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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Reds
stop
Phillies

Pick 3:
734
Pick 4:
0972
Super Lotto:
1-4-16-.32-37-38
Kicker:

Pages

259640
•

•
Vol. 44, NO. 23
llultiiMIIIIno.

. '•

28eollone.12PIIgee25oenta .
A Multlalecllalno. Newap..,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,Tuesday, June 1,1993

Meigs Countians
honor war dead
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Seatlnel News Staff
"Let us never forget that Ameri·
cans have given their lives in
defense of die fragile freedoms that
we, in America, have the luxury of
referring to as 'rights'. Let iJs never
take for granted what American's
pitricts have died to preserve." ·
That was the message of Gerald
L. Moore of Fairborn when he
wreath on the water In tribute to Navy dead. spoke Memorial Day in Pomeroy
A WREATH IN TRIBtrrE • Jolnliag-Jolm
and Chester•
were Paul Cascl, Dick Vaughan, and James
. ·Weeks, commander or Drew Webster Post 39,
Moore, past commllllder of the
Gilmore.
left, at the Pomeroy levee for the laying or a
American Legion, Department of
Ohio, and currendy serving on the
National Executive Committee,
called .on his listeners to reflect on
America and the freedoms we
enjoy.
"As we pay tribute to America's
fallen sons and daughters this
Memorial Day, let us realize that
the United StateS remains lhe envy
of the world.
By )\)LIE E. DILLQN
"What is it about America that
Sentinel News' Stair
has
drawn citizens of faeign lands
Fifty-six Eastern High School
for
more than two centuries and
seniors received diplomas during
wby
do people to this day leave all
combined baccalaureate and comthat
is lamlliar to them and rislc
mencement exercises at the school
death
aboard rickety boats on the
on Sunday evening.
high
seas
to, re'.£Ch our shores?" die
The ceremony began with selecspeaker
asked.
tions bl. the award-winning Eutcrn
"It's the freedom," he said.
band, 'Invicta" and "Symphonic
"Tbe freedom of speech, the
Festival," under the direction of
,
freedom
1&gt;f religion, the freedom of
Willilm Hall. .
•
~
the
~.
and our rights to life, libPbllowing the march into the
erty
and
the
'pursuit of'happiness
auditorium, Chad Eric Griffith,
....,.freedoms that are unique
p.-uident of the class, load the
tlut&gt;ughout
the world." ·
.seniors and the audience in the
VALEDICTORY
Pledge of Allegiance. Rev. Bob
S .A L ·U T A T 0 R J
ADDRESS -Jeremy WIUWD
Sanders pvc the invocation.
ADDRESS - Jqlaberly Aue.
Buckley,
SOD of BW and 1W1Ja
Following Griffith's welcome, Mlcbael deUven her aalutatoBuckley,
Pomeroy,
dellven his
the senior members of the Eutcrn ry address, "Coalldeace Ia
valedlctor7 address, "Time
Choir, performed "Friends" under Ona.Self," for the 1993 East·
Travelen,'
during combined
the direction of HaD.
ern graduating claal oa Saa·
baccalaureate aad commence·
Stephanie Renee Otto, vice- day evenln&amp;. She Is the daap·
meat
exercises at Eastera
president of the class, introduced ter or Gary and Sharoa
High School · on Sunday
'
Continued on page 3
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH .
Michael, Pomeroy.
evening.
Seatlnel News Staff
Music by an alumni band,
recognition of alumni classes, and
· the awarding of six scholarships
highlighted the annual Middleport
Alumni Association banquet held
on the lawn of the Meigs Junior
High School building, formerly
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Kimble Hite, Findlay; Hartwe'l Cedarville; Phil Ohlinger, and
The MHSHigh
01811jle
and black col·
Middleport
Sqhool.
Seatlnel News Stair
Curd, Pomeroy; Robert J. Lcwi,, Carol Evans Ohlinger, Pomeroy.
on
w«C
fettored
m
flap
and other
Pomeroy; Clara HulilphreJ,
Class of 1953, 40th • Louis W.
decorations
at
the
reuruon
More than 400 alumni and Pomeroy; Ruth Hazelton Young, Osborne, Melborune, Fla.; Barbara by about 320 alumni andattended
guests.
guests ilaended the Pomeroy Alum- Middleport; Sara Hawk Culluma, H. Hatfield Scarberry, Henderson,
David
was emcee for the
ni Association's annual banquet Pomeroy; Lyle Hysell, Leona W. Va.; Mildred SIDCitton Bernard, pro1ram
with Franklin Ginther
and dance held Saturday night in Hvsell, Pomeroy; Helen Spencer Coolville; William L. Roush, El leading
in singing of the fight song ·
the Meigs High School cafetezia. - Rite, Oleshire; William J. Hobstet· Paso, Texas; Sally Bartels Ayers, and "'nnge
and Black" accompaRecognition of classes and ter, Rutland; Nick V. Raub, Eliza~ Athens; John Peter Raub, Pomeroy; . nied by the alumni band directed
awarding of scholaaships were bcthiOWII, Ky.; Milton Houdashek, Shirley Smith Smith, Pomeroy; by R . Williams.
: , up the band were Sandy
highlights of the banquet emceed 0•11innlls; Ziba Midkiff, Pmoeroy; Marlene Moore Wilson, Pomeroy;
by Charles Kirchen.
V~ia Hanis FISher, Minersville; James W. Kitchen, Mecco, Fla.; Brewinafon Luckcf.doo, bass drum,
Oldest alumni and only mem- •Rose Angeletti Sisson, Pomeroy; Ted Scott, Westland, Mich.; Jerry Wayne Davis, Mike Mullen and
ber of the 1917 graduating class Charles E. Sayre, Pomeroy.
· L. Snowden, Norcross, Ga.; Daisy Ken McElhinny, drums; Ruby
attending was Harold Martin of
Class of 1943, SOda anniversary Russell Gillogly, Albany; Frances Vaugban, Margie Blake, Karen
Port Lauderdale, Fla. He was pre- • Jack Matsoll, .Columbus; John It Evans Hunnel, Pomeroy; Barbara Gress Nease, clarinets; Ginther,
sented a copy of the Mcip County Stout, Columbus; Harry Leonard; Wehrung Martin, Sue Struble Jack Bacon, trumpets; Myron
video prodiiCC4tby Roger Gilmore Millwood, W. Va.; Darothy Peo· Cramer, Marion; Shirley Russell Duffield and Olita Lewis Heighton,
and
.last year for the Meigs County Parte plea Glanville, Iront!ln;- Leall . Slollar, T~edo; Patricia Ann Cline
Distric:L
Jeanette Altmaycr, Lcvtaown, .N. Hall, Marietta; Mary Holter Hud· baritones: WilHams• trombone•
Iva Sisson, flute.f Middl
lass
Others rccolllizcd were Edwin Y.; Nettie Sinclair Bambarr. dlestoa,Raclne.
Nan Moarc 0
epon.
c
Wehrung of Mt. Ari"ael, Oregon, Pomeroy; Robert L. lfulm and
Class of 1958, 35th anniv~ of 1919, was recogniud as the old·
who traveled the fartbest, Nonga MardlaRoedel Hamm Cld1licotbe; ·Fay-c. DeWees, Grove Cuy, est
graduate and presented a bou·.
Flemming Roberts of the class of Helen M. Quillen,
Marvin t.Wpret C1ar1t Shreve Cincinnati; quet of flowers. Officers elected fo
1927 and Wilhemia Smith Maier of Burt, Pomeroy; Lois Neutzlina· WibDa I. Acord. Hebron; Carolyn . liandle the 1994 reunion were Mary
the class of 1934, for having Burt, Pomeroy; Virainia Church J»bil1ips Surface, Marieua; Robert Gilmore Brewer, Jean ~Craig,
attended the most reunions, and Crew, Columbus; Mary K. Vqb- F. Slack, Sr., Vemone, Conn.;
Nancy Miller Beaver.
·
Tom Brown of the class of 1958 an Spencer, Pomeroy; Anna Hard· Harry Leme, Pomeroy; Rachel andReunion
classes recognized
for wearing the lQUdest tie.
en Kendall, Warren, Mich.; Mar· Roush Gonnan, Columbus; FloReunions classes were recog- prot Story McDonald, Nclaonville; renee Bcarha Wood, Coolville; were:
Class of 1933, lite Neal, Mid·
nized and Included:
Mary Wi1.8_ins Bentz, Pomeroy; Viola Brown Hunt, eolumbus;
die~ and Keith Kincaid, Citrus
Class of 1928, 65th amivenary · Francis D~ Carleton, Pomeroy; Jobn SlricltiMd, Woodafteld; Ann Heiahts, Calif.
• Dr. Huah H. Davis, Ella May Homer Hysell, Pomeroy; Belva Icen.bower Alloway, Belpre;
Class of 1938, Gene Kauff and
Midkiff Romaine, and Mandy Glaze, Pomeroy; Addie Buck, Patr.ack Norbert Neutzlina, Jr.,
Harold Hubbard, Middleport.
Hayes l!allmln all of Pomeroy.
Pomeroy; Marjorie Reuter Marion; Sbirle~ Brown Hli'man,
Class of 1943, Bill King, Mid·
Class of 1933, 60tb • Tippy. Leonard, Pomeroy· Rk:hlnl Gress Columbus; Marcia Gruea ~
dleport; Jack Welsh, Houston,
Dye, Mary R. Dye, Port Ch'arlotle, Middleport; v~~~a'Pa..._ Hazel: Pomeroy; Tbelma J. David lema,
Margaret B. Weber, Rut·
Ffa.; Roy Millcr, Pomeroy; Mary lOll, ffeinlock GJove; Mary RDIICil, Pomeroy; Gene Romine, Bd Texas;
land; James Miller, Columbus;
Baer GrueiCI', Pomeroy; \VUliam P'omeloy.
Boney, Jerry Fieldi..Pomeroy, and
Wllllrcl Elmba, Cheater; Mqe
Stobart, Lakeland, Pia.; Della
Clua of 1948, 45th • Nelda Tom brown, Clinton.
· ·'
DlJea MJICbell. Albenl; BW Mayel,
Starkey Swartzwalltcr, Catherine DlenDer Macby Fort Myen, Fla.·
0.. of 1963, 30th • Harold S. l,lma; Cbarlel Burlt, Brookpark;
Raub Welab, Pomeroy; Simer Bruce SchuH, CbUHcotlle: Roa Smith, Mansfield, Donald C. Mildred~.~ Pia.;
Grauer, Point Pleuant, w. Va.; ltflry Raub, Pomenw; JC......,. B. Brown, Jr., Columbus; Cbarlene HeloD Bart Sdcltley, Columbal;
ClareDCO R. Bailey, Sprlnafield; Harris, ~J WUbar A. R•· Diehl Rutherford, Lawrcnceb1111, Nan Terrell, Oat Ridae, Tenn;
n.a.Kin''lbelii,ROird•, VL; 1e11, Wicblla P1111,
Ind.; Jerry Sbamlin, Ma4i$on, John Barltet, Middletown; Patty
W. G. McGuija, Bast Aurora. N. D. Stnable, Carroll; PriiiCOI B.
J~W
Kloe•. Bidwell; Roae Hackett
Y.; Fred W. Crow, Sr., Syracuae; Rouab Weber, CWumbu; W1Di1m
8110
I Daaaa. iJm. Trebble, St. Albans; Donna
Virlinia Harris F,llber, Mlftenville; R. KniJbt. Point Pleuant: Betty -inston, Dela.; Sandra ·Wells McGuire Geier, and Dorodly Bur·
Ro6ett B. Burdette, Pomeroy; SayreFIIWDI,MiddleilanHoeF01• -~rer, Vincent;.'runie Lisle neue Walten, 8e1Jn.
Louile .._..., Pomeroy; Oeaeva . ter, Sfe!UaiJW&amp;bU: Micb.; ADD ._Y..,, Pomeroy; ROle W'mgeu
C1aa of 1948, Bruce Blnablal,
Willllm Olllkler, Delaw..-; Helen Smith~. Poineroy; Carol B. Jarclaer, Vincent Town, N.J.; Ravenawood; Marilyn IC"nopp
ao.,0e1~
Scory IU!Ode1, Zlleaville; Helen Roaor Youna, Pomeroy; Judy
Dorothy Anthony~ Helen
ot938, 55th reunion • Jane Houde t-all Btvn, Middle- Welaruna Werry, Pomeroy; Folta,
Byw, JOM Tewbblly, Ill of MidJ)olll1d F. Leifllelt, SJJ!{iisfield; part; BftiJa Plat v011111, Sidney;
Coatlallld ca pqe 8 .
dleport; Miry Rollins Scmerry,
Golda Reed Heilman, Pomeroy; 1une Unroe. Adalnsi.J~ L«blry,
Rio Grande; Btta May Nonon,

Eastern graduateS 56
during Sunday ceremony

•

Moore paid tribute to the 3.1
million men and women who have
served this country and spoke of
the sacrifices made by veterans to
preserve the American way of life.
He said that Memorial Day is a
reminder of the responsibility
which Americans have to remember those who paid the ultimate
price in defense of freedom.
The speaker concluded with an
impressive poem entitled "Come
Visit My Grave" written .by Jim
Rolfes, a legionnaire in LaMars,
Iowa.
The Pomeroy service was preceded by a parade led by Gralid
Marshall Leo Story, 94, a member
of Drew Webster Post 39~
Pomeroy, for the past 70 years. ·
John Weeks, Drew Webster
Post Commander, presided at the
service held on the parking lot
stage. The flag was raisejl by
Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249,
followed by the National Anthem
played by ~e Meigs High School
Band. Weeks led in the pledge
Chaplain Jim Gilmore had prayer:
and Mary Martin, president of the
Auxiliary, recited "Flanders Field"
and "America's Answer.
Draped over a chair on the stage
was the Prisoner of War flag. The
Pomeroy post's ftring squad and
taps and throwing a wreath in the
water in -special tribute to the Navy
dead concluded the service.
A parade through Pomeroy

.,
•
•

..
•

opening the Memaial Day celeln~
lion was led by the LcglClll honor
guard. Auxiliary presidents Mary
Martin, Drew Webster, and Lula
Hampton, Lewis Manley 263, rodC.
.in a white vehicle decorated in red;
white and blue. Girl scouta from
Troops 1180, 1309 and 1271
marched in the~ as did tho
boy scouts from
249.
The Melp Band, teve Stewart
and Jobnny Ooncb on horses, fire
trucks, emeraency squads, and
army vehicles were among the
parade units.
Prom downtown Pomeroy•,.
observance, the Pomeroy posi
legionnaires began their rounds of
cemetery visits. There were ser-·
vices at Beech Grove Cemetery ·
Sacred Heart Cemetery, and R~
Springs Cemetery in the morning/ "
and Meigs Memory Gardens, the:
Chester Cemetery, and Hemloclt"
Grove.
At Chester, the legiOIIIIaires led
a parade from the Chester School
to the Chester Cemetery• .
Meanwhile, legionnaires from
the Middleport Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 conducted services at the ;
MiddlCtJOrt levee and eight cemeteries, mcluding tbe Burlinlbam
Cemetery where the 103rcl .-vice
featured~ Rev. Davi4 Brym u
speaker ind enttttainment by Den: vet Rice, Paul Eichinger, Floyd and Colleen ·Bric!Cles, 1and Frank.
O'Brien.
·
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MHS-alumni scholarship -winners are announced
-

Harold Martin olde-st PHS on
hand for .weekend activities

A~hley

naYmn:

,._Ricbad

a..

'.

=·i

.;:_Gilbert, sw:::a·

Chillicothe; Dorothy Sampson,
Sciotoville; Dorothy Roach,
Pomeroy; Mildred Bailey, Middle·
port; and Harry Featherstone,
Amblin.
Class of 1953, Charles Vroman,
Belpre; Rex Maiden, Nelsonville;
Myrville Stewart Brown, Rutland;
Ron Barnhart. Lancaster; Charlene

Dillard Stotenhoff, Coscob, Conn.;·

Arlene Kina. Bronx, N.Y.; Bob.
Ashley, Middleport; Martha Beach;
Branden Beach, Sabina; Bob Dyer,
Middleport; Paddy Jo Lambert..:
Doolittle, Berea; Marilyn Ebers- bach Wolfe, Racine; Frank Eastep, :.;
Continued on page 6

Man ki.IIed 1·n
.
motorcyc1e crash·.,:
. ••
•: -~

· ·
•·
A Norton man was killed Mon·
The accident is still under inves~
day afternoon when his motorcycle · ligation.
·
struclt a sign post in Orange Town•
ship, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Two vehicles sustained light·
Smte Highway Patrol reported.
damage Saturday night in an accii; ·
Donald 0. Hartung, 63, 3921 S. "dent in Rutland Township, the
Mass Road, was pronounced dead pattol reponed.
•
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
Thomas A. Schoonover, 29
after being transported from the Depot Street, Rutland, was DCII1b!
Msc:Jk:JServiMeipce.County Emergency bound on County Road 174 ad ·
Melissa A. Durham, 18; S.R. 143,· '
According to a patrol news Pomeroy, was southbound wileD
release, Hartunf was northbound th ey attempted .to cross a narrow
on State Route near the intenec- bridge and sideswiped each Giber. :
lion of S.R. 681 when he lost conN · · ·
trol I'd ff the ri h .
o IDJunes were reponoct lllll
•s' o
g t sade of the no citations were issued. Bocb \IIJiti.o
road and struck the sign. The vic- cles were driven from the ICCDe. •
tim was wearing a hdmet

L oca
· J b fJe
• r:·s-..._....;.~..;

Charges pending against men

• Charges are pendiJig apin• three men stemmina from a lllllill
of related assault Incidents Friday and Saturday, ~ repr: != dllhe of
the Meigs County Prolccutm's Office reported this m01111J11.
Assault charps are pending apinst two of the men lioli • a:t.
dent Friday, the spa'elman slid, while a third man may
with agaravated aault llemming from an alleged asault ~
night in which Dan Richlrcl HiD, Racine, was allegedly *will a
piece of metal used for COIICI• relnfortemenl
Hill was 1lall8pOded by the Meigs County Emapncy IIIIMI
Service to Velrnlll Memorial Holpital where he wa II lid ..a

·
:
•

be_._. ::

re~

B&amp;E, vandalism investigated

:=:

Depudes of the Meip County Sberiff's Office
recent bres'rlnl llld ellllldlla of .... Southern h
According 10 a RlpDit frOm Sl&amp;iff James
Sci
an discovcled PtidaJlllCII'IIina dill the building
window wu ll'*- ID pin -aa. Soulsby .-.:w
the locked doan of
oftbt were tnocbd ~-

••II

the loll and ro.t ' - wa aeponed stolen •
the treiiUftl''l oiiDe.
In addition, the ye+ll• of two ares elea~•li
oa-paae 3

cur •••

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'Commentary

, Page-2-The Dally Sentinel •
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TUesday, June 1, 1993

'

The Daily Sentinel

'

iVA uncovers 'patient dumping' at its hospitals

But a VA doctor who reviewed tigators found ·46 cases where lynn DeMartino, Washington coun·
WASIDNGTON_r Ricling 37
the
medical .records iD the case 10kt transfers were "in poiMtial viola· sci for the American Hospitat
miles
through
the
lliUs
of
ICeniUCky
111 Court Street
investipton for the VA's inspector lion of the law."
isn'
t
the
way
most
people
woukt
Association, which has monitored
Pomeroy, Oblo
choose to spend the lui few bolD ~ that the patient's condition , That law is the 7·year,.old Bmer· the issue since its inception.
~ DBVOTED TO 11IB JNTERE8T8 OF TIIB IIBIGIJ.IIA&amp;ON ARitA
of their lives. But that's exactly
Although ·we found no legal
gency Medical Treatment and
what happened to one 39·year-okt
·
actions
being pursued against any
Active Labor Act, which forbids
veltran as he lay dying on June 8,
hospitals from transferring any of the hospitals cited in the rqJOrt,
1990.
patient with an unstabilized emer· at lesst one senator is working to
The veteran, a quadriplegic,
gency condition, unless the tranS· ensure that the aeallh Care JlinanC·
'IUrived
in
a
"
semicomatose
stale"
ferring
hospital
certify that the ' ing Administration continues to
ROJJERT L. WINGETI
at the Veterans Administration
patient
would
clearly
benefit from . investigate for actual violations of
Publisher
Medical Center in Lexington, Ky..
the transfec., The law wu passed in the law.
•
foUowing a ride from the emergen· was unstable at the time of transfer response to what was then a grow·
"I 801 outraged," Sen. John 1), .
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
cy room of Mary Oilles Hospital in and that the llosPital had the facili· ing number of hospitals that were "Jay" RockefeUer, D·W.Va., told :.:
Controller
I,
Mt. Sterling, Ky. Laboratory tests ties to provide die Jlioper care. Fllr· . transferring patients .who couldn't our associate Jan Mollec. "Our vet· ~
&lt;&gt;eneralMan~ger
taken at the original hospital thern1orc, the inspector-general pay for services.
erans deserve not just better, ·but ·
.
UlTI'I!RS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leu lban 300
showed the veteran's blood bad report claims that medical records
When veterans are dumped on the best possible care. The VA 's
wonll All Iotton are aubject to editing IOd Dlllll be lignod with DIIIIC, ·. critically low levels of sodimn and in the case included no evidence the VA system, the patient isn'tthe
inspector general has done a great
~. and telephone number. No unaignod !etten will be publiabod. Letters
potassium before be was trans· that the patient or his family asked only one who suffers. Inappropriate service by exposiJlg this te!Yible ..
abould be in good laSte, oddlessing issuea, mt ponon.Utiea.
ferred . Nineteen hours after be for the transfer, IIICI that there was transfers crea~ higher operating practice, and the VA was qwclc to ::
\-=::::;.::.;:::.:;::,~;;,;;;;;;..;,...;;;..._;_..;.._______~ : arrived at the 'A hospital, the
no atatement from the tranSferring costs for the VA, as well as inflat. respond." Rockefeller heads the ·•
patient died.
doctor justifying his actions.
ing mortality rates. No matter what Senate Commiuee on Veterans , '
There is no way • 1iscem what
The caae in Mt. Sterling is no the reasons for transfers, however, Affairs.
would have happea.ed to this exception. Rather, it represents a the profit motive may be driving
Though a patient transfer may
patient had he not been moved 19 potential QCW twist on an old prob- life and death medical decisions. not make the difference between ·
hours Jl!ior to his death. Kentucky lem: patient dumping. The VA "One of the ori~al reasons for life and death, several transfers ·
authonties investigated the incident inspector general recently investi· the (anti-dumping) law was to pie· cited by the VA s11ggest that even
and found that Mary Chiles Hospi· ltated 242 cases of patient transfen . vent patient transfers for financial if a hospital abides by the letter of
By WALTER R. MEARS
tal "followed proper protOCOl" in from non·federal to VA hOSJiitals r~na. although the law doesn't the law, they may not abide by its
AP Special Correspoadeat
tranaferring the patient.
·,
across the country. Of those. mves· specifically state that," said Gae· spirit
WASHING10N - Rebuff'mg protests against bnsinell! ~ clolc;d
lq one case, an "unresponsive,. '
"doors, the chainnan of the House Ways and Means ~ 881d ~ s
94·year·old veteran was taken to
• the best way to get the work done on a ccmplex, C:OO~ tax Jri!l.
Richland Memorial Hospital in
• The issue is as okt as the United States - the Constilutim was ~ m
Columbia, S.C., with .labored
breathing and severely low blood
.~S::S~ abpses of secrecy :::~vacy have !Jeen raiied again in
pressure. Upon arrival, doctors
Congress. in court, and in newly rei
tapes recording the early days of
mserted a central line into the vet·
Jbe Wlllei'Pte scandal.
li . al
'th H .
eran's le and administered fluids
· In Congress, the latest round became. ~ po uc one, wt.
ouse
to bOOst ~s blood pressure. Within
Republicans protesting ~ Democra~ declSI&lt;;&gt;n to close comnuttee proa half-hour, the blood pressure
~ ceedings on President Clinton's tax mcrease bill. .
.
.
increased enough that arrange·
At the same time, the Clinton White House Sided With former Pres!·
ments were made to transfer the
· dent George Bush's effort to control access to computer records. of h':5
patient across town to the VA Med·
• Republican administralion. Bush had wanted those files of elcctronic mail
teal Center. But before the vetemn
IUiil computer memos erased. but a federal coun barred that. But Bush '
was placed in an ambulance, the
' · · eel legal control of "all presidential information" in those records
central line was removed. The
:S~ an agreement with the National Archives the day bef&lt;n, he left
patient was dead on arrival.
Bven when patients are dying,
. office.
the
. •-~-• court
.,. The Clinton administration defended
agreement m '"""'"'
!&gt;n
transferring them to a VA hospital
Monday, opposing the bid of two inter~l groups to get ~ mate~al
may not be most humane way to ·
moved from the archives back to .the White House. In an earlter hearing
· proceed. In another case cited by
on the same case, the new administration argued that the law does not
the: inspector general, a dying .
require "every·sc•ap of information be saved. .. "
·
patient was found to have been fer, After all, ClintOn will be J.,.ving office. ~ne ~Y, '!te ~ will set· the
ried 77 miles across Sduth Carolina
precedent on computer data. and no adnnmstraUon ts gomg .It? want to
to the VA hospital in Columbia. ·
leave all its records to the custody of a successor, perhaps a political foe.
Upon reviewing .this incident, a VA
The National Archives holds Ric~ Nixon'.s papers and the Wfll:l·
doctor told the inspector general's
gate tapes in a warehouse near Waslungton. Ntxon spent years and $3
office, " ... one must wonder if it
million in legal fees trying to get them back and ~ them seaet. Last
was really necessary to transport
Monday, the archives released 25 taped conversauons, about three hours
this poor man clear across the atatc
out of 4,000, with more to come later.
.
. .
.
on the last day of his life."
In one Nixon dismissed the Wfll:lgate breatin as 111 UISlde Washing·
Jack Anderson and Michael
ton story 'most- Americans would ignore. •'It sounds like a comic opera,
Bluteln
are writers for United
really,' • he said of the case that ultimately forced his resignation.
Syndlc:ate,
IDe.
Feature
·• ~ open door argument was raised by House 'Republicans when the

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

can

Ru.ell Eqeue Triplett
Susan Park
Scllolaraillp

:can government orily be
·efficient behind closed doors?

