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By The _Bend
' .

~

The Daily Sentinel

HEATHER EAGLE

Racine girl wins title
The Precious Miss and Mister
Pageant was ~eld ~ecently at the
City Parle Pavilion m Parkersburg,
W.Va. ,
.
Heather Eagle entered her age
division and now holds the title of
Precious Miss Queen 1993. She
also went on to compete in the
overall category for prettiest hair,
eyes, smile, best dressed and personality: She won the prettiest hair
category.
She is the daughter of Philip and
Sherry Eagle, Racine.

Party held

1.

A welcome home party was
held recently for Brent and Brian
. Houdashelt at the home of Greg
and Linda Grover.
Attending were La Deana and
Kayla Grover, Myrtle Grover,
Andy , Nellie and Karen Grover,
Randy, Genia and Cody HyseU, Pat
Humphrey, Joe, Jamie, Kandis and
Joe Humphrey, Gene Jr., Bridgett
and Blake Humphrey , Bob and
Loraine Venoy, Tony, Lisa, Jake
and Josh Venoy, Robyn Wayland,
Marion; Bob and Marcia
Houdashell, Butch and Brandi
Grover, Letart, W.Va., Todd
Grover, Terri Lynn Yeauger and
Evan, Tracie Collin s, Ronnie,
Brenda, Zach and Chelsie Arms.

Reds

1\.letday, June 29, '1 993

•

Page-10

Star·,Garden
Club has meet
EsteUa Atkins and Ruby Diehl .
wem llostesse' for the 'recent' meet·
ing of Star Garden Club.
For devotions Mrs. Aikins read
"A Perfect Day," "'The Best Place
10 Live" and ''The Voice of 8 Holy
Man." Twelve members and one
guest answered roll call with 8 tip
on the care of roses.
Pauline Atkins, Neva Nicholson
and Allegra Will attended open
house at the Chester Garden Club.
Belly Dean showed prize slides of
a Carousel of AmeriFlora.
Star members who lid: flower$
to church or lodge meetings during
the past monlh were Neva Nichol·
son, Margie Rife, Martha Chapman
and Wanetta Radelrin.
Mrs. Chapman reported 011 sunflowers. They are attraCtive yellow
flowers and provide food for birds
and after roasting are nutritious ·
snacks. Contrary 10 popular belief
the sunflower does not tum its face
to the east in the morning and to
the west in the evening.
Estella Atkins read about t'he
mocking bird. She noted that dur·
ing the entire mating season the
mocking bird will master 400 dif·
ferent songs. He also imitates
squirrels, frogs, crickets, sirens,
bells and home alarms. How he
decides which tune to sing next still
remains his personal secreL
Members displayed a show of
different flower arrangements.
Those who placed fli'St in the vari·
ous categones were table arrangement first, Neva Nicholson; verti·
cal mass first, Sharon Jewell;
arrangement for' television, fust,
Pauline Atkins; mass wrangement,
first, Wanetta Radekin, and roses,
first, Martha Chapman.
.
The hint for.the day was "If you
want a lot of blossoms on old fash·
ioned rose bushes, cut the shrubs
back two or t'hree feet each spring
and thin out the old canes.
The hostess served mfreshments
. at the close of the meeting.

Ohio Lottery

blank

Couple should go to party together
Dear ADD l..pden: A year un,
I married a. widower wliose
according to my husband and
everyone olae, - "perfect.'
Its been t'hree yan Iince 'Mona'
died. ' Frank" became extremely
attached to his wife's parents
following her death. They were not
p~ when he married me. Now,
the greatest obStacle .10 our
happiness is Frank's continued
closeness to Mona's family.
Yestelday we received an invita·
tion to his former father-in-law's
birthday party. Only SO people w=
invited -·Ill rdativea. When I asked
. Frank if he planned to go, he
replied, "I wouldn't miss iL'
I feel hurL It seems to me that
Frank should not attend this 'family
reuni011." He needs IIi let go of his
past so we can get build a life
together. The party will onlx,.~emind
him of his loss, wilh everyone
sympathizing with him instead of
mjoicing over his marriage to me.
Should I insist that Frank not'go?
Sl!ould I go with him? I need your
guidance because I'm too upset to
think .straight. •• PLAYING
SECOND FIDDLE TO A GHOST
IN CALIFORNIA ·
DEAR CALIFORNIA: You are
treading on dangerous ground
when you try IQ discourage Fnmlc
from honoring Mona's memory
in whatever way he chooses; Cpt it
oul

rio, Ann
L andefS

~-..

~\

. •'

FATHER AND SON- Mac Stewart, left, eDjoyecl breakfast
wlt'h his rather, Lawrence, at the Fat'hen' Day Breakfast Buffet
held receDtly at Overbrook. CeDter in MlddleporL LawreDce Is a
patieDt lit the ceDter.
/

New officers installed
New officers were installed
when the Reedsville Nazarene
Wornens Society met recently with
Carol Kanawalsky as hostess and
. Robin and Tami Putman as cohosteSses.
.
Cathy Masters presided at the
meeting which opened with prayer
by KayeJeu.
Plans were made for a church
dinner and while elephant sale with
proceeds (lOin(! to help p11rchase
playgroun4 eqwpmenl
·
Birthdays were recognized for
June.
There were 73 shut-in calls
reported and cards were signed for
the sick and shut-in . .

Devoti011s were given by JaneUe
Sargent, "Catch the Vision." ·
Those attending were Evelyn
Barr, Kate Ladd, Kaye Jett, Lucy
Robens, Dian Bias, Janelle Sar·
gent, Barb Swartz, Sue Suttle, Barb
Masters, Wendy Wilfong, Linda
Putman. Sue Douglas, Lisa Put·
man, Judy Elkins, Marlene pgomin,
Cathf Masters, Robin Putman,
Caro Kanawalsky, Tatni Putman
and guests, Vicki Milhone and
Joyce Kanawalsky.
The next meeting will be at the
church with Gloria Decker as host·
ess and ChristY Hensley and Eve·
lyn Barr as co-hostesses.

Carolyn Nicholson hosts meet

.

Rose Reynolds
observes 90th
birthday

I'
I·
I•

'· .VoL oM; NO. 44

:: • r

TUESDAY
SYRACUSE - Infant and pre·
schooler aquatic program at London Pool 7-8 p.m. through July 9.
For more 'information, call 992·
9909. $15 fee.
BURLINGHAM· The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment Comniittee will meet Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the Burlingham
Modern Woodmen Hall. Commit·
tee by-laws wiD be Voted on. Public welcome.
WEDNESDAY
.
POMEROY • Meigs County

I.

1 ' ' lon.14 . . . . - • -

A,.IIi ecl•l110.th .,.,.,

'

'HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)

The llllion•• laqelt COil opera·
totJ ll.'f they wiD not change their

.-

negollatina stance despite the
. defecdoll of sevaal c;ompEiea thai
. siped teplllle deals wilh the Ullit·

. ecfMinc wcnen.

. The UMW IIII•IIIIIIUIIIIIIIII:Cdil:ed Tuesday
. tllll Ohio-billed Alllerlcan Electric
: Power Co. had ~ from the
~ Bituminous Coll'Opetalora Auoc:i·
atioll and lillled an interim IPCI'WIIt with die union. AEP - the
third cotnpll\y to drop out of the

auocillicn and the feu1h 10 sign a

sep.ue ..,eement.

The aareement covers 1,400

WOlken In Ohio, Utllh, IUinois and

• 'Today' a orchestrated media
event was brought to you by the
UMWA in hopes lhlt someone will
believe !hat IIIOihet BCOA member has suddenly walked into the
Age of ~t,'' said Hoff.
IDIII, alao spolteaman for CONSOL
lllc. of Upper St. Clair, Pa.
The coaiiiiOCiation has never
released iu me111berahip list,
althoup off~~:ials aid at the start
of talks last yar that it repreaenled
.abOut a 'dozen of the nation's
largest poducers.
·
·
Based on lhlt number, a thild of
its membershi,P. has signed sepuar.e
agreemenu wtth the union.
The union began its Slrike Mlly
I 0 over job security and has
expanded 11 seven! times. It says it
hlis 14,000 members on strike
against five companies in West
v~ Illinois, 1rm.na, Pennsyl-

West Viqinia, the UMW ~.
"They have plowed no new
grouild In labor·~ rela·
tiona. ~ have deveklped no aew
. relalionlhip with the UMW A. In aD
Ohio and Kentucky.
likelih90d, they have merely
AEP, baled in l.ancallcr, Ohio,
· apeed 10 abide by 'rhatever ~­
. uact BCOA ultilutdy ncJOtilles is the nation's 24th lqest coal
· with the uni011,'' said Thomas F. producer and one of the luaeat
HoffiiiiR, spokesman for the coal electric utility holding corpora-

I'\ I)
H
\
'

Richard Trumka.
The apeement "clearly demon·
. . _ ~·s conunitment to work
wilh the UMWA to addJess the job

security needs of coal miners,' '
Trumlra said "In starlt conbast to
some operaton, AEP has demon·
lll8ted aood faith and a real wiD·
ingneas 10 address the issueS.'.
Three other companies also
have signed interim agree.ments
with the union since the strike
began. They are: AMAX Inc. of
Iftdianapolis, the nation's third·
largest coal producer; Freeman
Energy Corp.-Freeman United Coal
Corp. of Marion, lll.; and W ~ ..
a small coal processing plant in
1-bner City, Pa.
·

GED RECIPIENTS· Plctarecl are GED

rec:lplenls rec:oplzecl at tile auaal recopltloa
dlnDer of the Adult Balle ud Uteracy Edaca·

tioa proaram at Melp HIP Sehoul 011 MOIIday
evening. L-r, are: lroDI, Roberta Smltll, Cllar·
lotte Wamsley, Mary H:Ysell, Kathy EvaDs,

·Twenty-seven receive GED awards ·

van..,

Twenty-seven people we1e pre·
sented their GED's at the Adult
Buic and Literacy Education annual recognitiOil dinner at Meigs High
.
·School
on Monday evening. The
. i'uocildon.
tiona.
.
dinner
was
sponsored by the Mid·
The coal uaoeia&amp;ion coatenda
'The aJ.l:eement with AEP ends
dleport·Pomeroy
Rotary Club and
' thl~~~e~m n11 viollle fedenllllbor the p051Jbility of a strike against
Jhe
Meigs
County
Board or Educa·
-~........
...,.,. ....
the utility, said UMW PreSident
' lion.
Gradualel receiving plaques and
certificates were Mary Hysell,
Paula Budce, James Stewart, Max·
'
inc Thomas, Delwon Laudennilt,
II
Nancy Phillips, Debra Boring, Ruth
A Racine man injuled in a two-vehicle accident Tuesday mornShuler, Donna Warnecke, Pamela
. iiiJ il in llllble COIIdilion today at Holzer Medical Center.
Gheen, Robertll J. Smith, Charlotle
Delt.oa W. Fowler, 49, 31440 Salser ROlli, Racine, was admitted
,
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Sen.
Wamsley, Rebecca E. Wilson,
to the '-! itll's inrelllive en unit fer multiple trauma, a hospilal
Howard
Metzenbau111
draped
an
Dorothy Robbins, Belinda Bailey,
tllil-ma.
·
arm across his front-row seat and William Johnson, Shaula Lauder·
Fowler - lnjtnd on Stale Roilte 7 near Addi1011 when a velii.
sat back, smiling, while senator milt, Carolyn Schuler, Richard
cle lktwn ~ Pl!ul J. Shaffer, :U. McDernlOlt. went.left of center ·
after
senator talked about how Cook, Mitziann Klaiber, Dreama
and llniCt
llilll head
on. Shllfer was killed in the .:cident, which is
__._
.
•
•
they'D
miss him al'ter he !etires.
. Cremeans. Sherry Henlman, Kathy
sliD ~~~~·
Then he met privately with Sen- Evans, Patricia Grimm, Brenda
ate Majority Leader George Peuie, Catherine Cox and Rhonda
MitcheU, posed for photographers DePue.
outside
the Capitol, and foisted pic·
Receiving recognition for 200
A ReedaviiJe Wli&amp;l'a vehicle sulllli!Jed li,..t dania&amp;e Tuesday
tures
of
his
grandchildren
on
a
..
hours
of service wem Mary HyseU,
e=illen it ltniCk. a pd rail, the Olilha-Meigs l'ost of the
tongue-tied
tourist
from
Win1o,
Amanda
Lemley, Cathy IUrt, GloStllO
Pllvl1""*1ed.
.
Ky.
·
·
ria
Bradshaw,
Pamela Gheen, DarK. SiJadock.: !11913 Rye Rold, was uthbOdnd on Stale
"N.e
you
looting
at?"
he
lene
Dunaway,
Diana K. Roberts,
ROlle 7 ftlll • lost COIIIJul 011 wet JI8WliiiCIII and . . off the
Slid, Sla'ing past the cameru to 6- David Rose, Viclrey Banett, Robert
~ n.l. The JWro1 listed unsafe speed u the conyear-old Chryln Chapman, standing Boling, Wilma Boling, Rodney
ROTARY RECOGNIZED· JMI Riebel, riallt, aaperllilniwith
her
f1111ily
(ew
feet
away.
Hart,
Dennis
Pmons,
Pamela
Per·
deat
of Melp C-ty Sdtoola, p..-111 ce; H11c11te or~
No iilludea- n!pOfred and no citations were issued. The vehi·
to
Ge~e
.JUaa or the Mlddleport·Poaei'OJ Rotary Clall wtJ II co"What's
your
name?
I'm
sons,
Marsha
Siders,
Carl
Smith
cle Wll!clrhen
the ICCliC.
·
SJIOIIIOI'ecl tlie Adalt Bask od Literacy EdllcalioD uaaal recopl- .
Howard."
Jr., .00 Carolyn Stewart.
Metzcnbaum, l).()bio, had just
CertifJCates for 300 hours aucn- 11011 dlnllel' held at Meip Hll:ll SOnol oa Moadly eftiiiJi&amp;.
announced his intention to step dance were presented to Debra
down afler he completes bis thin! Amott, Robert Arnou, Susan
Tw vohlcla reponed cJanutpl followinl thunclerstorms
term, and was luxuriating in .the Lyons, Paul Pullins and Ruth ·Randy Friend, Doris Starcher Hill, Ruth Sellers, Tina Searles,
that aruc:t the c:ounty Monday aflanool•. No lnju!iel were reported.
moment.
Pullins.
Meip CJlllllty Sheriff James M. SouiJby reported diM Lane
Maxine Thomu, Debra Boring: Lisa Thomas, Dorothy Robbins,
"Every
member
leavi11g
the
Reco1nized for 100 hours of Ruth ,Shuler, Donna Warnecke, Belinda
Danloll of Rail IS wu callbould on Stale Route 143 lfOIIIIII 4:SO
Bailey,
Mickey
. · Senate OIJiht to feelu good as I do attendance were James Stewart. Randy~. Roberts J. Smith, Char· Schwartiger, James Jones, Pamela
p.m. Monday MdiiJUCII: a limb tllll had flllen 01110 the fOIId!o'ay.
· at this moment," he saiil.
Burtina Klein, Kendall Lemley, lotte Wlllllle~:.:=ca E. Wibon, Arnott;. Thomas Arnott, Linda
Acconllnl 10 the report, die front tirea 011 ·Daniels' 1984 OkJsmo..
His
retimment
will
end
a
2().
Ellie
Lemley , Shannon Pierce, Bmlda Ball,
bile CUIIaa were blown out, one rim was bent lllld die fenders wm
Ev1111, Debbie
LODtiauecl OD pa(le 3
dlmlllpd.
.
chapter of ~itics and
·
A 1992 Dodp Colt owed by Carolyn RobiniOII, Racine, was
dalnaaed by allrle limb fallinll'rum a tree.
Danlqe was listed u
10 the left·fmlt, hood, wind·
Metzenblum told coUeagues his
lh~ anjl roof. No one was In the vehicle It the time.
.
% ApP'Oved the 1993·94 manSouthern Local School Board medicine card and a valid CPR
intentions
at a morning caucqa
'
card
by
the
stan
or
the
season.
bership
In the Ohio High School
Tuesday Md tlien made a public hired Gordon Fisher as high school
%
Approved
the
contract
AthletiC
Association for Southern
_ , o n the S..te floor. princiJIII Monday niabt duriJII the between the Southern Local Board Local High
School and Junior
Deputies of the Meip ~~ Dep.r;Jnent are invesli·
"II'S lime to tum the flllll pqes hoard s regolar monthly meeting.
Fisher was hired for three yean of Educatio• and WashinJton High.
of lhla chaDiet of my life and begili
% Approved membenhip in die
or
203
clays and wiD be paid about County Board or EMaiOII for the
glli&amp;,y~c=."7:n!. reporteclrec:;::C..~ing that six
another,'' he said.
1993-~
ICbool
year.
This
contract
coalition
for Rural and An-lsclii·
$46,000
aanually
plus
benefits,
raiiJ !Ibn fronl 11er rail fence durina the niJht and busted in
"My repeii.C few, my IIICIIIOprovidel the buic services for the . an Schools which PJOvide$ in-serwhlc;h
II
the
same
pay
u
the
for·
riea are ueasured •.my health I•
diaic:l's special educlllion IIUdenll vice for IUJ)erliiiDIIdenta.
principal.
. . the~hamblia, Ponland, reported Monday .that someo.ne
1reat and my love for the cause merFisher
throuah die SOitheufem Ohio Spe% APPIOved the employment or
Ieplaccl
retired
Principii
enteJCCI Ilia houle, lll'lled on the Wiler oil hll hat water iank and
- II undiminished,'' he said. "I J1111e1 Adams lnd actina~ncipal cial liducation Reaional Resource the Ohio School Board's fteFciat·
pulled die water line louie under the aillk, flbodillc the . . .
baYe voted my c:ooacienee, lpllten BobOnl.
Center. The COli is $812.10 a $.86 in1 services for the upeoming
my mind lnd foualil on the aide I
per student.
nejlOtionations with the teacher's
Ia
other~ the bolnl:
helieYeiS 10 be riahL ..
..
Ellablilbed
a
half time math
11&gt; Approved Barbara Beegle, uruon .
He said he wanted to spend teachiDI position for the junior Donlld Duddina. Miclllela Kuca11&gt; Discussed the employment of
l'odd
Of, reponed late Friday nilht that more lime with Ilia wife, Sblrley, . . whicll will be f\lilded through
enleled 111
paJC and IIOie tools from his tool box.
ma and Carla Shuler 10 .-:h - · personnel for coaching vacancies.
::::: clau~tm an.~ "110ven
Aa lsivesliplion 11y the Meip County Sherirra Deplnment is
I and will make ftir llillller mer school during June and July
11&gt; Discussed hiring a hllf-time
1993.
They
will
WJt
three
hattn
mlllh
teacher at the blgh lchooiiO
lulcl
and
help
jNepalt
1111condlaJlaa.
Mil.
denis for the math seclioll of the per day for 16 days at $50 a day. help students PIS' the ninth plde
~ fa wad 10 IPIIIIdlna They will be !eiMdiatiaa lllldellll profK:ieilcy teat. It was ~
time Wldlller ... lliJiid of 46 yea'S ninth
telL
..
Tricia
Wolle
u
the
that failed the ninth arade prof'· ihat the half time math leliclw at
IIIII bei11J able 10 platllheir ltldal junior
volleylllll
coD
for
tile
ciency
leal. The COli ofthe- • die junior hiP be combilied with
life.
1993-94
acbool
year
01
lite
c:cnlischool
II
Jllld by the Rani D-· the half time pocition at the hiall
DUMONT. Iowa (AP')- The ll1 yem of Iowa nconllreepinl.
"I Clll mab dllel with fri•dl tlon that lhe llal a Cllmlit 1P0f11 , IIJIIion Project.
(Continued oa Paae 3)
111Uai4ea . . u " ' u the bollotl! Mole Jilin feU r-elay lliJhlllllhe and now we cu keep it," *he
· lalld Ill Dlleti Miller's field.
ow of a vi* by AJdculllft 5ec:Je.. said,
"It' a llhnted IJC•IIIIIP 10 &amp;arJ Mite lapJ to waaerloued
. MeiHnbauiR, 76, Ia a f~er
liM• It c.'t . .,.. 111111 Willer, ,_, Ia Iowa. MiiiiUOtl. Siiinll labor lawyer and aniOII lobbyist
Cllilof-rMidn•lnlmwiiO N
iatlllland
thina we c:an liw wilh,'' llid Sen.
liMe lllelt •liMe 10 plait hi 1
'I'M ftM 4'51 ... '*- blamed .... a
COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP) ..:...The House ~oual die . . .
fotcl behind
the law
llln dllt lull sn'W the ror thllle tr at lW cblldreD In nqulriDa ·day notice of plant Lawmabn who IIIII a $30,8 bil· Ben Blpy, o.coJumbus, a nlll e budget by • 72·
while lthw, Qoodellllamea Minneaota. AD 11-yur-okllirl
lion 1tate budpt to Gov. 0ecqe of a conference committee that Senate piSied lt.32-1.
_.
_. •u t IJsqe
drownod Noaday while wacllna c:~ other Democratl ran from Volnovich aaiiJ it's the beat they worked out the package. "It's
Voiriovich wu ::J::i~ID lip
01 die ...._., r r bll n1 way _. uc.ter,llllla 4-,-r-olll SL tho word "llbenl,'' Mellal. . . c:an do, u walt ewe! •ed 10 r-s ~the peop1C of Ohio can the bill to~if.':.J
... 1ft
"-St. .... Wiiiii.,IO SL 1AIItls. Paul boy droned Friday w~lle embiiCed ~inliq . . . . . . .. lW otlien IIebe a JniiSnlaht dial- IMwla
tWG-JIIr ~ ptikid ...... •
1911 , _
..... wllollllptd line.
LaWJIIUera coasltlered three Tllulda7.
Tile .... ..... ....... ..... . ft
Redwood ltMr cllael De ••u,
clecta.......,l ae IJl .. I ..
c kltl_,..,
. . . 1M • Did ........... ill /L,..S. ,
"It'I 5 fait budieL It's lOme· 111 lrtbllla• '11 I):

