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Weduesday, June 7, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Charges dropped-in pup mill case

Meigs County bas the tallest willow tree in the state, aL-.:ording
to state Department of Natural Resources records. The Jude fami·
ly stand In front of their weeping willow tree. Property owner' are
from left: (front row) Ryan, Alisha and Eric Jude; (back row)
Doug and Pam Jude. (Sentinel _photo by George Abate)

Danville family proud
of tallest willow tree
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Mei gs CouJlty boasts the
tallest weeping willow in the
state.
~- _
The willow stretches ltL!eet
higb and is located about two
miles south of Danville off State
Roure 325 near the Gallia:Mei~s
border. Ranked third largest 10
Ohio and c,allest in the state by
the 'Ohio Deparunent of Natural
Resources, the mammoth tree bas
, a 12-foot 4-inch circumference
·and a 68 foot crown.
The largest weeping willow in
the stale - locate&lt;) in Franklin
County - ljas a 20-fooL'4-inch
circ·umference. The second.
largest tree in lhc sm1c is localCd
in Fairfield Coumy.
Noled in lhe Ohio Big Tree
program, this willow's scientific
name is Salix babylonica.
Doug and Pam Jude have lived
ncar Danville for lhe last 10
years. 'lbe lifelong Meigs Coutlly
residents estimaled the tree to be
about200 years old .
"I like il. Irputs Meigs Counly
on top," Jude said.
· · A' natural spring provides a
wnlinual supply. of wa1er 1&lt;1 iJ1c
lr~~- This sprin£ has never run
dry. llC added.
·
"ll1card lhat ibcy used lO have
lhoms in them and il was useu for
lhc cross of Jesus," Jude said.
Hh's y;eeping hcca'us.c it did 1J1at."
This tree remains an cxccllcnc
shade lrce. willl numerous birds
landing in iL Usually 1hc limbs
Jumg down to the ground, hut on
one side 'it h:mgs inlo a field and

1hc cows e:il U1e leaves, he adued.
The ftimily used to have a
swing in this tree .
"I'm tryin£ 10 gel a si£n buill

for il," Jude said.
Eric Jude, ib~ eldest child, said
ibe tree is difliculllo climb.
"It's hard to climb il because
they have lhe limbs so high," Eric
said.
The Judes own ibis 93-acre
properly, call~d The Red Oak
Ranch . Jude w.orks at Meigs
Mine 31 in lhc prep planl on midnig!ll shift He ha:; worked at lhe
. opera lion for I &amp; years.
The famil y is also known
since il staHe d making Vallee
Potai.O Chips about a year ago.
Lasl fall, the opemlioo shut down
unlil a larger facility could be
foun(l , he added.
Ann Bonn er, with 1he .Ohio
Deparunenl of NaiUral Re.,ources
in Alhens, said ibis tree, is exotic
or nol nalive 10 Ohio.
"ll' s a real britiJe tree mill fairly shon-li ved. ll can snap and
hre().k," Donner said. " ll'l' nola

solid wood li ke an oak.'-'
More !han 75 species of willows grow in NoriJ1 America, she
adued. The will ows prefer a n
exceptionall y wei sne and have
invasive rools thm clog drams.
The tree is described as very
gracefu l, with a short, SIOUl trunk,
Donner said.
Th~ 1rue S. babylonica is an
enigma and appears almosl IO be
a plant of lhe past. In Europca~1
couniJ'ics and lhe Unncd S1.a1cs 11
is almosl 'nowhere to be fou nd ,
Donner said.
In facl, trees that have been
laheled 11\is species usually ar~
somelhing else. People wish 10

Heritage .Day progf8ffl"" -;;;;;o"i.'ln""Ced
Annual Heritage Day aciivilies,
including a parade, and Meig s
County Public Library and Muse·
urn activilies will be on tap for visi·
tors lo Pomeroy this weekend.
1ctivilies include: a puppel
show by ·tbe "Master's Messengers" of Hope Baptisl Ch ur ch at
10:30 a.m.; a performance by the
Big Bend Comm unily Band a1
-10:45 a.m. ; a ceremony by lhe
I 75th Anniversary of Meigs Counly Commitree marking the burial of
a time capsule al 11:30 a.m. in lhe
courthouse lawn.
The Heritage Parade slarts at 10
a.m. at the Meigs High School
foo1ball field. Any organizalion or
individual wishing to enler the
parade should call MHS Band

COLUMBUS (AP) - Supporl·
ers of an increase in the stale gasoline 1ax 10 pay for highway and
bridge impro'vemems appear lo be
running on emply.
Pro-gas taX forces in the Sena1c
on Wednesday were able to delay
- 1empomrily - a vote on a plan
It; ask Ohio volers 10 authorize bor·
rowing $1.2 billion for 10 years'
worth of highway and brid ge
improve ments.
'The bill calls for a constilutional
a.mendmen t allowing the stale to
IJick an additional $I 20 million a
year for 10 yc31S 10 a program that
·issues tionds for sewers, waler syslems and other local projecls.
"You have 10 have 17 votes."

and its leaves arc arranged in

tics ."

New GTE (tialing format
begins Tuesday, June 13

explained Sen. llen Gaelh, R-Deli· would genera1e $120 million a issue, but th~ speaker of the House
ance.
.
year, and wouldn ' l be noticed by has inditaled there is ~o ~u pport in ·
· The bill had no supporl among ·m01oris1s.
her caucus to do lhat," Dawson
th e Senate's 13 Democrats, and
Bul Gaclh said he may change said. "Therefore, we have lo look
Gaeth and other Republicans ques- his mind on lhe issue.
a1 the other options available.··
tioned whether il was wise to bor"When I find oul lhal lhere' s
Any increase would have to win
row money long-lerm to pay for only 15 voles for a gasoline lax vo1er approval to gel Voinovicb's
rouline highway and bridge mainte- over in the House .. . we have no support. he said.
nance and improvemems.
allemative bul 10 ·go this roule."' he
Se11'. Ben Espy, D-Columbus.
A legis lalive analysis said 1be said. "We can'lleave our roads go said Democrats would rather see
bill would cosl -lhe state up to $14 to beiHor two more years."
. the highway bonds splil from lhe
million in the firsl year, and up 10
Gaelh said he had no idea when exisling infrastrucwre bond pro$140 million a year afler I 0 years lhe Senate would reconsider the gram and consider~parately.
- with the amount decreasing
. :'We've never een sure, once
issue.
later.
Mike Dawson, spokesman for . ~ass 1hcse 1yp of bills, the
GaeU1 said he would ralher sec Gov. George Voinovich, also con- ·prOJCCis Ibm should
the priorily
an increase in the stale's gasoline ceded ii' s probably lime 10 leave · gcllhc prinril y," Espy said.
tax. 10 pay for lhe improvements. the gas tax behind.
·Bul he . 100, said lhe gasoline tax
He said a lhree-ccm rise ~n the tax -. _ "Sen. Gaelh raises a legilima~e mighl be a more responsible way 10
approach iJie problem.

Clinton vetoes spending cuts; quick deal seems likely

allcmmc and simple fa,hion. · ,

associa te this tree with the han£-

In addit on, llie annual evem lhe 50th anniversary of the end of
fealures crafiS, games and quilters.
World War II, special recog nition
Althou gh not pait of the fe slival, will be given to all World War II
lbe Ohio Center of'Sci ence and veterans in aucndance al 1hc dinIndustry program on "Body Build- ner. EntertainmeOI will be by the
ing: Bionics and Transplants" will Hislorical Sociely Singers.
be_on exhibit al the Meigs ·county
The Meigs County Museu m
Public Library Samrday from II will open Saturday at I p.m.
a.m. 10 5 p.m. During the hands-on · . A mum! by Larry Blake~ depic
session, participanls will lo.ok at mg early scenes from Olive an
real human bones and tie shoes Chesler IOwnship will be on exhib·
withouithe use of lheir hands .
il. Special displays include baseball
Also, a variely of exhibils and memorabilia, a pocket watch collively entenainmenl will he fea - lection, and lhe I 75th Anniversary
tured a1 lhe 24th Annual llerilage QuilL Outside lhe 'museum, John
Weekend of lhe Meigs Co unl y Rice, relired Meigs County' AgriMuseUlll.
culture Exlension Agem, will be
The museum 's evenl wi ll kick demonslrating sheep shearing at
off with the annual flerilage dinner I:30 and '2:00 p.m.
at 7 p.m. Friday. In celebration of
Continued on page 3

1

Supporters say gas tax proposal running on fumes

WASHINGTON ·(AP) - A
quick deal between Presidenl Clinton and congressional Republicans
seems likely over a velOed spending-culs bill ibm lhe GOP says provides "real savi ngs" and lhe White
House says amounls to "old poli-

ing gardens of llubylon.
The tree ha~ a .fast growiJ1 rate

direc10r Tony Dingess a1 992-5018.
Line up is 9:30 a.m. ·
.
Scheduled . enlerlainmenl
includes a piano program by Daniel
Russell at II :45 a.m.; the Dazzling
Dolls Balon Corps at noon fol·
lowed by Clogging, Inc. at 12:30
p.m. and CJ. and the Countrv Gen·
Uemen a1 I p.m.
The annual duck derby starts at
I p.m. with winners receiving U.S .
Savings Bonds up to $1,000 and
olher prizes. Ducks are available
lhrougb parlicipaling Pomeroy
merchanls throu gh Friday and at
Bank One until noon Saturday.
Proceeds from the derby go to the
Pomeroy Merchants Associalion lo
fund several downtown beaulification projecls.
·

··

·11nhe 'flfSI veto of Ols "2/-monlh·
old administration, Clinlon rejeclcd
1he measure Wednesday. He said
ibe $16,4 billion il would cui from
already approved spending for ibis
year would slash education, envi·
ronmcmal an.d housing programs
100 deeply while 1(ming "pet congressional projecls."
"That is old politics," Clinlon
said. " h is wrong."
H.ouse Majorily .Leader Dick

Armey conceded Republicans
didn 'l have lhe lwo-thirds majorily
needed 10 override lhe_ve1o and
wouldn'l even try. He described ibe
iss ues separaling the two sides as
·'a modesI difference."
"Now tha1 \he president seems
10 be able 10 ~0111e to Jl1e.1able. and
work out lhe differences we oughl
to be able to put il back logether
and get il back through as quickly
as possible," he said Ibis mommg
on Fox TV.
Republicans accused 1hc presidenl Of abandoning deficil redUC·
tion just as lawmakers begin lhc far
more daunting 1ask of balancing the
budget
" It is one of 1hc nails lhlll fils
inlo a coffin ," said Rep . Jerry _

Lewis. R-Calif., a senior member
but a small percen1agc of ibc bill's
of !he House Appropriations Comconrents.
miuee.
The measure con1ains new funds
" II is clear lhe White House .supponcd by Republicans and
political handlers decided a veto
Democra1s alike: $6.7 billion for
was needed 10 say President ClinCalifornia and olher states rocked
lon is relevant," said Haley Bar· : by natural disasL~rs.r about $250 bouP; chainnah 'Of lhc Republican
million for anti-lerrorism activilics
National Commillee.
and $275 million to .suppon Jor:
"I'm prepared to sil down wilh
dan' s peace 'efforts in lhe Middle
the presidenl and work ou l an
Easl.
agreemenl," said House AppropriThai leaves about $9 bil11on in
alions Commiltee Chairman llob . ne1 deficil reduction, an amount
L1vings1on, R-La,
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole
Clin1on and Republicans arc
R-Kan., _called "real savings, a~
eager 10 show lhcy are adamanl
Important down paymeol on getting
aboul reducing lhe deficit There is
our counlry's financial house in
no dispule between 'lhe presidcnl
order. " TI1e deficit for lllis year is
and the GOP about U1c arnounl of
runnmg at a rale of about $175 billhe. culs; their differences are over
lion.

Beginning Tuesday lony-dis- . ming include:. privale auiOmalic
tance calls from area GTE branch exchanges PBX). cus10mcr
exchanges ibal require "0" or "I" premises equipmcn( (CI'E), loll
before lhe telephone number will restriclion t~bles,_ speed ~all lists,
require the area t'O&lt;le.
call torw~dmg hsls, sial JOn me~·
In addition lo Pomeroy, o1hcr "'sage d~1a11 record mg. call delaii
telephone exchanges which will he rcporung, com puler dial~back
nffectedintheareaareLetartFalls. . devices, modems, facsunlle
Racine, Rolland anu Portland. machines, securily systems, pnvale
·
·· •
Athens, Albany, Amesville, Shade, pagin£ syslcms and lclephonc
LOS ANGELES . (AP)- Now
.Guysville, New Marshfield, The answering cquipmcnl.
- and no slranger to high -profile The fa1al wound, lakshmanan lhc · ·professor Laurie Levenson . ''They
Plains, Breman and Logan will also
"This change is needed 1o mee1 ibal ibe initial revulsion at the sight cases, made more than 30 mislakes orizcd, was intliciCd by an assailanl
might have more confidence (in lhe
be' affected. The change will also growu1 and mcreascd ue~and for of aulopsy pholos has apparently - everything from incorreclly
using his rig hi hand. Simpson is
autopsy) because someone ha~
apply lo Jackson, Glade, McArthur. telephone services wh•ch 1s rapadly worn off, OJ. Simpson jurors are measuring wounds to mislabeling a right-handed .
checked lhe errors .'·
Hill
Wells! on
and exhausung available telephone pondering other 'starlling·evidence: botUe of !)ile as ·urine to saying a
Legal analysts said lhe prosecu - .
Jurors -were firs! exposed to lhe
Oak
Wilkesville. '
numbers ;" said Lois . SeUers, GTE lhe_ multilud e of mislakes made wound was on the wro~g finger.
tion was spending so much time on
auiopsy photos Tuesday near the
Ohio GTE customers were noti- spokesperson. "ll makes possible dunng the exmmnauon of the bodSuit Laksbmanan IDSISted thai Golden's mislakes in an altempl 10 - end of a long court day. Many
fied of Ibis change al various times new combinalions of telephone 1es.
.
.
.
when H c~!'!e I() whal Kelber.~ · siCa! tbe. lhunder of the upcoming
flinched in !heir chairs and tried lo
during 1994 and have been able 10 numbers for currenl and fuiUre
In a maJOr pre-empt1ve str1ke, ·called the big llckel questiOns
cross-examination. During the pre·
look away when cOnfronted with
dial Iong-dislance withoul the area usc."
proseculor Bnan Kelberg has . -: ume and ~use of dealh- the liminary hearing, Golden was
lhe piclures, which included lifecode since January 1, 1994. This
_GTE will conven 62 Ohio essenually assume? lhe role of mi~lflkcs were msigm!Jcant.
,
clearly uncomfortable on the sland.
size Close-ups of Ms. Simpson's
. These s~all (m•slakes) do~ I
!-low lhis strategy works, howgashed neck. One juror appeared
permissive dialing period made the ofhces for mandalOry d1almg_ on ~n defense auomey, eltCIUng from lhe
trruJsilion easier ror customers by exchang~ ~y exchange ~aSIS thts county coro?er every _error made m !ffiP3Cl ~y abll~!Y to ~lve an opm· ', ever, remains to be seen.
on the brink of tears.
giving ibem the chance to repro- summer. 1 o aYIJ.!.\L.th~.!QfQ.!lY..£.: . ~ Ihe auto~s1es o( N1col~ Brow;I__ ~on m thJS_~~ ... -~.'?~L..:_
"I don'llhink any One individu·
But by Wednesday. th~ jurors
grmn their equipm~rorlriefuory· - nien ee of mlsdTrecletl or mcom- 'STU!jlsnrr·aM Rffi'lillil G51dman.
.
~non1s opm10n was tlial Ms . .. n1 erreF-Will·be problematic: lcwill • - we.re back.IIHftcil"tlSUal-stone-· •
dialing features on their phones 10 plete calls_. area GTE cuslomcrs ·
laksbmanan Satbyav- Simpson probably faced ~er killer . be the collcclive impacl on them
faced selves, showing about as
prepare them for the effective dale.
should begm using lhe new dialing ag1swaran sa1d Wedn~sday lh~t
for several, moments, h1l her face and whelher Ihe jurors will have
much emotion while looking at the
Examples of ilems which may formal Jun.e 13.
Dcpuly Medical Exam mer Irwm · on a w~ll m a slruggle and daed sufficienl confidence in the corogruesome pictures as !hey did when
require modification or reprogramGolden, a veleran forens1c doclOr sw1fLiy afrer her throa1 was slasbed. ner,'' said Loyola University law
hearing dry DNA ~slimony .

s·Impson JUrors
.
pon der

FOX FROZEN

AMultimedia Inc. Newapaper

•

By GEORGE ABATE, .
no other ·choice bul to file a law· dogs _- her personal pets The Daily ·sentinel.
Sentinel News Staff
suit," D~rham said. "I was not returned, Lemes said.
Relurning all lhe dog s lO
Officials dropped charges guilty. I flad show dogs. I had regMeig s Co unty Co uri Judge Durham will be difficult since the
Wednesday against a woman islered dogs."
Palrick O'Brien made two separa1e animals were placed in a wide area
accused of allegedly running a
Durham said she likely will ·orders requiring that these dogs be from West Virginia 10 Columbus to
"pup mill", according to Meigs renew breeding dogs. Durham said returned.
near Cincinnati, according lO the
County Court files.
she sold the pets to indivi4uals, not
Durham's seven dogs were not prosecu10r.
Sharon Dutbam, of Vance Road, pet s1.0res.
returne&lt;! by May 11and still have
Lentes said he may pursue
· Harrisonville, had 62 dogs, five
Her dogs bad a value of aboul not been .returned , Lenle s said. charges againSI Vinton CountY's
cats and two chickens seized from $24,000. During th\: follf years she ·O'Brien dismissed lhi s case Barbara Booth. Booth bad keplthe.
her property in March. All of her raised the dogs she bad been build- because the senlemenl was no I animals before the animals were
properly must be ·retull'ed to her, ing up her slock and had not made adhered 1.0. Le mes added.
placed since the coumy' s pound
Meigs County Prosecuiing Auor- large profits.
. Since Ibis was the f~rs1 charges could nol bold the animals, he
ney John Lentes said.
The ' dog breeds. included against Durham, .Lentes said he 1 added.
Wednesday, lhe charge of cruel· Pekingese, Yorkshire terrier, Sbi- cbose to seek an out-of-court settleA tape-from Boolh was circulat·
ty to animals was dismissed.
btzu, Mallese, boxer, bassett bound mcm since there was no guarantee ed lo radio and lelevision stations
Durham said she look good care and olhers, Lenles said.
the dogs would be removed from which made derogatory commeniS
of her animals, keeping lhem in a
An agreement bad been reached · her property.
loward the judge and prosecutor,
10 by 36-foot concrete pen . The between the prosecu1.0r's office and
The animals bad been held out- Lentes said. Also, Booth had told
animals were fed and warered oul· Durham's auomey, Lenres said.
side in cat carriers in the snow, the prosecuiOr' s office that one of
side, she ac;lded.
.
Part of ibe selUement was ibat
Meigs County Humane Society the dogs had l5een run over by a car
"If they don'l return them I have Durham would gel seven of her lnvesugalor Sharon McLead had ·and another dog had its lhroat lorn

LB.

ump oast ..............

2 Sectlont, 16 Pagea 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 8, 1995

-.

GROUND

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Low toaJcht Ia 601. Hu•lcl.
Frlcla:r porti~CIIIdy, sb""en,
bl&amp;b Ia mid

other .s_
t artling evidence

pr.

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\

Thursday, June 8, 1995
l

Commentar
The Dailr Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Obto

OHIO Weather

I

Ben Wattenberg ·

What they are saying in
other Ohio newspapers

olher businesses (theme parks,
HBO, retail stores and magazines).
Fine. Sort of. The weakness of
cultural polilics - and not just
regarding the entertainment tssue
- is that it is largely i~effectual in
the governmental realm . Sbame
canno1 be legislated. Assume that
Time Warner , under pressure,
drops gangsta rap. (I recommend
it.) As'sume further that other big,
vulnerable companies do likewise
(German-owned Bertelsmann and
Japanese-owned Sony.) Will that
end the matter? X&lt;il Smaller, less
vulnerable complmiis will produce
the stuff. If they don't. new companies will emerge. Why? Adolescents buy it, yielding profits to peddlers.
That too can be stopped. By
censorship. Except that 1he vast
majority of Americans (69 percent
to 27 percent) don't want it. They
do want tighter parental supervision (93 percent-6 percent), warning labels on records (83 percentIS percent) and " voluntary
restraint by entertainment companies" (81 percent-IS percent) .
Right. The labels teD kids it's a hot
one. In rebellion mode, tbe kids

...

OFFICE SPACE
~~ THf ONLY THING

HEr OCcupy
WITH ANY

I

SUCCESS:

Telegraph-Forum (Bucyrus), May 31
Before the Republican Party officially jwnps aboard the anti-immigration bandwagon, it sh~uld listen to one of its top slars, House Majorily
Leader Dick Armey of Texas. Armey, a trained economtst, counts far
more blessings from iJnmigratioqthan problems.
Anney rightly sees immigration as an issue of human liberty. ''The
impulse to limit immigration is really a manifeslalion of prolecltontst
impulse And il is misguided for the same reasons ... Should we reduce
legal immigration? Wen, I am hardpresscd to think of a single probl em
that would be solved by shutting off the supply of willing and eager new
Americru1s. If anything ... we should be thinkmg about mcreasing legal .
immigraLion. ''
Anney ts absolutely right. Immigrants typically want 10 work. They
often start ruld creale jobs In broad economtc terms. they keep our labor
market llextble, allowing American companies to hold prices down and
rcmrun competitive in world markets .

The (Lancaster) Eagle-Gazette, June 4
Just like the Genie in a bottle, tlte Republican-controlled Ohio House
granted rn1c of Gov. George Voinoviclt' s londest wishes last week when it
sent htm a btll giving his office full control of Ohio's Bureau of Workers'
Compensation.
Since takmg office m 1991, the governor consis1ently and justifiably
has cnlicized Workers' Comp; calling il "the silent killer of JOhs .': He
always has comended thai busmesses shy away from Ohio when Otey sec
bow the system would 1tea1 t11em He now has an opportunity to do somethinlJ abmii'it
.
.
.
.
We ttnd htUe substrutce 111 Dcmocrauc clauns llml Ole bill turns Workers' Comp into a "political bully pulpit" lor the Voinovich administration. The governor's overall track rcC'tlrd m appoinlJ11CDts seems to indicate he seeks out qualified individuals capable-of executing his programs.
We expect whining about Workers' Comp 10 conttnue. But we finnly
believe when the dust has sc10cd and the new law sunsets in 1998. Ohio
will have a more effictenl, les. costly system for prolecting ils workers.