! aipt's Pow• II) ,....,.. ~·· bailquet trMIIIrold Martin
: o1 Fort Laaderdale, IIIII. MartiD anctaateil In tile l'ollleny Hlp

Seilool dMI ol1917. Martin- reeoplzed and pnaned 1 video
: oiMdp CMU)'.
'
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&lt;

.----Local briefs.•. ----~

r·

~

C011tinued frolll pag~ 1
. •
Several windows were broken out at Harriaonville Elementary
: : School Sunday evening, Soulby said. The ~ of several juve. ; niles were cp;stioned and aped to pay restitution, he said.
:
Monday evening, several windows were broken out at Letart
: Elementary. Sc:booL Soulsby requests anyone with information con·
: cc:mins the Vl1lldalism to contact the Meigs County Sheriff's Office.
•

beitig investigated, Soulsby said.

i Manfairafterwreck

:
A MiddlqJon man was lisled in fair condition Tuesday morning
: at Gnnt Medical Center in Columbus following a one-vehicle
• wreck on Kimberly Road near Ohio 691 in Athens COUllty Saturday
• mo:ning which claimed the life IX a lloardnum man.
:
Kennedl B. Vanmatre, 20, was transported to Grant Medical
Center via UfePlight after being lmlted at r:~ital in Nel. sonville while Ronald L. Sloner n, 23, was
dead at the
scene by Athens County Cooner Robert Butts.
·
, • According to the Athens Post of the Stale Hi&amp;hway Patrol, the
- two were IOIIlhbound around 2:45 a.m. when the l&gt;ord Bronco they
were in went off the side of the rolld IIICI struck a bridge.
A Jlillllll dispwber·said this morning that an Investigation is con. tinuing to defamine who was driving the vehicle and if alcohol was
a factor. Acconling to the Athena County Sheriffs Department,
both men 8IWidlld Hocking CoUeae.•

'

Ways and Means Committee voted, as it ~JI!OSl•ways has~· to go
dume the fmal tenns of the piCiposed taX bill m exccllllve 9CSSIOD.
··r.My goal is to get the work done, and every one of '!8 knows ,that we
• get more accomplished when we are eyeball-to-ey~be.l! m execuuv,c; ~­
When Rodney Peairs shot down father because of his vigOrous edf- with deep remorse. He has been
-sion and unable to poswrc for~ cameras .or lobhytStS m the room, S8ld Yoshiro Hauori, a Japanese torials evec decided to try to make saved from a prison sentence, but
Ri:p Dan Rostenkowski. the chamnan. .
·
exchange student, outside his home good. On a number of occasio!ls nothing can spare 'him from the
:·- He a1ao said it had been done that way without GOP protests when last Halloween, he was reacting as after the venomous late-night · judgmentofhisowneonacience.
Bush and Ronald Reagan were in the White House. "As far as I'm con· . his society had trained bim to react.
·
·
'fhe problem is that there are
.. cerned. what we considered wise policy under two Republican ~dents Convinced by his frightened wife
millions of people who are exactly
: remains sman today," the lliinois Democrat said. ·
·
that the tccnager,was an assailant, u
· like Mr. Peairs and I once were,
Not acx:mling to the Republicans, wh&lt;;&gt; ~ the Democrats ~ !Jying Peairs grabbed his .44 Magnum, nO
"
·
armed with lethal weapons and
to raise taxes in the dark. Rep. Newt Gmgnch, the GOP whtp, S8ld the ·fired lint and asked questions sec·
ready to use tbem. The daily
...committee sessions should have been televised live.
ond.
·
stuff ·
images of the mass media reinforce
A Louisiana jury took three phone calls, Dad would ·
a PIS· old messages: Gum• are OK. It's
That would have been a stage for Republican denunciations of the taX
}Jill. Instead; the bill to raise taxes $24~ billion over .the next five ~· hours to set him free. It, too, was tol into his belt, grab 1 shotgun and smart to have them in the bouse.
guard outside the bouse,
was reviled in closed-door marlcup sesstons, then approved on a party line reacting accordin.g to a code whose mount
waiting for the nightriders who When the going gets tough, real
• vote 2'\ DemocralS for it, 14 RepubliC8lll! againsL
can be traced to the nation's never came.
men reach for a pistol. ·
- Hoaie reform rules adopted in 1973 require that commiuees hold pub-. origins
frontierpast.
·
da
In the United States, that
That is the problem. Behavior · In my ear1Y newspapenng IYS moment 'IUrives with atartling fre.
li~ 1 IQns to deal with amendments and fmal terms IX the bills they send
Th
sh
. 1 , h the durin~ the tumultuous days of the
tO 'the floor for action. unless a majority votes to close those meetings.
that had a cerwn
ogtc w en . . civil nghts revolution in the l960s, qllC!ICY· ere are 34,000 gun ot
' . According to Rostenkowski, the Ways and Means Commiuce has his· law was somewhere over the disfollowed suit. For about five deaths here each year, more than in
~Y done so on tax mldups, more than 60 times during his dozen tant horizon is singularly jnappro- 1
lose hand all the rest of the world put togeth·
- ears as chairman. and usually with bipartisan suppcn.
communi·
years,
I
kept
a
pistol
c
at
• er. There are over 200,000 .gunshot
riate
within
civilized
P
in a coat pocirel. under the
-Y It certlinly is more efficient in getting the bills handled. Whether the ties. When everyone acts as though whether
front scat of my car or in a desk injuries annually. About l,SOO
• tradeoff of openness for efficiency is the right one is a question that defies he or she has the right to play drawer at work. Though never Americans die in accidental shoot·
1
judge,
jury
and
executioner,
then
actually
fired
it
in
anger,
it
seemed ings in an average year.
ri no answm.
"Thele
is nothing novel about govern mental con fiid ential'11y, " Ch'1ef everyone is at risk. When handguns
·
h
As for the .rationalization that
Justice Warren BID'ger wrote in the 1974 Supreme Court decision that are readily available to aU, safety is !a:~forting presence JU~tt e gun ownerabip is necessary in our
forced Nixon to yield incriminating Watergate tapes. "The meetings IX available 10 none. Seeking individ·
But guns never brought our crime·ridden society, the FBI says
the constitutional convention in 1787 were conducted in complelt priva- ual security and self·protectim, we f ·~· bu · f
·
that the number of justifiable homi·
1 gne ' and tn
diminish it coUectively.
. that
amdy an wemg
cides
(in which private citizens
"
were and are ·as one·
cy. And most of the people who framed the terms of the Constitution said
This has not always been my widl the larger society. One brother shoot criminals) each year is conit cou1dn 't have been done without ~y, Burger. ~oted.
opinion. When I was growing up in L'ned himself hU layin 'th
sideiably 1csa than 1 nereent of the
Two centuries laler. the explanatim sounds familiar.
· Mississippi, guns were a .... in ""'
W ep
g WI a 34,000
fatalftfea:·in other
o·n .... pistol. Another brother almost, lost
tier justice is as much a
our home. In part, they re ec..... a foot in a hunting accident. And words,
EDITOll'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice president and colum. the Southern male's love of bunt· on two occasiOQS, came within a myth now as it alwtys was. As a
1
nlst ror Tile Auoc:lated Press, bas reported on Washln&amp;ton 1nd ing. Shotguns and rifles of au v.-i· fraction of a second
of making spokesman for the anti-~ lobby,
natloaal polities ror 110re tlllln 30 years.
eties stood in closets throughout Rodney Peairs' error. The first :Aandgan Control, put tt, "What.
lhe house, ready for target pi8C1icc time, 1 !fl0l11Clltari1Y mistld a vis· . you fmd is that guns don't make us
along the banks of the Mississippi
·
•
·
d Tl
safer, they just escalate the vioRiver or duck and deer hllllting up itmg unc 1e oor an IDtru cr. ."- lence."
_
other time, 1111d two friends drew
T h' h the
and down l.ts 00,~1 bby hasa
d
h ·
owtc
guno
By The Allociated Prea
But there were several pistols as
own on some teenagers w ose standard n:aponse.lf you take away
Today· is Tuesday, June I, the 15:btd day of 1993. There are 213 days
weU, put aside for a IJ!ore serious ~f fun was OlD' idea of a direct guns from the law·abiding, you
left in the year.
purpose, tucked into drawers all
After the death of my brother, 1 will1uarantee that only criminals
today's Higbtigbt in History:
ovec the house.
were there for put away pistols for good. Report· are armed. But that's not true. The
On June 1, Ul13, the U.S. Navy gained its motto as the mortally wounded
commander of the U.S. frigate Ches~, CapL James Lawrence, was protection, to kil and maim if edly, Rodney Peairs is now filled police would also be armed and we
heard to say, "Don't give up the shtpl " during a losing battle with a those who regularly threatened my
British frinte.

It's ~ime to put away our ha~dguns ,
dd;ng Carter JJJ

yes

cshot

Today i~ history

.

'Iber

I

, Leone! Herrera. convicted of
two murders and sentenced to
desth in Tau. convinced a federal
district judp that !'0 bad ~ugh
new evidence poinliJI&amp; to his mnocence 10 justify a hearing .on li!at
evidence. His claim cut no tee wtth
•the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals or the U.S. S!lpreme
~Court. There wu no~,. and
Herrera was executed by ethal
· injection in Texas on May 12.
Another Texas inhabitant of
Death Row, Gary GraiiMI. II due
' 10 end his days on June 3 llliellthe
•Texas Board of PardODI and
Paroles grants a ...-rna to ~
,or, amoag other i1sue1, lib evt·
'dence of actual innociiiiCe. 1'f!C
cllancC of getting such a ....., m
•a ctPIII case before that llelril II
•. , . . • remote as Plaruaell,._·
· :lloOd endorsing an anti-aiiOrdon
~II; lnlt in this case, tilt llolrd
·,., 1r 10 be somewhat dltliJI'
, Oa the ni~~:ht of May l3,lfl1, a

black male tried to· rob Bobby
Lambert in a supermarket parking
lot in Houston. In a struggle, Lambert was shot to death. &lt;Jary Graham was subsequently .-rested and
convicted of the crime. He wu 17.
There was no physical evidence fingerprints or a murder weapon cmnecting Graham to the murder.
But there were eyewimesses to
the crime. On May 2 of this year,
David Elliott, a reporter for the
Austin American·Statesman, ran
down the roll of wiblesses. There
were six who said they saw the
murder. Only one identified Ora·
ham as the killer. Two witnesses
cloeer 10 the murder llCCilC said, at a
.lineup, that they could not identify
Graham. Ancther saici'Orahmt del·
initely did not do it. And a few
weeks ago, two other . witnCIICI
who saw the murder came f01wwd
to say thll the tiller ..,. •honer
.than Gary Graham. They got a
good look at the murderer, they.

emphasized, because they almoit never did meet with Graham. "I
ran bim over as they ~e Into the really didn't 'think Gary had much
hope, so I just went through the
parking lot.
The prosecutors were not mOiions.''
There are also four alibi wit·
impressed and aalted how come
these two witne~ses had not said nesses who have sworn that Ora·
anything before. Nobody uked ham was 1S miles away from the
them, they llltSWmd.
.
supcmuuket when the mardct lOOk
Reporter David Bl1ioU ~poke to place. Tine of them are Jellied to
Merv we111, a privato invWC Graham. They were not c:aUed by
Graham's aaomey 11 the trial. how·
who received SSOO of public
to look into Graham's CMC before evec, 10 the jury never bad a cJuutce
trial. In an affidavit, Well notea to determine their mdiblllty. r
Varioaa International figure•
that he and Ron Mpck, the public
that Oov. Ann Ricbardl urled
defender asaigned to Graham, ''just
not have authority to
wlio
dooa
did not have time 10 wony about a
grant
clemeKy
on her own - 11
guilty client Bcc:anoe we UIUIIled
lCIIl
delay
the
eucarion.
Alld •
Gary - aullty from the 111r1. we
did not afve his case the aam~ did, orderiaa a 30-::J; atay on
Ulrn 011
atlllltion we would 1011tinely pvc a Ap1129. A-. die
Grabam
'1
beialf
wore
Soath
Clll."
Willi was IJiid $30 an hour for Africanc:::::~oad Tata,
PJeaidenl
· hi1 labon. He told the Auatin f(liiiiOr
VIICiav Havel, Joae Jlckloo and
American·Statesmll1 tb1t be onli·
narily meets with clients wboae . Amnele)'~
cues he is iave~tigatina. bat .he

•

••
••

'

.

''
. '•
' I

Nat H entoff ·:~
i

ibOiiiii

llllllledllldnpedoneindiYidaiL"
. "1he bulc: and very lmmediJII

question, ~ugh •.is whether Ora· ._.; t
ham comnntted this murder. To be . ; :
sure about tllat - in view of the ' :
quality of repreaentation he hid
before llld during the trial- there . : :
, should be a hearing on evidence of ' :
actual Innocence.
Gfllam continues to insist on . .
hi• Innocence of the murder, ; : :
adell!'•· ''I am weU aware of the ' · •
pllltRtl Rlllity lhlt tiJinaaltout Ills'
IOIY.Lkhuboen IOC ?FJPI)7for10 CliO 10 that otben mllbl Uw In a •
beaer llld more bllliiiM toeiety."
Tlln Ire 367 other iDI1Ibftl Ml
of Deldl Row In Tau. 'They lhae
OI'II*I'IICIIIe . _ IIIII die oddl.
frollltbWy . . not mtiR
c.t~~~~r 1101 T-ltlsDy.

m... . .

Nat H1wtotr II 1 aatloaaliJ ·
Nil Willi Hllloi lty - Itt Pirlt
A••ll•lwt IIMI ... r.a ol tile
lUI ol llllitl aid a writer lar '
"•••••"' llltlrprlle ~......

..

•

,I

••-

I ' '

Graham's future is now up to
the Texas Board of Pardons and
Paroles, which coukt recommend
that the goventiJ!: grant clemency,
but has not done 10 in a capi1al CIIC
since 1976. It could also recom·
mend that die governoi extend the
execution date again. And tbe
boaJd illelf could provide a proc:edure for hemng Giaham's claim of
actual innoce11ce.
Graham's 1upporters have
stn e• 111M he Is black llld bad a
very troubled youth, includina
severe bel!tinp 11y his fllher, whO
a1ao 11tot 11 him once but 111'-d.
Oil die odter hiDd, die ~·-llklll
~ oat that Gllhlm • COIIIIIIitlld
ilino qgraVIIed robberlea lmaed
witll eltbet a lllstol or a
lhot ODD indlv!iiUII Ia die nec:t, ...
1101-wblmld tine lndlvldalls, 11D11
nve vehlclel 11 JIIIQJOJ•IIICI Jdd.

•

A Reedsville man was cited following a one·car crash at the
of Ohio 248 and Number Nine Road in Olive Township
Friday around 12:47 a.m.
According to a report from the Meigs County Sheriff's Office,
o..ne Balbec, 33, was eastbound on Ohio 248 and lost control of
his 1912 Subara llltMNtwaaon in a curve. The car went off the right
side of die rolld l1ld overturned before coming to rest on its top. .
Dulne Barber was cited by deputies on chlrga of driving under
the inf1aence l1ld failure to control
A P""'IIIC"· David a.ber. 21, Reedsville, was transported by
the Meip County l!lilcqatcy Medical Service to St. Joeeoh's Hos·
pita! in Putersburg, VI. Va., for treaiiDCDt of injuries, ihe report
said.
Damqe to the \ldlicle was listed u modente.

i_~tioo

•

I

Death and due process: Texas style

ReedsviUe man cited for DUI

would all be more inclined to think
of them fll'St. Without ready access
to handguns in particular, tbere
would not be as many impulse
shootings. The Rodney Peain and
Hodding Carters of this world
would reach for the telephone
instead of a pistol. Fewer Yoshiro
Hattorls woukt die.
i..iule by liule, that message is
beginning to get through. The ''
S1JPr6111ClY arrogant National Rifle '
Association, whose political clout
is legendary and whose anti-pn
control activities are nevec-ending,
i
has lost head-on fights in the legis· '•
•
latures of Virginia and Maryland
l
recendy. The polls, wbos&lt;; political
effects are much softer than tbe
'
N~A 's lobbyinJ. cont~nue to
1
reflect the pubbc 's bebef tbat
1
tougher gun control laws woukt be
:
an unqualified good thing.
j
But there isn't going to be any
I!
sUdden breakthrough in this ~ular struggle. The roots of our · "
national lovq affair with weapons .•.
go deep into out history and collec·
live psyche. Today's tear of esi:alating crime inevitably reinforces
our worst instincts. The sad truth is
that Yoshiro Hattori will soon be ;
forgotten. It's not that he doesn't ' ' .
matter. It's just that his death is
dwarfed by the 34,000 other vic- · ·
tims of our national obsession.
Hoddinll Carter III, former
State Department spokesman •
llild l!ward·wimllllll reporter, edl·
tor ll1d pahlilber, 'II president or
MalnStreet, a Waablngton, D.C.·
bued television production com·
pany and a syndlc:ated writer ror '
Newspaper Enterprise Assocla· ·•
'•
tlon.

,,

OLDEST ALUMNI • Oils tlq llil 76th nllliOII at Saturday

•

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•

••
•
•

: Deputies probe two-car wreck

No injuries were reported followinJ a two-car wreck on Ohio
- 338 in Lellanon Township Monday around l:SO p.m. ·
A c:. jlriven by T11110ihy A. Curfmln. 3!5, Racine, was eastbound
·: when a westbound car, driven by Tony Wayne Frazier, 18,
~ Ravellswood, W.Va., swened in the roadway, forcing Curfman off
! the righl side of the rolld, a JqUt from the Meigs County Sheriff's
• Office iadjc:wd
:
Fruier's car slid sideways stricking· Curfman's car, the report
·: said.
:
Damage to Curfmin' s 1987 Ford Escort was listed as heavy .
~ while damage to Fnziec's 1978 Ford Fairmont was listed as light.
; " FrliZiec wtis cited by deputies 011 a charge of failure to control.
:

AI--.

'

: . Edi~Gr•a 1101t;
111ft and addl'tiiCI ue publislted as
: tlley a,_. ill law eaforc•ent or otller allldal report~.

'

'

-+-----Hospital news---~
. Veteral Me.orial
: S~id:fmissiona -Emma
S6ariCI, . epon; John Snider,
~
• Saturday . discharges
Woodrow HaD, Racine.
: Sunday lllmissions- None.
: Sunday diJchqes- None.
•Monday admisaions- Edna
Swick, Pomeroy; Donald Bolen,
Pdmeroy,
I

Monday discharges - Roben
Moore, Pomeroy.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Dlscllaraes, May ll Matthew Hill, Inis Corbin, Ralph
Gibbs, Lori Payne, Lisa Kauff,
Donald Mayer, Lyla Waugh,
Melinda AUen. Mn. Mark Jackson
and daughter, Mn. Mark Perry and
son, Jacob Thornhill, Ruth Sales,
•
Shirley Scurlock, Mrs. Charles
Olinger Ed - · Bonita Stumbo,
Christophel' Bisaell, Dustin Tlwt·
The Daily Sentinel
ton, Mn. Otristophet WaUace and
(U81'8JII-d~, Michelle Boggs and
S
' Smith.
.
....,.
""""'-•
MCINiaJ
.
...._. Frw.,; 111 Coart SL~w1oy, · ·
lacliar1-. May Z9 - Carol
am ill 11oo Ohio v.~~oy
Hald•
Rhea,· Brandon Kirby, Brandon
Stiltner, Kayla Ross, Charles
,..... j.iiiii a&amp; P
oy, Olllo.
McGuiftl, Jactic Sanden, Matthew
~ ,.. ,
...... ..._, aNI the '
Clabaee,l!llie Sorrell, Cecil Rif·
fie, Randall Filla, Jeremy Labnner
CW
i i t-~
atin,
,
,.. a:.:.·
!l;.
Faye McCoy.
la;t(;
- · '138 '111ird .Ma-. ' IIICIDlac~-.
'
llawYartiOOI7.
May 30 -Jason
•
JOIICI,
C
y
ZIDD,
Alfreda Rife,
JIIGI'I'IIAIJ'TI: . . . ~ ...,. Jll to

--

g..t =:"':a:,J:.&lt;-s..!:t::t:: .

:::=

..

z..~·
111 Coart St., '
4117811.
IIIJ.:IIPI101111ATD

-:t-111...
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. .........-.........:.....
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.

____....,..... ...............$1.60
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•.

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11

Albcirt Hllhea, Woodrow Harris,

LucilJe ROIIIIt. Mary Ingalls, Mn.
Douglaa Delong and daughter,
Lamoni HuaJw, Jelaicl ~·
Mic' I Pt '™• Anpla 1bbmas
and Mn. Seott Sdltaer IIIII ton. ·
ton Stapleton, 'lbclmu Lambert,
Mra. PWI \VIIIq.., IIIII UIP·
w, Mn. .r- Btiib ilnd danJIIiec,
Mra. Lelley Sti srhtDIIIIIII dauah·
ter, JOielleclaier, Larry Beaver,
Myrtle Yatea, VIctoria Dixon,
David Ballll p, Alma McMillin,
~ Sladalllll Jllllie Allin.
....... MaJ 21- ~.IIIII Mn.
Doullu DeJona, daughter, Jack·
lOlL

Blrtll~, MIJ 29- Mr. and
Mra. 1.- Bulb, daqb.-, Gal·
lipolla Perry; Mr. llld Mra. Dale

KaPea.-.A

I

... .

•

•

•

Abb_y Rutll Blake
McCODIU·Moore
Scholarslllp

.Eastern...

