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By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Mother-daughter banquet held Racine Fall

lt'.lUI C lUI

The annual mother: dauahter
banquet of the Reorpnizcd Church

of Latter Day Samu was held
recently 11 F'ondmola in Albena.
Attendina were Mrs. IJah Roush
and granddaughter, Sherry, Portland; Diana Dub! and Emily and
Sarah, Portland; Carol Collins and
. Chelsie, Portland; Golda RadcUffe,
Syracuse; Jocelyn Bailey and
d8u.~1hter of Chester; Lucy Taylor,

SPEAKING CONTEST - Ttie Meigs
County 4-H members participated .Monday
afternoon In tbe healtb and safety speakln&amp; contest. The top three, Harmony Tbobaben, ~&gt;!!bra
Frot1t and Tabitha Swearingen are eligible to
compete In the district contest on Tuesday at

Racine; Janice Danner arid Sandy
and her daughter, Ashley, all of
Racine; Maxine Sellers, Spiller;
Ruth Bradfml, RBcine; 81)d Juanita
Wells, Long Bottom.
A four generation family present
was Golda Radcliff and daughter,
Janice Danner and her daughter,
Sandy Demoss and great-granddaughter, Ashley Demoss.

Jackson. Pictured, 1-r, with Cblp Haggerty, ·4-H
Associate Agent, are the participants, Harmony
Thobaben, Joshua Hager, Tabitha Swearineen
and Debra Frost. Judees were Carol Brewer ud,
Arnold Miller.
·

Group holds
cookout ·
The Broiherhocid Department of .
Ji9pe Baptist Church recently held
a cookout and fishing derby at the
farm of Sonny McClure. Jini Ditty
presented devotions on "Passing
God's Word to the Next Generation. Prayer was led by Dale Colbum. Discussion of a building trip
to Stowe in mid;June was held.
Approximately 14 members of the
church will be going for a week to
puticipate i~ volunteer work on a
building pro.JCCt.
Attending were David Bryan,
pastor, Mark Michael, Nicholas
Michael, Brian Justice, Matthew
'
COOKOUT HELD - A cookout was held recently at the
Justice, Bob Mills, Craig Howard,
home
of Gary and Sbaron Michael, Pomeroy, to bonor vadnates
J.W. Howard, Joe Howard, Wenof
tbe
Mt. Hermon United Brethren Chnrcb. Food, pmes and a
dall Williams, Sonny McClure,
hayride were enjoyed by tbe 60 guests attendinc. Graduates were,
Kenny Imboden, Dick Owen,
l·r,
Alesha Kennedy, Hocking College; David Woolard, Eastern;
Michael Owen, Jonathan Owen,
Sl!nders, £altern; Chad Grlmth, Eastern; Matt Michael,
Jonathan
Jolm Pat Riley, Jason Riley; Jamin
K1m Michael, Eastern; Lisa Pooler, Ohio University.
Eastern;
Riley, Paul Bailey, Lee Williams
Chad Coole, Rio Grande; and Tim Lawson, Rio
Absent
were
and Jim Ditty.
Grande.

Community Calendar
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Hesth United
Methodist Church, Middleport, will
have vacation bible school through
Fri!lay from 9:30 a.m. to noon.
"Celebration Park" is the theme.
BRADFORD : Bradford Church
of Christ, Vacation Bible School,
throuah Friday, 9-11:30 a.m. All
ages welcome.

FRIDAY
CHESTER - Free community
immunization clinic, Chester Fire
Department, Friday, 1-3 p.m., ages
two months through kindergarten
age. Parents bring child's immu·
nization record

TUPPERS PLAINS - Round
and square dance Friday 8-11:30
p.m. sponsored by TuP.pers Plains
VFW Post Ladies Awuliary. Music
CHESTER - Vacation Bible by CJ and Countty Gentlemen.
School, Chester United Methodist Melvin Cross and Red Carr callers.
Church, through Friday, 9:15-11:30 Everyone welcome.
a.m. for ages two through teens.
Theme: "Celebration Park."
CHESTER - Special meeting
Shade River Lodge No. 453
. POMEROY -"Amazing Jour- F&amp;AM, Friday, 8 p.m. with work
ney to Bible Times" is the theme of in the master mason degree.
Vacation Bible School at lhe Zion Refreshments served. All master
Church of Christ through June 25 masons invited.
from 9-11:30 a.m. daily for ages
nursery through high school. Pro·
LONG BOTTOM - Faiih Full
gram is June 27 at 7 p.m. Kathryn Gospel qurch, Long Bouom, will
Johnson; 992-5195, is director.
have preaching and singing Friday
at 7 p.m. with David Dailey, evanPOMEROY - AII-familr. revival gelist. Pastor Steve Reed invites the
and vacation bible schoo , Laurel public. Fellowship will follow .
Cliff Free Methodist Church,
Wednesday through Saturday and
SATURDAY
Sunday with evangelist, Rev. Dave
POMEROY - The Belles and
Canfield and ~ospel music by Jim Beaus Western Square Dance Club
and Kathy S1sson. Bible school will sponsor a dance Saturday from
theme is "Victory Station" for ages 8· 11 p.m. at the senior citizens center in Pomeroy. Kent Hall will be
4-12.
the caller. Dress is casual. RefreshPOMEROY - . Full Gospel ments.
Lighthouse , Hiland Road,
Pomeroy, will have revival today
SALEM CENTER - Star
through Sunday at 7:30 p.m. night- Grange and Star Junior Grange will
ly with Betty Baker and the Joyful hold fun night Saturday at 6:30
Sounds. Public welcome.
p.m. Potluck supper and work session for fair booths.
POMEROY - The Young
Democrats Club 'l'ill meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Carpenters Hall in
Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
of AA meets Thursday at 7 p.m. at
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Call
992-5763.
RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conservancy District meets Thursday, 5 p.m. at the office. Public
invited.

REEDSVll.LE - There will be a
Reedsville town meeting Thursday
at 7 p.m. at the fue station to discuss the proposed gravel pit on
Rour.e 124.
RACINE - Racine American ·
Legion Post 602 will meet Thursday with supper at 6:30 p.m. and
meeting at 7 p.m.

.

.,

~

...

RACINE - A Werry family
reunion will be held at the home of
iames and Karen Werry lit their
home of Court Street Road (Morning Star area) in Racine on Sawrday at 1 p.m. A potluck dinner will
be served at 4 p.m. All family and
friends are welcome, Call 9492746forintonnation.

POMEROY - The Meigs County Fish and Game SoCiety will hold
its fishing derby Saturday from 8
a.m. to 1:30 p.m. for children age
15 and under. Admission is free.
Bring a pole and baiL No minnows.
Prizes will be awarded.
POMEROY - The Catholic
Women of Sacred Hesrt Catholic
Church in Pomeroy will be having
a bake sale at Krogers on Saturday
from 9 a.m. to I p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - There will be
a round and square dance Saturday
at the Middleport Legion Hall from
8-11 :30 with music by CJ and
County Gentlemen. Melvin Cross
will be lhe caller. Bring soft drinks
and snacks. No alcoholic beverages
permitted. Children welcome if
accompanied by an adult.

GEl liNG A HEAD START· Alex and Sarah Hawley (left)
and Chelsey and Jordan Wood are pictured here as they got a
head start on fWlne tbelr trash bags for the Ohio River Sweep.
Volunteers will "sweep" the banks In the filth annual event to be
held Saturday rrom 9 a.m. until noon. ·
.

Poet's corner
By an old well on a hillside,
three children met to play
And they gazed upon a church-

POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buff.
ington will be guest speaker at the
Naomi Baptist Chureh in Pomeroy
on Sunday at 10:4.5 a.m.

INGELS CARPET
Warehouse Sale!

$499 sq. yd.
.
•Carpet..............
Starting at
•K'atehen Carpet. ............. At S795

sq. yd~

•Boat Carpet................At $6

sq. yd.

99

Steak Dinner

...... 1419,10
Treat Dad on h&amp; day toe:
• New~ s., Slak .
I AI )bu Can Eat Gr.ld llufret"
• AI lbu Can Eat 5undle a.

.PONDEROSit
m "oooOIOEA
.. s'rtmusc

They would place upon the
Bible lllree small hands in grace,
And tell the congregation about
their meeting place,
Where the flowers bloom and a
well does stand and prayelll can
come true
Won't you follow lis to the hillside and we'll show you what to
do.

m!J

Fathe1 's Day Special " II

$7.99
__________________________
lncltlda New late 5tllp Stak,

........'llllld.,........._.
..,.............................
.........
...... ,. _
...,.
~fila:!

liar",., ...(.,-.t

Grind 8uf'fet,. and Swldla . ..

til _.~ (Dill!·

GALLIPOLIS
215 Upper River Rd. • At. 7 • (Across frOm the Airport)
el-.:bah&amp;dli__,_ COI!'t*J1, U•. ltt)

New Whitt
Potatoes

South Carollaa
Garaet Beauty
Peaches
SWOT
UIIICf 59c lb.
3111 lb. basket •1.99

•2.49
IDAHO
BAKING POTATOES
10 LB. BAG
-rn~·

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)
- Scout helicopters clattered
across gray skies today as U.N.
troops lelrGbed for warlord Gen.
Mohamed Farrah Aidid. ,
U.N. forces hit his compound
with. a daylong air and ground
assault on Thursday, bu~ failed to
capture the warlord. Aidid's fight. ers fought back'using women, Children · and hospital patients as
shields, the United Nauons said.
One Paldstani and five Moroccan U.N. ~acekeepera were confirmed killeli and 43 ~oilnded.
U.N. spokesman Joe SiUi uld in
New Yorlc. The number of Somali
casualties was unclear but could
range into the hundreds, given the
fii'Cpower used in the asiawt
The United Nations and President Clinton uld the opc;ration to
crush Aidid's military clipability
end,ed successfully . BuJ Adm.
Jonathan Howe, the U.S. special
envoy who ordered Aidid's arrest,
would not rule out additional military slrikes.
Howe told the British 'Broadcasting Corp. this momi114 that. he
"wouldn't say it was over. '

The Huntington, W.Va., Disttict
of the u.s. Army Cows of Engineers will gather addiuonal information and consult other aovernment agencies before it allows
Point Towing and Fleetina to con·
struct a barge fleeting area near
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., a Corp
spokesman announced this morning.
The Corp has requested additional archeological information ·
from the applicant as a result of an
inquiry by the West Virginia Division of Culture and HiStory.

.

4 HEAD

.

The applicant is gathering the
required mformation by a survey of
the site, which should be completed
by July 15.
Afrer evaluating the survey, the
Corps will write a draft decision
document with the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service.
The final decision should be
81UIOunced on or before September
15, the spokesman said.

operations in Mogadishu.
Fighting on thursday engulfed
much of the southern half of
Mogsdishu, which Ndid bas con.. Ccintlnued on A-3
·
.----,.,.......,,...,..,

ALSO :0. SWIIF, JUICY WATfUIILOIIS
MUSK MILON·ml CAII1ALOUPIS
AIID MUCH, MUCH MOIII
/

:

/

Fire marshal to assist probe

.

The Meigs County Sheriff's Departments is investigating the
theft of a safe from the Bob Deemer residence on College Road in
Syracuse. Accordins to the niport the safe was discovered missing
at II p.m. Wedncsclay evening. No forced entry to the residence
wu evident and nothina eiJe was bothered. Deemer sdvised the
safe weighs allout 160 pounds.
An invcailptlon is continuing.

A 196e OeVnllet truck wltb

'7WO CONVENIENT LOCATIONS:
2400 Eaatem Avenue (ac:rosalrom KMart)
Gallipolis, OH • (814) 448-1711

....................

INGELS CARPET

1/4 Mlle North ol Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Mason, wv • (304) 773-5721
DI'EN71MYI
AWIIKI

Chd Out Our Maon Srcn ... Wew
ToMMe
MoN
•

No citations were issued. Field'S
vehicle sustained moderate dam~
and was towed from the seen~;
Donohue' s motorcycle sustained
heavy, disabling damage anil
remained at the scene.
'
APomeroy woman was cited
for no operaror's license 8nd failure
to yield half of the roadway folloWing a two-veliicle accident in Suiton Township, the patrol reported. '
Mary E. Sheets, 25, 1716
Chester Road, was northbound Oh
Township Road 28 when she met a
south)loun!l vehicle driven by
Monty R. Hart. 35, Racine.
Sheets reportedly went left of
center on a curve and struck Hart
Both vehicles sustained moderat~ damage. and were driven from
!he scene.
· · Editor's note: Names, ages
and addresSes are printed as they
appear on official re~or1S.
:

Clinton, GOP joust over
image of deficit-cutting hilt
!hose with incomes over $100,000
a year. The typical family earning
less than $20,000 would get a taX
cut through an expandejl earnedincome credit
· The only ·new levy hitting practiCally all middle-class Amet~cans
would be the new 4.3 percent tax
on each gallon of gasoline and
other fuels - estimsted to cost the
average family $29 yearly.
· During committee debate Thursday, Republicans argued that the
measure's new taxes would do the
opposite of what Clinton most
wants to do - spark robust economic growth.
"That inakes no sense when
recovery bas just begun,'' said Sen.
WilUam Roth, R-Det
.
They also complained that near:
ly $170 billion of the bill's envi"
sioned savings would have to come
from future spending bills or from
less federal borrowing. That leaves
big tax increases now, with no
guarantees that spending cuts will
be msde later, they said.
"If the Reagan-Bush packages
were called voodoo, this package
ought to be called deja-voodoo,"
said Sen. Charles Grassley, R·
Iowa.
The House passed a similar version of the bill in May. After Senate passage, Senate-House negotiaIOrs will have to craft a compromise that both chambers will consider.

r---------Local briefs-~-----.;....--

Truck destroytd by fire
PROOUCE PRICES IN EFFECT THRU SUNDAY, JUNE 20

A Pomeroy youth was flown to
Columbus Thursday afternoon by
LifeFiigh.t emergency helicopter
servic.e after his motorcycle was
·
struck by another vehicle. ·
Rex A. Donohue, 16, 38246
State Route 61l4, was transported to
Grant Hospital where he was
admitted to intensive care and is in
serious condition. Information on
the extent of his injuries was not
available.
Also injured in the accident was
driver Linda L. fields, 39, Syracuse, who was transported by
Mei~s County Emergency Medical
Semce to Veterans Memorial Hospital where sho was treated and
released.
According to a report from the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Fields was northbound on S.R. 6ll4 iq Scipio TQwpship when Donohue, who was
westbound, pulled from a private
.drive into her path.

WASHINGTON (AP)
Democrats readied.President Clinton's giant deficit-reduction bill for
Senate debare, backed by a White
House campaign to show that the
meanN justly places its heaviest
. burden on the rich.
· Majority Democrats planned to
whip the bill through the Senate
Finance Committee today, and,take
it to the Senate fl&lt;n' next week.
The package would pave the
way for lowering federal deficits
by a record S5Q8 billion over the
next five years, largely by taxing
the wealthy, businesses and
motorists and by slowing the
growth of Medicare.
As committee members prepared
for what was expected to be
RESJDENCY
Dr • .
a
straight
~-line vote, Clinton
Kathryn Schmaltz .or Fairhts
Republican foes in a
engaged
field, Ohio, pictured, Is cur·
public-relations
war over whether
rently worklna her second ·
the legislati011 was a IICIIsible mix
tour of duty In tbe Emettii!DCY
of tax boosts and spending cuts, or
and Urgent Care Center at
a doomed attempt to trim rampant
Veterans Memorial HoapiUII
budget deficits with unneeded new
this month. Under the lllper·
vislon of Dr. Richard Patter·
levies.
"Seventy percent of the ecoson, Medical Director of
Emereency Services at the
nomic gains of the last decade went
hospital, Dr. Schmaltz Is now
to about I percent of the American
doing her residency In family
people" - the richest. CliniOI'I said
at his news conference Thursday
practice as the final step In ber
night "They are in a position now
· education at the Ohio Ualverto pay more to help make this
slty College of Osteopathic
economy move agam, and they
Medicine in Athens. She comwill."
pleted her interashlp In DayEight¥ percent of the $249 bilton and will complete her resi·
lion
tax mcrease would be paid by
dency In August.

Theft investigated

&amp; GfOIOIA GIOWII

Motorcyclistjlown to
Grant after accident ;

'

The State Fire Marshal's Oflic:C has been called to assist in the
investipdon of the Thursday night fire at the Eddie Smather residence m Columbia l;"ownshlp, accilnling to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department. A report from the ~nt stated the house was
destroyed.
'
, Sheriff James M. Soulaby reports !hat on Tuesday eve!llng a
· 1978 Chevrolet van was also destroyed by fire.
A bam on the farm also burned approximarely four weeks ago,
according to lite report.

41'1.00

CALIFORNIA

''I would say it has reached a
new stage,'! Howe said. •' Our
focus now is on arresting Gen.
Aidid."
. Aidid, who is accused of niasterminding a June S ambush that
killed 23 Pakistani U.N. soldiers,
escaped from his home during predawn shelling that preceded Thursday's ground assauft
·
When American and Pakistani
soldiers st·ormed his two-story,
stucco house at mid-morning, lhw.
found .it empty but badly damaged
from ljlikol )!y, 105-mm howil:uls
ftred by American AC-130 aerial
gunships.
U.N. offiCials, speaking on condition or anony111 ity, said in
Mogadishu today that tl!ey did not
know where Aiilid was, but were
getting a number of conflicting
tips.
At a televised news conference
in Washington on Thursday night,
Clinton said the offensive "is ov.er
and it was a success." Although
Aidid eaaaped t1pt11re, Clintoo Said
his "mill
back ... has been broken"' and~ bas ~gely IQSt his
ability to disru)!l U:N. humanitarian

Corp delays decision on
barge fleeting facility

LONG GREEN SUCERS

$

. , . ' 59

CARPET
175 N. 2IHI1Yt. • Ml~lefiO'I, OH.
614-992·7021

··I

U. N, troops continue search for Aidid

49' lb.

f~ ~ ICEBERG HEAD LEnUCE

••

RACINE - There will be a meeting of Racine Fire Department July
Fourth plannins cpmmittee at the
fire lllbOII on Thwsday 11 7 p.m.

"' I'
I
I
,

ate Democrats complained thlll Ms.
Bowland, 'Once a labor secretary in
Louisiana, campaigned for antiunion legislation.
Sen. Robert Burch, D-Dover,
said the appointment shows that
Gov. George Voinovich's administtati.on, which nominated her, is
"the most anti-union, anti-worker
in memory.••
Burch has announced his candidacy for the 1994 De111ocratic
gubematorllll nomination.
Sen. Robert Cupp, R-Lima, who
heads a committee that recommended confirmation, said her
responsibilities don' t include the
issues that should concern unions.
Cont.inued on A·3

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A pliance with 1990 amendments to
spokesman for Gov . George lhe federal Oean Air Act
Meanwhile, the House passed
Voinovich says the administration
is pleased that the Senate agreed to bills letting consumers leatn more
confirm its choice to lead the about personal information ·that
Bureau of Employment Services.
. insurance companies collect, allow·
SenatoiS voted 19-14 on ThUIS· ing shoppers to place orders for
day to appoint Debra Bowlllld as motOr homes and truck campers at
administrator of the agency, despite .lnlde shows, and letting more counDenlocmtic complaints that she is ties charge a ~g tax.
The bills w1ll be exchanged
anti-labor.
"She has been an outstanding berween the two chambers for furadministrator and will continue to ther consideration.
Another bill the House passed
be an outstanding admiillstra111r,"
said Michael Dawaon, the gover- - allowing politiCal subdivisions
to invest in U.S. money markets nor's press secretary.
Also on Thursday, ·the Senate goes to lhe governor's desk.
During debate over the OBES
approved an anti-pollution program
sdministrator's
appoinunent, ~en which would bring Ohio _into cOm-

HAlf RUNNER GREEN lEANS
, , . LB.

MANY NEW REMNANTS IN STOCK

INTRODUOORY LOW PRIUS • FREE ESnMAnSlU

CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP)
-· The United Mine Workers has
rei~ I video ,it hopes will tell
1ts story and brini ,extra money 10
help suppprt the union's strike, a
union off'.Cial said
"We're here to make it plain to
blic what our fight is about.''
sal Bob Phalen, presideilt or the
's District 17, wbich covers
southern West Virginia and eastern
KeniUCltY.
"What they're asking our members 10 .do is work themselves out
ora job," he said.
Phalen said the union plans to
circulate the video amoog civic and
church groups. He said the video is
intended to air the union's side of
its dispute with the nabon's largest
,coal operata'S. It also will be used
to solicit contributions to help
striking miners who face financial
problems, he said.
Striking miners receive a $!50week strike benefit The union has
acc'umulated a strike fund of more
than $100 million, and said ii also
bas arranged a $50 ml!Uon line of
credit with the United Auto Work. Clll union.
' The union has accused the
members of the Bituminous·Coal
Operators Association of reneging
011 a provision in a 1988 agreement
that promised three out of every
five new jobs to laid-off union
members. The union says the provision applied both to asaociation
companies and their nonunion subsidiaries.
·

1 S.CUon. 10 P - 25 cen1a
A ~ultimeclolnc. Newop...., .

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 18, 1993

Governo·r pleased with
Senate confirrrlation ·

UMWseeks
extra money to
suport strike

90s.

•

lluiiiiMCIIalnc.

· VOINOVICH TO VISITOhio Governor George
Voinovlch will visit Gallia
County Tuesday, June 2l to
tour the Gavin Pint In
Cheshire. The 1overnor apd
members of the aovernor's
cabinet will also hold a regional cabinet meeting the same
day In CbiiUcothe where they
will address ecopomlc devel·
opment.

Saturday partly cloudy, hlak Ia

7517

Vol.44, NO. H

Howard Hughes complefed a
flight I(Ound the world in 1938 in
four days.

r- toaJablla 701, • ••

Pick 4:

\

Czar Peter III of Russia .was
dethroned in 1762.

~tew York Strip

wish

POMEROY - There will be an
open house at the Pomeroy Waste
Water Plant at 500 Spring Valley
~on Sunday from 1-4 p.m. This
will be the last time lhe plant will
be open to lhe public.

This year's Racine Fall Festival
will start Friday September 24 in
the evening and last all day SlltiU'day September 25.
Entertainment will be from 4 tb
8 p.m. on Friday and start and 10
am. on Saturday. There will be
gospel, bluegrass arid country- .
western bands.
Activities on Saturday will
·include food and craft booths·,
games for kids, a pie eating contest ·
al)d a pumpkin growing contest.
Seeds for the pumpkin growing
contest are available at the Home
National Bank on.a first-come firstserved basis. Anyone that wishes tb
gJ:OW a pumpkin may enter the contest Prizes .will be given based 011
age.
Questions can be directed to .
committee members John Dudding
Larry Wolfe, Bob Hill, Sam Pi~:
ens, Lee Lee or Kathryn Hart'
·
The committee will meet again
on July 12.
·

. SDeciar''

They would
a shining rainbow across the valley dale,
And turn it all to heaven with
golden stairs and winding D'ails, .
Then they would follow them to
the church-house and down the .
aisles they'd go
With smiles glowing brightly
a,nd knowledge to be told

778

Page4

Father's n!IU

house from the hill not far way,
And they danced within the
flowers ca:sting roses in the well
Rejoicing to the music from the
solemn church bells.