Berry•s World
DON'T Tf.LL- ME
LET M£ GUESS•.
•'

.A
Dl1TOHEAD!
YOU'RE

I

·- l-Al:cu~!-~~~~!for~e.~c~ISI~~~or~~~condi~·li~ons~and~hl!!!sh!!!!.!~~~=~

Shamesmanship not -censo·rship

.MULTt1EDIA,INC.

The Columbus Dispjltch, Jun,.z
"I hoP.e this operation comes out all right," the surgeon tells Ole
paricnt ' I've never done one of tl~ese before."
That's part of a hoary doctor's joke. It comes 10 mind because of an
eminently senstt&gt;le de£ision by\ the Ohio Supreme Court recently that said
..Mansfield General Hospilal c: nnot do life-threatening heart catheterizauons because it is not equipped to deal with possible complications.
"We are unwilling to allow a hospital .. . to skin its responsibilities to
those m need in the absence of having open-heart surgery backup," Justice Francis E Sweeney wrote in the majority opinton.
There were many zrgs rutd zags in Ute N!.ansfield hospital's anempt to
win lhe right to perform caOlelenzatmn llul 11 losl an appeal in 1991
when certtflcale-of-nccd (CON) rules were changed, so· hospitals performed lngh-nsk caOJCterizattons also would need an open-herut surgery
capability.
.
It's almost ironic that a vrctory lor CON should com~ at a ttme when
the Geneml Assembly has decreed U1at the CON law llC phased out. The
law was supposed lu hold down costs by limiting unnecessary and expensive equipment and ho~pitaf beds . Unfortunately , some hea lth carc
providers used the overlong appeal process to delay or stymie their competitors' plans

Friday, June 9

.
Page2
Thursday, Jun,.s, 1995

•

Bob Dole's box-office ·bonanza competition today."· (It's even betin Hollywood spotlights the value ter than that.)
Dole won a political Oscar. The
of cultural politics, and its weak·
Washington Post headlined:
ness.
Dole went to Tinseltown and
trasbed the entertainment industry
, for promoting •'cas~al violence and
even more casual sex." He singled · "DOLE'S BLAST AT HOLLYROBERT L. WINGETT
out Time Warner Inc. for P-urvey- WOOD RESONATES - Theme
PubliSher
ing the most rotten sort of ' gangsta Has Appeal Far Bey.ond Social and
rap," ghetto music that glorifies · Religious Conservatives." Dole
· rape, mutilation, torture, dismem- was even attacked by Hollywood
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
liberals for endangering free
berment and murder- of women.
General Manager
Controller
Dole followed all the estab- expression. even though Dole
:lishc!i.lPOlitical rules fO'r cultural abjured censorship, while peddling
politics . He named names. He sbamesll\ansbip. (Similarly, BenLETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
delivered his lectllre on the' home nett and Tucker call them se lves
word• long. All letters are subject to editing and must be Signed with name,
ground of the malefactors. He dealt "virtual absolutists on the Fir~t
address and· telephone
number.
No
unsigned
letters
will
be
published.
Letters
with a serious situation, more seri- Amendment.")
shou ld be 10 good taste. addressing issues, not personaht~es.
1
Dole did right. Voters dest'rvc 10
ious than Murphy, Brown 's illegiti&amp;...._ _ _ _ _..;......;I_ _ _ _ _...,._ _ _ _ _ _.....,_ __, ,mate baby. He didn't manufacture
know about the values as well as
the issue: Jobn Leo had launched the policies ot theu Potential leaders . Symbols count in politics. as in
the attack on Time Warner in U.S
News, and the team of Republican liftl. Worriel) parents can use a
Bill Bennett and Demdcrat C. morale· booster when arguing with
U1eir kids. And when c~rporate culDelores Tucker had already rured
televtsion spots denouncing the ture vultures know that big shots
will rap them publicly , lhey are
company. Dole was selective, noting that, in general, "The Ameri- more likely to mind their manners.
can entertainment industry is at the That is particularly so for a huge
By The Associate~ Press
.
. .
1
cutting edge of creative excel- company like Time Warner, which
Excerpts of Obio edttonals of nauonal and statewtde 11\teres~
lence.. and dominate(s) worldwide ts vulnerable to boycotts ini their
The Cincinnati Enquirer, June 1
Following international policy in Bosnia is like watching a lost safari
in one of those old Tarzan mov1es. You just know that sooner or later they
wiD stumble into quicksand, a river of crocodiles or a hail of poison darts.
And now it's happening. More than 300 U.N. "peacekeepers" are
caught in quicl\sand, turned inlo buman-sbield.bostages, chained to targets
by the Serbs to prevent NATO air strikes.
Yet France, Britain and President Clinton wan I to send more troops
marching into the quagmire.
The U.N. role has been reduced to playing targets for both sides. Lightly anned U.N. troops who are supposedly defending "safe areas" are
being killed and captured by Serbs who could give brutality lessons 10
Nazis. The presence of U.N. troops delays a settlement and prolongs the
grisly bloodshed. They have been hostages from the start, whose vulnerability to Serbian retaliation has blocked NATO air strikes that could have
forced peace.

1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

buy the records . And new upslart
culture vultures make money.
that's still probably a net plus
from what we have now, but not by
much.
So too with most of lhe stark
issues of cultural politics now on
the table. They lack either major
public consensus, or appropriate
goveJnmental response. or both.
There is not much the government
should or could do about homosexuality . The Feds could illegalize
abonion, but solid majorities don)
want them to do it. The prayer in
the school argument, as made by
the Christian Coalition, •'would not
restore compulsory, sectarian
prayer or Bible-reading dictated by
government officials ... " and would
be "voluntary, sludent and citizen' inittated free speech in non-compulsory~enings .... " Which leads to
the question: If you agree with tha~
and get it, what do you get if you
get it?

•

W.VA.

Ice

Polls show that the catchall term
"values," m one form or anotller,
is seen to be i,he "most important"
issue in Ainerica. lbat shows voter
w1sdom, but not preci sion. The
"cultural" part of the values issue
is good ground for personal
acttvi sm, but hard for government
to legislate. Not so in the "social"
part of the values iss ue; . In that
realm l~ere is plenty 1he govern ment can do, and a broad consensus to do it.

South-Central Ohio
• Today ... Partly sunny with a
chance of mainly afternoon showers or thunderstorms. A few of the.
storms may be severe with drunaging winds and large hail . Hi~;h in
the middle 80s. Variable winds 5 to
fO mph. Chance of rain is 40 per1
cent.
Tonight ... Partly cloudy. A
chance of lhnnderslorms early.
Low in the middle 60s. U'ght
.winds. Chance of rain is 30 per-

Amatcans want to ' remstat'e
punishment for crime, reslore dtsincentives to welfare, re-establish
rigor m schools, and go back to an
earlier non-preferential form of
afftrmmive action.

·w illiam 'Wimpy' Stricklen
• William "Wimpy" Henry Stricklen, 68, ol Poim Pleasant dted Wednesday, June 7, 1995, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
He was a retired line superintendent of Appalachian Power Company,
where he had been employed for 41 y\)ars; a member of the Main Street
Baptist Church; a United States Navy veteran ot WQrld War II; a 1945
graduate of Stonewall Jackson High School; and he was a licensed private
pilot
.
.
· · Born May 12. 1927 in Charleston, he was a son of the late Henry and
Rosie (Taylor) Stricklen.
He ts survived by his wife, Oorthea (Clark) Stricklen; three sons and
'daughters-in-law, Btll and Sara Stricklen and David and Dawnda
Stricklen. all of Point Pleasant, and Tom and Carolyn Stricklen of Teays
Valley; two half-sisters, Dorthy Songer of Berkley Springs and Emogene
Sayre of Dunbar; and four grandchildren.
Service will be Saturday, June 10, at n a.m at the Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Point Pleasan~ w•th Rev . Don Johnson officiating. Burial
will follow in IGrkland Memorial Gardens.
Visiting hours will be held at the funeral home Fnday from 6-9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, friends wishing may contribute to Main Street Baptist Church Bmlding Fund. J 100 Main Street, Pomt Pleasant, W Va..
2S5SO.

copy ol 01eir receul newslelter, a career opporlunities and restructurgraph to track your fund's perfor- ing changes at SteinRoe, the three
mance on, and a list of the fund's porllolro man agers ongmall·~
minding Ute futld have moved on·
currclll holdin gs.
The
new management team
There are 40 issue s in the
includes
Brady along wilh Erick
Young Inv estor Fund porlfol io.
Dian Vujovich ·
Gustafson
and Eric Maddix.
The fund's top three holdings as of
SleinRoc's
invesnnent s1ylc has
obJeCitvc, UJe Youug Investor. Fund the end ot March were Microsofl ,
long
been
one
ol selecl mg quality
can easi ly move- n ghl 10 the front AT&amp;T and Coca-Cola. Whtle Ute
growth
stocks
and th en sticking
of 01e class .
lund lik es to keep ils ponfolio
"We ' re worktng on our ftflh turnover low - Brady said that if wtth them . So, while lhe Young
newsletler. the Dollar Digcs~" said UlC porUoho turnover tate is above lnvcslor Fund's marketing has Jar;
David llmdy, one of lltrce portfolio 35 percent a year the y are "over- gctcd kids , adults who like the
managers ol lhe Young Investor managing" the fund - 1wo rcce111 fund's investment philosophy, and
Fund.
addtlions are lntern&gt;UIOnal Fmnily w·ho want to learn some of the
"It's a wonderful product Entertatnment and llaby Super- _basks ol investing withoul goi ng
back to school, might also find the
geared for prereens ll\ 1ccns. Each slore.
month we dtscuss a companx Ulat's
" We like International l'amily lund appe;Uing.
Ji' or more inrormation on
in 01c lund and break il down inlo Enlertainmenl because they provarious terms to gel ktds thinking duce high-quality family cmertain- Stein Roe's Young Investor Fund,
!hal when they walk mto McDon- ment , they are taking the concepl call 1-800-403-KIDS (1-800-403ctld's and plunk their $3.50 onlo Ute oversea~ ami we think lhcre lS a 5437).
Cupyright1995 NEWSPAI'ER
counler lhey'rc not jusl walking . need for hi gh-quality chtldrcn's
away with a burger; they arc givm.~ and family entertainment out ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Dian Vujovich is the author of
Mcl1onald's reve nues, which is a !he re," said llrady . "And we've
added llaby Superstores. There arc "Straight Talk Ah.,ut Mutual
source of cash flow "
Along with 1hc newslc lier , lots ul little kids ruuun&lt;t with p:lt- Funds," whidt Is published hy
c niS ~pending lois ol money on McGraw Bill. Send &lt;]Uestions to
Stcml~oc sem.ls ml ereslcd mvcstors
her in care of litis newspaper.
a welcome ktl. Included in the krt UJCm,''
(Fnr informatiun on how tO
ru·c the fund's prospectus, :m activiOther developmcnl s wilh 1he
c"mmunicate
electronically with
ty gmdc wtth ideas aboul mvc~lm~ lund include a change in por~jjllio
this
columnist
and others, con ..
tltm patents ami U1etr ktds can work managers As ol mid -Marco the
tact
America
Online
hy calling 1on together, an' owner's manual Young Investor Fund ha.&lt; an cmirc:
800-827-6364,
exl.
8317.)
·
ahout the bcnefus of mvcsling, a ly new manage~cnt terun , Due to

cenl. Bul don't give the funJ'a tina'!
grade yet - remember, school's
not out until Dec. 31.
As far as meeting us cduc:uional

0

~

Middleport Court news
• The following cases recently
were heard in the Middleport
Mayor's Court of Dewey Horton
· Forfeited were:
Steven G. Goodwin, C lifton,
W.Va., $50 for speed; Darrell W.
Brewer, Middleport, $54 for speed;
Tracy L. Green, Albany, $5'5 for
speed; Matthew E. Long, Mt. Vernon, $500 for drivin g under the
tnfluence and $60 for going the
wrong way on a one way street;
Kenneth R. Smith, Pomeroy, $260
for fleeing lrom a police offtcer,
~50 for reckless operation --anLl
$SOO for DUI; Jeffrey S. Darnell,
Pomeroy, $60 for stop sign; Steven
~con Powell, Middleport, $60 for
running a stop

But a maJor correction from ll1c
ex~esses or the 1960s cultural revolution IS necessary and Inevitable

now that U1e catastrophi c consequences of the " liberatlon " era are
obvious to nearly everybody
America's cultural pcntlul urn
has swung from Victorianism to
licenuousncss. It is )lound 10 swing
back - either moderately or VIOlently and repressively.
·
Over the last 30 years. whal
started'as a movement to counter
Puritamsm led to •exual penrussiveness. which led to an AIDS
epidemic, rampant illegiumacy
ralt~s, rutd growing child poverty.
At the same time, an effort to
free schoolchildreh from rote memorization led to a collapse ol educational standards. Attempts to end
secular prayers in schools led to
expulsion of religious expression

movi es and ads tJ1at

lc ~tvc

nnlhing

10 the, imagination and rap
"mustc" glorifyi ng rape, 1onure
and murder
In Freudtan tcnns, lite id is out
of colllrol, and now the superego is
being cal lt.!LI in Lo restore some bal ance. In cu ltural tcrnts, reaction ts
under way, as evidenced by Ole rise
ol Lhc religious ri gh l, bqn1rt1san

effons 10 ftght teen pregnancy
throu gh "abstinence," new respect
for parochial schools over public
schools, tipper Gore's camp:ugn
against raunchy rock lyrics, and
Sen. Paul Simon's, D-111., pressure
10 nwke lelevtsion le~s viulcnl.
Pohticall y, the Republican Parly
is bound to protit from the move:
mem because Democrms were and
are so assoctated wllh " Iibera·

tion." President Clinton, ever
caugh1 in the middle, sometimes
rails at Hollywood (as in ,ht&gt; last
State of the Union) and at otlter
times hugs its lcadinJn:rrltural
defender, llarbra Stretsand. ·
All the Repubhcan pre-,idcntial
candtdates arc trying to cash in on
the spirit of reaction. Texas Sen.

~ign;

and Shalmon

ll:mel, Middlepon, $150 for disorder! y conduct.
Fined were:
' Gary Rose, Middleport, $ 100

plus costs for disorderly manner,
$100 for disorderly manner; Larry
L. Mitch, Middleport , $100 plu s
cosls for dtsorderly manner. $100
for disorderly after wanting. $ 100 ·
disorderly by fighttng, $200 lor
resisting arresl ;
Amy Little, Pomeroy, $ 100 plus
costs for leavin g th e scene of an
accident, $10 for no insurance:
W1lliam Hendncks: Pomeroy, $S
plus costs for speed; Christopher
W. Staats, Midylcport , $5 lor runmng a stop sign; Steven D. Miller.
Syracuse. $200 plus coSis for drivmg under suspension:
Arthur Petrie, Pomeroy. $100
plus cosls for disorderly manner:
Delllse Clark, Columbus, $100 plus
costs for consumm g alchohol under
the age of 21: $50 for disorderly
manner.

Divorces and dissolutions
The followmg actions to end
marriage were liled recently in the
office of Meigs County Clerk of
Coutts I~1rry Spencer·
Divorce asked - Cheryl Lynn
Fox, Pomeroy, from Larry Robert
Fox, Mtddleport, June 7.
·

Let Dole lead 'culture war,' not Buchanan
Morton Kondracke

cent
Fnday .. . Partly sunny wtth a
chance of showers or thunderstorms. High in the middle 80s.
Chru1ce of rain is 40 percent.
Extended forecast
Saturday and Sunday ... A chance
of thuoderslorms Lows in the 60s.
Highs in Ule 80s.
Monday ... A chance of showers
or thunderslorms . Lows 55 to 60.
Highs in lhe 70s.

--Area Death--

There " a role tor cultural polilics. There 1s a more importanl role
for social politics.

Phtl Gramm cozied up to Chnsll:Ul ing rap·musu..: executives at Tunc·
Coa liuon Dtrector Ralph Reed . .Wamcr an oppurlunity to dismi ss
when Ihal group's new -''Comracl pressur.c on Otem as mere electionwith the American Family" was eering . On U1c otiler hand. he says,
introduced. He' s damaged , though, "Dole has put thi s on page one,
.hy news that he once toyed with above the told "
One
who
is
ecstatic
about
mvcstments m solt-corc porn
Pat Buchanan anlicipaled - and Dole's recent spcccp in ·Califomia
overdid - the reaction theme in t s Ralph Reed, who calls it "~
his 1992 Hou ston convention dcfinmg moment" in Dole's cmn•
p&gt;lign, showing tbal Dole ''knows
speech, touttng "religious war"
and vig ilantism. California Gov . how 10 make 1he right enemies ...:.
like Oliver Stone and People for
Pete Wilson IS low-roadi ng, blarnmg 1mmrgrants and afftrmaltve · the American Way - as well al
action for the country's troubles, . how 10 appeallo his friends."
Reed also thinks Dole's ~'!king
rather than Hollywood moguls in
on a huge corporation like Timehi s backyard.
Warner is tactically wiser than
Dole. meanwhile, is picking up
anackillg a black rapper like Sister
th e theme lale and probably withSouljah (Ciuuon ' s 1992 target) or a ·'
out deep convtc~on. He admits he
gets hts vis1ons from opmion polls, mytl1ical character like Dan Quayle
foe "Murphy llrown "
and in this case his consulling lirrn,
Dole was careful to make ll
Public Opinion Slra,lcgics, produced dat~ showing that Holly - clear he docs no1 favor offictal
"censorship" of the entertainment
wood is among the lcast-esrccmcd
of U.S. institutions.
mdustry but rather ·'self restrain!. •·
In his announcement speech,
There Is a dillercncc. The enlerDole look a shOI at popular culture
t:unment industry still has the sense
and 01e line went "off the charts"
not 10 feature live sex shows from
in his focus groups. So, now !)ole
Thailand. Thai's self-restrain!., II' it
is taking up where Dan Quayle and
doesn't learn 10 practice it more ,
Bill,Bcnnett have shown the way.
Pat Robertson and Pat Buchanan
bashing Tunc-Wllrncr --- - · - -- - -wil~ be aiO'Ilg·"Willi proposals. for
true censorship.
Dennett, who dec1ded not to run
for president in order to concen(Morton Kondracke Is txeclltrate on the counterrevolution. says
flve editor of Roll Call, the news•
paper orCa]lilol Hill.)
.
he is "not happy" UKtl Dnlc rs giv-

Clo::dy Clo::dy

~------Weather

gets kids started

public life.
And "free speech" has led to
"rutyOJing goes." as epilomi ?.cd hy

S111rry Pt

C11185Aocu--, Inc.

SIHI-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

and even rchgwus values I rom

News in Brief -

'

DtSsolutton asked - Deborah
Lynn Babbitt , Rae me , and
Lawrence Millard Babbtll, Grulipolis, June 7.
Divorce granted - Vincent E.
Knight Jr. and Samantha Knight,
June 7

1

A fund bas been established at area Bank One of Alhens branches 10 assisl a 16-month-old Belpre boy who lost his ann in a lawn
'
mower accident May 31.
Michael Barrett Jr.'s ann was reattached last week in Allegheny
General Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pa.. but be has since undergone three
operations and may face additional surgery, a family spokesperson
0

said.

(For information on how 19
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online hy calling 1-

Politically and on Ute merits,
Sen. !lob Dole, R-Kan., deserves a
9.8 on a scllle of 10 for hts attack
on the harm that Hollywood is
domg 10 American values.
Dole deserves less Ihan a I 0
because he's a late arrival to a
cause that Bill Betlflctt pioneered
- the lormer education secrelary
and anli-dtug czar isn't happy
about 'it -and because Dole's
done it in the conlext ol a presiden lial campaign, invum~ the ~barge
thatu's "just politics.'

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
number of American s- filing new
claims for jobless benetits fell by
7 .ootllast week, the second drop in
tlm:e weeks.
The Labor Depanment said
today that firsHime applications
for unemployment insurance
totaled a seasonally adjusted
372,000 dunng the week ended
June 3, down from a substantially
revrsed 379,000 a week earlier.
Clatms during the week ended

will be held June 24 and June 25 al
the Middleporl Gen. Hartinger
Park . Entry fee is $50, plus two
balls. For details, call 992-6890 or
742-2808.
Special services
The Faith Full Gospel Church of
Long Bottom will have services at
7 p.m. Friday at the church. The
Clatk Fantily singers will be there.
Pastor Steve Reed invites the public.

Fund established for area youth

''Think Tank."

SteinRoe's Young Inve!~f!Jr
IFund bas been around for a lillie
more than a year And although
tltis growth fund's Larget audience
has been lillie k1ds, tis first-year
performance results were pretty
grown-up.
In late Apnl 1994 , StemRoe
introduced a stock fund wtth a double investment objective: tQ seek
1m-term capit1l appreciarion - a
t:lllk Ow fund hopes to accomplish
by investing pnmarily in common
slocks - and to teach children and
teen-agers about bas•c eco nom tc
pnnciples and ~ersonal finance .
Here's how this fund bas scored on
both counts.
The Iota! retum smce its inceptiOn on April 30, 1994, through
April 30, 1995, was 15 45 perccnl.
Thai ranked this new kid on the
block m the 941h positton out of
S03 growth funds , acco rding lo
Lipper Analytical Services The
average tolal rerum for all growOt
funUs in that same time period w:l'
10 72 percenl
So far thts year, however, lhc
fund hasn't beaten the averages.
From Dec. 31, 1994, Onough May
25, 1995, Its lola! return was 9 76
percent, while the average growt11
fund's Iotti return was 13 09 per-

Hymn sing to he held
The Hillside Baptist Cburch will
sponsor a hymn sing on the
Pomeroy parting lot at 7 p.m. Friday. A sound syslem wiU be provided and any gospel group, duets,
trio's or soloists who would like to
sing sbould call 992-6768 or 992570S.

~Local

(.,w at the American Enterpr~e
I nstilule, is the host of lhe weekly
·pub1ic television program,

fun~

Jobless claims down 7,000

'

lien Wattenberg, a senior fel-

New mutual

IV!eigs announcements

Softball Journey set
,
A women's softball tournament
•

The Dally Sentinel • age 3

Tbe fund has been created by James E. Bush, the boy's grnndfather, to assist with medical expetrses. The boy's parents have no
health insurance, the spokesperson said.
Donations to the fund cail be made at Brutk One offices in Galti"polis, Pomeroy, Rutlrutd and Athens

Meigs judge to hear riot case
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill of the Meigs County Court of Common
Pleas is scheduled to preside over the trial of a man accused of the
deaths of five inmates at the Lucasville Correcuonal Facility
Keith Lamar, age unreported, faces nine counts of aggravated
murder with death penalty specifications in the wake of the 1993
Lucasville prison riot.
He is accused in the murders of Darrell Depina, William Svetle,
Albert Staiano, Bruce Ytlale and Dennis Weaver.
Lamar was in the Lucasville facility after being convicted of
murder in Cuyahoga County. The Lucasville trial is set to begin
Monday.