Sllerry Seddoa
Crawford-Grey·Lewls
Scltolanlllp

Carl Loren KID1
Cllarlel S. Gibbs
Sdlolanltlp

Continued from page 1

the salutatorian, Kimberly Anne going, Buckler responds, "I don't
Michael, and valedic:torian, Jeremy know, I haven 1 got there yet." He
William Buckley.
concluded his speech with an
In her salutatorian address, Miss excerpt from the poem "Leaves of
Michael, daughter of Gary and Grass" by Walt Whiunan, and by
Sharon Michael, Pomeroy, told her telling his friends "AI wars ask
feUow classmates "This is the point why" and ''Never say never.'
where we step out of a workt filled
Following the smging of "It's
mainly with adolescences and step So Hard to Say Goodbye to Yesler·
into a world that is filled w~ day" by the choir, Charles J.
adults." She urged her classmates Moore, principal, recognized the
to have "confidence in oneself." top ten scholars: Jeremy Buckley,
She said "Confidence is having a Kim Michael, Lisa Hoffman, Sberri
self assurance in oneself. To be Smith, .Karen Morris, Matt
assured or confident in oneself is Michael, Mike Roush, Carrie Mor·
very important. Confidence will rissey, Nancy Nally and Bobbie
give you a feeling inside yourself White.
that you can accomplish what you
Moore presented the class of
have set out in life to do." She told . 1993 and Richard L. Roberts,
her fellow classmates to "live in su~tendent, accepted the class.
Dellor.. Alkire
·• Ludau Scott
hannony with one another. Do not Diplomas were presented by s. Ray
Bob Robes II
Bob Roberts
be proud, but be willing to associ- Karr, president of the school board. .
Memorial Scllolanlllp
Memorial Scliolanldp
ate with JlCOl!IC of low position. Do Kellie Anne Ridenour, secrewy of
not be concetted."
the class, and Michael Wak~
Citing a familiar quote, she said Roush, treasurer of the class,
------Meigs announcements------:
"confidence is not a thing brought the seniors in the turning of the laS·
the clinic. Public invited to the
on by luck." ."Confidence can be sels.
Sale planned
clinic.
·
one of the elements that distinguish
The Bastem High School Alma
The United Medlodist Women
us from othen, and confidence is a Mater was sung by the seniors and of St. Paul United Methodist
CJagtomeet
value we set upon ourselves. This audience and Rev. Sanders gave Church, Tu_ppen Plains, will hokt a
The
Eagles
Class of the ~
value is used correctly can raise the benediction followed by the spring yard sale Thursday through
United
Methodisl
Church will hold
you to 1111limited heiJ!!ts. She cited recessional march by the band.
Saturday in the church basement.
a
bake
.sale
at
Kroger's
on Friday 11
The graduates are William Ray Hot dogs and drinks will be sokt
examples of conftdent people
9a.m.
including Christopher Columbus . Adams, Sharon Dale Baker, · and there will be a bake sale. Proand Harriet Tqbman as well as William Eu$ene Baker, Carl ceeds will be -u5ed fot vacation ·
l Meetlnt JIGIIpoud
coaches and teachers at Eastern Patrick Barnnger, Benny Ray bible school.
Syracuse Village Council's
High School.
·
.
Bryant, Charles William Bryant,
meeting set for Thunday has been
' LePon to meet
She l1lJed her fellow classmates Jeremy William Buckley, Christo·
Racine American Legion Post postponed 'untilJWIC 10.
not to ~tve up when times get pber Michael Carleton, Jeremy
tougb c1tiilg the example of Stev~ . David Cline, Michael Eric Crites, · 602 will meet Thursday at the post
. Y011tllleape set
Kemp, lefl fielder for the Detrml Charles Alan CUllningham, home. Dinner wiU be at 6:30 p.m.
The Melfi County Golf Course
Tigers who was injured when he Michelle Renee Donovan. Maranda with meeting after. The post will
have a bean dilUICr Saturday begin· will be haVIDg a/oath 1eape for
was hit with a pitch during the Irene Drake.
children ages 8·1 , boys and pts,
SJ&gt;l:ing 1979 exhibition season but
Heather Nicole Farley, Charles ning at noon. The cost is $2.
with an organizational meeting FriDallas Francis, Susan Lynn Fran·
did not let that stop him.
day
at 6 p.m. at the course. A
Prac:tlc:e
set
She closed her speech by thank· cis, Nancy Michelle Gaddis, Rhon·
wiU follow. The league .
scramble
Evangeline
Chapter
No.
172,
ing her teachers for the chance to da Lee Gibbs, Deborah Rae Gray,
starts
June
8 at 1 p.m. Can Carol
Order
of
the
Bastem
Siar,
Middle·
learn and her parents for loving and Chad Eric Griffith, Sarah Jane Har·
McCullough,
992-5322, or Cheryl :
port,
will
have
officers
practice
caring for her.
ris, Lisa Lynn Hoffman, Letitia
Thomas,
992-6763
for information.
Thursday
at
7:30
p.m.
AU
officers
· In his valedictory address, Anne Holsinger, Shane Michael
"Time Travelers," Buckley, son of James, Kevin Andrew Klein, Brian are to anend.
Reunion planned
Bill and TWila Bucldey, Pomeroy, Jay Long, Joseph Daniel Marcinko,
The
J.W.
Eskew Jeunion will be
Blood ~re11ure clink:
, thanked,Qod, his parents, family Kimberly Anne Michael, Matthew
June
26.at
Fort
Meigs in Rutland at
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
and factilty for where he was. He Wayne Michael, Edward Dale
noon
widl
a
potluck
dinner.
will hold a blood pressure clinic
stated "Sometimes a person can Miller, Chastidy Dawn Milhone.
Jose sight of the goal and a reality
Karen Elizabeth Morris, Carrie I une 8 from I0:30 a.m. to noon at
·:
Dana\ lanaed
slap from these peor.le can be a Rae Morrissey, Tracy Ann Mur- the townhouse, There will be a
There
will
a
round
·and
great motivational too."
phy,.Nancy Anne Rainbow Nally, potluck dinner for members after
square dance Friday from 8·11:30
He said -"A:pproximately 18 Janelle Renee Neutzling, Misty
p.m. sponsored by tile Tuppers
years a~o, the Class of '93 _came Dawn Newell, Stepbanie Renee
Plains
VFW Post No. 9053 I •lea
tnto extstence. We entered mto a Otto, J11mes Bdward Parker, Brie
Auxiliary.
Music will be by Smoky
time line dlat we are expected to Bdward Powell, Brett EuJene
Mountain
Drifters.
Caners will be
inhabit for the next 45-SO years. Price, Jennifer Rae Proffitt. KeUie Lawrence Lambert
Red
Carr
and
Melvin
Cross. Every. ~
Scme IX us have been cut short in Anne Ridenour, Matthew Scott
Lawren~e A. Lambert, 79, of one welcome.
.
this
but that does not mean Ridenour, Wayne Bar! Ritchie, Route 1, Ewington, died Monday,
..
· that
who were cut short.did Shawn Paul Rollins, Tony Jones May 31,1993 at his residence.
AuxUiary
to
meet
not teach us something while they Rood, Michael Wayne Roush,
He was a retired employee of
Tuppers Plains VFW Post No.
were here and after they were Jonathan Dean Sanders, Chad the Ralston Purina Co. in WeUston
90S3 Ladies Auxiliary will meet
gone." ..
Andrew Sa.-oy, Mandi Lynn
and a World Warn veteran.
Thursday at 7:30p.m. Virpe
Buckley stated "We live in a Sheets, Sherri Jeannine Smith, Lisa
Born.
August
!5,
1913
in
Viriton
gardner will install oflicer1 Bvery.
country that is never satisified with Beth ·snyder, Vicki Ann Warner,
County, he was the son of the late one urged to attend.
the new but is always looking for Bobbie Jaye White; David Wayne George Madison Lambert and Etta
the better. Once a person finds Woolard. Jr.
McCumber Lambert. Preceding
Car Wllllli
what he is looking for and become
him in death were his wife Lucy
The Meigs 4·H Pleastn Ridrn
totally satisified with life, then he
Dickey .Lambert, two brothers llld will have a car wash Saturday •
will moet likely fall into the dol·
Soutii·Central Olllo
one
grandchild.
. McDonald's from g a.m. to 110011.
drums of a lethqlc and mcdiOCJe
Tonlaht.
DIOitly clear. Low 45Surviving are two brothers, The cost is $3 per car.
life." He urged his classmate&amp; to SO. Wodncaday, increasing cloudi- Lester Lambect of Wilkesville and
"Never stop looking." He said ness. A slight chance of showcn or Charles Cpnger of Bwington; one
"Americans constantly look to thunderstorm&amp; in the afternoon. sister, Verna Courill of Okee
rediscover and rebuild themselves High 7().7S. Otance IX rain 30 per· Chobee, Fla.; two sons, Tommy
and our class will be no different."
cenL
Lambert of Dayton l1lld Jerry Lam·
Citing 1 !\DOle by Albert Ein·
bert of Wilkesville; two daughten,
Ettwled lorecMl:
1tein re1anhn1 tile mysterious,
nanc1ay 111roq11 Saturday:
Pam Newsome of Vinton and
Buckley llld "The mysterious is
Thanday, a cJuutce of lbowcn Jenny Duffy of Wlllwville; nine
wbat keepl the haman IJIOCilll in or tbunclerallllln Lows in the SOl. grandchildren and three greatthis COIIItant state of c~Ja!!ae." He Hlahs In the 70.. Fair on Priday grandchildren.
said "we ire on a constlllt'quest for .and
Saturday. Lows in the 50s.
Services wUl be at I p.m. Thurs,
kno'ffledp" and that "innovation Hips 7().7!5.
day
II the McCoy·Moorc Funeral
and invention are the children of·
Home
In Vinton, with tho Rev.
the tnylleriOUI."
Blmor Gelaer officlatiaa. Burial
He urled bil fellow clasamates
will follow in the WUteaville
Pick 3 Numbers
to "Wori smarter,·not harder" In
Cemetery
with Military Gravelide
7·3.4
order to survive In a "oea of, teciJ.
Rltea
conducted
by the Joaepb
(seven, three, four)
nololic:al chaoe." "Thooe of us whO
Freeman
American
Le1ioa Poat
Pick. N-bers
will lelm to work _ . will be
176.
().11-7·2
on the caai~ ectae of technologl·
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and
·
(zero,
nine, seven, two)
callldVIIICIII he laid.
7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at the
Lotta
To the cpwdan of where he funeral home.
1-4·16-32·37·38

Area death

t!

C

a.n.

Weather

Lottery numbers

s..,..

'

'

' I

'

�The Daily Sentin~l

Sports
~Mingo
a

Canton for its second trip to the
state in three ye~n.
Sophomore Ryan WillilllllS got
the start for Southern (16-8), but
didn't last put the first inning.
Andy Grueser and Jeremy Northup
came on in relief. They combined
to fan four and walk nine.
.
Dan Corsi picked up the vietory,
boostin~ his personal record to 111. Corst fanned 14 and walked cine ·

in a P.t overall perfonnance.
V lSiting Mingo started irs uprising when Mike Smith singled with
one out. After another out, it
appeared that Southern would get
out of the inning when a ball was
hit back the middle off WiUiams
glove. The deflection allowed the
ball to carom away from Jeremy
Dill at short and all hands were
safe.

•

,_.· onal finals

ID

~ittipaldi spoils Mansell's debut to capture second Indy 500 title
By STEVE HERMAN
INDIANAPOLIS {AP) - The
fJrSt time, Emerson Fillipaldi was
the fresh face in Victory Lane, res-·
cuer of an Indianapolis 500 dulled
by the Sameness o( speed and more
'speed, a winner not named Unser
or Foyt or Andrctd or Mean.
:: Four yean I!tter· he is ~ famil:lllr face, ~ of an lndiariapo~s 500 notable for less speed, a
}litnarne winnec for a race wi~t
• lYI or a Mears for the first tnne
:lit 3hean.
•·. Fittipaldi, riding a 200 mph
·slingshot, turned the most competi:!ive SOO ever into a. dash to the fm:iih Sunday and spoiled the debut of
Nigel Mansell, the Englishman
;To'ho dared to go straight from For- .
mula Olle champion~ Indy winner
;.... and almost patlled tt off.
:". On a res.tart after a yeUow &lt;:&amp;'!·
pon flag wuh 16 laps to go, Flltl~di was the firSt on the gas and
shot past a .surprised Mansel1, the

"

Coach Mick Winebrenner Slid.
"If we make that play, we are out
of the inning. I'm DOt faulting anyone; we just didn' t get a break.
Mingo has a JtC8l t.eam, but in•eecJ
of going into our balf of the iming
lied at 0-0, we end UP being down
6-0. That was a big play."
Joe Cutri then walked, Dan
Rychlick doubt¢. and walkS were
(See TORNADOES on Pap 5)

'Greene claims victory in men's golf league play
The Riverside Senior Men's to sweep llpoinrsfortheday.
Monday, June 7 for a bid to go to
Golf League fmaUy beat the rain
"Whispering Roy" Crawford, . the 1993 U.S. Open at Baltrusol
with Clark Greene of Hurricane, tbe quiet man of the senior lead, Country Club. A total of 5,901
W.Va. claiming the win and the ·claimed that the team he was on players started out in this year's
league in the Senior league points' would never shoot over par, a club qualifying tournament
race. ·
'
spokesman said.
Local qualifying cut the. field to
Greene holds a 52.5-50.5 lead
Crawford further said jokin¥1Y, 497 players. Those players, includover Dana Winebrenner of Syra- that if it did, he would hang btm- ing Ty will now be joined by 104
cuse. Honerman Harley Rice of self. It happened and Earl Johnson PGA tour players who arc exempt
Reedsville ts next in line with a and Luther Tucker were quick 'to from local qualifying to make the
distlint 42 points, however, a club put the noose around his neck. Sev- field of 601 players. Those 601. will
spokesman said its possible for era! of the players bad to hold
anyone to come from back in the Ghuclde Lester back as he tried to
pack 1111d win because of the possi- kick the chair from under Roy's
ble 10-point gain from the unique feet
i ystem developed by Riverside's
As one can see, the senior
pro, Ty Roush.
league offers more than golf. It
A player is awarded one point offers a day of fun and pranks for
for each team that his team "beats aU to enjoy.
The basketball coaching staff at
plus a bonus point just for showing
A total of 56 players have Eastern
High School wiD present
up each week,. Ttes are awarded already participated this year, with
the
ftrst-ever
"Big-E" Basketball
Palf points.
the latest arrivals being Reider
.Camp
.
.
Last Tuesday was the largest Lund from Bell view, Fla. and
fJrSt session, set for June 7lumoout of the young season and Andy Palafyi of Belpre, an 10,The
wiD
feature instruction for stualso in the history of the league. employee o the Army Corps of dents entering
'grades 4-8. The sec. There were 43 players taking Engineers on the Dams ofthe Ohio
ond
session,
set
for June 14-17,
advantage of the balmy spring River Srstem.
will
feature
a
girls-only
weather to play some really fine
Willis Dudding also.stopped in those entering grades 8-12.camp for
golf.
to play 18 holes while traveling
should bring loose-fitTen foursomes and one three- from Conway, S.C., where he now tingStudents
clothing,
eitber shorts or sweat
some made up the day's pairinj!S. resides.
The·team of Don Wilson of MidThe senior league congrahtl•ted · pants; white cotton socks, water
bottle and tennis shoes. Please note
dleport, Dana Winebrenner of Roush on his qualifying for the that
shoes arc not to be worn from
Syracuse and Jack Young of Cot· U.S. Open sectional field. He will the outside
into the gym.
tageville shot an eight under par 62 be competing in Columbus on
Camp hours will run from 8:30
a.m. to noon each day with regis!fatio.n from 8 to 8:30 a.m. Pre-regtstrabon fee for the camp is $30, or
$35 at the door. Checks should be
· After finishing as bridesmaid for
Larry Bond held down the made payable to Eastern High
seven times this season, Racine's number three slot for nearly 35 School (EHS) BasketbaU Camp.
Bob Adams Jr. finally walked the laps, but on the restart Conley and
The camp is open to all students
aisle and brought hQIJie the cro~n Wolfe bagged .Steve Lucas and in the Eastern Local School District
~wei in Friday night' s Earl Hil1 Bobby Hill. At the finish the cars
as well aS open to other students in
Memorial fot super Late Models at came three wide out of tum four, other surrounding districts.
Skyline Speedway in Stewart.
where Conley edged Bond for tbird
All students will be given
· Adams scored an impressive run and Wolfe's Precision Automotive instruction in fundamentals, while
in beating some of the finest names car came home fifth ahead of Steve . the upper-level session will advoin racing, somt\ thirty cars in aU, Shaver.
c~ higher-level skills and the per· en route to the giant $2,000 win.
Bobby Hill, son of the legendary fection cif fundamental skills.
Adams had a big night, double Earl Hill, was seventh, followed by
Each
camp will feawre a
double duty to. also win the UMP Mike McDaniels, Kenny Riddle guest SJpealker, most of which wiD
Modified feature in the Smith and Kenny Johnson.
brothers S-3. Aaron Fleming
Conley claimed fast time and
claimed the Limited Late Models, the helment dash 'over Andy Bond
Pomeroy's Todd Smith took the - .and Bob Adams. Larry Bond took
Pure StoCk main, and Reedsville's the second heat over Wolfe and
Bobby Bailey took the pure stock Johnson; while Evans claimed the
four cylinder crown.
third heat.
Although Adams fended off
Adams claimed the modified
several early challenges in the main over Tom Mapes of Jackson
McDonald's/Keystone Beer/J.D. and Jumpin' Jack Flash (Jack
DriUing en car, the Racine c~uf- Kress),
feur bad a somewhat easy Itme,
Aaron Aeming drove a near perdislancing himself from the rest of feet race to beat former Late Model
the field.
·
chanip Kirk Isner and Ed Venham
Several cautions slowed the in the Limited Late Model f"eature.
race allowing runner-up Rod The win was a sweet one for the
Eva~s in the Burning Springs Conner sportsman cbamp.
Farms car to close the gap and
Pomeroy's Todd Smith claimed
pressure Adams for a short time. both 1h6 heat and the feature in the
. Adams again pulled away towards Anderson's Furniture #T-7. Smith
the checkered.
had a new engine finely tuned to
91 CHEVY
A grea1 race developed back in the beat of a victory, first beating
the pack for third through seventh defending champ Ralph Gardner
CORSICA LT
between Larry ·Bond. Bill Childers, and eventual runners-up mScott
4 door,
Bobby Hill, Racine's Scott Wolfe Thompson and Terry Tantomey.
loaded!
in
the
McDonalds
of
Bobby Bailey survivecj caution
$9495
GaUipolis/Marks Auto Sales, IncJ after caution to chum the 4-CylinBbers' Citgo car, Delmas Conley der main in the Barber's Auto Parts
and Steve Sbaver.
B-1.
Conley and Wolfe dueled for
Racing continues each Friday
nearly 35 laps side by side, until night at Skyline Speedway,located
Bond and Childers made contact half way between Coolville and
&amp;nd Childers dropped out of the Athens on County Road 53.

compete for the 91 slots open in the
field.
· The top 10 senior leaguers are
as follows: Clark Greene (52.5),
Dana Winebrenner (50.5), Harley
Rice, Don Wi!Jon, Ondie Lesler,
Bill Winebrenner, Harold Clark,
Jim Wikoff, Jack Nugent, Lew
Gilland, Sonny Chandler, Jolm Ferguson, Ralph Sayre, Harold Lohse, ·
. UCorge Bums and Carrol Norris.

·.

Adams wins racing event

·························~
"'I

1
THE BIG "E" BASKETBALL CAMP
1
REGISTRATION FORM
I P1eaae fit out lie form complelaly.
.

1 -Rrat Session, boys end gi~s gnodes U (lMIIrillelourth thru eiglth)
June 7-10
1 -Second mtion.knt 14-17 GirWoniv~8-12
I
In-coning~ glldl! girte ,.;1 atlllnd thia Clllllp
I
I

I

District 22; MOC honor four
vn Rio Grande softball team
: RIO GRANDE - Members of
lhe University of Rio Grande softball team received posaseason honors in voting by the District 22 and
Mid.Ohio Conference coaches.
The district named co-captain
Robin Stull, a senior from
Jeromesville, to its All-Infielder
listing of players, marking the
fourth time Stull has been recognized for her efforts with the Redwomen.
"Robin's stats speak for themselves," Rio Grande Coach Angelo
Forte said. "She's a very fine player who bas broughl our program to
where it is today."
Stull also shared disuict and
MOC: player of the week honors
during the season. The MOC
coaches also awarded her honorable mention as a shonstop.
Receiving honorable mention
from the district were outfielder
Char Peart, sophomore from
Glouster; pitcher Starr Philpot,
aophomore from Dayton who
ended the season at 10-11; and
catcher Sbe11ey Whitaker, sophomore fJOm Oak Harbor.
Receiving honorable mention
from the conference were infielder
Jane J•, sophomore from Troy,
and utlHty ICelly Robinson, sophomor, flam Marion.
Tile Redwomen ended the sea13-20 overall, 5-lS in the

son•

Studontsname:- - - - - - - - - - age _ _ _ _ _ A~l
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••

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Panont's SVI&amp;ll18:

l,lhubow~hel8bygrantmy~lorparr ' · •lo!*kifrlr ·-tl
In "The Big "E" Bublblll Camp". I hel8by IRII-..:1 thai I am noeponlible tor my lludlnf'a actions.
,
'' 1
Plaaoe mab .. chacko payable to Big "E" Beok8lbell Camp - Ea11em H~ ·~
Sc:hoot R.tum !Qrm and c:heck lo Big "E" BesUIMIII camp, Alln.: Sco11 Wcilte, .ji
EaMtm Hiltl Sdiool, 38800 SA 7, AI t ds.;le, Olio 45772 by May 21. ., lilt '
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loaded!

-~

By JOE KAY
It aU started with reliever Larry
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jeff Andersen (2-1) coming into the
• Branson stayed cool while tbe game to try to hold a 4-3 lead, then
'"Philadelphia Phillies fumed.
walldnjl Randy Milligan and giving
.., Branson, who had just two at- up a smgJe·to Reggie Sanders to
,.bats in the last two weeks, came to open the eighth.
,;.the plate with the game on the line
On his second pitch to Joe Olivwin a volatile eighth inning M9nday er, Davidson called a ballt. Catcher
:Oigbt. His RBI single off David Darren Daulton lost his temper, has
&gt;.;West gave the Reds a 6-4 victory a few words with Davidson and got
;.that delighted manager Davey . ejei:ted. Manager Jim fregosi was
,.Johnson and made the Phillies tossed out a few moments later.
seethe.
The balk - only the second
• · "That's the way you win cham- called on the Pbillies this season~ionships , guys com. ing off the took away the douole-play possibildlencb and doing their jobs," said ity and was the culmmation of an
;iolmson, who has led the Reds to evening of anger by the Phillies.
::tive wins in seven games.
Pircbing coach Johnny Podrcs was
• Branson, playing because third ejected earlier in tbe game for
'baseman Chris Sabo had a sore questioning Davidson, and starter
'1lack. bad a lot more than just his Curt Schilling claimed the umpire
oinactivity to overcome as he came told him he wasn't getting ball..up with the bases loaded, the score and-strike calls in his favor because
;.ned and one ouL He was facing a Daulton was complaining;
"PhiUles team that was angry over
. Schllllng raised his voice in tbe
=tosing the lead, Its best run produc- Pbillies clubhouse bas be blasted
;cr, its pitching coach .and its man- the umpires after the game.
,,
ager.
'
"The guys 011 the field ·are sup"Tbat's my role- put me in posed to decide the game, not the
there whenever and wherever you um~," SchiUing said. "I'm DOt
need me," Branson said. "It's takmg anything away from the
always discouraging when you- 'RedS. but let us decide who wins
don't get 10 play, but I didn't get and loSes the game, not them."
down on myself or my managers.''
The balk call set up the decisive
His one-run single off DJ: sequence in the eighth, and the
West made it 5-4, and West w
eJections hun the Phillies in the
Barry Larkin to force in another nmth. Rob Dibble, making bis secrun and complete a rally that the ond appearance since returning
PbiUies think was tainted.
from a broken arm, loaded tbe

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1.ol """'"'at""""'-~, 7:30p.m.

Sunday••...,...

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SL l.aiDIIO, . . Oloao 4
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NATIONAL LEAGUE

Sill Francilco 4, Allara 3
llaulara:I,Pioridal

•

MD..-............22 2! .&gt;1&lt;11
B•H n ..~ .. ·····-··%1 2.9 · .420
Cl.I!VI!IANp ..- .. 19

-"'BuebaD•-

bases on walks with one out.
But instead of Daulton, the
National League's RBI leader,
coming up, the PbiUies had to go
with Todd Pratt, just 2 for 11 with
one RBI. He flew out to shaDow
right field.
Dibble then retired Jim Eisenreich on a grolillder to get his fourth
save and make a winner of Jeff
Reardon (1.0), who tJiiChed out of
a bases-loaded threat m the eighth.
Daulton blamed Davidson for
the olncome.
"Bob is one of those impact
umpires. It was an ESPN game and
be couldn 'I wait to suit UP· He was
going to make an impact oo the
game one way or another,'' he said
Davidson denied telling
Schilling that he wasn't getting
ball-and-strike calls because of
Daulton. It was just a misunderstanding, Davidson said.
"I would never do that,"
Davidson said. ''I've never ever
done that, and I never wiD. I'm disappointed he would say something
like lhaL"
On the ballt call, Davidson said
that Andersen never stopped during
his delivery. Andersen disagreed,
and noted that third base umpire
Jolm McSherry didn't call it a~
"If I didn't stop, why didn't be
see it?'' Andersen said.
" 'That's why thev call him balking Bob Davidson,' r ScbiUing said.

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1\ll ... l hi \~' \ \1H ~ ~.ti l l\).!' l\l• ll tl• 111.1.1 I•~· u'1'11 a• .1 di•l."t•um 11•\\ ;ud
th,· j•urdt.l•l' "' : m~ lh' l\ •II' Ll'._., j i ~·lud.· purdl.b•'\1 1IHrl n ~ ,,,k huuf'
, ••• llh; qk· d.tll'' I .IUIII ' •11&lt;.' ,h , , ·uu t\1 j'l\.'1 1 dlt•' k l'u rdl.t'-~.:t l . Bt•llUJ
d i''' 'lll ll 111.11. ,til~· , · • !"in:tl th")!l 11t.ttcd pn ~· ,· . 'I It t" ••tkr 11••1 ~a lttlut
' ''nt tt t1•'1t &lt;I'l1 '\\ Jil l :HI~ ••llh'l' , toh &gt;' l"ll~i.'t l •l'•'o'l;t l t•ll .Tt •f t"''ll l"' 'il · •

Now VGolt 9, Cbicrop 5

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Co1lndo "

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l'llll1ru¥Jb 2

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••

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Voild foe Moy ll, :12, 24, 1993

S.ln EYftll Only

810 E.

St1t~

Athena; 0.

5~55

'

I
..

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'

son.

.

Riley agreed. "They had ~
seven-point lead when Jordan went
ouL Phil made a good substi111tio0
at the time. I think if we bad been
able to cut the lead then, Micbael
would bave been back e.lier.''
For a change, the rebounding
disparity was not too big. Tbe
Knicks held a 37-35 edge.
:
Starks, who had the task of
guarding Jordan, said "It wasn't
tough. I was playing good defense.
He was just knocking down the
shat. He didn't really have a lot of
WICOIItested shots. It's DOt fruslnling. I'm looking at the score, not

hU:

.

C'

"

opened the game with a
three-point« and the Knicks took a
7-llead. But the BuDs tied it alll.
It was 21-all when Horace Grllit
and Pippen hit.pll'N'8Sjve sbols and
the Knicks never saw the lead
again.

Perez gains offensive support"
in Yankees' 8-2 win over Tribe
.

NEW YORK (AP) - Melido
Perez is a fast-worting pill:her who
certainly didn't mind waiting on
the bench while his.New York
Yankees teamm~~tea were scoring
runs.
"I think today I didn't have any
problems. I got some runs behind
me,'' said Perez, who allowed
seven bits over the first eiFht
innings Monday in the Yankees 82 victory O\'CI' the Cleveland Indi-

While the 'Yankees won their
fourth in a row, the Indians lost
their fourth SIIllight
Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove felt his starling pitching was
a major problem, but not a new

one.

bases, and

-

BoggS' aecood sacrifice

fly scored Kelly.
·
· Leyritz greeted reliever Marl
Clark with a single that scored GalIes.o and Owen, who bad both
advtnced on Boggs' deep fly to
centrs.
Felix Fermin'·s run-scoring
groander made it 6-2 in the sev~
enth, but 0 'Neill bit his fourth
homer of the season, a line drive
into the ript fidel seats and Menlms followed with his 1 towering drive over the left fidd fence.
l.eyritz' two bits in four at..raised bis avenge to .365. But he
was particularly happy that the
offensive outburst eased the way
for Pen!z.