,..---.Local briefs----.
Accident viCtim sttlble

---Names in the news----

M et zen b aum

Won ''t·run £-or·
re -e·lecti•on

..,..__.lllld

Pickett, best known for the song
"In the Midnight Hour," will be
sentenced SepL 24.
In 1992, Pickett's vehicle struck
and injured Pepe Ruiz.
The singer was charged with
aggravated assault. He pleaded
guilty to a lesser charge of assault.
The singer is also due in coun
July 7 on charges be was drunk
when he drove across the lawn of
his neighbor, Englewood Mayor
Donald Aronson, in 1991.

.....

Patrol probes accident

:e,:,:'. .

NEW YORK (AP) - The publisher of a biography about Sen.
EdWatd KeMedy is withdrawing a
disclaimer that says author Joe
McGinniss made up some of the
characters' thoughts and dialogue.
Sim011 &amp; Schuster president and
publisher Clrolyn Reidy said Mon·
day that all the dialogue in the
soon-to-be-released book has
sources. However, she said McGinniss took "biographer's. license" to
discus, what some people might
have been thinking at certain
poiilts.
"The Last Brother" includes
long monologues from the senator,
even though he mfused to be interviewed for the book.
Last week, Reidy defended the
disclaimer, but on Mondar she
changed her mind after Ml:Gmniss
insisted it be removed. The book
could be out by mid-August, Reidy
said.
•
·
...

a

rm.

.Vehicles diunaged by storm

'f:
a.~~rambu!K:~:!

moaersre

Southern Local hires new principal .

Deputies probe vandalism

Pomeroy man reports theft

r:t;.t;:n

,t:;..::!-..ld • -

Midwest fields inundated

=

••W' *

..me

t b. . . . .

l
&gt;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 30, 1993

1na.

[UMW announces
!interim pact with
Ohio~based AEP

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Community Calendar ·
CommoDity CaleDdar items
appear two days belon an evnt
and the day or that evnt.Items
must be rec:elvecl well In advance
to IISSure pubUcation ID the calelldar.

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News briefs

10.25-30-32-34

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PEKIN, Ill. (AP) - A court materials in Pekin. Who knows together Lincoln's career as a
clerk drew a folder from a base- how much material we'll findT " country lawyer. They have visired
ment vault containing 20 brittle said WiUiam Beard, assistant editor 42 counties, digging through every
documents handwritten or signed of the Lincoln Legal Papers, a pro- available file from 183610 1861.
by Abraham Lincoln, giving schol· ject of the lllinois Historic Preser·
''When we first started this proars their biggest cache yet in a · vation Agency.
ject, skeptics told us we wouldn't
The documents include jury find anr original Lincoln docu .
county-by-county search of his
homestate.
·
instructions, indictments, affidavits men ts,' Beard said. "The Pekin
Clerk Pam Gardner on Monday and
discovery makes 75 we've found.
I verified as originals by Lin- That's an incredible number."
found the long:hidden !older
marked "Re: Lmcoln " m the coln scholars, they would be worth
He said the group has 49 coOn·
thousands. Beard said originals ties left to search and hopes 10 find
TazeweU County Courthouse.
"I showed the researchers the with Lincoln' s signature routinely 100,000 do!:uments related to Lin·
documents ... and
about had' a sen for at least $20,000, while Lin· coln' s legal career. The group has
bean attack," she . .
coin letters !lave sold for nearly found 55,000 so far.
The find added to historians' $750,000.
The Peoria area is prime hunting
Previously, the largest collection ground for the Lincoln scholars
discovery in the courthouse last
week of 14 of Lincoln's legal of documents signed or written by because it was part or a 15-county
papers. That had been the single Lincoln was a cache of 12 found in judicial circpit that Lincoln rode
largest cache ever found.
Clinton in DeWitt County, Beard twice a year, working on legal mat·
"And we've only scratc)led the said:
ters by day and politics at night.
Lincoln
Legal
Papers · Taze~ell County was part of the
tip of the iceberil hem. We've only
· gone through I 0 percent of the researchers are trying to piece CU'CWt.

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ada, send $4.45.)

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there
0 ther husbands
Rl
sure
are
who have written about the same
problem. What do you teU them? ••
PITTSBURGH
DEAR PITTS: I tell them to put
on an invisible vinyl raincoat and
let it all slide off.
Chronic naggers will not change. ·
Almoat llways. the nagging has lesS
10 do wit'h the inadequacies of
others than discontentment with
themsel
Once this·15 ..• A - - A

You and Fnmlc should go to the
party together. Be cordial and
fricmDy, and make Fnmlc proud of
ves.
uaU&lt;Oowuu,
you. This will be an enormous life becomes a lot more pleasanL
Try iL You'lllike iL
challenge, but you can meet it with
Dear Ann LaDders: A friend of
dignity and ·grace if you make the mine who is oonsidered a pretty dim
effort.
bulb (she ClDI!s almolt every senlmec
Dear Ana Landen: I have been . with "you know") can Sit down and
married for 43 years and have four
children. I hope you can save my work out a crossword puzzle in
marriage.
~~D0J:in:.~ome? •• ·'
Ilove my wife very much, but I'm
DEAR BAFF: Practice makes for
about ready to give up. She is
fi ·
eros rds
forever •nttamng
me
about
something
pro
Clency.
swo at are
......,.
and people who wort
themgames;
!cam
•• my shoeS ~ shining, my tie is the tricks of the trade. Its as simple
wrong, my socks don't match, my as that.
hair is too long (or too short), I slurp
An alcohol problem? How CCJII you
my IOUp, I'm driving too fast or too help yovself or som110ne you love?
slow, I need to lose weight, I laugh "Aicolroli.rm: How to Recognize It,
too loud. There's no end to it. ·
Hqw to Deal With It, How tu ColiShe nags R)e constantly and does quer It" wiU give ""U the Q/I$Wtr&amp;.
the same to our children. I'm sure s
,_
that's whv two of the kids ran off , end 0 self-addressed, lollg • busi·
'
·ness-me envelope and a check or
and got married.
money order for $3.65 (this illclwles
.Not long ago, I had a heart attack, posrage and handlillg) to: Alcohol,
and my wife really. helped in my c/o AM l..aJuhrs, P.O. Box 11562 ,
!Wlvery. If not for her nagging, Chicago, fU. 60611.()562. (ln Cilll·
Ann, she'd be the perfect wife.

MIAMI (AP) - · Roy Black, the
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Tom
lawyer who won the acquittal of
Cruise made a good impression several of them, in fact - as he William Kennedy Smith on rape
sank his feet and hands into wet charges, is dating one of the jurors
concrete at Mann's Chinese The· in the case.
.Black said his mlationship with
ater.
Cruise on Monday became the Lea HaUer began a year after the
173rd celebrity to leave his mark 1991 trial when the two "bumped
outside the theater on Hollywood into each other."
Black, 48, and Haller have been
Boulevard.
Cruise, accompanied by wife, an item ever since.
Nicole Kidman, posed fer pictures
"We catainly had no romantic
and signed autographs for many in interest during the trial,'' he said
the crowd of hundreds.
Black knew plenty about the 39The event coincided with the year-old owner of a cosmetics
release this week of Cruise's movie company. Before the trial, she
"The Firm," based on the John fil!ed out a detailed juror questionGrisham novel about a law 1fUlll 118U'e.
that is a front for the mob.
HACKENSACK, NJ. (AP)RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Marie! Wilson Pickett pleaded guilty tb
Hemingway says she's not sure her reduced c~w¥es m a drunken driv·
grandfather Brnest Hemingway ing accident m which he hit an 85would have approved of her career. year-old pedestrian.
"It's a good thing he's not
Under the plea bargain, prosecualive,'' she said in the July 3 issue tors will IWlmmend about a year
of TV Guide. "He hated Holly- in jail, alcohol rehabilitation and
wood. He felt the movie industry community service for the 51-yearbastardized and misrepresented his old rhydtm and blues Star.
wort.''
The former star of ABC's canceled "Civil Wars'' also had some
advice for screenwriters interested
in adapting Hemingway's hooks: ·Like a Rock
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) "Throw out the book and use the .
George
Henry Thomas, born in
story. You can,'t do what he did
Virginia
in 1816, was a Union
with dialogue. What he wrote was
Army
officer
in the Civil War.
not meant to be spoken."
An
1840
graduate of West
The 31-year-old actress a~
in "Stark in Love,'' an Aug. 14 Point, Thomas led the ";:~:f the
tly at
installment of "The Hidden Cumberland and fought
the
battles
of
Chattanooga
and
Room" anthology series on the
Nashville.
Lifetime cable network.
·
In the battle of Chickamauga,
his
courage and leadership saved
NEW YORK (AP) - His last .
the
Union Army from defeat and
day on the job at NBC, David Let·
won
him the title "The Rock of
terman got a nice raise - in rat·
Chlckam&amp;uga."
ings.
·
~died in 1870.
Friday's "Late Night" finale,
with Bruce Springsteen and Torn
Trault B1 Rail
Hanks, got roughly double Letter·
NEW YORK (AP) - Street·
man's usual mllence, ICCUding to
Clll,
once a common sight in many
preliminary A.C. N~ Co. ligAmeriam
cities, oriJinatDd ._ in
ures releued Monday.
1831.
In 29 mark.elltept ! II" tina SO.7
Raila for the tint horte-drawn
penlCIIt of aD TV hamel, I..eaiman
"str~t-rallway"
ran from the
got 1 7.4 radn1 and a 27 share.
Bowery
10
Harlenl.
Each rating point equall 472,108
Bxperimeatal steam and cablehouseholds. 'The share Ia the perpowered
111 utcan were followed
centage of TV sell In UIC that are
by
electric
models. In 1888, the
tuned to a J)ll1lcullr lhow.
firu
successful
electri&lt;; streetcu
Nation81 figures will be releued
syStem
operated
in
Riehm~, Va.
Thursday.
RUTI.AND • Rutland Township
Leuerman'a new CBS show~ Soon almost fNfll'J IJqC city had a
network of linea.
Trustees meet Thursday at 6:15
At 28.2 miUion acre·feet, Nevada's mieres Aut. 30. "La~,:t,ht"
Inlllilrllln IIJeetCin alao linked
p.m. with regular meeting It 6:30 Lake Mead, formed by Hoover Dam, reru11.1 will air on NBC
the
towns
and cities, unlil the growth
summer.
·
p.m. Public invited.
I• the largest man-made reservoir in
or
automobile
ttavel in the 193011.
the United States.

737

Houston

Tazewell County Courthouse
produces Lincoln papers .bonanza

Hostesses for the June meeting lace table covers given to the
of the Bradford Church of Christ church. A thank you note was
Lydia COWJCil was.Carolyn Nichol· received t'rQn1 Charlie Murray for
son.
the sunshine basket presented to
. May, •
Jariice Felty otJeRed the meeting him m
with prayer and prayer request.
Several activities of the church
Officers reports were given. Devo- were plamed.
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.
tions were given by Carolyn
Game balls were purchased and
Nicholson from James and delivered to the Ohio Valley ChrisMatthew on the power of positive . tian Camp.
witness.
The BradfQfd Ladies hosted the
A thank you note was sent to Woman's Fellowship 011 Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawmnce Eblin for The theme for ihe evening was
weddings.
The family picnic and swim
party will be held at the home or
Mr. and Mrs. Couch. Chicken will
be supplied by the council. Everyone is to bring covered dishes,
lawn chairs and table service.
The sunshine basket for June
The 90th birthday of Rose will be $iven to Ruby Hysell.
Karhla Stump had the closing
Reynolds was celebrated recently
prayer.
with an open house at the Middle·
Refreshments· were served to
port Church of Christ.
The celebration was planned Karlita and Hannah Stump, Kim
and given by several nieces and a Willford, Jane Hysell, Becky and
neP.hcw: Mary Powell, Pomeroy; Bethany Amberger, Madeline
Mila Raymond, Portland; Cbarl.otte Painter, Charlotte Hanning, Cherie
Roseberry, Franklin, W.Va.,; and . Williamson, Suzie Will, Gerri
Lightfoot, Janice Fetty, Diane
George Stacc, Findley.
A large birthday cake and yel· Bing, Paula Pickens, Nancy Morris
low rosebud corsage were present· and Carolyn Nicholson.
ed to Ms. Reynolds.
Decorations were provided by
Sabra Morrison Ash. Variegated
.... .._,. _.... •:
. "
butterflies and sueamers graced the
serving table along with crystal
candlesticks, yellow candles and a
lace 1ablecloth.
Birthday cake, mints, nuts,
punch and coffee were served.
Cake was served by Mary Bowen,
punch by Lynn Taylor and coffee
by Gwyn Horton.
·
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Roseberry, Franklin, W.Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. George Philip Stace,
Findley, Mr. and Mrs. George E.
Conroy Jr., Tallmedge, V~l Edgat
Reynolds, Leigh Acres, Fla., Lynn
Taylor, Naples, Fla., Gwynn Horton , Carrollton , Texas , Mr. and
Mrs. Val E. Reynolds Jr. and
Justin, Morgantown, W.Va., Mila
Raymond and Jeremy and Gerald
HONORED • Bett1 Bar·
and Mary Powell.
nett wu selec:tecl as employee
or the IDontll at Pomeroy
NursiDI and Rehabilitation
Center. She Is an aide Ia the
dietary department aad was
selected by co-workers ror her
friendly, pleasant and eooper·
Republican Women meeting 7:30
alive attitude. She bas beeD
p.m. at the Meigs Coun(y Public
emplo:Yecl tor 4 Vl )Uri and
Library. New members eru:omaged
prevlousiJ worked ID tile
to attend. For more information,
bouaekeeDinf!tJ*UIIent. She
contaCt Patty Pickens at 985-4231
and her hus d, Roaer, aDd
or Niese! Gerard at 992-6736.
aon, :r..c, On oa BaBey Ru
Road.
POMEROY • Wildwood Gar·
den Club will meet Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Heidi
Sobering Myllt
Elberfeld
The name of the gem amethyst is
THURSDAY
comprised of two Greek wonll mean·
POMEROY • The Pomeroy ing "not to be drunk." In olden times,
Group or AA and AI·Anon will it was beUeved that the stone would
meet ThUrsday at 7 p.m. at s~ keep the wearer sober through a night
Heart Catholic Church. Call 992- of revelry. In fact, goblets were often
5763 for information.
made or amethyst for that purpose.

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=1ciency

Lawmakers pass state budget
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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
.._..,.,ohio

DPOI'U 10 Til&amp; IJf1'UUTS or THB MBI08-JIMOif .AJUtA

ROBERT L WINGE'IT

hblllllet
MARGAJlEl' LEHEW
CGnlroller
lJ!Tl1lRS OF OPINION we wekome. They lllould be leu 1ban 300
wordl. All 1eaen we •bject 10 ectilin&amp; llld be lisnect witb nome,
lddnu llld lelepbooe •• m•u. No unlipid letters will be publiabed. Lenon
lllould be ill pld !Mia, ect'mill&amp; ia-, 1101 ponollllilin.

