iftlac
tudludlncrndna adjtllbaem .In - e Weral
lei.

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