"It's not due to lack of effort,
it's due to lack of command. Our
starting pill:bing has been a llll1ller
of com:em, obviously, since day
one,'' Hqrove said. ·
Den nil Coot (3-3) lasted into
ans.
It was a pleasant change of pace the fifth, giving up eight hiu, a
for Perez, who was becJred UP with walk and the first six Yankees runs.
"I didn't feel sharp out there
an average of 2.1 runs per game in
today.l
wuted behind in the count
his first eight starts.
too
mucb,''
Coot said.
"For a starting pitcher, it's
Mike.
Gallego,
making his first
always nice (to bave some runs).
appearance
in
the
leadoff spot,
You can play with the hitters, you
opened
the
Yankees
first with a
can mate better pitches,'' said
double,
moved
to
third
on Spike
Perez (3-4), who walked one and
Owen's
sacrifice
and
scored
0111the
struck out four.
'
-'
ftrst
of
Boggs'
two
sacrifice
flies.
His support was so solid that
Afuoz Mike Stanle 's RBI sing1e
every Yankees hitter had at least
made
it 2-0 in the fourth, Kenny
one hit and they totaled 14, includA sports card show win bo held
Lofton
singled home the Indians
ing two doubles, a triple, and backfrom
10 a.m. 1111tll 4 p.m.
- to-bact home runs by Paul O'Neill first nm in the fifth•
m
Lyne
Centrs as J8l of the
The Yantees answered with
and Hensley Meulens in the sevEvans
Youth
Day activities at the
four in their half of tbe inning,
.enlh.
University
of
Rio
Grande.
Six Yankees drove in tuns, led knocking out Cook and taking I 6The
show
wiD
fCIIIn 25 . . .
by. Wade Boggs and Jim Leyritz llead.
and
admiasion
wiD
be $1 for Idalia
Gerald Williams led off with a and so cents for children.
with two apiece.
.
"He came in smiling today. We triple and scored on Pat Kelly's
For dealers. one eiPt-foot 11bJe
fmally gave him more than one or single to center. Gallego walked will he rented for $1!5. McUtionat
and Owen singled to toad the
two runs,'' Leyritz said
!'bles B!'e $10 apiece. For 111ore
information, CODiact Randy Fianey
at 446-6637 or lt1111y Sl"nders at
&lt;ContinuedfiOmPage 4&gt; ·
446-3779.
issued to John Breurell, Andy . ter start, I'm confident we could
Jankowski and Aspenletter to lxing have eventually hit Corsi. We were
in two more runs and run the SC()I'C a better team that what we disto 3-0. Grueser came on at this played in this pme.M
poinl
Billy Jones was credited with a
Leadoff hitter Jason McEndriee fine perfOI'IIIIIICC.
then reached on an
at second Illlllllatolall ·
that scom1 another run. Smith sin- Mingo Jet: 650:201-5 = 19-17.0
111 St£11.. St.,
gled home two more runs as Southern: ()()().()()().( = 0-3-3
Aspenletter was caught in a runBatteries: Ryan Williams {LP), ·
down between third and home to Andy Grueser 1st. Jeremy Northup
111111 SIIVI.
end the inning. The score stood at 2nd and Billy Jones. Dan Corsi
MI. . COIIIIY
6-0.
.
(WP)(Il-1) and John Bret~~eU. ·
Winebrenner thought i \gO&lt;KI
Sllkl1161
first inning could 'et Southern
back in the game. BtDy Jones led
off witb a single, and then with one
out, Williams walked. Both were
successful on a double SICII.
The next two blaers popped UP
and root a called third stnte:
Mingo got three hill off
Orueser, wbo had J'!ICbcd dte day
before and left wtth a sore arm.
NorthuP came 011 to pill:h well the
remaining few innings.
'
8•
Mingo plated five ·runs in the
second and really put the game out
ofreach.
·
Billy Jones had all three of
Southetn '1 bits; two singles and a
double.
Pick Mon.-Wed.·Sat. 8 arn-12
McBndree and Ryeblick bad a
Containers Fumllhed.
double and two 1ingle1 to lead
Come rlda the berry wagon to Mel froln . . llld.
Minao. Smith, Corsi, Lane and
Alpenloaor each bad two aintllos,
FRESH PRODUCE DAILY IN OUR M"lbi
Jllitowlld a triple, Brelrell a dou· Market Hours: Mon.-s.t. 10 _.,
ble lnd Curiri •llinlle·
Sundlly 12 Noon • 1 pm
Winebrenner concluded, wrm
very diaappointed in our performance. flll*ially after comlna this
far. Tbi1 was a bil let down. We
54110 11124, hrM1IMI,
jlllt bad a bid 111rt lad Jolt confi•
dence, then It - jut I matll:1r of
PH. 614-MJ-51
time. If we bid IOIIIell off to a bet-

Card show set
for Saturday

s...:&amp;

Tornadoes fall .••

=

INSUUNCE

noon

.

!

J
••
•
•'
l

••
•

"That was a key three minutes,
we made our stand and were able
to hold off their surge," said Jack:

Fnah
Strawllerrte
FI.SI DAY OF PICIIII
WEDNESDAY, JU,t~lb.l •·•..•12 laaa

MoadaJ 111C11re
1

;

j

after going 3-fo.r-18 Saturday in made the big play."
one of his poorest performances. .
· Patrick Ewing, who scored 24
"He was in a zone," said Riley. points to share team-high boners
"He had everything going for with John Starks, caUed Pippen's
him.''
shot "Miraculous. Micbael had a
"Michael Jordan had an outra- great game. But even though be
geous day,'' BuDs CCB:h Phil Jack- scored 54 poinrs, we were still in
son said. "He bailed us out with a the nme "
11up1ber of ~. It was a dog fight
•'MiChaet bad a hot band and a
but we came out 011 top."
big game for us,' ' said Pippen,
Jordan coatinued bis boycott of wbo, lill:e Jackson, doesn't like to
the media and did not speak after see Jordan tate over a game. " It's
Game4.
DOt that we don't want MJ. to get
· Despite Jordan's superb effort. his points, but it makes it tough for
the game was hanging in the bal- others to get into the game and step
anee with 2:09 remaining and the it UP when they have to."
Knicks lrliling 94-90.
Jackson made a concession to
Scottie Pippen made a basket Jordan, who had 11 assists when he
while gelling hammered by Antho- hit only three shots from the field
ny Masoo and completed the three- SIIIUrday.
.
'point play for 97-90 lead. Another
"We told Michael that 10
basket by Jordan sealed the deci- assists are as good as 30 noints "
sion.
said Jackson, "but I don~i know
• 'That put us in a comfort about SO, that's a little better."
zone,'' said.J~ "A.five:point · Jackson said one of the keys
or even a Sl![-pomt I~ JS still the came midway in the fourth quarter
danger zone. Scot(Je was met, , when Jordan left the game· with
checked and out of rhythm but he five fouls.
.

OWD

•'•

'l

i'W£AHPP9'HONM PHJPt£

. because of some changes to ·the
tniCt, iDcluding the lq)llcemeat of
the 15-foot ap011 with two aew pit
entrance and exit lanes se)lm'lled
from the IJ'IICk by grass IUid a 30inch rumble strip. But the chlngel
produced the inlendecl pwle!Ctioa i4
speed, and no one ~·-=bed the
lap record of 229. I B mph bY
Micbael Andrelli during the 1992
mce.
Scou Brayton, Bocael's tealllmate, was sixth; Scott Goodyear,
runner-UP last year, was seventh;
defending champion AI Unser Jr.
finished eighth; Teo Fabi was
ninth; and Jolm Mdrettl, Goubt's
teammate l!ld alate addition to
recently retired A.J. Foyt's team
was lOth.
.
'

PlekYear

•'•
•·'

''
'
••'

CA-RS

ished fifth . At least this time,
unlike many others that ended
against the wall .or in • puff of
smoke, he was still nmning at the
end.
The mce, in coaii1SI with a year
ago, was remarkably clean. ~
were only eight yellow flags, Just
four for minor crashes. None of the
drivers was seriously burt
Before Mansell dusted the :white
c:onaete wall, the last crash was on
the 127th lap, when Roberto .&lt;Juerrero and Jeff Andrelli collided in
ihe third tum and went into the
wall. Guerrero had a bruised left
shoulder and right knee; Andteui,
Mario's youngest son who was
seriously injured in the race last
year was oot burl.
·
Danny Sullivan and Paul Tracy

YOIIIIDIPE-

s. St. Lolllll

I•
ll[l]~l•f!! .

fmished fourth after two penalty were elimilllled in earlier Cl'llllel.
stop~ for speeding in the pats. "In
In all 24 c.-. were still nJI!IIiDJ
my miDd," he complained, " I won · at the~ the most eYa" for a 33the race."
c. field.
Andrellj, in his 28th Indy, fin'l'here was concern abputwety

error

OU..p5.-2

•

ATHENS

legal and they were on the gas
alrelldb~ a second or two. Evtsybody, · , chtals 011 the restart. ... I
learned a lot out lhete."
ManseU, who ~laced Micbael
Andretti on the Newman-Haas
team this season, was the second
reigni118 ~ula One champion to
lead atllKiianap:&gt;lis, and the fint to
do it as a rookie. His teammate,
Mario Andretti, led 731aps and had
a lead at one time of as much as 25
secoods.
By the !59th lap, the first nine
cars were scparatedby less than 10
seconds. Three laps later, ouly
seven seconds separated the top
seven.
Andretti gave up tbe lead for
good after the 174th lap, when
ManseU got around him and Filiipaldi. ManseU stayed in front the
next 10 laps before he, too, was
passed
Raul Boesel, a front-row slarter
alongside Luyendyk and Andrelli,

DOWIIII CIILDS
MULLEIM-EI

•'

.

'

-

••'
•''

Middleport Mets
beat Alexander S-1

4,:0.

,I

"'

district and 3-11 in the MOC. Forte
is 39-65 in three seasons at Rio
Grande.

In Pony League action Friday, ·
Middleport's Mets defeated
Alexander BlackS 15-S at Albany.
Middleprt hitters wer~ Willie
Johnson who was 3-3 with a triple,
. double, and single; Paul Pullins
who was 3-S, Wes McClure 2-3
with two RBI, Gary Stanley 2-3
with a triple and two RBis and
Donald Goheen, who was 2-3 with
three RBis and a double.
J.P. Fisher had a double and
three RBI's and Mart Mills two
RBis.
Gary Stanley got his second win ·
of the year with II strikeouts and
one walk. Paul Pullins pitched 1
1/3 innings in relief and was credited with a good job. Pullins also
threw two runners out, mating that
six ronners in four games,
. The Me~ did a good job defenSively, tummg three double plays.
· Alexander hitters were Dave
Robertson witb a triple (2-2), Gaydish 1-3, Wilson, B. Six, and H.
Brookens one hit each.
Wilson suffered the loss.
Alexander is 2-1 and Middleport

ul

games at Madison Square Garden.
Knicks coach Pat Riley was
asked if the pressure is now on his
team.
"Definitely," was his answer.
The crowd in Chicago Stadium
was roaring with every shot as Jordan hit on 18-of-30 from the field
- including six three-pointers -

.Branson's clutch RBI single
~gives Reds 6-4 'win over Phillies
~

~

~ USED. CAR SPECIAL'

91 CHEVY
S-10 PICKUP

I

$3611edly .. cempatthedaar

f'nl.nogisbation Fea$30

~rive Awaylt!Yings/yen//

race.

;I
'1

until his final charge.
The final yellow came on the
192nd lap w~ Mansell, desperate
to make UJ! lime, brushed the wall
but was still able to continue. Afuoz
the green was displayed with siX
laps remaining, Fittipaldi pulled
steadily ahead, turning the fastest
lap of the I'IICC at 214.807 mph on
the 198th lap and winning by 2.862
seconds. He finished the SOO miles
in 3 hours, 10 minures, 49.860 seconds, an average: of 157.207 mph.
Mansel1, trymg to become the
· first.rootie winner since fellow
Englishman Grabam Hill in 1966,
was 4.2 seconds '!ebind FiUipaldi,
and seven other drivers were on the
lead lap.
"I was gelling ready to go (!own
the straight, and all of a sudden I
saw yroom! vroom!" as first FiUipaldi and then.Luyendyk roared
past, ManseU sal(l "And llhoul!ht.
'You shouldn't do that.'
"1 was worried about being

Bulls hand· Knicks .105-95loss to even conference finals at 2-2
: · · By JOE MOOSHll.
two-time champion Chicago BuDs
CHICAGO (AP) - Michael to a 105-9.5 victory Monday that
:;lordan took matters into his own evened the hest-of-seven series at
;,tumds and shifted the growing pres- two games each.
·
&lt;ture in this dynamic Eastern ConNow the scene shifts to New
:terence final onto the muscular ·York, where the Knicks ~faced
shoulders of the New York Knicks. with .a must-win situation' in
• Firing mostly from long range, Wednesday's game - just as the
Jordan scored 54 DOi!lls II&gt; lead the BuDs were after losing the tint two

."'

91 FORD

race leader. By the time Mansell
looked up, both FiUipaldi and Arie
Luye'!'iyfronk,the pole-position starter,
were m
I of him.
. ~hat's the w~y they finished,
Fttttpaldi pumptng his right fist
into the air as. ~ took ~ checkered flag. for bis 11ec0n.d ume and a
record mnth for car owner Roger
Penske.
·
''Because of the time of my
career, my BF,C• I. wanted to win a
secoodB
. . . Ind~: wd the 4~year-old
razihan. The fJrSt wm at Indy
was important The second is~ a
dream. I was very emotional at the
end.:· .
..
·
Fttttll61di, like ManseU a former
Formula One champion and an
emigre to Indy racing, was among
a record 12 drivers who accounted
for 24 lead changes. True to the
P~nske style that four-time ~er
Rtck Mears perfected before retiring this year, Fittipaldi bided his
time most of the I'IICC and never led

:~

Eastern coaches to offer
mid-June basketball camp
be coaches from other successful
programs who will offer a wide
variety of piJilosopbies to the game
of basketb811. .
Campers will receive 14 hours
of instruction, a certificate of participation, "Big-E" Camp T-shirt
and a chance to earn individual
honors.
For further information please
call Scott Wolfe at 614-949-2879,
or write to "Big "E" Basketball
Camp"; ATI'N: Scott Wolfe, Eastern High School; 3890() .S.R. 7,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
Registration information should
include students' grade, shirt size,
age and camp to attend. All checks
should be made out to "Big "E"
· BaslcetbaU Camp."
•
Camp awards:
-Best free throw shooter
-H-0-R-S-E tournament champion
-Hot Shot champion
-Dribbling relay champion
-Fundamental defensive champion
Features:
-Guest lectures
-lndividnali•~ instruction
. -Awards
-Camp T-shirt
-Team competition

The Dally Sentinel Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

1\.leSday, June 1, 1883
hge 4

Junction blanks Southern

· By SCOTI WOLFE
SealiDel Correspondent
. The Southern Tornadoes ended
fme season Saturday afternoon,
losing a 19.0 Division IV regional
rharopionship high school basebaU
game to second-ranked Mingo
Junction at Ohio University 's
Ttautwein Field
Mingo Junction (21-5) now
advances to the state tournament at·

1Uesgax. June 1, 1993

0..., 11111, Now Yaot9!;- dod
2-2

-.-.,,,....

TOilf&amp;ltl'l pma

"'-

--

WLM

--Yaot.----21
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__ _,,,....

O...,ll_Y.... 9p.a
01

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.

,...... ••- C"::2•
I

1VIdlln''J'I .....

AMERICAN LEAGUE

..........

NIIIDMI'
' W !!!''!'"'*l..
!he'!!
NIA: PlaM ilio
Bulla
~=
motlq
pta,...

n.nu,'l ....

~

••

HARRIS F

.

.

'

�Ohio

The

Tueaday, June 1, 1993

Meigs Junior High
honors achievements
by its young scholars

CANDIDATFS • Pictured with 11193 lladae
Souther• Alumni Queen Nicole Beegle, front
rilht, are other kiD&amp; and a::en caadldatn:
front. l·r, Wendt Harmon, N llble and Jalle

HilL Back, 1-r, Michael Ev11111, B-:atken McFaDD
and Mark Allen. Not pictured Is Kfag Kyle
Wlckllae. ,

. . SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS • Redplenli
of the 1993 RadDe Southem Alumlll Schotarships were, l·r, Wendl Harmon, DarreU Sayre
.

anci Jodi CummiDJ. Tbe dooadoos from alumlll
the $325 scholarships are possible.

'Those Were the Days' theme of Racine-Southern alumni banquet ·
treasurer, Shirley Stewart.

mins and Darrell Sayre. Alumni Ann Cale, Elma Louks, Blondena Cleek, Diana lhie, Mary Moraricy, son, ·Seymour, Ind'.; AI Cozart••
Lillian Weese aod Tonya Hunwr donations made lhe scholarships . Rainer, Janie$ Lawrence, Cyrstal · Debbie Morarity, David Sayre, Youngsiown; Betty Brickles, Gal-'
were elected to serve as new offi- possible.
Simpson, Debbie Offenba'ger, Paul Raymond Furbee, Dorothy lipolis ; Doris Jackson, Tuppers;
cers.
The alumni officers presented Sayre, 1ill Lipscomb, Donna Spencer, Lisa Pape, Kathryn Hart, Plains;
Mildred
Cozart,:
Kathryn Hart, third vice-presi- Lisa Pape a gift certificate thanking Larkins, Valerie Hanstine, Linda Shirley Stewart, Rollie Stewart, Youngstown; Myrna Close, Water- :
dellt, introduced !he entertainment her for au her work toward the ban- Hill, Dan Sniith, Don Smith, Hazel Tammy Chapmao, C.T. Chapman, ford; Doris Rogers, Columbus; ~
for the evening. Crystal Powell, a . quet and dance.
Dudding, Joe Glenn, Janice Glenn, Darrell Sayre, Jodi Cummins, Ben Kathryn Heater , Parkersbur~ ,,
member of the graduating class of
Nicole Beelge was crowned Robert Brown, Cin\ly Brown, ·cummings, Sadie Thuener; Nancy. W.Va.; Isabelle Hawkins, Balt1-:
1993 sang "Golf Bless the U.S.A." queen and Kyle Wickline was Melanie Weese, Tonja Hunter, Campbell, Becky Maliory, Joann more, Md.; Rulh Lewis, Massillon; .
and "He's Alive."
selected as king.
Jerry Wolfe, }'racy Brinager, Dixie WU!ford, Lynn Mallory, Gar( Paula Laird aod Jim Laird, Elcajon.:
Tammy Chapman and Dan
Willie Cundiff, class of 1958, Wolfe, Paul Harris, Davi.s Snod- Willford, Pam Diddle, Jan Hi! , Calif.; William McKelvey, ::
Smilh provided sound equipment gave the benediction.
grass, Paul Beegle, Wayne Roush, Marvin Hill, Charlie Mathews, Rita Ravensw.ood , W.Va.; James ~
assistance as Kalhryn Hart presentHostesses for the evening were Clifford Ashley, Claudia Roush, Mathews, Donna Bush, Legina McC!askey, .Sandusky, fl!.; Sharon ,
ed lhe classes 1918-1993.
Opal Diddle, Beverlee Wickline, Jeremy~ Nick Adams,.Wendi Hart and David Fizer.
Barber, Palatka, Fla.; Gene Wells. ~
Sadie Thuener, a member of the LU!ian Weese and I.egina Hart.
Harmon, Nikki Ihle. Michael
Out-of-town guests were Hazel Osseo, Mi.; Randall Talbott, New •
class of 1923, was recognized as
Donations were recognized from Evans, Bracken McFann, Mark McKelvey, Ravenswood, W.Va.; Lexington; Charles Cecil, Defi. :
the oldest alumni. Paula Laird, Racine Home National Bank, Cross Allen, Julie Hill, Rulh Johnson, Dwight Ross . Akron; Clifford ance; Lawrence Hilldore, Holland. ~
Elcajon, Calif., class of 1960, was Grocery, Nancy Parlier Campbell, Pam Rifne, Charlie Matthews, ·Beaver, Grove City; Wilma Mich.; Shirley Shively, Cplumbus; :
recognized for traveling lhe far- Jeff Warner Insurance, K&amp;:C Jew- Joyce Ritchie, Joyce Quillen, Church, Belpre; Judi Vitale, Susan Hayes, Columbus; Edward •
thest. Plaques were presented to elers, Larry Circle Greenhouse, Sue Donna Sayre, Frances Roberts, Mableton, Ga.; Sandy Randolph, Chapman, Pickerington; Aleta;:
both.
Rice, Tyrone Brinager aod sons, Mary Easterday, Emma Adams, Belpre; Audrey Boichyn, StClair Wells, Deltona, Ra.; Bill Wingett, :
Shirley Stewart aonounced lhree Rex Thornton Farms, Marshall Virginia Rees, Harold Roush, Shores, Mi.; Miriam Compliment, Hendersville, Tenn.; Eileen Ham- :
$325 scholarships to 1993 gradu- Roush Farms, Darrell Norris, Art Laura Circle, Crystal Powell, Rulh Raleigh, N.C.; Mary Jane Carr, lin, Kirkwood, N.Y.; Joann Dow-:
ates: Wendi Harmon, Jodi Cum- Hill, V~ Hill and Sons, Paul Hill Simpson, Audrey Hart, Giebert Columbus; Joy Ellis, Simi Valley, ell , Columbus; Emma Brewer,•
and Harris Farms.
Hart, Mildred Carnahan, Mildred Calif;
T. Dwain Sayre, Reynoldsburg; Timothy Bentz,:
Local
alumni
attending
were
Hart,
Linley
Hart;
Emily
Shain,
McCutchenville;
Salser, New Vienna; Cheryl Baylor, Pelz-:
1\1r1Jr~•••·----~C~on~t~in~u~ed~f~r~om~p~ag~e~l~------------- Roy Smilh, Dixie Smith, Hennan Kathryn Hill, Clarence Sargent, Chillicothe; TaddyLarry
Wilkinson, er, S.C.; Della Cross, Dublin ; ~
Dayton; Shirley Evans Eastep, Middleport, 1924; Maxin~ Coats R. Carson, Mary Carson, Pamela Jeiry Powell, Beulah Neigla', Jean Columbus; Jim and Maggie Oiler, Denise Mamone, Columbus; Diana •
Qayton, Judy Brooks, Springdal~, Gaskill and Dorolhy Morris, Mid- . Proffitt, Ron Hill, Don Johnson, Alkire, •Harry Pickens, Delbert · Gallipolis; Sara Beach, Tallmadge; Cross, Columbus; 'Jane Eddy, Ori-!
Ark.; Mary Bradley Stanton, ~- dleport, class of 1934; James Clat- ' Shirley Johnson, Mary Lavender, Smith, linda Evans, Denny Evans, Wilma Sayre, ·Columbus; Kenda ent; John Shank, Vienna, W.Va:;:
Jess Wood, Melvin Van Meter, Becky Evans, John PaP.e, Patty Chapman, Pickerington; Della Melanie Hann, Athens; Cecil ia ~
etta, Ga.; Harold Cart, San Francts- worlhy, Middleport, 193 S; Jean
co, Calif; Jan Stewart Harn.ey, Lama Moore, Middleport, 1936; Pam&gt;Foreman, Jim Foreman, Pape, Dale Hart. Perry Hill, Bobby Wolfe aod Carl Wolfe, Portsmouth; Nilssen, Norway; Sharon Diddle,
Huntsville; Blaine Walburn, Vten- Wallace Russell, Middleport, 1937; Charles Hupp, Michelle McCoy, Hlll, Geuge Sayre, Leanna Beegle, Don Miller, Pataskala; George Portersville, Pa.; James Harden,
na, w. Va.; Larry Wiley, New Alice Lama Jones, Columbus, Virginia Hendricks, David Brewer•. Ronald Beegle, Nick Ihle, Jean Donohew, Circleville; Bud Simp-_ London; Gena Lihy;
Ironton.
.
. •·
Haven; Bill Darst, Lima; Raodall 1939; Maxine Bennett, Columbus,
Bowles Shaker Heights; Lois Ann 1940; Lois McElhinny, Middleport,
Rosenb&amp;um, Danville, Calif.
1941; Joe Young, Rutland, Ken
Class of !958, Carol Blaker McElhinny, Middleport; Pauley
Oiler, Stockport; Vonda Walburn Kincaid Beaver, Middletown, and
see, Stan Saunders, Columbus; Janet Dillard, Centerville, 1942.
Dave Stover, Lancaster; Jeannette
Jean Ann Bradbury and Bill
Crooks Thomas, Middleport; Vera Childs, Middleport, John Mayer,
Covert Rundle, Columbus; MillOn Grove City, 1944; Franklin
Wayland, Big Prairie.
Ginther, Upper Arlington, Bob
Class of 1963, Judy Overturf Tewksbary, Middleport; Marlha
Dowling, Bay Vi!lage; Charlotte Ohlinger VeMari, Pomeroy, class
Davidson Hannmg, Pomeroy; of 1945; Richard Bailey, Doris
JQan.D~ (lrp.ss, Columb\1~; J a.qet Barker Bailey, Middleport,
...... ··!!·
Baker Downie, Pomeroy.
· DOrOthyChilds Gibbs, New Haven,
Class of 1968, Ketlh French, · W. Va., and Alfred Scarberry, Rio
Middleport; Carol King Bre'Yer, . Grande, 1946; Clara B. Riley, John
Middleport. Jane Gerard Rtce, Kanff, and Bob Fisher, au of MidWheelersburg; Bill Swan, Russell, dleport, aod Nona Mourning NelKy · Mike &lt;iress, Columbus; Jeff son, Pomeroy, 1947.
' MULTI-POSITION
GOOD
DOUBLES
VINYL
Boggs, Daytoin, Art Casci.• East
Gerald Anlhony, Virginia HoiCUPS
COOLER
LOUNGE
.
Pointe, Mich.; Mark Tannehill aod man, Charles Byer, all of Middle160Z.
" 1191620
Becky Tannehill. Healh; Marsha port, Hazel Ginther, Upper Arling20'S
Bowles Martinez, Cleveland; Jerry ton, arid Kitty Dallas, California,
Davenport, Pomeroy; Candace 1949; Jean Searls Craig, Mary .
Bahr Pope, Gauipolis; Jacqueline Gilmore Brewer, Middleport, Bob
Hawley Patton, St. Lo.uis, Mo.; Richards, Columbus, Naomi Over·
Ann Wilson James, Middleport; turf Durst, Gallipolis, Grace
Debbie King Fin law, Chester; Abbott, 1950; Bill Swisher, Sonny
Karen Hawley Triplett, Pomeroy; Wise, Middleport, Roger Dillard,
BiD Hackett Columbus.
Pomeioy, and Don Payne, Dayton,
Sdt.nhlps Awalrded
1951; Nola Knopp Swisher, Mid- ·
Six scholarshtps were awarded dleport, Harold Hinkle, Columbus,
during the banquet program to sons Doris Mayse_ Coleman, J~ckson,
or daughters or grandchildren of Charles ~- Spencerville, and
ACTIFEDPLUS
ECOTRIN TABLETS THERAGRAN OR
MiddlepM High School ~1181es. Nancy Miller Beaver, Midldeport,
IOOLHU/l
100'S
OR
,.
....,
TABLETS
OR
0
THERAGRAN-M
. •
Given $500 scholanbips from · 1952.
.
.. .
MAXIMUM
""""
CAPLETS
the susan Park Fund were Russell
Rae Mills Gwiadowsky, MtdSTRENGTli
· """·""'- . TABLETS
7ee~;,
20'S
T~S
~N~~~~~~A~-Eugene Triplett, J&gt;omeruy; Tawnya dle~'!rt, Marcella Warner, ·Bar130'S
Ann Hennesy, Gallipolis; Loretta bersVille, yt. Va., and Laura RowOR CAPLETS 60'S ~Jean Kelly Middleport, and Jeffrey ley Hamson, Pomeroy , 1954;
6 OL ASSOlliD
Nonnan B~tcher. Rockport, Ind.
Roger Williams, Ruby Vaughan,
Abby Rulh Blake, Middleport, Gary Wayland, Judy•Arnold, all of
received the McCornas-Moore Middleport, 1955; ~lene K~
Scholarship, and Sherry Seddon, Yeauger, Canal Wmchester, Jtm
Middlepar~. tl!~ Crawford-Grey- Mourning, Middleport, Julia
Lewis ScholarSIUP·
Probasco Mark , Bethesda, Md.,
Triplett, son or Eugene and Cherole Blake Burdette, Laverne,
Karen Hawley Triplett•. gradua~ Calif., and Larry Eastep, Columfrom Meip and pt.ts to enter Ohio bus, 1956.
USTERINE '----"
IMODIUMA-D
Univenity where he will pursue a
James Bowles, Point Pleasant,
ANTISEPTIC
BABY
CAPLETS
degree in ~ivil ensineering. Hen- Milford Hysell, Middleport, 1957;
ORIGINAL OR
ORIGINAL OR
16'S
nesy daujlhter of Robert T. and Herschel Knapp, Sabina, Jack
COOl MINT
CORNSTARCH
320Z.
Louise Hennesy, will attend Bacon, Indianapolis, 1959; S~dy
90Z.
As~
the University of Rip Grande Brewington Luckeydoo, Rtchwhere she plans to~ in mathe- mond, Va .. and Karen Gregg
matics. Kelly, daughter of Tom Nease, Middleport, 1962; Marilyn
••
Kelly, Sr., and Jean Kelly. Middle- Swan ~· Cinda. Sauer Hatport, will enter Ohto State Umver- ris Middleport, Iva Stsson, RutOn il
f~m
sity to study aeronautical and la~d, Ron Hanning, Pomeroy,
••
''
aerospace engineering. She is a 19~; Su~ne Bradbury Wolfe,
graduate of Meigs High School.
Racme, Diane Vao ~y Lync~.
••
Butcher is the son of James F. Pa~l Gerard, an~ Ohta Lew1s
and Jennifer Butcher and a gradu- Heilh~. all of Middltport, Marty
GII.LETTI
ate of South Spencer High S'chool
Niclioilon, TI!Dpa, Fla., ~ WalGOODNEWS!
in Rockport, Ind. He will enter lace, Can~!! WlllChesler, !965, John
REG., PI.US OR
Western Kentucky University B~, Mi~ DaVJdBaAshl~y.
PIVOT PLUS,
MICRO TRAC OR
where he wiU study civil eingineer- Vtenna, Jon CwmmJ!h!lm. taVlB,
DAISY PLUS 10'$
in• tdchnology and environmental 1966; Kalhy McElhinny Hood,
ROll.-oN 2.5 oz.
scl'ence.
.
Mar&amp;!e Blake, C~lesta Coates•. au
Both Blake and Seddon are of Middleport, Bill ~ysell, UtiCa,
graduates of d~ifF High School, N. YU., Wayne DaviS, .romer~y.
)like is the
ter of John aod. Sonny Haynes, Coolvtlle, BtU
Mlrgie Blake, 'ddleport. Sherry Davis, ~yracuse, Asa ~radbury,
11 the daughter of the Rev . and Circlevalle, 196~; Sheila Hams,
RITE
Mis. James Seddon.
.
Middleport, Dennis Ault and Mike
•
· The Susan Park Scholarship Mullen, Pomenm .I969.
.
AID "
committee, Nancy Cale, Judy
Musk: for dlmcing foUowmf lhe
Crooks, and Jeanette Thomas, banquet Wl!l provtd~d by ack
reported that the fnild has a balance O'Shea, '!f AEZ. Hu~ungton, aod
Rln AID "YIIIIACY ·
HAIR CARE &amp; STYUNO
o($40,235.05. Olily interest from The~ICsof~.
.
ACC.Q Jr08F IMJOir
PRODUCTS
tbe fund can bt ·used for scholarCtad~ Harr1s, S.hetla.Harru,
~-IC#WflOif 1'1. 4 N&amp;
lbips. To date 100 scholarahips Ropl' WUU.OS, Twila Childs.lllld.
T0150t.
50Z.
•
llave been awarded The Cllllllllilltle Candlee Pope .had charge of deco, . AID ACCUII ALL
CIICIJIIIIIPII dolUiliOOs to the fund.
t111iJ11 for tfte •nual banquet lllld
IIAIIJIIIIAC'IUIID'I
OtN- Alumul At18dlnl
dlnce. The blnquel aerved by
COUPOH&amp;
Oilier MHS graduata lllflllding Bvangline Chapter, Order of lhe
.Por Ill IIIII Aid PII llLICY RIINit JOUu.c.ll 1 .
tbe .reunion were Farie Kennedy, BlllaDS.,andJ~Daughtm .