Cast a rose into the water then
bow your head imd pray,
Give me a stairway you'll have
it soon someday.
Then we'll all go together and
as for faith there is no spell
Just believe in the fOOd Lord
Jesus for he is The Wishmg Well.

Festival set
Sept. 24

SAY"THANICS, DAD"
· WITH DINNER

The Wishing WeD
By Gilbert L. Fitzwater, Vinton

SUNDAY
LONG BOTTOM- Jerry Cotterill, Elizabelh, W.Va., will be the
evangelist at Mt. Olive Community
Church on Sunday at 7 p.m. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites,!he public.

POMEROY - Meig1 County
Democratic Executive Committee
meets Thursday, 7:30p.m., Carpentel!l Hall, Pomeroy.

,.

Giants
topple
Reds

Thursday, June 17, 1993
Page-14

~

'

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

toi loader, owned by Larry I'I!Jh.

wu dl I O)ed bJ fire Wtdftlllllay inomln&amp; It 1:56 LDI., according
to tile Mlisl Caimty Sbsift'1 Dupwlitail. The cqui~t- on
the old Pal Dutr firm 011 ~HID Rotld.
Allin• r tiptkll' ia oonti•n111 011 thll fire abo.

Amott cited

.

iC1vin C. Amotl, bciab, wu ciled Wednesday evenlna to Meigs
Cotny Court ca a
Of failing to lllalntaln'control. ·
AcCclrcllni 111 tbe Melp «=-IY Sherifra Deplrtment, be was
.,,d+Mntltlllloule 1431114 fal1eil to llllb tile curve. He went off

-.e

tile.,.. ....

tile IOidWI)' Oil
tile IUirdrall .
.
. Mocierllte detnqe wulilllid 10 'hil Ford Thunderbird. There

were no injuries.

Frye transported to reformatory
Brenda Frye was b'ansported Thursday by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department to Marysville Reformatory for Women to
begin serving her sentence receptly imposed by the Coun of Common Pleas.
·

.
Stones overturned
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department was notified Tuesday
evening that several stones had been overtw;ned at the Old Salem
Cemetery.

Floor stolen
Tho Meigs County Sheriff's Department was notified Monday
by Laverne Jonlan, Laurel Road, Albany, that someone had taken
the floor from a bay loft at a barn he owns at the old Trockmorton
farm.
.
An investiption Is continuing.

Mailbox vandalism reported

Sherlft J - M. SOullby is utili&amp; reaidenlllll be alert for maiJ.
boll vaad"iw diet ilocuadua about IWII)' weekend. Residents 1re
urged to teport 111 uplclcu WJblcles at the lime.

Man cited for D.UJ.
Wilbur W. Flllty, 24, 3749 Roct S)llinal Rold, Pomeroy, WM .
cited early lhiiiiiOI'IIill8 lbr drivlna under the iafluence, tile OaiJia.
Meip Poat of the s. HiabwaY 1'111111 tepoillld.
Edit«'l aofe: N--. ... 8lld addJ
appear liD oflldal rtpCNIL

II

are priBted M

aq

;

�Friday, June 18, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

OHIO Weather

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

l'omerGJ, Olllo
DI:VOTBD TO THB Ul'l'ZliDTa 01' TIIB ldi06-IUIION ARitA

llOBEin'.L WINGETI
Publllber
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET I.EHEW

General Manager

Coatroller

LETIERS OF OPINION ore wok:omo. They obould be I~ tbl11 300
11'0 IUbjtct Ill editing lOCI mutt be lipted wilb IWDO,
~ ond telepbooe n\lllllror. No unlipted lell«&lt; will be publilbecl. Lell«&lt;
sbould be in &amp;ood lUte, oddroain&amp; iu-, not penonalitieo.

wordJ. AJl lotJon

'Home Alone' conviction
sends sobering message

Page 2 The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport,.Ohio
Friday, June 18, 1993

--~

fuU of living, breathing dinosaurs.
Of course, there are plenty of
trOubles with dte hypothesis, most
of them havin~ to.. do with the

·William A. Rusher
unlikelihood of ftnding enouj!h of
the necessary ·11enetic matenal to
piece together a whole dinosaur.
(Dinosaur fossils contain no
dinosaur tissue whatever; they are
simply rock casts of dinosaur bodies that biodegraded many millions
of years ago.) But mere's nothing
wrong with the theory; in fact, a
carrot has already been cloned
from a cell of another carrot.
That raises some very interesting questions indeed. For example,
what's to prevent scientists from
cloning a wooDy ma,mmoth? These
huge animals, relatives of the modern elephant, once roamed over
Asia and North America, but
became extinct about 10,000 years
ago. But almost complete mammoth bodies have been retrieved
from the Siberian permafrost: in

fact, I!CCOrding to my Britannica,
"cases have been reported in
which sled dogs were actuaUy fed
the meat from frozen mammoth
carcasses." There is obviously no
shortage of mammoth DNA ro use
in cloning new specimens.
Or what about the extinct pat
ground sloth, which survived an at
least one Patagonian Cfve as late as
50,000 years ago? I have seen,
hanging 011 a ~all in the British
Museum ol. Nt!titral History in London, a yard or so ol. bumpy sloth
skin retrieved from that cave. Plenty of DNA there!
Or how about bringing back the
dodo? It was extinct by 1681, but
(again according 10 the Briwmica)
there is "a head and foot at
Oxford," plus other DNA-rich
oddments here and there.
By now you probably think (or
hope) I'm joking, but I'm not I see
no reason why we won't be able, in,
the foreseeable future, to clone any
extinct species of which a shred
remains. As for the northern spotled owl, its survival, if not its prosperity, can be assured without the

loss of a Single lumberjack's Job·
We might even, aa a precauuoa,
clone the blue whale (though I
wouldn't want the aaigrunent).
Prom thete, it woUld be just a
step to producing clones of anything that interesiS or appeals to us.
Aasuming Russia really does have
Hider's lower jawbone, we might
. clone a genetic twin of the old boy,
right down to his muatache, and
send him on a Jeawe rour promoting the Oospels. . .
Then would come the really
knotty problem: How about dear
old Dad? His clone would even
have his endearing characteristics.
so far as they were genedc in origin. And why - I ask this In all
seriousness - shouldn't ~nts
who have lost a child to BCCJdcat or
illness be given another chance,
.widt a clone of the original?
Dinosaurs aren't die·half of it.We 1118114 on the shore ol.111infaniie

sea.

WIUiam RUiher Ia a syadlcated writer for Newspaper Enter•
prlee Alloclallqn.

It was like a trip to Grandma's house

.Today in history

Bnglilh-. -

J:'e

'

}'

60s.

By-Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

Have you seen a woolly mammoth?

Calendars paying dividends

By Tbe A.aclated Press
A frontal system will continue
to pump a, southerlr flow of warm,
moist air into Ohto on Saturday.
That will produce niiiiiClOUJ thunderstorms, the National Weather
Service said.
Hot and sticky conditions will
prevail, with highs near 90. I,.ows
tonight wiU be mosdy in the upper

same sentence as nuclear war.
GWEN, a ground-baaed netWOJt of
SOO communications towers from
coast to coast, was pan of this mill-

Since.ihe Air Force proposed planning - there wasn't anything
installing one of its towers there, to juslify it (in the early '80s, wben
the local citizens started firing it originilled) 1ll!d there's nothin to
back, but it's nothing personal . justify it now," said retired~.
against the Pentagon. They're also Eugene Carroll of the Center for
resisting efforts by McDonald's to Defense Information. " The fact
install a 95-foot tall siiJn in the that this program is 11lill surviving
is absolute proof that once a provicinity of the tower.
Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., is gram' ws funded, it's iinpossible to
siding with Monlanlns who fail to stop: .. -see the practicality of erectint~ a
UNoER THE DOME .- Rep.
Cold War monument in LJV· Floyd Flake, D-N.Y., was not
· Officials.would be ingston's sen:ne Sllmllllldinp. In a among the group of six black
tary mind-set.
able to send messages across the recent lener to Aspin, obtained by Secret Service agents who were
country at a speed 80 times slower our associate Andrew Conte, Bau- allegedly denied service at a
than a fax machine. A leading Air cus explained his opposition: "I do · Denny's reataurant
Force official once compared not foresee the imminent daDgm of
But Flake and other African- ·
· GWEN to the "Poily Express."
a high-altitude nuclear explosion American membera of Congress
Only54ofthe500GWENtow- over the next several years that have their own version of that
ers are currently in open1tion at a would require senior commanders story: After a tough day legisi'MiJ18,
cost of $23S million; The Pentagon to operate the Ground Wave Emer- .· tlv!v have lrOUble I!aUing a taxi.
wants another 29 installations. But gency Nctwcxk."
-·-t.One of the wont things that a
communities are chafing at the
GWEN isn't galvanizing much . black person can be In Congress, or
prospect of having theii' landscapes other congressional&lt;1fii1Mition. The · otherwise In Washington, D.C., is
blighted by 299-foot military com- price tag for iiS completion reprc- an individual standing 011 a comer
munica.tions towers, desllile an sen)S $11 million in a $300 billion tryinJ to get a taxicab," Plaice says.
a~vePentagon sales job.
Pentagon budget- or what one "In this city of tuicebs, vou can't
In Livingston, Mont, one of the r.rivate defense analyst calls catch one ifyou're black.'1
'
world's premier fishing locatiOns, 'peanu~.'' Others See it almost as
Flake recalls that one night he
local act,ivists are opposing GWEN a parable.
waa left strlllded on a liRe! comer
on the grounds dtat it's an eyesore.
"GWEN is a satire on military outside the Caoitol because no taxi
would stop forhim, aldtough IIOvel'·
a! white I10IIeagucl were~ up
quicldy. A Capiro! Hill policeman
eacart.ed Plake to a cab stand at a
IIOirby hotel. "No cab wai ~t to
Slllp tor me in front of the Capitol
at 12:30 in the morning. Here •
waa, a member of Conf!ea. ia a
relatively expensive suit and had
just come from doing the nation' a
businell. tt .
EVCD in side the Clpirol, according to Rep. Craig Wuhington, DTeltal, black lawmakers foel there .
are invisible walls that often separste the races. "If I'm dressed in
plain clothes nobody wiD look. me
m the eye in the elevator,'' he aaid.
"But when I'm dreased .in a suit,
people -treat me differently. It's
only normal because there's a real
fear of black malea OUl there."
Jack Aadenoa aild Michael
Blastela are wrlten for United
Feature Syadlcate, IIIC,

By MITCH WEISS
Aslociated Prea Writer
TOLEDO - Authorities say the conviction of a mother in the deaths
of two children left home alone will send a aObering message to parents.
"You have to have ad~uate supervision. You just can't risk that
. everything will be aU right, ' Lucas County Prosecutor Anthony Pizza
said Thursday. "Children need attention. They can't.be ignored."
Helen Sproles was convicted early this week on two counrs of.involuntary manslaughter and three counts of endangering her cliildren.
Victoria Spoles, 9, and Cltristopher Sproles, 10, were killed in a fire at
their apartment March 13. Their brother, Preston Sproles, II, was b,umed.
Prosecutors said Ms. Sproles, a single mother,lefl ber children alone to
go to a bar.
Ms. Sproles will be sentenced July 7. The maximum penalty is more
than 50 years in prison.
.
Trial testimony showed that Ms. Sproles tried tq be ~nt Her
children were good studeniS and weD-liked In the neigh
Some parents said she was a IIC8JlC80BI in ~t C01lCCII1I about "borne
alone" cases. And they are worried about leaving their children at home
in the care of an older Sibling.
· "You wonder whether you can leave your children to go to the store
justiO pick up millc," said Rhonda Beruieu, 31, who was·standing outside
a grocery store with her dau~~. ages 8 ~ 12. "If l10111Cthing happe',IS
when you're gOne- even if It's a few nunutes- you might end up m
·
jail even though you 'It a good parent."
Authorities said Ms. Spoles left her hOuse after 10:30·p.m. March 12
and returned about 7:30 the next morning.
.
·
The ftre started about S a.m. when one of the children tnocked over an
electric heater. The heater ignited a sheet covering a doorway to the children's bedroom.
Preston Sproles escaped into the living room. He tried to persuade his
brother and sister 10 follow him through the flames, but they were afraid.
They huddled in a closet and died or smoke inhalation.
Much of the excitement over
Pizza said he charged Ms. Sproles with involuntary m8Jislaughter "Jurassic Park" arises from the
because too many chi)dren are being left unsupervised at home.
fact ·that cloning dinosaurs-is not,
He said his decision had nothing to do with publicity surrounding other scielitiftcally spe&amp;king, altogether
"home alone" cases this year.
·
out of the question. We have onlx
In January, a suburbln Chicago ~le were c:harsed with leaving their begun to digest this fact, however;
two chiknn alone at home while vacaboning in Mexico.
and when we are finished some of
A few weeks later, a couple from Bowling Green were accused of its implications are going to surleaving their four children with $5 each and Ii~ food while they went on prise the daylights out of us. .
a two-week honeymoon in Florida.
The fundamental point that
"The case was brought becanse of the act itself, not because of the . needs to be grasped is that every
other cases. Now it turns out, it was probably the most serious of the cell contains material so suucblred
home-alone cases in the lllllon,'' Pizza said.
that it describes au of the chalacteristicTsessed by dte plant or animal which the cell was a part. It
should theoretically be ~ssible,
therefore, to produce (or 'clone")
from a single cell of any organism
a genetic twin of that organism.
The hypothesis on which
"Jurassic Park" is based is that,
5,000 calendars were distributed although the last dinosaur died ·6S
The ·Meigs Counly Park. District
through
grocery stores the second million years aJO. certain insects
established quarterly and annual
calendars as a promotional tools. It quarter, for it waa suggested this who dined on ·dinosaur blood were
was one of the ways the Meigs would be a good way ol. distribut· subsequently trapped in tree sap.
County Park Board thought the ing more for less. The cost-of mail- This hardened tnto amber, ,was
District could become an asset to ing this number of calendars is pro- found by modern scientisiS, and
the entire county. The calendars are hibitive. The deadline has passed provided them with enough of the
intended to help, generate aware- and the events information baa not dinosaurs' c~llular material 10
been received.
ne1s of local acuvities.
enable them 10 clone a whole parlc
The deadline is being extended
The annual events calendar was
developed into a brochure and is to June 23 in one last attempt to
proving to be a real asset. The rally those having events during
annual events are placed in the July, Aua. &amp;: Sept (3rd. q~) ·
The calendar can only be as
Ohio events calendar, Southeast
good
as you allow it .
Ohio and various other calendars in
The
quarterly calendars will
She is 86 now and her health is
the stare and distributed at festivals,
cease
if
the
following
is
not
failing.
So Jane has decided to
fairs and direct inquiries. This and
received:
close the dry cleaning and laundry
other promotions of Meigs County
1. What event 2. When (dare &amp;: establishment that she operated in
are beginning to attract new visitime) 3. Where 4. Contact Person the neighborhood for 30 years.
tors into the area.
&amp;:
phone number 5. Sponsor 6.
ActuaUy, "establishment" may
The quarterly calendar is basiEntrance
fees if apply 7. And addi· be 100 ornate a word for the bustcally -intended for area events with
ness that Jane ran. She carried it on
short term planning (community tional pertinent information
Thank you for your interest and from the ground floor o.r th~ yeldinners, ice cream socials etC.) This
low-brick bungalow she lived m.
free promotion is offered to support help.
Sincerely,
You had to wonder at times how
the activities and entice Meigs
MaryPoweU, her litde operation thrived as it dic!J
Countians 10 support the communi·
Director
The parking nearby was not
tics with their atlendance.
good and you had 10 climb I 0 steep
sleps to get to the front door. The
doorbeU didn't WOik so you had to
knock.
By TH A.aclated l'nll
Jane's legs were not the best in
Today is Friday, June 18, the 169th day of 1993. Jbere are 196 days
the r.ears 1 knew her, so it took
left in the year.
awhile for her to get to the dolr. In
.
Today's Highlight in History:
the winrer months, there was a rug
Ten years ago, on June 18, 1983, aatronaut Sally K. Ride became Amen- across
bottom of the door to
ca's firSt woman in space as she and four colleagues blaaled oft' altollrd k~p thethedrafrs
out. II was a chore
the'space shuule Challenger.
for Jane to bend down and slowly
the rug. She always kept
gn,~fg~rican forces enrered Philadelphia a the Britilh withdrew remove
the· door locked because once,
during the Revolutionary War.
.
years ago, she had been robbed.
In 1812 the United Stares declared war against Britain.
On the counter, in what was
In 1815' Napoleon Bonaparte met his W11terloo as British and Prusaian
once
the living room, you could
aoops defe'ated the Pmtch in Belgium.
always
find a Bible. On the wall, a
In 1873, suffragist S~ B. ~thony was fined $100 for attempting to plaQue said:
"Ood is Love."
vote in the 1872 presidential electJOII.
1'hete
waa
a ''Thank you for not
In 1928 aviala' Amelia Earhart became the fmt woman to fly ICfOII
·smoking"
siJII
lettered in pencilthe Atlantic Ocean a she completed a fliaht from Newf!IUIIdland to
plua
a
aucer
of
red, heart-shaped
Walel in abolll21 hours.
cinnamon
candies
and a dessert
In 1~0 during World War II, British Prime Minitter Winston
dish
filled.
with
packs
of bubble
Churchill utgea his countrymen 10 com~ lbemaelvea In a WIICl' tbll
gum.
would pnliiiPl future Jencntlons 10 18)', 'nia- their flnelt boar."
Picture postcards sent by friends
1n 194~. William Joyce, known 11 "Lord Haw-Haw,'' - dapd in
on
vacation trips we~ Iefl on the
London .nih hiJh tre11011 for llil
wnme broM&lt; •• on counter
for us to read and look at
German ndio. (He - hanged the followln&amp; l111itary.)
while
we
were waiting. Christmas
In 1948, the U.N. Comm~ on Human Ripu adopted iulntemacards
were
there all year. There
lional Declllation of HumiD Righta. '
.
'
In 1979, Plelident Carter aRd SoVIet Preatdent Leonid I. Brezhnev was often a copy of the National
Enquirer IyinL:::~e next to old
signed the SALT2 ~V=e Potier Stewart 8IIIIOUIICed he woald coptes of Oui
, the Nonnan
Peale magazine.
!f:2~on the nadon's hiJheat ~hit clqtwture pa~ the Vincent
On the mantel was Jane's wedway for Sandra Day O'Conaor 10 become the ftnt feNie a•ulw juiding pic~. and the. f11111ed hightlce.

Letters to the editor

Stormy weekend forecast

Saturday, June 19

Out with one defense system, in with another
WASHINGTON- Consider·
this a tale of two defense systems.
Last month, DcfenJe Secretary
Les Aspin scoffed at the threat of
nuclear war as soinething that bas
"receded to the vanishing point,"
when he announced the cancellation' of the " Sw Wars" missile
defense program.
.
. .
Two weeks later, Aspm gave the
green light 10 complete an $11 million defense system that smacks of
"Dr. Strangelove." It's the Ground
Wave Emergency Network, which
would allow military leaders to
communicate after a nuclear
doomsday.
·
If the country needs GWEN,
why doesn't it also need "Star
Wars," which was designed 10 proteet civilian Jl!&gt;PUiations from a
nuclear war wtth the former Soviet
Union? Air Force officials maintain
that' GWEN is an essential camponent of America's nuclear deterrenee efforts. Yet, Aspin declares
the end of the nuclear threat, but
~signs off on GWEN.
GWEN is a throw back to the
Cold War when Penta~ officials
tallced about "survivability" in the

school graduation pictures of 'her
two daughters. They were grown
now, of course. They oflen helped
out at the Ia,undry, as did Jane's

George R. Plagenz
son. He had retired after 2S years
as postmastet in a small commillli. ty.
Jane had her own way of keep- ,
ing track of the laundry we brought
in. I never figured out what it was.
llut after she had made out the Wip,
she gathered all the shirts in her
arms and threw them on the floor
where other piles of shirts lay and
you wondered whether you would
· ever see yoiM' shirts again.
But you almost always did.
Sometimes when you came to
pick up your shirts, Jane would be
gone a long time in tho bade room.
When it got to the point that you
began to worry whether she was all
ri~t•.you would go back to check.
Fmding that Jane was fine, you
joined her in the search for your

shirts.

visit than a hnsiDess trusaclion.
As I said, you would never ~I
Jane's plal:e an establishment.
Establishments aren't run in
such a srandmotherly way. But
maybe they ought 10 be. .
Geotp Plaaeaz II a syadlcat·
ed writer for Newspaper Enter·
prlle AMoclatlon.

B~rrts World·

'

W. VA.

· sOuth-Ceatral Ohio
Extended iorecaat:
Tonigh~ mosdy clear. Low near
Sunday lhroagb Tuesday:
70. Satura.y, pardy cloudy. ScatA chance of sliowers and thuntered afternoon thunderstorms. derstorms each day. Lows in the
Hjgh near 90. Chance of rain 40 . 60s. Highs in the 80s.
percent.
~·
Contin~ed

The Daily Sentinel

M.-: Tho Allodotld "'-· and t11o
Ohio No ...,.,... Aooelallon, Na~GOial

Mftrlilint Re.W Wllllattve, Branham
No-per Be._, '18!1 Third Avenue,

side capital. ·
Howe said he ordered Lt Gen.
Cevik Bir, the Turkish commander
of U.N. for= in Somalia, to arrest
Aidid despite the fact that an investigation in10 the June 5 ambush is
incomplete.
A O.N. Securily Council resolution de~ng the arrest of.those
r~ible for the ambush did not
name Aidid, although U.N. offi·
cials have openly blamed him for
it.

Jury rules against
smoker's family
GREENVILLE. Miss. (AP) A judge's landmark ruling that
cigarelleS are inherendy dangerous
waa left moot as jurors ruled that
. !'13 years of smoking didn't kill a
man whose family sued for S17
milliOn.

Eleven of 12 jurors decided
Thursday that Anderson Smith Jr.,
63, of Kosciusko, died from a
blood clot brought on by surgery,
rather than from emphysema or
lung cancer.
Physicians in the eight-day trial
disagreed on the cause of death. No
autopsy was done on Smith's body.
The cancer was discovered only
about four months before his death.
"There was no way it could
have killed him in such short
time," said juror Darryl Morganfield, 25. He aaid jurors had some
heated discussion during more than
two hours of deliberations.
Victor McTeer of Greenville,
one of the lawyers who represented
Smith's children, Jessie Willie Bell
· and Jeanetle Willcs, aaid of the verdict: "That's the way the system

.

NowYork,NewVork 10017.

Sw..[r}J~'Y

POSTMASTEJl, a-t add- oha,.O 1o·
Tho Dolly Sednel, Ill c.un Sl.,
Pomeroy, OHio 46'7dll.
.
8UIIICJUP1'10N JIATU
Br Canior or Motor Bowie

One Week.......................................... 11.60
One Monll! ......................................:•.se.llll
One v-. ........................................183.20
&amp;INGU: COPY
• •
PIIICii
DoD~ ........................................- 2&amp; Coftlo

Sabocribon ... d•ldfttlo ~ .....m.
• IMY nnd\ tn a4Qnoe. ...... &amp;t The
Dolly S.UMI 011 . a Oo,.., ola • lJ
- I l l bail. Creiit ..OI'tra., . _ _
11etl weoll.
No oubocripl.., by ...n ~ to
atut where home •rrll'l' IIII'VtCI II
available.