Today in history

1 1 ne Alloeiated Press
Today II Wda11~1y, J - 30. lhe 181st day ol1993. There are 184
days left ill - year.
.
'
Taday'a
ill Hilby:
011 J.l, tile 26111 Alllendmc:nt to lhe Canstitulion, lowering
lhe ~ 'IOiill&amp; IIC to 18, was Tlllified as Ollio beeline lhe 381h Slate
·

HiPiil:
3fi.l

toi(IIIIOVeiL

011 IIIII elite:
Ia 1834, lhe IJidlan Territory was creatod by Congress.
In 18S9, Fleacll . . . . Blondin, born Jean Ftlncais Gravelet, crossed
Nilan F.U. CJilali&amp;hlnJpe • 5.000 speclaton wat!:bed.
fn 18'10, Ada H. Kepley of Effingham, Dl., became America's first
female law.................
In 1906. die I'IR Food and Drug Act and lhe Meat Inspection Act
"'" !law.
In 1934, Mdl Hider bepn his blood
of polilical and miJitary
llld"'' il Ow ny. ~ diOie tilled ~t ~. leader of lhe
Nazi 1101~ and Hit&amp;'s one-dille Illy.
Ill 1936, lhe IIO¥el "Goae widllhe Wind" by Margaret Mitchell was
bli*rd ill New Yilrt.
·
~Ill 1952, '"l'lle Guiding Light," I )IOpUI.- l1ldio JIIOil'llll, IJIIdc its
debut• a TV 101P ope11 on cBS.
Ill 1963, 30 ,_. ..,, PqJe Pial VI was CiOWIIed lhe 262nd bead of
lhe Ronla CINiic Clllch il .. C&lt;Uidoor ~y II SL Peler'a Sq~~~~e.
In 1971, a 5oYiet ..-ce m-.. ended in lll&amp;edY when ~ cosmoJIIIJIS lllolnl Soyuz Elevea were found dead inside tfJelr sprecraft after il
had ltllllaed to Banh.
'
.
.
.
.
In 1986, ill a 5-4 decilion, lhe U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Slates
could oudaw homc••ualacts between COIIIellling Udts.
Tea , _ ago: The Justic:e Dcpvtmcnt announced it and lhe FBI
would invesliple how 1118la'ills from l'lesident Carter's 1980 re-electiOII
campaill! got jato lhe lllllds Qf President Reagan's campaign staff.
~lleSI ~ Livinptonc, wife of comedian·Tack Bemy, died in Holmby
HillS; Calif., • • 77.
.
Five y-. aao: There - a smprising display of p11011 during a
Soviet Communist Party conference as deleJIIC Vladimir I. Melnikov
bhmdy criliciMd Plesident Andlei A. Gromyko md other longtime Kremlin fipra. Re
Raman Calbnlic An:llbisbop Martel Lefebvre con·.
scc:rated roar btlhops in defiance of papal ·authority; the Vatican
IUIIlOUllCed tho eXCOIIIIIIunication of all fivf\.
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Wedneaday, June 30, 1993
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Page 2-The Dally Sentlne
PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio ;
Wednelday, June 30,1993

OHIO Weather

hours 1 day of carnage and may·
hem.
Sound absurd? Well, it's not far
from reality.lf yoo spent a 24·hour
stretch channel surfing between
regular and cab~e TV. you could
Immerse yourself in non-stop violence.
This was lhe fmding of a study
last yeat by the Center for Media
and Public Affairs, a Washington,
D.C .•.research outfit. The center
was commissioned by TV Guide to
monitor one day of programming
to ascenain its violence contenL
The center smveyed I 0 clamels
-. netwQtk, cable !llld independent
- and recorded an average I 00
acts of violence an hour. Most disquieting, the single most violent
programming ~g on television was found m cartoons dim:ted
at children.
In fact, according to a study by
tho American Psychological Association, lhe average American child
will view 8,000 murders and
100,000 other acts of violence
before finishing elementary school.
The average 27 hours a week kids
spending watching TV -. much of
it violent - makes them more
prone to aggressive and violent
behavior as adolescents and adults.
Of course, TV executives have
known this for a long time. One of
the most comprehensive studies of
the impact of violent TV was commissioned by CBS bact.in 1978. It
found th·at teen-age boys who
watched more hours of violent TV
than average before adolescence
were committing such violent
crimes as rape and usault at a rate
49 percent higher tlllll boys wbo
watched fewer than average boors
ofviolcnt TV.
So what did CBS and lhe other
networks do about it? They put
even more violent programming on
the air.
In a provocative article in the
spring issue of lhe quarterly jour~. The PubliC lnteJ'f.'lt, Dr. Brandon Cantawell pf lhe Universily of
Washington mates a·compelling
case that television bears much
responsibility for the level of violence in American society.
"There are many factors other
than television that influence the

indicates that if, hypothetically,
television tcehnology had never

Joseph Perkins
been developrd, there would today
be I 0,000 fewer homicides each
year in the {]nited States, 70,000
fewer rapes, and 700,000 fewer
injurious assaulu. Violent crime
would be half what it is. •'
The TV industty is fmally s-.ting to get lhe pteture: It is puttiilg
too much violence on the air. On
Aug. 2, there is 10 be major powwow in Hollywood, at whiCh executives of lhe major broadcast and
cable networks. as well as independent TV producers, will discuss the
violence tssue.
But it's just a big front. As
recendy as last December, lhe networks pledged 10 adhere to a list of ·
volunwy guidelines on television
violence. Here it is six monlhs later
and TV is as violent as ever.
TV execs lament that they
would like to put more quality,
nqn-violent programming on the

air, but that lhe unwashed viewers
will tum away from the tube in
troves. If this resulted in a
decrease in advertising revenues of
as liUie as I percent, IIIey say, lhe
television industry would stand to
losr $250 million a year.
Bitt lhe viewing public does not
have an iJlSIIiab1e appetite for violent programming. In fact, a rrceot
Times Mirror poll indiclllrd that 70
percent of Americans feel that
entertainment shows on TV are too
violent. Maybe if the networks
stopped pandering and put on bet·
ter, non-violent programs, they
miaht aciiJally increase viewership
and make even more in advertising

dollars.

It is preferable that the TV
industry police itself. That it lead ·
the effort to curb the amount of
violence on lhe air, especially that
which is targeted to children. But if
the broadcast and cable networks
and lhe independenlll are unwilling ·
or unable to accept this social
resptinsibility, lhen lhe government
should in~. It should require
that the TV industry clean up illl
8CL

Of course, the TV industry will

conditions and

NEWS ITEM:COURT ALI9W5 ANCIENT RITUAL OF ANIMAL SACRIFICE ...

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IToledo! 7fr' I
IMansfield !e~ I• .

Twenty...

Continued from page 1

Buckh;y, Pam Shields, Cheryl Susan Lyons, Paul Pullins, Ruth
Stumbo, Tammy Klein, Cheryl Pullins, Gary Reese, Diana K.
Laudennilt, Mary Braley, Pamela Roberts, David Rose, Ruth Sellers,
. Priddy. Rebecca Hess. Donna Alan Wilson, Tina Sellers, Lisa
COlumbus
McDonald, Carolyn Schuler, Thomas, Danny Kuhn; Julie LaudRichard Cook, Wendy Carsey, ermilt, Freda Swan, Todd
April Priddy, Donald Davidson, Kennedy, Cathy Brumfield, Amy
Melodic Leach, Susan King, Rita Wright, Dorothy Robbins. Belinda
Michael, Terry Michael, Donna Bailey, William Johnson, Mickey
Barley, Patricia Grimm and Brenda Schwaniger, Shane Engle, Pamela
Petrie.
Amott, Thomas Arnott, Vickey
Certificates
for
academic
Barret,
Robert Boling, Wilma BolW.VA.
achievement were presented to ing,.J.inda Buckley, Linda Crislip,
Mary Hysell, Paula Burke, James Rodney Han, Coleen martin, JohnStewart, Diav Bartlett, Burtina nie Nash, Dennis Parsons, Pamela
Klein, Amanda Lemley, Kendall Parsons, Pam Shields, Marsha
Lemley, Ellie Lemley, Shannon Siders, Cheryl Stumbo, Carl Smith
Pierce, Michael Sloan, Katherine Jr., Shaula Laudermilt, Tammy
Stover, Cathy Hart; Karen Kehler, Klein, Cheryl Laudermilt, Mary
:,., &amp;my Pt. CJ:::dy Cloudy Martha
Parsons, Rhonda De Pue, Braley, Mary Garnes, Pamela Jlid·
Randy Friend , Doris Starcher, dy, Rebecca Hess, Donna Me Don·
Helen Hemsley, Gloria Bradshaw, aid, Sally Me Knight, Candy Lee,
Maxine Thbmas, Delwon Lauder- James Hannan, .Wilbur Fetty, Jo
milt, Nancy PhiUips, Debra Boring, Ann Fetty, Carolyn Schuler,
Chance of rain 70 percenl
Ruth Shuler, Donna Warnecke, Richard Cook, Mitziann Klaiber,
Extended forecast:
Wendy Carsey, April Priddy,
Friday tbrouglt Sunday:
·· Randy Lee, Penny Hoskins, Kathy George Ostenneyer,Donald David·
Day,
Monte
Riffle,
Charles
Crislip,
A chance of ·thunderstonns each
Wolfe,
George son, Melodic Leach, Carolyn Stew·.
day. Lows in the low and mid-60s. William
Vincent,Pamela
Gheen,
Roberta
J. art, Susan King, Rita Michael,
Highs in the low 80s nonheast to
Smith, Charlotte Wamsley, Rebec· Terry Michael, Deborah Rhoades,
.the upper 80s south.
ca E. Wilson, Debra Amott, Roben Donna Barley, Suzanna eblin, Amy
Amott, Brenda Ball, Bobby Bar- Dunfee, Sara Hobbs, Drema Cre·
ringer, Darlene Dunaway, Angela means, Sherry Herdman, Kathy
· Edman, Nonna Evans. Debbie Hill, Evans. Patricia Grimm, Brenda
Jurisdictional Conferences, a niem· Tami Hunnell, Edward James, Petrie, Catherine Cox.
ber-at·larse of the Appalachian
.Development Committee, a confer·
contiouedrrompagel
ence trustee and president of the
West Ohio United Methodist RIIIlll Voinovich 's press secretary, said
Rep. Robert Netzley, R-Laura,
Fello~~
.
there could be line-item vetoes, but · criticized a $1.7 billion increase in
Locally, she is a member of ~. he.wouldn't be.specific.
spending for Medicaid and other
chamber or commerce and the
-The Senate sent by a 32·1 welfare programs. He said the state
Meigs Ministerial Association. She vote a transportation bud~et to the
helped in the leadttship of SOLOS House, after narrowly rejeCting as is spending twice as much for wei(the singles' gathering in Meigs too expensive a sbldy about a pro- fare as for education, "while some
of our schools are a disgnk:e and a
County) and griefs groups and is oosed upgrade foe U.S. 23 between disaster."
.
chairwoman of the School of Reli- Toledo and Portsmoulb.
Sen. Robert Burch, D-Dover,
gion 'committee of the parish.
-The House rejected .a budget the only senator who voted against
. According to a press release, it for the Ohio Bureau of Workers'
is Hausman's hope and dream that Compensation and the Industrial the plan, said it will keep the stabJS
she is· able 10 work with the Rev. Commission. The bill, which quo, which he said wasn't good
Baker and lhe rest of the staff and includes refonns the Senate insen- enough.
churches · to continue 10 discover ed, wentiO a conference committee
ways to help aii people in Meigs to work out disag~UD~ents.
County know the full love ol Jesus
In other action, the House
Christ in their lives.
(Continued from Page I)
passed 88-8 a resolution 10 place a
.$200 million parks and natural school.
resources bond issue on the Nov. ~
% Accepted the reSignation of
ballot. The proposal went to the Barb Lawrence as junior high
Senata
"
cheelleading adviiOt.
held Sunday ·at 9 a.m. at lhe Rut·
Most lawmaker~ praised the
% Hired Tom Smidt as assistant
land Otun:h of lhe Nazarene. p.ke two•year state bud$et as the best
football
coach for the 1993-94
and coffee will be served until 9:30 they could do with 'limited funding.
school
year.
a.m. when the outside program Revenue projections pennltted lit% Approved Dennis E. Hill and
begins. Evenlll will include vet~~r· tle more than current spending lev- Pall)ela
L. Boso to join the Ohio
. ans recognition, scout flag presen- els, plus small increases for infla.
Association
of School Business
tation, special characters, solos and lion. The new budget is 14.4 perOfficers
for
the 1993-94 school
the church choir. Public invited.
cent, or $3.9 billion, higher than
year.
% Transferred $4200.00 from
Card shower
the current budget
general
fund to food service 10 baJ.
Sen. · Robert Ney '· R-St.
A card shower will be held for
"T " '
.. Baker
h
·.
.
Clairsville,.a
member
of
the
conferance
out
luncheon accounL
Glen '-:"'ty.
w o wt 0 ce1e- . ence committee that worked o'ut
brate hts buthd~y July 9. Cards details, said the 2,472-pa~e documay be sent 10 ht~ at 40199 Sue- mentis a "bud~et for the limes."
cess Road, Reedsvtl~. 45772.
He said it mcludes money to
create jobs, improve health care
Tr115tees lo meet
and help education.
·scipio Townshjp Trustees will
meet Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at .the
Pageville Town Hall.

le2" I

•I

r------Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy with
scattered thunderstonns. Low near
65. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Thursday, showers and thundersiOnns likely. High in the mid-80s.

Hausman appointed to post
HERE'S MY

NOMINEE ...
•

..
The Dally Sentln~-Page-3

By Tbe Associated Press
lower 60s. Highs Thursday will be
There is a chance of showers in lhe lower 80s.
The record high tcmpe!lllure for
and thunderstorms over mos.t of the
state tonight, except in the nonh· this date at lhe Columbus weather
east. Showers and thunderstorms station was 99 in 1901. The record
are expected over all of Ohio on low was 46 in 1943.
Sunset today will be at 9:.04
Thursday.
.Lows tonight will be in the

MICH.

hoot and holler about the First
Amendment, about government
censorship. But they ' ve got it
wrong. The airwaves are public. As
ri condition of receiving a license to
bnw'.r•• a public asset worth billions of dollars. but which the
lucky corPorate license holders get .
free of charge, lhe networks must
be prepared to confonn to certain .
rules set forth by lhe govemmenL ·
Giveo the overwhelming evi·
trnce that violent TV has delcteri- · ·
ous effects on children, that it ;
increases the level of violence ;
throughout American society, it :
hardly seems unreasonable lbat lhe 1
sovernment ask that TV industry :
tone down its violent program- :
ming. Those who find lhat request '
ob~tionable should forfeit lheir :
privileged use of the public air· I
waves.
.i
Joseph Perkins is a coiUIIInist
for The San Diego Unlon·Trl·e
bun'e and a syndlca~ wrller for
Newspaper Enterprise As~ocla :.
lion.
1
----------On Jan. 5, t987, President Ronald
Reagan produced the first trillion·
dollar budget in U.S. history.

__

Showers, thunderstorms will continue over Ohio

Thursday, July 1

TV mt~:st cur.b violent programming

... .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Accu-Weather• forecast for

Coming SOOIIIO your local cable amount of violent crime," he
sylllelll: VTV, violent television, 24 Writes. "Never!beless, the evidence

111 Coart Street

..

The Rev. Shaton Hausman was
recendy appointed assistant dim:tor of the Meigs United Methodist
Cooperative Parish.
A native of Aberdeen, Ohio, and
a graduate of Manchester High
School; she graduated frorll Asbury
College and AsbuiJ. Theological
Seminary, both in Wilmore, Ky.
. She has served Dodsonville
U.M. Charge, Tunnel· Warren
Chapel U.M. Charge, Nelsonville
.First U.M. Church and, since the
summer of 1990, is serving the
Alfred-Chester·Tuppers Plains St.
Paul's U.M. Omrch~s in the Nonh·
east Cluster of the Cooperative
Parish.
Earlier in her ministry, she
taught and supervised at Greenville
College in Greenville, W.
Hausman is il member of the
United Methodist General lind

Lawmakers

Southern.,.

p.m. Sunrise on Thursday will be at
6:00. a.m.
Around the nation
Clouds threatened the already
waterlogged Mississippi Valley
early today. Rain rain fell in the
northern Plains, where tornadoes,
thunderstorms, hail and powerful
wind held sway a day earlier.
Heavy downpours and thunderstorms in parts of Iowa and lllinois
were expected to cause further
flooding along the Mississippi
River, which already is closed to
barge traffic from St. Paul, Minn.,
to SL Louis.
In the Plains and the Midwest
on Tuesday. several tornadoes were
· reported in South Dakot;t and Iowa.

.Divorces and
dissolutions
In the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas Monday, David W.
Grindstaff, Racine, filed for
divorce from Sandra Kay Grindstaff;' also of Racine.
An -action fot dissolution of
marriage was filed Tuesday by
Ronald Ray Q-emeans and Deanna
Faye Cremeans, both of Tuppers
Plains.
A divorce was granted Monday
to Lisa M. Dill from Edward D.
Dill.
A pending divorce action by
Denver R. Persons from Mary K.
Young Persons was dismissed
Tuesday.
'

Couples receive
marriage licenses

Severe thunderstorms dropped
heavy rain and hail on Nebraska,
Iowa and Kansas.
Powerful storms also were
reponed in Alabama and Florida,
where four mobile homes were
damaged in Sebring.
Highs today were expected in
the 60s and 70s along the Pacific
Coast, in the Northwest, the north·
em Plains. the Great Lakes region
and in nonhero New England; over
100 in the Desert Southwest; and in
the 80s and 90s elsewhere in the
lower 48 states.
The high temperature for the
nation Tuesday was 114 degrees at
Coolidge, Ariz.

Squads make 7 runs
Meigs County Emergency Service responded to seven calls for
assistance Tuesday and Wednesday
morning. Units responding were
II :07 a.m. Middleport to C.K.
Market for Buddy Smith who was
transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; 4:23 p.m. Rutland to
Meigs Mine #31 for David Hensler
who was transported to Holzer
Medical Center; 6:22 p.m.
Pomeroy to State Route 7 for
Shirley Gibbs who was transported
to HMC; 9:45 p.m. Middlepon to
Railroad Street for Betty Taylor
who was transported to VMH;
11:40 p.m . Tuppers Plains to Lim·
berger Ridge for John Lucas who
was transported to VMH; 12:21
a.m. Middleport 10 Railroad Street
for Ryan Lunsford who was trans·
ported 10 VMH; 4:02 a.m. Rutland
to Meigs Mine #31 for Donald
Elliot who was transported to

VMI!.