"Those Were lhe Days" was lhe
!heme for lhe 199~ Racine-Soulhern Alumni Banquet and Dance
held Saturday niJht at lhe Charles
w. Haymao auditorium of Soulhem High School.
The invocation was given by
Mark Monow, class of 1968.
In keeping with tradition the
dinner was prepared by the mothels
of lhe junior class and served by
lhe students.
Lisa Pape, president of the
alumni association, welcomed the
alumni and guests.
Tammy Chapman, first vicepresident, presented lhe Icing and
queen candidates as follows:
Michael Evans, Bracken McFann,
Mark allen and Kyle Wickline aod
for queen, Nicole Beegle, Nikki
lhle. Julie Hill and Wendi Harmon.
. The business meeting was co~;~­
duclt.d by Usa Pape aod secretary·

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~9.~~

$269
~!!!.QH~OKE $269
COKE &amp;
DIET COKE

HERR'S
CHIPS

99•

.;.

gee

5 159

2
.99

5 ••

3••

I i!J!!I&amp;=

MarY

As $1, $2; $3

$100

.

Services

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attendance.
Sevenlh grade honor students
were: David Anderson, Lauren
Anderson, Rachel Ashlt~y, r,iick
Barr, Billi Jo Bentley, Michelle
Bissell, Stephaoie Burton, Carly
Chasteen, Gmger Darst, Brad Davenput, Scou Dodson, Robin Donohue, Crystal Eblin, Emily Fowler,
Jason Frecker, Brandee Gilmore,
Brianna Gilmore, Danielle Grueser,
.Chad Hanson, Jennifer Hayman,
Mrca Har.nes, Heidi Legar,
Michael Leifheit, Jason Litchfield,
Nancy Marlow, Steve McCuUough,
Gecqe Miller; Melissa Ramsburg,
MeliSsa Reeves, Wendy Shrimplin,
Jennifer Sigmon, Amy Smith, Sab-.
tina Smith, Allen Southern, Zinnia
Spears,..,Nalhan Sroufe, Adam
Thomas, Aaron "A.J" Vaughan, '
Nancy Whaley, Jessica Wheeler,
Melissa Williams and Sandra
Young.
Eighth grade honor s.tudents
were: Scott Aulhersoo, Jonalhan
Barnhart, Lilliao Barnhart, Casey
Booth, · Josh Butcher, Carl
Carmichael, Desiree Clemons, ·
Amy Clonch, Eva Ctabtree, James
Ditty, Taryn Doidge, Paul Bpperson, Anna Fink, Jenn!!er Gcatf.,
Tara Grueser, Whillley Haptonstall,
Betsy Houdashelt, John Linden
Kelly, Libby King, Amy Kloc:s.
Erin Kniwsczyn, Cha-les Marshall,
Josh Marshall, Leigh Mash, Jessica
McElroy, MicheUe Miller, Jason
Mullen, Tim Peavley, Stacey Price,
Crystal Priddy, Stacie Reed, Cynthia Sandy, Tornie Sha!Ier, Amber
Slaven, Darrick St. Clair, Timotby
Stearns, Beverly Stewart,
Stephanie Stewart, Melissa Whaley, Adam White, . Jamie
WilliamSon.
·

SEVENTH GRADE HONOR STUDENTS • Pictured are seventh grade students at Melp Junior Hl&amp;h wbo were honored
recently for their acpclewli: a~:bleve-Dt.1bey are, In DO pl1111cu·
Jar order: David Andenon, Laorea Ander10n, Rachel Ashley,
Mick Barr, BUD Jo Bentley, Mkhelk Billlell, Steplumle Burton,
Carty CheteM, Glnpr Dant, Brad Daveaport, Scott Dodsoll,
Robia Doaohae Crystal EbliD, £111117 Fowler, Jasoa Frecter,
Br111dee Gllm~ Briana Gilmore, ouwte Gruesel'l Chad Han·

son, Jennller Hayman, Myca Hayaes, Heidi Leaar, Michael
Leifheit, Jason Lltcllfteld, Nancy Marlow, Steve McCaUoaah,
George Miller, Men- Ramsbvg, Mellasa Reeves, Weady Shrhn·
piiD, Jennll'er Sipoa, Amy Smith, Sabrllla Smltll, AUea Soathera,
·Zinala Speara, Nalllan Sroufe, Adam Thomas, Aaron "A.J"
Vanallall, Nancy Whaley, Jessica Wheeler, Melillll8 WUII•ms and

Sandra Youne.

.

Y SPECIALS:

Food/Drink

,

- Eighty-five Meiss Junior High
s1udents were honored for their
scholastic achievement at the aca·
demic banquet at the school recentIy. The annual event is co-sponsored by the Academic Boosters
and . the Middleport-Pomeroy
Ro!MY Club.
·
&amp; opening remarks by Bruce
Wilson, principal , Rev . An!}y
Miles, Pomeroy, delivered the
invocation.
Sevenlh graders who had a
grade average of 3.0 or better for
the year received gold satin school
leiters, and eighth J1rBC!erS with t!Je
same average recetved a gold pm.
In addition, six students, Danielle
· Grueset, Michael Leifheit, Amy
Smith, Sandra Young, Erin
Krawsczyn and Libby I;Cing
received plaques in recognition of
their having au A's dming lhe year.
Teachers Linda Lear and Jeanne
Bowen presented the awards to
t.he8e students. Gene Riggs of the
Rotary Club presented two special
award plaques to seventh grader
Terra Dowler and eighlh grader
Ryan Baker for their overall
improvement in academic achievemenL .
The Rotary Club supplied baked
ham and turkey for lhe meal and
inembers of the group presided
over lhe buffet tables. Also, t.he
club donated two s~ial awards.
The boosters provtded all other
awards, the table service and decorations. Tables were decorated with
bunches of maroon and sold balloons in gold foil holders. Booster
president Kay McBiroy cloaed lhe
banquet by thanking those who had
worked to make it a success and by
recognizing once more the students
and their parents who were in

99"'"

..

•

•

•
(

•.

..'

• ..GHTH GRADE Hf)NOR STUDENTS· i'lclo1'11diffeflltb
grade ltudellts at Melli Jarilor Hllh who were bonored recently
for their academic 111:~ TlaeJ are, ill DO ll8l1blar order,
Scott Aatllerson, Joaatllan Baruhart, LWt.a aarlllaart, Casey
Booth; JOlla Batcller, Carl CanDicllael, Dealree Cleaou, Amy
Clondl, En Crabtree, J - Ditty, Taryn
lf~ Eppenon,
Aana FlU, Jeaall'er GearJ,. Tara Graeser,
Haptoutall,

.

• .

U.:..

Betsy uoudashelt, Jolla Lladea KtUJ, Llblly

Klaa,~J

K!Ou,
Malt,
Jessica McElroy, MlclleUe Miller, Jason Matteo, Tla Peavle;r,
Stacey Price, Crystal Priddy, Stade Reed, Cyatbla Sucly, Tollilf .
Shaffer, Amber SJave1, Darrick St. Clair, TIDlOilly Steana, Bem-- ·
ly Stewart, Stepllaale Stewart, Mellala Whaley, Adaa White,
Jamie
EriD

Krawsczyu,

W'"am-.

Charles

ManllaU, JOIII ManbaD,

.

·

RETIREES HONORED - J.R. Kennedy •d Jeaue Bowen
were honored receatly with a reception at Melas Junior Hlah.
They are retlrbillt the end or this year.
.

Longtime Meigs Local
educators set to retire
A retirement reception was held Teacher Corps Project in reading.
recently at lhe MeiSs Junior High Mrs. Bowen resides in Syracuse
School cafeteria honoring Jeanne with her husband, David. Mrs.
Bowen was presented a Fenton
Bowen and J.R.
Mrs. Bowen has ta t in Meigs · clock wilh the inscription from the
. . high staff.
Local for 26 of her 1 teaching JUDtor
..M .
Kennedy has taught m etgs
years. Prior to comins to Meigs,
she taught in Lominc County from Local for 27 years. He was present1961-63. From 1963-66, sbe taught ed a clock accented wilh a golf
in McArthur Local in Vinton motif and inscription. Kennedy
County. Mrs. Bowen has tau,ht resides in Tuppen Plains wilh Iris
high school English and junior high wife, Judy.
h
A decorated cake and pone
reading and was team leader in die
·
Ohio University/Meigs Local were served.

Kcnned;f.

Area native accepts new ·
position at military school
Col. William E. "Bill" Gibbs

has been appointed as New Mexico

.-Jed to write "New ~co Mil·
itary lristitute: A Centennial HisiOry" published in 1990. Gibbs is the
author of numerous other publicalions and boolt reviews 1111d cur-

MOST IMPROVED -Terra Dowler was preseated ,
an award lor owralllmprove-.
meat and academic achievement at the receat Melas •
Junior High Academic
Awards Banquet. Ryan Baker,
not pictured, abo ~lved the
award.
ALL A STUDENTS - Tllese sWeats at
Melas Junior Hlala Sellool were
pta1qu•es In recopltloa of
Clle acadeale
at

Military Institute's new deputy
superintendent for academics. He is
Ole son of Dndo and Sarah Gipbs,
Ball Run Road, Pomeroy.
rently has two manuscrip~ being
A search committee that includ· considered for publication.
ed lhree faculty membl!rs, included
His teachlRI and research
Gibbs among five finalists chosen awanb include the Nlllional Teachfrom a field of more lhao 70 appii- ing Excellence Award for 1989
cants. ,
from the Unlvcnlty cl. Texas InterA native of Ohio, Gibbs, Sl, national Conference on Teaching
received his bachelor of arts degree ·ExeeDcncc, a fellowship from lhe
from Ohio State Universi.ty in .· DeGloyor Research Library at
1964. a master of artS from Mar· Southern Melhodilt UniYCI'Iity in
shall University in Huntington, 1988 and JeCOgllilion four times as
W.Va., in 1968, and a doctorate the outstaodlnf coUcae teacher at
from Kent State Upiversity in NMMI by Ph Theta Kappa, the
1973. A history major, his doctlnl national junior coUege acholastic
dil'aertation was on Mexican- honorary.
American relations durlnf the
Active in Westminster

:Y:a-:J::S:ro;;,~ Mit; ~i~~~of :t:' :::!sbyterl:
School a n d s in the Sugar
Run- of
.
Gibbs has taugnt history and ·
pllll010phy at NMMI since 1_976.
lfe has 1ttended summer scm mars
ror college reachers conducted by
lhe National Endowment for lhe
H.-ltielll Dutc, Yale. Cornell
llld die Unlwnity of Arbnlas.
He WM the fillt Ieci........ Of the
Burton Profeuonhip, ~~h pro:
vlded the fi11Rncia1 support he
\I

Mlaorit.r Outreach Proaram of
Chavel COUnty Iince 198f and has
served two tcnnl 81 president of
the 01aves County Hlslorlcal Soclety •
.
He residel in LaPalonta, N.M.,
with bls wife Lorraine. He bas •
dauibt«, Slllh, who llfa!dl Pill·
uate school at West Texu State
Unlvenlty, and ·a 1011, Oreg, who ·
attendl Miami University.
·

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••

Jim Stewart, Chester, was
recently elected to the board of
· directors of Blennerhassett Drama'
Association.
The association produces thC)
musical drama "Eden on the
River," where Stewart is a cast
member.
The drama tells of the story of
Aaron Burr, former vice-~
to President Jefferson and his asllo1.
ciation wilh Hannan and
Blennerhaslett: which led to BUtt'
rrial for II'CUOII and the collaDe
the Blennerbamtt'a Island par.{
adlle. Tbrough • clrlmaDc mixllft
of romantic music, dance and theaction Eden comes to life in thil
unique period whoa preaented at
tbc hlslllric Smoot Thealre in Part~
cnburg, W.Va.
.
It will be pm!CIIIDd ewry Tbday, Friday and Saturday in J - • .
8 p.m. lllld on Sunday, June 13 •
2:30p.m.
For dctet information eall " '
villiton and convention bareau It'
1-80(). 7S2-4982 or Smoet T' I e
it 304-442-7529 or Artlbridat •
304-428-3988.
•

e3

=r':;

0

Chester man
joins drama
group's board

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�The

sentinel

Harold...

AI-•

June 1

+•

B
1944, Nora Rice, Middleport;
Presiding officers were Judy H~rold E . Blackston, Pomeroy;
Werry, president; Kitchen. vice Robed Hyacll, Syracuse; and Jack
Colltillued fnim page 1
president; Mary Jane Wile, lleCOIId B. Lewis,
Thomas -L . White, Miamis9urg; vice president, and April Smith,
194S, Wilham Radford,
Je~ifer Lollsc Sh~. PPoorrteroy;
seaetary-trMsurer.
Paneroy.
Carolyn Vlllghan Tnpp, meroy;
1994 officen elecled were Din
1946, Eleanor Smith Walter,
William Murray, Hilliiard; David
Morris, presideat; YVCIIIIC Young, Toldeo; Roy Holter, Pomeroy;
It Gordon, Charlotte. N. C.; Roi- vice presidcat; April Smith, eecond Howard B. Mullen, Pomeroy; and
lind Ray F18her, Columbus; Sharon vice president; Judy Wfl(r'J, aecre- Mary K. Foster Yost. Syracuse.
Thoma Barr, Langsville; Allen
la'y,andJoannWilliams,trMsurer.
1947, Richard Rosenbaum,
Downie, Ponieroy; George R.
Jim Lochary Jed in group Danville, Calif; Mildml Kapteina
Stareher, West Columbia; Gloria
singins of the Abna Mater. Music PbiJJips, Paneroy; Frank Vaughan,
Shumate Johnson, Rutland; Rick
for the dance was provided by the Paneroy, c . K. ~.Pomeroy.
Crow, Syracuse; Dicit Well,
Gary Stewart Oicheslra.
1949 (Je(qc Dallas, California;
~y; Ramona Kay Compton,
Tbe necrology report was posted Ann Fo$ter Coarill, Pomeroy; 8lld
by Lila Sue TeneU Milcll who for Lee Wince, Zanesvi11C.
Athens; Linda Austin, Gallipolis;
. Ronnnic Pllalin, Gallipolis.
many years has compiled and . 1950, Robert Burton, Pomeroy,
Class of 1968, 2Sth • William R
updated that report and she was Betty Genhehtter Knight, Point
Petty, Athens; Pamecla ~ · ~r~w
reoogniud.
.
.
ban Pleasant; H~en E . Grucser Black·
Na~per, Pataskala; at Y u tz
Other alumru a~ the • ston, Pomeroy; Nora RiSP Balon,
Te grow, Hudson; Michael ~ar·
quct were:
·
Paneroy.
graves, Apex, N. C.; Jane Quivey,
1926, George Bacr, RIK:ine
1951, Lily Girolami Slrickland,
1927, Anice Smith Roush . Woods£ie1d; Don Hunnel, Rose
Pomeroy; Sandi Bailey Mathews, ·
Athens; Pamela Hayes Holcomb,
Frecker, Hilliard; Nonsa Fleming Hill, Pomeroy; Alice Kitchen
~;t;Maurisha Durst Nelson, Roberts, Pomeroy; and Edwin Werry, Centerville; Emmosene
·
Beverly Beaver Smith,
Wchrung, Mt. ARiel. Orqoo.
Edwards Hamilton, SyracU3t; and
South Marcellus, Mich.; Duane K.
1931, Mary 1t. Rose RousJt, JoanneJoncsWilliams,S)'111Cuse.
' Brickles, Logan; Jane A: Wells
Racine; Lula Russell Hampton,
1952, Ann Piersall, HIDitington;
Mitchell, Ravenswood, W. Va.;
Pomeroy.
Phyllis Mayer May, Pomeroy;
Jennifer Menchini Kirley, Queen,
, 1932, Harlan H. Wehrung, MaryStacePowcli,Pomeroy.
'
stoWn, Md.; Rebecca Hawley Ellis, Pomeroy; Esther Thomas Daniels,
1954,
JoAnn
Thornton
Pomeroy; Hilda Young Roush , Pomeroy; Mary Elizabeth Chap· Lawrmce Vaughan, Looj! Bottom,
Mason, W. Va.; George Capehart, man, Pomeroy; Oscar Qualfs, Don Yeauger, Canal Wmchester,
Pooleroy; Becky Nease Anderson,
Pomeroy, and Vicla' Stewan, Mer· and HowardKilcllen.