Man pleads to felony charges
A 20-year-old Pomeroy man pleaded guilty to three felony
charges in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court of Judge Fred
W. Crow III.
Gary D. Arnold, Jr., pleaded gmlty to charges of breaking and
entering and gross sexual imposition with a 15-year-old "stepuning
from the breaking and entering of a Pomeroy residence on Nov. I 0,
1994, said assistant Prqsecutor Chris Tenoglia . In additton, be
pleaded guilty to a charge ot escape after running out of the Meigs
County Sheri[f s Department on Apnl 18.
ti~~e charges are felonies of the fourth degree carrymg 18-month
5
. He faces sentencmg next month.
,
p ~emences

No one hurt in wreck

1

Two drivers escaped mjury Wednesday around 1.20 p.m. after an
unidentified vehicle stopped suddenly and then fl ed th e scene,
according to Pomeroy Pollee Department reports.
Tbotl}as B Lester, 29, of Mason, W.Va., and lleth Anne Kirby,
35, of Huntmgton: W.Va., were both driving eas1 on East Main
Street neru McClure' s Family Restaurant, records show
The unidentified cru stopped suddenly and Leslcr htt the vehtcle
with his 1994 Chevrolet, causing hght damage to the lront and rear,
records show . IGrby reported light damage to the front of her 1995
Ford after she hit Lester's vehicle.
No citations were issued m this wreck, reports stated.
\

\

.

~n:i~~ :i~C~nt~O~'~ve~Ve~~~~e~rial

Emergency Medical Service logged
Jive calls for asststance Wednesday. Units responding mcluded:
MIDDLEPORT
4:05 p.m., Page S1ree1, Eva

Marriage licenses
The following coup le s were
issued marriage licenses recently in
the Metgs County Probale Court of
Judge Robert Buck:
Jerry Lee C le land, 24, and
Stacey Renee Gibbs, 23, bolh of
Pomeroy; Jerry Lowell McPherson,
27. and Bo~bie Rae Mitchell, 21.
both of Pomeroy ; Alban Ray CurIts, 23 , Pomeroy, and Mary Melissa
Compston, 21. M tddleport:
Mark Martin Dovts, 41, and
Conme Darlene Cleland, 39, both
of Middleport; D:ma Ray Wtlliams
Sr., 39, and Shelby Lynn Hoschar.
23. both of Pomeroy ' •

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT
WALT DISNEYS

A GOOFY MOVIE G
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
A LITTLE PRINCESS G
ONE EVENtl'jG SHOW 7:30
446-0923

May 27, originally estimated to be
389,000, were first lltrough to have
ri sen by 9.000. The revision
showed they actually dropped by
1.000.
The departmem said that initial
data reported dunng weeks that
conlain a Monday holiday tend to
be subject 10 large revisions
bccau&gt;e states have less time to
ob~1in Ute figures .
.
Claims have remain substantiaiJ
ly above the 335,000 range record~
ed earlier m 1995, reflecting the.
sluggish economy and slower job'
growth . In fact , payrolls declined
by 108,000 dunn g Apnl and May,
the fir st drops in more lh an 1wo.
years.
The four-week moving average.
ot new weekly jobless claims rose
by 1,000 to 374,500. highest simi
379,250 durmg the penod ended:
Oct. 17, 1992. It was the seve nth
straight advance.
·
Many analysis preler lo tracK
the four.week a'vcrage hccau)Se It
smooO~&gt; out the spikes ill tile weekJy reports _
Twenty-seven states and temtorics reported an increa.~e 111 claims
dunng the week ended May 27 and
26 reported dechnes. State figures
arc reported a week later than
nauonal tolals
Stales wtth the b1ggeS1 mcrea,es
wete Mich1gan, 4, 127; Misstssippt,
1,650; Oh1o, 1,6 13; Mtssouri, 657,
and Colorado, 591.
Swtes with the largest declines
were Califonna, 6,084; Oklahoma,
1,883; Oregon, 972 ; New Jersey,
799, and ldallO, 719.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ........................34 7/H
A kzo ........................................611 112
Ashland Oil ..................................35
AT&amp;T .....................................SO 118
Bank One ..................................... .JJ
Bob Evans ...............................lO 114
Champion Ind ........................21 314
Charming Shop ..............................4
Cily Holding ...........................26 t/4
Federal Mogul ........................ l8 till
Goodyear T&amp;R ......................42 112
K-mart .................................... J4 J/4
Lands End .............................. 15 Ill
Llmiled lnc.............................2 t Sill
Multimedia Inc ..................... .38 till
People's .......................................23
Ohio Valley Bank .........................J4
One Valley ............................. .30 114
Rockwell .............................. ..45 1/2
Robbins &amp; Myers ................... 25 1/2
Royal Dutch ......,................... J25 3/8
Shoncy's Inc. ,,,,,,, .............. , 10 1/l

Slar Bank ............................... 44 114
Wendy lnl'l .................................. !?
Worthington lnd ................... :......ll

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advest or
Galllpulil;.

Heritage Day.. ;ontmued from page 1
''The One- More Trme S1rmg
Band" from Columbus will be performing from 2 10 4 p m. on the
museum grounds
Contesls for homemakers begm
at 2 p.m. and include :
Apron contest: 3 categories with prizes donated by area merchants and fn ends. The categones
·are · I. Every day work apron. 2
Sunday - dre ss apron. 3. Original
apron.
_
Aptons are to be at lhe Me1gs
County Museum by 4 p .m . on
Thursday, and the winners will be
announced at 3 p.m. on Saturday.
Cabbage Dtsh Cookoff - prize
sponsored by Reed's Coun1ry
Store Favonte cabbage dish and
recipe to be broughl to the musewn
by 1:30 p.m. with winners 10 be
announced at 2 p.m.
Apple Peehng Contest - 2 p m
Who can peel the long es t apple
peel? Apples will be furnished , bul
contestants should bring their own
kmves. Prize will be given by The

Meigs County Muse um
Pea Shclhng Contest - 2:30p.m.
First contestant to fill a cup wtth
peas. Peas wtll be weighed in event
of a tie. Pnze furnished by local
merehant.
Contest for youth - Brcycle - 1
p.m. Som~ of the categones include
obstacle course and besl decora1ed.
Pnzes ' will be awarded 10 categories and age dt visions.
Activtttes on Sunday begin a1 1
p.m. when the mu se um opens. An
an uque rractor display will be on
the grounds, as well as horseshoe
pitching. Vtstlors can parti ctpatc in
a galne of tToquet and children will
enjoy contests of tug-of-war, sack
race, hoop rolling, and digging for
burred treasure .

Our customers
appreciate perhaps the
rarest quality of all:

H)

pual

POMEROY
8:10 a.m., U.S 33, Sarah
McC:trly, YMH.
ORANGE TWP
4·40 p m ., Coolville ·Road ,
Martha Durst, St. Joseph 's Hospiral .
RACINE
1 0 l am. , Riverlronl Road ,
Lclrul Falls, Nancy Manu1. VMH;
10· 57 p.m .. Portland Road, MtiOred Parsons, treated at Ute scene

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions
Sarab McCarty, Reedsvtlle
Wednesday discharges- none

QUALITY
THAT ENDURES
STARTS
TOMORROW
'7:20,,:20 PAil.Y
KAT t NE£5

1'011•

S~TURDAY/SUNDAY1:20,J:20

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
FRI., SAT., SUN.
DENZEL WASHINGTON,
GENE HACKMAN
IN

POMEROY
Meigs Counly Display Yard Near

CRIMSON TIDE R

992-2588

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Katie Miller,, Manager

AND
SHARON STONE, GENE HACKMAN

VINTON

THE QUICK AND
THE DEAD A

Gallia County Display Yard
155 Main St.
Jay 8o Joe Moore, Managers

446-1088

388-8603

.

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~-•

�Thuradey, June 8, 1195

The. Daily ~.~.!!!~~

Sports

PI e4

ORLANOO, Aa {AP) -

If the
Ho~ston Rockets keep this up,.
we're going to need some new
adjectives.
Incredible. unbelievable, amaz:·
iog.
They all seem to fall short to
describe the Rockets' 120·118
overtime victory over Orlando ·in
Game 1 of the NBA Finals on
Wednesday night
II was perhaps the most aston·
ishing chapter yet to this team's
improbable playoff run.
"Wbat a great sport we have,"
Houston coach Rudy Tomjanovich
said.
Hakeem Olajuwon, pushed
around by Shaquille O'Neal much
of the night, winning the scoring
baule between them llut losing the
rebound fight big-time. woo the
gru~ with a rebound.
·
After trailing by 20 points in the
first half, after being headed for
certain defeat beJnre Orlapdo · s
N•ck Anderson missed four free

•.

,'·

,.

'•
•

•'
•
•
•

O ~ Neal bad 26 points and 16
rebounds. Olajuwon bad 31 points.
But they shared the prominent roles
with many others on this night.
For Houston, Kenny Smith,
Robert Horry and Drexler also
were in the spotlight.
With the Rockets offense sput·
tering and Olajuwon on th~ bench
with three fouls, Drexler scored the
last seven points of the first half to
cut Orlando's lead to 61· 50:
He kept it up in the third period,
and his teammates joined in, .espe·
cially Smith. The point guard bad
been quiet offensively in the West·
em Conference finals and had been
beaten badly by Orlando's Anfer·
nee Hardaway early in Wednes day's game.
But Smith was 5-for-6 from
three-point range as Houston made
7 of II 3s in tbe quarter II&gt; go
ahead by ns mnny as nine. Smith's
five 3s broke the finals record for a
. quarter. His seven threes in the
game also broke a finals record of
six shared by four players, including Michael Jordan.
Several team three-point records
also fell, the first of many bound to
be broken in a series where both
offenses are designed to create
open shots from the perimeter.
Smith's biggest heroics c'ame
later.
With the big fourth quarwr from
Hardaway and an overpowering
performance by 0' Neal down the
stretch, Orlando led I 10-107 and
had the ball as time was running
out. The Rockets fouled Anderson,
a 75 percent free throw shooter in
the playoffs.
·
He missed both shoL~ bu~ to the
relief of the 0-rena crowd, he got
the rebound and 1&gt;-as fouled again.

Meigs boys' cage
camp Monday

•

LOSES CONTROL- Houston ceitler Hakeem Olajuwon (center)
loses control of the ball afler Orland~ postman Shaquille O'Neal
(right) during the NBA Fin~ls opener Wednesday night in Orlando,
Fla., where the Rockel' elomlnated a halftime deficit to beat the
Magic 120·118 in overtime. (AP)

The 199 5 Meigs Marauder
boys' basketball camp will be held
from Monday, June 12 until rri&lt;,lay,
June 16 at Meigs High School.
Camp for grades 4-6 will be
from 10 a.IJI. until noon. Youths in ,.
grades 7-81will bave camp from I
to 3 p.m.
Registration will take place on
the fir st day of camp. For prices
and more information, call Meigs
boys' varsity coach Jeff Skinner at
742-3003.

'

Smith and Dre:Uer finished with
23 points apiece. Horry scored 19,
and Elie bad 18. Hardaway SC()I'Cd
26 and Horace Grabt had 15 points
and 16 rebounds for the Magic,
who dominated the boards 57-41
but committed 18 turnovers.

son. He made four three-pointers,
Incredibly, he missed them both.
Smith got the long.rebound and, scored 22 poinls and grabbed II
after a timeout, made tbe three - rebOunds.
Before the ball was thrown
pointer that forced the overtime.
inbounds
to Smith for the game•
"I haven't missed four free
tying
sho~
the Magic tried to get a
throws in a row since I don't know
delay-of-grune
penalty in order to
when," Anderson said. "I think it
get a look at the Rockets' offensive
was more mental."
· The Magic, the worst free . set. But it wasn•t call and, after a
throw-shooting team in the NBA in fake, Smith got an open look at the
the regular sea~on, were 12-for-.14 basket. ·
Orlando had a chance for a last
until Anderson stepped to the line.
Even the normally shaky O'Neal shot in regulation, but Horry
blocked Dennis Scott's three-point·
was 5-for-7.
It was a miserable end to what er, then made two three-pointers in
had been a strong night for Antler- overtime.

as

...

.The Rockets made 14 of 32
three-pointers. Orlando coach
Brian Hill -wouldn't second-guess
his decision to double-team Olaju·
won virtually every time he got the
ball, thereby leaving Smith or
someone else open.

.
.•

l~c. (!)
Get The Jump on Summer! y ·

.· Mantle gets netllf! liver

HOP ON DOW" TO
DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

.

... .

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1994 CHEVY
CORSICA .

~

•

...

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1995 BUICK ·
RIVIERA

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Bright white, Astro roof, CD player.
Auto., 4 door, air, tilt, cruise, cassette,
steering wheel radio controls. Loaded I
air bag, ABS, delay wipers.
. WAS $31,901.00

.· $9999

$

1995 GMC
JIMMY
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CAVALIER
Auto .. air, cassette, delay wipers,
rear defogger..

29 595

NOW.

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auto:, SL: Decor, till, cruise, more ..

$12,499

$23
.
I 865
.. I

Pr..Ownad SpeciD-First Coma, First Saned!!!

.'

(Kiingr.nbect: U.O), 7:35 rpn
Seattle (Belcher 2-0) lit New York
(Perez 3-2)'.7:35 p. m.
Toronto (Darwin l-5) m Kataas C1ty
(Appier 7-2), 8:05 p.m.
.
Detroit (BtJhanon 0-0) ut Minnesota

Major

leagues·

(Ou~dado

AMERICAN U : AGUE

CLEVELAND (Ogea

ER!ltem l&gt;l\'l ~l on

Will

iiJI

lt !.' 1!&lt;1.

Btlliluu.................... 25

12

.676

21
Torunlo .................. l6 22

.432
.42 1

9
9.,

New York .

21

.417

9.5

-Oftroil. .................. 16 23

.410

10

B:~llimore ............... l6

... 15

0-5), 8:05p .m.

Centnl Dlviaon
CLEVELAND ....~ ..27 10 .730
~ Dsall

City ...........20
Milwaukce ............. l7

17
20

.54 1
.4!19

7
10

Chicago .. .. , ............ 15
Minnesotu .............. J I

22

.405

12

28

.2H2

17

Weill ern. Divi:~ion
Califurniu .. ~...... ...... 23 L ~ .590

TUM ..................... 23

17

.575

.5

Seattle ................ .-.21

17

.553

1,5 ,

OaklamJ.. ...... :... ,.... 20

19

.513

J

.
~0)

at Milwau·

kee (Roberwn 1-1), 8:05p.m.

Chicago (Alvnrel 1·2} nt TelllS (Oh'let
2- 1), 8:35p. m.

\

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eash:rn Division ·

:wu.
lY
Phihllldphia ......... 25

I. 1:&lt;1.

14
Alla11111 ................. 22 11
Montrcul
... 22 Ill
New York ........... 15 24
Aorida ................. 11 26

.tiel. I

SM

3

537

4

3t15

\0

.297

,13

Centul Dlwl•lon
CINCINNATL ..... 24 14 .632
Cltlccco ................. 22 16 .519
HoWl ton .............. 11} HI .5 14
St.louili ............... 16 25 .390 •
Pittsburgh ...... ,...... 14

23

.378

Wutern lli v i ~lnn -.....San Frunciscu ........ 23 17 .5JS
Colorodo ................ 22 17 ..564
Las Angele.&lt;&gt; ........... 20 20 .500
San Diego .............. 17 22 . .436

Wednesday's scores
CLEVELAND J, Detroit 2 (10)
Bo:.wn S, California I
Scank 10. Daltimor~ 2

Nt!'w York(, , Oak hand I
Milwaukte 6, Minnt;'.l.ata 3
Toromo 4, Chicago 3
TeKa.~ 10, Kun sa.o; City!i

lill

.S
3
5.5

Wednesday's scores

Todny's games
S~ontle

(Cilrmona 1·2) at Ballitmm:
(M u.~sino 4-3).12:35 p.m.
Californ ia (Bod:.ie 4·0) :H Boston
(SI!lith 1- l }, 6:05 p.m .
Ouklantl (Harkey 1-4 1 at New York
(McDowhlll-1), 7 ''~ f1 .m,
De!rolt (Moore 4·3) nt Minnc~o l o
(f:1pnni 3-4), ii:OS p.m.
CLEVELAND tMrutrnel 5-0l ;u Mil·
w1n1kt!'t' (Spark.~ 1- 1J, II:OS p.m.
K~tusa:s City (Haney 2- l) :11 Texa11
(Gross 1-S), ~ · 35 p.m.

, Friday's ga mes
Oakland {Stewart J-4) Ill B os ton
(Wakefrdtl 3-0), 7 05 p.m.
Cah(ordul (untlt!cnled) at Dallirnore

The ·Daily Sentinel
(USPS liJ-%0)
Published every ~frern oon , Mond:ry through
Fndtly. Ill Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio. by the
Ohio v,tlley Pub lrshing Compan)I'IMultlmediG
lnt, Pomaoy, Ohw 45769, Ph 992-2 156.
Second c ltl~~ po!&gt;tage po1d Ill Pomi.-'1'0)1. Ohi o.

Florida 8, HuuMOn 3
P11lludelphlti 7. San IJiego I
Co\tJrado 7 , St. Lou i&amp; 3
los Angeleti 7, Montre:~ll
.
Sun Franciscd 9. New YOrk 8

Today's games

New York (Mllckl 3 ~ 1) :u San Fna.ncisco {Wdsl\n 3-2), 3:35p.m
PiLtsburgh (Wngner 1-7)· at Flurrda
(WeaU1ers J ·2), 7:05p.m.
COlorado (Ritz 3-1) at Chicagu (FtJs!cr
4·2), 11.05 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Pugh 3-0) at llous wn
(Ktle 1-4). K:05 p.m

Friday's games
Colorado (Gr:rhe 1·1) at Ch1~a~o
(Cil.~lt ll u 4-2), 3:20p.m.
P•ttsb urgh (Neagle 5-:!) at Fl\•rl(i:l
(HliiiTIIIIUOd 1-1), 7:05 P·!IISt. Loui11 (Hill4-l) at All~ma (Maddux
4-1 ), 7 ·40 p,m.
CINCINNATI (Schouret 4-2 ) 1\t
llous10n (Reynolds 2-4), K:05 p.m
Phi lnde!phio (Quantrill 4-2) ot Lu!o An!!dl!lli (Astado l -3), 10:05 p rn.
Ne.w York (Harnisch 1-2) 111 Sun Dit~t:tJ
(Hamiltnn 0-2). 10:05 p.lfl,
Munlretnl (M:irtinez. 4-1 ) at Sao Fran d~co (Letter 3-11, I 0:05 p.nL

Mt:mbcr: The MSocamcd Prtss. ond the Ohio
Ncw~paper A s~«: int• on

Basketball

POSTMASTER: Send addre~~ corrcrt10n~ to
rhe Dady Sentinel. t I! Coun St . Pomeroy.
!no 45769:

Wcdncsday•s score

SUDSCRJI'TION RATES
By Carrltr or Motor Route
One Wef:k..
One Month ...... _......... - ..........

Onr:Yc:ar

NBA Finals
Houston 120. Orland o 118 (0T) ;

SUS
S7.60
sgJ.OO

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dllli)l .................................................. J5 Cents

ll ou~ton kads 5Cfleli 1·0

Friday's game

H o~on at Orlando, "9 p,m.

Sunday, June.ll
Orhmdo atHouslOo,7;30 p.m.

Sub\Crlhen not de.'1ring to pOy the clll'rier may

remu an.adyance direct 10 The Daily Sentinol

Hockey

on !llhrtt, •ill Of t2 month b.1sif Cred1t w1ll be

given cnrrier each week .
s ~o~b scripuon by marl permiuod an
where home C4mer sttv1ce 1S nvn1 l&lt;1ble

No

tu~o s

Wednesday's score

MAILSUHSCRIP'TIONS

!J Wec-U

tnsldr Mtigs County
..

S2.1.92
. . ......
. ............ $47.06
ll Wo&lt;k..
......... _.............. $92.56
Ra1u Ouuldt Meigs County

26 Week ~

llWeek•

26 Weeb .

_

NHL playoffs

!lS61

..149_66

l2 w,.k,·, ........................................ S96.20

Detroll at Chicago, 8 p m

--·-·

.Saturday's game
Philadelphia at New Jersey, 3 p.m

V-8, ·leather, one owner, rear wheel
,
drive. Loaded! Low miles.

4X4, 5 speed, stereo,
special paint.

sa 995

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SEATI:LE MARINERS: Pla ct1d Jay
Bulmer, outfielder . and Luis Suhtl, in fielder, on the 15-&lt;lay di.~~t~b l cd h~t Callcil
up Qre~ Pirkl, inl"idder, nnd AleK RtJ·
driguez , shortstop. from Tacoma 11! the
P:rcific Coast league,
TORONTO BLUE J.\ YS : S tll ned
Ryan Cisaf, pitcher, tu a llllfi(J r•lcngue
cuntr.Jct

I

on~yenr

•

'N

I

I

, NEW YORK YANKEES :· Agreed to
tennfi with John Wel!c,land , pitcher, oh n

JLcquisitions
FINE JEWELRY'

MID-WINTER SPECIALS
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GOLD CHAINS!!
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9t.cquisitions J'ine Jewe[ry
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• Gold Chains

Comer of Second at Grape St.
(Tope Furniture Bldg.)
Gallipolis • 446-2842

9\ Mill St.
Middlcpon , Oh

992-6250

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Hockey
N•llon•lllotby Le-aue

ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS:
S1gned Sh:aun Van AliM , center , to a
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- $1.781

Sale Pnce

• S: 'l fkc

• AMIFMCassette

111

ust Pnee
Factory Rebate
TI;H11 Peden OI&amp;COurf

• Arr Condi!IOI'l

• ~utomal~
• Dual Atrtlag

• Power Sleenng
• P...,r Brakes

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval -·

350 V· 8 POWER/ COLOR T.V.

·L~ed!