The following couples recently

~~~svc~~;~~es

in
Receiving licenses ~: Larry
Duane Carpenter, 53, and Annie
. Ruth Carpenter, 42, bolh of Middlepon; Keith Robbin Little, 36,
and Carol Louise Guinther. 34,
both of Racine; Robert Keith
Hypes, 29, and Martha Faye Nelson, 22, both of Lanf.ville·. Robett
W. Moodispaugh, 3 , and Julia A.
Moodispaugh, ·36, both of Middleport.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

111 Second Sr. Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNn
SINCE 1868

DAIRY VALLEY

... Meigs announcements-~,.
We Appreciate Your Business

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

The Past Sa Yean! - SAVE

J'

JULY 2 • JULY 5

Preachiog and singer
Faith Full Gospel Otun:h, Long
Bottom, will have preaching and
sin~g Friday at 7 p.m. with David
Dalley and FIIJ!Iily and other local
singers. Pastor Steve Reed ·invites
~ public. Fellowship will follow.

SIGN·UP TO WIN A
. GAS GBQ.L or
OTHER PRIZES

ECKRICH
FRANKS

Meelilla slated
· Lotltidge Community Center
Association will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at die ~;enter. Evei')'OIIe weicome.

Pie baldnr:
• A pie baldng and cake decorating contest will be held at annual
Ox Roast of the .Rutland Fi~e
Department on Monday. Cakes and
pies shOuld be there by 4 p.m. with
Judging at 5 p.m.ltems will be auc·
tioned at 7:30 p.m. preceding the
celebrity
auction.
.
.

Legion to meel
.
The Racine Legion Post 602
will meet Thursda)l at.? p.m. with a
' !Jinner a.t6:30 p.m.

•

•

Olllr..,.••• I

a21 ........

II.,.,..; 1.2 mg OICD1int ... ""

$146

"i'""' b; FTC mOlftOd.

,.,

Peck

.....

SURGEON GENERAL'S
Date: July
WARNING: Smoking By
nme: 2·8 P.M.
Pregnant Women May
Result in Fetal Injury,
Premature Birth, And Low
Blr1h Weight.
-==:;;:_~

Beandioner
Racine Legion Post 602 will
have a bean dinner Sunday at 11
a.m. Cost is $2 per persoil. ·

49

.'

-.. . ..:., !!

·

Celebration planned
A "Grand Celebration" will be

.

The Daily Sentinel

'·

. (USPS IIIJ.II60)

Published every afternoon, Monday
·,..ruuah Friday, Ill Courl SL, Pomeroy,
Ohio by lhe Ohio Valley Publlohl011
Company/Multimedia

Jno.,. Pomeroy,

·Ohio •576g, Ph. 11112·2tl!6. Second eluo
poolap pold oiPameroy, Ohio.
' Meltlber: The Alooeioled Preu, ond lhe ·

Ohio NeWipaper Auodation, National 1
AdvertiJin1 Repreuntalive. Bn.nham·
-Newepaper Sal•, 733 Third Avenue, ·

01
Marlboro

'New York. New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send oddreoo cha"'l.. lo

:t'he Doily Sentinel, Ill C'"'rl St.,
.Pomoroy, 01111145189.
.

Ralt-

earu.

•

·Judgments sought

Two suits seeking cash judgSwlmmin1 le.ons
.
menf
were filed recently in the
Middleport Pool will have
Meigs
County Court of Common
swimming lessons Monday through
Pleas
..
July 16 fr9m 8-9 a~m. for swim·
Tri-State Driver Training of
mers; 9-10 a.m. for ' in~nnediate;
Middletown
seeks judgment of
10·11 a.m. Jor advanced be'inner;
and II a.m. 10 noon for begmners. $3,297.50 plus interest from Gary
Call Ryan Cowan at 992· 7999 for L. Fife, Pomeroy.
Sears Roebuck and Company of
information.
Louisville, Ky .• seeks judgment of
$3,120.50 plus interest from James
Spencer penonal
Barbara Spencer is a patient at ~-Johnsen of Middleport.
Doan Hall, Room 910B; Ohio State
University Hospital, 410 West lOth
Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 4.3210- Veterans Memoriitl
1228. Cards may be sent 10 her Tuesday Admissions
there or to RIIIlll Route, Somerset, William Kennedy, Middleport
Ohio 43783. Her phone is 293- Tuesday Discltarges
5737. '
Fr·eeda McFann, Middleport;
Charles Kiser, Pomeroy; Jacob
. Lodge to meet
Kennedy, Pomeroy
Th~ Harrisonville Lodge No.
411 wtll meet Saturday, at 7:30p.m. HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
June 29 discbarges - Vivian
Refreshments will be served. All
McCormick,
Pamela Morrison,
master masons welcome.
Wilma McGraw, Doris Harper,
Blanche Thompson, Kathy
Hollingshead, Kathleen Ratliff,
Ralph McKinniss, Anna Oiler,
Enna Oiler, Homer McMillin and
Thomas Y cates.
·
June.l9 blrllu- Mr. and Mrs.
Am Ele Power....................37
Gary Caldwell, son. Gallipolis. Mr.
Ashland Oil........................2S
and Mrs. Rick Farleigh, daughter,
AT&amp;:T..........:......................63
.Wellslone.
,

PlUCK

OFF*
•

Bob Evans ........................ .17

811118CIUPTION IL\TES

IINGL&amp;COPY

SECOND PAIR

Stocks

Cbanning Shop.................. 13

Clunp lndultries........ :........ I3
City Holding.................,....25
Federal MOiui....................2J
Goodyear TC\R. ..................42
Lands End..........,..............:27
Inc. ~·············· ······· 21

By. c.m .. or Motor Rcnlle
'.(lne Woek...........................................SJ.60
{)ne Mont.h .................................., ... .•.$6.95
One Yeor...................................- .....183.20

•

$1.49

Hospital news

Boosten to meet

. The Meigs Band Boosters will
meet. Tuesday at die high school
band room. All band parents are
)Yelcome.

•

PC.

.

Oolly. ........ ................................... .i!ll CMto

WOMEN•s, MEN•s &amp; KIDS•
Leathers • Colors
Character Sandalsfor kids ... and more!
Open July 4

*

*

Inc ................... ~~

Subocribcin not dioollina to poy. ,._ oanl· ·
er I'NI1 remU tft HniWI dtNet to Tho
llofly BenUnel on • lhree, oil or 12 • .

monlh bulo. Cnclil will bo liven e;onlor .
IICh weak.

No oubocripUono

by

ana• when home

ovoitoble.

l•tenectlon of Flatwoods Rd. &amp; State Route 7

Five Points

moil ...,.,..,. In

e~niei-

lerryiee t1

Malllaboorlpllo•
·
lnolcle Melp Coull'
13 Weeb...... .,.,. ... ........................... S21.84 .
28 WMko......................................... f43.16

=

62 Weeko......................................... IS4.76
O..tolclo Molp Coon~T

uw..u............... _........................
aew.-a. .....,..-······-····
......-..........
.:......•.•..... _, ...............

.........
·ill

Stock
are tbe ,
qaote1
protrlded
a.m.
.

Keaper Secarltles, lac,,

Ot'l)a'l

.

\lo

OHIO RIVER PlAZA • RT. 7 • GALLIPOLIS, OH.

I

�'

Wedn11day, June·30,1993

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

~.

hgl

'·

~I

.

4 The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, June 30, 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

.

,,
•

•
I

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'HANGING ·
-BASKETS
FOODtAND IMmNoon R£TAms 8I'IING

$6 99

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And Up

lnde endence Day · --"'
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Har W.ork_lng .•PEPSI FREE
Low Pnces!
•DIET or REGULAR

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It

�WedneSday, June 30,1993

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

..

In tonight's NBA draft,

Bradley, Mashburn, Webber among expected. top choices

Wednesday, June 30, 1

By MIKE NADEL

Despite Browning's exit,

AU~URN HD..LS. Mich. (AP)

- Chris Webber, 6 feet, 9 inches
of basketball talent; looks like a

Reds record 3-0 win over Astros
fe~t cheering wben Rob Dibble
struck out the side in the ninth to
save a 3-0 victory over the Houston
Astros. And Browning was in a
civil, if not accepting, mood afterward.
•'We won. I was just happy to
be able to go out and get past the
sixth inning, for crying out loud,"
Browning said.
Johnson hasn't given Browning
(5-3) much room for e110r, and f~r
good reason. The left-bander has
struggled ·this season as he tries to
come back from a career-threatenconferenoe that Mercer was arrest- ing knee injury last July 1.
By ED SCHUYLER JR,
NEW YORK (AP) -Ray Mer- ed Sundlay in Indianapoli~ aft~r
Brownin~ took a 5.89 earned
cer, knocked out of a rich heavy- being indicted by a grand Jury m run average mto the game Tuesday
weight title fight by Jesse Fergu- the County of New York on a against Houston's Doug Drabek (6son, was hoolced by the long arm of charge of offering Ferguson 8), who has allowed three earned
the law Tuesday on a charge he $100 000 to lose during their fight runs or less in 14 of his 17 starts.
Feb. 6at Madison Square Garden..
tried to bribe Ferguson to lose.
No one expected Browning Mercer lost a 1O"round unan1- who hasn't thrown a shutout in
"Not guilty," Mercer said .
And lhal's all the 1988 Olympic moos decision to Ferguson. He also three years - to be working on
gold medalist said. At least within lost a $2.5 million payday ~gainst . one in the eighth. But he was holdearshot of reporters during and heavyweight champiOn R1dd•ck ing onto a 2-0 lead with a runner on
after his arraignment in Criminal Bowe. who stopped Michael Dokes first and two out whe.n Johnson
Court of New York. He was in the first round on the Garden · decided he wasn't going to press
card. Ferguson got $500,000 to
released on his own recognizance.
his luck.
District Attorney Robert M. challenge Bowe, and he was
"I knew it wasn't a popular
Morgenthau announced at a news
(See MERCER on Paae 7)
move," Johnson said. "But I
didn't want to see him give up a
homer or a double and put us in a
hole. I'm glad it :worlced out - I
would not have been a popular guy
C.utomia (Spriaau 0.2) at Ooldood
in
Ibis town.
(Do- :1-2), 3'JS pm.
•
- • Baseball • ''I kneW he wanted to. rmish. He
Chita~ ~lvarcz 7-3) at ~E·
UN!) (A
0.1), 7:05_p.m.
had
not thrown many pitches and
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Toronto (Stewart 3·2) at Blltimoro
EutentiHYiilloa
had
a
masterpiece going. It was a
&lt;V.........., 2· 7), 7,3s p.m.
y...,
WLP&lt;LGI
Milwaukee
(Minnd:a
0-0)
at
Boatoa
dream."
pitcher's
Philadelpllia .......... .S2 24 .684
(Dorwia 6-7~ ,,lS p.m.
SL LcaUI ................olot 31 .587
7.5
Dibble,
who's had several nights..tll• (Johaton 9-4) at Minneaota
_ . ................40 36 .lU
12
marish
outings
since returning from
(Eriwan ..a), I :OS p.m.
ltansa1
CitJ
(Gardner
4-..
)
at
Tex
...
a
broken
arm,
was bac;k in form.
=
.:::::::: ::U ~ : '\~
(Boh.... 2-1), B!l pm.
Florida ...................l4 41 .4S3 17.S
After Jeff Reardon gave up a single
New Yod&lt; ..............22 S2 .297
Z9
to Jeff BagweU, Dibble got the last
T~unday'sgamu
w......,IH....,.
Seattle (lhnaon S-6) at Minneaota
four outs for his eighth save in 12

high school kid. So do Jamal
Mashburn, 6-8, Calbert Cheaney.
6-7, and J.R. Rider, 6-5.
"When I was 9 months old,

prefers Mashburn and Hardaway,
who figure to go third (Golden
State) and fourth (Dallas Mavericks) in the draft.
"Mashburn, at 6-8, can talc:e a
lot of forwards outside." Rider
said. "He has to get stronger
inside, but no one's going to guard
him outside. He's going to dribble
around them, be's going lo shoot
jumpers.
. "Hardaway, Bl 6-7, can dribble,
shoot and pass. He needs to get
stronger, but his game impresses
mealoL"
The Sacramento Kings, Bl No. 7,
will be followed by the Milwaukee
Bucks and Denver Nuggets before
the Detroit Pistons closes out the

people thought I was 3 years old,';
Sba\vn Bradley said. "I've always
been different, but I would not
change being 7-6 for anything in

Tom Browning JUSt tour outs away
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Davey from a shutout Johnson didn't get
Johnson's most unpopular moment a very hospitable reception on the
as the Cincinnati Reds manager mound, e•ther - a stone-faced
came in a most unexpected circum- Browning handed him the ball and
walked away.
.·
stanc4.
Luckily for Johnson, it wodl:ed
Johnson got booed loudly as
soon as he stepped out of the out The :1.9,215 fans were on their
dq~out Tuesday nif1hl to relieve

Mercer arraigned in New
York court on bribery charge

0

(Bonb 5-4), l :l.S p.m.

San Francilco ... :... .S2 24
Allanoa ...................43 l4
Loo AnF"" ...........39 36

.667
.SSI
.l20

HOU&amp;ton ................. 31 36

.514

12

CINCINNATI ........ l7 40
San DiCJ0 ..~..........,29 41

.411

14.5
22S

Col9rado ................26

49

·ir,
•

California (Finley 9·5) 111 Oakland
(Wolc!t l~. 3,15 p.m.
TOUI (L&lt;ibnridt 7-4) at Doaoit (Do-

I.S
II..!

haty 7·3), 7:051'-m.

BaltilnorcatChicaao.I:0:5 p.m.

24.5

- • Transactions • -

Tuesday's SCOf"S

Pi.....,

CINCINNATil, Houstm 0
Manbell9,
2
Allanoa 6, Cokmldo 4
~•ll,SLLouia 10

Base!lall

ou...,1o. s.. Die&amp;• s

San fn · v 3. Lo. Anpla 1

New YOlk 10, fJoric1a 9 (12lnll.)

Taday's cames
CNclao (Guzman 6-6) at San Dieao
(Whi10h""' 2--4~ 4:05 p.m.
New Ymt. (Sabclba&amp;en 3-7) at Florida
( - 1 S.i), Hl p.m.
Pittaburah (Ne.aale 2·2) at MonlrMl
( 0 - (0.2), 7$ p.m.
HouROn (Swindell 6-7) at CIN.CINNATI (Bol&lt;horf&gt;S~ 7,35 p.m.
Cohndo (Blllil 3- 5) at Atlan&amp;a (AN'l'

9-2~i:.r;·
'
·a (Greene 9-1) at SL

LaaiJ

&lt;"'::""~:;,llor;. I· I) .......

A...,lcan l.aque
AL: Named Detroit manapr Sparky
AndU.on; Baltimore man~-;r.:obnny
0.•; and T orm1o coach•
Cilco.,
John Sullinn and Gene Tmac:c COic:ha
!or1he Ali-Sw pme.
BALTIMOH- ORIOLES: Si&amp;ncd
Mike Bielecki. pilcha, 10 a minor-leap
earmct wi1h Roc:hc:lta'oflh.e Imemationoi!Mp .
NEW YORK YANKEES: Named
Denbo manaa« of ~ Oromaboro
~ q{tbo Swlh Allantio Loa..,.

Olf)'

TEXAS RANGERS: ActivaWMI Brian

Bohaao~t. ~!:.,•,;. from 1lle 15-da~ diaablod liiL
. , ldfBmnkey, p1t.cher,
10 Oklabama City «the Americati Aao-

oatioo.

NlllooaiiMII'!t

AnF"" (A. .cio 6-4).10,35 pm.

NL: NamCid Phillldcljlhia man~aer Jim
Freaui; lAI Anpla manaaer Tommy

Thursday's aames

Laaorda; and Atlanta coachol Pat Cor·
rate., Leo Mauone md limJ Williama
coad. far.lhe AU-Star pme.

Piuaburah (Cooke !5·3) at Mootreal
~dl-4),1 ,35

p.m.

CHICAGO CUBS: ActivatGcl Mike

· Philadelphia (SchWina 1· 3) at St .
LoW (Tm&lt;bo')' 1-6), I ,35_p.m.
NeW Yruk (Ooodca 7-7) at Florida
(llooah 3-8), Hl p.m.

M"'P", ~. fnlm tho IS-day diablod
list. ~oned Twk Wendell, pitcher, to
Iowa ol' the American AIIOCiaDoa.
.

Howton (Hamia.ch 6-5) at CINCJNNATI (ltijo 6-3), 7,35 p.m.

PoalOr, pite:het, on the IS-day GiNblod

Colorado (Reyn01o 5-3)· at Att.nta
(Gla- 9·3), 7,40 p.m.

CINCINNATI REDS' Placed StoVo
Hat. Purchued tho contract af Jof'f)'
S dlin, p·.....,., fnlm lndUna""''' of tho

~-r - Mut
COI.OIIAOO ROCICES, Placod

3

~

Baltimc:n ..........,....40 36

.566
.526

Onnt, phdoo&lt;, ...... ll-tlay diablod 1ia.
Clalmcd Scou Service. pitcher, off
waivan frar. the CUK:innati Rrld.l.
FLORIJ).\ MARLINS : Placed Bm
Barbaic., llliCOnd bac:man, m the 15-day
dinbled lilt. Purchucd the conttiC:J of
Gu.a Polidor, inacld•, from Edmonton of
tho Pacific Couo Loop. ApoodiD....,

o ............. ............. l7 39
CI.EVELAN0 ... .... 3S 42

.417
.4S5

10

li&amp;ned him to the Marlin&amp; team in the
Ou1C Cout Loape.

AMERJCAN LEAGUE
Tum

Eut.emDI•W.
·. W L Pet.

Toroato ..................41

30

New Vodl ..............4S

33

l)euoiL ...................43 · 33

.615
.577

Mil••1.!kct .............32 43 .427

CB

12.l
14.5

Watei'JIDIYlalon

Chiclao..................39 35
Kanou City ...........31

n

sn
.S07

Califomil ............... 37 37

.SOO

Seiulo .................... 37

.481
.459
.431
.423

40
Tcx• ..................... 14 40
Minflelota .............. 32 41
Olkhnd .................30 41

u

wilh. Thomaa Howard, pitcher, and II•

SA-N DJEOO PADRES ' Pia cod Pat

OomCil, pi~. on the 15-day dilablcd
lill, rctroactiw to June 26. Purcbued lhe
ctn.rac:t of PedJo Martinez, pitda, m.n
Lu Voau of tho Pacific Coait Leap.

l

l.l
5
6.5
7.5

Tuesday's scores
CLEVELAND&amp;, Chicaao 2
Tol'U\to 2, Blltimotc I
Minncsot~ 7, Seattle S

Milwaukee 7, Boat.an 6
New Yolk 4, Deuoit 3 (10 inn .)
TCu .. 4, K.anlu City 3
_Oai.llnd 3, California 7 (II inn .)

Today's games
Octtoit (Wclll 9-2) n New York (Abbott 4-7), l p.m.

BasketbaU
NallonaJ lukee.blll AUoclatioft
INDIANA PACERS: Named Guficld
Heard and Bill Blair 111iaant eo~clB.

Foothllll
Nadonal Football Leque

DALLAS COWBOYS : Sip.ed David
Lucu, wiOe ra:eivcr.

Hockey
National "ock~r Ltaa•e

NEW JERSEY DEVILS, AnnDIIftcod
the reaianuion of Marahal1John1ton,
playa- pcnonnel dircctOJ, to become the
head
I four-team NHL ICOUtin&amp; com-bino.

or

ATTENTION!
POMEROY AERIE
2171 MEMBERS.
Dues Are Due
Now.
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GOOD GAME, JENNIFER - Defndln1
Wimbledon ehamplon Stdfl Graf of Germany
coogr!ltulates America's Jennifer Caprlati after

m, MARGE! - Clnclnaad pitcher Jose Rijo
(left) throws a ball on a string towards Reds
owner Marge Schott in the seventh inning of

Tuesday night's game against the visiting Hous- ·
ton Astros, who reu J-0. (AP)
I
0

At Wimbledon,

.-•

I

Indians hand White Sox 8-2 defeat

Graf, Navratilova in semifinals

ByCHUCK MELVIN

CLEVELAND (AP)- Pitchers

Thomas

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is pleased to announce the
opening of his practice July 1
in association with

Thomas A. Durnell,

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POIIIIOY'S QUAUTY SIOI STOll

I

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0

By STEPHEN WILSON
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- Is there any reason to bother
with the women's semifinals?
Mighl as well 1e~ Steffi Graf and
Martina Navratilova do battle for
the title right now.
. Graf,lhe top seed and defending
champion, and Navratilova, the No.
2 seed and nine-time champion,
have reached the semifinals with
such ease that virtually everyone
assumes IIley will face each other
in the championship match Saturday.
'
Neither player bas lost a set so
far. In five malches. Navratilova
has dropped just 16 games and
Giaf only 15.
~ Navratilova had a slightly easier
time in Tuesday's quarterfinals,

cruising to a 6-3, 6-1 victory over
Natalia Zvereva. Graf saved a set
point before punishing Jennifer
Capriati 7-6(7-3),6-1.
The other women's semifinalists
. are Conchita Martinez. who beat
Helena Sukova 6-1, 6-4, and Jana
Novotna, a 6-4, 6-3 winner over
Gabriela Sabatini. •
Based on past performances,
Graf ought 10 have little trouble
with Martinez and Navratilova
should ease past Novotna in Thursday's semis. Graf and Navratilova
both have UJ records against their
challengers.
The women had a day off today
while the men played their quarterfinal matches. The pairings bad top
seeded Pete Sampras against

n
lfu "' ning family affair for Rupes

;rCOR1LAND, Ohio (AP)- For
"They hav·e indoor track at
'!'¢ and Michelle Rupe, running is OSU, and vou can't throw the disa·lamilyaffair.
cos inside/~ she said. "So I mn to
~ "If we're not running in an~ keep in shape, and I kept at it
race, we're normally ru11nmg because I lost weiJ!ht, and I got to
wgether if we can rmd a sitter for like it My specia!Ues were the 800
oi)r three kids, •' said Michelle and 1,600 meters, but I also ran
R!ljJe, who also coaches girls' cross cross coun(ry. 1 came to OSU as a
c4untry at Maplewood High walk-on, and earned a partial scbolS~bool. "But even our 1wo kids.
arship.'1
Craig (7), and ·Rochelle (4), run
While she was in the early stage
wben they want to."
of becoming an accomplished longj£ric Rupe is the only family distance runner in Columbus, Ted
member· not yet involved in run- Rupe was on the Cleveland State
· ·ne bas a good excuse: He IS· 1 cross countty team, where he was
nipg.
year old.. . .
. chosen· most valuable runner three
;Running was a way of life for limes.
. the pare.nts before they even met in
•'I haven't stopped running
I!181.
· since I went out for the Maplewood
. :Michelle, 34. was third in the High track team in 1969,'' he said.
st~tc in the discus while at "I really wasn't much in high
Brecksville High School. She school, but I mn well at Cleveland
switched to running as a sopho- State thanks to coach Dave Burgmore at Ohio State.
er's help.

Mercer.. .

defending champion Andre Agassi,
three-time champion Boris Becker
vs. fellow German Michael Stich,
Jim Courier vs. Todd Martin,' and
Stefan Edbefll vs. Cedric Pioline.
As Navraulova chases her lOth
Wimbledon crown Bl the age of 36,
she said she is feeling more confldent and relaxed with every mateb.
"The closer I get, the better I
(eel about it,'' she said. "It's been
a gradual ascent to better form, and
it's holding. oo• The tournament gets
easier emotionally for me as I go
on. It's much more nerve wraclcing
getting to the semis or quarters .
Once you bit the quarters, you are
just playing the person, you're not
playing Wimbledon any more.''
Just being at Wimbledon gives
Navratilova special motivation.
"SoJjlletimes it's hard IP pro,

-------------

;l;j~}':e ~~~~~:~j~f(~fn1':

••

.

~ ')

•o
' ni

•

heart more than on form some. times. "But; you know, they both
. seemtobeworkingweU.
"I still have the desire to play
well regardless of the tournament,
but here you don 'I even have to
·work at it. If anything, I have Jo
sor't of pull back and not get too
excited because it's easy to get
overwhelmed here.''
Navratilova said she is thriving
on the grass despite a ·recurring
anlde injury, suffered while playing
basketball in March.
"It's J'ust hard to get out of 1x~. :.
in the morn in~, but once I get
going I'm OK, ' slhanhesa id. "f'm
99 percent
still moving better
of the women out there ... I'm playing as good tennis. as I ever have in
my career.''
.
Navratilova takes offense at
suggestions lhal the women's game
must be suffering if a player her
age, hobbled by anlcle 1ro11bles, can
win so easily.
ld .
"I think you shou g•ve me
credit rather than take it away from
the rest of the women,'' she said.
"I'm just playing good ~Mis, period. Age doesn't counL"
But, eight years ago, would she
have expected to he where she is
today?
"You know , if I really think
about It, I can't believe it," she
said. "But why not?"

(Continued from Page 6)
.m·
Stopped 17 seconds to the second district attorney, asked bail be set
round May 22 Bl Washington.
at SlO,OOO, but Judge George
Mercer got about $50,000 to ~oberts rejected the request.
fight lhe 36-year-old FeJ'Iuson, Mauskopf.had presented the case 10
who got $10,000.
the grand Jury.
A tape of the fight revealed the
Mercer's next court appearance
32-year-old Mercer rnt offered the is set for July 12. He is ch~ged
bribe in the third round, according w\th a class D felony that Carnes a
to Morgenthau, who also said. "it
pnson term of up to seven years:
was repciiiNI numerous times after
Hank Johnson, Mercer s tramer
the·third round."
from indianapolis, where Mercer
HBO taped the fight, but did not bas bten living since his loss, .~d · ,...~-------,
teiCvisc iL
be was contacted by authonues
,
1
"'Illey were practicing for the about being if!terviewed about the
bigger fight,'' said Daniel J. matter. He Slid he tol.d them ~
Cutlcman, cbief of the Investiga- Mercer to come to h1s mother s
tion Division of the New York house.
.
Frauds B'ureau. "They used four
Mercer was en route to meet
ll'lll:king 8)'lletllS and we were able Johnson when he was pulled over
·
by the Indiano State Police•. urest•
tol!etintoll)oaeiyst.ems."
'fi'ibe tlpCS confirmed thai Mered by a New York State policeman
cer re~ly attempted to per- and taken to the Marion County
suade Perlu100 to let Mercer wm " Jail, according to Johnson.
Morgenthau said. ''I don't think I
''Thepolicemen .we~politeand
want to comment on what Fergu- did not embarrass h1m, the tramer
sonliid.''
added.
.
When liked if Ferguson would
Randy Gordon, chal!man of t!'C
be c:haraecl for not reportins a ~ew Y~ State Athletic Comm•sbribe, the cllstrict attorney said, 81,00• Sllid referee Wayne Kelly ~ld
"We're not considering charging h1m there had been a 101 talk1ng
him with anythlna "
betwea1 M~r and Ferplson dnr"We're not aQuj1 to comment ina the. filht. Talking between
on what ltlt llalUI Ia " Cutlernan fighters 11 common, GonSoll noted.
said "Heilnotbcinichned..
Feb. 28• ROICIIIIry Ross of
Pu.u.on reachea at his horne theOnNorth
Jency Herald &amp; News
in ·PII!Iidelpiua, referred all ques- reponed a IICIIIIt:e • saylna ~
lioniiiD biii!Ducy, 11111011 Blans, hid ulred Feaa.- 10 kNie during
of Phlladalpbla. Binns was not the,~
·
·mmcdlately available for com'fhe day before the story,
:ne.u,
ICelly told me be'd helrd It might
1
•'He baa cateaorlcally dCilied be m01e dta1 Jolt .~~g, it might
his auilt,'' attorney Dominick be a bribe offer, . aud Gordon,
AtiiCirOa of New YOlk aald at Merwho IIOtll!ed autboridea.
cer'l ..,.._L "I am llhodced
"It'• ldDd of sad when someand cliiiiUiyed he fw even been body trlea 10 al~ ~ outoome of •
. Jlloted ..
I1IOI1ina event. 111d Tbomu A.
10
I
MASON,
Roll- Muskopf an llllilllllt Cc-wtanMI•, nperintendcnt of the
' __.
.-'
New YCilt Swo Pnlice.