Ptxnerof·

Pomeroy; PaSalullcttGHul.dsobokarn
HarrisonErw
' • •
ID,
Pomeroy;
Y o
Pomeroy; David E. Karr, Gallipotis· Jerry Well, Shade; William
Ch~les Cook, Shade; Belinda K.
Shaffer Nease, Portland
· Scbolanhlps Awarded
Bob Roberts Memorial Scholarships were awarded to Deborah
Ann Alkire, Carl Loren King, and
I:.uciana Lanette Scott, aD with par·
ents or grandparents who gradualed
from Pomeroy High SchOol.
. Alkire, grandilaughter of Mil·
dred I. Kapteina Alkire of the class
of 1947, is a Meiss High School
graduate and plans to attend the
University of Rio Grande.
King as the son of Carla Jane
No.rton King, a 1968 graduate of
Pomeroy, and Philllip LOren King
of Mason, W.Va. He will graduate
from Wahama High School whc:re
he hu maintained a grade pomt
~verage of 4. He plan~ to attend
either Marshall Uruversaty or West
v~ Slate College and major in
the:inedicalfield.
·
~colt, daughter of Sandra Kay
Wildcnnuth Scott a 1968 gradlJ:Ble
Of PHS and Stev~ Scott, Cbesh!re,
,Jinl(lualed from River VaD.ey Hish
School wi~ a 4. ~ pomt aver·
age. She will be attending Manhall
·University, HuntingiOII and plans a
pharmacy major.
The Charles S. Gibbs Scholarship went 10 Richard David Carson,
Pomeroy, son of Patricia Owens
Carson. class of 1965. A graduate
of Meigs High School, he plans to
.attend Ohio University where he
will major in art education.

rittli9sl341111,dW,~·'-'ne s-;th

·

u-•-,

1955, Nancy L. Jacobs Hanold,
Columbus; Thomas E. Smith,
Westezville; PaulL. Casci, Middle- Pomeroy; Ray N. Shaslen, Baca
port; Lettie Thomas Spencer, Raton, Fla.; and John Wayne
Pomeroy; Jane Priode Brown, Tcafocd, Chester.
Pomeroy; Doris Whaley Gruescr,
19S6, Carolyn Brown Charles,
Racine; Geroge Hohstettcr, Mid- Pomeroy; Mary Scott Wise, Mid·
dleport; Victor Hysell, · Racine;
dlcpotl; Bob Hill, Davie Boney,
RIK:hel Elberlled Downie, Racine.
Columbia,
C.; Ron Bearhs,
1935, Doni Swank Crispin, Paneroy; William Qualls, Galli
Westerville; Geneva Webster
lis; and Iris Qualls Payne,
. Haney, Findlay, Evelyn Roush
port.
Seelig•. C.hesiU B. Rous!t; Colum1957, Bob Roberts, Uniontown;
bus; William Gruescr, Middl~
April Smith, Pomeroy; Linda
1936, Agnes Sutton Daxon,
Moore Jcu, Pomeroy; Janet Struble
Pomeroy; Edward A. Leitwiler, · Williamson, Rutland. Dan Morris,
Jeanne Leitwilcr, Columbus, Jean
Pomeroy; Lila Terrell Mitch,
Clark Coates, Syracuse, Margaret
Pomeroy; and Carolyn ' Sisson
Jones Stewart, Merritt Island, Fla.;
Tcafocd, Chester.
Eugene Wolfe, Cleveland.
1959,
Craig
Wehrung,
1937, Marpret Thomas Bailey,
Charleston, W.Va.
Pomeroy; DOI'othy Yost Smith,
1960, Paul R.
Roush,
Racine; Ed Baer, Pomeroy, Ruby
Reedsvillc; Janet Rummell Leffle,
· Rice Bacr, Pomeroy, Richard HarPaneroy; Charles Kilcllen, Mason,
tung, Bedford, Pa.; Allegra Wood
Va.; Sue EUen Pbillips Boney,
Will, Rutland; Paul Carmichael,
Columbus· Barbara Eskew Fields,
South Webster: and~ Crow. . Pomeroy. '
1939, .Thomas Smtth, Colum- ·
1961 • Mike Roberts, Akron;
bus; Kathryn Spencer, Anna Maria,
William' A. Young, Ben Ewing,
Fla.
and Norman Price, Pomeroy.
1940, Lawrence Leonard,
1962, Anill Russc;ll Neutzling,
Pomeroy; Annabel Houdashelt,
Parkersburg, W. Va., and Mike
Gallipolis; A~a Warner Nease,
Wmy, ~.
Pomeroy;· Nellae Fugalte Brown,
1964, Yvonne Beat Young,
Pomeroy.
. Pomeroy; Louanna Leonard,
1941, Robert Jay, Columb~s;
ColiiDII!us, Robert Buck, Pomeroy;
Ian Bennett, Betty Hoffner Martin,
Nancy Bums Van Meter, Sy!Bcuse;
Columbus, Ruth Leifheit Jovan,
Kamt Miller Gilbert.
Parma; Nara Tracy Douglas, Kent·
1965, Carla Jean Will Werry,
field, Calif; Eva Jane Simpson
Belpre, Donna Hauck Carr.
Wolfe, Olmstead Falls; Helen
Paneroy.
Simpson lhlc, Abbie Warner Sttat1966, Donald E. Napper,
ton, Pomeroy.
J'at!!Shla.
w ....•u

""

lYlliiQ

s.

Mi:

w.

Public Notice

Public Notice
ourronur looatecl on the
....,.. ds rllu d 1'1111REAL ESTATE AND
IIOBILE HOlE
APPRAISED AT S33,-.00.
The rill Mille and mobUo
homo wtll Ill oold togother
---:"·r--::::-~;:
..;;;...._1·--IJ•d ...,ot 111 oold for 1I VME DISEASE
than two-third• the

· 4:30 P. M. DAY IEFORE

-

IIPP~'!'~t!"•• r,

INTERNATIONAL MEETING
JUNE 1, 7 P.M.

w'loullbll
.....,,

on~
or
,_~Mil

....g_

Pleasant Valley Hospnal

lhlltn of
(1)17, 24, 31, 3.,

Adm~~~:~~~oom

3

t:·-

IIWIR PRGBLIMI

PRoBATE CO~T OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CountY JENNIFER L SHEETS,

••rm•r•••
-. .,..,..

LocustSL In

:=

Cheshire, Ohio
JUNE 3, 4, 5, 6-8:3()-?

Colnnaluacm.. will rtDIIve -

Levi jeans, DoGkerl pants,

1

llldl In tholr ollie•
lloclled In h Mllge County
Courlhoue-,lloajld !1tr11t,
Pomeroy, Ohio
unUI
10:00 A.M. on June 11. 111N,
j,nd will Ill _ . c l at 11:GO
A.ll ilnd rawllloud on lhll
dal• lor lho following
Community Dovolopmont
Block Grant projlct
lnellllotlon of • 4·1nch,
100 lln11r loot aanlllry
11w11 forc•d main end
owvtoo oomocUon lor lhl
Alvllllclr Food 111ft lccalsld
at 431
Pomoroy.
CopiM ol
Ill oblllned or
lhl Ollloo or
W'- ol Pomoroy,
Hlll,lio"""'Y, Ohio. A
r.. wtl Ill roquiNd tar
111 of *nlnll'·
concornlng thla
ohould Ill dlroctad
nd• r1o n

. leather jacketrs, beautiful
lamsp, clocks, Home
Interior, clothing, all sizes.

367·7350
Public Notice

417"

·

U12

,

RODGERI .&amp;-1 IIIII

"

:.?'i:Roldl:

e-

-

R..Pond.a..-

NOTICE BY NOTIFICATION
TO: The Unkn-n Hllra,
Noxt ol Kin, Devla11e,
Logatoee, Admlnlatnlors,
Exocutoro end AliiIIIII of
Guy E. Hunter, Tho•oa
Bellar Huntll, ·ar., LIUio
Jano R.ed Hunllr, ...,_..
l•m• GorreU lind Lllibuo
Gnbol Glrrult.
You ,,. horoby noUflld
thot
have bHn nllllld
In 1 1•11111
Jennlror L
of
ol Guy E. Hunllr,
Tho E-• of
Dwa•ed,
ocllon h11 lllan
C.H No. 211103
pending In ·lhe
Pla11 Court or
llelgo County, Ohio,
Proboll Dlvlelon, S.Cond
Stroet, Pomoroy,' Ohio
457811.
.
. The object ol 1M Pollllon
11 to detormlno lho holre, .
noxt of kin end p1r1on1 ·
onllllad to th• •isoto o1 Guy ·:
E. Hun tor, DICIIIIII, In · .
orcllr lh•l a dloblbullon ol . ·
uklll-oanlllm-.
.,
You ,,. hli.liY nscpilrocl '
to •n-•r lh• PaUUon · wllhln twonty..lght (21) :
d•y• . •fl•r th1__ loot ·publlo•llon ol thlo noUoe •
whloh will be publlohlll ::
onoa 1 WHfl lor ola (I) - :
auaa Iva w ko The lilt ·
publloallon wMI Ill ...ctr on • .
lhl 22nd cloy of Junu, 1tlt, '
and tha twanty.aiahl (211 ;.
dayo lor anawllfng wll - :
oommanoo on lhll c1s111. In : ,
ol your lallur• to • '
· or otharwloe ';
raapond 11
by 1he ' ·
Ohio- Rulli ol Civil · •
Prooaduro, Jud.,ment ,.
dallull will bo .. r•nder~
:~~r~:~'lor the r'ellar
llo PIIIUon.
13th day of

·~~!;:,~~~~

..•••

2411. EMERGENCY SERVICE

••

COMMIICIAL &amp; RISIDINnAL

(614) 742·2345

101.10 IMI 1o an Iran pin 11 CoUnty Died R
d., Vol"'- NorthMII- of p.,_ ume 211, !19181.
eel Number e; 111anoe North
lkfll•= Died: Volume
41° OG' ..., llong • .... 213, ............. County
242.75 fMI to an Iran pin In Died RnardL
the NoriiiMII -.!er of Par· I ct~l": ........... •
eel Number I end h rwl 1•
•ufllecl to Ill
pofntoflleglnnlngforthe.
-...
andrlgh18
.vs
h_..n do-lbed; u.- of way ol..-d.
HILL &amp; ASSOCIATES, INC., South 12• 51' W•t olong the
Said ,... MWti hal belli
.,.,_,dlont.
&amp;11 llnl of Porool Number cllllaned Auclltor'l Parcel
NOTICE OF SALE
1.117.07 IMt to on Iron pin In No ---...
By virtue of 111 Ord• of the Boutheoll-oiP.,.
·~--llleWiblool
Sale lseued out ol 1M Com· !lei Numblr 8; t h - Jtorth t o - 1111 rMIMIIII • -·
mon PleM Court of llelge 73" 02' v w... elong1he for"11N.
-County, Ohio, In 1M OIIM of South llnl ol PII'DII Number
REAL ESTATE AP· ,
F......,. Bank &amp; s.vtnge I, 37.ea !MilO an Iron pin In Pllo\ISEDAT:III,OOO..OO.lhe
Compony. Plllnllll. v.. -HID 1M Southwell- ol P• ,_. -11-tbeeold lor
end AIIGCIIIM. InC.. .. II .. eel Number
North lllllhen -ll*dlthe IP"
Dele! donta,uponoJudgment 20" 04' 04"
Ilona h pnlaed ........
1lleNin ..........s. being c... WMI llnl of Parcel Number
TERIIB OF SALE: C..h
No. 12.CV·2411n ..... Court, 1,114.44 t.l 10 en Iron pin; on c1111wry ofds.'.d ., __ ._._~
, 1will olfwfor uleot lhefnlnt ....._North 25"12' •• Eul
, . _ .. - door of the Courthauoe In oondnulng. along Hid line,
S1Mrf1f 11e1go County, Oh
Pomeroy, llelge County,
In the IT(S) 24, 11, (5) 7
Ohio, on the 25th dloyoiJ11111, 1Utt.ltollllronpln
Norlll-1 of ....
1113,. II 10:00 Llll. the folo eel Number I; lhlllollouth 1---~~--'lowtnglandlo lnd , _....... 41" oo- &amp;etllong the North
Public Notice
loOIIIIid ay 1321 Ruelle Hlle, llno of Porc11 Nu•ber · t - - - - - - - - SyncuH 41771. A oomplels 8,131.43 ,_. 10 ... point of
leQII d-'PIIon of the -1 blgfmlng and oon181nlng
NOTICE TO
-lelaMfolloWI:
0.331
·
CONTRACTORS
Shuated In the Townlhlp
Exoepdo'll an IIII-I
'STATE OF otiO
of SUltOn, County o1 llelge,, lor lngr 111 •nd ~gNMbllng
DEPAIITIIENT OF
•nd Stlte ol Ohio: Shulleln' _ty...... t.l Ill wld1ll,
TRANIIPORTATION
100 Acn Lot Number 2te, .....,. and ....._If laal on
Calumllul, Ohio
Town 2, R111111 12, 8ullan lkll of .,. fol-ng
lily 14, 1111
Townehlp, llelg1 · County, d
I od oanWIInl. eo.. Con- ........ Copy
s..teofOIIIo,•nd being men -"'1111 11 an Iron pin In . .
No. IIN82
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
fullY . . . .bed II foiiOWI: North oll_ol. .,.....
r ld Pei'DII Nu•b•;
lioled propoute wiU 111
ColllllltnOintlll. point In lhe d
ln... II. ilfl ollhe Weal line ..... _ South 12" 51' W•t rs o1hed ,,.,. olllol of the
ollllld Lol Number 2M and otona the Eallllne of PlrDII e l l - of 1he Ohio
the nllnllon -lllflnlty ol Numblr I, 13.20 laal 10 1he DIP I - of Tren.,..,.
Ardllt LM'allolm proC rwl point of lllalnnlng for tlloll, Columbuo, Ohio,
llneur 1dsdlnDaed
the •11nMnl IMrlln cleo un•10:00 LIL
TUMdloy, olune 1,1ta
211, , . - ol .... Died •••d;lhllloiNollh 71"02'
R 1 d• ol llelgo County tr WMI llong . . Mllll lor~181n :
County, Ohio fro
Rnar•·• OIIIDei .,__ 1M ol 1111 - t , 77.71
&amp;II llong h lllld Arallle laaltoopolntlnlheWMIIno lmpro . wulaua II 11....
. . and liM;
~· Boulll property . . .. oiParaai ..... berllnd....
MIAS laal lo an Iron pin; 10 llimlnlls. .
1;;~~and lraiWu
hnOIINollhO"ae',Enllfong lubjoaltollllgiiiAah•=,. 1~
Runllall
. .*'11.
..... 271.111,... to. point; and ............ ol _.....
pa-IC llicl
thHn Northwlltw•rdly l!lloepllng and NMrV!ng
wldl ..,.....
. . . . . . - ... - t o . .
IIJ......... ...Slue.,_ .... t.otlelafa,. rrnrsad.
,... lar • .... - ol 11M TM ...._
,... to • ...,.; . . . . Nortfl ~by R.C. GL.gaw I J~aJI!IIIIon
... w ............ All u,R1al tuedlulo.,or '"'d!!naf.;::;:!:.....
111.47 laal to M Iran pin II .........1.. , P"...., of ,.
lp&amp;olfta
tlteNatBIUI-ofP• Noua::ller10,1171.
.,. on llle In 1M
... Iiiii '., I; " ' - Nortfl Baing a portion ol h propWl1' WMI Ilona • lnl, eny dMarlbed In lllltl• ~ DIJI*It'*" ofT,._...

t::-

011111,..................

,tnariJ'::" ...

'

lion ond the ollloe ol 1M
Dlllrlot Doputy Director.
JerryWray
. . _ r Of Traneporlldon
(5)24,31, ZTC
Public Notice
NOnCE TO
CO?TERAOFCTOOHIOR8
8T
"'
DEPARTMENT OF
TRAHBPORT
Calurnbul, ~r::"
llay 14, 1111
Contraot IIIII Loall Copy

No. ....,

iNT PRICE CONTRACT
• 8Mied propoMia . . be
r=-'.ru' 11 ...._ - • - of .,.
-·u .. ..,,,_
diNotor olthe Dhlo Dopanmont ol Tl'llnlp orlllloa; Columbuo,Ohlo,un.10:IIOI.m.
TuMdloy,Ju..8,1H31or
lm'O!:'f-•~.:..,

=·

-. ·-~·.,
llonroa, Morgan, llo 1•
VInton Walhlngton Coun1111, Ohio lor Improving-"
rou._ lnd IIDIIone by
hlrblclclll apny.
"Thadlollllllor-pll.
Uonotlhll~lhlllblu
Ill forth II) the bidding pro-

poeol."
Pllne•nd llpaoiiiOIIUone
oro on llllln 1M Dlplrllnlftl
Tran.,......llon and 1111
offlol o1 1M Dllblcl DopuiJo
Dlruolor.
.lorry Wny

Olractor Of T"lllpol'llllon

(5) 24,31

'
----~--:-::~----·
,_
.
Public Not
-

..,. ""'•v-·--

t;o,u

.

;;.;;.;;-c.t.;.;.;R.:~---110

4

GJvuvtay

t Yellow

t-

llgYwllloloo-J~'.....
lhl
Chiller Flro D1f11. Dol•lloo• ol

...... . . _ Auxllllry •

. . . . ICDiptecl

Col, - - 1

_ . . . . , T o - - · t14-

(No S.llllay Calls)

cloChe~. oa11 f1•

112 46L

·

2112192Jtfn

Cllnao--.. . . -

Rood; .llaolnl. ~........
lnii ·Frldoy, .....,._

-

-

111111

....

......
,, ......
8 Loll ~ound
&amp;.

J&amp;IHOMI
IMPIOYEMINIS

....

...........tiHto
lali.. udCut
FrM EIIIIMI•,
Low Colla.
Work Gua"'nleed

61Co949·2tll or
61Co59J·5010

11-24-1 mo.

EVERY THURSDAY

PubllcS.Je

.. .EAGLES·
.- CLUB

&amp;Auction

• IN PoMEROY
"1:4&amp; p.m•
Special ,Eilrly Bini
1100 Pltyoll
Thle lid good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. f'o~ 0061·32

· .~ Stone
· SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SAlE

Call 614-992···
6637
St.lt•.7

C..s.IN,.OI.

THE . BOOK

BARN

Ill I SIU •IUH
Jl7 I. 2tMIIt.
IIWtlloport,Ohlo
IOUUt
.....frf. I Olot-2100
CLOIIt IHUIIt•Y ·

991·3$77
W•tl-1

•
'
I
·• ·
I

. ••

UCIII
IIOWII CUIIC

" WAWI ALLIY

l'lrls ... 5erYice
- Mowen· an Saws

wu•••hn
AulhoriDd: Brlggl ..

Stratton MTD, Ryan,
I.O.C. lllpllr Cenllr
PICKUP .nd DEUVERY
Hour• 11-11-F w Bot~
Cloeed Suncltly

t41•2H4

I&amp;CDUVAnNt
Ill' I OOZING

NURSES' AIDE .
WITH CPR
TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.
614-992·7698

~~
UGLE LilliS

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

EXCAVATING .
BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
•nd TRACKHOE WORK

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

AVAILABLE~

(former Mason Lanes)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy .Streets
Maaon. WV
(304) n3-5685
" SUMMER HOURS"
Sun.·ThurS-10 pm
Fri-Sat 5·11 pm

·BEPnc BYBTEIIS,
' HOME BITES and
TRAILER liTES,
I:ANOCLEAIWIG,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIIIE8TONE-TRUCKING

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
lox 189
Middleport, Ohlo'45760
(614) 143-5264

FREE ESTIMATES

992·'3838 .

CLOSED WEDNESDAY

.

""""'

Hown L Wrlttsel ·

ROOFING

NEW-REPA)R
Gutters

J&amp;L INSULAnON

Downspout•
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

UIIIJ PANEL tiWGE JOOI

FI'M ElllmatM
Repi•Oiflient
Windows
VInyl Skiing

IISTAWD PIICES

16x7..;$450.00

Wllll2 Traa.... ttn.

Rooting
c.JI•for
Special Prtc. on
Siding .rid Windon

ALSO- m OUR NEW

CALL TODAY

VINYL SEAL TRIM

446-4514

OPENERS INSTALUD
9x7-$275.00 .
Y. HIL-$200.00

$1.00 PER

992·2772
J-KIIIII,DWIIII'

'*"-"'·

•

:=:...me;: •;:

... -

......

or

!flo.~~~=

,_., ond - · t14-l11Mea0.
lmiU 11111o dog IIIII !'1!11 ....

Middleport,
Radae,
Rutlaad, ••o•

w

The-n eo- -lily 1a
I n - Of- -IIAnvono
-UMTo-'n1!roP 'n- 011 On IIOfto

Prices Stert1111 et
1129.95 +Tax

:t.•

CALL 992·6123

UloGIII,

2 Front Struts • Lallor
I 4 WIIHilliJ•IM•t

!5)

7a

llngll _..., Copr, Ado To: Ohio ,...
IDn,OH,.......
.
a-to, Polnta, ...,...., And
llllorol , _ _10ll3 Ell. 1711,
12.11 llln II • Unlolor Co. 102·

I

n

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF IIEIGS
-_ COUNTY- OHIO
FARIIERB BANK .. SAY. 1NG8 COMPANY.
Pllinlllf.
c... No. 12 cv 245

:=.
_,_o.--. ..-

=·-~"T._::•:
,_.,_
...r.'l&amp;i'OCIPL

.:..:.:-=-~··
.::=--::;-::::.-::;:
I la'P blao ol nnl •Ia

6J4•99.2•7643

FRr:E ESTIMATES

va

Public Notice

Room Additions • Roofing .
coMMERCIAL !Uld RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

LlceautiL Insured &amp; .......

fn

Public Notice

OHIO'S COHHEC'IICIII ALTERNATIVE .-1110 1117 1U0o

New Homes • VInyl Siding
; ~Y
New Garages • Replacement Windows ' =~ cl:1,::.~

New Wiring, Rewiring,
Troultlt·Shootlng

••
•

I

n

BISSJLL BUILDERS, INC.