'

=. .

lrlalll•lrlboo!Cittlohrtlltl•o • , •

.a·"........ . . . .lfllal•
. . _. . . . . . . . . .
lnotclo

·-·--

q; -~111"'a.-o--"I think I've ldentlfi«J our problem.
worlclng with the wrong people.•

' netWe'/8

Co•n~T

28 Woob. ... :...........................·.........
113 w..u..........................................
O.tol. . Mol.. C011irfil/

11 w..u, .......................-

TOLEDO, Ohio (Al') - A public housing authority's plan to
restrict the use ol. its properties by
outsiders has drawn criticism from
a legal advocacy ~P·
The policy mtght mlerfere with
the right of Advocates for Basic
L~gal f:quality to c'!mmun!cate
wtth restdents at housmg projCCts,
said Gina Snyder, a lawyer with-the
Toledo group.
.
"I come on the property at the
request of residents. It's not appropriate for you to examine the content of what I say to residents,"
Ms..Snyder said Thursday.
But Donald Troendle, executive
director of the Lucas MelropoliWl
Housing Authority, said the new
policy would not preclude residents
meebng with lawyers.
He said the authority hopes 10
reduce crime.
The action foUows allegations
exempting the pensions of their that white supremacists have been
own retired stale and local govern-· threatening !Mants at the predomiment employees must be applied nantly black Weiler Homes. The
retroactively.
authority also is concerned about
One of the dissenters, Justice Black Muslim meetings being held
Sandra Day O'Connor, said, at the east side housing project. .
' Today the court applies a new
"I don't want anyone inciting
rule of retroaciivity to .t·!"P.o.se our residents or putting fear in our
crushing and unnecessary 1l&amp;bthty residents. I'm concerned about any
on the states, precisely at a time outsiders gathering on our proper·
when they can least afford-it''
ties," Sykes said.
The 1989 ruling said such dif·
"Now it's the Nation of Islam.
fering tax treatment was unconsti· But what's next? Will we get the
tutional.
White Aryans here and then the

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Supreme Court ruled today that
states must refund billions of dol·
Iars in taxes collected unlawfully
from retired federal wotters.
The court, by a 7-2 vote, said its
1989 decision barring states from
taxing federal pensions . while
•

Livestock
report

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
. at selected buying points Frida.Yby
the Ohio Department of Agncul·
ture:
NEW YORK (AP)- The famiBarrows and gilts: 50 cents
ly
of
rodent viruses responsible foc
higher; demand moderalc 10 good.
the
mystery
disease that has killed
U.S. 1·3,, 230-260 lbs., country
at
least
16
people
in the Southwest
points, 46.00-47.00; plants 47.50·
will
almost
certainly
strike again
48.50, a few 49.00.
somewhere
in
the
country, a
Sorted U.S . 1-2, 230-260 lbs ..
researcher says.
country points, 47.2S.48.00.
The family of viruse~. called
Recetpts Thursday 7,200. Esti·
is found in rats in
hantaviruses,
mated receipts Frida~!fOO·
Prices from The
ucers Live- cities around the world, virologist
Stephen S. Morse of Rockefeller
SIOCk Association:
in New York said
University
Cattle: 2.00 to 3.00 lower.
Thursday.
He
is the author of the
Slaughter steers:. choice 71.00new
book
"Emerging
Viruses."
. 79.25; select67.00-74.00.
Five
cases
of
people
with simiSlaughter heifers: choice 70.00.
lar
symptoms
have
already
been
74.50; select 67.00-74.00.
reported
in.
California,
inclu~i.ng
Cows: 1.00 higher; all cows
two who dted, health authormes
52.00 and down.
said.
.
Bulls: 1.00 higher; all bulls
On
Thursday,
the
Centers
for
71.00 and down.
Disease
Control
and
Prevention
Sheep and lambs: 6.00 10 6.75
higher; choice wools 52.00-61.7S; reported finding genetic material
choice clips 57 .00-59.75; feeder . frolfl a newly recognized rodent
· llll!ibs 63.00 and down; aged sheep virus in two victims in the Southwest, meaning that the virus almost
35.50 and down.
· ·
·

from A·l

Continued from A·l
U~ N·----~
- ----------

trolled for nearly two years, and
U.N. soldiers came under relentless
sniper ftre.
,
Aidid's gunmen fired at U.N.
troops from behind hospital
patients·at Digfer Hospital, near,the
warlord's home and office, Sills
said.
U.N. forces in the field also
reported that Somali foes with hand
grenades "hid behind women and
children until they were within
throwing distance" of U.N. troops,
Sins reported.
Sills said 36 Moroccan and
three Pakistani peacekeepers were
wounded, aa wen as three Ftench
troops and an American soldier.
The Moroccan forces came under
fire when confronted by a large
· crowd of demonstrators, he added.
The night passcc! peacefully and
the dawn brought·people and traff:te
back onto streets, although it was
the Muslim sabbath and a day of
rest for mlist residents. A few small
shops and rickety stalls opened,
and reporter$· encountered hoS!iJity
only from die-hard Aidid support·
ers near his ruined home.
·
Scout helicopters flew through
the gloom, but'the American Cobra
gunships that provided cover for
Thursday's fierce ground assault
were not in the air above Ibis aea-

East Coast today, while the
nation's midsection received heavy
rain.
The sticky weather f rom New
England to Aorida was expected to
last in10 the Qliddle of next week.
Rain and thunderstorms pounded an area from Colorado to Michigan. Heavr. rain in the central
Plains was likely to cause flooding.
Highs today were forecast in the
50s and 60s in parts of the northern
Plains , the Rockies and in the
extreme Northwest; in the 70s in
other parts of the Plains a.nd the
Rockies; over 100 in the desert
Southwest and central California;
and in the 80s and 90s elsewhere in
the Lower 48 states.
The high for the nation Thurs. day was 108 at Coolidge, Ariz.

Scientists say mystery
illness could strike anywhere

IIMheclllotatoee &amp; Gravy,
HoiRol~

8.,.11 Drink o; Coff"

Lottery numbers .

Hili Road to assist; 8:15 J!.m.-Rut-:
land Fire Depanment to Clllpenter .
Hill Road to assist; 10:15 p.m.
Middlepon to Race Street foc Deb- ·
bie Davidson who was transported
to VMH; 2:28 a.m. Syracuse to
Smith Road for Burt Metz who was
transported 10 VMH.
.

Names omitted
. ·
.·
A brother, ~ton (Wunp) Douglas, ~thens, a SJ~r. Rose ~ of .
. &lt;;:(/Oivtlle, and his mother-m-Iaw,
" Betl!iaTuuleotTuppenl&gt;lainsare
survtvors ol. Gerald R. (Hanll:) [lou.
glas, 67, who ~ied .Wednesday at .
Doctors Hospttal tn. Col~mbus.
Thetr names were uruntenttOnally ·
omi tied from a listing ol. survivors
in Thursd,ay's obituary.
·

. Stocks

Meigs County
announcement
Homecominr
Mt. Union Baptist Church will
have homecoming Sunday with
singing by the Sunshine Everlasting Singers of Akron. Dinner will
be at noon withe service at 1:30 ·
p.m. Pastor Joe Sayre invites the
public.

Hospital news

EXTE.NSION GRANTED

SP'ECIJ1LL

Last Day To P11y Sec·ond Half 1992
Real Estate Taxes
Will
Be
.
.

J.ly 91 l993a

*4'5

HAPPY FATHER'S DAYI Free Sundae for Dad!
TRY OUR HOMEMADE PIES
NEW HOURS: OPIN 10 A.M.-8:10

Penalties
Be Added After This Date
Failure To Receive
Does Not Avoid
Penatf.y and Interest.
·. MEIGS COUNTY TRIISUREI,
HOWARD E. fUll

.11
,'/8

1!4010
... :..................................... 40
.............

:II WNb, ............................ -..........

u-

skinheads? Where wiU it Slllp?" he
said.
The housing authority board .
Thursday asked Donald Troeadle, ·
executive direcla', 10 aft a policy
that would require non-tenant .
groups to get permission to hold .
gatherings on the audlority's prop- ,
erty. Times and localions of such ·
gatherings might be limited.
Last month , police and federal ..
authorities arrested two members ·
of the supremacist croup White Aryan Religion during a raid at a .
house a block away fmm Weiler. . :
The two men were accused of .
planning to plant bombs • the 378- :
unit housing project on July 4. ·
Authorities satd members of the : ·
group also were harassing tenants.
Members of a local Nation of
Islam group began holding meet·
ings outdoon at Weiler about two ·
weeks ago.
Some tenants complained, saying members of the group were
preaching anti-Semitic and antiwhite messages.
"With aU the recent threats, I'm
concerned about these outdoor
affairs," said Betty Elliott, a 12·
year tenant at Weiler and Block
Watch comlinator.
Charles Muhammad, 'the local
Nation of Islam leader, has an
unpublished lelephone number and
could·not be reached for comment.
In December 1990, Muhammad
proposed using members of his
group to patrol housing projects in
an atlempt to rid them of drug (lealers. The housing authorily rejected
the offer.
Troendle said housing authori1y
grounds are not public perks.
.
"Every government entity has
rules on the use of its facilities," he ·
said.

Squads respond to nine calls ·

Coo•rt n'e'w's' · ···

HOME BAlED TURKEY &amp; DRESSING DINNER.

............

certainly caused the deaths.
The CDC. also reJiorted that
three ~pie tn th~ Soudtw~ ~d
been mfected wtth the vuus tn
1991 and 1992.

The Meigs County ·Emergency
Service made nina: calls Wednes·
day and Thursday morning.
. Units responding were 9:24 a.m.
Middleport to Race Street, the
Department ol. Humim Services, for
Kimberly Turner who was transported to Vererans Memorial Haspital; Rutland emergency and fue
• 10 Stale Route 684 Cor a child who
waa hit by a car, Rex DoJI8)tue was
transported to VMH; 1:37 p.in .
Pomeroy to State Route 684 to
assist, Linda Fields, transported 10
VMH: 2:42 p.m. Grant Lifellight
#2 transported Rex Donahue to
Gr,ant ~aical Ce~ter j1,1 Columbu's{ 7J'~ ' p.m . ColunibfiFire
Department to Carpenter HiU Road
for a strUCture fire at Ch~l Lyon's
Licensea issued
Divorce action CUed
residence; 7:43 p.m. Scipto Town·
Marri11ge licenses have been ship Fire Department to Carpenler
An action for divorce has been
fited in the Meigs County Court of issued by Meigs County Probate
·
Common Pleas by Teresa Lynn Court to Carl Edward Parsons, 22,
Long Bottom, and Mary Ann
MiUer from Ricky Todd Miller.
•
Miller, 21, Long Bottom; and to
John Alfred Zeigler, 44, Wellsburg,
Divorce case dlsm~ed
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
The divorce case of Terry L. W.Va., and Mary Elizabeth Smith, Thursday night's Ohio Lottery
Brewer and Bonnie Sue Brewer has 36, Wellsburg, Vf.Va.
selections:
.
been dismissed in the Meigs CounPick 3 Numbers
ty Court of Common Pleas,
7-7-8
.
(seven, seven, eight)
Payment ordered
Pick 4 Numbers ·
ET Broadcasting, doing busi7-S-1-7
ness as WMPO Radio, has been
(seven,
five, one, seven)
Am Ele Power.................... 36 3/8
ordered by the Meigs Counly Court
The
jackpot
for Sa. turday ' s
AShland Oil........................25 7/8
of Common Pleas to pay on a past
Super
Lotto
drawing
is worth $18
AT&amp;:T................................61 3/4
due balance the sum of $6,914.05
million
.
.
Bank One.................... :......53
to The Associated Press.
Bob Evans ......................... 17
Charming Shop.................. 13
Chmp lndustries.................l4
City Holding...................... 2S
Federal Mogul.. ..................l9
Goodyear
T&amp;R ................. .38 3/4
Veterans Memorial
Lands End .........................28 3/4
Thursday
Limited Inc. ..................... : 22 318
Admissions : Valerie Holter,
Multiniedia Inc.................. 36 1/4
Pomeroy.
;
Point
Bancorp.................... l4
Discharges: Edna Swick,.
Rax
RestauranL
.................. l/8
Pomeroy; SleUa Frank, Middleport
Reliance Electric................ l9
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 16
HOLZER MEDICAL CEN1'ER
Shoney's Inc.... ,................. l7 3/8
June 17 discharaes - Joshua
Star Bank ... - ...................... 35 Ill
Redman, Lester Lewis, Bonnie
Wendy lnt'l........................ l5 .
Huston, Patricia Long, Wilma
WorthingiOn Ind................ 31 Ill
Saunders, Nedra Johnson, Mrs.
Stocl! reports are tile 10:30
Gary Bryan and son, Gaye
a.m. quotes provided by
Sowards, Lucy Biggs, Lillian
Kemper Se~urltles, Inc., o
Osborne, James Nibert, Dora
GaUipoUs.
Queen, Roy Payne, Viola George,
Erika Hubbard, Wayne Horton,
Mrs ..Winston O'Connor and son,
Mrs . Roy Depue and son, and
Jessie Martin.
June 17 births- Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Salser, dauahter, Middlepon. Mr. and Mra. Michael Sergent, son, Point Pleasant, W.Va. ·

SUNDAY, JUNE 20, 1993
'

Housing authority
seeks curb on outsiders

States must refund
billions to retirees

He said she improved Louisiana's ering, why it's being coUected and
job placement rating from 49th in who has access to it
_ the nation to ftrSI.
Customers would be able 10 see
Ms, Bowland couhl nl)t be · the personal information, medical
reached for comment. A records and reports to check for
spokesman said she was out of accuracy. Insurance companies also
stale.
would be required to give reasons
The clean air bill, which sena- why it denies coverage.
torspassed31-l,imposesa$25-a·
TheHousealso: •
ton emissioJts fee on factories and
-Passed a bill 89-8 allowing
other air polluters. It requireS the counties 10 pass a 3 ~entlodging
Ohio Environmental Protection tax within their borders, except in
Ageney to issue .permits for a pol- towns that already have one. The
lution control p:ogram and to adopt money would be used in part to
pollution rules.
create local tourism bureaus.
Sen . . Robert Ney, R·St.
-Voted 97-0 10 let coosumers
Clairsville. !V.ho sponsored the leg- place .ilrdUs for motor hollies and
islation, said it will cost jobs iii truck campers during camping and
coal and other •industries, but the sports shows. Currently, orders can
state has to pass it befoce a Nov. IS only be talcCn for travel uailers and
federal deadline.
rent-type, fold-out camping trailers.
In the House, representatives
· -Agreed 96-2 to let political
voted 94-0 to requtre insurance subdivisions invest in money marcompanies to show the information ket mutual funds, a pool of money
to customers and explain who else invested in short-term securities
can see it ·
such a certificales of deposit and
Rep. Mike Stinziano, D-Colum- government seCurities. Voinovich
bus, ~d ,lljs bill requires compa- will review the legislation,
nics ,lo..leltc.OIIS"111CfS in,wriung spolceima!t.t.fichsell)aw~ said. ,
about the information they're gath'
-----

(UIIP811S.PubUihed tlftr)' aRemoan, . Mon4by
u.._h Frida~ Ill Court Sl.,_ ~-·
Ohio by u.. Ohio Valley ....,llohl..
CompanyiMuUbned.ia Inc., I'WiWSIG)',
Ohio 457611, Ph. 118:1-3156. SecOnd elurr
poolap pold at Pwrwrvy, Ohio.

••

·

Weather

'

·

Many of JIJIC'S cusromers were
success-oriented baby boomers
who lived at a Cast l*C· But they
never showed the llllhtost bit of
impatience wtdt Jane's slow movemenu or the IOIIICtimea long waits.
Over the years, I reaclied the
conduaion that dao billy boomell
came here for the ume reuon I
did. There was ~etblng comtonina aboat the surroundings about ll!llinl Jane at the sewing
macbllle In the &amp;aat window, dclnl
a IIIIIIU ftlllllr job 011 a tcm sleeve
or sewinll bulllll 011111 O'o'WCOIL
It wa lib IOiu to oar lfllld·
mother's. Thlt Ml Tt
J

Jane didn't check to see that we
wiped our feet whea we came in
(afthough there was a note to
".Please close the door" on our
way out).
·
But the little treats, the homelike atmosphere, the fainily pictures, the graciousness f'xtended to
us - these things made our trips to
Jane's seem more like a pleasant

The record-high temperature for
this dare at the Columbus weather
station was 99 degrees in 1944
while the record low was 47 in
1986. Sunset tonight wiD be at 9:03
p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 6:03
a.m.
Arouad the aatlon
Hot, humid air settled over the

• IColumbusIago I

Governor...

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

'

'

J

�\

The Daily SFrl~~~~

Sports

By The Bend

Page-4

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, June 18, 1993
Page-S

Giants top Reds 5-1 to win first series at Riverfront.since 1983
homer off Dibble in the second
ByJOEKA:Y
CINCINNA11 (AP) - Say this game set the tone. The Giants' 6-5
about the San Francisco Giants: win in 10 innings was an indication
They' re not just winning, they' re that something special was happening for San Francisco, which hasn't
winning spectaculluly.
Barry Bonds bits a ninth-inning played well at Riverfront ~ince
homer off Rob Dibble. Bill Swift 1983. The Giants have gone 29-55
since then, failing to win a season
pi~ehes seven perfect innings. And
the NL West leaders take a series series at RiverfronL
The Giants were riding the
in one of their most difficult ballmomentum
of Bonds' homer when
parks.
they
took
the
field behind Swift on
A 5-1 victory Thursday over
Cincinnati, wbich included Swift's Thursday.
" They had us 1~~&amp;1 night," Matt
run at a perfect game, gave the
Giants two out of three at River- Williams said. "Dibble throws a 98
front Stadium and a 6 1/2-game mph fastbalt and the MVP of the
lead over defending-champion world happens to hit it out of the
park."'
Atlanla.
Swift (9-3) felt something speThey didn't just win them cial as he warmed up before the
they won them impressively.
' ' They came out like a buzz deciding game. The right-hander
saw . Motivated. They were usually takes a while 10 get loose.
pumped up ," Cincinnati's Bip The 83-degree afternoon helped
him get going right away.
.
Roberts said.
"
I
threw
five
pitches
and
I
was
Bonds ' two-out, game-tying

loose," he said. ' 'I knew it was one
of those days."
Was it! Swift's sinker and slider
were taking nasty dips, the fastball
was darting, and everything went
right where he intendl;d.
After seven innings, Swift had
faced 21 batters and retired them
all. He thtew just 66 pitches, didn't
go 10 three balls on any batter, and
had a two-ball count just six times.
"His ball was sinking real
good," Kevin Mitchell said. "He
kept the ball away from the big hitters. He never threw the ball in the
same .Place twice. When he's got
good stuff, he can put the ball
where he wants."
With everything going for him,
he knew he ha(l a shot at the first
perfect game since Montreal's

Dennis Martinez threw one against
Los Angeles in 1991.
" Afler the fd'th inning, you look
up and see what's going on," be
said. "I wanted itreal bad."
Only one weak infield single
kept him from getting it Ironically,
it came from one of the players
involved in the trade that brought
Swift to San Francisco.
·
Mitchell led off the Reds' eighth
with a soft grounder deep in the
hole at shortstop. Royce Clayton
made a nice play to get 10 i~ diving
to his righ~ but didn't have enough
time to throw out Mitchell. He was
several steps past first base when
Clayton's throw arrived.
Neither Giant could have done
anything different. Swift's pitch
was a nasty slider, low and away,

Southern Tornado Basketball
Racine Suns beat Middleport . Camp set to begin Monday
Caldwell assures participants
sixth annual Southern TorAngels, Eastern in first games nadoTheBasketball
that
this year's camp will be on of
Camp will begin

The Racine Suns senior girls'
softball team opened the season by
winning its fJrSt two games, defeating Middlepon 8-4 and Eastern I28. The fJrSt win was an 8-4 ·comefrom-behind win over the MiddleponAngels.
In the top of the first inning,
Middleport scored three times on
two hits and an .error 10 take a 3-0
. lead. Racine carne back, however,
scoring 'one in the bottom half of
the frame to make it 3-1.
After a scoreless second inning,
Racine plated five runs in the third
to take a 6-4 lead. Racine went on
to win 8-4.
Racine hitters were Sherrie
StoV.er with a triple and single, Jennifer Cummins a triple and single,
and Jodi Caldwell, Shelly Winebrenner, Michelle McCoy,
Michelle Brown, Sammi Sisson
and Beth Clark each bad singles.
Middlepon llitters were Davis,

Monday, June 2I and end on Fri- the best ever.
Heather ' Hudson, Cogar and day, June 2S from 9 a.m. 10 noon
Each day a special guest will be
Tiffany Gardner.
present
to talk to the campers.
daily n the Charles W. Haym11n
In the second game, Racine Gymnasium
Among
those
who will speaking
in Racine.
defeated Eastern I2-8 as Caldwell
are
Kevin
Teaford,
a State HighThe camp will feature the fundasat down the side I-2-3 in the first
essential to produce win- way Patrol officer and former
With two out in the bottom half of · mentals
ning
basketball.
Most of the funda- Southern sw; Kent Wolfe, a inemthe frame, Racine scored six big
. ber of the !982 state tournament
runs on an error, walk and five mentals are the ones that are used tearri and now Logan Elm's head
by the Southern High Hustling Torstraight hits.
·
coach; and Joe Bob Hemsley, a
Three Racine errors allowed nado basketball team.
The camp will feature most of 1982 graduate,. coach and five-letEastern to climb back iniO the hun~
ter winner at Southern.
making the score 6-2 after two the Southern Hi~h School coacbing
Each camper will receive a Tinnings. Racine got the runs back staff. Included m thiS list are head shirL
Howie Caldwell, reserve
in the next round 10 lead 8-2 before coach
The cost of the camp will be
coach Scott Wickline, assistants
sailing 10 a comforlable 12-8 win.
$40.
Checks should be made
Jonathan Rees, Jim Lawrence,
Racine had fourteen hits, led by Mick Winebrenner, Gordon Fisher, payable to Howie Caldwell, Box
Michene Brown with a perfect 4-4 Marvin McKelvey and members of 263, Racine, Ohio 45771.
night and a double; Beth Clark, the 1993 team.
The camp is limited 10 grades 3Tassy Cummins and Sami Sisson
Senior member of last year's 8 inclusive. Each camper will be
had a double "'d single each, and team
will also be available 10 assist placed with players in his own age
Jodi Caldwell, Jessika Codner, Jen- at camp.
group. •
nifer Cummins and Jennifer
Lawrence each singled.
Racine is now 2-0 on the season.

Cavs name Fratello head coach
'\.

Scoreboard
Chicaao (Here 2-1) at California
(JbthiWl)' 0-0), 10:0! p.m.