pIckens has a
.large SelectiOn
Of
COOLERS
ICE CHESTS
ICE CREAM
FREEZERS &amp;
THERMOS
JUGS
In Stock For

g.

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Friday, July 2nc1, 1993 • 9a.m.-3p.m.
~f.

Q

PICKENS
HARDWARE
w.v.

•

• Free Blood Pressure Testing by Rutland
Emergency Squad
• Re[reshmeHts
• Talk with Maxine Griffith, Classic OneSM Director

Su•••·r·Fun.

-GRASS·
HOPPERS

_CHAPMAN SHOES

' match at Wimbledon's Center
their quarterfinal
Court Tuesday. Graf won 7-6 (7-3), 6-1 to make
it to the semifinals. (AP)

..

Whatever it take8.
lllmk ODe, Alhooi,NA
Memb«fD!C

Sheela Delayn, country music's up and coming female country
artist and Langsville native, will be In the Rutland lobby from
8 aam.-3 p.m. Come on In and enjoy the music.
~--------~~--~------------------~---· -----

..
"

•

lottery picks with two consecutive
choices. The Los Angeles Lakers,
at No. 12, will be the rust of last's
playoff teams to draft
Like Detroit, Orlando and Charlo tie Hornels have two firstrounders. The Miami Heat and San
Antonio Spurs have to wait for the
second round, and the New Yolk
Knicks have no selections at all.
Golden State, Minnesota and
Portland Trail Blazers are among
the teams that have publici y stated
a desire to deal.
"There are enough teams oo• in a
somewhat aggressive mode," Portland vice president Brad Greenberg
said. "It would not surprise me to
see a number of deals.' '

Theweieht
Joss planlor

start.
out in the seventh.
.
"I really w11nted to keep the
Manager Gene Lamont said.\
Dibble complained 1¥.1 week have been using a new strategy streak going," Clark said. "During Bolton would stay in the rotation ;
about being used only in ihe ninth against Kenny Lofton recently, tty- the streak, we really haven't been fornow.
l
inning, and suggested the Reds ing to jam him with inside pliChes. scoring a whole lot, but .with an
''The bottOm line. is, be bas to
ought to trade him. Although he Apparently, Lofton has figured it offense like we've got, we can keep us in games,'' Lamont said
said ;fuesday he still plans to leave ouL
score runs in a hurry. It's simple: "He ran into a hot team, but you're ·.
someday, he was happy to get into
••A Jot of people have been ' Two plus two malc:es four; ~itching goiQg to face a lot of hot teams dur- d
a game in the eighth.
ing,lhe season."
·?
pitching him in, and he's been and hilling makes a winner. '
"I don't feel! should be labeled starting to tum on the ball to keep
The Indians scored twice in the
Chicago's Frank
went 0 ;
a one-inning guy. Now I've Fot to them out of there,'' manager Mike rust inning against Rod Bolton (0- for 3 with a walk, ending his billing ;
go out and prove what I say,' Dib- Hargrove said Tuesday night after 4), who was recalled from the streak atl ~ games.
'
ble said. • 'Hopefully things have Lofton's first career grand slam minors Monday after the White
been straightened out and they helped the Cleveland Indians defeat Sox released 45-year-old Carlton
0''
know I just want to pitch as much the Chica~SO White Sox 8-2.
Fisk. Lofton led off with a triple off
as I can, no matrer what the situaThe wm was the Indians' fifth the glove of center fielder Lance
tion." •
strai~bt, matching their longest Johnson, Wayne Kirby hit a sacriBrowning wants to pitch a lot, winrung streak of the season, and it fice fly, and Paul Sorrento added
100, but as a starter. Johnson put continued their recent domination ali RBI double.
him in the bullpen for one appear- of the leading learns in' the AL
Cleveland finished Bolton in the
ance earlier this season, and has West. They swepl three weekend fourth, sending up ll batters and
been quick to relieve him when he games from Kansas City and have scoring six runs on Lofton's grand
got in 1roUble as a starter.
won two in a row against first- slam, Sorrento's RBI single and an
"I don't know if I've gotten a place Chica~o
error by second baseman Joey
thick skin lately or what, but I just
"I've wd 'at! along that we've Cora..The home run was Lofton's
wanted to go out and have fun and got talent," Hargrove said. "Noth- rust SIDCe last Aug. 23.
pitch the way I'm capable of." . ing this team does surprises me,
"I think I could have hit that .
Browning said. "It just has not because we have talent. It all one out,' ' Bolton said. "I wanted
s
Per Thousund
been much fun for me Ibis year."
depends on pitching."
~ c~me inside, and I left it about
Drabek isn't having much fun,
Delivered To
Cleveland, which finishes ils SIX mches.over the center of the
either. He bas five complete games, 13-game homestand tonight,· is 9-3 plate, right in his wheel house. He
but a losing recdrd in lar.ge measure with a 2.00 team ERA through the was all over it
because the Astros aren't scoring rust 12 games.
• 'I'm going through a down
runs for him.
''Right now, our pitching is period, I guess. it llappens to everySame story Tuesday. .
going good, and that's what was a body."
"He pitched a good game and little shy before," Lofton said.
The White Sox didn't get a hit
deserved a better fate. How many "Now, the starters are going past until the fourth. when Robin YentJcxt to Meigs (o
times have I told you that this five innings. and our. bullpen can tura hit his 13th horne run to close
year?" manager Art Howe said. come in for lhe seventh, eighth and it to 2-1. But when Cleveland
Fairground•
"It's a broken record. We've got 10 ninth and rmish the job."
answered with six runs in the botColi if ?'s
get him some runs before he can
Mad!: Clark (3-3) gave up two tom half, ilwasall but over.
win some games.
runs and six hits in eight innings,
Chica11o added a meaningl~ss
"It was just a bad night offen- striking out four and wallcing three. run on Rick Wrona's RBI groundsively, one ()f those nights. Obvi- He hadn't been able to getll!rough
ously, the man pitching against us
f,
bad a lot to do with it He was on - the third inning Of hiS nrPViOUS r-~~~~~-~~~~~!!!!!!!'------top of his game toniaht"
·
I
Drabek allowed just five hils
and two runs in seven innin¥s ,,('a
an RBI double by Chris Sabo m the
second and a solo homer in the
JEFF WARNER
third by Barry Larkin, who has a
'
113 W. 2nd 8L
.388 lifetime average against him.
Pomeroy, OH. 457&amp;1 ·
But once again, the Astros wasted
Office 992-547!1
another good overaU performance.
1-800-742-3868
•'
"I can't keep thinking about
.J
. what's happened," Drabek said.
I
"I've got to worry about what hap•~
pens next''

chances.

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag..-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

11 '

_.....

-f

I

�'
Ohio

The

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

ELL

Family
Medicine

.Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·10 PM

OPEN JULY 4TH

lion to the tiunily.
1
Scialfa's publicist said Tuesday
!lJat the 36-ye;w-old backup singer
IS pregnant, The rock 'n' roll couple already have a 3-year-old son,
Evan James, and a I 1/2-year-old
daughter, Jessica Rae.
Springsteen, 43, married Scialfa
· in 1991.
Her f'llSt solo album, " Rumble
Doll," is due out July 13.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Scott
Till'ow, Joyce Carol Oates, Calvin
Trillin and other writers have
agreed to use their words to fight
hunger.
They are taking part in WrilerS
Harvest: The National Reading.
hurt...
'
.
The fund-raising event is organized
A spokesman for the Post, by the non-profit group Share Our
Howard Rubenstein, said lawyers Strength.
Share Our Strength hopes to
for the newspaper were reviewing
the lawsuit and had no comment.
organize 200 readings in the United
But today's Post said: "Ms. States and Canada on OcL S. Tickijouston did not s~er an overdose ets will be $10 for adults, $S for
of any piUs and does not take diet students. ·
Last year, 480 writers in 8S
pills. She was not admitted to
Miami's Mt Sinai Hospital (or any cities took part in the first Writers
other hospital), and was not diag- Harvest, which raised $44,000.
nosed with any heart irregulari- Among those participating ·were
ties.'1
_ Susan SonUJ&amp;, Gloria Naylor, Jane
Smiley and= Roth.
NEW YORK (AP) - Bruce
Novelist
rick Buach came
Springsteen and his wife, Patti up ":Vith the idea and is the project's
Sci.alfa, are expecting a third addi- chairman.

Good Thru Juty 3, 111113

P-17~130-92

.
1

ItA CINE FAA - Attending the state FFA
convention were from left to rll:ht Jessica S~yre,

Fred Matson, Stephanie Sayre; Christie Cooper
and Chris Hamm.
·
·

8430

BUY ONE
GET ONE

FFA chapter
;attends recent state conference
Members of the Racine-South-

~ Amercia recently attended the 65th
• State FFA Convention in Colum·
bus.
. The theme of the conference
• was "The Spirit of Leadership. "
:. Members had the opportunity to
; listen 10 and talk with people such
· as Robert D. Sommers II, assistant
: director of Agriculture Education
Service; Bobby Moser, vice presi.dent and executive dean, College of
• Agriculiure at The Ohio State Uni·
: versity; Ted Sanders, superinten. dent of Public Instruction, Ohio
Department of Education; Ed Johnson; Coby Shorter, motivational
speaker, Austin, Texas and Darrell
: L. Parks, director of vocational and
· career education, Ohio Department
of Education.
.
TALENT AWARDED· Stephanie Sayre and Fred Matson ' .
On Thursday June 17 each chapRacine-Southern
Chapter FAA are presented with the first place
ter member was given assignments.
plaque
ror
the
state
FFA talent show by State Vice President Mark
• Fred Matson, Christie Cooper, JesRuff.
, sica Sayre and Chris Hamm served .
on the courtesy corp to assis in
making he convention run a linle crown award. This award was pre- Talent Show. Matson played guitar
smoother, while Stephanie Sayre sented because the Racine-South- while Sayre played bass to the song
· went to the State FAA choir prac- em chapter earned a Superior Rat- "Michelle." They were given first
. lice. Later in the afternoon, Racine· ing in the National Chapter, BOAC place and played during the final
session of the convention.
Southern FFA advisor Aaron and safety award areas.
The RaCine-s·outhern chapter
Also during the final session,
Sayre, ·his wife Shirley and daughter Stephanie attended a special nmked 33nl out of 318 in the state Sayre received the State FAA
state awards banquet. Stephanie and received a silver rating, ranJced degree. This degree is the the third
Sayre was awarded a plaque for 36 in the area of BOAC and degree of membership in the FAA
placing third in the state in the pro- received a bronze rating and nmked organization and is the highest
ficiency area of Fruit and Veg- 21 in the area of safety and de~ the s~te can bestow 011 a
etalllc at die s&amp;ond regular session received a bronZ€lating. · · " ·
member. It is awarded to the top
Friday aftemoon Christie Coop- two percent of the FFA members in
of the convention.
On Friday Racine FAA Presi- er and Chris Haman served as the state of Ohio based on scholar·
dent Christine Coope( was asked to chapter delegates and voted on new ship, supervised agriculture experithe stage to receive on behalf of the state officers plus other state FAA ence, ·FFA contests and leadership
Racine FAA chapter the triple items of business. At the same and community activities.
time, Fred Matson and Stephanie
The Racine FFA members are
Sayre were involved in the State now attending FFA camp.

Married five
:months, wife
:is miserable

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, .
DIET PEPSI,

Mountain Dew
or Pepsi Cola PEPSI
12-Pack 12-oz. cans

.
·
: Dear ADD LaDders: My dear
friend, • Alice,• bas always included
me in her family activities. She
invites me for every Christmas,
Thanksgiving and Easter.
· Here's the problem: Several years
lgo, I bought myself an expensive
taupe leathet and suede jackeL I
loved the jacket ·so much that I
bought a 1811pe sweater and a leather
skirt to match. The outfit was really
a knockout. Whenever I wore it, I
~ved loads of compliments.
.
' A year ago, my Jacket disappeared. Because I travel a lot, I
thought I had left it somewhere.
Alice's younger sister, "June."
)Yorks at my doc!OI's office. When I
had a ·checkup last week, I stopped
b~ to chat with her, and there,
hangins on the back 9f her office
door, was my taupe sUede Jackel- I
was so shocked I wai speechless.
When I sot home, I called Alice
and told her what I had seen. She
Said she'd tallt to June about it. Well,
June told Alice that she had bought
the jacket herself. Alice said she
didn't believe her' sister, but she
Wanted to give her the opportunity
to return it with grace. So far, she
hasn't.
I just came home from another ·
family set-together, and June was
there. She seemed very uncomfort·
able. I really want my jacket back,
Ann, but rm concerned that it might
eause a rifl, and I don't want to Jose
AliCe's ··
· .
·
, How
this? Should
• pvo JUM lbo tell •of the outfit if
she continllel 10 maintain that the
jlcket illtera? She will neva' be liD
well-droiMd in hllr life. Plase help
me OUL -PORT WAYNE,IND.
DEAR P.W.: Give it one lllOI'Ci
lhoL Oo 10e June, and tell hllr you
know that :J-:ket is yours and you
want it blck - no questions asked.
If she lltlll insists that she bought
it, ulc hllr 10 produce proof -- such
u the name ol the stole, etc.
Of c:ouriO, she will not he able 10
but you Will have had
the · lction of lettina hllr know
you know lhe'a • liar and a thief.
That lhould be enough.

~e

Jllld.':C•

Poet's Corner.

f

. Jagged!boughts
Jasoa L1ves!
By Gloria K. Gardaer
Rutland
Collect caD from Eric
Will you accept the charges
Please moo oh please say yes.
Yes, I say with dread in my
heart

Mom, sit down,
I don't know where to start.
Jason's been ·in a car wreck. I
shiver.
Is it bad?
They're going to operate.
But mom he'll he O.K. I cry.
His head is hurt and internal
injuries.
Then it sinks in.
Eric is trying to protect me.
I scream, I go numb, 'I want to
die!
Charlie! Amy ! Jason's dying!
Jason 's dying!
I gulp back sobs, I pound the
walls, I sink to lhe floor, covering
mY eyes.
3000 miles separate us.
My baby boy! Hurt! Hurt! Hurt!
Amy take the phone. They tallc.
Then hang up.
Eric will call back when they
Opetate.

I exist in limbo.
My mind tryin$ to shut down.
No! I can't let1t!
I quit dying.
Knowing what I must do.
Charlie I'm going, Jason needs
me.
You do what you have to do.
Mom, I'm gomg too.
No Amy you stay home and
take care of your daughter Jessie:
That's my brother! Amy cries.
We pack, we go.
The agony of waiting to get
there.
I'm weighed own with death
thoughts.' .
How .bad is It? WUI Jason live?
All of this and more run through
my ravaged miild.
We're there!
Jason's in !CU. I walk back.
I gaze down at my 18 year old
son.· ·
·
Oh ·myGocll
Reality moves in. I must stay
strong. I stifle my screams with a
fiSL
Tubes ruming in his head, arms,

I

:I

FREE

--.,

: em Chapter of Future Farmers of

'

I
I
I
I
I
I

SQUEEZE·IT
DRINKS
6 PAK

~Racine-Southern

r.ou

Spaun, Bobby and Linda Foster Sr.,
Robert and Judy Miller, Dwaine,
Gma and Cody Weaver1 Jim and
Darien~ Vanaman, Tammy Miller
and Lawrence Shiutis~ Robert and
Mary Barrett, and Shirley, ..:manda, Michele and Christina Miller.
Out of town guests wereRalph
and Gladys Blosser, William and
Hazel Moore, Groveport, Marguerite Baker, RushviJle, Catherine
Hill, Sue Hill, and Niclrie and Cody
Hill,.Pleasantville, Richard and
Patty Nelson, Jerry, Jeanette and
Ryan Nelson, South. Point, Frank
and Evelyn Leach, Wellston, Walter and,Pat Nelson; Aaron, Mindy
and Miranda Nelson, and Brian
. Benca, L,ancaster, Jack and Cheryl
Nelson, Proctorville.
.

·FREE

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JULY 3, 1993

RIGULAR HOURS

aU these. The explosive force necessary to make a "BANG" or to
propel a rocket into the sky can
cause serious damage if it giles oft'
while still in SOII'ieone~s hand. An
obvious method for prevention of
these injuries is to never lisJn any
firework while it is in your or
someone else' s hand. Put the fire•
work in a proper holder or on a
solid surface. Light the fuse,
preferably with a long match, then
run-run-rua.
Fuses are unpredictable, and
sometimes they will set off the firework in an instant in!!lr:NI of allowing the usual several seconds delay.
Remember that skyrockets apd
other fireworks have sufficient
force to go up into the air. If you
are leaning over the rocket when
~s happens, the rocket goea into
you instead of into the sky. Stand
to lhe side of the firework .and use
that long match.
Firecrackers are a perennial
favorite because that "BANG" is
exciting, and it sure gets everyone's attention. But firecrackers are
not all fun . Those which use a
small amount of powder willllljlke
a nice bang and cause only a tium
if they go off in the hand. Larger
firecrackers will blow fingera to
pieces. If lhe fii'CCiliCker is lit on a
gravel driveway, it will send gravel
shrapnel when it goes off. So if
frrecrackera are legal in your area,
please be sure that
put them on
a safe surface; bke a concrete
driveway, when lighting them. ·
I like frreworts, and as a kid I lit
my share of frrecrackers, Roman
candles, skyrockets and sparklers.
But remember, the ellCitement of
frreworks should not overrule sensible safety precautions, Children
need training and supervision in
order to use low-powered fireworks
safely. Large and powerful fire. works should he left to the professionals. Review your state's laws
about frreworks; then, you and your
children make your decision
together. If rou use proper JDC&amp;U·
tions, there s no reason wliy this
Independence Day can't he a safe
and exciting time for you and your
famil .
·
. "l'amuy Medlclae'' Is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
Ohio University College of Os~
pathic Medicine, Gl'Oiivenor Hall,
Athens, Ohio, 4!701. ·

-Nanies in the newsNEW YORK (AP) - Whitney
Houst9n slapped t~e New York
Post w1th a $60 million lawsuit for
a story that said she overdosed on
diet pills.
The Post printed a retraction
today.
On Monday, the tabloid said
that the 29-year-old Grammy-winning singer spent 9() minutes at a
Miami hospital on Thursday and
was diagnosed with an irregular
heartbeat, apparently brought on by
diet pills.
Houston accused the tabloid in a
lawsuit Tuesday of (abricating the
story.
"She has never taken a diet pill
in her life," said her lawyer, Sheldon Platt. " She's outraged. She' s

POMEROY, OH.

ALLSTORIS

Nelson reunion ~eld recently
The annual Nelson reunion was ·
held recently at the Forest Acres
Park·in Rutland.
Walter Ray Nelson said grace
before the dinner. Following the
dinner, games were played and pictures were taken.
Local residents attending were
Richard Bert, Tanya and Richie
Dill, Bonnie Miller, Julia Engle,
Rossie and John Nelson, Tim and
·Michelle Showalter, Dick and
Sharon Folmer, Danny and Debbie
Folmer, Ed and Judy Nelson, Laura
Fields, Harry and Sally Stewart~
Charlie Miller, Randy, Sally and
Timmy Wise, Cathy and Cortney
Scarberry, Betty E. Dill, Raymond
and Lydia Smith, Bobby and Becky
Foster Jr., Keith Stout and Missy
Foster, Ryan Foster and Rhonda

BUY ONE
GET ONf

298 SECOND ST.

Leave fireworks to
the pros on July 4

l

TUNA 0
HAMBURGER
HELPER

7.5·1.50L

STORE HOURS

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Note to regular readers: You
may remember having seen this
column before. It is based on a letter I received three years ago, but I
think the message is important
enough to print again for this year's
Independence Day celebration.
JCW
.
Question: My children have
been trying to convince me that
they are old enough to have fireworks this 4th of July. I'm worried
that they may get hurt. Do you
have any suggestions? Answer:
Your concern for your children's
safety is justified. Most states have
laws restricting the sale, possession
or use of fireworks. These laws
were not written just to t81ce away
your enjoyment of the 4th of July
but because of the many injuries
produced by fireworks each year.
The best - and certainly Sjlfest way to enjoy fireworks is as a spectator. However, if you or your children decide to set some off at your
home, there are a few things which
you should keep in mind.
Injuries from (li'Cworks are usually due to burns, explosions, flying fragments or from falls in the
dark, The location you choose for
your frreworks should not be near
any combustible materials, and the
surface should be free of obstacles
so that your risk of falling in the
dark is minimized.
You should always select cloth'
ing which is light in color to help
prevent someone else from ·accidentaUy .running into you, and the
material should be safe around
. sparks. All fli'Cworks require "fire"
so caution must he used to prevent
burns;
In Ohio the only fireworks
which are le~al are those which
will not go 'BANG." Sparklers,
smoke bombs and snakes are about
all that is OK. With these, the
major danger is from burns or faDs.
The wire inside a sparlder gets very
hot as the sparkler burns. The wire
stays hot after the spark.ler has
burned out, but young children
often don't realize this until they
grab that hot wire and bum their
hand.
Fireworks laws are not strictly
enforced in many areas. I have seen
several places selling small firecrackers; skyrockets, Roman candles and similar items. In other
states, like Missouri and Ten nessee, the law allows the sale of

P-17-96-130 m8430

I

nose, mouth, everywhere.
Everywhere tubes, medicine,
beeps and hisses.
He ' s in a deep coma. He's
shaved, he's naked, and he quivers
from a paralyzing drug. '
A crucial part of me shrivels up
and is gone forever.
I ache, Oh Dear God I ache!
Jason , I take your hand and
whisper
I'm here ~d I'm staying.
Wake up Jason-release the
bonds or coma.
The doctor says it's bad.
Probably won' t live another 48
hours.
I searched for a reserve of
strength. I found it and prayed.
I prayed! I prayed!
Waite up Jason! Live Jason! I
love you Jasonl
You Jive!
Another CAT scan.
Severe brain damage!
May never waite uP.!
No! No! No! Will be a vegetable!
• I pray more.
You waite up!
Weeks later you talk! (A vegtable?)
•
·
You said to me:
Take me home to find Jason.
You wilk! I take you home.
A big family welcome at the airport.
We eat pizza at McDonald's
We laufhl We cry! We celebrate Jason
More rehabilitation. A lot morel
You're a living miracle they
say!
I say God performed that mira·
clel
.
Three months have gone by
since that dreadful phone call. My
life is again filled with renewed
hope. My son, Jason, has some
mental and physical problems that
time will heal. Ri~ht now he can
lllllJC with me agam, which makes
my heart sing. Jason is not even
close to being a vegetable!
Juon will he able to live a productive life agliin.
EventilaUy.
Bact 10 college, 10 to work, get
ma,rledl
•
It will take time, a Jot ofbard
work, however, the choices ARE
there!
JASON REYNOLDS UVESI

COUPON

P17 -06-070 I 12342070

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Community Calendar
CQIIIIIIIUiitJ C.!ndlr llems
appelll' two da,a Wore u evat
ud tile day fll tlllt emat.I-.
mus1 be rteeind well illiCI¥Uee
to assurt publlcatloa iD the caleadar.

.

ship Trusrees will meet Thii!Sday at
9 un. at the Chester Town Hall.

FRIDAY
POMEROY • Meigs County
Pomona Grange will bold inspection Fridar with a dinner at 6 p.m.
Meat wil be furnished. Bring a
covered dish. Visitors from Athens
and Gallia plan to attend. Meeting
SlllrtS at 7:30p.m.

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE • Infant and preschooler aquatic program at LOndon Pool 7-8 p.m. throu$h July 9.
For more information, call 992·
99()9. $15fee.

Wedneaday,

Pomeroy Mlddlepc:irt, Ohio

10-The Dally Sentinel

Marie, We Are Here

Mix 'Em, Match 'Em

Marquis de Lafayette, the
French soldier who was a hero of
the American Revolution, was
christened Marie Joseph Yves
Gilbert Du Motier Lafayette.
When, at age 2, he gained his
father's Iitle, be became known
simply u Marquis de Lafayette.
George Washington shortened even
that, often calling him just

There is no s~ of fish that
is called "sard10e." ThOS&amp; taaty
piscine morsels are actually any of
a variety of small ocean ftsbes although purists insist that the only .
true sardine is the pilchard, a linle
saltwater fisb related 10 the berring.
It is thought that the name is taken
from the Mediterranean island of
Sardinia, where sardines may have
been fust caught and packed

Area students are

1983

I