EBLIN'S

•

,..Ired

1

Lie•••••,
l•suretl ••• .......
Ctlll614-992·7171

614 -446-0736

Road 31 to a poln~ lienee
Soul! 61. dag. 33'. 36" Eut
448.82 l11t along the
oenllrllno ol olld County
Road 31 to • point; thenoe
Boulh 31 clOg. 21' 48" Eoal
142.83 f111 along 1111
oanlllriiM ol llld County
31 to 1 point; ~~~eno~·
Soulll 4 dog. 03' 21" Elll
71.11 faot along the
oanturllno ol olld County
Rood 31 to lhl DMIIrllne
ln.,uallon ol lllld County
Rolli 31 and lhloanllrllna
of T-hlp lloed 10 (Dunt
thlftoe lloull
• 11' (W' WM11U.ea
fM1
g 1M oanlllrllne of
to
Hid Townlhlp lloed 10 to II· auoranty ·In
point; IIIMOI8outh 11 dog. lllhor I IUIIIY bond In Ill
24' 27" WMt 172.51 leat full omount ollhe contract
lllontlhloanllilllllollolcl or • corllllod chockl
TOWMhlp Road to a point; oall_le!'l cheok or !attar o
1henn Iouth 18 dog. 23'
In lho omounl ol10%
11" Wilt 71.15 lilt along
tho bid. BucclllfUI
tho oant1 rlln• ol 11ld bldd1r muat P.r~vl~~
Townehlll ·Roell to • point; conlroctlloncr perlormanoe
lh•no• ioulh 11 dog. 51' bond or llllor ol credll In
W..t lt.M leal liang tho lull amount ol lh•
oant1rllne ol 11ld conlriiCt.
Townohlp Roed to 1 point;
Flderal .
~~~- South a clog. 48'11" Provlolone
WMt a4l fM1 olong lhl
Equll
Olllllrllne otllld T-hlp
pro•~oh:on• wll
Rolli to 1 point; thlnoe
uOid In
Iouth 4 dog. 24' 11" E•t
IIWiclrr
47.87 feot elong th•
evlclrnoe ol
oanllrAne ol llld T-hlp Worker'•
ROIId to 1 point; lhenoo covor~g~. 8ldclrr to
North U .._ 41' 03" W•l hlolhor own bid form.
Colsmlhlonlrl 174LI7 r..t:f.nglhl Norlh or envelope conlllnlng bid
2TC (5) 24, 11
Uno of ulcl Urohal porael to "' reid .. loUowe: "Bid lor
--::-:-:':'-:":'"':':'--·Jihl point ol boglnnlng, Rlv. .kllllwlr ProJect".
conlllnlng 21.21 '"""·
Th• Board of llalge·
~_Pub;..;...ll_c_NDI_I_ce...,._ moro or llle&gt; ~~ecopllng 111 County Commlulonera taay
llgol -~~ end rlghll ICCipl tho IOWIII bid or
Robort E. Buok,
NOTICE OF BALE
of way.
,
leloct
bill bid lor lhl
· Prolllll Judge ·
By vlrluu ol an Orcllr
Lena K. NMielroed, Clerk
Tho abovo daocrlbad I ~:::~ pur poll and
Balo l11u1d out
property Ia ... porael
tho right to aocopl
18, 25;
Common Pl111
of land 11 ...,..~ In lhu or riJjocl
or all bldlo 1)1, 1,15, 22, 8lc
Mol a• County D11d ondlor 1ny
Rsaordl: Volume 211, P~g~
Public Notice
43
•
Lu:::·
.bove dliocrlpdciii fa
Mil)' Hobllllltlr,
OF APPO..TIIENT '
~
lllflln renclrrad, ballcl on a ...,..,. ronclrracl
Cllrk/CDBQ Admin. NOTICE
OF FIDUCIARY
bllng C.. No. 83-C'/·21111 by Robort H. E11011, of Echo (5)18, 25; (I) 1, 31c
On lily 27, 11113, In th•'
aald Court,-1 will offer for Survayo, Inc., Roglallrlll ----~~---~-- llolg• County Probllo
111• at lhllront door olthe BuiVoyor, Ohio R. S. No. a.
PubliC Notice
Court, C111 No. 27145,
Courthou11 In Pomeroy, 01541, dallll F•bruary, ~----....,.-­ Bamlca M. Belley, 47510
MIIge County; Ohio; on 1he tilL
IN THE PROBATE c:ouRT
Comp Rood, Long
11111 doy ol ~..n.. 118S, al
EXCEPT tho following OF IIIEIGB COUNTY, OHIO Scout
Bonom, OH. 457 43 woe
10:00 •.m., tho following daoorlbod real 111111: ~NIFER L SHEETS,
oppolnlld Admlnletralor of
r.1 Mmls end mobile homo 811uet 1 In Lobonon Adlalnlllrolrlx
tho 11111e of Rob1rt 0.
lllllllld lhwoon,loolled II Townohlp llolge County of.,.&amp;Witil
Bailey, docaoaad, lola ol •
'123H B•ld Knob Rolli, 11111 ol Ohio ond bolng
Guy E. Hun~-DDeos-•od,d,
47510 Scout Comp Road,
PorU1nd, OH. 45no. A llotlon 11 Town .3 North
Long Bottom, OH. 45743.
oomplall legll dMcrfpllon Ranae 11 W•t ol tho Ohio
Fred W. Crow,
illlhl r.l 1111111 and mobile Company'• Purchoaa end tHE Eli'ATE OF
Acting Probal8 Judgo
homo II • folloWI:
bllng dMorlbld • totlowo: DAVID G. HUNTER,
Lin• K. N-llroad, CWk
lltuatu In L•b•non Baglnnllig at 1 point in the DlciMIII, II II.,
(5) 1, 8, 15, 31p
Townah!P.. ll_alge County, c1n11rlln• ol T-hlp
lkaponden18
awe or Ohio 111d bllngln Rood 31 JDuret Rlda•
CASE NO. 2t,803
llolloil 1~1 - Town 3 North, Rolld), 111 point being
Dockel13 P8ge 215
ORDER
Range11 w•l of tho Ohio North 1011 fMI and Iouth
Company'a PurohaH and Dog. 41' 03" E11t 1748.87
Upon review olthe lie, II
bllng dMorlbed 11 lollowo: ,... and North 4 clog. 24'11" 1o hareby.,. ORDER ollhlo
Beginning 11 •n Iron rod Wllt47.tl' ,... troin 1 • - Court that eorvlco by
•
llong • ltnoe llno at ~· coni• found at lh• lllkldlu pullllcllon Ill midi upon
•
Bouth-1 oornor of Rlr. • or the WMI Une ol Baollon lhl untcnown Hlll'll, Nuxt o1
p. .el 11 dMorlllld In lhu 11• oalled tor In lhl Mllge Kin, Dovl1111, Loa•-•·
Pon~troy,
Molge County D11d County Doad Rooordo: o\dmlnlotrotore, Exooutoro
Rocorclr: Vohano 2tl, Pl(ll Volum1 111 Pago 151· end A11lgn1 ol Guy E.
278, uld Iron rod IIIIo being 1henOI NOrlh clog. 43' 01: Hunllr, Thom11 Bailey
on lhl W11l Ano olllcUon W•t 121 ,71 leal to 1 18 Hunllr, Sr. Llllll Jene AMd
11, aald Iron rod bolng lnoh Oak lfll; IMnoo North Hunllr, Morgarot lama
Noril) a lael from • otone 32 dog. H' w E•t 324.20 GorreU end Llbbuo Grebil
found at II• mlddlo ol tho fMI to 1 20 Inch oak lr•· Gorr•ll, Addro1111 un·
Reasonable Rates l
WMUno ohold llcUon 1t .....0. Norlll78 c1rg. 31'
known.
Dependable
11 calllld ·for In Ureh1l'1 &amp;oiU.I2 IMI to 1 polnUt
It Ia further 1M ORDER ol
paroel I I dMcrlbed In lhu lh• oMIIrllno lnteriiCdon thlo Court lhol proof of
Service
Illig• County D11d olllkl Townehlp Roell to publloatlon Ill lumlohlll to
Ro;oorclr; Volumo 10, P~g~ llild County Roed 31 (Bold DougiM W. Utile, Attornev
151; thenc• North 11 dog. K '-811
Ill R d~·
-· 51" E11I 445 50 IMt
no... verev I oo '
Rea I E ttate General
""
th•no• South 10 dog. 1 •
•
llong • ,..... line on ....
W..l 111 13 r..t Ilion
Iouth llno o1 lhu llkl Rill th• c•nt•rlin• of 111J
'
pereeiiO en Iron rod; IIIMol ..
"I
d
North 8 ... 58• 32 • Will .owno,, p Ro1 30 to a
...
In th1 point; thence Soul! 11 ctrg.
·44 •111 IMI to 1 point
24' 27" W111 I 72.51 feol
DMIIrllnl of County ROIId olong the cenlerllno of 11kl
31 (Bold Knobolllv~r~vlllo townohlp Roed 30 1 point;
Road):"""'"' North 71 Dog. th
·s th 11 d
23'
02' 27" W•t 48.51 f11t ,.~.n;..
f..:'~ona
olo- "-- ~,___,,__, o1 alld
the conlorllno ol 11ld
County ROlli 31 to 1 poln~ Townehlp Ro1d 30 to. 1
thlnCI North 52 Dig. 5I point• theiiOII Iouth 11 ...._
2:1" Eoll U.lll IMI Ilona 51' 47" W111 13.14 i111
tho conterllno . ol llld lllorlgthe cen..rllne of llkl
County lloed 31 to 1 poln~ Towne hlp Roed 30 1o 1
"""'"' Norlll 41 ...... 03' 01
.
Eoet 121M flit elong th• po!nt, ',!l•n•• Iouth 3 diS·
oo~llrllno of 11ld COunty 41 11 ·Wilt 18.41 fill
Rold to 1 point; lhonco olong lha contorllne of
North 25 dag. 51' 25" &amp;II Townehlp Rold to to lhl
154.10 fell olong lhl polntofbaglnnlng, conllln·
Sumner Rcl.-llrlcklhma splltlopr home wllh 4 bedrooml,
2 bllhs, Ollrplllvlnyl flooring, new elec. heat pump
con•rlln• of eold County lng1.10 acr11, moro or IMa,
will 011nlrll llr, slllll(ll building, cellar, large dec:kl, pello,
Road 31 to a point; lhtnoo exoopUng 111 log•l
ftroplace, 1.4811 AC . nlol landlcaplng. QOTIA SEEI
North 15 dag. 5I' 12" EMI e•••••nte 1nd r.lghlo of
ASKING$0,500
111.13 loot •long th• woy.
oenllrlln• ol elld County
The blarlngeln lhlobovo
DEXTER- 8111111 communily home' wtth HI atorlea, 4
Roed 31 ., 1 point; thlftoo ducrlptlon ' " ll111d on
North 17 dog. 41' 04" Eul the rof-• cllld: Volumo
Olllr, Gardin .,.., lddld lniUiollon, large front
pon:h. VII)' alloRIIble. ASKING $11.000
341.03 I••• alona tho aea, Pog• 417, Mola•
Olllllrllno ol elld County County DMd ~
MIDDLEPORT· 2 1tory frame heme wtlh 2 bed11101111, balh,
Road 11 1o a point; lltnoo
lkterenoo DMcl: Volumo
North 32 dog. 11' 07" EMt 105, P1g1 171, Melga
_ , oablnell and 111• turnoce, flrepl-. basement
111111 s :I* PG~~"slonl $28,500 make an ofllrl
221.11 ta•t along lh• co ...tyDaedR niL
oanturllno of oald County
Pr111tlsu knewn • 52:111.
Road 31 to a point; 1 1 - Bald Knolt RDICI, Porlfond,
POMEROY· Wolle Pon Ad.· 35+ acree with 1975 2
North II dog. 01' or EMI OH. 41770.
. bedloom mobile homo, appll-, fnlnt porch, barn. shed,
14.37 111f llong th•
lubJIIII to occrued 11113
-lrnclng. $35,100
~~nllrllna ol 1lld County rlll•llle 11111.
Roed atlo • point; ~~on.
lllow d :raed rua1
Ro\CIN!- I liD Clayton 24 X 40 sectional wllh 72 X 72 lOt 3
North 71 dog. 31' 21" E•l
1!11 blln -11111111
blclloo.ns, 2 lull balha, IPPII1n0111, utlily room, elec. heat
73.53 l11t along. thu
P1rcol Nu•lour:
pump,IDII of cablnllll and b. In kllchln. $35,500
oenlarllno ol aald
unty '
with 1 1117
BUBIIII!U. GOODI WE NEED LISTINGBI
Roed 31 to a point; ...,_ ,;~:;,~~~
South Ill clog. n• $2" EMI ~
DO!Ibl• Wlclr
101.11 1111 along lha
lollnullltur•'•
llftllrllne ol alld County
• II• r
Roed 11 to • point; .......
Iouth • clrg. 50' 17" EMI
111.77 fa•t •long tho
oenllrllno or olild County

oqulvelent, dlllwry Vehloll
capable.or hiving refrlglnlo
Uon and oVII!aiOrlglarwL
Ou11t1one oonoornlng
lhle vahlols lillY Ill A solid
to 8u11n Ollvor, llolgo
County Counoll on Asing
(114) ·112·2111. BpnlflUone ...y Ill ........,. lrota
h lllelga County Comml•
llonera om., Courlhouae,
Sloqnd Btr11t, Pom11oy,
Ohio 45711 (114) 112-2111.
Blddlr muol Ull 1hllr own
bldlorat.Bidl,lhalbll__....
•nd marllld 11 "Bid lor Doll.,.
IF'{ Vlhlofa" lnd IIIIIIICI or
diiiVIfldto1heComml11lotto
1r1 olllol by the aloruoald
dloll ond llmL
Any oontraot IWirded
under thlllnvllallon lor bide
luxpecllldtobetundlodbyo
gl'llnl fnlsn 1M Ohio Dlpartmont o1 Duwlopmlnl
munlty Duoelopmlnl Block
a..nt Pragrum. IWdw llo
Unllsd 81a111 nor anr of Ill
Dlparlmlfttl, o\Qenolte, or
IIIIPioyMI II, or wll be, •
pertofllllalnvlllllonlorbkll
or eny l'lllllllna oonlr8ol.
The ...... County CommlaolorMu I nu diu right
to IOOifll or roJootony or al
blclllndlor ony pert"'-'
· or to oocilpllll• bolt bid lor
lhl'lnllilded purpoll.
~~Ad'""m~"'n.'
_.,.........
Melli' County

Tanks, Leach Lines
Repair &amp;1.-stallatlon

W.A-, ...

·

:f.:~::!'!f!X

CALL 614·992·7171

•uto-ll•tGII

iN-TIE

,._._

Pomeroy,

Announctrnlfdl

MlddllpOI't
&amp; VIcinity

.t or iho -Eellte or Guy
Hunllr, dloeaolll, 211·213
E•t llcond Struut, P. 0.
Box lea, Pom11oy, Ohio '·
4570.
.•
.
"-'-·: - E-. Buck, 'u..._ :
...,_,,
v ..,.
APPROVED:
· Douglu w. 1An181,
Attoriloy lor e... .

Guy E. Hunllr, Doc-..cl
•
PubliC Notice
P.UIIoner
-v...
NoTICE TO
THE ESTATE OF
COtmiAC10RS
DAVID G. HUNTER,
Tho ll•la• County DECEASED, ET AI.,

HUGE GARAGE SALE

Pt.allc Notice

1993 -

n:

1 .. l!00-71.1.-40 n

24 Hour Portable WeJdiril Semce

COMPLETE MACHINE
COM111IITO

SERVICES

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

(614) 992·7878

-"'d?NIICI
o\oo_ _ . . ,
Choolt out my prloll tlrut. ·

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING
HO\Jils:
7:30om
- 5:00pm
Mon - Frl
7:30am - 12:()()pm Sal

"Inspiration•"
Flower Shop
886-4178

•

r'tk
:J
•

.

... .,hcllllln

IPIOUIIIY
Cuatomleet

cowr-, carpet,
Hledlnera,

Con11atllle Topa
•WI&amp; I flo
111111 tt•
110IUIIIIAII&amp;
IF II rut.

and small
Dozer Work

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

3-1&amp;-11-Hn

You Wea't Find A. Bettei" Value!

aackhoe

992·3768
17 COLE • POMEROY, OHIO

4110

Employmenl SPrv1ces

._1CHIS

---------

HAULING
.
.
UMinOIII,

.....

GUVIL I COIL

Rt•so•••lt
JOI N.·SAYRI

~roy.

Ucldllport
I

�0-The
11

Sentinel

Help Wlntecl

June 1,1993

Ohio
44

SNAFU® by Bn14:e Beattie .

KIT ~N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrtpt

Apartment

TNclca

torRent

for.... '

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRI~QE

'

ACIIOII

PHILLIP
ALDER

1 HookUh

sCendwllcomtng

lllbr.
8 Cleenlng
device

IHcl

411 Slllkn, etc.

12 ConatrucUon

·•ro

NORTH

'"1·11

7

.QU5
tt091
.Kt07Z

EAST
.IIHSZ

•u
OM b I rl

;:a_o-., no pole,

+86

»&gt;-t'll-

13 Coprcll
14 Actrn•

33 B~ldl
34 PilCh IIIII

+AQ

37 Irma -

•
"'BARNEY

---:- -M
.,..,. ...........
=. -·
--·•

All leal eslate attvi nlalng in
this newspaper Is subject to

the Federal Fllr Housing Act
ott96B wnlm makes Illegal
10 actvert~e "lin'; preleranc:e,
umllillon or discrlmlnallon
based on race, colOr. religion,
•• tamil..,l slalus or naUonal
ortgln, or any ll"'leNion lo

. . - , 0noa A -11, C.l fill..
• A.ll. . . Rll. -

-~·Uftl

In

of tg
af
••• b Wl_l',
. . . - . Bond to P.o.
'.; . . 7210, Pomeroy, Ohio 4I7ft.
IIVM),

~

M· II ........:.._,~

.........
._

... 114 iiaam:
•
....... ..... l

lqulpa&amp;&amp;r

~

enlrlnol, . . mint.. above
Onln, 114-111-7711.

GMGitiMO,I1t 4tl MU
Pra tit tela

IWIIIF

h'sa

.~

-----·-h.

'make any sucn prelerenca,

......... ~.Golla Halll.
h41•••o

Hm~alion or

lllxf'na -

Allo.....,
Col
i olar .,.,..
2:00 p.m.,

Cll.scr1mtnaUon.•

wlh _.,.,
All hool~
304'

-.MoeonWV. .

knowingly ae&lt;ept
real estate
which Is In viOlatiOn oll!le
law. Our raaliers are hlr8by

adve~lsemtnlslor

llolunda. Olrii
I 11 8603 &amp;1.211

...........

'1111.

'a ta I J d IJOne tar thrw ......
lihDwlr, oalllllli TV, Mlu&amp;Jm..,
rulrtgonlar, oil p~~~t~ng;

..,.

Thisnewspaperwillnal

~t?toi""~~

FHA
Howa. 1
:M -

Fumlahad
Rooms

Ply• ·~ , . . _ .....
-or
1r1c1o far uo _....
-.

For-: ~l'llaA l'ull-

'='eo

-ion, - . CUI

_.lort
.....__......

advertised In lhls newspaper

llnaiM ..._.. 0Wn1r ~

opportunity basis.

II Alto Aid PharmiO)'.
T h o - - .. tllol.
Gltt'u ..... Gold Tllno,
~h 11rrw t'JI. 111 &amp;ee euo
Qo.aort . ...., ,..,_, -

1-

'"r'----------------------,
· . IELL ME, AS A WORLD

w -..........

10, ...
trlln lril ........ 1100, 111 1111.

T-~-~~~====~~

ln ..

-~--.-h­

.Mnny Lyn bed, . . . 11t -

za

.,.............,........
8P!not ..... •lllnl t110.

Lollor

_,...

.=·.=r
'~T.,...

==uu .,.

Wotar,

-lc-.-•lle

~.fl.-homo,30&lt;

4bdrma., 1 112 boUt, -

on·-

OliO . . , . . . . . . . ....,.

aiding,

nloo jlorch, largo
out buitdi!IP
lot at_.
- o f s . . _ , . ChortJ 81.
•on the hlu• kt Riclne, $44.000

irr:~_,zR"~.3

,____

CUI lor II""'!. IIIUp. ,..,..._
- . Athlno,OH.

Rlinah

mull -

,YtA~.

('

StOD,
Gold ltml - . _ •
•••• ' d D
1110LTD-~-llrm
WI I II, Dlnot l'nloti ~ -~._,......,tm,
..... .... Willi I . . . . . . . . . . . .1 ...... ¥ ••
Pwt·TIIM To Ofllor • ol"
I

VI'RA FURNITURE
114 441 1111 Ot IM-441-4421

. . . . . . ._.

...,

&lt;/If••
,

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .;'. . 1"1

101:111 1111, .... -

OR RENT.Z.OWN (NO DEPOSIT)

_ , . . . . _ ••

I

'I-

~ tlli ...IIR~

Home.

Eo•-lool HMI.._Good tlon,
~" -IY
Ren cdslad KltohWI Will llllrMf
CUirloto In Utility 11-. -

114 11=;, •..-:

o11o4gun,

2112 oftar lpm.

Goode

....

eun, tlllicl ...... nuu,

'10 DAYIAIIE All CASH

Rent als

Bedroom

puao

12

a

Suppllea

u• ... --~-wlth
Hol_u..
-ho-lcl-- blue-·
tiOO 080, IIWQ:

- : - . PMI'" .,.. 11111a:

Finn.
3

-

lpoii.

- FAMOUS SUR6EON, ARE MOST
· -'01= '(OUR PATIENTS ANIMALS
" OR I-lUMAN 8EIN6S ?

WY.

~·' . ..

==t-=~
•...•..
1111 · - . . 4 CVIIncllr, •

~

1100; 1111 ,_,... T·
~· 4 Spmd,-.

LGt ...000.11'1441

1

r.. Very -

Nlni-E-8=

-.-2.

I lad oom Trahlr, 1 112 MIIM
F,_ Golllpollo On Nl, AnH.._ Jurw 1•. Rafaa : r a
ttl 411 U13.

.__llequlrH.

I....,_,_PIIIIyFumlohod,
=-Good '-IOn. ~-

=
"':.rF! ---·1/Z-. . . .
COUN'Tin' HOliES /ACREAGE

18 Wanted to Do
E.loll TREE SERVICE.

..

~.r..r ~wr:l
Pool, 2 -

Talrinmlng. ,.,_ Rlmovll,

'Ttlrnltlln&amp;
- 4p.m.
Eltl.,_7111'Aiw

•

$110,000; • -

PoriJ - . A I On 4 - II1L
~ 110 Aon 11/L F"""
Wllh lorn ' • Tillable. tt1!),000:
10 -1111. taii,CID!:.AI ut Tho
Wllhln s · - Of llo
---ColiConttiiAIDonni-RMity

for-

lftlorn Ill

112111.

4lalh
811-tll,
I 2Onl C..
ldr
UnlumIIIII
No

Rood,

- . · Gopoalt,

RelwM LLI, Cllll Ewnlngli: 114-

341 II"

Nice 2 Ia droont llobll: Home
For - . ...- . Dopoalt
Roqulrucl. I IIIIM Out :111, 114,
2118'41211.

L .........

c:ao ......

,_,
-In - t o In , _ ~lono - ttt: vutaait ~4'iiiitli AIIIL 148 or
call IIM.f82:mt. EOII.

F . . . - Apott-: 1 Br, 820

Colt----.abed-..,
-· .....
1'1W411.

32 Mobile Homea

fOr Sale

, Full

-..lotolv - . , .... _..
In ..,. on the river, t2000, I.......U.

WV.·-

12&gt;111- -~~~On Ronloci ~aud
12,100
Finn.
Rnlgontor, Coil

.,

-lort.

'

-~Polk14ii8Siod1'001ft. 1 a.dt, laa ·e 111 Conclo

tlonf 111
On Ul
- 1W.Lot. - 1:111,

FCMI'th A..n.., Golllootla 1280
Uti•IM - . 114 UW1i Allor
7P.II.

Buslnea ·
Opportunity

.,...

=--

Olilo - : I

VOIIdlntl

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addlreS:!ed ., stamped envelope to Astro- you gel ,involved in some type ol cOtTIOet,i-1
Graph . clo this neyvspaper, P.O. Box 4465, tive involvement.
New York, NY 10163. Be sure to slate jour CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) If
zodiac sign .
incorporate elemen ts of mystery 1n
CANCER (June 21.July 22) You're chans- presentatoons today you're noo apt to
BERNICE
matic today and very stimulating to be any trouble selling people your ideas
BEDE OSOL around, Those who are on the slightly timtd wares. They can't resist having their cunc·,,. r
side could be especially drawn to you and · ty satisfied .
see~ the sheller of your wing.
, AOUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Even thOwtoh I
LEO (~uly 23-Aug. 22) That 10 which you ; you may go about accomplishing your
set your mind can be eventually accom - poses today in an unassuming mar~ner , 1
plished today wilh or withoutlhe help of oth· · your innate drive wifl be strong
ers . The seoret to your success Is your terred . 10bjectives have excellent chance1s(
po~Lil motivation.
•
.
of being achieved.
,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22) Fortunately. you PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Your res111es1s
possess a forgiving nature today. because if nature can be pacified today if you
you didn't turn 'he other cheek, your imme· involvements that offer adventure and
diale reactio.n might be to snap someone's our. You need something new and difl&lt;&gt;rentl
June 2,1883
head off.
'ro refurbish your attitude and outlOOk.
-;::
LIBRA (Sept. 2:J.Oct. 23) ll's nice to be ' ARIES (March 21·Aprll 18) Usuafly olacino I
11 you have a good garml plan for the year generous. today with people ypu like, but 100 much dependence on olhers isn'l
e~Wad your chances for success look much don't put too much strain on your pocket · . wises! course of action. However, today
l$)!er 'than usual. Toy to work 'with proven bOOk. Use your common sense when doling could luck out wnen the nghl people ·
methods and procedures.
oul dollars.
·
through at juol the right lime for you .
GUINI (Miy 21.Junu 20) CO·ytOikefl may SCORPIO (Oct. 24•Nov. 22) You're not , TAURUS (April 20-Mey 201 It's oka'y ' t&lt;JI
be vulnsrable lor being taken advantage of likely to let your strong. ~rsonal desires gel , select allies today based upon your
today To your crtdtt, this 1nclinaMon might oul of hand loday and do something at lhe tiona! prelerence if rt invoNe8 something
never enter your mind You'll flnd otJler eKpense of others . Fortunately. you 'll be a social nature , but when choosing
Ws to rurther your a1m Gemini, treat Y0 ~.r- mqra sellless than selfish.
ness ·allies , log!cal considerations
!llfllto a birthday g1il Send for Gemlm 8 · SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-00C. 21) You're a essential.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION; " I think everyone goes lhrough a period whore'
you have a fear ol ·loslng that spark." - L.,. Zeppelin's Jimmy Page.

TIIAT D&amp;ILI
PIULEI

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Wife to husband In hospital

1--....,1,.~""TI-1,.......,.1-1

bed, "You've made quite an
' impression on the staff here,.
~=~=~~::~::~--~-·...., You received a get well card

MIDAS S

lfrom all the--··."

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Comp lete lhe chuckle quoted
by filling in the miuing words
you develop from $fep No .. 3 below.

8 PRINT
NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

.

Rid... - ,
II.D., • lt!oh,
Dynoiilorlt . . . nWil-1102
tu•hlng. 1J2 mi.
Jorrtoho lid. Pl. P I - , wv; llldlng ..... For -..
COII304-171--.
~ r-r.l100; Trano A&amp;·
In, Far ... llohlritl Grovter
.
A. A 8. Fumlun. - · .-,""" tiOD, 1144111.'11127.
tlquu. HeM uhold lllmlultlnga,
Mo- wv. 304-77HMI.
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AUCTION ' FURNITURE. 12 Dxlom
Olf ......
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otnd lnrno,.... 114-1112-1102.

1 Actreu

A. You're not alone. The "right" deA UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTEIS
finition of TABLE depends entirely on
'U
TO GET ANSWER
the context. The British define this
verb as "to put up for discussion"; but
SCftAM..I.ETS ANSWERS
r-•s
the primary American sense is "to put •
Toffflfl • Ditto • WCMitl • Rodent • FOOT DOWN
aside or delay discuuion. • If you
One
d\lmmy to another; "I never thought about It
cannot make the meaning understood
befora,
but
man owes a lot to the garden spade. It gives
when you use this verb, then your
·
•
him
at
least
one place he can put his FOOT DOWN!"
TABLE will not be clear.

THI:Re,
WINTHROP"

114-1112-71111.
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with
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PICKENI FURNITURE

Manege.-, InC., 1~1
11117, Mlf7i. 2 llriiM, .. 11Wlll-4237, 11W714111, CIA,- . .II, M I - l - Hauling Opportunity.
Into .. ''" ~~t'im­
Fuan~•h&amp;d
2 rvome_ Mth,
INOTICEI
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. - . Clmn quill no polL
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54 MI8Cellai'IIOU8
Merchancllae
IEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTI AT
BUDGET PRICU AT JACK- tiS Honlo Po.r Elootrto 8ua

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By Jell'rey M&lt;Quain
LOLLOP lounges about or relax·
es lazily. Don't become so relaxed that
you forget to pronounce the British
verb LOLLOP correctly: -"LAH-Iup."

.. _
Cionclllonl ..... t411W

.,._'1110.

cha alll'l ISohool Ao- 114o441-

home otlopple Qnwo,

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OUR LANGUAGE

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wlth_lli..,. ..... . _

I USED TO OPERATE
ON FISi-1, BUT FISI-I
NEVER I-lAVE ANV MONEl{

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Building

55

01111

wrtnklel Offt
5 Flavor
5 Femily Dr. •
7 COfftPiretlvl

Eut
Pass
Pass
All pass

There are some plants tbat seem to
survive despite all our best efforts to
kill them. Others, though, fold up al·
most Immediately unless they are
treated with tender, green-fingered
care.
Bridge partners are like that. Some
will find the best plays despite any attemp! to mislead them. Others,
though, must be guided over the pltf~lls of 1 deal. East's play on today's
deal might be determined by whether
West fails into the first category or the
second.
South opened with a strong, artili·
clal and forcing two clul!s. North's two
diamonds was a negative re&amp;JIOIIR.