.- • Baseball • -

Texu (Pavlik 3-2) aL Sut\lc

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Euaem DI•Won
Team
W L Pet.
Plilladolphia ...........4S 20 .69Z

Nt~wYatk .............. 20

13
14

.49Z

.471

44

Milwaukee C\\:epnan 4-10) at Detroit·
(Wdlo &amp;-1), H5 p.m.
Minnelol.l (Bankl 5-2) at New Yolk
(K&gt;mioniodri 1-1). ' '30 p.m.
Baltimore (Valenzuela 2·6) at
CLEVELAND (Biol-4-5),1 ,35p.m.
Boaon (Darwin 5-6) at Tommo (Stew-

8.5
10

.S38

.453

15.5

.313

24.S

an.l-2), l !lS .P·m..
Kan111 Cit)' {~ppia 7-4) at Oakland

Wt~ltrn

OMdon
' San Franci&amp;eo ..........3 23 .6S2
Atwua ................... 37 30 .55Z
Hounan .................34 Z9 .540
LoaAnaetea ...........34 Z9 .540
CINC!NNATI ........io 36 .455
San Die&amp;o ..............l6 39 .400
Colondo ................ ZI 43 .328

(C. Younal·O}...~ p.m.

6.5
7.5
7.5
13
16..5

·

Sunday's games

Minnoao•utNr;wYmk, 1:30p.m..
Milwaukee at Detroit. l:lS p.m.
Baltimore at Cl.EVEl.AND, 1:35 p.m.
BOilon atToronto,l :35 p.m.
Kanau City at o.klatld, 4:05 p.m.
OUcaao at Calitomia, 4:05 p.m.
Tcu.a at Scaule,. 4 ;35 p.m.

Thursday's scores
Florida 4, Philad
· I
Pit&amp;lbu.tJ,h 6. New o.dl: Z
4, San Diqo I

Today's games
St. Louia (Arocha S-1) aL Chicago
(BoWc().l)), 3,zop.m.
Atlanta· (Smollz: 6-.5) at Montteal (D.
Maninez 6-:5), 7:3.5 p.m.
florida (Bowen .4-6) at Philadelphia
{Riven. .5·3), 7:3.5 p.m..
New York (Youns 0-7) at Pitllburah

(W•-1·3), 7'35p.m.
L01 Anaelea (Candiotd 3-S) at
CINCINNATI t,1laper 1-1), 7:35p.m.
San Frw.nci&amp;co (Biact .5-1) at HOUI\on
(Dnbd&lt; 5.6), a,os pm.
~an Dieao (Grca Hatril ~ 7) at Colondo (Rulf111 3-2), 9:0S p.m.

Saturday's games
St. Louil (Oabomc 4-3) at Chicaao

(Gum&gt;"" f&gt;.5). z,:IO p.m.

New Yol:k Cfanana 4-S) at Pittsburgh

(Noasl• 2-Z), 7,05 p.m.

-

Loa An1~lcs (Hcnhi acr 6-4) at

CINCINNATI (Brownin&amp; J.l), 7:05p.m.
·

Atlanta (Avewy 8-2) It Montreal (Hill
6-1), 7:3Sp.m.

FlMida (Annauona 4-7) at Philadel-

phU (Mulhollond 1·5), BS pm.
· San fnnci&amp;&lt;:o (Bwkdl9·2) at HCJiliiOq
(SwiD&lt;I&lt;ll!-6), S:OS p.m.
San Dieao (Taylor 04) at Colorado
(B!ait Z-4). 9,0! p.m.

Sunday's cames
Aw.nta at Mont.teal, 1:3' p.m.
F1oOda ot P!Woddp!Ua, I ,15 p.m.
Lot: Anad~ at CINCINNATI. l :lS
p.m.
SL l&lt;&gt;uilll QUuoo. z,:IO p.m.

San Franciaeo at HOUitOII, 2:3~ p.m.

:M

3J
37

.S40
.524
.SOl
.484
.477
.468
.393

CALIFORNIA ANGELS : Cltimc:d
Doug Linton,
on waivcn from tbc
Toronto Blue ay1. Optioned Darryl Scott.
~cr•. to VanCOJver
Paeifte Cout

r.·tchcr,

«the
reT..orr nGERS: Activa'ad Rob

Deer, "'ti'IO!clw, fnxn tho 15-doy .U,.blod

Lit\.

•

.

NEW YOJUC. YANX.EES: Activated
Mike Wit~, from the: 15-d.ly dia·

abled liP..
Jim Abboa. pia., em
the: 15·daldUiabW lilt.
OAK AND-ATHLETICS: Plac:c:d
Rick Hooeycut1, pitc:her, on tho lS·day
diublcd litl, :retro~c:tive lO June !5.

Re-

lc:uod Dale: Svc:um, infielder. Recalled
Troy NccL outf1Cldc:r, and Vinco Hanman, pitcher, fRill :t'ac:oma ol tbc P1cifu:

CoutLcap
Jlj'allonal Lu..e

ATI.ANTA BRAVES: Siped Andftl
Kin&amp;, autfic:ldcr, and auiped him
Danville: of tbD Appalac;hiln Lapc.

10

PHILADEI..PHlA PfULUES: Sianed

J01h Wan., Jeff Key, and Brian Co.ldlo,
outfitldcn; Ric:hatd Hunter, pitc:hc:r; fun.
ttlfl Pietftl..t.ow., (ltll bManan; 1nd BIJ)'
FilZpald, cal.cher. P1acod Wa Onmberllin, outfielder, on 1hc 1.5·d•y dilabled
lilt, retroactive to June 16. Recalled
Rubca Amaro, outfidclc:r, from ScnnumWilka Burc the lntemation.t] lMJUe.

or

........CLEVELAND CAVAI..JEJtS: Named
Mike Fnldlo coac:h and slped him

GB
3
4
8
11
12
IS

Wttttl'll Oivlllon

29
30
31
33

Baseball

Amerkan IA&amp;ut

NallonallelketNII ~U.
BOSTON CELTICS : R.c-sjaned
Robert Pari.lh, c:ader, to 1 me-year cmtnC1. N•med Oenni• lohuon auisUint

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eaattm Dlvillon
Team
W L PeL
Oc:ueiL- .................41 2A .631
TOIOOto .................. 39 28 .582
Nc:w Yock .............. 38 29 .561
Bal&amp;imote .............. :33 32 .508
801tm ........... ......... 30 35 .462
Milwau.l!:ec ............. 21 35 .444
CLEVELAND .......26 39 .400

- * Transactions • -

games three times in five years,
including 54 this year; but has been
unable to get over the hwnp in the
playoffs.

Turley pushes
Logan to 13th place
in AAU cagefest
Renee Turley of Racine scored
34 points and had a team-high 21
steals as the Logan Lady Bobcats
tied for 13th place in the state AAU
13-and-under girls' hasketballtournament in Huber Heights.
The Lady Bobcats defeated Nelsonville 55-I6 and Columbus
TAKE/ABC 47-46, but dropped
narrow .decisions to Cincinnati
White (34-32) and the Cincinnati
Flyers (44-41).
·
Cincinnati Black successfully
defended its state title by edging
the Columbus Lions by one point
in Tuesday night's championship
game. Elida finished third, as all
three teams qualified for national
tournament competition in
Knoxville, Tennessee.
The Lady Bobcats, completing
their first season, finished in the
top half of the 38-team, doubleeltmination event.
Turley, the daughter of Ed and
Linda Turley of Racine, sustained a
severe leg injury in the final seconds of the Lady Bobcats' last
game when they lost 10 the Cincinnati Flyers. She averaged 8.5 points
per game, 6.3 rebounds and SJ
steals per game.
Turley made a crucial threepoint bucket with around 20 seconds left to play 10 give Logan a
four-point lead that TAKE/ABC
couldn't overcome,, despite
TAKE/ABC's three-pointer at the
buzzer.

Basketball

San Diego at Colorado, 3:05p.m.
Nc:., Yotk at Pi.u.bwJh, S:OS p.m.

KIJ\IIs Cily ........... 34
Chieaao.................. 33
Califomia ............... 32
Tc::tll ..................... 31
S..ule .................... 31
)(innMCU """'""'"29
Oollind ................ 2&lt;1

Chie~ao (Ruffcom 0-0) u California
(Lorcam 8-l),!O;JS p.m.
Teu~ (BIUt'll 0-3) at Scaal~ (Jotwcn
1-3), 10:0:5 p.m.

Zl

San Francilco i , CINCNNATI l
St. Louil 11, anc.~1o
H(K~Ston

(flcmina

Saturday's cames

GB

.~3

St. Imi1 ................36 2S
MonuW ................ 3S 30
Cbioop..................31 3Z
florido ...................31 34
Ph•bwJh .......,......29 35

1-1),10,35 pm.

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND
(AP) - · Mike
•
Fratello doesn't expect to walk into
the Cleveland Cavaliers' locker
room and command inslant respect
''These are bright people.
They'll watch, and they'll either
say, 'This guy has no clue,' or
'This guy knows what he's talking
about,"' 'Fratello said Thursday
1 after he agreed to a five-year contract as the Cavaliers' new coach.
Fratello, 46, has a lOugh act 10
follow. Lenny Wilkens, the secondwinningest coach in NBA bisiOry,
resigned as Cleveland's coach May
24, a week after the Cavaliers were
swept from the playoffs by the
ChiCago Bulls.
Wilkens has since signed to
coach the Atlanta Hawks, the team
Fratello coached to a 324-250
record during seven ·seasons in the
1980s.
Fratello left the Hawks under
pressure and began a three-year
career as a network television basketball analyst after his I989-90
team went 41-41, a record he considers commendable in light of the
injuries that afflicted that team. The
Hawks won 50 or more games each
of the previous four seasons.
"That was another SO-win
team" had the injuries not
occurred, he said.
Fratello flew to Cleveland on
Thursday morning from Chicago,
where he is working on NBC's
telecasts of the NBA Finals. He
then returned to Chicago for
tonight's fifth game between the
Bulls and Phoenix Suns.
Like Pat Riley, who worked as
an NBC analyst between his coaching stints with the ·Los Angeles
Lakers and New York Knieks,
Frate~o said he could not purge his
system of the coaching bu~ during
· his three years in broadcasung.
In the Cavs, Fratello takes over
a team that has won more than 50

1
2

3.~

4
4.S
9

to

a

five-yearcootna..

Foolboll
NaU..I

root ..ll Leq,..e

HOUSTON On.I!U A..... 14.....,.
with AI Smilh, linc:beclulr. 'lclcuod Da·

ric:lr: Crudup,
quutetback.

~afct)' ,

and Mike Power,

INGELS CARPET
·warehouse Sale!
.

•Carpet•••••••••••••• Starting at

$499

sq. yd.

' that Mitchell somehow got around
on. Clay10n didn't have a chance.
"It just wasn't meant to be
today, as far as the no-hitter, "
manager ,Dusty Baker said.
That was the only hit Swift
allowed in eight innings. He gave
up a sacrifiCe fly later in the inning,
then took the ninth off. Kevin
Rogers finished the Giants' eighth
victory in 10 games.
Williams led the offense with a
pair of doubles and a homer off
John Smiley (3-9), one of his
favorite pitchers. ,Williams is 13 for
28 lifetime againSt the left-bander
with six homers.
"I don't know whr. I don't
want 10 think about it,' Williams
said. "He got a couple Of pi~ehes
up in the strike zone and over the
plate. That makes you a better hit. ter."
While the Giants left Riverfront
buoyed, the fifth-place Reds are
starting to become hopeless. They
needed 10 sweep San Francisco 10
get back into the NL West race, but

wound up losing ground. Now they
trail by a season-high 13 games.
Manager Davey Johnson held a
team meeling after the gl!llle.
' 'I told them not to be discouraged, " Johnson said. "By all
rights, we should be be.tter than we
are. I just 10ld them to relax and let
me do the worrying.''
But even Johnson seemed a little ·dazed after losing the series. He
stood behind his desk and told
reporters: "It'll change,just as sure
as I'm sitting here . ... Uh, s!3Dding
here.''

Sports briefs .
Tennis
MANCHESTER, Enj!land (AP)
- Second-seeded Henrik Holm of
Sweden defeated eighth-see!led
Guillaume Raoux of France (i-4, 36, 6-1 and fourth -seeded Wally
Masur of Australia beat Jeremy
Bates of Britain 6-4,6-3 10 advance
to a semifinal match in the Manchester Open.

Adams Memorial tonight
· Skyline Speedway in Stewan hosts the annual Bob Adams Sr.
Memorial Race for Late Model Stock Cars today.
Warm-ups will be at 6:30 p.m. Racing will start at 7:30p.m. for
the $2,000 10 win evenL
·
Bob "Bobby Joe" Adam.s Sr. was the father of Racine's Bob
Adams Jr., perennial champion at Skyline. The elder Adams w()n
!he last race he ever ran before being stricken with a heart attitck
following the race. His memorial has been established as one of the
biggest races in the Tri-Siate, a great tribute 10 the man it honors.
Last week, Skyline's racing surface was one of the fastest of the
year as Bill Childers of St. Mary's, W.Va. caught Larry Bond in
IBP.ped traffic before charging on for the win with Bond right on his
tall.

\

.

sq. yd.

• Boat Carpet...~ .•••~.......At s6" sq. .yd.
MANY NEW REMNANTS IN STOCK
••

CARPET
INTRODUaORY LOW PRiaS • FREE ESnMATESIU

INGELS CARPET

••••,ort, OH.

175 II. 2111 Awe. •
614-992·7021

Members of Harrisonville
Lodge No. 411 F &amp; AM have sponsored two athletes 10 the Ohio Specia! Olympics State Summer
Games. The event will be held at
the Ohio State University in
Columbus· from June 25-27. In all,
3,200 athletes with mental relarda- ·
lion from across the state will take

Several events were planned
when Rock Springs Grange met
recently.
Meigs County Pomona Grange
win have inspection July 2.
Rock Spnngs Grange will visit
Harrisonville Grange on July 16.
On Aug. 5 Rock Springs will have
inspection.
Opal Grueser gave a legislative
report on several issues.
Barbara Fry, CW A, announced
that she still has entries for contests.

Fishing derby Saturday
1'he Meigs County Fish and Game Society win bold its ftsbing
derby in Pomeroy Saturday from 8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. for children I5
years old and younger. Admission is free.
All participants are 10 bring a pole and bait. No minnows arc
allowed. Prizes are 10 be awarde&lt;\. ·

Men's soft~all tourney Saturday

The Middleport Child Conservation League met recently at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church. Guest speakers were Ellen
and Jerry Rought on the subject ol
M.A.p.D.
M.A.D.D. was started by the
mother of a child who was killed
by a drunk driver in 1980. To date,
28 local chapters are in the State. A
video geared toward children was
shown and questions were· asked
about the video. Rought said a first
time offender of DUI loses his or
her license for 90 days, the second
time offender loses their vehicle for
30 days, the third time offender
loses their vehicle for 60 days and
the fourth time offender forfeits
their vehicle.

Football, basketball camps continue
Southern football camps and basketball camps will continue
throughout next week, Monday, June 21 to Friday, June 25 as will
the ~vening football camp at Eastern High School. For further informauon, please contact the various schools.

Zides to sponsor softballjest
Zides SP.Ons Shop will be holding a Class D &amp; E Slate- and
world-qualtfyine USSSA softball IOumament July 17-18 at Marietta, home of the Zides franchise, which will give away numerous
sporting gbods 10 the lOp fmishers.
.
First place will receive 15 Wilson gloves, second-IS team Windbreakers, third-IS travel bags, and fourth-IS T-shirts. All attire will
be printed in team colors of your choice. 1
,
•
The entry fee is $I25. Contact Ken Offenberger at 374-2943 or
Fred Cross at 428-5899.

·
The Harrisonville Lodge also
participates in programs such as
Adopt a High"':ay, Fri~nd's Nig~t.
Father-Son Naght, Fmger Pnnt
Children Day, Masonic Home Support, EndQwment Scholarshtp ·
Fund, and the District Association
Picnic.

A discussion was held on fair
exhibits by Bunny Kuhl and she
asked for items needed for the fair
booth.
'
Bunny Kubl, lecturer, presented
the program. Readings were br,
Helen Blackston, "Fresh Start;'
"There is Someone Needing You"
by Nancy Radford; "House Wife"
by Pat Holter and "!!right Sayings"
by Bunny Kuhl.
Refreshments were served by
Helen and Harold Blackston.

A donation was made 10 MADD
byMCCL.
Linda Broderick lead the group
in "Pled~e of Alle§iance" and the
"Mother s Prayer.' Rolf call was
answered with "Our Hope for
Future Mothers."
Nancy Morris .gave devotions
"Special Gift" and "A Small Boy's
Prayer."
A donation was given to the
RoCk Springs Church for the use of
the building.
Refreshments of ice cream,
cookies and soft drinks were' served
tci members and guests: Ginger ·
Darst, Keith Oars~ Christie Mash,
and R.D. Snider.
The hostess gift and traveling
prize were won by Kelli Snider.

Hysell bestKOPS loser

Camp ofChamps _setfor mid-July
The Marietta College baseball sta!I will host the 1993 Camp of
Champs, a baseball fundamentals camp, on the Marietta College '
campus.
There will be two resident/commuter camps for players ages 101~ from July 1110 July I6 and from July 18 10 July 23. Day camp
wtll also be held from June 2810 July I for players eight 10 14 years
old. A weekend bauery camp (pitchers and catchers) for players age
131018 wiD beheld fromJune25 IOJune 27.
Don Schaly and assistants Jeff Scbaly and Rick Hatfield will be
camp instructors and advisers. Camp cost is $170 for commuters
and $220 for residents.
For further information, call Hatfteld at 6I4-374-4673.

·.

Julia Hysell was best KOPS
loser when Ohio TOPS Club No.
570 met recently. Judy Laudcrmilt
and Maida Long were best TOPS
1
Sh
M
osers. aron atson was runnerup. Debbie Hill won the gadget gift.
Peggy vining won the fruit basket.
Phyllis McW!illan was the best
loser for the month of May.
Sharon Matson lost 18 pounds
in a six-week contest and the total
,· h
f th
132
•v,1g l 1oss or c group was
ond three-quarter pounds.
An article on summer ·cookouts
~as read by Debbie Hill. .
At another weekly meetmg of
.he group Jan1ce Curry was best
oser and Donna Jacks was runn7r:
Jp. Best tee~ loser :was He1d1
DeLong. V1rg1ma Whatlatch won
the fruit basket and Julia ~ysell,

b~st KOPSloser, won the gadget
glfL
· .
d
There was a gam of I7 poun s
and loss of 33 and one-quarter
pounds.
.
Peggy Vining read a dieters
prayet'l Debbie Hili presented a
program on me~surmg foods and
the ~tfference .•n fat !!rams and
calomsper se~mg s1ze m cereals.
Vlrgmla Whltlall:h was presente.d an award for losmg SIX consecuuve weeks.
Bernice Durst was presented a
f b
·
·
ed
corsage or ecommg a remstat
KO.fh'e group meets every Tuesday
from 5-7 p.m. at the Carpenters
Hall in Pornc:roy. Call Debbie Hill, .
949-2763 or Wanda Faulk, 9925638 for information.

Wildwood Garden Club has meeting

SUNDAY BRUNCH
AT OSCAR'S

Sunday, June 20, 10 A.M.·2 P.M.

Ma•y B.reakfast Items Plus
Our Famous Lu•ch Buffet!

Oscar's Restaurant
'sg COURT ST.

GAWPOUS,OH.

446-9545

The Wildwood Garden Club
met recently at the home of Evelyn
Ho!Ion.
·
Janet Theiss opened with devotions reading "The Spring Calendar" by Helen Steiner Rice. For roll
call everyone was 10 name the prel·
tiest garden they have seen.
fathryn Miller, president, read
an 1nvitation from the Chester Garden Club's opening meeting at the
Chester United Methodist Church
and a thank you from th.e Mei~s
County Park District for the contn·
bution to the Sugar Run S':hool
project.
Evelyn HoUon presented a video
of the many beautiful and unusual
collections of "House on the
Rocks" which she toured on a
vacation trip to- Sprina Green, Wis.
She a\10 had the report on tho Red
Bud, a favorite onwnent in ev.-y
yard since they ue hardy and a colorful mass of lavender in early
spriqg. Bean-like pods follow the
nowers in late summer ami they

Meredith Felts arid Marjorie Halar. Back row,
Dave B.own, Marissa Whaley, Mall Milhoan,
Shawn White, Eric Jarvis, Tricia Davis and
Anna Story.

pan in the event.

MADD Middleport CCL topic ·

The Coolville Baseball Association will be hosting a men '.s soft•
bali tournament Sawrday and Sunday at 9 a.m. in Coolville.
The D and E classification is a double-elimination affair with a
$65 entry fee and two balls. There will be eight teams only on a
first-come, fmt serve basis.
Call6I4-{i67 -6852 for reservations.

TRElT YOUR Ji'ATIDR

CONCERT PRESENTED - Salisbury Ele·
mentary recenll;r held Its spring band concert
under the dlreclton of Dave Bowen, instrumental Instructor. Pictured are Leeann Dill, Morgan
Mathews, Tiffany Harder, Brooke Singlelo,n,
Public Notice

Events planned by
Rock Springs Grange

.

Bond and Childers were consistently clocked at record times in
the mid 10 high 12-second range.
•
Ken Riddle, Bob Adams, Butch McGill, and Andy Bond rounded out the fmish.
Aaron Fleming lOOk the Limited Late main, Doug Henry claimed
the UMP modifieds, Cliff Whitely the four-cylinders, and Tom
Morrisson of Athens the Pure SIOCks.
·
Coming up July 2 is the Mid-Season Championships in an divisions.
·

Jus

Burrls, 3,000 hours; Ml'll. Mildred Fry, 3,000
hours, and Mrs. 'Vinas Lee, 1,000 hours. Others
earning awards were Mrs. Sara Collums, 2,000
hours; Mrs. Mildred Hudson, 1,000 hours, with
a 50-hour patch to be awarded to Mrs. Becky
Mankin.

Masons support
Special Olympics

.---Meigs sports briefs

TO .

•Kitchen Carpel............ At 5795

RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE • Several
members of tbe Women's Auxiliary at Veterans
Memorial Hospital were honored Tuesday afternoon for long-time volunteer service. Receiving
award pins from Hospital Administrator Scott
Lucas from the left are Mrs. Jessie White,
13,000 hours or volunteer service; Mrs. Clara

prefer a sandy-loamy_ soil and grow
,
Doris Grueser gave a garden tip
to check holly trees for the troublesome pest the holly leaf miner. The
adult will lay eggs in merely
expanded leaves and are most
numerous when the leaves are
about an inch long. This is usually
around mid-May. This is the ideal
time to control thiS pest and to
prune forsythia and lilac before the
buds form for next spring.
'
Mrs . Grueser also had the
arrangement of the month using
yellow roses, feverfew and boxwood in a white baskel
Specimen exhibiu by Dorothy
Smith included a black ins, by Mrs. ·
Miller a1 black and peach ins and
by Mrs. Hollon a red and white
peace rose.
The rnectlna concluded with tho
hostess servina a de.uen coune
and Kathryn Miller won the door
prize.
10 a height of 10 10 30 feet.