~~~~~Ju:ne~~1~99~3~====:r.======::-r.=:::~==!'::;/liilliill
Ohio
, PubliC Notice
PubliC Notice
PubliC Notice

named to dean's list

The followinJ area students
wae recently named to the Hocking College Dean's list for the

.

E!lch has achieved at least a 3.3
quartuly grade point averaae and
compleled 12 or more credit hours.
Listed were: Vicky Dent,
Stepbeit
Jonathan Dunn,

POMEROY • Wildwood Garden Club will meet Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Heidi
Elberfeld.

THURSDAY
POMEROY • Tlte Pomeroy
Group of AA and Al-Anon will
meet Thii!Sday at 7 p.m. at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church. Call 9925763 for information.

. -ton, .......... ,.,....,.

RAVENSWOOD, W.VA . ·
Wolfe and Toler reunion with
gosJ.lel country and rockabilly
mus•c will be Saturday at noon at
Kerra Park in Ravenswood. Bring a
covered dish and lawn chair.

RUTLAND - Rutland Township
Trustees meet Thursday at 6: 15
p.m. with regular meeting at 6:30
p.m. Public invited

CHESTER • The Chester Town-

,.,.. LB. BASKET

CANTALOUPE$

JUliO

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK!

first Of rhe Season!
"HOitlfGRDWII"'

YELLOW SWEET CORN
IRISH DAilf
$2e99

DOZ.

Hon Grow11, Tudar

·

. SNAP BEANS 89 Ll2 LIS. Sl"
1

WI AlSO HAVliWIIIINNER GIEEN lEANS

gent and family, Belpre. Seventy
four atte~d~d. ~6 were absent.
After a ptcmc dmner, the group
took pictures and pitched horseshoes.

Walla Wala Sweet Onions 59' lb.

FRESH, LONG GREEN

CUCUMBERS ·
4/Sl.OO

'

SIIODGWS'
UPHOUIERY
·UCIIE, OHIO
Recover Your

l•ve•lmeal"

614-742·2996

$)59
EACH

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. A. BOSTON
EICAYAnNG
(614)
- 667·6621

BANANAS 39 4LB.

TWO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS:
2400 Eastern Avenue (across from KMan)
Galllpolis,OH • (614) 446-1711

~

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WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER

36970 Ball R111 Road
POIHfOJl Ohio

How.-d L Wrlresel

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR

FrH Eatima111

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614-446-8568 11211

BUlLDOZING

LAWN CARE

.'HOME SITt:S
HAUUNG: Ume.tone,
Dtn, GriiVtl and Coal

Mltltlleport,
Po•ror, Racl•••
Rut..•tl, Maso•
Areas

PH. 614·992·5591

CAll 992·6123

LICENSED ... BONDED

Reasonable Rate$
Dependable
S.e rvice

1

Gutters
Downsf)outs
Gutter Cleaning .
Painting

GRAVE!p,SAND,
LIMESTONE. TOP SOIL
&amp; Fill DIRT

WoAIIoHo ..
7&amp;12

IM4111 State Rt. 7 . 614-446 -0736

Gallipolis

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

· DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

F,.. Eetlma!lee,
Low Coate.
Work Cu-nteed

319041.Hdllll

The Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Department Committee
will be holding a benefit on July 17
from zp.m. until 8 p.m. at the Ohio
Valley Christian Campground (the
old Bedford School).
There will be bluegrass, country
and gospel music. The Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Department Committee will provide
refreshments and a b!lke sale will
be held. The Scipio Township Volunteer Fire Department will provide and receive proceeds from
popcorn and homemade ice cream.
Craft spaces will be available
for $10 per space. To reserve a
space, please call Angie Bricldes at
614-696-1017.
Admission will be $2 for adults
with children under 12 admitted
free w~en accompanied by an
ad~lt. All proceeds will go toward
the Bedford Township Volunteer
Fire Department Committee.

News briefs
The word "companion" comes
from the Latin "com," meaning
with or together, and "panis," or
bread. The underlying meaning of
companion is someone with whom
one breaks bread or shares a meal.
Interestingly, this is also the root of
"company," which makes perfect
sense when the word means guests,
but perhaps less so when It is used
. as a synonym· for corporabon.
King or Weeds
The dandelion received its name
not for i.S bright flower, but for the
shape of its leaves, which were
thought to .resemble the tooth of a
lion -in French, "dent de lion."

rJI!~,tJIIng

:;ji'

Creekloatl

Mltltlleport, Olllio

614·992·7144
. 4/29/93

5-24-1

All Stores Will Be Open
R~ular Store HoUrs
On July 4th &amp; 5th

EXCAVATING

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

. I•
•••
I

Sweet
Fr n~h

RateI
JOE I. SAYRE

TRAILER IllES.

LAHDCLEARING,

DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED

SAYRE
'

IMEITOHE·TRUCKING

yiiiU'ago-y.l

FREE ESTIMATES

min you so much.

614·742·2131

992·3838

Love, IIO~nl

m.oe'll.

live 24 Moon A Dov!tl Till To
1oau111u1 01r11111 1-.zaa ata
lat. U71, $3.11 ... lllln. . . 111 Yra,

,_Co.--

0115.

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lion.,·
111 ., .,.....
Fleo _,
~ ........ .,., 01;. 9Pin
lhru Mon.. .....,.
m t Nl,

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Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

OHIO'II CDIINECTION ALTER- .

T=ll,..
rour "'"" -,.

NATIVE -~ U.IOmln 18./el
ftiiiiiQQ'eaf
In

ov-

Ft.

REDUCE; 111m all fol wNII rou
· T.... OPAL,
e1
Fruth

l'hatma.,. ,

2 Front Slruts e Laltor

CONSTRUCTION
Ho••

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Prices Start•nt at
1129.95 +Tall

J&amp;L INSULADON
FIM' Eatlmlllee

-··:
wantecl:

Replacement
Window.
Vinyl Skiing

1 ahlld • ale 2 ••· 104oe7So'M4ii

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PM, ...._
ir;rllma 1711-2111.

4

J - Kee-, owner
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DINI...r, - · - . D , tlonalilp
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-Ilk•
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Roofing
c.n .. for ·
Special Prlc• on
Siding and Window•

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TRIM and
REMOVAL

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Giveaway

· oUGHT HAUUN~
•FIREWOOD

BILl SlACK
992·2269
USED RAilROAD nlS '
'

IHG-92·111

1

Sto"e

SIZE,D UMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call 614·992· 6637
St. II. 7
.clle..lin;

6111'11211

Real Estate General

Corn

Top

IHIO•altle

SEPTIC IYITEIIS,
HOllE SITES end

palledfiWWI-

Yell- or White

&amp; COAL

AVAILABLE.

st.-, who

11 Y - Proc.ol ~r 102-

LIMESIOIIE,

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
end TRACKHOE WORK

Jean

3 Announcementt

HAULING

HOWARD

of my daughter,

Announcemen ls

0 - Phplca S.IUIIDI ...
_ , . , caa 1 - zaa 0321 Eat.
3001, S3.H Por - . , - ..

3/8/lfn

949·2168

OWNIR: ltH Wlck•sh111

__

Auto-Bentals
SprineTime
Speefal

36358 SR 7

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3470

992·3768

,
RODGERS 1-Z RIDE

: BISSELL &amp;

•..,..

Fully lnaur.d
l
Job Shop Fecilltiel
S UStee
COMPLETE fie ._e _:.- "'!
RADIATOR &amp; ~-wrr-­
SERVICE

Will

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
lox 119
Middleport, Ohio 4576'0
(614) 843·5264

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

•

CIIPUIII

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

614·949·2911 or
614-593-5010

.

,

17 COLE • POMEROY, OHIO

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

·

'tOP. Frflsh

'

Job Shop F1dlltin

• J+ett~•t - A~lmlnUm &amp; Stainle'Ss • Sprar Wetdii'IQ
• Ytg W~ . Slttt I Atum1num • WeldJOg ~pplte s
• ~" abf~eatl()ft - Abiii!Y 10 RoM &amp; Bend Melal

Weatftalen

·$25.00

949~2126

loot
lnsiH •flOut

Volunteer
firemen plan
benefit July 17

•

Mon - Fn

GENERAL MACHINE WORK &amp; WELDING ·

Authorized: Brw:.a &amp;
Str•Hon MTO, an,
I. D.C. Repair Cenw
PICKUP .,d DEUVERY
Houre 96· M-F W S•L
Cloo.cl Sundey
949·2104

PONDS
S~PTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;SEWER
UNES .
,BMEMENTS&amp;

•ckenlle Ill.
hciH

J&amp;THOME
·IMPROVEMENTS

so.,thern
Peaches

.

'

~~

7.30om · 12 OQpm Sal

·992•2772 -

Sweet &amp; Juicy • Fresh

;

HOURS.
7·30am - 5:00pm

• Hpogot' • Co2
HilUm •
• CartJde • t.lapo Gos • I'!!JP'fl' • Cylnde!s

MowiiS ·Gall S.Ws

R&amp;C EICAYAnNG

feel, COlla and IUCh other

·FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTEDPRODUCE PRICES IN EFFECT THRU IDIIAY, JULY 5

, •• '!

'

•.' "' ' (:

WE LEASE
0•191"·~·No!rogen
Argon •
$IJecillll Gases

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC
WALIEI AllEY ·
Parts IIIII s.w.