After that, the bidding was n~tural.
As 10011 as be saw two spades in the
dummy, East knew that bis partner
was void. So, if West bad led from
klng-filtb of diamonds, there were
four defensive tricks avaUable: two di·
ampnds and two' spade ruffs.
The careful defender, wbo likes to
treat his partner kindly, plays the diamond queen at trick one. When it wins,
he switches to the spade nine. West
ruffs and leads a diamond to East's
ace. This allowed the fatal lleCOIId
spade ruff to be administered.
AD East who is playing with an expert, tbougb, can afford to win trick
one with tbe diamond ace - as long as
be ret11111S the spade rJilJe at trick two.
West will read this bleb card u a suit·
preference slpal for diamonds.
Knowing East doe111't have the dla·
mood king, he will read It u showing
the queen (or an iiDUkely llllgletoa).
He will uuderlead In dlamoods to get
the leCond ruff.
Treat your partner tlndly.
r&gt;--. ....AIIIIII&amp;ICU I Ala.

75 BQata Motora :
for Sale
.. :

71 Autos for Sale ·

W IIIIR 11114 ?lon I ad II 6 1G
To 11- !!anla 110 looh lei,
Itt 141 IT
'
• · • Full . . nillbw .._
Exarcl11 blllliUD. 104-771-1210.

minor ~r.

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Motor, aut, ·1143811111.

4Rem~

bridge
green fingers

;:::-rEANUTS

are avaioble on an equal

..

'

Opening lead: +4

AN' THEN I WOULDN'T
A- LOST TWO DOL-lERS
IN TH' CARD GAME

-~~,

=:"te?onuu •"' Pl.. ttOO-

To nn1 or lotnd - - . _ . lutn with 3 bud- - .
111 •• 1111,
114 eta •••••

THAR'S HOPE FER
US ALL!!

4•

81 Finial!
.
82Vela
83 lllritrnenl

By PIJIIIIp Alder

..... biJJ ~. 1112 .......

.
. To Pull
Cam!oonJ Flolbud
tlllllh
Or -llodol
r
. - Clll
......., At 1 M1-00II.tMiW)6.

GLORY BE I!

I SHORE AM SORRY
I MIS SED TH' .PRAYER
MEETIN' LAST
NIGHT,
PARSON

._
........

lnlonned thai all dweMinQS

OWNERSIOPERATORS
K-ui TIIUCKIIO Of Hun-

PallS
PaM

____

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._U!Inl
Amino _tul.. .., ........

Norlll

2t
2 NT

(2 Wdl.l

eo !liver rtrmpll

Dou~e

Vulnerable: East·West
Dealer: Soutb ·
Pass

Pirbnent

58 Filii-rete

30 RulaUvu

.o\KJ6

Well

r.::=,

53 Chna piece
57 BtOflge com-

"•II right~ '

tJ5

t

51

Gl!dner
15 Over
17 Grooved
18 Pecenl, e.g.
21 Pronta ·
22-IP
28 Forw1rd ·
28 AelroniUII'

SOUTH
.AKQH

·-·

47 Drift lorwlrd
50 Accom-

beam

27 AciOf Jeremy

tAQS.

apt. Fumlehed,

l I

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38111Mr81
. eprtng
40 DolorelRio. '
41 RlllrNCI
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43 lymboliOf

C 1913 TV Data Tedk • ,., L.P.

Ft Worwt TX

JUNE '1 I

�•

Ohio Lottery

Philsrally
to defeat
Reds 6-3

Pick 3:

230

Pick 4:
8240

Low lualPIIa 501. Jllia.

Thunday, pll'lly cloudy, hiP ID

Buckeye 5:
.16-23-25-26-28

PageS

601.

•
Vol. oM, N0. 24

'

llulllmecll•lnc.

SIXTII GRADE WINNERS- Tbe followillg Salem Center Elementary Scbool slxtb graders were winners ~t tile scbool's recent ·
science fair. Wlnnen were, from lint to tblrd respectively: Bridget
Vaughn, Rebekah Smith and Steplumie Jones. .

F1F1'H GRADE WINNERS- Tbe foDowln&amp; Salem Center Elementary School Mb graders were winners at tile scbool's recent
science fair. Winners were, from first to third respectively:
Stephanie Kopec, Scott Colwell and Lana Payne,

FOURTH GRADE WINNERS - Tbe following Salem Center •. •
Elementary School fourth graders were wlnnen at tbe school's
recent science fair. Winners·were, frolllllrst to third respectively:
Carl Richards, Dultla Er1ew1ne and Automn Slater,

Your Social ·Securitv_._·.

.
AWARDED FOR ACADEMICS- The folIowiog first, second and third graders at Salem
Center Elemeatary School were recently hoaored for academic succas. Haored were, from
left, front row, Adl!m Joaes, Aubry Kopec,.
JosbUIIlay, Kevin G1'811t, Ashley_ ColWell, Lind·
say BoDo, Amanda Priddy and Kristin Napper;
middle row, Shane Napper, Philip Smith, Devin_

Erlewlne, Jessica Scililler, Crystal Johnson;
Shenelle McKnlg•t, Jenl Priddy and Mary
Jane Partlow; back row, Jessica Smith, DooDle
Barnett, Krlsty 'Puckett, Misty Puckett, Josh
Na~er, Josh Bass, Melissa Kirk, Rachel
,Ar
rlpt, Ansdn Crou, Sba• Crisp, Aman•
da mlth and Cory Lonptretb.
'

By ED PETERSON
Soci.I Secwlty
Muaaer Ia Atlle.._
"More low income Medicare
beneficiaries may get help paying
out-of-poc:ket medical expenses
because of recently announced
changes in naliooal poverty guidelines," said Ed Peterson Social
Security mlllliiF in Athens.
The belp is available tbrougb
two _government nmgrams called
the-Qulllified ~ Beneficiary
(QMB) and Spcicified Low-Income
Medicare Beneficiaries (SLMB)
pro~rams. The QMB program
requues States to pay MediCare's
Part A and Part B premiums,
deductibles, and coinsurance
expenses. '"These a the e~tpenses
usually paid bl the beneficiary,"
said Peterson. And could add up
to savings of sevaal hundred dollars or more per yetiC."
Under the SLMB program, the
States pay only the full Medicare
Insurance Pan B mODtbly premi·
um. "Bcc:ause the monthly premium is $36.60, even this limited help
. means a savings of almost $440
annually," Pttcrson said.
Both progranlS are administa'ed
by the Health Care Financing
Administration in conjunction with
lhe States.
The rules vary from State to
State; but in general, to qualify
your:
I
• Annual income m1151 be near .
or below the 1993 national povaty
guidelines of $6,970 for one person
or $9,430 for a family of two for
the QMB Jl1'0111'8111; for the SLMB

-Tbc-Atbe-1180-lftee-isloca_ted_
' at---:.221
program, your annual income must , 1fl N. Columbus Rd and is opene4
be 110 patent or less of the 1993 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. (phone 592~ ....
D8lional poverty levels. Under both 4448).
programs, $20 in monthly.income
will not be counted toward tbe
·· ·
lUniL
: ''
• Resources-such as bank
accoupts or stocks-may not
exceed $4 ;000 for one person ot
$6,000 for a family of two.
(Resources generally are things you
own. However, not everything is
COUIIIed: The bouse you live in; for
example, doesn't count, and, in
some circumstanceS, your car may
State Auto's already
IIDl count either.)
lowJ)IVmiumsc:an be
MOaly the State can decide if
reduc:ed even more by
you are eligible for belp from the
.
insuring
both your car
QMB or .SLMB program. So, if
· and home with the Stfte
you a elderly or disabled, have a
low lnoomc and vr:ry limit.edasaets,
Auto Companies.
and are a MediCU'C beaeficilry,
contact the Human Senices off'JCe
l..et us tell you just
to apply," Petmon said For more
how milCh your savings
information about either~·
can be.
•
call the Health Care Fmanciag
Administration's toll-free tele~b~ne number, 1~800~~!6833 .

ILL 4• POTS."...............50'
ILL TREES••o..........20" OFF
,

Open Mon•.Sat. 9-6
CLOSED SUNDAY

HUBBARDS GREENHOUSE
SyrtlciH •

992•5776

ol

EARLY
AMERICAN

SUITES

Church hosts mother-daughter dinner

The annual mother-daughter board teat~ea a ~donna drawn
dinner of the Heath United by_PJ . Harris. Class-; Madoona !If'
Melhodist Church was held recent- pnnts by famous arusts .were disly in the church dining room.
played to complete_lbe decor.
Decorations were provided by
The Eleanor CirCle hosted the'
Pat Philson. ~ booklets were . dinner. The committee members
prepared by Sue Smtih, Jane RCI!I\ft were . Mary Wtse, Ja.ne. Regan,
and Jennifer Sl!litb: A large bullebn Francts Thomas and Vtcki Rouch-

- Ulll•ty ca}endar
c.·omm

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Regular meeting,
Drew Webster Post No. 39, American Legion, Tuesday. Dinner, 7
p.m. Meeting, 8. p.m. Nomination
of officers.

, .
Middleport Arts Council begiruting
We.dnesday. Begiooers and inter- ,
mediate classes starts at 7:30 p.m.
and advanced dancers are to report
at 8:30p.m. The cost is $7 per cou·
ple and to register or for funber
information, caD 992-2675.

. RACINE - Vacation Bible
CHESTER - Chester Garden
School will be held at the Racine
United Methodist Cburcb Tuesday ' Club will hold its open meeting
through Friday from 9-11 a.m. Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Chester Umted Methodist Church.
daily. All children are welcome.
Betty Mizikio will be guest speaka
on
prize winning slides of OAGC
POMEROY - F.O.E. Ladies
convention
winners.
AuXiliary No. 2171 will meet Tues~Y at 7 p.m. for a plltluck. MeetPOMEROY - Pomeroy Masonic
mg at 7:30p.m.
•
Lodge No. 164 F&amp;:AM meets
BURLINGHAM - The Bedford Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Middleport
Township Volunteer Fire Depart· Masonic Lodge.
ment Commiace will meet Tuesday
LONG BO'ITOM - Revival, Mt.
at 7:30p.m. at the Burlingham
Olive
Community Church, Long
Modem Woodmen Hall.
Bottom, Wednesday through Sunday, 7 p.m. niabdy. David Crowell,
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Country Ravenna, Mich., evangelist. Public
dance cl••ses will be offered by the invited.

ins. The welcome and devotions
were given by Emma Kay Clatworthy. the Rev. Sue Smith gave the
evening dinner grace. Mrs. Betty
Dean guest speaker was introduced by Marker W~r. ' •
The theme of the evening was
"Blessed Art Thou Among Mothers." A program on Madonnas and
their usc in worship settings with
flower arrangements featuring
Madonnas. The life of Christ was
exemplifed as she completed each
.arrangement. Her lecture, as she •
worked,-informed the audience of
the various categories of Madonnas, as well as tlieir proper usc in
floral compositions. Helpful information sheets were given to all present
To conclude the program, several mother-daughter teams created
floral arrangemellll with Madonna
figures. Those participating were
Donna and Sarah Jenkins, Twlla
and Klltie Cbilda, Mary Wise and
granddall(lbter, Llura Harrison, and
Srcphanie and Katie Alexander.
Special rocognition of mothers
in various cateBories concluded the
evening. Pots of flowering pinks
were awarded to Julie Hubbard,
Mary W'ISC, Kathleen Scott, Twila
Childs, Donna Jenkins, Nan
Moore, Marsaret Weber, Jane
Regan, Becky l'arsons and
Stephanie Alexilnder.

$7995 ea.

*Sold I• Sets O•IJ

AMINI
7 CU. FT.

CHEST
FREEZER

3 PC. SET
OAK or CHERRY

(Blue or Brown)

TABLES

4 PC. PINE

Whitt &amp; Brass

5 PC.

BEDROOM
SUITE

$366°

0

- AMANA
11 CU. FT.
DELUXE
REFRIGEUTOR

WOOD

DAYBED

sa·995
Bidding Extra
WHilE·
WISTIIGHOUSI
GAS or lliCIRIC
Ull81

DINEnE

"

$2'2995

Wlm.wlmMHUII

•

IIIlTH

CAIU READY , CONSOU IV
TV .

Th~ Eastern Local School District wiD have a new superintendent
effective July I.
Ronald Minard was hired May
25 by the Eastern Local Board of ·
Education to replace former Superintendent Robert Smith who left
the district in .early 'April. Riclu!M
Roberts, a retired former supenntendent, is currently serving as tem~ supcrinlelldenL Mtaard bas been a school
administrator for II years and is
presendy a building principal in the
Caldwell Exempted Village School
System. He was a teacher for eight
years before becoming an administrator. He bas been a coach and albletic director, coaching fQOtball and

Minar.d ~ua,ted from Mansfield Sem~ High m Mansfield and
received a bachelor, o~ arts depe
fmm...Marshall UniYmUY. H.u!ltinll
ton, W.Va., where he part!Ctpated
in inteicollegiate athletics. He then
received a master• of arts degree
from Clevelatid State University in
1975.
PurcU.I'uel tanb
In addition, ~ board awarded a
contract to Weber Construction to
remove four fuel tanks at the

UADY

liio...-;l

Under the direction of art
teacher Jeff Baker, several
murals decorate the walls at
Meigs Hi&amp;b Sdlool.
In the library Is a colorful
book repllea with Ill laacrlptiOD entitled "Read to Brlna
Imaglilatloa to Life*', Here
Mellsaa ·Vance and Keith
.Darst llnisb up the mnnl
In the careterla, one com·
plete side h• beell dealrated.
Wide maroon·and gold stripes
were painted by James
Kopczlnky and Ell Fink aloaa
tile waD leadinl to two murals,
one a Melp Mll'lluder paint·
ed by Sonja Bateman, pic·
tured bere, alld Becky GIII'Del,
and tbe otber entitled Melp
Cafe painted by Juon Wltli·
ereD. Aaotber student who bas
worked oa the project Is
R.lchle Canon. (Photos by
Charlene Hoellldt)

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
1114)112-TOLL
FREE -..426-1511
•

l.ay+Wayt

MasterCanl •
Vial

., .

.• \r.

-•

and the results of much _time and ing for the tests. Today we should
B)' JIM FREEMAN
energy
spent by students m preparContinued on page 3
Sentinel News Starr
More than 15,000 members of
Ohio's class of 1994 have yet to
pass all fo!H' sections of the Ohio r - - Proficiency Test required for graduation.
.
According to the Ohio DepartA Glendale, Ariz., woman's vehicle sustained moderall: damage
ment of Education, 23,785 memMonday afternoon when it struck a ditch, the Gallia-Meigs Post of
bers of Ohio's junior class retook
the State Highway Patrol reported.
the tests !bey bad previously failed
The vehicle was southbound on State Route 684 in Scipio Townor missed due to absence. Thirty
ship
when it drove off the left side of the roadway and struck a
percent, or 7,061, of these students
ditch.
The driver of the vehicle is unknown. The vehicle was towed
passed all the tests they were
from
the
scene.
required to take.
This leaves 16,724 members out
of about 117,000 enrolled in the
A 7-year~ld Middleport girl was listed in fair condition at Chilclass of 1994 yet to pass one or
dren's Hospital in Columbus aCta being SIIUck by a car on South
more of the tests, which cover
Second Avenue in Middleport Tuesday around 5:45p.m.
:
reading, writing, mathematics·and
Elizabeth A. Landers of S04 South Third Avenue ran into the ·
citizenship.
path of a 1992 Geo Tracker driven by Michael L. Childs, 40, of :
The department estimates that
Middleport, a Middleport Police Oepai bnatt spokeswoman said
:
,about 85 percent of the junior class
Landers was transported by the Middleport squad of the Meigs -:
bas passed all the required tests.
County Emergency Medical Service to VelmiiS Memorial Hospi- :
Sixty-seven percent of juniors who
tal. She was later transported via LifeFiight to Children's Hospital. ' will still be taking the test in the
fall have only one test yet to pass,
the depiubJ1CIIt reported.
··
Two charges of rape were dismiss¢ Tuesday against a Meigs •
Aft« six attempts, 85 percent of
. County mlllJ.
the juniors at Eastern High School
Charles Re~t Justis, 24, was arraigned Nov. 23, 1992, following
have passed the writing section of
an indictment in September by a Meigs County Grand Jury.
the test, while 96 percent have
According to Judge Dan W. Favreau, visiting from Morgan
passed the reading section. SixtyCounty, the dismissal resulted from Special Prosecutor K. Robert
five perCC!nt of the juniors have
Toy's failure to provide Justis a bill of particulars. A bill of particu·
passed the math section while 80
Iars is a document which specifies elements of the alleged crime ,
percent have passed the ~lizen.sbip
and is more specific than the indictment
:
section.
I
ustis
was
represented
by
Public
Defender
William
H. Safranek. •
AI Meigs High School, 89 percent passed the writing section
while 98 percent have passed the
C?fficers of the Po~roy. Police Department investigated two
reading J10i lion of the test Sevenaccidents Tuesday. No inJunes were repoutd.
·
ty·IWO percent have passed the ·
A Pomeroy woman was cited foUowing a two-car accident on
Ann Street around 2:45 p,m.
·
~=:2 percent have
Michelle
Whittington,
19, Pomeroy, was coming down Ann ·
Ninety-nine percent of Soutbem
Street and met a car driven by Ruth Francis, 65, Pomeroy a polic:e •
HiJh School jUI)iors have passed
spokckwoman
reported. Whittington stopped her vehicle. Francis ·
the writing teSt while 88 percent
~= to stop and struck Whittington's car, the spokeswoman
bsve passed the reading section.
Sixty-five ~ent and 16 'percent
Damage to Wbitlingtoo's 1984 Mercury Lynx and Francis' 1987
have JII8IICd the math and sections,
Ford Tempo was listed as light Francis was cited for failure to
~vely.
.
maintain USind clear distanco.
'I am very encouraged by
A Racine man was cited b no insurance followin.la two-c. ·
today's announcement on -profiaccidenl on the loWCI'r PIRina: lot in l'ooleroy IIOUIId 6:311 p.DJ.
ciency Nlllill for !be junior clasa,"
Raymood Se~. 21, wu leavinJ_the parkin&amp; lot then turned
said Ted Sanden, Obio'a_superinaround, backing 11110 a taxi driven by Hmy Clart, 60, or Pomny
tendent of public instruction. "I
Damage 10 Sayre's 1976 Pord and Clart's vehicle, a 19il
believe we're llllelng the pay4f of
&lt;;bevrolet owned by Willilm Snouffer of Middleport, wu'u.c! u
the many bonn teiCben and parlight.
.
enll bavc lpCilt helping students,

Patroi probes wreck

Girl injured in accident

,,

Police probe two. accidents

•"•
•

,,•
~

(CASH I CARRY)

. Credit Terma

The new tanks, one with a 2,000
gallon capacity, the other with a
1,000 gallon capacity,. will be
installed above ground With protective dikes. The board also aJ¥.0ved
the purchase of two reconditioned
pumps through Larry Miller.
Personae! matters
The board approved Deborah
Weber as head teacher at
Riverview Elementary School for
\he 1993-94 school year and
approved the installation of an
electronic management information
system unit in the Chester Elementary School to meet the needs of
entering student data. .
The lioar~ also apProved the
lists 'fJf sut,s01111e clasSified pilrsol!nel and substitute leac:bas for the
1993-94 school year.
AAA of South Cenbal Ohio was
awarded a contract from drivers'
education for the 1993-94 school
year while the district transportalion director was granted permission to attend an advanced school
bus drivers education course in

Local briefs_;.,-

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.
106 NORTH SECOND AVE.

Iron.

..•
.•

••
••

Gll4ND MAIISIIALL • lAo SW,, N, tile
only ••niYIDI World War I vetera ol Drew
WeHter Pllft 3t, waa r.·ead mar1halfqr tbe
Memor~ Day Parade • P-eroy. He II pie·
.. lured here wltb llaJaiOIId Jewel,,...

-··n·

••

der, Job WHirl, cea•aader, aad Ke11et•

u.rte, Jllll-·nder, 11ft tn rWat. Jwt prior
to tile JlfOII'III• Stlll'J llu been a member ol tlle
poit tli' 7CJ couecutl.e yean.
.

.,

~

Mar!~ th~ summa. In addllion,
Pa.I11C18 Shriven was IIPPJOVI!'i b
retmbursemenl for professtonal :
gro~.
. transti
. • '"' board . ercd also Cindy.
Lmton ~m kindergarten at Tup-:
pers Platll8.1!1ement&amp;!'Y !0 fourth,
grade effecuve the beginning of the:
1993-94 scboo1 year. .
Other actiOn
In other action, the bClard:
. - Approved re-enrollmentto
the Ohio School Board Aasocialion's 1994 Worker's Compcnsalion GroupRatingProtp'IIR;
- Approved the mter-district
an~ \ntradistrict open enrollment
polictes;
- Commended the high school
band for outstandinJ performance
~d recognized .William Hall, 1iand
director;
- Approved participation in all
s_tate and federal programs for !be
1993-94 school year. · ··
. Allellding were B~ President
Ray Karr, Vie6-prealdent Jim
Smiih and board members Ron
Eastman, Bill Hannun and Mike
Martin.
. The next regular board mceri!lg
· will be held June 30 at 6:30p.m. in
the Eastern High School library.

schools to meet Environmental
Protection Agency requirements
and approved the purchase of two .
new fuel tanks from Mid-Valley

Bulk of M.eigs County students
have passed proficiency tests

RIMOII n1110

s2aaoo $499
""'
""'

WASHER &amp;
DRYER

.
....
5
95 SJ99'5 •s49'

25• Dill.

the gross domestic jlroduct, soared:
at a 4.7 pm:enl annual rate in the
fourth quarter but·advanced at only
a 0.9 percent rate in the firsL
Economists said lhe growth rate
would be further depressed by a
rise in interest rates that could·
occur if Congress fails to follow:
through on President Clinton's pbm:
to reduce the budget defiCit
:

Rape charges dismissed

••

VCR's
RIMOII CAlLI

or

tain sign
whether the economy
will'beexpandingorcontrseting.
So far this year, the index has
fallen in January and March and
risen in February and April. The
March decline was the worst since
November I990 signaling a continuation of the' sharp slowdown
from the economy's end-of-theyear growth rate.

.Eastern superinten:~ent

DISHWAiHER

ICE MAIER Y. Price

tious about adding to payrolls.··
In advance, economists were
looking for a somewhat stronger
gain in the index of 0.3 percent or
0.4 pen:enL
The leading index is designed to
predict economic activity six to
nine months in advance. Three consecutive monthly movements in
O!IC direction, up cr down, are con-

' .Mrn~;Jn;me{f;,"ew

WHITE·
WlftiNGHOUSI
UIDEI COU1111R

95
95
$699
$299 95 $28895
$299
ZENITH
19• DIAG. COLOR

Meigs murals

•

95
95
0
95
$699
$299
$166°
$129
FULL

growth has been so painfully slow
that the nation's unemployment
rate, stuck at 7 pc;tcent sit!ce.February, may even lick up dunng the
summer, they warn.
"It's certainlr, not any kind of
boom situation, ' said economist
Lynn Reaser of First Interstate
Bancorp of Los An~eles. "Companies are still remauiing very cau-

•

•

TWO POSinON

2 PC.
LIVING ROOM SECTIONAL$ RECLINER

SPRING AIR
MISMATCH
BEDDING*
TWII $5995 ea.

the Index of Leading Indicators,
following a I percent plummet in
March, fi~ ~it~ the views. of tbe
more pesstmtsuc economtc anaIysts who see little chance the
economy will soon break out of its
lethargic growth pattern;
Few analysts see any chance the
economy is on the brink of another
recession. At the same time,

track.

•
•'

VALUES
Scott Colwell, Stephanie Kopec and Laura
· Payne; sixth ~tade, back row, Jessica Priddy, ·
Rebekah Smltb, Beth Call, Brldaet Vau&amp;•n,
Lori Kinnllon, Candy Bamett aad Kim Ritter·
beck. Also hooored but not pictured were flftll
graden Orloa Barrett, Jeremiah Smith, Lisa
Blaa and Tawny JODeL

By DAVE SKIDMORE
Associated Press Writer
. WA~HIN_GTON - .The gov.emment s chief econonuc forecast·inf gauge rebounded only a feeble
·0. percent in AJlril after taking its
worst plunge 10 two years the
·month before, the Commerce
-Department said today.
The barely perceptible rise in

..,.._uranee
,/!j ~t.re
Auto .
eo...,..,.,••

.

AUullmecllelna• .....,....,

Lfadiltg indicators up 0.1 percent in April .

.214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992·6687

Ill UIGIIG IISIETS •••15

(IILD OVER ftROUOB m11 8, 1-)

STUDENTS HONORED - The following
rourtb, lll'tll and slxtb lfader&amp; at Satem Center
were mntly bonored with awards for academ·
lc success. SboWD are, from len, fourth grade,
front row, Carl Rickard, Amber Roush, Jessica
Marcum, Kendra Cleland, Eric Montgomery
and Robert Johnson; fifth grade, middle row,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo,Wednesclay, June 2, 1993

E11. Of The Seu111
Clttt·OIIt S1l1
ILL FLITS••••••••- ............•5

2 Beollone. 121'11Qee 25 oenl8

•

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