RECENT GRADUATE·
Rhonda R. Rathburn, of Midd.leport, rec·enlly ~raduated
from The Universaty of Rio
Grande with an associate of
applied· business degree with a
specialization In accounllng.
Rhonda is the daughter of
Linda Rathburn, of Pomeroy
and the granddaughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Herschel Gilkey, of
Cheshire

Awarded gift certificates
This Mother's Day brought
Ruth Young, of Middleport, something special.
Shoney's Reslaurants awarded
Young $100 worth of Shoney's gift
certificates after she was selected
as one of five consolation prize
winners in the Shoney's Mother~s
Day Sweepstakes.
Young said entered the contest
at the Shoney's in Parkersburg,
W.Va. and was surprised when she
received the calllelling her that she
had won.
The grand prize winner, who
lives in Osceola, Ark., has won her
choice of an expense-paid Mexican
or Caribooan cruise for two.
·

Four from Meigs
graduate from OU
Four Meigs Countians received
degrees from Ohio University at
the end of winter quarter.
They were Randy T. Simmons,
Coolville, doctor of philosophy;
Sherry Renne Cooper, Middleport,
graduating with honors with a
bachelor of science in nursing;
Kathryn Sue McCann, Pomeroy,
bachelor of science in education;
Jeffery Hugh Sayre, Coolville,
bachelor of science in industrial
technology.

Holman on honor list
Mountain State College
announces that Denise Holman, of
Middlepon, was on the honor list
for the winter quaner. In order to
be on the list, Holman· had to
achieve between a 3.0.and a 3.5
grade poiflt average for the quarter.
COLONY THt:.ATRE
FRI. THAU THURS.
CHUCK NORRIS IN
SIDEKICKS PG

IHOWnMII

FAt., lAT., IUN. 7:10, 1:30

MON. THIIII THUAI.
ONIIVINHG IHOW 7:311
ADIIIIIION 11.10- 44t DIU

Putillc Notice

PubliC Notlee

Public Notice

Common Pteila Court, I will
PUBUC NOnCE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
BID SPECIFICATIONS
offer lor sole at public
COURT OF MEIGS
FOR ISSUE 2 PROJECT II auction altho front atopo of
COUNTY, OHIO
SAUSBURY TOWNSHIP,
the Courthouoe of Meigs
BANK ONE, ATHENS, NA
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
County, Pomeroy, Oh lo on
Plaintiff
Bid propooala lor all work the 23rd day of July, 11183,
vs
daacrlbed herein will be ot 10:00 A.M. lha following
CARLA SMITH, .. al.,
llefandlllla recoivtd by the Board of -crlbod real •lito:
Truat.. o of Sallabury
Shualllln tho Townthlp of
CaH No. 113 CV-141
NOnCE BY PUBUCAnON Townahlp In the ollie• ollhe Columbia, County of Melga
TO: THE UNKNOWN. Helrw, clerk, 463 Hooker Strut, ond Stale of Ohio:
Middleport, Ohio until 4:00
Beginning for reference at
N••t ol Kin, DevlaHo,
P.M. on the 5th day of July the lnteraectlon of the
Leg•-· Admtnlalralorw,
1993. The bids will be center of State Route No.
Executora, Paraonal
opened on tho 5th day of 143 and Road No. 5; being
RepreMnllliVH, and ·
A11lgno ol Dollie L Smllh, .July and reed otoud lor the the Norlhweot corner of a
.75 acre tract owned by
following lob:
Deceaaecl, narnea and
• T-165 (Baney Run Road) uura P. Krebo, being Parcel
addrotl . . ~mtcnown.
Three (3) deecrlbed In Deed
YOu are hereby notified SR-124 or SR-143
Each bidder mual file . a Book 211; !'ape 251; thence
that you have bNn named
Delondanla In a togatacllon 10% performance bond at South 59 dog. 15' eaat
entilled Bank One, Alttena, the limo ollh• bidding and aboul 266.5 leol along tho
NA, va. Carta Smith, el aL tho IUCCIIIIIU! bidder ·mull center ol Stale Route No.
Thla action hoi boon fit• a 100% performance 143 to a oteet pin; thence
a11igned Cue No. 113-CV- bond. A lellor "labllohtng South 33 dog. Woot 126.5
146 and Ia pending in tho certified Une of crtdil, in the fMII!&gt; a hodge lance on the
Common Plaao Court ol 1tated amount, from a bll'lk South llno of the oaid .75
Maiga County, Ohio, Court doing bualn••• within the acre tract to a ateel rodi
Street, Pomoroy, Ohio ocope of Ohio Banking thence North 65 dog. Wool
Lawa will be accepted 11 265 feel along the hodge
45769.
The object ol tha complying with the bonding fonca 1o the center of Road
·
No. 5; lhonce North 32 deg.
Complaint Ia judgment requirementl.
Aa a preroqulalte lor E11t 153 feet along the
a!l"inat the Delandanta in
the oum ol-$8,760.65, wllh bidding, only aerllflod center of Road No ~ 5, to
lntarullhoreon at a rate of minority buolneae enler- place of beginning,
S3.34 per day, from May 10, priH contractor• that are containing .53 acres, more
19113, and colla of lhlo quallllod ODOT BIDDERS. o.r leao, after excepting all
action; thatlha Mort!l"ue be witt be conotdored lor the legal rlghto-ol-way and
aaaementa of record.
forectooed and that the r•urfaclng work.
The oucceaolul coniJactor
Thla root eolllle being the
Iiana andfor lntaruta In or
on oakl property, II any, be may bo required to furnloh oamo real eotate that wao
marahatted and the real any tab work u raqulrod b' excepted from the deed
convoyed by Lauro P. Kreba
eatate quieted and aald the Moigo County Ell{lln-.
property aold In tho The env~ope containing to Lillie Rupe by deed dalod
forecloaura action and all lha bid mual ·be marked October 31, 1969 and
amounta duo Plaintiff bo 41 Reaurfaclng l11ue 2 recorded in Vol. 240, Page
paid flom tho procHda or Projecr. Bid apocificaliono 102i, on the Deed Recorda,
the sale, coola and ouch may be picked up al lho Melg• County, Ohio, of
othe1 rotiel 11 may bo Satiabury Townahip Clerk'o which releronca Ia hereby
neceaoary •d proper.
. Olfico, 463 Hooker SlrH~ "made.
Excepllng all coat and
You are hereby raqulrtd Mldcllopor~ Ohio.
Tha Board of Trust- of other mineral reservation•
·to anower the Complaint
within lwonly-oighl (21) Sallabury Township, Melgo and all leaae1, If any, on
daya after tha tat County, Ohio reaorve tho .record In the Recorder's
publicallon ol lhla nollco right lo accopl 01 relect any Office, Meige County, Ohio.
Last prior conveyance:
which will bo published or all blda and/or any part
once a week lor olx (6) thereof and wilt accept tha Volume 327, P- 63, Moiga
County Died Rocorde.
IUC:C8111VI WHkl. The Jaat beat bid lor the Intended
Said real e•tate located
publication witt be made on purpooe.
at: 29539 Sl. Rl. 143,
the 16th day of July, 11193, Approved By:
ond tho twenty-eight (28) Robert H: Eason, PE., P.S., Albany, Ohio 45710.
Melgo County Engineer
The property appralaed
dayo for onawarlng will
Richard
Baltay,
Clerk
for
$1,166.00 and cannot be
commence on that date. In
Board of TruaiHa of ootd for toao than •/, (lwocaae of your failure to
Satlobury Townohlp lhirdo) of the appraised
anewer or otherwlae
(6j18,
25,
2tc .
value.
reopond aa raquired by the
Torma of Sate: 10'11. caah
Ohio Rutoa of Civil
or
cer.llfiod check, day of
Public Notice
Procedure, judgmant by
aale
and balance on
default will bt randorad
doilvory
of dead.
PUBUC NOTICE
all"inat you lor the relief
•Jellray
L
Simmona/
dM11111dod In tha Complaint The Vinton County
Ptoinllff N. Robert Grillo
Dattd thia 7th doy of National Bank,
Anorneyalor Plaintiff
VI.
June, 1913.
VInton County National
Larry E. Spen-, Dennio R. Glllone, et al.,
·
Defondanta Bonk
Clerk of Court
Jamu M. Soulsby,
C11o
No.
92
CV 272
Moiga County, Ohio
Meigs County Sheriff
Purau1nt to 1n Order of
6) 11, 18, 25;
7) 2, 9, 16, 61c
Silo lrom the Metga County (6j18, 25; (7) 2, 9, 16, 31c

PUBUCNOnCE
The lotlowinll wore recoivodlprep•ed by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agancy .(Ot:PA) lui WMk.
Eflocllve dates of ltnot
acllona and laauanct dat•
of propoatd actions and of
draft acllono are alated.
Fino! ocllona may h
appealed, In writing, wllhln
30 daya of the date of lha.
notice, to The Envlronmentw

ol Board of Review, Am. 300,
236 E. Town St, Columbus,
OH., 43215. Notice of any
appeal thai! be flied with the
director within 3 doye.
Propoaed

moetill{l regarding any draft
oction within 30 dayt of tho

date Indicated• .,Action", as
uaed abova doea nOt

Include receipt of a verified
complaint llalgnlllcllll public intereat exiata, a public

m"ting may be held. As to

any action, including r~~eelpt

of verified comptalnta, any
poroon may obllltn notice of
further actiona, and addi-

lionot Information. Unlua
olhorwioe provided In
Notlcea

of

particular

acllono, all communication•
aholl be ..nt lo: Hearing
Clork, OEPA, P. 0. Bor 1049,
Cotumbua, OH.; 43266-01411
Ph. 1614) 644-2115. Conault
ORC Chap. 3745 and OAC
Chapo. 3745-47 and 374&amp;-5
for requirement..

Final

iuuance

Huntington U. S. Army
Corp• of Engineer•

Reodoville, OH.
Effective Dale: 0&amp;'011193
Receiving Wat•a:

Forked Run
Thia final action not preceded by proposed action and
io appealable to EBR.
Pertain• to 401 Certlflcallon,
grant,

pertain•

to

Huntington DiaiJicl Corpa of
Enginoero Public Notice (H)

113-20.

(6118, 1tc

(Continued
on Page 7)

You'll be floating on a cloud with
· the buys you'll find in the
clossi(ieds.
GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

204 Concloi' St

SPillI
Mon.-Fri. 11:00-5:00
Sllf.I:00-12:00

a111

GIIVIIIY
IYI.,DI
June 21-25
9:15am-12:00

Church of Christ
.

of

certification:

!

For more
Information
call
992·2914

will

aubmit comments 1ndlor 1

!that Main

MJddleport, OH 45760
co'!le hear about "the Story Telling Man"

•
#

actiona

become ftnal unl•a a writ·
len adjudicallon heoring
raquaat lo oubmittod within
3() days of the luuanco
dolo; or tho director revtaoalwithdrawa the propoaed
oction. Any penon may

�•

Ohio

Sentinel

Frldlly, June 18, 1993

Bl Ll 1'. II\ BO \ Rl&gt;
IUWftl lOIII DIIDUII
4:30 '· M.
• DIY IEFORE
' PUIUCiftOI

..

DI
..._ ...

OJ. Whir&amp; Rl. olf 5I. l!.L 160

r .,., Cllolrdl or Oorlol
lll w. Maio Sl.

Saodasr Scllool- 10 .....

w- Ooardt orCiorllt
33~ Qilcnn'a Homo ltd.
..

Cheller

Puler: Guy !linea
Sonclay School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhi -6p.m . .
Weclneadoy ~ : 1 p.111.

E p1scopJI

Middleport Clturdo of Chrlat
Slh_.Main
Po-. AI HaiUCII

WonhipCi :IS, J()-.30 IJD., 7 p.m.
Wodneldoy Savices-7 p.m.
K.,.o Clourdl ofC~rllt
Worship • 9:30a.m. .
SuDday School - I0:30a.m.

•
''

Rutlud Flnt Baptlat Churcll
Sunday Scbool· 9-.30 a.m.

l

l·

ll

Pomaoy,HarrilclnvilleRd. (RLI43)

Putor:R.... w......

Sunday School - 9:30a.m,
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
WeGlelday Savioes - 7 p.m.

"'-:Tom R'"'f'll
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship • I 0:30a.m.

Putor: B. L.amar O'Beyant

Sunday School - 9:30a.m. ·
Worahlp ·10:43 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Walncaday SeMocl ' 7:00p.m.
Pint Boplllt Churcll
6th and Palmer&amp;.
Panor. Rev. Jamea A. Seddon
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip · 10:15 LUI., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.· 5:30p.m.
Lon!'• s...-111 Sunday of...., monlh.
Woclilosday SeMce· 7:00p.m.

!;'

I

Putor: Bill Uule

s-lay Scbool · IO..m.

Wonllip • lla.m.,7:30
_ J p.m.
Wednaday SeMcea· 7:30p.m.

Clta"" .,

Mt.UolooBos:,

SL J • Lullloru Cllllrcll

. Pino Grove

Pulor: Cleora• Weirick
Wanhlp • ~:30 a.m.
Sunday Scbool - 10:3j) a.m.
Our .S a - Llllllorll CltWalnutandHauySU.,Ra-wood, W.Va.
eo._...: Rnva. Ridwd A.

CometS~ A. SecaDd SL, Pomeroy

Dcuer

P-.·a - . Weiridc
Sunday Schacl. 9:45 a.m.
Wonltlp- II a.m.

P.-: Woody can
Sunday Bwnina - 6:30_p.m.
Thunclay Setvice - 6:30 p.m.

..._.a.

Cltrlall• Clourdl
Sunday School - 9:30 .....
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WednesdaySeMCII7:30p.m.
c ..... Chordl

Chadea Domipn

Sunday ac:bool • 10:30 a.m.
Wonhlp - 9:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
RoecJmlle Churcll of Chrlol
Pbilip9:30
Slunn
. Sunday
Sc:bool:
o.m.
Wonhip SeMce: 10:30 a.m.
BibleSiady, W..........,y,6:30p.m.

Panor. J - E. K.....

·. Wonhip -IOo.m., 7 p.m.
We+eaday SeMoca • 7 p.m.

Un1tcd rv1Ptllod1st

G - U.IIM Mz": II
WonhQ&gt;- 9:30a.m. (I at A. 2lnd SWI),
7:30p.m. (3niA 4lh S...)
Wednesday SeMce ·7:30p.m.
I

ML 01... Ullltld Mlllllodlal
Off 12A behind wru....w.
r.-:ChadNJ-.
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunclay !lorW:u • 7 p.m.
Mlip CaoptndYI Parllll
N..-.CIIAifnd

Pastor: SlwmHausman
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Chnst1an Un1on
H - Cloll'dl of Chrlollo
CllrlallaiiUniGa
Putor: Tber&lt;&gt;n llwtllm
s...c~ay School · 9:30a.m.
· - Bw:nina-7p.m.
Wednesday SeMca · 7 p.m.

Fallll Bopllot Clourdl
Rai1tood Sl., Maaon
Sunday School- ID a.m.
W011hip • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednelcfay SeMoet · 7 p.m.
Fanat Run Boptlat
Putor : Ariut Run
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

Wonhip- 9:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.

. Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

ML Morlllt Cllurcll of God
Racine

Putor: Rev. Jo.mea Sauelfield
Sunday Sc:bool - 9:45a.m.
Evmina - 7 p.m. .
W..u-day Semoca -7 p.m.

Rlltlud Fno Will Boptlol
SalemSI.
Putor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

llulland Church of God
I'IA«: I&lt;&gt;M F. Coroonn
S!""':'r School - 10 a.m.
~%; II a.m., 7 p.m.
W
SeMca : 7p.m.

s - . - 7p.m.
W-.Joy s.m- - 7 p.m.

Sfnc:uM Churdl ot God
Apple and Seoond SU.
PallOr. Rev. David RUIIell
Sunday School and Wonhip- 9:30 a.m.

Catt1ot1c
Socrad Bean Co- Churdl
161 Mulberry AYe., Pcxneroy, 992·5898
Paator: ReY. Waller E. Heinz
. SaL Coo. 4:45-S :ISp.m.: Man· 5:30p.m.

Shanln Hausman

Wonbip • 9 a.m.
Sunday Schoal - lO a.m.
Thunday SeMces • 7 p.m.

w-,

Other Churctles
lodllloo u- ofPnJer
(It BurJinabam dlurdl oft Roucc 33)
Pua:llobertVmce
s-Jay WOilhip • 10 o.m.
Wedneaday aemoo ·6:30p.m.

Putor: Anlmr~

s-ea•

TrlokJ con.,......_l Cllurcll
Putor: Rev. Rolond Wildman
Churdt • 9:15 a.m.
WOnhip- I0:30a.m.

l'ua:Ronl'ioR:e
Sunday Sdtoal • 9: IS a.m.
Wonhip - IO:U a.m.

Bvenin&amp;Semcea· 7p.m.
Wednclday Servica - 7 p.m.

SWI. Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Swt. Mau · 9:30 a.m.
Dailey Mus · 8:30a.m.

ne Solnlloll AnnJ
liS Buuamut Ave.• Pcnieroy.
Sunday Sc:bool- 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip -!O:OOa.m., 7:30p.m.
Middleport c ...moniiJ Cllurcll

Paator: Kamodlllaku
Stmday Sdlool- 10 a.m.

m Pead Sl., Middlcp,on
Putar: Sam AndonOn
Sunday School 10 am.

Won!Dp - 9 a.m.
' ·• Wednaclay Servic:ea • 10 a.m.

l!venin_l-7:30 p.m.
Wod-.ySeMce· 7:30p.m.

c.MII
Poator: Kenneth Baker
SuocJay Scbool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - lb:4S a.m. (2nd A 4lh S...)

Filth To........ CHrcll
llalJoy -Rood
1'.-. Rev.·. . . Rawaon
SuocJay Sc:bool- 10:00 a.m.
l!venina 7 p.m.
Thunclay Semce ' 7 p.m.

M...ln&amp;SIIr
. Parur. Kenneth Baker

·'

s,nlaue MJ1411 BricJaeman Sl., Syrocuae
1'.-. Roy (Mike) ThcJntpaon
Sunday Scbool- IOa.m.
~!wain&amp; . 6. p.m.
WocMuday ferrice -7 p.m.

Eut Lolart
•
PallOr: RoaerGSunday SchOol - ID a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

....

Hliael ConwuolcJ Clturdo
. otrRL 124

Putar: BdMI Han

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
WQ!Ihip- 10:30.a.m., 7:30p.m.

PallOr: RoaerGnee
Sunday Sdtoal · 10 a.m:
Wonhip - lla.m.

'
o,..... c.... unlcJCioorch

Luurll Cllll' ..._ Me«• a 1111 Cltorcll
Putor: Tremhl.ay
S101day Sdtoal • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Semcea. 7 p.m.

•

w.........,

Rullud 111111 Me!hodlat
Pa-=Rev. JvanMyen .
Sunclay Sdtoal· 9:30a.m.
Bw:nina - 7p.m.
Wednaday SeMoca • 7 p.m.

J"Ppl

PuiAif: B...... Weber

Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
- 10:30
a.m.
·7:30p.m.
W=xay SeMc:ea
PallOr: Rev. Seldon Iolwl100
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
W..u-day S.Mocl ·7:30p.m.

Caohlll Clourcll

Main • Fifth 51.

Sunday Sc:bool · ID a.m.
W~·9a.m.

-Cioolrdl
ToWDihip ltd., 46IC

W

Uollad Foltlo Chlb. 7 op Pomc..,Y By-P11a
Putor: Rev. Robon B. Smilll, Sr. '
Sunday Sc:hod - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
w-.y Service - 7 p.m.

Wonbip • 9:30a.m.
·
I at &amp; 3nl Stinday : 7:30p.m.
, Sonclay School· 10:30 a.m.
Wednelday Serric:a ·7:30p.m.

Fui~LIIh-

3304511iland Rood, Fuueroy
Pa-=RoyH...IIIr
Sunday Sdlool · 10 a.m.

To,.... Ploloa St. Pal

B-a7:30p.~~~ .

--Hau-

Sunday Scbool'· 9 a.m.
. Wonhip - IOa.m.
Tuesday llefvicea ·7:30p.m.

We+

~.n\:30p.m .

MldthpitC..rdi.rti..N...-..e
Po-. O..orv A. Cuoitiff
Sunday Sc:liool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp - 10:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
w.........,_s.mcea-7p.m.

lond, Ohio,

Port-

Aoben E. luck

Probata~

(I) 4,11, 11

....__

HAULING
SIODGWS'
UPHOUTERY

MONDAY, JUNE 21
81o8p.m.

UCIII,OIIO
K8elpta1 You To
Reaover Your
· laveefaaeDt"

Cl'lef's Galley

614-742·2996

Upper River f!_oad, Gallipolis ·
446·8154

Cai•III'J Bible Churdl
ru ... oy Pike, eo. ltd.
PallOr: Rev. Black_..
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
WodneldaySeMce ·7:30p.m.

House Special:

SHRUI
TRIM and
UMOVAL

Baby Bacl. Rib$ prepared in
our special Barbeque Sauce
Our Lounge Features.

Fallll Fil-Ip Cr.llldo for Clorlol
·

•LIGHT HAULIN~ ·
•FIREWOOD

FREE
Country Uned Dancing
Ever)' Thursday.

c....., l'llpl• Chlpol

HarriamYille Rood
P¥10f: Rev. Victor Roush

Sunday Scbool9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · II l.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednaday s.m.. · 7:30p.m.

Rill Eltltt Gtneraf

S t l - Word of Faltlo

Place your
today'
hold out
_.your hand ...
Clo~oilied

EBLIN'S ELECTRIC

24 HL UIIIGIICY SlmCE

New Wiring, Rewiring,
Trouble~Shootlng .

LIMESTONE,
GUYEL &amp; COAL
Rtasoaaltle

.....

JOE I. SAYRE
SAYRE TRUtiiiG
614·742·2138
3-4-83· 1 mo.

LlcensltiL lnswell &amp; lonlltll

BILL SlACK
992-2269

CALL 992·6123

USED RAILROAD TIES

Service

Reasonable Rates
Dependable

'

(614) 742·2345

LINDA'S
.PAINTING

Paa10r: L a - Ponmian
Sunday Scbool· I 0 a.m,
Wednelday SemCe&amp; . 7 p.m.

INTERIOR .
FREE .ESTIMATES
Take the pain out ol
pointing. Let me do It
lor you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

.. ~ ofJ- cllrlo(

IIWBR PROBLEMS

$25.00

CALL614·992·7878

FOREVER
,IRONZE

Tanks, leach Lines
Repair &amp; Installation

'l'lclltnlllt ltl.
lldH

Apootolk Fait•
1/4 mile po111'9fl Meia• on New J.ima ltd.
Paator: Willilm Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.

205 North Second INa.
Middleporl, OH

W~eld.w-7:00p.m.

Friday-1:00p.m.

949·2826

Clifton, W.VL

RUTLAND ,.flow Urno Rood - Spociouo lol, 3'/, IC,.I
in lown or./ 1 eule glngetb!Md t~mmod 1'/, olory homo
wilh 3 bodroomo, 3 IIO!dteo and equipped kik:hen which
h.ll~
Fo""'rly $1!8,000.
'
Now Anlloble II 121,000.:

Sunclay Sdtoal · 10 a.m.
Wonbip · 7 p.m.
Thunclay SeMce -7 p.m.

,......led.

Pentecost&lt;tl

AOCKIIPAINQS ROAD - An older home with tho
downotolro complellly .ranovalod. Hu on onormoua
liviR$1 room with 2 baY. windowo and a nlco olona
firoptaco. Tho bMUiild kilehen hlo naw cablnolo willian
loland, 3 bod-.o with largo walk·ln cloula, dl~ing
room, wropa.,und porch, ond many oulbuilclngo, lining
on 1•1. acre1.
.
SIS,~

Poo-A
~Jr .
St. RL 12A, Racine
Put..: Willi.. Hoback
Sunday School - 10 un.
Evenin!;=Wedneaday
.
- 7 p.m.