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY S-sERIES PICKUP
• Power Steermg

ROOF CONVERSION VAN

Boards

• AM/Hoi Casselle

Sale

BRAND NEW '95 CHM 314 TON RAISED
• Vrsta Bav WmoowS
• 350 V-8 Powe•
· Long W"eeJ Base
• P·S. P B
• Aa1sed Aool
·Power W1ndows
• CoiQr T.Y
_, = ~·~ t~
-:-or~ve1 S1ae .,,.r Bag
- T~t SteeflOQ
• Al'lb·LOCk Brakes
• Cru1se Cootro•

l.JstFioce
$10,219
·. Factory Rebate
-S300
GMAC 1st TIT'f BtJver
MQwante To
Clualohed Buy"'
. ssoo
Tom Peden DIScount
- $531

Foolbatl
N•lhm•l lo'ooth•ll Lr..,ur ,
OENVSR BRONCOS: Si~;ned R(llph
T&lt;~mm, o!Tensive li~rmn .
GREEN BAY PA C KERS · Signed
Charlie Simmotvi, wide rect:iver.
INDIANAPOLlS COLTS· Re-8iwned
TQny McCoy. dcfenstve tackle, lo a fouryear c:ontrBCt. S1gntd EIH1 Johnson. J~ fenslve end .
,
JACKSONYtu.E JAGUARS: s;gned
Kellh Goganiow, linebac:t.u: AJ Jacbon, •
co rnerbac k.; Le' Sabi Ma1ton, runorng ·
back; and Mark Tucker, center. Wuived
BrtH Be!!h and Mnlt Jlall, wide-receivers,
and Den Meinert and Andy Ma•on,
· linebacters.
KANSAS CITY CHlEfs : Agreed to
Letrns with Troy Dumas, Hnebitek:Cr, on a

.AU New1BB«onversion vans
Discounted SBOOO

• lndrrect LJghtrng
• Prem1um Wood Pkg .
• Full Corwerston
• Alummum Aunnrng

• Power locks

· P...,r Door Locks
• Power w.oows
• AMrfM Stereo
· T~ Sleerrq
• O~ay Wipers

• Siyled W'leels
··w.·!~.

ISave '2281 I
..... Oo.: I'~ Ot!l'l!'•l'll

• Atr Coro110n
• A'U10mallc
.• Duat A•rbags
• 4 Whee! Antt-liJCP.

Br;IJ&lt;es

•""""' SteeMJ
· Po wer Bfakes
· Po•er Ooor locks
• Power W•rdows

''~,it ~lf't'&gt;'""9
• 1..-&lt;.l)I;.Yll Cloth fntL• StviOO Wh~~
•1/et EQI&gt;PJJ&lt;.'(I

~e~

•AJMMStereo

-~--

• All prices Include
rebates to dealer.
Taxes &amp; fees not
" included.

•

Seiko-Pulsar-Citizen

N;~li unal l,..r;~~u"'

ATLANTA DRAVES : Signed Ben
Fowlt!r, Andrew Cochrnncl Kevin Ulewc
and Jcrellry McMulltJn, p1tr.hcrs, anjJ Mrkc
Mahoney, culchcr. .A.'J~&gt;ign~d McMulltmlo
Eugene of the Northwest League. and Mahoney, CI)Chtanc and Ulewe to Danv1 lle
of the Appult~chum u.-~,gu~.
CINCINNATI RE.DS ~ Activated Eric
Anth ony, outfieldt.-r. fro,m the 15-day d i ~­
ab led list. Optioned Eric Owens, infielder,
to In dianaroh~ ~\( the A meri~an AliNociation .
FLORlDA MARLINS: Signed AnUmn)' Enard, Ro h~rt Poilthorpe, Ierro Riggun , D01vid Milln, Rick Ga-rcia , Swan
Austin, Gary Santoro, Shana n Slevens,
G:1be Gonzalez . Tmns Burgus and
Michllel Du,-aiJ, pitchtrs, Mat Erwin and
Robert Uernanclez, cOJtchwi; and Ja&amp;on
Stlanahan, Jason Garrett and Jo&amp;eph Funaro , Infielders.
MONTREAL EXPOS : Agreed to
tem~ wiU1 Moise11 Alou. outneltJer, on 11
one-yedr cnntra~.-1 .
NEW YORK METS : Signe~ Gnant
Robnb , Jeff Huwalt,. Nelson Figueroo.
Man Ferul lo. and Michael Blnng, pitcher .~; Mark Pll'Jik.i and T1m Tts~mar . iufieltlclli: Ji..rut Yoder, Se:rn Gill :1nd Ryan
Morrl~on. outfieltlcrs : a.ntl Rn1:er M:rftinez, clitc her.
ST. LOutS CA RD!NA LS: Agret.'d to
terms wi~ Chris Bna.~. infiel~er. and a~­
stgned hlffi tO Jn hn!ion City of the Ap palachian League.,

Ph•ladelph1a J, New Jmey 2 (OT);
New Jersey leads series 2-1

Tonight's game

~

enough.''
Lieber, who was ().3 with a 7.63
ERA in three previous starts
against-the Reds, retired 13 consecutive batters after Brian Hunter's ·
sacrifice lly in tjie second.

Baseball
An1erkiU\ Lea@:Ue
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Placed Si d
Fernandez, pitcher, nr~ ' the 15·day di~'lbled
litl. Recall«! Scou Klin~,-enbect:, pild1cr,
fro m Roc hester of the lnterna1ional
League.
.
· cmCAGO WHITE SOX Placed John
K.ruk, desii:natetl hillt!'r, tm the JS-da)' di5ablet1 list, retroactiw to June 3. Recalled
Lyle Mouton, outfielder. from NIL~hv illt
of the American A5 sud ation . Signed
Kevin Beirne, ('lilcher: .Brian Bownet;li, infielder; and Manuel IJJI7 , third bu.~e man
KANSAS CITY ROYALS : Signed
llaroiU Reynolds, second base man and oss!gncd him to Oma1t:J of the American As-

Plttsbul$h 7, CINCINNATI J
All nnta 4, Oticago 3

five starts.
' 'Some of them have been on
breaking balls, some bave been on
fastballs. I don ' t know wbat the
cause is," Jarvis said. " I'm not
changing speeds enou¥b and I'm
not disrupting tbeor timing

Transactions

&amp;&lt;Xtntion.

2
4.5
9.5
9.5

The Pirates managed jUit tbree runs
in the two losses and mildc a defen·
sive mistake in each that let in tb!
tying or winning run.
,., 1
"We pitched good the whole
series," manager Jim Leyland said.
"We didn ' t get enough hits the
forst two days.' :
Lieber was the only winner out
e three starters because be was
only one wbo got some help.
e Pirates bit three solo bomers
- one by Carlos Garcia and two
by Mark Johnson - and played
errorless ball to give the Reds only ·
their third loss in 15 games.
.
"Those guys just cru.s hed the
ball. That was so huge,'' Lieber
said. "That's s omething we
haven'.t been doing mucb of this
year. We need to be doing more of
that. Maybe lhis will get things
rolling ."
The Reds have kept roBing right
through injuries that forced them to
rely on minor leaguers. Under the
circumstances, the loss Wednesday ,
wasn't all that troubling, although
Kevih Jarvis felt a letdown.
"We could ·have won the game
today·, " said Jarvis (2·3). "We
don't need to let thpse types of
games slip away.' '
Garcia put the Pirales ahead 2-1
with bis forst homer in the fifth , and
Johnson made it 3·1 with his fourth
homer in the seventh. Those were·
the biggest mistakes by Jarvis, who
. has allowed eight homers in his last ·

.

Scoreboard
Baseball

-

..

DON TATE MOTORS,

308 E. MAIN

ByJOEKAY
·
-· CINCINNATI (AP)- Wben
. the worst was finally over, tbe
Pittsburgh Pirates bad three reasons
to be optimistic well as relieved.
The Pirates ended their SC8liOII·
bigb five-game losing streak IUid
avoided another sweep at River·
front Stadium by beating tbe
Cincinnati Reds 7·3 Wednesday
afternoon. Jon Lieber went seven
innings to get his forst career win
over the Reds, who bad bit him
'
. bard in the p;~&amp;t.
That the Pirates lost two of three
at Riverftont wasn't surprisingthey've lost II of tbeor last 13
there. and tile Reds are on their be'st
roD of the season.
~ But the way Pittsburgb's\Start·
ing pitchers performed was hote·
\..
worthy . Denny Neagle, Esteban
Loaiza and Lieber threw well
( 1enough to win all three games,
·
allowing just 15 bits, three walks
and five earned runs in 21 innings
TAUBENSEE SCORES- Clnclnnali's Eddie Taubensee (10)
.
(a 2.14 earned rtm average).
kicks up some dust wblle scoring In front of Jilttsburgb backstop
Coulcl it be that the Pirates' rota·
Angelo Encl!rllllcion 111 the second. Inning o~ Wednesday'~ game in lion is finally coming together?
Cincinnati, where the Pirates won 7-3. (i\1')
· " We've got some young pitch·
ers on this staff who are going to be
very good in the years down the
road," said Lieber (2·5). "That's
what makes it so excEj
· · . We're
announced bis condition Wednes· all working together for e first
By KEVtN O'HANLON
DALLAS (AP)- Mickey Man· day, they notified the Southwest time, I think. We've got s e good
tle underwent a liver transplant Organ Bank Inc. on Tuesday that a arms over here. •'
early this morning that doctors said new liver was needed.
The problem was that tbe
The organization's director Ali&gt;' offense and defense didn't keep up.
was. needed to save his life, hospi·
son Smith said it was not unusual
tal officials said .
A liver donor was found late for an organ to be found within two
Wednesday and once tests showed days because . Mantle's poor health
it was compatible with the 63-year· placed him in the Status 2 category.
" His medical condition was
old blj!~b~at, iUrgery began
worse
than any other recipient we
around 'tti:m~ SlUd'Jennifer Jones,
a spokeswoman at Baylor Universi· had listed from the local area," she
said: "I'm sure there will be people ·
ty Medical Center.
"He was already prepped (for wbo refuse to believe there wasn't
surgery) so I don't think it took some special consideration given
them very long to start after the because of who he is, but that will
not 'be the case. We hope people
liver arrived," she said.
realize
we work as hard to recover
.The operation was exp~cted to
organs
for
everyone on the waiting
last between four and six'llours,
l.ist"
1
Jones said.
Roy True, Mantle's attorney and
A news conference was sched·
close
friend, spent time with Manuled at 9 a.m. CDT with the entire
tle
on
Wednesday night and said
medical team expected to be pre·
the former New York Yankees cen·
sent
"We should know a lot by ter fielder was in pain and couldn' t
get out of bed.
..
then," she said.
,. "He bas not eaten anything in
Mantle's liver failure was
caused by a small malignant tumor, day s. I've never seen Mickey's
years of alcohol abuse and a long· face look so thin -he's emaciat·
.
dormant hepatitis C infeetion, doc· ed, " True said.
" He tries to eat. He takes a bite
tors said. They said his bigbly publicized bout with alcoholism. con- or two and that's about as far as he
goes. He knows he has 10 eat, but
tributed to his problems.
Mantle was hospitalized May 28 be just can't. His stomach is so
complaining of stomach pains . swoll'en ... be's got so much pres·
Although doctors publicly
(See MANTLE on Page 7)
I

Rockets edge Magic 120-118 in overtime to open·NBA Finals .
throws in the fllllll 10.5 seconds of
regulation, the Rockets hold 1·0
lead in the series.
This No. ~ seed from the West'
tied NBA playoff records with its
sixth road victory in a row and
eighth away from borne overall in
ihe postseason. And this one may
have been the most unlikely of
them all for the defending champi·
ons.
" I felt they deserved to win
tonight," the Rockets' Mario Elie
admitted , " but we seem to be
pulling the game, like a magician,
out of the hat. I don't know how
we do it, but this team never
quits."
Olajuwon tipped in Clyde
Drexler's miss for the winning bas·
ket with three-tenths of a second
left in overtime. O'Neal had gone
out to try to block Drexler's layup,
the shot went high off the glass,
and Olajuwon was there for only
his sixth rebound of the game in
the suddenly icy silence of the 0·
rena.

The Dally Sentinel·· Page 5

\ . Pirates beat Reds 7-3 to end . losing streak·

--------------------------------------------------------------~--------------~
ByBOBBAUM

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-~

TOLL FREE 1·880-822·0417 • 372·2844
344·5947. 422-0756

Monday - Saturday: 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday: Noon - 6 pm
. -.... ·
~

_,-,

�·-

I

•

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday; June 8, 1995

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

...:rhuraday, Junt 8, 1995

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7:

~~--~~--~~--~~----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~----------~~
::In
other NL action,
1
'

J\Bonds' double helps Giants top Mets; Braves edge Cubs
~~ By BEN WALKER

I•
JUNE MENUS

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

MONDAY

TUESDAY
--

19

Chicken Patty
Buttered Carrots
' Cauli flower with
Cheese Sauce
Bread
Graham Crackers
26
Baked Porkette
Mashe{:l Potatoes
and Gravy
Peas and Carrots
Bread
Blushing Pears

.

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

-

.

.

15

Chicken Supreme
Broccoli
Pear Halves
Parslied Whole
White Potatoes

20

21
ChiGI&lt;I&lt;p &amp; Noodles.o
Three Bean Sa.lJ&gt;.d
Orange Juice
Vanilla Pudding
with Banana Slice

22

Oven Fried Fish I
Oven Browned
· · Po~litoes
Green

eans

Angel Food Cake

-

·•

27

Baked Bean~
Ham Salad andwich
Banana slices in
·red gelatin
Potato Salad

.

28
Macaroni &amp; Cheese

Baked Ham Slice
AuGratin Potatoes
Buttered Peas
" Bread
Fruit Cocktail

Spinach
Vanilla &amp; Chocolate
Pudding Swirl

nsurance Services

fi""Q

'

' Sloppy Joe on Bun
Lyonnaise Potatoes
Perfection ~~1~~
Peach Slices

Baked Steak
Mashed -Potatoes
and Gravy
Buttered Corn
Bread ·
Cantelope

. 1
Representing: .
LIFE •AUTO • HOME • FARM
AU1o OwnePB Buckeye Union
BUSIN,ESS • BOATS
• nT A. ~ Grange State AU1o Mutual
MOTORCYCLES • BONOS ; L'.&amp;n. :
Ohio Famrers
HOSPITALIZATION
•,,, "" ,,,•
Westfield Insurance Co.

''

23

1

.,~

992·6617 or 992:2143 '-214 E. MAIN • POMEROY. OH.

·

·

Questions about hearing?
.
·Can Hear For Life® .
.,

30
Cheeseburger
Oven Roas t Potatoes

29

Creamed Tomatoes

"W4CI !f2',..

16

14

Swedish M~atballs
· on Noodle" . -..
Stewed Tomatoes
Cole Slaw
Watermelon Chunks

•
E'YI:D W~ Barry Roods messes
· ~up, and thts !"eek bas been an
, ad~enture, he s usually JUSt one
: swmg away from malclng ~·
; Bond~ atoned for a J?B!r of
. baserunnmg blunde~s by h1t~ng a
;~br~e-run dou.b'le !n tbe etg~th
;mrung Wednes;d&amp;y nt'bt t¥trallied
,the San Franctsco Gtants over the
:New Yorlc M~IS 9-8. .
.
Bonds fio1sbed wt~ four btts
: and four RBis. But unUI bts tw?;out double. ov~ a 7-6 ~licit,
. Bonds had drawn more attention !JY
:getting-pielred ~ffsecond a!lllliemg
; thrown out lrymg 10 stretch a dou.ble.
,
' . "Sinc~,-w~ won, they weren't
mtstakes.. Gtan!S manager Du~ty
Bak~r satd. "l)le s:une guy were
talking about ~IS ~IS~e~.won the
game. Barry did bts thmg,
Bonds declined comment after
the game.
·
On Monday, Bonds lashed put
at fans at Candlestick Pru:k after )le

. .T..-:..I~· G}f;

'

FRIDAY

-

- ··

Turkey Slice
Candied Sweet
Potatoes r -~
Buttered Lima Beans
Bread
Blueberry Mtlffin

13

12
Weiner
Sauerkraut
Mashed Potatoes
Bread
Fru"it

Baked Chicken
Sweet Potatoes I
Green Beans
Bread
Pineapple Chunks

Coleslaw
Bun

Most people with hearing problems don't seek h~lp. often
because they don't know where to turn. ·
Our Hear For Life• center is SlUffed by audiologists, not sales
people. Cail us to schedule a free telephone consultation· or face-

Creamy Fruit Salad

Senior- Citizen's Day Activities----.
•

·to-face visit- with an
audiologist. We' ll answer
any questions you have
about hearing aids or hearing
loss, without pressuring you
to buy a product.

r--------·
1 Attention hearing

CLEVELANP (AP) - Detroit
Tigers pitcher David Wells did a
good job of keeping the American
League's top offensive .team in
check. The surging Cleveland Indians won anyway on Jim Thome'·s
game-winning home run.
Tbe 3-2 victory Wednesday
night over the Tigers was the Indians' fifth consecutive victory, lOth
'in 11 games and I Oth in their final
at-bat this season. Seven of the dra·
matic wins have come at Jacobs
Field, where .the Indians are 50· 20
since their new ballpark opened

. LISA KOCH, .
Licensed
Audiologist;
heads a full lime
staff of expert
:audiologists at
INHEARING Hear
. For life location.

1
I

aid wearers!

Bring in this coupon
for a free clean and
I check with your
I free consullation!

I

----.. ~
Providing entertainment for Senior· CitizCn's Day . were the

Parr-Four quartet from Pt. Pleaoant, otudelll8 of Sharon Hawley
a 11d Lenora Leifeit. Spokesman for tht: !(rOll[' was Gerold Kelly,

Senior

----.,.--;~;,;;~ ~~~'/i~''i[;[ioMonday
10 4:30.
Senior citizens arc invited to
participate in daily activitieR nnd
special events. Daily acthitit;S ·
tire quilfing, sttwi ng, pool , l.Jno,
-games and visiting with friends .

-'--kutlstruKes~

ancltorC aregivCrs TOr
s trok e virlims an• invitctl to
uUt'-n(l,

.

.

Thm·sauy, June 15 - the
monthly Olood PI'CSI'Ure Clinic
will he held from 9:3U to I l ::lo.
FriJny, June 16 - the Arthr·iti"-

~_____,..S uppot·-.--G"rolip
)0:30 to 110011 ,

will m eet from

open to tiH•st· ('Hfl' ,_,rivers. but it is
fll:so ow·n to nnyom• who wonts to
l(•1u·n more nhout Alzhdmrr's or
carc--givtng.
.
For the nf''Xt two months, which
incl~dcs ]m11• 2hi and "July 19th ~

The Center for Aging und
· J[eulthrnn• in W{'81 Virginin will
be pru'liding puhlic• t•cluration on
Undt&gt;r s t:unclinp; Alzhcim(•t·':;~
Dis(.•as(•.

public ,
nttend

Thi~ i~ UJH'n to the

You do not hnvo
t&gt;Vf'ry

Wednesday, June 21

n e w YOnKEn

nhout Medic arf' patients' right~

,'

• if,

•
Lenora L•if&lt;it do•L-d th•·
prQgr&amp;l)l. Lenora is direrlor
of ihc Alzhdlilf"r'e..' Progrant
at the Center.

fifth that put Philadelphia ahead 30.
.
Braves 4, Cubs 3
Marquis Grissom, moved from
leadoff to the second spot, bit a
two-run bomer that helped Atlanta
win at bome.
Rookie Brian Kowitz batted fJJ'St
for the Braves and had a hit and an
RBI. Grissom's bo~e run in the
seventh mning orr Mike Perez (0'
3) made it4-3.
John Smaltz (4-3) pitched seven
innings and gave up five hits,
includi~g home runs· by Rick
Wilkins and Kevin Roberson. ,
Mark· Wohlers got his second
save, striking out four in tl1e ninth
inning, with Shawon Dunston
reaching on a 'wild pitch. The last
NL pitcher to fan four in one
innin~ wa~ Tim Binsas for Cincinnation June 4, 1990.
.
Rockies 7, &lt;;ardinals 3
Andres Galarraga hit a three-run
homer aqd Colorado dropped
Danny Jackst&gt;n 10 0-7.

.380 with bis first four-hit game
since Aug. 9~ 1994, when Detroit
-rlayed Mil waukee.
Whitaker doubled down the leftfield line in the first, doubled off
the wall in center in the fourth and
-lined a single up the middle in the
sixth. He bit liis second homer of
the season int~ the righi-Centerfield
stands after Chad Curtis had singled in the seventh,
"Wells did a great job. So did
Nagy," Tigers manager Sparky
Anderson said. "That's a tough
game for neither to get a win out of

it. Cleveland's not going to score a
ton or runs all the lime, but they are
pitching good."
Eiic Plunk (3·1) pitched iwo
scoreless innings for the win, striking out three .
"Hitting one out to win a game,
that's the ultimate," said Thome,
who victimized Brian Maxcy (2-1).
. Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove said he thought about giving
Thome the take sign on a 3·0
count, but only for an instant.
"Jim's a good hitter in those sit-

uations. so I turned him loose,"
Hargrove said. "He made me look
prelty smart, hllh?"
In the ninth, Cleveland loaded
the bases with one out, but Wells
escaped on an unusual double play.
With the bases loaded and one
ou~ Dave Winfield hit a line drive
at third baseman Travis Fryman .
He dropped the ball and stepped on
third base to force Eddie Murray .
Fryman then threw home to try and
get Carlos Baerga in a rundown,
but catcher. John Flaherty instead

ground into a double play with the
bases loaded in the fourth and
strike out looking in the ninth.
Ob yeah, he also walked three
times, giving him 48 'free passes in
37 games, ahead of his pace last
season, when be walked 109 limes
in 113 games.
boring. This is

player is that dangerous.. This is scoreless innings streak snapped at
just trash."
22 213 ,in the first inning, but he
managed to go live innings and gel
Thomas, who is in an 0-for-12
the win.
slump, saw his average drop below
.300 in a season that has already
. Leiter (4-2) said his best pitch
bud an O·for-13 slump.
may have been the one that got·
"lfs very frustrating. I'm getThomas to hit .a grounder to third
with the bases loaded. Ed Sprague
ting fed up with it. It' s going to be
a long season,'' he said.
stepped on the base apd threw to
. '
.
As frustrated as Thomas was, · · first
Toronto starter AI Leiter was
"It was a quality pitch in and
relieved. The left-bander saw his
down, I' II look at it that way. J got

June L6, to tour Fenton Glass
nnd riclc th e st crnwhcele1' to
Blennt•rhust•tt · hli1nrl with n
mansion --totlT:- CosrTS $ L5.00.

Call 992-2161 for resf!r&gt;ntions.

so(,m u.CJ p'ossiblc.
A dinner theat~· r· trip f01· th e
prududion ••G u ys nnrl· Dolls" i.l!
Sl't for ·W('dnesday, Srph•mLf&gt;r
12.
An- o\..-€rnigl1t ~p In
!'inulht•n'&gt; tcrn West _._ Virginia is
~&lt;"h(;'tlult·d for mid OctoheL --Fur
f'urtfu •r information. f•al l the
C(•ntcr. ···

~&amp;.(liP
~J~~elers
~212 EAST MAIN · ST.
POMEROY, 01-1

992-3785

..

fJJie !fanners 'Bank ana Savings
Company
Wislies to invite ry'ou to .our
·Secona fllnnua{

Crownetl King and Queen of Senior Citizens Day were Garnet

Ervine 1md -Clarence Wirlt.li!Jc, from Radnc. Garnet

hotJ~n .....-4 -

acttve iii I he c.~nler ~e ih; openmg and fins fieen a melllher of
the R~&gt;t. ired Senior Volunteer Program for 22 years. Clarence
has also attended the Center since its opening. They were

prJ:scnlf•fl with corsages by Sharon Smith, Chairperson of the

TAWNEY JEWELERS &amp; STUDIO

~-~

.t

.