.UNUMITED ONE
MONnt TANNING

1-17.-.11110.

relief • mey be n.c••ery
Mdproper.
You ere hereby requlr•d
to. enawer th• Compleint
within lwenty-•lghl (21)
deya after .the leet ·
publlcetlon of lhla notice
which will be publlohed
once • week lor alx (I)
•-•lve weeka. TIM l•t.
pubUc.Uon will be made on
the 2tat dey of July, 1m,
end the twenty..lght (21)
d•Y• for · enawerlng will

1/4 Mite Nonh of Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Mason, WV • (304) n3-5721
Chllck Our Our /Jason Stew... We'Ve &amp;pand9d
To l.lake Your Shopping 1.10111 EJ¥oyablel

,, '&lt;

:

COMPLOE MACHINE SHOP SERVICES

Remodell=~r
Painting,

FOREVER
BRONZE -

•tate locet•d In Ch•ter
Townohlp, llelga County,
Ohio, ..,d In S.cUon 34,
Town 3 end R - 12 ol the
Ohio CoMpeny'o Purch•e
end S.ctlon 35, Town 3,
Renge 12 ol the Ohio
Compeny'a Purchl&amp;e (aome
reference deeda being
·volume 334, Pege 113;
Volume 252, Pege 717; and
Volume 174, Page 333,
Melgo County De•d
Recorde) •d lhet the real
eelet• · be pertllloned or
Ordered oold lilt c..,not be
partltlon.cl, pluo allomey

PICKLES
49c LB.

&amp;:

'

24 Hour Portable Weldin• Service

are

IIC,.., more or ..... of real

WHITE SPINE

GOLDEN RIPE

addr•••••

-~
"Helplac You To

6-»1 mo. pd.

entitle Richard A. Radford
va. Alta Uey Morgan, et al.
Thla action haa been
aoalgn.cl Case No. 13-CV·
154 end Ia pending In the
Common Pl..a Court of
llelga County, Ohio,. Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
457611.
The object of the
Complaint Ia to determine
the ln.... ta of Plalntln 1111c1
th• D•f..,denta In 78.11

S0t1t• Coroli••

Hazel and Bud Wilson, Bill and
Flo Grueser, Doohy Baker, Bonnie
Smith, Elsie King, Minister AI
Hartson, Dona, Jaemy, Carrie and
Erin Hanson. Glen 8114 Katherine
Evans, Frank, Kathy, Jodie and
Joshua Ihle, summer intern Joe
Furrow, Susie LeMaster, Herb
Roush, Tom and Penny Evans and
Kalie, Bernard and pat Shriven,
Cody, Bill and Missy, Ryan and
Brittany Fraiser; Rosanna Manley,
and Anna Marie Hartenbeugh.

Alfred news note~ ·

laat

PH. 949·2314
or 742·2217

unknown:
You are hereby notified
lhat you have been named

SJ.99
s.,.,,&amp;hlrr

r=

FREE ESTIMATES
All work gU11111ftteecL
Low Colt
lnalde, Outalde, Top to
Bottom

tellve,; apouaea end
Nalgns ol lotte c. WIN,~
Ole Redford, Ole Ide
J-.._ Evalyn Boaton, lllu!
Evelyn Hehe, eke Ev.lyn
,loeaph. u.ry U.garet WIA,
llarprel II. Will, HeleM
Elizabeth Sayre, Lane
HeiiDien, Wall•r WIU,
Lawr•nce Will, Larry Will
and Jo Ann O'Ntoll, who••

Defendant&amp; In a legal acUon

eLB.

Homebuilders Class
. has annual family picnic
The Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ held
its annual family picnic recently at
the home of Glen and Katherine
Evans of Bradbury.
. Teacher Frank lhle gave the
Jlf!lyer before the meal for the food
and the sick of the class.
Attending were Richard and
Doris Bailey, Dorothy and Gene
McDaniel, Loret'!l Tiem~yer,
Lester Bowers, Nellie and Willard
Boyer Thelma Boyer, Dorothy
Roach: Geneva and Clay T_qttle,

RIVER VALLEY
CONTUCTOIS

unkftown helra, devl-a,
........ lldmlnlalrelora, u -

PEACHES

'{, k

. •

IN SHOP WELDING SERVICE OR PORT
ALL TPES Of ;IELDING FABRICATION AND REPIIIR

Wll; JoAnn O'Neil; •d ...

SwHt, JWq, rrH

&gt;· (~

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING

.....

lest fasting, ,resltest Produce Ill Tow11
At le,soJtable Prlces•••SatlsladloJt Guaranteed.

~

"

24 BOUlt EIIEllGEKCY SERVICE

~

ari.Y llpown •• Evelyn
Joeeph, formerly known ..
Evelyn JoMph Kelee; WIIIW
Will; uwr- Will; Larry

ROCK SPRINGS • An open
horse fun show will be held Saturday at 6 p.m. at the Meigs County
Fair Grounds in Pomeroy sponsored by tlie Meigs County 4-H
Horse Committee. Call Pete Scott
at 992-3885 for information.

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

: PUBIJCATION

C.a NO. t3-CV-154
To: EvelYn Boaton lonn-

SATURDAY
RUTLAND - There will be a
dance at the Rutland American
Legion Hall Saturday from 9 am.
to I a.m. with music by Pore County Band. Public invited.

11

The Dally Sentinel-Page
-

NOliCE BY

coinmMice on lhet date. In clemllnded In the Complaint.
Dat•d thlo 1oth dey of
c11e of your fellure to
IN THE COMMON PLEAS enow•r or otharwlu ........ 1113.
COURT OF
Lany E.lpen-.
••r:nd •• required by the
· MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Clerk of Court.
Oh o Rulu of Civil
By......,.twrloon
RICHARD A. AADFOAO,
Procedure, judgement by
PWnun default will be rendered 111 1e, 23, 30;
VI
,
egelnet you for lhe reJ!el (7) 7, 14, 21, 6tc
ALTA MAY IIORGAH, el al.,

IJW!I quarter.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Round
and square dance Friday from 8·
11:30 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains
VFW Hall with music by CJ and
the County Gentlemen. Melvin
Cross. caller. Everyone welcome.

POMEROY • Meigs County
Republican Women meeting 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs County Public
Library. New members enroun~&amp;ed
to attend. For more inforrnatiQn,
contact Patty Pickens at 985-4231
or Niese! Gerard at 992-6736.

Florence Ann Spencer, representing the women of the church,
presented fathers Barlow lcnives on
Father's Day. Nellie Parker read
"Remernbering Fathers.•
The church and community
extend sympathy to the family of
Gerald (Hank) Douglas. Many
attended visitation and funeral set·
vices for Mr. Douglas.
Clarence Henderson is recovering from pneumonia in University
Hospital, Columbus. His wife,
Thelma, and daughter, Linda
Williams. have been staying in
Columbus.
Matthew and Kevin Keaton
attended a Boy Scouts meeting in
HuntingtOn. Pat and Bob Keaton,
Bobby, Kevin and Matthew are
now visiting relatives in WinstonSalem. North Carolina.
Visitors at the Poole-Parker
horne were Bruce and Sherri Lackey, Mega'!• Ryan, and Heather of
Bethany Ridge, Athens County.
The 18th reunion of the family
of the late Thomas F. and Bay Sargent was held at Goodfellows Park
on Route 550 on Father's Day.
Attending were Daryl Sargent ~d
family, Doyle Sargent and family,
all of Cutler, Charles F. Sargent
and family, Alfred, and Denvil Sar·

June30,

Real Estate General

. '.•

·Large 12 Size

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES

En1oy These Flavorful Melons

California
Cantal
,,.....

Great On The Grilli

. IN POMEROY
8:46p.m.

I

I

'

205
Diet P~i, MI. Dew, Cahine

Free Diet Pep$i or

20 Pack

Groun•
C"uck

-3 Lb. o• Heavier Pkg.

1!~
BORDEN - Box of 6

Ice Cre•rn

San~wlche•

~~LU410
'='

...........,_...,_
......
304_.SI1M1

CLUB

•••••

12 oz. Cans

399
Knlft .

ltlrltecue Sauce
Reg. or Thic~ Varieties
18 oz. Btl.

•

.........

I

I

l
I

Ice•••••
Crewr

I

graund. i17,000.

'

POMEROY· v... St. - Need • lot lei a mobile home or a
,_'-?Allie end of lhe tiiMIIa •large lot jull Wllitlng
lor rou will a1 ulllln evllllable. $7.000

I

Hall Gallon

I

'

I'OIIEIIOY• PIM.. nt

I

J•
•

•'
•
••
'I

.......... Yep

(

Great Wiih Vanilla Ice
Cream · 26 oz. Box

:;r--

.

''
'

I••
.........

Middleport, OH
DARWIN • Rt. U1 • A 1874 14x70 mobile llciiM with 2
beciiooma, 1 bill;, end el8ctiC ~on almollan acre of

POIJEROY PIKE· Ne.- SeHIIMiry Elementary School- A
nice lawl lot wllh a 2 bedroom, one IIOrY home. Hat a
dining room, front end .... porch, .,.n baaement, lllld
tlonlge !lulling. $211,000
.

•

Your Choice of Flovors

Second ,...,.,

&lt;

''

f

~

II~

t.oolclng

BABHAN RD.· 8.5 acres whh 1978 12 x 85 motilla
home and an older home with 2 septlcs, TPC water,
make nice future building ale. $23,000

--u

for a rental or an

LAHCI8YILLE- A .-11' claccnlld 1 t/2 arory ,.,.. harne
will 4
lemly with • large . . . . .pl-.
...... graund pool, , _ hHt pump
big dodo In - ·
Alto .... ., Ofcllr gnge end cellar. Hal ...... big lot.

'*"-"•·

..a

ONL'i'SZS,OOO

.aDI..UORT....tnlllon ....... ~ b' .... hQme In
- . on a quiet HMt. Thla 3 bedloom. I 112111DrY harne Ia
Jua1 the-· It hal a lot of lwdltood loin, fio'lf I e, 2 W
ballt, 4 pa~dll&amp;. Sill on • - l o t end lie harne It '"'
....tlar.

I

NEW USTINGI CHESTER- Frame Ranch style home
located on two Iota, features F.A.N.G. heat,
appliances, 3 bedrooma, 2 baths, lltacl1ed garage, llir
condklonlng, shed, f~. 187,500
.
REDUOEDI SR 7 two atory home wlh vinyl siding, 3
bedroom•. baaement, carport, Cllntral elr, utility room.
1011111 new.r remodalng completed. $35,000

Ia it lor you. Haal t~-~~~
3 '*"-''a, large u~ .-n end ho1 wetar
- . JUST se,ooo ,
llllltAmloal place 1o he?

1

Special Eerly Bird
. '1 00 Payoff
Thlelld good for 1
FREE cerci.
Lie. No. 0051·32

EAGLE RIDGE- It need• some work-BUT· you can,
bell the vlluetS-4 bldloom two story home Wlh vinyl
lldlng, ulllity rocim, pan basement, approx. 1+ acre 2
car garage, paved t'oad, TPC '(tater, BeautWul vlaw of
ridge. ASKtiG $18,000
,

. LINDA'S

PAINTING
INTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the p11ln out ol
painting. Let me do It
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
I!AVE REFERENCES

614·915·4110

DEXTER- Small country communlly wtth 1112 I!OIY
franie home 4 bedrooma, Cllbr, front Mlting porch 10
enjoy IUIIImer -lnga end witch lite 11'1!,. pus ~­
'16,000

256·6640

FREE

·BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~
New Homes ~VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows ;..7__Y.;..:•:...RI:...S:...al:...•;,__
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
Gallipolis
FREE ESTIMATES
• ViCinity

614·992· 7643
llo S.llflly Calls)

201-71A11"11ger , _ XTII AWL
201-71A14"11ger , _ XTII AWL
211-71R1r I'll ola118 OWL
:ZU.71R1r I'll aata 11t1 OWL

· 8ELEC110N OF HO'ES1

-CALL FOR PRICING .
'EXHAuST IAIJ! NOW IN PROGREII'

•
I '
•

.
•

•I

INSURED

ORIGINAL EQtiPMENT REPLACEMENT nRES

I

''

Formnl:r of JIGnlts' TN• ...,. .

1111CIIII3/1 1110. pel

STOP ON IY ctECK OUT OUR .

s:u.ooo

TIIMMING and
TREE &amp; STUMP REMOVAL

-

--··-

unique -'dngL
••m
age

�.

.. ..

... . . ..

.,

'

•

(0.

•

•

;

.

.

Page-12-The

- ...

"'

...-... ,

I';

Sentinel

..

~

All roa1 eotale ldi'1111U11J In
lhis .......,_ Is IIUiljo&lt;llo

3 FMIIIY Ya~ , _, 111, 2nd,
3rd. 4 II._ Oul . . .Nil Plko,
C..ftll, Lalo 01 llloe

·-

.

'

)

_...

''

11.6'•"'"'' -..11!'
'2f''"~'~ttC, "f•~ M\l't' "ftN\6

W .... O

l"il II.

W I ~ ..

~.

71

A&amp;.•N•

Oowy

C. " 'f•

Int-.

..

1993

.

PHILLIP
ALDER .

·~ ·

1111 Ponl'- OriiiCI Pill, -

""' aood010,
tl\ile

....nlnp. ,

lmil\lllon or &lt;hcrlmlnallon
ortgln, or any 1n1ennon to,
make ilny sudl prelerence,
Mmllallon or disorlmWiallon.•

•u

. NOIII'II

~-

.,AU '
tiOUU

.

are avallabhl on an equal
Ollflortunlly basis.

iI'

..

I

.,

r.· ...... cMI'!J
bod!OOI)I' tuK•
bod, aaoo. 304-171-

~

.............. 135.

I WAS IN

CHURCH

"

., 10 7Z

tuu

21"1111 111111
llvt

&lt;.

*••it

· 57 Pw Qynt'l
mother

"=

DOWIII

34 CO. Iii..:..

tlllllhll

31 Pilate writer .

1 lllflllt

4 Loolt:..tlke

...

17
11 Calegeclq.

22StoregeCOftlo
24C::"'
PDIIIIDI! .
25- terrier
21111Yerln

· 18al101heHII

2Anpra
3 WortiiiHt

11 Flnllhtd llrol

.,,,

lalalum

West . Nerlll ·

27VtMII '

Paa
SNT

Put

-211bkHdo
wtllt

~=~:-~
lullll

.,.,

CHURCH

32 Eclgll
33lllnltd-

lll'llllll

A difference
of style

111118 llllnw,j30. Vlnol llkllng I
111m. _,. lor ....Oiy.
1100. 304-f71.44104.

31 A COIIInelll
(lbbr.)

37 Sllor1 . . .
31Unwtlati-Yitp0f

40-lldlir
~--~ 41 IIHt ....
-Lot*
43 World org.
44 DapDIItJ
41lllllt
41 TYIIt ot duck
47 1001ba.
..

GOOD

WED ..,PLIANCES
W.~dlfOIO. rof!lg«atoro,
~·
Apjllta,_, 71

:::..=-.

:J:oi'Of

5 GrHII ltlllld
I Lltloed
7 llutlc8l key ·
8 Sltlp lltal

YOU II IN

••

IIIII-, 1311. 34" I 20"
¥onlt~o1a:•
WhHo com~
110.
ooll llltn, :llar..l'ol4ltng

aaw...,

30PIIIIIOUIICit

Vulnerable: Neltber
Dealer: North

! .NT

' 11:..~

31 Ai" rltlhl
32 -vopge

.All:

iiHIII

a.r-,

14 Aclr.- WHt
55 Cine
IIYMti!VM

.QJH

.i

47~ot

171...........
180tlw .

IIK1Til .. '
'

11 Unllnlll
11 CitY Ill

tK7

.Jt'IU

In this newspaper

.

42~

44PIIrCII

23 1oo lnqull-

""

law. Our r-rs ore he..t&gt;y
lnlon)1od thll all dwellngs

11=-

41 llpllllh '"'
~~"

.10143

actvel1l$8Me.r1s tor ~at ~ate

'

'*«-·!

40.._.01

121edretMdtn
13AIIow.C.

IUIT

. which Is "' violation of lho

....

't111'1n ·

1111:UIIIIIt

IOblcllle

•Qu

This nellsp- wll riot
. knowingly accopl

op1nc111

3tl'-

··oa.~o··

EEKANDMEEK

...,,

:=:
....

13 Clllrlc1tt
""""' IOUIId
14
In

lim,,
--.200f,

- : 111 411 1271 ~~" 5 P.M.

s
•

31~-

1 .....

·

1tn-.. Grond Am 4 Cvllrio·
dw, Alllo, 22,000 lllloo, 4 lroor,&lt;
Lilla Now, Alklna. SIO,soo~

,_ tWUal status or national

AIUwer .. PreWIIM« ......

37Ftiiiii11M

"""
. cM.,I•Id'!.~,_33,oao "'""'·

ba$ed Ql1 race, CQior, religion,

a?Jin~

NI:A Cro .. word Puz•l•

aaiDGII:

I

~~ IIIIQ, .

1114.

lo adveMIM •any prelere,...,

I _ , ,.,.. Mil, .luly \ 2, 3. ..
I 210 .HollnM Trooe lid. Polllol.
Glrll bofl,l-·1 - clothIng, Lolli or "'"" • -·

Autos for Sale

GoOd lllllpel .l

ol 1968, wNch ""''"'" • ~

pilar c11

..

.

,Y-1,... Aulo,
ow.~.,....,_,,_, ~
Atr, PW, Red Wllh

'SoM~ o"'•

lho F - 1 Fair Housing Act

3 ~ ~. Friday,2114
ll!tloo fMI 01 , _ on !IIIIo
114. Cloll.. lf, 1m111 Ap.

.. .

June

AP'of"liiL """""~ lo

2 Bid Galt .............. Fof
R.... , AI E..IJIIMfl, No IIUncloy

ChlnAtiiO.

'

~-·-~

KIT 'N' C~RLYLE® by Larry Wright

for Rent

' 111, 2nd, lnl. I IIIIM I$Dulh On
.._ '!!. tt Pc. 111 01 Ncnlu

.

I

Mobllt Homes

42

....

&amp; VIcinity

~

Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Gelllpolla

...

1~7318, 1·

LAYNE'S FIJANITUIIE

'-tl llimllhlnat.
.....,., ...... Ill, w. 114-4481!122.·S outlula•Uia Ad.
l:clmpilto

liMn. . .
Wflllll

F,_~;

41 Atdllor-

!:lvtng R - Sullo, 2 Plaoo,
NovW Uwd, t271; E·Z Box
lledlnor Aocikor, tltll, ,,.._

IO ........,IDr
lllorl

Fltntllll

am.

·EVA I

• L.

--;;:::==-:::-:=:===---' ·PET GROOMING/ PEl IIOARDPICKENi FURNil'IIRE
Newflltd

Til LONE

VKC

NEVKSI

YK

S1

FRANK AND ERNEST ·

Musical

Instruments

01111~--

SWAIN

Spino!- -

. ..

EVA I

"'OIOI&gt;Y TWSTS ANYfOI&gt;Y
~:&gt;~ ANYMO~f! ·

plano for .....

TaU on Mill ~1.
locall)'. 1ooi0Dit3

s-

f
1
t=

. II I I 'I

Jok&gt;T IN

I

·HQ(£,!

OUR LANGUAGE

Fro\\ no:E!
I

Tbe treasury of a college or uni·
versily is a BURSARY. Whenever you
need to use this noun, count on the

i t-..,......--.JV
-...-.~

._.;..._,_j
'

.

114-24~-~DH

F.or Dotallo.
Rick Palroon Auction Company, .,...,.., luiOring, all aubjocta,
full time luctklnMr, oomp1M1 te-e. For more lhformt.tlon c11t
auction ooMce.
UcIIII,Ohlo • WOOl VIrginia, !104- 304.f7UOU.
7n-5715.
Will do lll!llplltlng In my homo.
YMta of ••pettence. Good
,.,. •w:ee. Waul~ prefer •.m~ll
.Thw.fff.Sal, Rl 2 N. • miiM a1 9
Wanted to Buy
cltlldron. NOW!&gt;om lo 5 youo.
Flalroc:k, of anllq-, all
klnclo olotuft. .
I tlpaad lno-xle lOr Saoro 114 ue ast.
riding lawn · :IOW71Yonl •Ia: 2123 Mapll Ave, July. -"'..,-..:-·---:,...-.-:-7--::--- Will do ,,. loDDI1,111 ondior
rwmDnt, trw ..um~... Bub,
~ 2, 3. lladaprlngo, dro- ~
etoclla. toll of miac.
Anlkluea and u•d furnHur•, no 304.f7Jo1f711flar 5:30pm.
too_ ..rg_e or too Mnal, wiH
Yonf Sala: JUly 2-3-4, I:D0-4:00,
. plooo or oomplafe Will tor $5.0GIIIr or lisa.
1lnl4 91. 111. 160, Vinton, 011.

caK O.by Mal11n,

304.e7~1M ..... --go.