'

MDOLEPORT - Mill Slr•t - A handyman'• apacial. 2
loll and a five room houu with 2-3 bodrooma. Noodo
quite o bil 01 work inoide, bul lhe oUioida looko p,.lly

1'bird Ave.
Po-. Rev. a..t Baller
·10a.m,

nice.

.

sa.oaa

CO...ERCIAL LOT - Pomeroy - Atlho comor of Main
St,...l and Spring Avo. A g,.ot locallon tor UnoalllfY
good buoinooo. Apptox. 88 loot
on Mlln SlrHI
ond 182 teol on Spring Stmet. AI utilili" oV11ioblo..

Iron•

'

MIODLEPORT - Soulh 5th - A 1'/, aiOry 3-4 bedroom
homo with fen..cl yard and cenlnll llir, II you wanl lhe
convenlonea of liV111g in lown, you boller l09k 11 lhra
homo.
S32,11011

Middleport Pnob)'ltrlao

Sunday Scbool - 10 o.m.
Wonbip ·II a.m.,4p.m. (I•A.3nJSun,)

,

POIEAOY- Old Union Avo. - Two big lots with a 61111
over '/• ..,.. Allho end of !he 101111 silo a 1983 Cloylon
doublewldo with 3 bodroomo. 2 bollia, llmilv room, clning
room ond o new· l10nl porch. Kitchon ia oquippod,
lncludng o new diohwuher. Haa canlrll air, ond 1 wolar
AI in good condition.
$34,1100

--.....,.r.

HAULING
SERVICE

onS...R-.J2A
Pa-. Rev. Rob.t~
~ Scllooi·JO LID
w......,·7:30p.m. ·
Wodnoaday s.,;.., ·7:30p.m.

510 N. 2nd Avo.

' K&amp;C JEWELERS ·

·'

M1ll Work
C~butet M a k i n~

l •: t..• ,, t;,_ ,l,l
~ . ! • . . ~ .\

212 E. Main Slreet.
992 -3785. Pomeroy

Syracuse

992 3978
,. "'""U

. ....,.

:r~t~•

!

-·~

IILL QUICKEL
992-6677 .
• BIBLES

C\\\1ft S,ruf (23•• ~,
113 MMI8trMlddlepor1. Ohio 41110

,·

.fS
~-~

MEIGS TIRE
\ CENTER, INC.

,
)
\
.
1
l

J. llara .. Pull
MDPIU

Ph.la-2101

GRAVELY
204 Condor

St.

Ponwroy, 011.

. 992-2975

IAWIINGS.(OAn

FISHER

Crow's Family Restaurant
.,_"'*'11 KHIIH:ky Fried Chldr.,"
228 w. Main St., POmlt'OY

FILL DIRT

&amp;

992·3470
OWNER: JoH Wl..onlta11

YOUNG'S

992-6215

PDIIII'oy, Ohio

6:45 'p.m,

FUNERAL HOME
992-5141

2114 Sou1h 2nd

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
: S.ERVICES

~--

214 (. Main
992·5130 PomtiOJ

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus , 0 .

eo• w. M••n

992-5432

Mithllepert

. H2·1111POmlrov
.
.

,.!M;\

...

:·-c..::::-.:;7
'

Veterans

Memorial Hospital

, I 15 I . .._lei D•.

DAL lON

Parts .. Sll'vka

Mlwtn • Cl!ala S.ws

w. ....,.,

Authorlztld: Brtggo &amp;
Slntlton MTD, Rfltn,
I.O.C. Rlplllr Coillor

PICKUP and DEUVERY
Houra M· 11-F W Sat.
Cloatld Sunday

,,.. Foncl1tlon to

loof

lnli.. •iiOut
F- Eatlmllln,
Low Cotta.
WorkGIIMiniNd

614·949·2911 ..
614-593·5010

.

EAGLE LINES
(former Mason LanH)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streels

Mason, WV
(304) m-5585
' SUMMJ;R HOURS'

EWING FUNERAL HO• .
..Dil(nity and Yrt'iC'f' Alu"Oy•"
Eslabllshed 1913

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

;ji

~

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

31904 .........
Crookload ·
Ml•llloport, o•io

4/29/93 ,,.

614·992·7643

Sun.-Thur 6-10 pm
·
Fri·Sal 5·11 pm

Call6·14·992·.
6637

992 -2121
106Mllltorry

AYL

Ptok:rsr,r.-OH
Tow""'

Ebor
..-Of,loJ41f,
' '157711._ Phono:

7110 P.!IO-mln. IIIC-VISA

·---82

1U·1111 $2...1n. 11+.

oe11.

2 Froat Struts • Laltor
• 4 w•••llliJnmont
Prices Sllrtiflllt

MISTRESS MADONNA UVE 1!100·1'15-1115 $2 min. HIOO·III

~VISA11+.

MYRTLE BEACH RAMADA:
Octln Front 1 lr., Lux. Condo,
110 - · ,__ 4 To I . $130
Wool!. CoN OWnw, ---111117.

'129.95 +Tax

OHIO'S CONNECTION ALTER·

NATIVE t-fiOO._., 12.50·
min 11-t~•n • ...,._ daleliM
moo1 1GO'o ollllngfoo.&lt;cou- In

~onot~. ~IOCAFL

CHARLIE'S

SMALl DOZER WORI,.
DRIVEWAY WORK
aacl UMlSTONE
DEUYERY SERVICE .
REASONAILE RATES
SJOHOUR

992·7553
POIUIOYr OR.
511

THE OAY CONNECTION 1 -

Shade River Saddle Shop

oomponlonohlp. Social .
omokw, tlkoo camping. •ncl country mu.k:.
:tl04.f75-.21•.

....n:....

Chester, Oh. 45720

36358 SR 7

liiG-3337 $2.50-mln. ... 100'1 of •xdtlng men In your
lfN 1oni1Jh1. Got phono l'o. CCI
BOCA Fl.:

Whl11, dlvorcocl, malt, 112, '!Mho

CUSTOM SADDLES, ,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
985-3406
3/8/lln

Women To Tolll Wflh You Uw!
Un-blo Corw-Uono!
CaM Tlilo E l c - 14
llnelll 1~800-M-SSSS En 1412,
$3.tl Par Min. MUOI lo 11 y,.,

Hour-

Ptocallii«&lt;-A141111.

4

Glvtaway

1 lui bfoodod Coahor

. IISSILL &amp;

1-

14-11:1·1'111
llntry . . . . . . . . . . ·
EXanc LADIES LIVE 1 - 5 -

Bo 11 Yro, PIOCIIII Co. 102-taf·

St. Rt. 7
c•..•iro,

COIISTIUCnOI
H,_s

HOWAlD
EXCAVATING

-

't."::

~~to good

2 acloraiH I'IY kilt-. ,....,
.... - . 1lolnod. :104-e7511M.

I

lomoto

•

C01o,

.........

•me•.

- - ·good
1111or
• - ·J04..
1
w/ chllctNn.

TRIMMING and
TREE &amp; STUMP REMOVAL
, ..........,., ........ raw ..... -

••-•

17Hf124.