~ Don't Miss Out- See The New
95's Today At...

Remember Father's Da
Let Everyone Know .
The love, Respect,
and Appreci~tion
You Have For Your
Father In The

Father's Da,
Trillute

•

From 9:00 am till 3:00pm. "At the Main Office in Pomeroy.

Mel Mock has been trusted by
hundreds ·o f people from Gallia,
Jackson, Mason and Meigs counties to help them hear
better! Call him today!

THE HEARING CENT£R -548 White Road
Gallipolis caD 614-44J-J971

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AND
Friday, June 23rd

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The Sunday Times-Sentinel
SUNDAY, JUNE 18, l995

Friday, June 16th

'•

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GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

To Be Published In

In Conjunction with our Third Annual Loan "Sale-A-Bration"

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From 9:00am till 3:00. pm. At our Branch Office in Tuppers Plains.

••

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148 ,J.aekson Pike ·
allipolis, OH

threw to second to force Manny
Ramirez who had not broken from
first base.
''On that double play, it was a:
very tough call for anybody 10
make. Tbe way. l saw it, Fryman
dropped the ball intentionally ;
which is illegal.·' Hargrove said.
Murray led off the second witli
his nint.l) homer of the season and
467th ot his 19-year career, a line
.drive well over the left -field wall;
h was his fout1ll homer in hi s last
seven games.

out with one run in five innings and followed with an infi eld hi! and
I'll take that," Leiter said. "We scored on Robeno Alomar' s triple:
severely needed a win.:•
Alomar made it 4·1 when he trolled
The Blue Jays, who had lost uie home on a balk.
first two games of the three·game .
The White Sox got wi thin one
setjes at Comiskey Park, scored all on a two-run homer bv Robin Ven·
their runs in the fifth off Brian tura in the seventh. Ventura went
Keyser (0-1.)
3·for-5 and extended his hitting
Devon Wh&gt;te 's fourth homer streak to 12 games. Mike Timlin.
rollowed ·~ leadoff single by
U1e fourth Toronto pitcher. worked
Domingo Cedeno and gave the the ninth for his LhirU save.
Blue Jays a 2-1 lead. Paul Molitor
(See AL un Pa11,e 8)

di-s tribute informolihn nbout

Medica re"s toll -free hotUnc .
Thcrt• will he u trip 1 Friday,

Galarraga, who's beer work.ini
with manager Don Baylor to breal
out of a season-long slump, ball
two hits for the second straigh't
game. The fonncr batting champ(on raised his average to .250. ·
Jackson, signed as a free agenl
in the offseason. has an 8.39 ERA .
Bernard, Gilkey hit a two -run
homer for St. Louis off Marvin
Freeman (2-2).
Marli1" 8, Astros 3
John Burkett won again at the
Astrodome as Florida finished off
its first series win against Houston.
The Marlins won twice in the
three-game set. Greg Cotbrunn andGary Sheffield homered for Flori-:
da.
Burkett (4 -5) ended his fourgame losing ~treak overall and
improved to 5-1 lifetime it\ Hous·
ton. Jeff Bagwell homered for the
Astros
· Colbrunn connected for a threerun homer in the first inning of£
Doug Drabek (2-4).

.

and otlrer health i..uc•, and also

it's your most rmportatJI
consideration when seeking
hearing he/pi

•

Todd Hundley bit a long drive
to ri'gbt-center that Darren Lewis
caught on the warning track. Altonzo tagged up and scored, but Bonil·
Ia was running with his head do~,
rounded second base and was eastly doubled off as be tried to return
to ftrst.
I
"It turns outiO be' a terrible, ter·
rible baserunning mistake," Bonil·
Ia said.
,Alfonzo' s run counts, even
'&gt;- !bough it scored on a game-ending
double play. Rule 4.09 in the Offiei&amp;l Baseball Rules covers the
, 1exact situation, explaining that a
runner being thrown out trying to
return to a base on a fly ball does
not constitute a force play.
.
DOdgers 7, Expos 1
Hideo Nomo won his, second
straight start, pitching Los Angeles
to i~ fourth straight win.

. Mantle};~n_u_·n_ued_fro_m_P_a_ge_5_&gt;-~-:----:-:----:-:--:-~-:--:-""'::-----::­
: sure on his st~macb aQd other kees owner George Steinbrenner
Injuries and alcoholism were of
organs it makes him feel full all the said. ''He's a very unique, coura- little consequence to Mantle, who
time.''
.
geous guy. I hope there's that same · always said he expected to die
At a news conference Wednes- detennination and willpower that young because no male member of
day, transplant surgeon Dr. Roben pulls bim through this that pulled . his family had lived past41.
Goldstein said: ''I can tell you he him through in baseball."
His father died at, 41 from
·will 110t get out of the hospital
Ma~lle's off-field dri~king
Hodgkin's disease, a lymphatic
·without getting a transplant."
exp_lmts, notably_ w_Jth pllc~er cancer that killed hi~ grandfather at
:- True said Mantle's wife Mer- Whlley Ford and mf1elder B11ly age 40. One of his sons, Billy, also
lyn, and sons Danny, David and - ' Martin, were alm?st as heralded as bad a long struggle with the dis. Mickey Jr. have been with Mantle thetr on-field berotcs.
ease, then died of a heart attack last
:around the 'clock.
Mantle never kicked his drink- year at age 36.
.
, Mantle was the centerpiece of . ing habit and last year admitted it
The five-year survi val expectan, the New York Yankees dynasty in was a problem. In January 1994, cy for someone who has received a
i the 1950s and '60s and one of Mantle cbecked into the Betty Ford liver transplant is about70 percent.
:baseball's premier sluggers. The Center in Rancho Mirage, Calif., But because of his age and alcohol· Oklahoma boy· who replaced Joe for treatment of his alcohol prob- induced liver problems, Mantle's
:DiMaggio in center field retired in lem. .
.
. .
chances probably would be about
·1968 with 536 home runs which ·
H1s stoned career also was s1de· 60 percent. Goldstein said.
' ranks eighth on the career 1~1. Five trac,ked by many injuries. Doctors
' years latet be was inducted into speculated the hepaUUsillay have
Does anyone remember when
the Hall of Fame.
come from blood transfusions
the name plate on an automobile
"Mickey Mantle was an athlete · Mantle received during past athletactually let you know who made
. that transcends the game:·.·, Yan- ic-related surgeries.
the vehicle?

mee t from 1 to 3 p . m. with the
co ntinuation of the education

TRUST
,..,.

last season.
Cleveland's 27-10 record is tl!e
best in the major ~eagues ,
The Indians are averaging about
5.9 nms a· game. but WeDs yielded
two runs on seven bits with two
intentional walks and six strikeouts
over nine innings.
Cleveland starter Charles Nagy
piiChed eight innings, did not issue
a walk and ·struck out eight. Nagy
was working on a shutout until a
two-run homer by Detroit's Lou
Whitaker tied it in the seventh.
Whitaker raised his average !o

weak stuff they
This is the big

the

mretinp; to learJJ

•

brmg 111 the runs, Sllld Edgardo
!'-lfonzo, who homered ~d o/ove
m four runs for tbe ~ets. ~e ~.the
best player! ve seen m my Ufe.
In other games, Lo~ Angel~s
beat ~ontreal ?-1, Pbtladelpb1a
stopped_ San D•ego 7- ~· Atlanta
beat__ Ch1Ca[O 4~3;, Flonda topped
HousiO~ 8-3 and Loloi'ado' down.ed
St. Louts 7-3.
,
Bonds doubled to tight-center
off le~t-hander Eric Gunders~n .
The Gtants l~aded the b!"es With
two outs ag111nst Bias ~mor \1-2)
on two, w~ks and a. htt by ptlch.
Bonds .btl made btm 33-for-87
(.379) lifetime with the bases loaded.
,.
Dave Burba (2-1) was the wmner. and Rod Beck pitched the ninth

1, jT~he~·]p~ro~f~an~i~ty~-l~a~ce~d~q~~u~;~st~~-n~,.~,~~~·~·T\h~i~s~bas:~eb~al~l~i~s~g~et~ti:n~g~o l~d~,"~
i~~~~~~~;~~--~~~~-------~~·-·
~
~
·~·
~
.
iC::M~~·~·::·~--------~---t~~·
1
~

t'o

· SOitlf' lhin .

' By The Assocjated Press
The Big Hun is hurting. Nothing physical. He's just doing too
much walking.
Frank Thomas, the two-time AL
MVP, let loose Wednesday night
with how fed up be is about not
. gelling pitches he can swing at.

Alzheimer~s Support G1·uup will

A trip by motorcoach to th r
Ohio State F'nir is sc hedul&lt;&gt; d-supf)et:t~roup meets - wednesday, August 9. Cos t will
he · approximat ely $20.00.
The
Alzheimer"s/Helu!&lt;•d
Heset·vn
lio·ns need to !Jt" madt• ns
Di so rd ers Su pport Group

This support group is not on ly-

1
1
I
.J

maintain hand function .

Pam Boothe,

con tinu es to meet thf• third
Wednc8d-ay of every month from
l J&gt;. m .' to 3 p . m . ul the Meigs
Multipt1rpos«&gt; S t•nior Ce nter .

.

Gallipolis
Veterans Memorial Hospital
.Pomeroy
.
779 E. Ma1n St., Jackson, Oh1o

g1~ 10 fB?S fOI' bis outburst.
'Barry s a pretty good player.
A~ I he: needed w~s a. chance to

Nomo (2-1) siruck out rour and
walked four in eight innings. He
allowed six hits, including Darrin
Fie Ieber's home run in the eighth.
After Nomo escaped a basesloaded, no-out jam in the Montreal
f"lrst, the Dodgers scored twice in
the bollom half of the inning on
Raul Mondesrs lOth home run .
_ J?&lt;xlgers manager T~ l..asorda,
m b1s 19th season, won b1s 1,500tb
game.
Phillies 7, Padres 1
Cun Schilling pitched a two-bitter and Philadelphia stopped its
season-high five-game losing
slreak in San Diego.
Darren Daulton, Mickey Morandini and Gregg Jefferies homered
for thePhimes.
'
Schilling (4-0) walked none and
struck out eight. He retired 16
s lraight batters in the middle
innings before Ken Camlriifi home·
red in the seventh.
An error by Andy Ashby. (2-4)
led to three unearned runs m the
·
_

Thomas unhappy after ChiSox loss; Rangers down Royals

I

435 2nd Ave ..

~

In other AL action,

Students of Sharon Hawley picture•l L-R are Sam Cowan,
Kelly Grueoer and Bonne' Smith"'.
.
piano. Sam and Kt:Uy graduated from
this sprmg
und Bonne' Smith will be a freshman next year ut Meigs. We
OTRL, will discuss ll~w~w~~r;!J-i~~~~:.:;:(''!,liileii'to good luck in the future. Their music was
-wttlr-nrthlitls can nr
delightful.

progr~m on Understanding
.Weekly activities are: Tuesday, Alzheimer'8 Di8ease .
Chorus pra ~ liee from 1:00 l.o · Thursday, J u'ne 22 - I h e
.I :45; Wednesday, Knitting Circle mon1hlv birthday party will b e
from JO to 12 antfPhysical fitness held. Seniors with birthdays in
on · Tuesday and Thursday at June will be honored .
11 : 15.
Tuesday, June 27 - Bernadette
A representative from the Laube r, M.S ., Deportme nt of
Athens Social Security Offire will Psyc hology· at Ohio University,
be nt th~ Cemer on Wt~flncsrluys, will speak at II :00 a.m. The
June 14 and 28, from 10 to II program will be .how to improve
a.m.
memory functioning nnd bow tc;:.
Wednesday, June 14 • the dt!c-reaHI! the rnernory •~ nmpluints
!';troke Survivors Support Group of older n&lt;.lults.
will mc~t from I to :i p.m . Lin
Thursday, Ju·nc 29 - Shar·on
Tipton , flql~er Rehabilitation Bowling, L .I2.N., ·P,.&lt;'r Review
Occ·u pntionnl Ther fl pi~t, is Sy.tcms; will s pea k at 1 1:00 ,
t.· oonlinator for th e s upport
group. Any persons who have

1
I
I

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

·

Meigs County Senior
Center June Activities
Tho Meigs County

1

I

. couoon exoirers 6-24-95

For
Life·

=!:!
JNIIEARING
.

I

'

•Hear-,,

»« »« ---· ~

~

for his ninth save.

sailed over bis bead and btl the }j:ft
The game ended oo an odd lay.
~eld wall. ~ Tpesday. the three- Trailing 9-7, the Mets bad onzo
lime r.t:V~ bit a (cjutcb double !bat ' on third base and Bobby Bonilla on
~yed a Giants v•c;torY· then apolo- first witb one out.

·Indians slip past Tigers 3-2 to collect fifth straight victory

l'

l!OII·in-law of Polly Eichinger, Pomeroy.

f~ed 10 ~ arowtd 011 a. ball !bat

: · AP B-b.U Writer

.... .....

~~"'"Bank

2t1 West Sooond Street
P.

o. Bo&lt; 626, Pomeroy, OH 45769

et419921213(1
~
'&gt;" · --'"'"- - -. ~... ,. ·..
Member F.D.I.C.

Roule7
P.O. Bo• 339
Tuppers P181ns, OH 45783
._ 6t4166HII61

Deadline Wednesday, June 14th - 4:00 p.m.

x3 Greeting .......$7.00 .

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1x5 Greeting w/Picture...... $1 0.00

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Your Message Here:
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--------

L--------;~:~:~:~;;:;;;;:~~;;~~:-;_t_;_;_:_-_--_-_-_--~----~~
The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

�Thu~.y.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

'

June 8, 1995

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

In the NHL Eastern Conference finals,

Flyers hand Devils 3-2 overtime loss

I

OyTOMCANAVAN
lion.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
At that point, the Flyers looked
(AP) - In the end it wasn't eilber
like a team ready to go down 3-0 in
tbe backpassing or the forecheck- the series, and one ready to be
ing or the extra bits that solved lbe swept.
•
New Jersey Devils' cenler-ice Imp
That all changed when
an\1 Manin Brodeur's goallending Brind'Amour flipped a shot at
mastery for the Philadelphia Flyers. . Brodeur. The puck landed five feet
It was a fluky bounce on a nip in front of the goalie and then
shot from the point late in the !bird bounced over his right pad into the
perioo, and then it was old reliable . net.
"We bad two guys going to tbe
Eric Lindros.
Linllros scored on a rare odd· net and I just tried to delay a little
mru1 break by the Flyers 4:19 into bit," sail! Brind'Amour, who had
the first overtime as Pliiladelpbia been )leld without a goal in the
patiently foughl its way back into set:ies. "I threw it at him hoping for
1be Eastern Conference final by a reboun\1, but it just bounced .the
beating the Devils 3-2 Wednesday right way. It was the break we
night.
··
needed."
The win in what was a mus1
Brodeur sail! he never saw tbe
game for tbe Flyers cut the Devils' shol.
lead in the best-of-seven series to
''It was a nightmare . when it
1: I . Game 4 will also be played at went into tbe net,'' he said.
the Meadowlands Arena on SaturLindros made the dream even
day aftemoon, wilh Game 5 hack worse, .scoring on a great cross-ice
in Philadelphia on Sunday.
. pass from Mikael Renberg to cap a
Game 5 would nol have been 3-on-2 by the Flyers' "Legion of
possible ball it n01 been for a lluky Doom" line.
gonl by Rod Brin\1' Amour that tied
Renberg was holding the puck
the game witb 6:03 left in regula- at the right point when he suddenly

In the Fr~nch Open,

spotted Lindros skating ·a1ooe down
the middle of the ice. He sent a
pass across the ice and Lindros
snapped a shot from the top of the
left circle just inside lbe goalpost.
"I never saw Lindros coming in
late," said Brodeur, who had a
1.29 goals against average in 12
playoff games. ''I was playing the
2-on-2 at the 1\luelipe. Renberg
made the long pass across and
boom, Lindros was all alone.''
And just as quickly the Flyers
were revived.
"That was a big goal for us,"
said Kevin Dineen, wbo scored tbe
Flyers' first goal. "Like I say, your
big guy scores the big goals and we
got It from him tonight"
Renberg said the Flyers were
desperate on Wednesday after los·
ing tbe ftrst two games at borne.
"We had to wjn this game,"
Renberg said. "If we didn't we
almost would have been dead. Now
we're still alive and it's going to be
a hell of a series."
'l'hat's not what the Devils
wanted after thoroughly domina!·
ing Philadelphia in the opening two

.

Family
Medicine

games.
"After winning the first two
games like that, you come back
home and you h:)ye all the people
saying bow great you are," Devils
coach Jacques Lemaire said . "It
catches up with you at a certain
time. I bad that feeling tonight.
Hard work and the way we can
play wasn't tbere tonight."
The Devils fwice took one goal
leads against goalie Ron Hex tall, ·
who was outstanding slopping 3 I'
shots in returning to tbe nets after
being lifted in 'Game 2.
Claude Lemieux put New Jersey
in front at I :32 on a 45-foot slap
shot, but Dineen tied the game
about tbree minutes later, putting in
the rebound of a- shot by Karl
~' Dykhuis .
•
Ranlly McKay got his sixtb goal
of lhe playoffs :mil pul New Jersey
ahead 2-1, convening in close after
Bobby Holik forced a turl)over
behind the net early .in tbe second
pet:iod..
However, Brind'Amour gol tbe
bounce 10 lie lhe game and Lindros
then won h.

Convertible, auto, llr c:ond,
AM/FM etll, tilt, c:rullt, All
power

has not won another· Grand Slam
event. He has been in only two
oth~r Grand Slam semifinals, in
1992 at the U.S. Open and this year
at the Australian Open.
His lopsided 7-5, 6-0, 6·1 victo-'
ry Wednesday over "'-drian Voinea.
a !28th-ranked qualifier from
Romania, put him in anotber.
"I've been able to peak a little
bit better, as far as trying to make it
so that I'm playing my best tennis
in the Grand Slam tournaments .
I've lightetled up my schedule to
give myself a little more time for
these events," said Chang, who
also has been using a longer racket
Chang was so dominant against
Voinca, who beat Becker in the
third round, that the Romanian
offered his hand in a .mock early
surrender al'ler winning his only

V-1, auto, alr · c:ond., tilt,
cruiM, eau, PS, PB, PW,
PDL, PwrMat

. 249.:.

.

game in lhe ·fin&lt;~~aset. The Romanian had lost 13 straight games after
wasting two set poinL~ in tbe first
set.
"I actually thought he was con·
ceding," Chang said.
Next for Cbang is Bruguera, tbe
Spanish winner of the last two
French Opens an\1 a superb clay
court player.
Bruguera also was not tesled in
a 6-2, 7-5, 6-2 quarterfinal win
over Renzo Furlan of Italy, who
was bat!ling leg and back injuries.
Chang an\1 Bruguera have never
mel on clay before. Overall, Chang
leads tbeir series 2-1 .
"I think on both sides, it's
going to' be very. very tougb. Sergi
is a very tough player and especially on this surface. He knows how
to win here. ru1d he !eels very com-

fonable," Chan!\ said.
That's not what Bruguera feels.
"I was better prepared tbe last
two years," 911id Bruguera, who
missed nearly seven weeks after
knee surgery in February. "I hall a
lot of troubl.e to recover my physi·
cal condition."
In the Ollter men's semifinal Fri·
day, Muster of Austria takes his
33-malch unbeaten streak on clay
tbat includes five tournament titles
against Russian Yevgeny Kafelnikov, conqueror of the ailing
Agassi.
In the women's semifinals
today, top-seeded Arantxa Sanchez
Vicario, lhe defending champion,
faced ninth-seeded Kimiko Date,
and No. 2 Stem Graf, a lhree-time
champion, played fourlh-seede\1
Conchita Martinez.

1994

V-1, auto, A/C,
Pwr. Mit.

Pwr mirror•

The victims were not boutld .
''From that poinl ,it did not
There was no sign of struggle or appear hkely that Mr. Thompson
forced entry.
would be arrested," he said.
All four suspects also are being
At a news conference Wednes·
investigated . for other crimes . day in Cle.veland, Browns coa~b
pohce srud.
BtU Behchtck pra1sed Thompson s
Thompson, a New Orleans contnbutions as.a player an&lt;! leader
native an\1 fonner member of tbe for the football ~am.
New Orleans Saints, offered a
"He's obvtously suffered
$25,000 reward for tbe conviction through .a very IQug,h off-season
of whoever killed his son and ex- and anytl1 ng that we ve bee_n a~le
wife. ''I know the reward money to do as a team, as an organt~Uon
did play· a big part in catching tbe or per~onally to support htm ts
perpetrators," he said.
sometbmg,tha.t I reel good about,
His attorneys would not say beCf!USC he s g~ven us so much: .
how many ways lhe reward money
However works out JlOSlttvemay be split.
\
ly for hun, th.~t s the best news that ·
• 'These are obviously dangerous I could have, he sat d. .
people who have been arrested,"
Thompson, the spectal learns
said Rick Kohnke, • 'They have captam for the Drowns, srud he wtll .
confederates and associates out be at mmt-camp today and thanke\1
there. It would be a very inappro- lhc team and offictals for lhetr suppriate lhing for us to comment on •.port.
.
.
whelher or not there arc informant1 • Game days wtll be hard, he sru\1.
or tile number of infolll)ants."
, '·~ usually call my son every
Rick Kelly, Thompson's· other Sunday before I g~ out ~n the loot·
altomey, said tbey got a "very sig- ball fiel~. I know I m gom~ II) mtss
nificant break" March 2.3 and
!hat.. ... I m also gomg_ to mtss hear·
shared lhe information witb police mg ht\11 tell me what Daddy dtd
and the federal Bureau of Alcohol,
llunn¥. lhat gall)e tf he sees the
Tobacco and Fireanns.
game.

MCHA linkfest

~et

The Meigs County Heart Asso·
ciation will be .hollling ils annual
Heart J'und Golf Touniamcnt on
Thursday. June 15 at nnon at lhc
Mcij;S County Golf Course.
1 ec off is scheduled for I p.m.
The formal will be a four-man
scramble witl1 a blin\1 draw for the
1eams. Registraliou fees include

grcep fees, can, a hnt dog lunch
anti it sleak dinner.