1.a1o • .....ve for , . _ • ..,.

00\'ln, •-·7N1.

•.

,.aeon1ble ,_.rlctlo,., countr
waler; Information milled on ,..
queet, :JD4.47S.I253, piNu no
lilngla wkla tnol-.
.
·

RDMia for rant • .. tnorith.
Slatting at112D!nio. Oollla Holaf.

on

Reyburn

Ad,

Lalo lor """-· 11111111 l cam-

perw. County ....... road •
12,110. :IOW1Io

-ric. -

Buy llandlrtg Tl-, PIM,
Papa..-, I llllw Tlmbar 114-

. Middleport
&amp; Vlclnhy

1112·7311.

Purl St

225
,..., llilfl'•p :it,
July 1 12.
s 1om11y r•rd .....2,3,4. c..11o,
ohlola lhll chengo oo1or., toay

rack, many olhor ""- nouta
331, 2 miiM '""" ~~~-Bridge.
All Yn .SaiM Mutl S. Paid tt

Ad••-· IINollno: 1:""- the
..,....
dar - . the Ill Ia to run,
Suftdat IIIII ton- 1:DOpm · Frklor,
,.~

• • Frkllr, July
:lnd, chl-'a e-.o, bad'·
-·
llat~lrta.
Cc&gt;tnor
lrlcililllaln. In Alllland. 114-1'12·
21117, 114-J112.214S.
Annual

Big cludt aalo a1 the tor..,
U:::amot_, ~tina, Mechlnle
~July :lrd, - r f l . Rain or

w.

Dove .....
Col·
1aga lid., l l y r l - July 111 •

:zold.

~:"' 7

.

.

a;:.:-r;.:'lo ~7. ;!:1
1

Slooya ttun lid. and ll!dd'-~
Cooponlllon
llrto
et-.... Infant clothing, high
..,_....n go ololhlng,

$'!:; ..,._...

-..
-

Docoralllf .. _ . . , olllampa,
antiquo ....._. trialf pouc:!&gt;
ttwmto~uet. ., ~ral anlla
Rlvorlno Aiollq-. Rulo
li!OON. """"· we do ""'
pnoloall, 114-tll:l.aat.
Don, Junll ftl Sail ua Your Nonworlolng 11a1or Appl..._.,
Color
TV'a, • Aafritenltort;,
F,..Ura, 'ICA'o, Mlc,_....,
Air CondHionora, Guitar Ampa,

1-*

...

Junk caro; any condMion, 114-

112·7513.

.,......,,,..,_--=...,.,......,.,-=.,....,.,,..
Paid: All Old U.S.

·=·

oop

COina, Gold A~ Sll.., Colrto,
Gold Colrto. M.T.lo. Coin Shop,

181 -.I~. Oalflpolle.

W.nlad to buy: ~~omoo. 114-441-01711

-

Employment Services

..._
rtG
-.hold -

trpr~uerlt«,

and muc/t

mote. C... N.ll~lnot.

Oo5to-lll. Sacond f.vo.,
• JUly 111 a 2nd,
tun. p.m.
Mldd

Oonfl .... ...........

100

Logkiol ,.,..... JUly 1il 2, 3. Bra
tor "II M~,· t1 ; folo of

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

mlac.; • .....,.,. ttAoaa (bffnt

INOTICE!

Quaflflad Buyar II .._lng

11

Help Wanted

===~==:-:--­
'AVON' ALL AREAS! Sltilre your
time wMh • · Vou'N ton lhe
- ' · 1.-et2.f351.

...._lia --- ~

. .. 1
...,.,. "'
~ ...... loW.. 1
~~- ~ and pritl: lM
lldmlnlotrtlllvo
oxpor!Onco.
COmpaiHive , oalary I benotiM
paclutgo. Sulima nooumeto fiW•
oona1 dlrootor, JacU.,. o-af
H901&gt;11!!,_ P.O. 801 720, Ripley,

WV :~S•n. EDE. '
AVOfl I All

Atooa

,..,., 304.f71.142t.

·

I lllolrloy

luay Court liallof11f Good
TYJIII!I Who UOH jl'~ Parflcl.

Poy By The Page. 114-311'41157.

For

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
reoornmendli that you do buel. . . with paopla you ktw&gt;W ond Third Aven. ., OoUipolll, OH
.
NOT to oanct tiiOI1IY tlvough tho 45631.
.... until you ..... lnvMtlgatooi
the ollarlng.
·

Rentals

'fending Routo: For 111111.
Strong, Solid Caoh Bualrtooo.

41 Houses for Rent

High Troftlc, Local Lacatlcino.
Haio Equl_.t, 1-2MVend.

Real Estate

pa~,
wry
·fUeonlble, .
•
llntr11nce, ftve mlnut• •bow

114 ......0.

.

wAh ooololng.

Slooplng -

2---PrlvatoJ
Mlloa From Oalllpollo, C.,:
pal, Carpotl, Nice, IM-37fi.31M
$350/Mo., Do-M.

Z - - . Ullllty Room,
Largo Fenellf Yord, Niot1h Oollla
S c - I:IOCIII!o., 114-MII-1t11
Aftar• P,M.
7 A_,. I Bath, In Counlry,
I Roloronca. 114-37f.

I

P!lnt•- u.. ,_, ..... · - - 64
,,,..,..--......

.

-

Pnoducto 11111

Nulrttlon

lioatuolng Amino Acld Body
llulldlnoL wolahl ..... fail
lournor 'YitnttUI"aa. AvioHobll U•

-lo

Aid

oluolvlly .. -

Tlto ...

--cy.

dial.
.
llydroHo llll'lorlrtvolld, 1100. 21"

bulldlna. lin 111111. Point
Pl....nl. IMna HaM SOM'IIIo

""'" ...... 171. SOMJI-1341.

raatna up. kDDIMt ~ ....1'1

-----.,..

,...;..·

Y,lanted to R9nt

In

::...:~ '.:",":;"4...

..,. PlY AOOIItto. II utll- oro Htlw eouct. • lowTTT 1 nn.r
lnoh1d1d In ,.,., call »t-171- '*'l!s'lrlna out o1 state, ""'"'
_.. WasM • lftd 3
WI ~kd.,l.
Now Hall 3 ton pooh. . olr • ..,.
W.ntlna to """' 2 or 3 bad oo.n dMionor t1,21S.Inalallid. 1-uoad
........ 1n ...... •net goo_d oonctt- 21121en olr oond. •111.00 Inola~
'
llon, IIJIW prtnlo ~L~'Mo lld.l14 . . . . . .
1124421, H 110 . . . . . , .,.... .
Nl~l 3 controflaoa, 11
lllve n ••••• on mechlnl.
' - tlov. 304.f711.17N.

.... ··--7301.

Merchandise

51

Household

Goods

. Polio lillie .I 4 ........ - .
1811.1DK1D gold "''o
IJ1.44M.

Twin bad tll:l·-·

55

f21, !104-

,

box oprtngo. 114-

I

Bt,~lkllng

Supplies

-or.

·-~­

no-·
In-

42 ~bUeliomu
for Rent

GO Rial-IT IXM'N
. 'Tl-llii· DRAIN.

you don't mind

Wi Ni

ntlxllf hey, localad In Apo-.
1 Slndhlll •• :104-

571o271B.

·

""'

saying."

1 1 ·1 .

'

=:-.. r:::..:- ~ ~
58 Pets for
a.-rna. lurr:::op
141 IJIL

.... ·

Sale ·

OroOon andAll

oiUIIo . . . Cllll •

Pol
olvt.o.
It!

Ap/eC.

.

Services

•

stand whitt 10 dO 10 makellle rtlaliolill'tlp are a !rille unusualloday. You COUld be in
· Mail $2 and a IQIIg. aeK,addroll88d, tor a pleaaanl surpri14!. especially if .You
stamped envelOpe to t.talchmaker, P.O. visualize evenls ending up in a positive
Box4465, NeW Vorl&lt;, N.Y. 10163. ·
manrter.
,.
·
LEO (o!UIY 23-Aug. 22) Havelun and efljOy AQUARIUS (Jen. 211-'Feb. 18) Benellls
BERNIC,E
your friends today, bul dorl'l get Involved In could develop lor you lhrougl\ your social
BEDEOSOL buSiness artuallons wilh one aoolher. They conlacts, so lake advantag* o.l e•ery
might oot work out too wen and rt could pul oppo~unily you gel loday 10 ate and be
wrlnkln in ll1e relalionshipl.
.....
.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-llpt. 22) 'II you havo PilCH (Fell. 2G M1n11t 20) A goal you're
somftlhing impo~ant you're hOping lo pull anxloua 10 achieve Is analnable, bul It
off loday, 1ry 10 do il wilh 1t1e aid of family mighl have to be dOne lhe toatd wey. Don'l
members and relalives ralhtr !han wilh be discouraged if il ia a little 1ixql get11ng
OUillidera.
.
.
01anec1.
•
UIAA (llpl. 23-0al. 23) Your powera of ARIES (March 21·Aprll 181 Keep your
Obtervation should be quke koon today. schedule llexlble today ao lhal you can
· Important knowledge can be. acqui,.cl by dell wrth unexpected cMitgH.
a
cloaely Obe.rAng olhera, eapeclally j)lr· good chance a couple.of thing~ might
,
sono who you IHI you'd like to omullte.
occur In which you'U wantlo parllciplla.
Mont treilellhan usual lis a poNibilily _lor 8CORPIO (Oat. 24-Nov. 22) II you use · TAURUS (Aprti »Moy 20)1nm-i!W lit·
. ·lite yur ahllld, npeclally 1mpo1111111npe r!JUf COII111101'1 -H and ~ inallnc:ll· uattona today which coutd be deVIIOpecl
, ypu '~ 118 making tor bualt1eee PU(POHI. in your .llnanclll dHIInge todly you lhOUid Into an additional aource of 11m1nga. II
You could be lUCie* on lht !Old thin ~ COnti OUI on lht plua lldl Ollheildglr. lAI you1 laok .hlod enough. you might unoover
will belllyillg In a fh!lil paalllon.
yow neturat lnctlnlllcJnqul you.
IDfllllltlng PNIIY IICIIing.
C.\ltCIII (olunl i'I.Juty II)~ thOUgh IAG11TARIUI (Nav. 2t-111e. 21) The QIIIINI (lily 21 ....unt 101 Today you
cooiCIIIIoM might no1 be oplin!UI!1 JodiY, 11'1 lblllty 10 operall lndlplnd4!ntly Of Dlltlra ~ be rnora 10r1un111 th!ough a pallnlr·
10 10cu1 your e1for11 ~nd I!IIJDIII on lulflllo wtH ~ lmpotla~l 10 you toclly . .Don't get : ohip .,..1gt1111n11han you w111 ~ Mlc!klnirtll yGiir embiiiOUI objectiYII- Trying to Involved with people or altuetlona that 1rtg u .n ~ldlplndlilt ojlehltor.
,__ up a llrOtolll -fiOI? Till Attro- could 1111 you down. .,
incll!ltrantly lhll which -'CIIht bill.
Graph t.talchmlktJ can 1t11p
to unlllr· c~ (Ooc, ZNan. 11) ~
'
'

,.

Dan,.._

vou

I

.,

~

I

'-11 "O_ c::.~h~ &lt;~~~~:·~::;:

........J.

bv fdl1ng •n the missing words
yau develop from step No. 3 below.

SCitAM-mS ANSWIIS ··• Ruddy · ·Craft • Afosqu6 • STOP DEAD

"I want a IWitcll to coililec:t ·
· with my hueblnds work room so when dinner is ready
· I can make all his equipment STOP DEAD."

Transportation

,.,

I

~ 10 efectricial1;

Thera:•

...... llrlalt, -

.,

T-IS"""P'T-I.;..;A..,;_,c;...
. .,1....

.;;..U

L.--1.1.....1.-.L.-.1.._

1171-27 Fl. Tmot rr.llor, M;
llf 1:00 p;11, 114 4. 4114! '

AITRO·GRAPH

:::·

'

.

Kilo 'I'IMIII 1uf 1 - - FIM
Kllaro ~· palo, home I ,...,_
- _.._ll_blo
""'"'-,.._
c..,, 11111
ICaMWfl!tSt ·
llillhl 22,000 BTU lAC 1210, 114441-7211.
.

---.-lobo=
W.nlllf to """' ot11ca -

A. Tile expi'e&amp;ai~n may be used, but
it should be wonted differently. In this
expr,ssion, SAYING Is a genmd (a
noun formed from a verb endiDgln •
lNG). Wbat you 'mlgbtmlnd Ia not "me
sayillg" but "my saylnc·~ lbe posses~ve MY, notlbe object ME, is needed
With the gerund. From now 011. feel
~ to use lbe correct expreuion, "if.

INCiiJ!JTR( WIU.

=-::=~__,...,...,.._,~

Pntn'tllll Office lultM: 4o

Q

'THE. BA.PER ~

Hay &amp; Grain

a..la

J VK1 X P W F .

be-

I

RURJ 0

.&lt;·1~-:-,-M.-1

Q. Should you U.e "ifyou.doo1t mind
saying"? Or i1l that wrong?

:

46 Space tor Rent .

'

2117..
1D CU. Ft. KaMnalor F - I
For roni· One bodr- houlo lit 12 Cll. Naooo "-11•, ,,..._
11110 par - . ••• _1113_1.-~----VI'IIA I'URNITURE
·~4 .4•• ltll Or 1'14o441-4421
"10 IMY lAIII AI CASH
011 RINT4~ 11!0 !JEPOIIT)

Two bllfroont houoo lor- or
nonl,
-octo,...,....
l .... .-qulrod on """·
no
palo, 11iloll2.-.

lion, ,,..

=-·=..:~r..
:Or~=~i
=.a_
oaklng 11111 1:
114- will-.
rou heut.
.

•'~'-11131.

~~auR·IUh·ree."

u-,.._.

-~,

Apple IIC - ' • · 2 heado I

Alao troll• - · All--upa.
Call ••• 2:00 p.m., 304·771-

IIISI,IIII-WV.

right pronunciation of BURSARY:

R~glot-~.. lullo1 111-211

llolllla Lal For Rolli,
W.tar I . . _·F-.114-

Nlca Fat11) WIINn 1D Mill Aidlua
01 Oolllpolla. P - Roapond
With DOacrlf'lk!n, Location •
Prlca. Roapoild To: CLA :ml, c1o
OoiUI&gt;OIII, O.lly Trlltoino, 1211

o.-.

-·- 811 . .::.IT.=

.._,,

Bualness
Opponunhy

31 Homes for Sale

otloi'*ll. llundry tub,
load
ltoopllal II
..,., • . , . .·.: :~
: : - rnu:hlne, __,.
-.~r&amp;- 1ft-~~~- di'ICtat of
'

21

Real Estate
Wanted

Etc. 114-251-12:11.

J I D'o Auto Par18 and SaiYago,
!O:OOa.m. . ;l:.~.,!;~!l~!iunll
llnicko.

= Y· IIIHion

36

'O iieli! \'"

Accom adatlone tor three IMf'l.

mlc,_v.,

otnte1lon

'TO Nl:(
E.IE'RNAL
R~...

LIFeAAE
ehoww, cable TV,
'nofrlgorilor, ott -

lion.

AND!EiO·

QA.~ef'MY

Appraxlma1afv 1 aero lol~ 4110
mlla out Nafghborltood Hood.
114 441 3431 lor "'"'" lnfomli.

28M.

Pomeroy,

wt'llilll TI-lE

Appn&gt;L 314 AcN Lal for Sola,
Locatad On . Ooorgoa CtMk
!load, Oolllpolfa, 614-~112
Allar I P.M.

CYKI

"l!lidn't mean to bore you
~ 1~
~ talking about my iob."the tet. . . . . . ' low apologized to his dale. "Oh
,..:·- - -'.----__,that's okay," lhe dale sighed,

By Jell'rey MCQaaln

1 .... Iaiit. Ill ~ Alton. Clydo
- · Jr 304..ano-23311,
n ac. . lilt. v-nt Land Wator
/Eiac Anllabla, ~ CtMk
Road~,!I4.0GO Nogolliblo, 114-

· L .

1M

I~

TICWH
1-,;,-:.'+.IJ..:;..:1~

TH£

'f'OlJ c.e.r "
FJI:££ DROP

V K C

lllltatl ~J ClAY I. POUAII - - - - - -

'I BAZALE

. ..
DOtoiT FlET, ·

V .K S I J V

0· four
loo~ron.; lonort of
Krambled wordo
low to form four words.
·.

•

!'IY eov...

ZIYzJI

'::~:;~' S~\\clllA-l&amp;'E~s·

.

iI'
' ·. I

·'

Sarvlco
c-laanlng
- To Your Do!&gt;r.
Call

v

PREViOUS SOLUTION: "The yura of my 1111 ona tile ones I " loll. You CM'I .-y lboul wltl1'i gone." - (Singer) Ernie And-.

.i

-

TZW. LKS

NYKTOVIl .O JF

0 i V0 • '

Farrn Surpt1cs
&amp; Livestock

COn

OY

INO,I1oHI:I-1012.

Houllhold twnlohlltg. 112 mi.
ollrltcllo Rd. Pl. ·PI-nl, WV,

441~-.

VJAVFT

'

�,..,

14-The Dally Sentinel

Wedneeday, June 30, 1113

·•s-•1
OFF

•s-•1

.OFF

REGULAR .
PRICE

,

GAS RANGE
• EVERY
EVERY ELECTRIC
• RANGE
·
EVERY M.ICROWAVE
• OVEN

$100FF

•
••
•

•

•

:

REGULAR

PRICE .

EVERY UPRIGHl VAC
EVERY CANISTER VAC
EVERY WASHER
EVERY DRYER
EVERY DISHWASHER ·
-~

REGULAR
PRICE

•
II
•
•

EVERYTV
EVERY REFRIGERATOR ·
EVERY F. .........,. ·"'~--""··
EVERY COMPACT
REFRIGERATOR
• EVERY ROOM AIR
CONDITIONER

18 CU. FT.t FROSTLESS REFRIGERATOR

-·C..-.

.....,....17.

'T-c-11¥

With adjuStable glass shelvee. gallon door storage.
twin crllpers, meat drawer and telCiured steel doors.

ll·C~LE WASHER 7·CYCLE EUCTIIC DRYER

~7!.9

.

"-3 .PEAK HP CANISTER VACUUM

!"-.9:~

199.99

Has 5 temperatures.

Auto Fabric Molter,

3 water Ieveii and
ael1-cleon4ng Hnt ftlter.

3 temperatur... Wrtnld*
Guard I' ond Soft Heat".

........, ..., • .... '""'
Features edge~· tltple micron fllliuiiOI'I oncllhrH
C&lt;JrJ* height odjultmentl. InCludes• attuchments
ond 20-tt. c:Oid foro total""*'ulhiQ iUilQe ot 29 I'Mt.

-

,

·c.....

=••••-..._ ...... ......,.

i

I

.

.

n. UPRIGHT OR CHEST FREEZER

____ ..

9.0 CU.

Choole 1M model that beat ftt1 your needs! Each
frMlllf feature~ on odjultable cOld control. security
loc:lcl llklllelctured cablneta oncl doors.

.

I

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