•u•

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING

l'fRACUIE - Rlnc:h alylo homo willl 3 bodroomo, both.
oatpOit, . . . , . ..... appllanciL $34,800.

~~~!~! l~~
Prt\Utplton\

PomerOy

- 112 +I· acrw lann wllh mobile hoinl IIIII hal
boon ..,... on1o lnclu1lng ftrwplecO, nlco hing - .
lnoludlloollr, 11om, gMICIO. hav land, piiiUN l woocfa.

24 HcMar Portalale Weh1Ui1 !e• vice

1ft -

t?O.IOO.

a b..,_,., 2 n...
wo1 .,....... um .... """

1ft* _ 1 """" , _ ~ wllh

,._., balh, c1111m &amp;
i1Y« fllllllagl.• Sarno -

120,1100.

Npalrw. ASKING

'

•

&amp; SEIVICE

Entrtoa lolng Aaooptld For
alii Hu-nl 11omor1t1t
L1t1Jo L.ol.. Tourna- AI.
. , , . . _ , · - July llh, Con-

Ell!.

Wlndowa

Jarneaku•ee.-n.

.

Uw 24 - . , A Doyll! Talk To
looutl1ul
5378,Olriolll
h.ll Pw Min. MUOI

667~6628

c.ll•for
Sptclll Ptic• on

992·2772

Par
llo 11 Yro. Proca11 Co.

1H3

itl--------.,---------

EICAVAnNG
. (614)

SIZED UMESTONE

llln. -

IIOZ-&amp;31-4111.

2f121921tfn

D. A. BOSTOII

Stone

--·Ell!.- a ...
'I!&lt;'

(No Sunday C•llsl

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

8EAUT!fUI. OIIIUII Ex..lngl
Pa-ol Totll To 'Em Uwlll·

COMME;RCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7144

CLOSED WEDNESDAY

3 Announcement•

All&lt;ING ....000.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

S~lES

16x7 ••••••••• $296

.INKIR tiLL-_., Forh Ana -136 +I· acrwo VIC ·
ant around with 2 jiiOCIJclng oil &amp; goo woia whoylltloo.

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

FilE &amp; SAFETY

9x7 .~••••••••• $1

Announcements

1.

VInyl Siding
Rooting
Siding n

lz7 ••••••••••• S1

6-9-93-tln

n~~~~lng

FOIWE ·

These Sizes O•l·rl

985·4181

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMIING

' 949·2104

J&amp;THOME
IMPIOVEMEIITS

WHILE THEY LASTI

Lon1lo1tom, Oh. 45 743

611019311 mo. pd

WALIII AlLR

•Painling Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
We Pain! Mobile Homes
and Aluminum.Siding
Power Washing

FREE ESTIMAJES
50734 lltloy 11•1• R.I.

S100PII)'ofJ
Thi• tid good tor 1
FREE c•rd.
Lie. No. 0051·32

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC

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

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES

IPACIOIJS HOME LOCATED It IIIDOLEPOAT- 10
, 11rga 3 bod10111111, 'Z/o batllo, INplaco, waodbum·
• . or, ..... gjlllgl, oiled, ....... v.y ........ homol
Reo&amp;y muii-ID oppNCillof tee.ooo.

271 .....

,_,.,

DO n YOURSELF
I COIITUCTOR
SPECIAL

\'di'OJ~

Specl81 E•rty Bird

-'-:t.=:'
Windows

ll(Jmllea-ct~e

t •n·''"
s.c....

• Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
1 8ox 189
·
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264
.

992·2259 '

RACINE PLANING MILL

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health

Mlcldtopoft, Ohio

Pom•oy, Ohio

CLUB

J&amp;L INSULAnON

Unrted Brcthrrn

N - S.W.NI Churcll

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

30 yro. aporlonco.
614-112-1113

36970 Ball R111 Road

EAGLES

11-24-1

ML R-ca Uoltod ......_
loChrtatChT... Conumouq. oft CR 82
Pa_, Robert Sander~
Sunday Sc:bool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp · I0:30a.IO., 7:30p.m
Wodnoaday SeMcoa -7:30p.m:
..... U.ltod . . . . ,. Cltrla

Lictlltd, l11•ed tid IHdtd
Call 614-992·7878

Cu1t9ms..t
Covtt'11, Carpet,
Hudllnet'11,
Convertible Top!l

11-17·113-1 mo.

EVERY THURSDAY

614·985-4110

altica1o.,..._ Churcll

Malbeny Hta. Rl., Fuue.oy
Pastor: Roy Lawlndty
SolunlayServicel:
Sabboth Sdtool· 2 p.m.
Worship • J p.m.

COMPLETE AUTO
UPIOLSTERY

CARPENTER SERVICE

• IN POMEROY

Gall polls

.UNLIMITED ONE
MONTH TANNING

Plumbing

Reloldna Ll'e Ch-

&amp;n-·Dor An • r

b 14·446·0736

I

soo N. 2lnd A...; Middleport

Scvcnth -DJ y AdventiSt

RODGERS 1-Z RIDE .

FRtE ESTIMATES

LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL

Milltlloport,
Po•roy, Raclao,
Rutlaad, .....
Areas

rim• ·

Speefal

au
,..,..,v.n.

GRAVEl, SAND,

lAWN CARE

Sprint

Wdiloltavo

CO. .RCIIL I RESIDEm&amp;L

Putar: Dovid Dailey
Sundq Scbool9:30 a.m.
E•eninJ • 7 p.m.

MldclltPGrt Peo-1

Auto-Rentab

WOLFE BED/
FACE TANNER

Members Only

Fairview !Uble Chorcll
Lelan, W.Va. RL I
PallOr: Junes Lewil
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Walncaday Semce- 7:30 p.m.

Tuelday A. Thanday ·7:30p.m.
Sunday Wanbip - 2:30_p.m.:
Thunday .....,.. • 7:30p.m.

111, 1111

FISH FRY

PAllOr. Rnv. Plliltip~
SW~day School · 9:30am.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
WedoetdaySemoe -7 p.m.

Srncu• Flnt Unl~ l'rtol!rtorlo•

School· 9:30a.m.
- 7p.m. .
y Mc:e·7p.m.

-·•c. r--.,
or

FREE

Fll.. ~urcll

c...-•IIJ CHrck

1m

MOOSE LODGE NO. 731

w-,..
Coolvilll Rood

Sunday School · g a.m:
Worship ·10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd A. 4lh Sun.)

r.-:Lo........lJuoh

Pa&amp;tor:. Rev. Seldon Johnian

Poator: Deroo! Newman
~Sc:hod - 9:45a.m.

Chefs Galey presenla
The hones! girls in female Review
"The California Calendar Dolls'
TICkels on Sale Now
'Show Tim• June 3oih al 9 P.M.
446·8154

~ho'o Capel

I'IA«.: MikeMaucn
So.day tcbool · lO a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wodneldoy Semoc -7 p.m.

ML OIIYI

Sunday Sillool - 9 a.m.
Wonhlll· 10 a.m.
W - y feMcea- IOa.m .
Roat_.CII_
Onndsu...
Sunday Sdtoal· 10 a.111.
, Wonhip • II o.m.
We+eadaySeMocl- 8p.m.

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

Ex-·
..
,.n. •

MS,OOO

Sunda=·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7:30 p.nt•
Wednaclay 7:30p.m.

R-Ule .

c-.. a ....
,..., !Sr-&gt;

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

lnglonil.

lonl

FIDUQARY
"011 June I, 1\la, In lho
llolga Counly Proboto
Coull, C.oo No. 27UO,
Morvin L. Kotly, 543 Grant
111. .1, lllddloporl, Ohio
41710, woo appointed
Exooulor ol lhe ...... 111
lornolono II, Kolly,
dooooood, Ia .. ol 543 Oronl
llroot, lllddloporl, Ohio
41710.
lloMrt E, Buck
Prob... Juclgo, ...... Co.
(t) 11, 11, 25, 31c

•. llllhln oflw
•Ill Cheellr ....

Bald Knob, m Co. Rd. 31
Putor. Rnv, Ro&amp;er Willlonl
Sunday Scbool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:45 a.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Semoe · 7 p.m.

PallOr: R ... Fnnklin Qicbna
SeMce: Friday,7 p.m.

:rr,

illlloo LMe, a . - , FL
14111 . . . lppolnlld Co-

. M - Cltopol Cltordl

. Putor: Helen Klioe

...... Code, .... 1111.GI
"'OIIIay
1111, In lhe
lhtpCounlyi'I'&amp;... IICourl,
C.. No. I7M4, llary AOH
II'V I, 710 A....., W......
PA 11101 811!1 la~t­

our son.

Putar:CJYck'/1. H-11&lt;11
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30a.m.
EYIIIiits - 7 p.m.
Wedoetday SeMce • 7 p.m.
•
Freed• G-.11 Miwloll ·

ChriiiiMI Fol-lp Cenltr
Salem SL, Rulland ·
Putor: Robonll. Muner
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip.-11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
w~ SaviO. -7 p.m.

Tuelday SeMcea - 7 PJII·

LooalloCiola

Cllwch of God

AadquiiJ Bopllot
Pas-. Xameth Smilh
Somday School • 9:30 a.111.
Wonhip. 10:43 a.m.
_Thunday SeMa:a • 7:30,p.m.

N.., B~t• Cltardl rllllo N Putor: Glendoo Sltoad '
Sunday Scbool · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Servic:ea - 7 p.m.

Cooll'lllo U..llod Matloodlal Pariah

Cb-

PallOr.

Barll'ord Churdl fll Chrlalln
Chrlallu Union
Hanfonl, W.Va.
PallOr: Rev. David Mc.M.ris
Sunday School· II a.m.

ML Mori .. Bapdll
"-'b A Main Sl., Mi+llepM
Pa_, Rev. Gilbert Cnoi1, Ir.
Somday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 Lm.

Pua:~Jaalis

Sunday Sdlool- 9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 10:40 a.m., 7 p.m.
w-.y Servic:ea • 7 p.m.

Sunday Sdtoal · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip - 1()-.JOa.m.
Thlnday Services - 7 p.m.

SooPutor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday Sdtoal- 9:30a.m.
Wonldp ·10:45 a.m. (latA 3ni.SIDI)

Vldor! _Baptlol lodepeodlnt
325 N.lnd Sl. Middlepon

PortJUd J1lnl Ch- of the Nuarene

Sunday Sdlool · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip - IOa.m.
WeGteaclay SeMoes • 6 p.m.
RIIIIood

SL Palll Loa ........ Chorch

-

Rulland Church ot lho Nuar••
Paator: Samuel Baaye
Sunday School· 9:30a.m:
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedoeoday Sa rica · 7 p.m.

Roell......_
Putar:Kdii.'ibder

LllHrtf ChrlallaD Churcll

s--

Putor: Rnv. llerllort Onle
Sunday Sdlool·· 9:30a.m. .
Wonhip · 11a.m.,6p.m.
WOIIo&gt;ooday s.mc.. • 7 p.m.

~)Kee

Bethleh- . . . . .
. Pallor: Rev. l!lrl Shuler
Sw!day Scbool · 10:30 a.m.

l'atrlda --Krva

.

.. c - a.rc~o r1111e N..,..,

Sw!day Sdlool · 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wodttoadiy SeMcu · 7:30p.m.

Sunday Sdtoal • 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip - I 0:30a.m.
Thunday SOMoet·7:30p.m.

w,!.,"':!",&amp;;

.
0

Pallor:

Sunday Scbool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

· Bllloldo Bopllat Churcll
SL RL 143 just oft RL 7
Pa110r. Rev. Iama R. Acra:, Sr.
~School - 10 a.m.
II a.m., 6 p.m.
Scmoe. -7 p.m.

..

Wonhip - 10 a.m.
'
PuriChopol
Pastor: Ruiwce Smidt
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.

w:,:_-•o

Fno WIH Bopllal Churcll
28601 Sl. RL 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Bvenin&amp; · 7:30p.m.
l'hu&lt;aday s.mces . 7:30

. Sunday Sdlool - 9:30.....
w~ . !0:30a.m. ... 6p.m.
WoA lq SeMoca • 7 p.m.

MJ...mlle

r - : IoeN.
Sunday Scbool-9:4 a.111.
B...u.a·6:30p.m.
Wedneaday SeMces · 6:30p.m.

011 -

Peao""'
a ... ., ... N.......
r.-: Rw. n-.u Mcauna

Putor: Deroo! Newman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

S.c... ....
Chrlol
Putor: Ioaepb B. llooklnJ
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
a.m., 7 p.m.
W
y Savices - 7 p.m.

Wonhip • 9:30a.m.
Thullday Semca· 7:30p.m.

·:

F-R.oo

· Pastor: Deroo! Nftrnon
Sunday~ -IOa.m.
Wonbip - 9 a.m.
Thursday SeM&lt;:ea - 6:30p.m.

......,

Lutheran

Bra&lt;l'ord Chardl of Christ
SI.RL 12A&amp;C...Rd.S
Pastor: DeJdt Slump
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdaesday Savieloa ·7:30p.m.

SIIYer Raa Boptlot

w.- ,...,

NOTICE OF
APPOIHTNENT OF

tiECbaED CASE NO.
11144; DOCKET N; PAGE
411; NOliCI! OF APPOINT·
IIENT OF I'IOUCWIY He-

June 21 due to the death of

Cartet.o. lntM" ••• r••ed•ll Clliwdt
Kin&amp;aburY Rood

Putor: Rnv. Glenn McMillan
Sunday Sd!ocl · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Serviatl • 1 p.m.

Iii: Din•
Paat!r. Flonnce Snilh
Sunday Sdtoal· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.

llafci:J·

Wo11hlp ·10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday SeMces · 7:00p.m.

'·

-Cit-., Cltrlat

Lattcr-DJy SJints

Rullaod Clourclo of Chrlat
PAllOr;
Underwood
Sunday
- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.,7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.

II

Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship • 9:45 a.m., 6:30p.m.

PUler. Qria Slewan
Sunday School- 9:30 LJD.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wodneldoy s.m... · 7 p.m.

Panor: Steve Fuller
Y&lt;llllh Putor Rid&lt; Harris

!

Plllo c .... lllble Roll- Clourcll
I(J milo oft RL 325
p._, ReY. O'Doll Manley
Sunday Scbool· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
WeclneadaySeMc:e · 7:30 p.m.

H,..a Ruo Halla• Churcll
Putar: Robert Manley
Sunday Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Wonllip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7:30p.m.

a...:..

Tu ..... Plaia
ofCitrlal
Pulor:BiiiW'IIIOI ·

Rodnt Flnt Baptlot

I

-Rev. o.- Kina ..
s-lay tcbooJ. 9:10a.m.
s-lay wcnhip -7 p.m.
Weclneaday pnyer.....ana- 7 p.m.

w-.ru Bllllo Hall- Chorcll
75 !'earl 51., Middlepolt.
..._Rev. JcmN.mu.
·Sunday acbool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Weclneaday SeMce ·7:30p.m.

llradbU11 Clt.-do ofChrllll

Flnt Southen Boptlal
41872 Funcuy Pike

'
I ~;
I'·
1

New Umo Rood, Ralland

Zloa Cllurdo of Clorllt

p...,....,

Hot111rss
R•or-u.a-ourc~o

......... ...... CloarcllofCiorllt
Putar: Iadt CoJeanwe
Sunday Schaol-9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.

Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.
Flnl Bopllol
But Milia Sl.
Sunday School - 9-.30 a.m.
Wonbip - 10:30 a.m.

StncwoCit- of lilt Nuarene

Putcr:Pnnl&lt; •
Sunday Sdlool ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednaclay SeMcea • 6p.m.

Sunday School · 9:30 .....

i

•

FlaPutar: Klidt Rader
~ Scllool - 10 a.m.
Wonllip • 1J. a.m., 6 p.m.
Thunday SerW:ea · r p.m.

R•.. (Hidllc&gt;

Y&lt;llllh )lliniator: BillPruilr

Fno Wll Jlaplllt Clwrdl
A&amp;b Slncl, Middlcpolt
Po-.MutMonow
S.Uiday SeMc:e · 7:30p.m.
&amp;.day Scbool · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.,
WcdaesdaySeiYico-7:30p.m.

Wonbip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wet dey Scrvi.aea - 7 pm.

New ...oChurcllfliGod

~School - II a.m.
Worship · IOo.m., 6 p.m.
WeGlelday Semces · 7 p.m.

"

Klidt ·Rader
Sunday
Sdlooi
IOa.m.
Wonldp - 9 a.m,, 6 p.m.
Tuolday SeMcea -7 ,....

PROBATE COURT OF
111108 COUNTY, OliO
EITATE OF C.l. llllorMn

n.

Upper Rt. 7aGaltipolls
Will Be Closed Until Monday,

SootlllletJill N"'T-0111
Sil..rRidp
Pa-= o.- Sy4alllrid&lt;er
&amp;.day School • 9 a.m.
Wonhlll - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
W-.day SeMoe • 7 p.m.

Clt-lllllltN..,....
r.-: Jolll W. J&gt;nualaa
Sundoy Sd!ocl · 9:30 .....

PubUC Notice

•cttiJIIJ . . .

VI'.RA FURNITURE

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

llltlr~

Wonhlll - II a.m.
W ' !dey Servi.CIIII - 7 p.m.

Pulor:AadleWMilol
Smdoy School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 ~..,., 7 p.m.
w.-.....y s.m.... 1 p.m.

r

_

Cloamillor GolorPreplo..,

Ct1u rcll of Chr1st

Public Notice

ITOP 8Y AND liE IF WI HAVE
A110111! TO FIT YOUR NEEDII

HIM t. Wlltwl

ROOFING
IIIW -IN
Qutllln

DownsPouts

Gutter Clttnlnv

Pllnttng

FIHUMATES

992-7075

949-2161

171 NO&lt;IhStconollva.
Oltia

l-11111fn

,'

'

COMPlETE MACHINE SHOP SDYICES
IN SHOP WELDING SERVICE OR

ALL TPES OF •'IELDING FABRICATION

!!.!!~~o::~·
...
'Clt*1

• c.tlldl• -

~:

7:30am · 5.00pm
MOll . Fn
1:30om • 12 ()()pm So1

•

C· -

Gil• ......

·Moo-·-·-·--

GENERAL MACHINE WORK &amp;WELDING
• """( • AIUfiWU'I'I I

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

........ •lpr., WMding

• .r tbrltlfiOn·Qikty to Aol a lena aitttl

17 COLE • POMEROY, OHIO· ,

Gall. Itt . . . . ..

I Olol . _ C1tt,
FIWTaACIM1!--

�Sentinel

Ohio

Frl1tav. June 18, 1993

5I

54 MIICefiiMOUI
Merchandise

HoiiSihold
Good a

61 Fann

12 Trucks for Sale · :

BRIDGE

I HERESY... PROCLAIM
~1&lt; .. . ONTO.. ... TO

NI!W IWLEII. ... 01'

The

NEA Crossword Puzzle

M ...

V~IU&gt;IIJ

ACIIOSI

1110 GIIC Slom; '79 JHp, 314

ton; 2 .~ "-VJ duty t ... n.,:
Honda Goldwtng, monr _Olto:ljO;
114-lU-2441, I :OOo ....:OOpm. •
Clwmolot, Fonl, Doda• pickup
- . Sholl or lang. No rull.

Na. I l1droorn TraUit FGr

.._..,I MU. Out:"! ...... ,..

• Dopooi1 iloo;uirwd, 114211 121L

h*......... ond

1Woo

poll Celie,

' ............ -

.... a........... - . ' 'ill'ii - . ldiiOJI, -

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

f~. . . . . . . . .. . . . .

·-

»H7M211~

hoo!N. Rullond,

....,.,_ ...
quinld, no pdl, 114-li12-H4t

Rr.il EsiJte

'fto.llnt&amp;?: ....... _, ....

&lt;

' ·

NORTH

.AS4
to\83
•.a.QJ

Hani¥slizV:Sh.

- ..-

1ht F - Fltl HouolngM.
.. 1881 which lllogal

biNd on race, COIOr,rtlglon,
MX ._...
nattonal

•u•1n1on11on
or lo
origin. or
11/rf

- l t ' i """'Pf01........

· lnibdlonordoa1mlna11on.'

nowop-.,.

no1
knoWingly IIC&lt;llpl

Tllll

WIIICIIII ~-lion &lt;&gt;11110
low.
hoo.by
lnfonnid thll .. dtuell•
...erUoed In tNo

Our-.,.

..._r

..,. avlllble on'an tqUal

_.,.._~

••w- "':.. 'iK
1:::~ /'£:. ~ On

GallipoliS

I VIcinity
Yn a.a.: 101 Plllllalucll Rd.

cwOIIunlly-

-In

all

'-

I

lldd,AIR flhonl:
1 Con,..,._

=

1141412133.

44 ·

Sur 1 Clodloo, 01111 Nl ... - - ,..,., lod - . llobr 1unly In -

=hoM

OMI,il04-t1a-1150.
Condlloniria
· -.. -

.

l_

oi11111144'11-14M. _
- - opla., 10101 doclric, o;&gt;p1111CI8
furnllhed, ~~~ R.l I. Fumil...._ -·.....:,on- - - 1 0 - 1ic;uH. Hot uhoki :Umllilingl.
ln lown. Al&gt;loi~ ovollablo

d: w.- ·o..., Apb. M1i or
0111 114412-3711. EOH.

114 ••

hoo .... ....,

Alpr111 ......

-polio.-.
....._.J

IWAIN
AUCTION I "'IUIITUIIL 12
Olive~
Uood
~
W1111m •
Wortl ..... l1•••• till.
'IWin mdoi - . - . . , w/
opoingo.IOW7W!Jt

AU.Y. . . . . . _
.. _"'
Adaaa. DIADI .-: 2:410 p.m.
"'" ""' - . 111e od 1o 1e ""'·

M" boo1 111111 4llilp. molor orid
lflilor, 11' boo1 Whh 115hp.
...... ond trolilf; 114-1192·2385.

11' lloril Twain Tri Hull, 140 hp,

t:i
F~
odnloi.
•
:00
.....
,.
~ -

. 2:80

Juno illll, 1tlll, 2111h~

~or~=~T-.2
Lorp ...
... ... -

1

r loowll 11110 Te 11110
~--- , ::.
No

-.._

,73.."r:l'~.211.

:MHoun.

In

\

Nol To Lolo To 11oM b1Jo
~ Soli -1111F1 .....
Gdlopllo C11r ~ Or Of 111. :u, C!Untr· -

F,.. For " Lloll1od 'llnlo; 1 ~.:::-·- N!-.
OUwo ............ : 1211
Fo&lt;.rlh
Juno
"·
11,
10:00 ..:00 40 Y.,. 'DCI"nulli
lion. .._. . _
1 d, Ao-

.....--

I

0

IIDtllllM

t:

I

,__,,.a

1_._ ___

4_ f\ =--·
-

-"=lloolh,2ocr

a. c
Col

......- . 1b&lt;l ,_, 52

1o u~nry, jllridng, -IE - .
7p.lll.CII 111 Ut 0331,

to.';:

""''
...'""Pold,A;l1:
U111111oo
a:-Allr,
Ioiii,- 7111
FOW1It. GJIIipolll, 114 Ill ,.,.

Oflor,
Willi Nol- Juno 20111.

t!or 11111.

12 Wli-111 Pump,
=Good ~.... 114-311-.

53

-wlotW
- .b!m.
cloorl:
..._
PIS IR llft.lto4111dfOOIM.1
112 - . gorb 'Ill lloii!IHI.
plln!llul-'do, I ool[lni fono.

----In-

~--~~~~~-

:: :~ :: =. :=:-.....111.~~

a:::-r-ur.~ ~~
ARN'IP.~

~ril

Akiing

21" Iori
llaJ~ ...., Good Conol~
tlorif, 4 U~ 1 - Atlw I P.IL

.-..

1400.

Semi-¥• WHh 4 IMCh S.11
And I Uphaill- lwlvol Sooto
With ~ A001o Hd Trollor, 8001
u..,.. Good Un11119116, t1,7t0

104-4'15-

One bodi~:.-

$271.-

Yoni---··•t.Frifl

for Sale

7

I

1171
111on,
2
-.
,.m:adllld. 110¥1 I .... ...,.~

f::
~~·=:=.••
MI47H141er

Pomeroy,

In

1•

-...,.

76

= -=:--..'""r'~

..
,.

45

" " - wv•

·

Fumllhecl
Roome

~ I l1d,..,._ 2 i~~co;..,;;;m;;;;;;allk11ikloo;,.;1ior;fj11i0w;oo;-;;,_;;:,,

eom.-.

....... '"'-

1:00pm fridor,
odl1ion
10:00Lm.

11111

.

...
•

'/.

I

1. . ForMfl llllrk. llldFCIOIM, 1
112 ldho, On 314 Aole, Clftllfo
IIOinl Rd~ ...... Coun1Y. 10
llnuloo
RloGno
. .. _Rinl
Wolor.WII _
_
W I - Lond. - - A l l o r

1:00 P.M.

Public Sale
-· IAuctiOn
RlokPwt....,,....,.eon... .,,

8

IUCIIol'l

BORN' LOSER
·~
IV£ GOT,_

Gavin, ........77'1'1.

..2113.

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Wanted

,.

THIS HJ8 ei:EN
A VERRIE-

U@-lio.ao.

.

9 '. Wanted to Buy
Wolllod r. luy: Groonl
Pool, ' II" . . Dr . . . . And 4"

__ ....,..,,.. -. ..
.,.""'-.......
11M. ... .
...., ......... .. . .

o.op, -

.. In GOOd -

tlan; 114 Ill lttS.

An1:qo.. lincl- iUmlhn, no

=D

. jiioCe

.. - " " " '

Gobr - ·

I, I low

lllllllui

.............

'iiiii6er 114-

..... :ur-.~

r

I

•

'

tr'W:.. I I,"J:"i ~~

Cill 1011 l,lgh1 ~
~-=-A '#Mill; et..ri':

·····AI."
-· "'I=-.-..

--

..... ~
.·
. .4 mlloo
loll Cnoil,
IJI,DGO llnl. _,. 175-l'!q or

.......
....... --

35 L.ots 6 Acreage
1.-_ L&lt;olo l'or -

Or Wll

.....
..........
=.::::=::'·

-lo&lt;lellooll'll I ...

41

Houlll

for Aenl

·--:ar-:-ld
46 Space for Rent

-

Wanted to Rent

, '

I

]I

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

THATB
TEI..I..INiS- IT

t.ttcli rr ts.

-

4 ..- .

. .=t;;s
.
_-__

......---.

Tho -IIOJ • -·
lling

-

.... w

,.,_ - - 2
~41,000 lllloa,

__
_
=

- - P i l l LE, VI,

,...
,
~~:=
..........
~ · · - - ....

....
ltl-4ill

. . . APiooo-·1111.

-··

Eu1
Pau

e Clwlltmu

10Evet'J12 ,.......
prefll
14-P17 Kind ot

a

20Unci01111d

....

5 Muticai ohow ·

D()WN
1 Goon hO&lt;"'
back
2 Willie lroel

•nd-thir

3 R,..nlnl
4Ruatlan
kings

Item (2 welt.)
7 8intlilr lo

Circuit•
8 eutol IIMI

24 Space • • •

25 Yellow ocher

27~r
28
A
29 RtpwUtlw

Plllll

low -

58

. -· "'

FNHI 6

fUNNY ... THE SAI&lt;\e :Tl1tNG
llN 1\IE. l~i DAY
~ SCI\OOl LM\ 'tEAR...

Serv1ces

81

114-

ll,iiCIO m!loo,

AITRO·(JRAPH

Vegetabl. .

lr;;;;i!~~~~i.;;;t:"";;;
~

........~[. ,.

- . Col IM-1141- To -

Drdor.
.,••••, _ PIDk Your Own.
CoU Clolldo WinCoro, Rio
Orondo, Gitio. IMIII1121.

-. a;(
Toy1or'JI

lUng Orilr.Or-

Declarer called for tluJ!lmy's ipade
jack. How could East defend? U be discarded, South would ruff low for his
lOUr trick. But wbl!ll Eut ruffed, cJe.
clarer discarded his diamond loter. He
bad a trump Irick to co~
South wu p~ be had been able
to ·CODCertlna two of tbe defendent'
tricks. However, neither Eut nor
West felt sufficiently 'pained to com·
. millulclde.

IIOIIIId

30 ln'-lllon
32 Hold on

=:"'

·=,~

31
..
31 !aCIYIIIII

411tlllllh

BERNICE
BEOE OSOL

'Yeu ...... til ltl

72 Trucka for Sale

3::~ili=
l'inm 1
II
100 1nv. T.... 11.100,
ltlunlll¥. J\111111, 11113
Signtllclnilloveioj)manis could ~e In l~e
oiling lor you In 1IMt year ahald where ~r
cnet II c:anctmed. Tile 1ypo of ptomollon
lor which you've alwaya hoped may
111comt a relilly.
OBiN (May 21.....J 20) Your 1WO rrtCII1
promlelng areoa lodty are cerear end
" " ' - · yet ....,. mey 1101 be any dl..a
,.reilliclriiNp. incllpe'*"l:y you lhOUkl do
well In both , l&lt;now "(hera to took lor
, _ 111C1 you'M lind M. The Ao:ro4fllill
M111111maker iniWI11Y - " wltiCil llignl

II

'

atrMIC•

WOlD
lAM I

'

'O four
Rtorrongo ltnors oi
JCrarnblocf wdldj

aro romanlically perfect lor you. Mail 52 check your budget anq resources today.
and along, sell·add18188d, stamped env8" because you might be able lo lind a way to
lope 10 Matchmaker, c/o lhis newspaper, do or gel something you've been wanting
P.O. Box +165, New Vorl&amp;, N.Y. 10163.
bui ieh you couldn1
CANCER (June 21.July· 22) Today you CAPRICOIIN (Die. 22.Jan. 11) You'll be
might heve 10 handle a ~Huatlon very simi· prepared to lace laues squerely today and
litr to one you recenlty handled succeeoiul· cleat whh IWe on realislk: terms. This con·
ly. 11 you do whal you did previously , all SIIUCiive aniluda will enable you lo make
should como oul well
'
very sound daciaions.
LEO (July 2:.-Aug. 22) Thoro could be a AQUAIIIUI (Jon. 20-Fab. 11) Properly
spill over todoy lrcim !hinge or shualions hendled 11lia COI!kl be a red latter cley lor
you comptlaritly mtnaged lor olhoro. 11 you finoncilllly. Focua your oflons on shua·
11\ey come ou1 well. you·n do oicoy you,..::. lions lhai can offer i11101abla ,.Mns over
VIRGO (Aug. 13 ltjll. 22) You'rw a very an tltlfided period oi - ·
good negotillor IOd.ly becauH you're lbla Pi8CII (Feb. 20-March 10) Being lhl
1o see !hinge :rom 1i1o othor guy's porapoc· P.rson In Chi'V' it a 'IIIII you llhouki pity
11Ye. The good 11llnge you'll wanl :or your· In your Jnvolvanitnll wllh olhora today.
Hll. you'lltllo want ior·lhom.
Don1 leave impor11111 m.ollerl up lo inoliec·
LIIIIA (llpl. 2J.0o1. 23) Your j)OIIibill· · live PH"·
uu :or lulittllng 1WO Important, arnllflio\18 Allill (March 11·Aprll 11) Somelhing
objlctivea lOOk YI'Y good locily. Once one might be uoJn9 on beltlnd 1i1o -lociay
is lltiled doWn, lho Olhtra llhould qulc:ltiy regarding a nlartar about *hleh you've
1o11ow.
been concemtd. 11 10oic1 ilki U may bt
ICOIIPIO (Oo1. ~. 22) A li11le applo handild blfterlitan you OOUki yourllll.
poillhl!1g or primlnQ oi 1i1o pump rntghlllt TAUIIUI (Ajlfll 2Q.IIay 20) Plaud111 m.oy
n101111ry IQCily In onier lo win ..., ....,.. be awarded - y lor lite My you onl epoelal who lo poninentlo your ;Ire• yourMii wl1h your PION In ~. dlvliop·
11111 pllnl. 1
'
- *· YOUr iaCiiCa wl beiPPI'Mitd IIICI
IAGITTAIIIUIINov. n.o.o. 21) Doubit lllno•ed by.:;.

""""t

rho

below to form four sJtnple words .

SIJRUT

I,

ri t

5

OUR LANGUAGE

·1,

By Jeffrey McQuaiD

The nagging wit~ went on
and on to the mamage coun·
. selor about what was wrong in
L--!---.1.-.L.....I-...J.;
her marriage. "That's my slde
.--E__R_F_L_Y.E-.,, of the story." she announced.
1-...,.:;...;.;..:.-ii--.:.,..::..,.--1 "now let me :·-- you -.. 1'

A. It is wrong. A comma signals a
slight pause, just as opening a set of
parentheses does. Never write, "I'll be
38 in November, (40 in 19951." lnstead,
if your sentence starts a new clause
after the parentheses, use the comma
before the conjunction: "I'll be 38 in
November (40 in 19951, but I'm told I
look older.•

I FRIDAY

'

t::a..

-

... P11r fiDI'mo.lf..._fft
.. alud1d II&amp; IWII:. Cll ......,._
IDII lilt 10 I MCII I ,., -:Good-- c.- Tl•

--· ...........

.

..,.,_.h - - 4
AC,

r::a..~. Auto,

Coo-· -.

oi

34 ........ 37 Moftt genUr

you put a comma in front of lhem? We
were told it's wrong.

HAPPEN~

Wo_ .. _ , _ _ "'

WlllldiSI.

Un .
23 ()pent
28 Organ oi

33 !lomn 101

Q. When you use parentheses, can

..... J04.171.4011.

--lllliloo--5:---·-··
-lng,-...... ......
·--·-·
~

5I L-h,ln
London
81 Volclnk: rock
63Underalancl?
14 Srmboilor
Nmarlum
65 AI lilt prlct

21 impoltt
22 s,.,.bol lor

e ................ .-.

.. _.2 ...... -