Gift certificates of $300. $200
an\1 $100 will be aw1uded to the
first second rm\1 lhird-place lcruns
re'p~ctively. A calcuua will be
held just prior to tee-off.
Prizes will include. an automobile for a hole-in-one on the nintb
hole, $10,000 for a hole-in-one on
the seventh hole and a vacation trip

delayed by a Strained rightsh&lt;•ulder
muscle. On Wcdnesllay, he !ct two
runners reach second base and
Lhrew R7 pitches.
.
.
Dllslon scored on RBI smglcs ·
hy Luis Alicea in Ihe third and
Mike Macfarlane and Troy
O'Leary in I be seventh against
Chuck J'inley (3-5), who hall won
his three previous starts. Tiln
Naehring added a two-run double
in the bottom or the eighth.
Mariners 10, Orioles 2

for next week
for a hole-in-one on the lifU1 hole.
Other prizes will be awarded for
closest 10 the pin, longest pun and
mosl accurate drive on llcsignalcd
holes. Door prizes· will also be

awarded.
'The Meigs County Chapter
Amcricru1 Heart Associall&lt;m Tournament is the ollles1 swnding tourmuneni held at the Meigs County
Course . Funlls derived from the
tournament will go toward this
chapter's fight against heart disc:u~e .

lolerested ·golfers may register
nt.the course or by calling 992·
6312 . For regislration fees and
other information, call Dan Morris
a1 992-6149.

219.:.

Fred Biletnikoff
Jeff Blake
George Foster
.

15.95
SJ 5.95
SJ 5.95

V-8, auto., AJC, tilt, crulae,
AM/FM cau, PS, PB, PDL,
PW., etc.

269

'60 Racine High class has reunion

*

Twemy-five of the 52 members attending were Lois Gn~1am Allen,
of U1e 1960 Racine High School Don and ·Sue Buck Beegle, Mary
graduating class atlended a 35th Euler Hill, Patty Rous'h Pape,
anniversary reuniOIJ hel.d Saturday, Richard Shuler, accompanied by
?..May 27, at the Syracuse residence his wife Anna, Margie Sto9art
of Bob Winge11.
·· Wolfe and Don Weese. all of
The reunion, headed by a com- Racine.
mince composed of l'ally Roush
Bob Wingett and 6eqrge ConPape, Sue Buck Beegle and Mary nolly , accompanic\1 by hi s wife
Grace Stoban Cowdrey. included a Jeanie, Syfacusc; Charles Shain,
potluck lunche9n and \lessen of a Pomeroy, Carl Leroy Wolfe, Millcalce inscribe\1 wilh the class gradu· dlepon: Mary Grace Cowllrey an\1
ation motto, "Not the End, butlhe Robert Smitb, Long Bollom.
.
Beginning."
Jerry Lee, Dublin; Saradelle
Two retired educators, Vinas Rees Mack, Grove Cily; Jerry DaiLee anti Howard Nolan, who !aught Icy, Reynoldsburg ; Louise Fisher
at Racine. High during the lime S.mith , Baltimore; Donna Neville
class members were in schooL Fiske ·of Columbus, accompanie\1
· vlcre it1iroduced as special guesls.
by her husband, John; .lack Wigal
Members or the class or '60 and . wife of Caledonia; Alfre\1
Toney, Jr. of Cross Lanes, W.Va.,

•!

.' Ellgar Martinez's grant! slam
and an incident' that cleared bolh
benches and bullpens highlighted a
wild top of tbe eighth lhat saw lhe
Mariners score nine runs.
Limiled 10 lwo singles over
seven innings by Kevin Brown (5·
3), the Mariners broke through in
the eighth . Joey Cora's one-out,
two-run single g~ve the Mariners a
3·2 lead. Armando Benitez
replaced Drowi1 and wall\ed Alex
Diaz before Martinez hom ere\1.
Benitez hit Tino Martinez wiU1 a
pitch and thai ~mptied both bench·
es and bullpens, but no punches
were U1rown . Benitez was ejected ·
an\1 replaced· by Almi Mills, who
gave up a two-run homer to Doug
Strange.
Chris Dosio (4-0) allowed two
runs and 10 hilS in seven innings.
. Yankee$ 6, Athletics 1
Rookie lefl-hander Andy Pettilte
a ll.ow ed four hits over seve n

innings for his l'irst major league
victory and Wade Boggs hit his
IOOih career homer.
Pettitle (1-2), making his third
major league start, struck out tbrce,
walked one ru11l allowed one run.'
Don Maningly's sacrifice fly.
broke a 1-1 tie in the fifth. Boggs
hit his secon\1 homer in the sevenU1.

HAPPY JACK BACK
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1992 BUICK
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1991 CAOILLAC
BROUGHAM

$15 949
1993 CHEV
1/2"TON L.W. B.

1991 CHEVY
TAHOE BLAZER

4X2, 4.3L, · V-6, 5 SPO·
A/C, PS, PB, AM/FM ster
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$11,249
1987 CHEVY
S-10 BLAZER

. 4X4, 2 dr., V-6, auto, air
cond, PS, PB, AM/FM
stereo, more, cleanl

56,949
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4 dr, ·4x4, 4.3 V-6, auto,
A/C, tilt, cruise, PS, PB,
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1988 FORD
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Ma~ 13aftr Cfotftiers ~ur '.[ather's tJJa!J

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• Mens Casual Pants
• Dress Shirts

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• Cloth Hats
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TIRES

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22 in)

(jift Jieaaquarters
• Sport Coats
• Lightweight Jackets

•Ties
• Belts
• Straw Hats
• Sport Shirts L&amp;S Sleeve
• Key Cases
• Jiffy Slippers
• Western Shirts
l... ong &amp; short sleeve,

P;rewashed Levi's Values to $42 NOW s34oo
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'

Long &amp; Short sleeved, Colors &amp; White

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payment a! lime of delively Warranty lrlcludell. Slale Iaxes no1 included.

BATTERIES

accompanied by his wife , Judy ;
Tom Chapman, New Haven .
W.Va.; John Clelan\1, Parkersburg ,
W.Va.; Robert Lewis, Highland ,
Maryland an\1 Paula Han Laird .
Watauga. Texa~.
Jack Proffitt of East Wenatchee,
Wa sh., who attended some of hi s
high school years with the cla.'S but
moved out of·county prior to gradu~tion ; was also present .with his
wtfe, Ruby. Others attcndmg were
George and Ruth Strode; Wynn
Rees,.l';mmogene Hamilton. Elizabeth Bright and Patty Tarr.
. Two members or Ute 1960 grall·
ualing class. Chris Pickens an\1
Harold McClaskey. ru·e deceased.
C)ass members decided to have
anotlter reunion in the spring or the
year 2000.

CCL to celebratf; 50th anniversary

V-8, auto, A/C, tilt, cruise
cass, all power, leathe
padded top, much more
34,000 miles.

515,949

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'·

1994 MERCURY
. COUGAR XR-7

V-1, aulo, air cond., AM~F~II
ca .., lilt, crulae, PS,
PW, PDL, etc. .

STRUTS
5

'

1

Middleport, Ohio 45760

Autographed 8 x 10 'Framed

4 c:yl, auto, AJC, AM!FM
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.

Tbe Ladies Fellowship. wiU met
at the church on Aug . 24, the
Ladies Retreat will be held at tbe
Oliio Valley Christian Assembly
camp on Sept. 22 and 23 witb\ Billie Joyce Fine of St. Petersburg,
Fla. to be the speaker. and the
Ladies Fellowship will beheld at
Dexter with Bradford women to
have devotions on Sept. 28.
Brenda Bolin and Sherry Smith
will host the June meeting or Lydia

Lawrence, Tara Rose, Dena Sayre, Lena Yoacbam, Robbie Card, Josh
Jon Smith, Jessica Alley, Courtney Davis , Troy Hoback, Autumn
Haines, Anita Holter, Jock Rose, Tflomas, Asbli Davis. Jody Hupp
Teresa Bush, Jennifer Carleton, ru1d Trisha W&lt;mler.
·
Tara Norman, T.risha Warner, Ashli
Receiving recognition for quiz
Davis, Mary Francis, Amber Tay- bowl participation were Kyle Norlor, Adam Williams, Chrism Circle, ris , Jamie Baker, Amber Maynard, '
Kara King; Pany Lawrence, Kim Ryan Nease. Autumn Thomas and
Sayre, Jeremy Johnson and Mike Dennis Jones. along with team
Smitll.
four, Jesse Linle, Luke Grueser,
· Academic fitness awards went Jmed Smith, Erron Aldridge, Man
to Christa Circle , Ashli Davis, Wilson and Carly Crow.
Josie Jarrell and Jesse LitUe.
Newspaper staff members preRecognized· for their work on senletl awarlls were Erin Bolin, Ty
lhe studcm council were presiden~ : Johnson , Tiffany Curfman, Ashli
Asbli Davis; vice president, Carly Davis, Julia Hensler. Denise
Crow; secretary, Sarah Brauer; Keyes, Autumn Hill, Troy Hoback,
treasurer, Autumn Hill; reporter, J ody Hupp, Jesse Litlle, Cbris RanJaney Hill; and members, Kyle dolph, Kim Sa)'ll!, Bobbie Scarber·
Norris, Dena Sayre, Josh Davis, ry, Billie Jo Sellers, Amber Taylor
Steven Boso, Ty Johnson, Kara and Lena Yoacham.
King and Jeremy Johnson.
Essay winners for the county
CCTV staff members honored historical society recognize\1 were
were Tiffany Curfman, Melissa Autumn Hill, Josh Rauer, Jennifer
Norman, Jason Allen, Jerroo Mills, Morris, Teresa Bush, Kara King
Derek Warden, Chris Reitmire, and Stacy Wilson.
Josh Rowe! Kyle Norris, Ty John·
Volunteers at the school were:
son, Chris Randolph, Stacy Lyons, librarians, Donnie Proffill, Tava

Copncil. Tbere will be a family
.
picnic in July.
Hostesses were Becky Amberger and Madeline Painter. Otbers
attending were Gerry Lightfoot,
Diane Bing, Karleta Stump, Edie
and Addie Hubbar\1, Kathy and
Megan Dyer, Charlotte Haning,
.Jackie Reed, Carolyn Nicholson,
Janice an \I Amanda Feu y and
Nancy Morris and Suzie: Will.

Young , Ryan Hill, Tara Rose, .
Healller Dailey, Elizabeth Salser.
David Nance mtd Rebecca Congo:
ltitchen helpers, Jeremy Johnson,
Mike Smith an\1 Wil son Hall;
office helpers , Jessica Alley,
Samantba Hysell, Suzanne Evans
and Matt Wilson; janitor helpers,
Mike Bissell and Brett Counts; and
kinderganen helpers, Sarah Brauer,
Stacy Wilson. Jessica Alley, Stacy
Ervin, Mandy Lang, Heather Dailey, Sanlly Smith, Jason Allen,
Chris Randolph, Jamie Balcer, Troy
Hoback , !esse Little and Bobbi
Scarberry.
A band· award was. given to
David Colvin.
Appreciation was extended 10
Vicki Hill and Bill Dacr for ,serving
as eightb grade lrip leaders, Jim
Wickline for seMoing a~ subslilule
principal, and Hill for being the
dinner organizer.
Todd Rizer; an eighth grade stu·
\lent, presented a gift 10 Mickey
Kucsmli from the eightb grade stu\lent,.

Bradford Church honors
mothers at banquet

In the seNice

#20460

1994 FORD
TAURUS

~L. ~Ci/ll~~.iSo_n_tin_u_c__
d tr_om__P_ag_·e_7_)__~------------~-------------~---------------------------ln 111 J1cr AL" gruncs Wednesday
ni ght it was Boston 5, Cnlifomia I;
Scmtle 10. llaltimore 2;'New York
6. Oakland 1; Milwaukee 6. Min·
ncsola 3: and Texas 1O, Kansas
City 4.
RedStJxS,A ngels 1 •
·Roger Clemens struck out eight
and allowed two hilS ru1d two walks
in live innings a,, the Red So• won
for the eighU1 lime in nine gruncs.
Clemens ( 1-0) struggled last Friday
in his 1. 995 debut, one th~l was

1994 FORD
PROBE SE

4 ClfJ., auto., A!C, AM/FM ,
PS, PB, PW, PDL, air bag,

Third triple-murder suspect surrenders
girl in tbe chest during a holdup. '
Kintad "Bucko" Phillips, 21.
surrendere\1 Wednesday to police
in Melbourne, Fla., the NOPD said.
Juan "Short Dog" Smith, 20.
remains a fugitive .
Thompson and his ex-wife got
protective orders against each olher
during a bitter divorce. That
aroused suspicions when the three
bullet-riddled bodies were found in
Ms . Thompson's upscale New
OrleanshomeonFeb.5.
"All along, I tbink i've been a
prime suspect- the No. I prime
suspect," said Thompson, 32. " .. .!
knew I was going to be a suspect,
but I knew I was innocent.''
Arrest watrdllts contend Smith,
Phillips and Bannister ransacked
the house searching for drugs and
cash, then killed the residents 10
climinale any witnesses. Trackling
wailed in the getaway car, accor\1ing 10 lhe warrat\t,.
Investigators found blood on tbe
back door and the bodies in the
den. Each victim'- even lhc little
boy - had multiple gunshot
wounds. Police have refused to say
how maJ)y times t11ey were shot

URY COUGAR XR•7

C:lll, till, c:rulle, PS, PB. PW, PDL,

11994 FORD
TEMPO 4 DR

After Browns' Thompson cleared,
NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Whoever kille\1 his three-year-old son
deserves to die , ~aid Cleveland
Drowns defensive back Bennie
Thompson.
Speaking publicly for the first
time since tbe February murders of
his ex-wife, their son and her
tiancc. Thompson said his prayers
were answered when four men
were accusc\1 of tbe killings.
"I'm g,lad these perpetrators
..,have been caught s n now -I' can .
grieve oveqhe dealh of 1'!'7 so~.
who I lov e very much , sa td
Thompson, calm bul red-eyed durlng a news cm~fert;_nce Wednesday
at his attorneys ofhce.
" I think anyone who killed a
threc-.,Year-ol~, son should get the
deatl1 penally.
Police lxjoked two men Tuesday
and announced the arrest Wednesday or one of two fugiti vcs on
charges of aggravated burglary and
of the first-degree murders ol
Tangi e Thompson,. 28. Andre
While. 30. &lt;llld Devyn fhompson.
Doniclle Bannister, 20 , and
Robert Trackliog, 18, botb of New
Orleans, were already in jail for
allegedly shoOting a 13-year-old

A~llr-M

It was noted lhat cookies are
needed for the cookie ministry. A
pasta nigbt was planned, Madeline
Painter and Evelyn Wood were
appointed to bandle communion,
and needs or lhe food pantry were
noted.
•
II was reported !hat Lydia Coon·
cil will be supporting Rick Bolen
who will be going to Africa in January for a two week mission jour·
ney.

Southern Junior High recognizes students

1993 FORD
T·BIRD LX

1993 FORD
MUSTANG LX

The Dally Sentinel • Page t

Lydia Council unveils plans for Bible School

Plans 'for Bible School at the '
Bradford Church of Christ were
disc11ssed when the Lydia Council
met recently at the church.
' The school wiU be held July 2428 using the theme, "Jesus Kids. .
"Totally His."
. John C. Wolf, D.O.
Karl eta Stump bad prayer.
Associate Professor
Becky Amburger and Madeline
of Family Medicine
Painter gave devotions using tbe
theme "The Power ol' a Wasted
Day"
and script1,1re from Proverbs.
Qu'estion: I'm having trouble longer time for lhe antihistamine to
wllh my allergies again Ibis year. I "catch up" and ll!alce you feel bet·
have all tbe symptoms lhe ads on ter.
. Many allergy medications add a
TV talk about - lhe itchy eyes,
runny nose and congestion. I've decongestant such as pseu ·
lried most of tbe brands o( non-pre- lloephedrine
, or
phenylAcademic an\1 other achievescription allergy medications with propanolamine. These medicatiohs ments were recognized during an
unsatisfactOry results. Some didn't reduce the swelling in tbe nose and awards assembly held recenlly al
help very much, 'while others sinus areas. They are used with Soutbem Junior High School.
worked, but put me to sleep. Is antihistamines to give more rapid
Students receiving all A's durthere anything new for allergies?
r~lief of the allergic symptoms.
ing the school year recognized
Answer. Allergies - one of the .
The decongestant opens up the were Kyle Norris, Chris Ranllolph,
most common buman maladies nose now, and the antihistamine Brandon Wolfe and Jennifer Carbeset up to 30 percent of Ameri· blocks the allergic reaction which leton.
· cans. Wow! If this causes each suf- would bave resulted in a stuffy
Those bo~d for' being on the
:ferer to hi: absent from work or nose in a few hours. As a group, honor roll all year were Jamie
·school for only four ' days a year, anti(listamines tend· to produce Baker, Kyle Norris, Chris Ran· tbe country loses at least 100 mil· drowsiness, and decongeslaniS tend dolph, Brandon Wolfe, Jennifer
·Jion person-days of productivity. to produce nervousness. Taken Shain , Stacey Ervin, Jennifer Car· Addilionally, we spend more than togetber, each &lt;*le.~&gt;ften cancels out leton, Ashlie Davis , Jesse Litlle,
:$500 million for allergy-related the other's undesirable effects, but Jessica Theiss, Christa Circle, Kara
;doctors' visits and medications.
as you know from experience, this King and Kim Sayre.
"Allergies" are calle\1 '"allergic doesn't always work out.
Students with perfect attendance
:rhinitis" in medical jargon . Plant
We doctors have a wide asson- were Donnie Proflitt, Sandy Smith,
:pollen, the most likely cause of; ment of available antihistamines Heidi Bumpus, Heather Dailey;
•your current symptoms, as well as and· deconges.t ant combinations, Courtney Haines, Stacey Ervin,
;animal dander, molds, house dust nasal steroid~. cromolyn sodium Jeff Michael, Jeremial1 Johnson,
;and other substances, produce and otber lreatments that are more Jennifer Arthur, Jennifer Carlelon
.watery · eyes. a runny nose , a effective or have fewer side effects and Kim Sayre.
'scratchy throat, puffy dark bags than the non-prescription treat·
Citizenship awards were pre·
under the eyes (allergic shiners) as ments you have tried.
semed to Samantha Hysell, Ryan
:well as cou)lhing and "wheezing."
These medications usually pro- Nease. Kyle Norris, Chris RanIt sounils·Jike yoti'vejust about had vide safe and affordable relief for dolph, Brandon Wolfe, Peggy
'them all!
most allergy sufferers. There are
As a general rule, it's safe to try new products witbin each of these
the non-prescription allergy medi- drug categories, but none of tbem
.cations first, just as you have done. offer dramatic advantages over
Brian M. Smith
They are relatively inexpensive and their older counterpans.
Brian M. Smilh, son ofClaudia
·safe if taken using the label direcPelkey and step-son of Albert
tions. Most contain an anti hisQuestion: Should I have allergy Pelkey of New Castle, Pa., recently
tamine such as chlorpheniramine testing before my doctor gives. me completed his basic training at lhe.
which works by blocking the one of tbe stronger allergy medica- Navy Training Base in Great
release of bismmine - the natuml tions?
Lakes, lll.
Answer: Allergy testing and
body chemical which produces lhe
Smith graduaied from Meigs
allergy symptoms. Unfortunately, allergy sbots are important treat· High School in May. He anended
most of these drugs also cause ment tools. For most people, tbe University of Rio Grande for
wowsiness as well as the desired though, ·I think that it makes more two ye;u;s tbrough a special prosense to try one of the .stronger gram which permits high school
antihistamine effc~t.
Antihistamine s work better allergy medications ftrst. For those students to attend college caUed lhe
when taken before you are expose\1 individuals whose symptoms are post-secondary school option.
· ' to the substanct&gt; U1al producesi':POt controlled with lh.e availlible
He is the grandson or Donald
allergy symptoms. For most o , , medtca~ons or who cannot tolerale and Mary Barnett of Langsville. He
this means that they should e tl1em, I d recommend allergy test. is the sou of Michael Smith of
. taken regularly d~ring U1e allergy ing fo.llowed by allcrg?'_ shot s Lorain.
season instead of wailing until the (sometimes called dese·nsntzatlon
Smith is currently sl'lltione\1 at
symptoms are severe. Once the or inununotherapy) .
·
the Naval Nuclear Power Com·
symptoms are established, i 1 ~'lkes a
m'ind Base in Orlando, Fla.

Chang beats Voinea; Muster also wins
: By NESHA STARCEVIC
PARIS (AP)- Witb the spot·
light on Sergi Brugucra, Thomas
Muster and Andre Agassi, Michael
Chang has been lurking in the
shadows at the French Open. I
Lurking and winning.
Altbough top-ranke\1 Agassi has
been ousted (along with secon\1- ·
ranked Pete Sampras and thirdranked Boris Becker), Druguera
an\1 Muster have kept on going
righl inlo U1e semifinals.
So bas Chang, who made histo·
ry here in 1'989 by becoming tbe
youngest champion ever in a Grand
Slam event, winning.on tbe Roland
Garros red clay as a 17-year-ol\1
ouisider.
Six years later, Chang remains
somewhat ol' a llarkhorse.
Since his French victory, Chang

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ORlAN SMITH

"Find Us Faithful" was the Faithful", by Karlita.Stump. Speak·
!berne of the annual mother-daugh - er was Connie Cunningham of the
ter banquet held recenlly at the Walnut Street church or Christ at
Belpre. Mrs. Nicholson and Mr s.
Bradford Church of Christ.
Carolyn Nicholson had the Pickens presented a gift from the
opening prayer, with Karleta Lydia Council to Mrs. Stump who
Stump' giving the welcome . Gifts will be moving wit11 her frunily to
were presenleil by l?aula Pickens Hillsboro.
and Janice Felty to Caitlin
The men of tile church serve\1
Williamson , Joy Cunningham.
lhe dinner. Committees consisted
Amru1da Wolfe, Jamitha Wilfor\1 , of Diane Ding, favors: Mrs. l&gt;ick·
Rachel Cunningham, Spring Light- ens and .tv!rs. Nicholson, program;
foot, Elizabelh Smilh, Nancy Mor- Mrs. Pickens and Mrs. Fetty, speris, Cherie Williamson, Joyce Sh~~ cial gifts; Mrs. Stump, Edie Hubline, Jackie Ree\1, and Cindy Hut· ~ bard, Madeline Painter, Becky
lOlL
·
Amberger, Brenda Bolin, an\1 Sher·
There were several song s, ry Smitb, decorations.
includin g one by entitled "Find Us
l

�'

I

..

•

Thursday, June 8, 1S915

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page10 • The Dally Sentinel

Junes, 1995

Zion Church hosts mother/daughter dinner -.

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
:: I want to tell you about some
I "ain't" talk in •
"-'ealher.
:: It might be hard for you to relate
to the thought of cooking up a
batch of your hot chili wbat 1with
yesterday"s temperature bitting
!!-bout 90. However, the Albany
c;ommunity is having a chili mak·
lng· contest-its 12th annual chili
!K&gt;:W.I ~off in fact- and if your
~btl!' IS as good as you'.re always
telling me it is, then I think you
sbould participate.
:. The contest wiU be held at Lake
Snowden in Albany on noon, July
ts. Contestants are judged in any
one of five different categories and,
iit addition, there are an overall
·-~udge's favorite" and "people's
choice" awards. If your product is
ainong the winners you will receive
a: uapby plus all of the bragging
rights that go along with the
accomplislunenL
· : For more infonnation or to get
_[HI entry blank call Power 105 in
'.\!hens, 614-593-6651.
· And, by the way, Lake Snowden
which is located 10 miles west of
...,!hens on U. S. Route 50 and 32,
will also be' offering the general
public a -.jariety of live entertainment ·and recreational fun on the
dRy of Ute chili cookoff.

!I of stuff-and

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ber and she would like a member
of Ms. Pratt's family to have the
sheet music. If you happen to be
among her descendants give Sue a
call at 742·3172 and she'll .be glad
to see that you get it. If no one
shows up, Sue plans to give the
music to the Meigs Museum.
. Keep in mind that next Tuesday
evenmg at 7 p.m. in the cafeteria of
Veterans Memorial Hospital, the
next meeting of the Meigs Ameri. can Diabetes Association Support
Group will be held.
.
The sessions have been going
on for a number of months now
and are 6pen to all persons with
diabetes and their families and
friends. Those attending Tuesday
night's meeting are to take multiple
copies of their favorite recipe for
the diabetic diet to share with the
rest &lt;!f the group.
Jackie Starcher, R.D.L.D ., of
Meigs County will be in charge of
the recipe exc:;pe·
Heritage w kend is coming up.
· I don't lmow just exactly what's in
store in downtown Pomerov and at
the Meigs Museum. I understand,
however, that downtown activities
will take place only on Saturday
and the "time capsule" of the
Meigs County I 75th Anniversary
Committee will be buried at II :30
a.m. Saturday. The Big Bend Community Band will be on hand to
present music and the commillee
will serve refreshments. Some col-

"A Country Fair" was tbe theme
for a mother/daughter banquet held
recently at the Zion Church of
Christ.
.The decorations carried out the
thCJile with a display of ceramics,
paintings. photographs, needlework
items, quilts, and canned foods representing the different aspects of a
fair.
A sunflower decor was carried ·

out in the table decorations. Pat
Arnold gave the blessing and
Tammy Dummitt welcomed the 46
mothers and daughters attending.
Mattbe~ 5: 12 was the scripture
te~t Conme Watson used for ber ·
devotion.
The program was a "stage
show" with Hazel Stanley as the
emcee. The first act was a singing
group called "My 'Fair'

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·

A summer program geared to
give children a jump start on reading has;been initiated by the Ohio ·
Valley Area Libraries (OVAI..).
· "Camp Read" is a special reading club for tots to teens. It gives
pre-schoolers and teenagers the ·
opportunity to read books white
earning prizes 'including stickers,
posters, and paperback books.
The only requirement for participation in the program is to live in
Meigs, Athens, Hocking, Jackson,
Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Scioto or

ground.
reading log has beer\' sent to :
Although registration · bas OVAL , a special prize will he :
already begun for "Camp Read," it returned ihrough the mail. Aug. 18 ;
is not too late to join the program. is Ute deadlin&lt;o to return completed :
All a child needs to do to join is to reading to OVAL.
Books
By
Mail
is
a
free
book
order children's or teen books from
lending service provided to the res·
Books By Mail .
A "Camp Read" Reading Log · idents of nine so uthea~tern Ohio .
counties through special stale fund· ~ill be included in the order. Use
):
the log to ke.ep track· of Uie titles ing. .
in
the
pro··
:
Anyone
interested
read . After children have read or
/gram
is
asked
to
call
1-800
759·
•
have had someone else read to
15
37
lor
a
Books
By
Mail
Catalog
•
them I 0 books, they 'send OV AI..
the list of titles . After a completed or to inquire about "Camp Read."

.
Vinton counties.
According to OV AI.. personnel,
research shows that children who
read as few as six books during the
summer tend to show achievement
gains in reading and vocabulary
development when they return to
school in the fall. A recent Illinois
study found that children who participated in public library summer
readmg programs, gained as much
as half a year in reading achievement, while children who did not
participate in the program lost

Community calendar---The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing t.o
announce meeting and special
events. Tbe calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are priuted as space 'permits and
unnot be guaranteed to run a
specific number or days.
THURSDAY
•· CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge F&amp;AM, 8 p.m. Thursday, at
lodge, refreshments.

POMEROY -Rock Springs
Grange, Thursday, 8 p.m . annual
inspection.

FRIDAY
POMEROY- Return Jonaihan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of 1he
American Revolution, will meet
Friday at noon at the home of Pat
Holter. Members to take a casse·
role or a dessert:

POMEROY - Pomeroy Group
6f Alcoholics Anonymous, Thursday, 7 p.m. Sacred Heart Church,
Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy.

.'

: This poem was written by
Qotores Will and read at the 45th.
anniversary of the graduation of the
P.omeroy High School Class of
1Jl50 and the Pomeroy High School
reunion.

Remember the old Hbck;ing Valley
Train
Now, not even \be tracks remain .
NQ buses leave our 1own any more.
The Blue and Grey is a video store.
The high school moved clear aut of
town
\Vhat has changed since you lived Which made some of the older
here. ·
ones frown .
No longer a White House that sold But now we are all in one big fold
been
And turned the purple and white to
T~e theater's gone, the Hotel, too. . maroon and gold.
The Beacon, the freight station, tO Elberfelds has changed ils name
mime a few.
Bul the friendliness rem ains the

directors meeting Frid~y at Star :
Grange Hall on County Road I :
near Salem Cemer.' Potluck will be ·
at 7 p.m. followed by a meeting at :
8 p.m. Grangers urged to attend.

SUNDAY
.
STIVERSVILLE - · Rev ival ·
SALEM CENTER- Special . Sunday_ through . Wednesday ,:
Ohio State Grange officers and · SoversviiJe Word ol Fruth Church . •

· TUPPERS PLAlNS - Tuppers
Plains, VFW Post 9053, Thursday,
7 p.m at the hall . Installation of
officers. Members and guests. Dinner.

White earns
collegiate
recognition ·

- The
Pomeroy Cemenl Block is now
O'Dell's.

,•
Shuler.
The highlight was an ugly baby
contest called "Ugly is Only Skin
Deep" written by Bonnie Arnold .
Taking roles were Ann Lambert,
Linda Bates , Pat Arnold, Kay
McElroy, Connie Watson, Lindsay
Watson, Kathryn Johnson, Tammy •
Dummitt, Peggy Bole , Donnie •
Arnold and lla1.el Stanley.
Ida Murphy had the closing
pmyer.

Jump start on reading offered at 'Camp Read'

lectible itCiits will be Sold by the
.
committee.
I also lrnow Utat the duck derby
on Ute Ohio River will begin at I
p.m. I've adopted my duck and
hope that it doesn't spring a leak
before it bits the river Saturday.
There are some 30 .prizes-some
pretty nice one&amp;:-to be awarded to
"adopters" of ducks crossing the
finish line ftrst. You can adopt your
An Eastern High Schoot.graduduck for $5 at many Pomeroy busi· ate recently earned a national colleness houses. By the way, Joann giate award in student govenunent.
Williams tells me that the Farmers
Bobbie Jaye White ,' who had
Dank has \be ducks available. The attended Ohio Valley College,
bank was not mentioned in an earli • earned the United States National
er comment on the derby. Actual! y, Collegiate Award. White is the ·
you can try to "adopt" at about daughter of Bob and Dove White
'most any Pomeroy business . of Coolville and granddaughter of
house-if you hit a dead end Myrtle Copley of Kenova, W.Va.
undoubtedly someone will direct
White tran sferred to Harding
you to a selling point closeby. May University in Searcy, Ark ., this
the best duck win and I ·hope it's spring. She bas been li sted in
.yours. If it isn't then let it me mine. Who's Who Among American
Do keep smilin£. ·
High School Students.

Sue McGuire of out Rutland
way went to an auction . Sue
McGuire purchased a wash stand at
that auction.
Later, looking over her' purchase
Sue found under some newspapers
in a drawer a copy of a song enti·
Ued "I Rode With Gus, In a Jibley
Bus." The song was copyrighted in
1915 and was written by Florence
· L, M. Pratt of Pomeroy. It was published by the Mellinger Music Publiihing Co. in St. Louis, Mo ..
. Sue says its a pretty cute num-

Ladies"composed of Aruia Shuler,
Kay McElroy, Pat Arnold, Bonnie
Arnold and Charlotte Lambert,
wbo sang several old time hymns.
The next act was a skit by Bonnie Arnold, Pat Arnold and Kay
McElroy called "Bubble Gum!
Bubble Gum!" ·
Other features of the stage sbow
were a piano solo by Whimey Wat·
son and an organ splo by Anna

PHS alumni hold reunion .~

A ·buffet luncheon and social Lou and John lhle, Racine; Donna
·hour for members of the Pomeroy and Guy Morris, Pomeroy .
High School class of 1949 and their
Shirley and Jack Seelig, Starke,
guests was held at Trinity Church, Fla.; Eleanor and Wyllis Davis,
Pomeroy, Saturday .
New Haven. W. Va.; Carmalctta
A p-urpl e and white color William s and daughter, Louisiana.
scheme was carried out for the Mo.; Kilty and George DaMas,
gathering of alwnni who spent the Agoura, Calif.; Martha and Joe
afternoon reminiscing and looking .Struble, Pomeroy; Lois Hawley ,
at pictures.
·
Pomeroy ; Frankie Rusche I, ColumAttending were Jean and John bus; Laura Slaughterback, Neehish
Werry, Pomeroy; Betty and Dick Island. Bareeau, Mich.; Bill Tubbs,
Ash, Syracuse ; Hazel and Eddie Phoe nix . Ariz . Lawrence Eblin ,
Ball, Pomeroy; Maxine and Tom . Pomeroy ; Paul Ray Rei bel,
Norris, ·Sl. Augustine, Fla.; Ann Rey noldsb urg; Irene Bailey, Mid~
and Mac Couerill, Lancaster; Mary dl eport ; aptl Peg gy Houdas helt,
Pomeroy.

1

:
•
•
:
:
:
:·
:

HILLSIDE BAPTIST
CHURCH

'.·\

~ located on S.R•.J43 iu.'t off Rt. 7/ "'

BODDIE WHITE

--------.,..-Poet's corqer -------_- - -

'

Get This Matching 5-Pc. Dinette FREE When You
Buy Tire 6-Pc. Living Room Grllfll

..

. . , And Saturday will be reunion
rught for the Eastern Higlj School
1\lumni Association. Tbe event will
be at the Royal Oak Resort with
dinner being served at 6:30 p.m.
(allowed by dancing from 8:30 to
11:30 p.m.
Alumni must have advance tickets to be admitted to the grounds
a,ud today is the deadline for purchasing them at Baum · Lumber ,
Summerfields, Chester; Hawk's 76
and Keebaugh •s Shake Shop, Tuppers Plains; Reed's Store in
Reeds ville, and Francis Florist in
Pomeroy.

11

Ohio

r:;;

Pomeroy, Oh1o

·

._-_,/.,.

~ ..;M;~jNG ~~

\

ra'isecom
guard
And we don ' t get up iu the early
All alone in the courthouse yard.
The Rose Hill School where we got mom.
We don't milk our cows or have
our s\art
A home now lor Don, Frankie and chickens on th e range
I guess so me thin gs really do
Art.
·
change.
The Enterprise Church is still go ing
bodies
have aged and our hair
Our
strong
turned
gray
.
,
·
Trying to teach us right frQm .
And
no
in
the
yard
our
gnmdchil·
wrong.
drcn play.
Much is different here on the farm
But the old barQ ba s kept her Time marches on , thing 's don't
stmtd still .
charm.
The large country dinners are now Expecl for the river near our home
On Ute hill.
"tea for two,"
And sugar, fat and sal t arc now
Dolores Will

Friday, June 9th - 7:00 p~m.
~ POMEROY PARKING LOT ~

co~re~

DOWN BYTHE RIVE~SIDE c~t';'.'tt
fret&gt;
A Sound System Is Provided
,,._,
Any Gospel Group, Diets, Trio's or soloists
Who Would Like to Sing Call
992-6768 OR 992-5705