Lolt:
.,
•••1111 - .. _ ,

rI

'rial I

J

.......... wv.

VI'RA FUIININRE

---J:""~
r.::....
.... ,... .. .

.........1

Cllll .... 2:00 .,....., .....

11t t• ttiiOrltt 441 ttM
'111 IMY IIAIIII AI CAlli
Oil RIHT+OWN 1110~

. . . . Ill
Doll'l.luokli ... U o - -

Niter' . . . . . . ~

PfCIDUCTlON.

Alati tJder ~. AI ~a aII ;;;:

Wulin111D..,... 2•1' teem For - : iiCA " - 41" Long
- . ... - ••nd ..... Good
PhonO:
114
441"1
.... ,..... prinlo ....... PiooOC For ...., ,_ Cidhlo - . ,
Londl'or ..... 1 · 0 N - 11244111, if ... --'ollnC...Clftlot1 ,._ IIIM,IIIWIJ.'IIZ7.
Good For Yoni IIIIo. 11.110
-WidOIHMCOn ~~Mol' I 1A.11. -I:M P.M. N ..... ' - ••• fw home .....
!:f'•
Aftor 1:00 P.ll. · .. ...,...., lid,
~ ANI I riel• J!1l!! lt11611R ,., Your - - · Jill Filii MlltlaUinl, ~
. , . _ -ion Prcd lcJo
~
Cn.CIIUol'orA'411Linlln1
Jodv
11'til 1,
...
1227.
_
rt , . _
. .,_
... ..
PlooM no 5I
HouHhold
"""Avolabil a·
'
.....,., d Rllo Aiel ....._..
Ooocli
luldTONd Plnonolnt~
lble.lltlll • •

....
......

.... ......_
rol jiJIOio!l

CRLJ.IM\Ie

LARGE DISCXlUNT ON ALL
DISPLAY MODE!:!, MOUNTAIN
lUll""
....._
ITATI HCMa. ,..-, PLUUHT, Trol1or
PIMI, _
_
llnf.
WY, JOt.tJI.MOO.
•

II

~-r.,
"1711(£. ~RIN ! .

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

R!Wr olo loCI "" ,_.
7SWK1001., oJii .ioAno) d 114-

.-....""" "' ' w. 7'00 I:,=8=-=want==ld=to:..Do.:,__
Pll 111. Alo -ion Clftlot, Rt.
1
2N'a •·
top olille
hll". ·c.~~lliiilod;~..
~.......
~M·~·~•;;-.
iw:uiiii 33 Fenne for Sale
niOI!dJ.
'-.!-·
..
Oranrioo on Frldoyo 1oo. Filio Do ~~'!.'_:r--. a .... -.10-houoe.
........ llllclll . . o111rM.
r"!" :.11li.~CIIInt

[ G£1 ~DE.

'.

IIOIJiina-wlh~

PI

""order

writing
31 Drudge

Use TRANSMARINE ("trans-nluh·
REEN"I for. •across or beyond the
sea," as in "the transmarine !ravel·
er." For help with spelling the end of
the adjective Tlj.ANS.MARINE, ask
any Marine.

MJ.~::,.

Vlrglnlo, -

Dl...... :a.:,:,. . .

1M.

~~

Wolor I lo II Loll'or
PurniJ1toci.-114·

SHuatlon

-..clloMer, 0011 piiCt
MIVIce. Ucn 1

~

• -I¥,.,.,

•• •

5PUm~co

Auto Parts &amp; '

lie. D AAf:t:{ptoyJ...Yf"• 304112·2133 or
21:1'.-J&lt;D. .•

Zlldmh 1 both, oxci/1on1 oond~

la~lor...:S. ~,;:~,

III,Ohlo I -

'·18 ·

1"HI'WI'$

"r,
~ lonU, ono ion Initio
w
..- . lloor mot.,

14111,

-=.....

Pass

51=~=-"'......
15 Howard - · • 11481ngerlliva
Ptnu
11.ColnptJter of 58 TJpa
oi
llolarci
Wiltlt
18 Gallup58 Bone
........11

seven.

don,....
...000.
- wolk-ln
an,
bulft,- lui •both,

w tiMe

DO 'I'OU?

lludao1 TronJmloolono, Uood ,I
,.buTn, oi11Ypoo,l1ar11na oilll;
owner fJ14.:24~5617, "114-3712211
~
:::V. 225-70R15 O.y1ono Rltl.
11:"114ialr condblon, """'·

·
EOK
ot
low _
, I04'IIW71I
~ Apia,

llh •• -

P.ll. 114-:MI-8108.

Accessories

ldho, E1oo1r1o Goo. -~L 2 • . - TV, tnlcJo o..;
Ao-, .._ Or Looo, ~ ,.iJi;Jonilor, Dll portdlta.
,.,._.. ,....,.. Courwtr w...., ..., ... ur t'l
..,._.
HT lc-, ExM- COndllion, - · live .:nUtoo -

AI Ywcl loloo lo Paid
AdWII-. Dr #m: 1:oo.- the
.,-.u.od:Oio-.
_, _,

Coil Aftor I

pold,

IIIIUIOI•IP ' -. . . . .....

32 Mobile Homea

fllaihle.tJS . . . . . . . .......
Yoni ..... Juno • I 11, I:M 11&gt;
7. One ...... froM McDIIT
ot

MiddlepOrt
&amp; VIcinity

AN':'T~IN6,

1.1 HP, 301b. Trolling
llolar, Now ldtorr, 14' Alum.

.......,~--~·

...........

'(OU DON'T
BELIEVE

-

· - · ........ - ... _1 ldlna.
- . . - . - - . ohoii

.. .

AND TJ.IAT 6LACK8EARD
ONCE SPENT THE NIGHT IN ',
A MOTEL IN NEEDLES?THATS
WJ.lAT SOMEONE TOLD ME .. ,

•

Aold, 114-211-1110.
·~
Jot Bldlo, 1D81 Kowaukl 5511
And 1!0 With Trollor, 18.800)
114-2111-111111 (Jocl&amp;oon).
,

.
. Yonl,--·
_
, ......
_.11,- L&lt;olo of-

=r

""t

Trolling 1101«1 ·
Lowronco Fish Flndorw P-Nd
ElY llhrourr o .. boon:o, F~
Lrno Porto • Ac-ioo, 11
Voyagor Jon Boolo On Solo J
llorino lorvico 3028 Blldon

Guido

Pl. Pleasant
a VIcinity

--.-...........................
,.,_.
-------1111,--........
In--·""""

DID '(OU KNOW THAT
BLACKBEARD, TJ.IE PIRATE,
BURIED ALL I-llS GOLD
J.lERE IN THE DESERT?

Aiu ......lii .... -·~,.Alii
-rortiY. Contlllo1o
Alumln""' Uilllmo
WHh llol

12,000 .... - - - . .

~.:-1

PEANUTS

,,.... $
l'lnn, oo1 Groa ~1411924110, Hpm, II·F, 30~-lq,
~~. evenlng81 week•nde. ~

.._, 1300;

Blid. Atclnlr, l•d•Pt'NIII.
Chid&amp;••
Clochle, ...........

Pass

13 In gooclwork·

=)'!!'t7:me

1111 TIEcilor 01.21 poriy borgo,
IOHP, PfO' lriCMr evlnrvde, o.b.
enalno, oil ~ICiion, _ .. irlm
11Tft, lriCUr lroilor, bougltl now
JIMIO 1~ low .hou,., m1ny ox·

Merchandise
11 HP II"

1•

Nor3
!NT

50Ha

44 Piece of
Stephen Leacock wrote, •Anybody
cutlwrJ
wbo hu heard certain kinds of perfor·
411w......
mances on the concertlaa will admit
47 Part otiJitlii
llttaellne
that even. 1ulclde has its brlJhter
48 Not hard
aspects.'
52 ........
In bridge, there Is a concertina play.
It is featured in today'a deal.
.
53
In
Acalnst four hearts, West led the dl·
amoad jack. Tblnp looked like plain
14
Slliling to South. He won trick one in
581harDiun1
57 Hollldlw.
hand with the diamond king and
eo Two, llooNII
played a trump to dummy's ace. How·
53
&amp;upp nlnt:
ever, West's discard wu a ructe shock.
IIIII
S)lddenly there appeared to be four In·
escapable losen: one spade, two
hearts and one diamond.
Hearing the strain~ of a c:oncertlna
being played in the street outside,
South had a clever Idea. He led a spade
off the dummy. East won and returned
the heart qt~een . (a diamond is no bet·
JZHP · lTD
'POPUa
FPUOTUH
ter). Declarer won with the king,
ci"OS!Ied to dummy with a club to the
X Z 0 P,
TIAJCYP
zJ
BTHPA
jack, ruffed a spade, played a club to
dummy's queen and ruffed another
8 C I 'J .
JRP
RPCUJ.
ZJ
OUTH
spade. Now came the diamond king
and the club king to dummy's ace.
C I I
FXCBP
BTHP
GUTH
South had won Dine tricks: two
spade ruffs in hand, tbe A·K of hearts,
JTHHS
J D I P.
P X A P. '
lhe A-K of diamonds and three top .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I may 1101 Ill .an open book, bu1 I think peapie
clubs. Left in his band were the 9·8 of
know
u much about me u 1iley notd lo know." - illnB1 ~-'11101•.
hearts and the diamond four. Eut had
the J-io· of hearts and the diamond

IIlii Johnoono Fiborgloa Boil,
50 HP IIUior Johnoono a Extro
Ooocl Condition, $1,100, 114-4411021.
•
1114 O..ntron, iT, lnbolrd,
Mlrcrulatr MOhp. wtth tr~ll.,.,
14200; 114-t92-6121.
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GO BACK
· IN!!

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Nollii'Uood
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Complere lhe chuckle quoted

~y filling in the miS$ing words

'-....!..-L--1...--L-"-~ you develcp from step No. 3 below.

•

I' I' I' •
I I I I

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESf ~QUARES

A UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS
·' U FOR ANSWER
•

I"

I'

II

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
• ·''
Rarely • Agate - Myrrh - Dainty - MARRIAGE
Several women were talking about the marital stalus
of their daughters. "My daughter is eager to meet a guy
with the same interests as her."·one mother explained,
"mainly MARRIAGE!"

--

JUNE 181

�. - .....

Page 1G-The Dally Sentinel

Friday, june 18, 1ia3

Pomeroy.-Mid,dleport, Ohio

I

.,_,

Su nda~

75
..

Community .Calendar
FRIDAY

POMEROY -"Amazing Journey 10 Bible TimesK is the theme of
Vacation Bible School at the Zion
Church of Christ through June 25 ·
from 9-11 :30 a.m. daily for ages
nursery through high school. Program is June 27 at 7 p.m. Kathryn
Johnson, 992-5195, is direclOr.
POMEROY - All, family revival
and vacation bible sch_ool, Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church,
through Saturday and Sqnday with
evangelist, Rev. Dave Canfield and
gospel music by Jim and Kathy
SisSon. Bible school theme is "Victory Station" fc. ages 4-12.
POMEROY - Full Gospel
Lighthouse, Hiland Road,
Pomeroy, will have revival through
Sunday at 7:30 p.m. nighlly with
Betty Baker and the Joyful Sounds. .
· Public welcome.

Major League baseball results - C-1

Happy

2746 for information.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Fish and Garne Society wiD hold
its fishi ng derby Saturday from 8.
a.m. 10 1:30 p.m. for children age
15 and under. Admission is free.
Bring a pole and baiL No minnows.
Prize~ will be awarded.

Father's

POMEROY ' The Catholic
Women of Sacred Heart Catholic
Church in Pomeroy will be having
a bake sale at Krogers on Saturday
from 9 a.m. ll! 1 p.m.

Day

Rio Grande baseball teams
recalled by James Sands • B-8

June 20, 1993

Meigs Public Library seeks
services • Beat of Bend-B·7

Inside

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
·a round and square dance Sillurday
at the Middleport Le~on HaU from
8-11 :30 with mustc by CJ and

TUPPERS PLAINS - Round
and square dance Friday 8-11 :30
p.m. sponsored by Tuppers Plains
VFW Post Ladies Auxiliary. Music
by CJ and Country Gentlemen.
Melvin Cross and Red Carr callers.
Everyone welcome.
CHESTER - Special meeting
Shade River Lodge No. 453
F&amp;AM, Friday, 8 p.m. with wort
in the master mason degree.
Refreshments served. All master
masons invited.
~ONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church, Long Botll!m, will
have preaching and singing Friday
at 7 p.m. with David Dailey, evangelist PaslOr Sieve Reed invileS the
public. FeDowship will foDow.

SATURDAY

POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance Club
will sponsor a dance Saturday from
8-11 p.m. at the senior citizens cen1 lee il\ Pomeroy. Kent HaD will be
the caUer. Dress is casual. Refreshments.
SALEM CENTER - S'tar
Grange and Star Junior Grange will
hold fun night Saturday at 6:30
p.m. Potluck supper and work session for fair booths.

County Gentlemen. Melvin ·Cross
will be the caller.' Bring soft drinks
and snacks. No alcoholic bevemges
permitted. Children welcome if
accompanied by an adult.

•

Vol. 21,

No.1 I
•
13 Section 124 Peg•
=eo=p;:yrlg=ht=ed=1=1183=-================M=Id=d=le:::po=rt=-P=o=m=er=o=y=-G=a=l=llpo=II=&amp;-P==o=ln=t=P=Iea=aa=n=t,=J=une=·=20=,=1=i9=3=:i::==========A llutumedla tnc.

·RACINE - The Oval and Sarah
Diddle reunion will be Saturday at
noon at Star Mill Park in Racine.
All friends welcome.

_..,.per

-

~____;_Ohio

. RACINE - Entertainment at Star
Mill Park in Racine on Saturday at
7 p.m. includes Middlebranch Blue
Grass, Mountain Top Singers with
Crystal Powell and Scioto Valley
Bluegrass Boys. Public invited.
Bring lawn chairs. Refreshments
will be availabl~.

River Sweep_......._ New GJMV solid waste

·district must file PDC
document with Ohio EPA

HENDERSON, W.VA.- The
Gallia Twirlers Western Square
Dance Club will hold a dance Saturljay from ·8-11 p.m. at the Henderson Community Cenler in Henderson, W.Va. Homer Magnet will
be the caller.

trict fails 10 ratify a locally dlafled ·
.· By CHERYL KULAGA
plan, the agreement of payment is
Tlmes·SeDt.!Del Staff
POMEROY - The new four- nullified.
Lance Wilson, director of the
county solid waste dislrict consisting of Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and four-county solid waste district
Vinton Counties wiD begin ll! write said the first thing the district musi
its fli'St solid waste plan in the near do is file a technical document
future.
called a Preliminary DemonstraThe board of directors for the tions of Capacity with the Ohio
old six-county solid waste district Environmental Proleetion Agency.
voted unanimously on June 11 ll!
Ohio EPA spokesman Rob
allow Athens and Hocking 10 with· ·Berger said that in this document
draw. creating two separate dis· the district has to demonstrate that
tricts. AU of the individual counties it has 10 years of disposal capacit}'.
also approved the withdrawal with
After this document is filed,
Jackson being the last tO do so on "the four counties wiD be able to
Monday, June 14.
. · become free from the EPA plan "
'
The agreement for withdrawal Wilson said.
Wilson said he had no idea at
allows. the maximum of $SO,OOO
that Athens and Hocking Counties this time how long it will talce for
can collect from the district fot the district to devise a new plan,
expenses incurred in drafting the but the district will have 90 days
two-county P.lan· According 10 the after the plan is written 10 ratify it.
agreement, tf the four-county dis· · "We want to urge them (the

SUNDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Jerry CotteriU; Elizabeth, W.VL, wiD be the
evangelist at Mt. Olive Community
Church on Sunday at 7 p.m. Paslor
Lawrence Bush invites the·public. .
POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buffington will be guest speaker at the
Naomi Baptist Church in Pomeroy
on Sunday at 10:45 a.m.
POMEROY - There will be an
open house at the Pomeroy Waste
Waler Plant at 500 Spring Valley
I,ane on Sunday from 1-4 p.m. This·
will be the last time the plant wiD
be open to the public.

RACINE - A Werry family
reunion will be held at the horne of
James and Karen Werry at their
LONG BOTTOM - Special
home of Court Street Road (Morning Star area) in Racine on Satur- speaker, Faith Full Gospel Church,
day at 1 p.m. A potluck dinner will . Long Bottom, Sunday, 7 p.m., Rev.
be served at 4 p.m: All family and Ashby, Williamstown, W.Va. Pasfriends are welcome. Call 949- lOr Sieve Reed invites the public.

The family of Kirtley and
Tressie Meadows Spencer held. its
annual reunion at the home of
Richard and Florence Spencer,
Tuppers Plains.
A pic~ic . lunch was held with
Kyle Gretlbmg, great-grandson of
C?lm:t and Mlidred Spencer Holler,,
nngmg the dmner ~11. Larry Ashbum asked the blessmg.
.
. l!'e aftern~n was spent remtmscmg, tossmg water balloons,
pitching horseshoes and talcing pic-

.

Auendmg were G~y and Evelyn
Spencer. Tuppers Plams; Olan and
Mildred Holter, Mansfield; ~irt
and .Betty Spencer, Grove C11y;
Vugtl and Barbara Spencer, Somerse~ Larry and Mary J~ Osburn,
Washmgton, W.Va.; Mildford and
Martha Jarvis, Little Hocking;

Pictured laft .to
photo) are Mluyillu11iellf,
Chldy Armlllead, Raebel
cya aad Mell11a WbiiUDe or
tbe River Valley Hlall SchOol
Key CIDb. Tbey afoDJ wllb
Krls Maadevllle and JeDDifer
Neal of Gallipolis, (bollotD
photo) were IIDODJ 72 ]leople
who llped Ia 1o belp wltb lhe ·
nf'll! anaual Oblo Ri1'er Sweep
at the Gallipolis public use
area Saturday morDIDJ. Eveal
coordluator Terry Hemby or
tbe GaUia CouDty Litter Pre·
ventlon ornce said that the
turn-out was lower tllaD she
had hoped. The River Sweep,
tbe Jara•l oDe·day riverbank
clean up project Ill tbe United
States, wu held simultaneous·
ly Ill lllx states Saturday moralog and covered tile le*tb of
the Ohlo trom Pltlabur , Pa~
to Cairo, Ill. PartlctpaDII
recei\'ed tree t·nlrta and were
lnlled b·ack to tile park at
noon tor refreshments. (T ·S
photos by Jim Long) ·

Howell Jarvis, Maxie and Lyndi)l
Jarvis, Gallipolis; Clyde and Regina Jarvis, The Plains; Sarah Shone,
Jan Keith Lainb, Toledo; Connie,
Jason, Brandie, Chad Ballard and
Teresa Sheets, Chesterville; Roger
Spencer, Marietta; Brenda and
Mike Weber, Pomeroy; Lewis,
Carolyn, Sherrie and Michael
Smith, Dennis Parker, Chester;
Sharon Drasko, Nancy Hoback,
Keri Whilaker Racine· Nick Beth
and Heather Asbum, Pete, Sheila,
Brian and SI8Cy Lawson, Washington, W.Va.; Roberta Hutchinson,
Kyle Greilbing, Mansfield; Norman Midkiff, David Gumpf, Ken
Fausnaugh, Success; Tim Spencer,
Dan, Shiela, Kirt, Danielle and
Tiffany Spencer, and Dick and Flo·
renee Spencer Tuppers Plains
'
·

worker~s

Lit~

Tlmes-Sentillel Staff
POMEROY -'l'be Meigs Coonty Chamber of Commerce appealed
Friday 10 area industry, business·
lea~. and other individuals interes~ in the state's econolllic development 10 get involved in a letter
writing campaign to legislators
supporting workers' compensation
reform, SB 152.
Paula Thaclccr, director of the
Meiss Chamber/EConomic De velopment
Office,
was
in
McConnelsville Thursday for a
meeting with officials of the Ohio
Chamber of Commerce, the Offtee
of Economic Development, and
other business Iejlders.
Focus of that meeting, according to Thacker, was on gathering
support for the biU 10 reform the
workers' compensation program in
Ohio.
.That bill would implement a
managed health care syslem 10 treat
all injured workers, establish a
"deductible" for all state fund
employers, enabling them to pay
the ftrst $1,000 of medical claims
without it-being charged to tile
company's experience rating; and
privatize the curmtt state"flln rebabilitation program which is report-

11' .1 f..t&gt;- l t ' .
C#.iJ if \I&amp;· • U\ '

Infant baptized during
Monday ceremony
Anne-Marie Quinn Franko,
infant daughler of Melanie Hackett
Franko and Robert M. Franko of
Irvine, Calif. was baptized Monday, at the Sacred Heart Church in
Pomeroy.
Attending were family mem·
hers, friends of the family, and
other members of Sacred Heart
Church.
Anne-Marie is Mr. and Mrs.
Franko's first child. She was born
and adopted on May 3 in California. She weighed seven pounds and
eight ounces.
.
She is the granddaughter of
Phyllis and George Hackett of
Middleport and Robert M. Franko,'
Sr., Phocniz, Ariz.
The infant was baptized by
Monsignor George· Adams of St.
Sylvester Church in Woodfield.
Msgr. Adams was paslOr of Sacred
Heart Church when Mrs. Franco
was born and performed her baptismal service.
· Anne-Marie's godmother is her
aunt~ Linda Hackett Goodwin,
West Palm Beach, Fla Her godfather is her uncle, Daniel B. Franko.

cQm . ro&amp;.r~m.

edly operating under-utiltz ancl
extremely costly state-Qwned rehab
cente(S.
It would also put in place betler
response rates, reducing legal costs
for workers and businesses, and
would provide incentives for workcrs to return 10 their employment.
Thacker said that the worker's
compensation program in Ohio as
it now operates is discouraging
new .industry from coming in
because of cost, and that businesses
are finding it more economical U!
go inll! other states, such as Indiana, where the cost is considerably
less.
"That's why we need reform,"
said Thacker.
"We are losing industry because
of the workers' compensation program in Ohio". The economic
develwment direclOr stressed that
letters of support 10 legislall!rs can
make a difference.
Action on the bill will probably
be taken within the next two
weeks, according to Thacker.
She stressed that the refonn will
benefit both employers and
employtes by eliminating some of
the time delay and legal ramifications usually associated with the

progmm.; f(is Opi.' "'now. She
said that fraud is a big iJsue with
workers' compensation claims .00
that the bill wiD help get that matter under control.
The underlying principle behind
SB 152 is "10 improve service 10
stalceholders while holding back
the risin~ costs that are driving ·
many businesses out of the state ..
according to the Ohio Chamber ~f
Commerce.
That organization contends that
enactment of the provisions of SB ·
I 52 would -achieve meaningful'•
reform of Ohio's workers' compensMion sys~em by reducing the
increasing costs of medical secvices, improving the administrative
procedures at both the Ohio Bureau
of Workers' Compensation and the
Indu~trial COmmission of Ohio, by
creating a more cuiiOmer-friendly·
system, reducing legal costs and'
providing incentives for wort~ 10
return to their jobs.
,
Thacker urged local support of
the Senale bill through a letler writing campaign 10 Senate and House
leaders and other lcgislalOrs. FuF
thee information on the issue can be'
obtained from Thacker at 992·
5005.

·Innovative master's program
at RG.wins Reg~nts.' approval

Fide lis Bell, pastoral associate,
were present for the baptism and
joined the Hacketi family laler at
their home for a rece~tion.
Other family members attending
were Anne-Marie's grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Hackett and Robert
M. Franko, Sr.• her aunt, Dr. Rose
Marie Hackeu, her uncles, Bill and
Dennis Hackett and Bill's wife,
Tammy, and cousins, B. J. and Ben
Hackett, Michael Chrystal, Kyle
and Jay Goodwin, Spencer and
Erin Hackett, great aunts. Barb
Mullen and Mary Pickens, and Sisters Alice and Virginia Griffin,
Dominican nuns from St Mary of
the Springs Motherhousc in
Columbus. ·

RIO GRANDE - 'An innovalive IICW Masler's Degree program
at the University of Rio Grande
desig_ned 10 ~n ~rs' 10 IIIC the
creanve arts m education hu been
approved by the Ohio Board of
Regents.
.
·The Masters of Education
degree. with 1 ~ooccnnation in the
fine lrll, "js alflduale prograin rc.
classroom lelle"hera K-12, arts edueaton, ud education admlnisuators in~ in arts and humui• tics u crellive aveniiCI Involving
students in the eliiiClieniW learning
· procoues,K explained Dr. Orca
Miller, direclOr of tbe Fine Arts
Program It Rio Clrlnde who coor-

dinated the developme~t of the new completed aver tmce such summer
degree program.
.
SCSSlOnS.
.
"This program has the expressed
"We will offer courses during
purpose of re-tooling classroom the academic year," Dr. Miller said.
teachers to utilize creative activity "but the program may be completas a means to involve children in ed ui summers only.K
the process of education." Dr.
Regionally and nationally~
Miller said.
known artists, cducaiOn .00 IChol"We will teach teachers how ars will be brouabt in to suppleand why they should introduce ere- ment the univenity faculty,,provid·
alive activity as a catalyst 10 inler- ina participants with i~onal
disciplinary and integrated stud- as well as practical experiences,
ies," he added.
Dr. MiDc:r said. ·
.The unique dearee. program,
"Anotber unique feature of this
which wu authoriZed by the Bolrd' new proaram," br. Mlllcr added,
of Reaents at its June 17 meeting, "is an orpnized class stUdy D'ip to
wiD include annual five-IWdc 1!1111- New York City .anNor other m~
mer se..ions. It is desiancd 10 be
Continued on A-2

Old Rutlan~ school building may b.e razed
ByCHARLINEHO~CH

Forher~an,theinfantwore

a while baptismal dress and during
the ceremony received a hand-

embroidered baptismal .gown from
Msgr. Adams. The gown was
inscribed with the infant's name
and date of her baptism. The gown
and a special baptismal candle
were made especially for AnneMarie by Rebecca Baldwin of
Msgr. Adams' parish.
Fr. Walter Heinz, pastor of
Sacred Heart Church , and Sister

municipalities that have to appove
the plan) 10 act as rapidly as posSible. We hope U! CUI the 90 days in
half, if possible,Khe said.
One benefit of ratifyiDg a locally-drafted plan for the four-county
district is the permanent ability 10
collect fees. The old district lost
this ability. which pays for operating the district. when the Ohio EPA
was in the process of writing a plan
for the district and only lemporarify
regained the ability, Wilson said.
Wilson said the support for the
new district has been overwbelmingly positive. "People don't want
10 be governed by the Ohio EPA."
House Bill S92 required that
each county come up with a solid
waste management and {eduction
plan either as a single county district or as a district with other
counties. Th.ese plans must be sub. Conttnued on A.S

Chambe'r seeks support for bill

Spencer reunion held
at Tuppers Plains

wres.

l'l'llh

.... .....

,. .IY

Tlm..satiMI Starr .
RUTI.AND • DemoUtion, not
renovation will PIObably be the
die olcf 111ree skll'Y Rutland
Scbool bulldiq wbich II
blilll lold by tbe Mt[JI Local
Scboill J)bcrlct 10 Jutlllld VIUap.
Valid Ia 19119, tbe bodkllq Is
in depblllle condldan.
It' hat • loaty roof, windows
witbout Jlua, deteriorated alerlor

deltintbJ!

• wood trim, walls withopt plaster,

floors without supports. It is not
even accessible by way of the large
front double doon because of over:
grown shrubs and 11ee1 which complelely block the entrance. ·
.,Built in 1915, the bulldin&amp; .,...$
used for both juniar .00 leDior high
school c'-1 until the.Northwestem Local School District merged
witb Middleport and Pomeroy into
tho new Melgs Local Scbool Dis·

trict in the late 1960's.
For sevcnl mantha Rutland Village hu been negocladnJ with the
Meias Local Board of Education
for the bulldina and land around it.
Several ycanqo the auditorium
on land l4ijlceat 111 tho ol4 Jutllnd
school wu turned over to tbe villaae and now operates u a civic
center, and houses vlllap officel
and vehicles of the Moip County
.
Continued A-l
·

on

DBSTlNED TO IE DEMOLISHED • Rut·
latld YIIJaaw wiD 801111 CIWil ddt aid Rullud Hilb
Scbool bulldlnJ, bat It aeema destined to l!e
demollalted becaue or Ill deplorable condition.

The
Ia ac~.:J llle blllldiDJ1 adjacellt
land IDCIIICI'eqe
It from tbe Melp Local
Board

or Bducatloa.

Anne·Marle Franko
t

•

•

'

•

. ·~

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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32530">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32529">
              <text>June 18, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