Civil War soldier still stands We~o~
don't
oigs :md we don't
·.
ThR~e~las~t~t=o~c=o=m=e~d=o~w:n~w=as~O:s:·c=ar~lThe
sru~n~e~.~~~~~~~~~!_~ta~bo
. ~~·raise
~~~~~~~~------------~--~P~p~tn=er~o:y~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~

!Odell's

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Missi?

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675-2727

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• No punhdse ncc\"19ary • Adult&lt;\ only
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~ans subject to credit appro~;al.

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 8,1895

.

Thursday, June a, 1995

The Dally Sentinel• Page13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

: . _,.;..PI.;;;;;ub;.;;;llc;..;Nol=lct;:__
:·
IN THE COURT OF
1
·. COli- PLEAS OF IIIEIOI
: COUNTY, OliO PII08ATE

•:
~

DIYI8ION

.t..,a..,· ·

IN THE IIATTER OF THE
· ESTATE OF MARCIA GAIL

TOROESEN

CASE NO. 28903
DOCKETO

•

Could a. tours!
Just Call
1·900-945-61 00
Ext. 1327,
'2.99 per min.

PAGE3

~

••. NOTICE OF PUBUCATION

.·

Notice lo hereby given
thot on tho 24th dey of
·• April, 1H5, Thomoo E.
. · run-, Jr., Executor of the
: Eattto of Morclo Goli
· · Torgo .. n, late of 980
~

: He1rtwood

SIDEWAIAK SALE
2 DAYS cfNLY

SWEWALK SALE
SATURDAY, JUNE 10
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.

mu

)

- JUNE IOtr &amp; lith

ONE DAY ONLY!
Of sa,ing Than• foul

w.,
'

Iierita3e Wee)cend

0avin8s

·

2

KARAOKE
FRIDAY 9 PM-?
COURT STREET

,

OFF

GRILL

YARD SALE
JUNE 8 &amp; 9

THE FABRIC SHOP
POMEROY, OHIO • 992-~84
OPEN 9 TO 5 MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

•

:Forest Run

HERITAG.E WEEKE"J'
·
. SALES

:alumni ·reunite
.

2 o OFF

~PRICE

COLD POP

27C CAN
CANDY BARS

Lela Delores Hawk is a surgical patient at the Mt
Carmel West Medical Cemer in Colwnbus.
Roger and Gina Chapman of Columbus are visiting
his grandfatlter, Emory Weekley. Mary Ellen Andrew
· of Pennsylvania recently visited.
, . Justin Daniel Hill of Columbus spent several days
, wttlt grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Larkins.
Birthday guests of Mildred Hauber mcluded Mr. and
:· Mrs. David Ross of Middleport; Wells Van Dyke of
. Amesville; Lela Delores Hawk· and RoHbie Hawk of
.Long Bottom; and Shannon Moodispaugh of
· Reedsville.
·' Weekend guests of Ada Bissell were Marilyn and
· Mark Miller of Columbus; Mike, Teri. Erruna and Scot• ·ty Shipkowski, all of Columbus; Janet and Tom Groen: weld of Worthington; Mike Bissell of Ru~and; and Mae
. McPeek of Long Bottom.
.·
· On Monday, Janet and Toll'l, Ada and Mae 8 issell
• traveled to Chester to anend the parade and enjoy the
-· dinner at tlte fire hall.
• : J•mie Fitch and arandon and Ruby Brewer attended
·· the Deem reunion in Vienna; W.Va.
·

30%oFF ·

.

TIMEX WATCHES
COMPLETE S!OCK 3Q% OFF
Early Bird Special Friday 8 AM-Noon'

~0%oFF.
·

Limit 2

Customer

.

MEN'S COLOGNES &amp;AFTERSHAVES

20%oFF

'

10:30 - ."Masters Messengers" Puppet Show

· (by the Hope Baptist Church)

·
.

11:30 ~ 175th Anniversary of Meigs Committee

(on&lt;qph ·Allergy· Free Diumon!i ·Eo~~ings

CASSUTE'TAPES (Country &amp;Oldies)

' .

12:00- Dauling Dolt§ Baton Corp

ure )'OIIr nnswcr

REG.'$4.49

12:30- Clogging Inc.

to -

• 1:00 - C.J. and the Country Gentlemen

.

.

J

'.

.

Pharmacy

PARKING LOT STAGE

; CRAFTERS • GAMES.
. . __,(}UILTERS • FUN!

. $339

SWISHER LOHSE

LIVgENTERTAINMENT ON THE·

· Annual Duck Derby

.

.•

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
. Mon. thru Sat. 8:00 a.m. to 9:00p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH, 992·2955
, E. Main

~

:Lon_g Bottom news

c
34

PAPERBACK BOOKS

CHAPMAN SHOES

11:45- Di!_Wel Russ~I •• Piano

of

~~t~e':y~.~~~~~~ for ·
Free Estimates

· ·Berore6p.m.leave
message.
After6p.m.
614-985-4180 ,._ .

COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.

Service Pomeroy; Oh.

'&lt;"l

.

Convenient Mini-Storage Units

s. R. 7

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

. Garages • RepIacemant WI n d ows

Pomeroy, Ohio

COMMERC~ and RESIDENTIAL
FREJ; ESTIMATES

·Open For Business

614-992-7643

CaU for all of your storage needs

(No Sunday Calls)

992·5251 ·

992·9949 - 992-647t

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
· Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

Call for rate schedule ·
Min. $2.00

Bfll
Prolfuce
Flowen&amp;
Vegetable Ploatot41:

Hanging Bask•tts ~
Roger &amp; Tom Hill
49534 State Route 338
Letart Falls, Ohio
247·2015 daytime

Racine
Gun Club
Trap Shoot

Portable
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy
Hollow Rd.
Middlepon, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles

~ -

---

.,~~--'i
·.' .
- ~-.. --..J'_,: '.....:.. ·-

614-742·2193

Kenny's Auto Rental

AB&amp;T AUTO

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.

3RD ST., RACINE, OHIO
949-2882
Owners: Ed Chaney &amp; Richard Moore
14 Years Experience In Area

We Hare Cars and Vansl

•AliGNMENTS •BRAKES
•TIRES •OIL CHANGES

Kenny's Auto Center
· 1.abo!'4ss- 1590
264 Upper River Rd.
Bus. {614 ) 446 •9971
,..,.,
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

Looking forward to seeing old friends
and making new!
5119/tfn

MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
mortthly rental rates.

=·••:...•

' :.,..,:

:. 1:

Bill Slack

.•.

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

TAMMY tlYSELL'1S
DAY CAREI

• Lots of Fun and
Learning
• Lots of
Experience
Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
A.M. ti116:00 P.M.
992-5388

3115ttfn

Antiques

Free Estimates

ALFALFA

STORAGE
COMPARTMENTS
.
Now renting on S.R; 7
in Chester across from
the Dairy Queen. Size

FOR SALE
BAILED TO
YOUR NEEDS

949-2512

.___ _ _ _ _ _.J

MANLEY'S .
ROME
IMPROVEMENT

J&amp;L INSULATION

AUCTIONEER
SERVICE
JIM REEDY Auctioneer

. · HAY

Roofing, Siding, Room .
Additions, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box 220,
Bidwell, Oh. 45614
. . (614)388-9865
24 Hour PagerAnserlng Servic
1-800-215·2023
!5.111/tfn

111wttn

IOx28 ·store cars,

boats, furniture, or
what ever you want.
. Ccill992-3961

.
~---..:....,::----,

TONY'S PORTABLE

WELDING
Radiator Repair
Service Porlable
aluminum welding
New radiators
available,
recores also.

614·742·3212
UN'S APPLIANCE

SERVICE

_:Alfred news notes

•Factory Authorized Parts
&amp; Service

Gay Ann and Robert Burke held a neighborhood pig
roast on May 27 honoring the~ son, Randy, on his graduation from Eastern High School. Many relatives and
friends auended.
Recent visitors of Nina Robinson were Jan~r. Bob
and Brian Robinson of Belpre; Tammi and Greg Crum
and lbcir new daughter, Marissa Arilla (Nina's newest
great-grandchild), of Pattersonville, N.Y.
.
Those attending the Olive-Orange alumni event were
· Sarah Caldwell, 'fbelma Henderson, Osie Mai and Clair
. Follrod, Rorcnce Ann and Richard Spencer.
. Nola and· Clarence Wollet of Whitehall were Sarur·
110\\'\IW
day guests of Nola's sister; Titelma Henderson.
E\L\\ATii\(;
Retent guests of Marilyn and Wilbur Robinson were
Lee Ann and Kirk Fick. Randy and Jan Koehler, Randy
Bulldozing, Backhoe;
Jr. and Leah, all of Grove City; Lori and Allen Moni- .
Services.
·son, Larry and Codi of CaldwelL
Home Sites, Land
Sarah Caldwell attended the high school grad113tion
Clearing, Septic
of her granddaughter, Crissy, daughter of Peggy and
Charles Caldwell, Columbus. ·
·
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Eloise and Russeli .Archer visited tlteir daughter and
Trucking· Limestone,
family, Joyce, Steve and Stephallic St. Clair, and attendTop Soli, Fill Dirt
ed Stephanie's joining Methodist United Church._ .
Wilma and Harold Henderson are announcmg the
birth of a grandson, Garret Lee, son of Lisa and Kenny
Riochie.
Pam and Richard Yost, Aar~n anu Sarah, s~t the .
weekend at Lancaster with relauves. .
Rud1 and Lloyd Brooks and family held open house
recently celebrating the finishing of tlte homes of tl1eir
children Bob and Trina Brooks, and Debbie and Jere•
'
my Bar~.

•Fast Reliable Service
•Washers - Dryers - Ranges
•Refrigerators •Freezers

.

.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Speoializing in Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992-7013 OR
992-5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1·800-848-007
DARWIN, OHIO

HAULING&amp;.
EXCAVATION
limestone &amp; Gravel,
Septi! Systems, Trailer &amp;
House Sites.
Rea~nable

Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138

'"'"'' TFN

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
OHice Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Vl~yl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Insulation, Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows, Garages.

AND MIXED

992·2269

...

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

.___ _.,:__ __.

1112fttn

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

5:30p.m.
=-· :.•;

•Room Additions
-New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; E•terior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-62,5
Pomeroy, Ohio

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

•All Makaa -42 Years .

Mobile Welding
Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985·3879

•Dishwllhers
•H.w. Heaters

·

-Microwaves •Disposals
•Thanka Melg1 &amp;

Surrounding Areas

(614) 985.J56t or

EASY MATCH
MAKING IS
READY NOW!!!
1-900·884·7800

Ext. 4466
per min.
. Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co .
(602) 9~4-7420
$2.~9

6/W111'10. lid,

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985-4473

...

7122194

992·5335 """""

MERIT

PURCHASE
~ANCE
CONSOUl&gt;ATE
Bankruptcy, Judgements, Slow Credit

O[tr Specialty

·

1-800.. MERIT-98
MII#0489

..
I

YOUNG'S
.CARPENTER SERVICE

Every Wed. Nite
Everyone
Welcome

Pickup &amp; DeliverY
Service ·
owner/Opr.: Tom Lane
Racine, Ohio · • •
·
00

L..----------....:"~'=::...J
i L---~-----------' ~=(=61:4:):94:9-:3::::!:·:-~H&amp;H SAWMILL
One $top CoMplete Auto Body Rep1lr

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

Mon • Fri 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Sat. 8 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Sun.' by appt. only

MY BUSINESS
Residential 6
Office Cleaning
PLUS

Five Points

Room Additions • Roofing

· Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark

.
One mile out
A gathering of present and fanner .residents of "Bull
143 from Rt. 7
. Skin," also known as Forest Run, was held recently at Tues.·Wed.·Fri.-Sat.
· the Forest Run Methodist Church.
1-6
- Those at the reunion all attended tlte old two-room
•Craftsman
Tools
· Forest Run School and were playmates in the early
. 30's. The day was spem sharing memories and reflect- •Toys
- ing on incidents which occurred many years ago. Edith -Glassware
Loads of Misc.
H. Sisson, Wilma Reiber, Carolyn Salser. and Mary
· Hamm were the organizers of the geHogether to. wei- . Buy·Sell-~ra~ ...
• come two fanner residents, George Brenich, Jr. of near
• Pittsburgh, and bis sister, Jean Brietkrcnz of Cleveland .. - - - - - - - .
., A buffet luncheon was enjoyed by tlte group. Attend- 949·2192 . RACINE, OHIO
... ing were Jean Brielkrenz, George Brewitk. Jr. Virgil
, Walker, Harold Holter, Paul Karr, Bob Reiber and FARMS
: Wilma Eynon Reiber, Virgil Hamm rutd Mary Yost
. Hamm, Annabel Lewis Houdashelt, Grace Dunlavy
. : Warner, Edith Holter Sisson, Carolyn Baer Salser, Vir. : ginia Baer Jones, Helen 'Francis Shay Baer and David
· ·· Holter.

BILLFOLDS

. REG. 504 ONLY

.

Sixth St. &amp; College Rd., SyracJse
File cabinet, crib mattress, dishes,
desk, shutters,. clothing &amp; misc.

SALE PRICES GOOD.THRU 6/12/95

0

(Burial of th'f..rime Capsule)

3TC

out

, $6.00

20" ·

DAYS
ONLY

.

··

(5) 25 (6) 1,8

Toke the pain

&amp; Flats

·FABRIC

STOREWIDE SALE

10:45- The Big Bend Community Band

clalme, duly aworn to, to

thlo Court within three
montho after the filing of
said loners In thle Court, or
their 11id lleno ohall forever
be deerF\lld barred ond
canceled.
Robert E. Buck, Judge

AlL OTHER

Includes:
•Soft Spots
•Naturalizer
·Connie
•Reebok
• •Eastland
•Hush Puppies

.

PubliC Notice

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

. Pom~rQy, Ohio

\

...........

BULLETIN BOARD
1600 column Inch weekdays
1
8" column Inch Sunday

OFFICE SERVICE AND SUPPLY

.

.

Get Your ••••1• Across
With ADally Sentinel

THIS MERCHANDISE IS TOP QUALITf
AND WILL NOT BE OFFiRED AT LOWER
PRICES.
Our

Must be 18 yrs.
Procall Co.
602-954-7420

l•terlor
Exterior&amp;

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. .

Serving Pomeroy, Middlepon
&amp; surrounding area.

Many Back To School Products
And More Never
·
Priced So Low.

11s &amp;ut.~ s~.

Lake

· . Zurich, IL 60047, flied In thlo
. : Court under Docket 0, C•••
. No. 289113 on outhentiCIIted
. · copy of Lottora of
: Admlniltrltion l~euod to
him by the Stille of llllnolo,
· Prob1t1 Dlvlolon, Circuit
• Court of the Nineteenth
Judicial Clrcult, Lake
County, llllnolo. Notice 11
' further given that 111
credltoro of uld Hlala who
· doalre to uoert their Ilona
:.- on the roll oatata of 11ld
• deocendent located In thla
· · atota shall present their

I

tlllll JIBIWRtl JJltlll
RJ - ~

L·ane,

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

.

.

H&amp;H SAWMILL
llortaltle
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy
Hollow Ad.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742-2193

.,....,

Howard L. Writesel
ROO~ING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-,2168

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
Custom

Bt~ il~tng &amp; Remooeting

• NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
•SIDING
• ROOFING
• PAINTING·
FREE ESTIMATES
_(614) 992-5535 .
(614)·992·2753
(Umestone low Roles)

WICKS
HAULING
(Specialize in
driveway spreading)
l,.imestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
_614-992-3470

5116194 TFN

Give Yourself The
Sports Edge with
The Sports &amp;
Entertainment
Line
. 1-900-263-1800
Ext. t986
$2.99 per minute
Must be 18 yrs, old.
Procall Co.
(602) 954·7420

111111 mo

CHARLIE'S
CONCRETE
.. •Sidewalks
•Driveways
•Patios
'
•Porches
•Slabs
992-3265
512Yt

mo .

.

�•

Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
June 8,1995

ALLEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel • Page 15; ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

'

BRIDGE
ACROSS

~~r.rmurJCEr.1EtnS

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wright
We IN an old local compa..,
aNklng a motivated peraon to .
.... aloOrgo of ...lltllwory,
ahow;am Ntupllftd ~·
oa. Send rosumo CIO TM Oolty

· P.O. Boo
or,OH41l'81.

~. l'rlmti-

180 W.nted TO Do

PHILLIP

.55 Ac&lt;oo Of Land With 21132
lluildlng On Cllf Choptl - . 1·

ALDER

IOD-.7CIOI.IUU11l •

1-2..,. lot lor- In Bradbury
., CA S.I14-811U1110.
NORTH

3 Acret· 112 LIN'el &amp; .Wooded, 1
lllloa From Gelllpplla, lloblt.
Horne Welcome, ,, ,000 Down.

•K 10 4 3
tA J 4 3 2
•A 52
WEST
EAST
...Q I 0 8 7 3
•K 9 6
•Q 7
•9 8 6
• 10 8 7
oKQ9s . •Q J 9
•K 10 6
SOUTH
•A J 52
•A JS 2

sro.e:

"' Pul)f)lee: Mother O•rman

Shop,.rd, 4

441058.

w..ka

Ahor

•....,.. ....,..,
GoneraIll• I•-nco, Pal ntlng.
Yard W~Uk Wl!ldows Waohod
Gutttro Claanld Light Hauling,
Conwnorlcat, Raaldon~al.
.,.....,..18117.

3 long Haired Killona, 114-:!Y1527.
Old, .

Alto-·

~

. Glt
-I '
...
vlnJI
aiding
do land-pfng,
Re11onable Prlce1, Fru E1t.i·

814-3711-UII. Aak for
Sun Valley Nuraory School.
Chlldearo 11-F •m-5:30prn 2-K, ~no School Ago DurT1111
Su"'""'-:T Oaya J1tr Wool&lt; lllnl""'"814-448-3857.

Kllttno Very Cute, 7 Wool&lt;t Old.
Col- 5 P.M. 81._....7603.

Kitten&amp;, loll Of WaiH, 11&lt;1·«10417.

Garage Sat.: Saturday. 11-5. ea.
My
425 o.tlble Drive. 2 112 Ton Ill:.,
Homo, -~~)-q;,,~-;;;•~:~;;;;;.~ llllc:yct., COUCh, l,lmpt, Chid"""
~
Clothoa, Toya like Now, Much

60

Moral

Thursday and Friday, lnaid&amp;, one
and 112 mllaa Hyaell. Cloll1es, $11
bag, various hems, cheap, 6141192-5:!75.

-:-~-:--:":"-:--:--:-~~~

Lost and Found

Gold Wrlll Watch In 1 Around
Baptlat Church, Third Avenue.
114-448-281».
'lo1t Wamana Billfold Belonging
To Mary Houck LD. Ia lnalda, Ra'Mit&lt;l Ofwed. 81 +44~.0022. ·

70

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

~·1----7.

lit lo'lt
And
Frlondil1 .......171!11.

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

114 lincoln Pike, 8-4: Saturday,
Olthll, Pots I Pans, Curtain,
Bail!' Clo"" And Misc.
1259 Sllo•••tno Ridge Road, Off
Orchard Hill Road, From 10:00 To
~ .....~
9:00 On HN•-r•.•
142 Lower Garfield June 7th.
10lh, 9-5, Clothing, Bedaproada,

=·-r·

Curralna, Home Interior, lot•

Mloc.
2 Femly Gara11o Sale: 111 Houaa
On loll, But.vlllo Pike Altar Under Pa11 (17 Solar Dflve). ·s.turday, June 10th, 8:00 To 4:00 P.M.

c..,..

Baskets, GlatiWare, Rocker,
Badlld4! Commode, Steom
Cleaner. Lampa, Games, Toy a.
Weedaeter. Home Interior, Fan,
Nice Cidthea, Bed Sprooda. Comtorten. 2 Mororcycle Helmeta.
Iliac
-

3 Femlly Garage Sale: 168 Magnolia Drive, Girls Ctothel, 18 llol·14, Toy1, Houaaware, Oeak &amp;
Headboard,, Book Seta, Men'a &amp;
Women• Clothes, Thufl, 9-3, Fri
11-1.
374 Mll&lt;:hell Rood, Fri. Sa~ Juno
9lh, 10th, Baby Clotheo, Baby
ltoma. Clothel. Houtahold, Misc.
~Family :

Friday. Saturday, 9·6,
Reed Folding Pipe Vic&amp;. Weed
Eater 9.-.12 Screen Room, Picnic
Table, Tlrea, Typewriter, Bicycles,
Olahe.a, Craft Books, Children,
Adul1 Clo1hlng, Misc. St At. ~60,
Potter, Acrou From Trlnlty ·United Meflodist Church.
'

Wod.-Sat on laurel Cliff Burdetta
Juno lith, 10th, 1 IIIIo On IIIII Road
behind Free Uathodial
c... - .
Church, children &amp; adult clathea.
-:--:-:-:-::-.--:-:-:~-:-:­
Ju"" 11th, &amp; 10th. 211ilat Out lk- 10m1t furniture.
lit Ky(ltf Road From River VelltiJ 90
Wanted to Buy
High School, Tum 2nd Road On
loft, &amp;wither Hill Rd, Arll Houtt ::C;-:Ie":a::'n-:"La:':t":t~M:"::o":de::I-::C:O::a~ra~O~r
On Rlghl
Truckt, 1SI87 Models Or Newer,
Juna lith. Frl9·? Burnette Road. Smith Buk:k Pontlac, 11100 EutTwo Houaea Acrou From Ray- ern Aver11e, GallipoUa.
burna Marko~ Lots Ot Baby Boy
Clothes, Also Womens And Decorated ttoneware, wall teleMana. New Bowling Ball Wilh pllonal, old iompl. old ...........
1tr1. old dodla, andQuo lumituro.
cuo, 151nchCatRina. Ero. ·
Riverine Antlquea. Au11 Moore,
K&amp;K Eastern Avenue, June 9th. owner. 814-11112-2528. Wo buy
'
lOth, 9-5, VBiioUI, 1181111, Ctothea,
Todcler Gltll All SIZIII.
Don't Junk Ill Sail Us Yaur Nonlllnk'l 872 Plnecroll Drive Worldna Refrlgeratara. Freaz.-a,
(Acrou From Gellt. Auto SaiJO) Waahera, Drr•ra, Mlcrowavet,
F~day And Saturday, 9-4, Electric Color T.V.'s VCR'a, Air ConditionAtgobro Doak. Ty-ntera, "'· Computara, Ofllco llachlnoo.
Toya, Nice Clo....... loll or Girl• Elo.814-258-1238.
Half Sizes. MlacelllneauL
Top Prlcaa Paid : All Old U.S.
MOving
Coina, Gold Ringo, Sliver Colna,
4
~~lc~~n:~~i: Gold
Colna. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
Clo~38 Howard Sooe~ Now 151 Second~.. GaiW(&gt;oll.

....

s-.

Wha=L:'ri

Hawn,

8-?

Pallo Sale: June 1Oth, 73 lincoln
Pike, Bedspreads, Curtains,
Jeana, Sho... Girl a Clothea,
Toys. Misc. Items, Martin Real·

denll. 3-41.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
1047 South 2nd; Juno 8th. 9111, 94, 5 Family, Roger Manley Realdance. Something For Everyone!
253 Soull1 5111 Sueet, Middleport
Oh,, Wedeaday, Thursday, fnday.
11h, 81h, 9111.

Wanttd To Buy, Junk AutDa, Any
Condition, 014-388-9082, Or 814448-Po\111'.

Wanted To Buy : Used Mobile
}lomeo, 814-4-48-0175.
Wan1ed : Fairly Clean 55 Gal.
llnom 814-448-0547.

5 family- 8th, 9th, 10th, 9 to 4,
mostly c~thea, lots or larger slz.
e1, no junk all nice, Baa Wood,
814-742-2790, from Rutland,
come out New Lima Rd 3 mllea

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

_Help Wanted

"' LICENSED PHYSICAL
THERAPIST ASSISTANT"'
Immediate Ope/ling For LPTA To
Work In Active, Growing, Multi·
facited Physical Therapy Practice
Off8felng Cli,.cal, NUfiiMg t-iomt',
And Home Health Service• In
Jackaon, VInton, Melgl, And
Gallid Counties. Salary And Benefits Compoti\ive. For More Information Contact: Michael L. McGraw PT, MA 614-288-8831.

tins.

Baby Items, Clolhea, Diahea, An·

Moving sale, Juno 9-10, Crahaman tools, over 30 t;~uns, loads ol
AVON SlilLSATWORK·HOME
toys, electric train, Craltaman -4 Need Additional Income?
hp. air c:ompreuor, band saw, . Average $8·$15/Hr. Benefital
11ereo with CD, trombone, trum· Territory Optional. tnd'rep.
pet, Fenton glanyrtare. 3 glass 1·800-742--4738
showcases 5' long, Royal cash
reQister, 4'x8' lighted sigr! with let· Benar Butinesa Bureau Seeks
tors, loads ol misc., v8ly .large 5alea Prolasalonnl To Invite lo·
sale, 39553 SR. 143 one m1le orr cal Buainesaoa Into L4omb&amp;rahlp.
This Is A Gr~at Opportunity For
Rt 7, ~nroy, Ohio.
lndej&gt;endont. Sell·llodvatod lndl·
Thtoe family carport sale- child· vidual With High Income Expecrens clothing, misc. 266 Mulber- tation&amp;. Ptestl~e And "Elu:ellent
rry, Pomeroy. Juno 0-10, 9am - Services Ta Offer &amp;alnen Co~
3pm
munlty. Call MI . Ehrlich, 1·800·
471-3015.

Fr1. Sat Old Oullll, Homo lntarlor.
Furniture, Everything Cheap,
2552 Contorpolnt Rood, Thumnan,
8t4-&lt;182-7571.
Friday, t-3, 521 Mllchell, Oolla,
Toya, Clothel, Garage Goodlea,
Some Dlohol.

Child Care In Centenary Or
Northup Area, Call Afler 7 P.M.
814-3111-9433.
Computer Ustn Needed. Work
Own Hours, 20K ·50K /Year, 24
· Hr~ 714-249-7489 E&gt;&lt;ttt73.
Easy Work I Ellcellent Pay I Asaembie Products At Home. Call
Toll Froe, 1·800-467-5566, Ext.
313.
'
.
Licanaed Cosmetologist with
manager's license, 614·1'111'1124103.

NOW HIRING
We Are A Grow1ng Company
Seeking A Motl\tlated Pvr10n For
Advertising Sales. You Mull
Have Good CommJnicstion Skilla,
Reliable Transportation And A
Willlngnest To Succeed . Bate
Plus Ccmmiuion. FUll Or Part
Time. Sond Resume To : The Advertiser, P.O. Box 2S4, Jackaon,
OH 15ll40.

Some Of Our
Best People Are

"STRICTLY CLASSIFIED!" ·
Writing an effective classified ad is no big
secret, when you speak with one of our
specially-trained classified "ad-visors ...
He or she will be happy lo assist you In
writing an ad that will showcase what you
have to sell In the best possible way. So
don't delay, call and place your ad todayl

a

Yard Lawn Catt. Lawn Work.
Reuonable Ratti, Fr•• Etti·
matta, Satiatacrlon GuarantHd,
814-zse.a224.

FINAN CIAL

21 0

Business ·
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHlO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bull· .
neu with peo~e you know. and
NOT ID ttnd money through tho
mail until ~au hiM invtltfgated
thO ol1orlng.

Rotall Buatno11 For Salo. Rio
Grande, Low l.w.atment, Great
PottJttlal, Call For Derail•, 814·
245-1101.

Sapilc Tank Pump Truck, 11170
Chevy 1ff00 Gala. Good Pump I
11!1101,114-742-1300.
VENDING: Won't Got Rl&lt;h Ouk:k.
Will Get Stoody, Cuh lncolna.
Priced To Sail, 1-800-820-4353,
HIOCHI2CHI78Z.

1-·---------.

RENTALS

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Pair Hous!ng Act
or 1968 which makes it Illegal
to advertise "any preferen'ce.
limitation or Qiscrimin~tion
based on race, color, religion:
sex familial status or national
origin. or any intention lo
mal&lt;e any such preference,
limitation or discrimination."

know1ingly accept
advertisements for real estate

which Is In vlola11on of the·taw.
Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
adverli sed 1n this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity b8.sis.

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
1993 Indies Manufactured Home
And 2.5 Acres. 1.4x8C Home
Features 3 Bedrooma, 1 3/4
Borha. Living Room, Dining lf(ltdoon Combo And Udlity Room. Metal
Storage Building With Concrete
Floor. Concrere Walks And Pa,tio.
Located On Kemper Hol~w Road.
For More Information Call 814·
441 ·0233.

.

3 Bed,...,., 2 Ball1s, Heat Pump,
Gat Furnace, 1 Acre, Garage.
Addison Area, $62,000, 614·367·
121l1.
By OWner; 2 Lola, 3 B&amp;drooma, 2
Car Garage, Electric Heat, Fireplace, Fence Backyard, George!
Cr,oek Road, $55,000, 614-4460403.

Priced cheAp to a&amp;nle estate- five
room, one ttory houa.e, 1WD bod·
rooms, bath, carpel, basement.
Out ol all ftood watera, very good
location and neighborhood In
Middleport, $25,000, B14-9927047, 61•·7~2-2550 or 614·384631)4.

Roomy two ""'Y vinyl homo within
walking diatance of downtown
lllddklpor~ clole to Uhoola and
ahopplng areaL Tt'tree bedroom,
flnilhed attlc. hatdwood ftoora, 1

112 bath, lull basement, F.I..N.G.,

two tndoM&lt;I g!aSied-ln porches.

atorln Windowa, attached storage

unit. one car oara~.

~5.000 ne-

oom-. 814-992-3158.

t6

410 Houses tor Rent

.s

2 HOUIII for Rant: Qna 3 Bodrooma, One 2 Bedrooms, $3001
Mo. Outdoor Pat Only, VInton,

eu ue oe•s.

•·i

J/f~u

On Mulberry Helghta, PomeJGJ',
S3301mo., dlpoait; and relerencea.
no- ~-21145.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
1"x70, rhrH bedroom, two bath,
t.rgo yard, Pomeroy arH, $3751
mo. plua depoait Will conalder
aptian to buy. B14-Q92·3789 or
814-11112-7272.
2 Bedroom Moblle Home, Vau
Pay UtlKtiea, I llepoalt, In Porter
Area. 81oi-388-D182.

~ 1 !~~~Trollor In Country,
2 Bodrooma, S250111o. + $250
llepool~ 814-251HK08, 814-258·
ll118.

---------2 Bodroom' Very Nice, Gellipollo,
61........U·20CO, 814-448-1409.

3 Bedroom Baih &amp; 112. lt4-2868857.
3 Bedrooma, Nice 14x70 House
Trailer For Rent, Vlllaga or Rio
Grande, Oepoalt, 814-379-2720
AFTER8P.II.

Two 2 Bedroom, Stove, Re~lgorator, Water &amp; Treah Paid, Neat
NGHS, $210, S250 Plud Oepooli.
814·388-9888.

510

BARNEY

. Household
Goods

Sleeping rooms with cooking.
Alto trailer apace on river. All
hook·ups. Call alter 2:00 p.m..
304--7J3.5651, Mason YN.

460 Space for Rent
,.nt· commercial building I
cen1er of downtown Middleport
Central air and heal, 814-ilil2·
2&lt;5U.

Household
Goods

Carpet &amp; Vinyl In Stock $5.00 Yd
&amp; Up 80 Patterns or Kitchen Car·
ptl In Stock. Ovtr 35 Pattern•
Vinyl In Stock. Mollohan Carpeta.
814-448-7444.

9
pilot
10 Football COICh
-Ewbank

5 S.lllrd
6 Cheri'(-

LOOK.OI/ER
HERE.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

•

YOu GAN UY IT, ·IUT
Pe~SON ,A£.1..Y .I
I&gt;OUIT YOU't)
~v~~

6er

T~~

L.tAp OUT.
;,

BORN LOSER
760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Wf\1\T'~ Yl&gt;. 001~\
POP, Q\~Git-.16

SOUTHWEST PICK-UP FI\RTS
Beds, Cabs, Ooora, Fendots And
More. 3 Miles South Of Gallipolis
At Juclion At. 7. &amp; Rt. 2t8, 814«8-3787.

...

.

-

f'.lOPE. . .TI-KI t-.IG

,

.. .
MOniER'~
((X)(IMG HER

YOOR.

Tf\E:I&lt;\ OOT I .

'I

$300.

Ping Pong Table Far Sale, $50;

Balm8rl Car 170, 814-24S-5887.
Racing Go Cart, With Yamaha
Engine, New Tlrea, 2 Cart Trailer,
And Acceuorlea, Ready To
Race. 614~367..05Q4, 614·446·
8060 Ask For Jay.

Red Metal Bunk Bid. 4 Month Old
$225,614-256-1747,

ReJrigerarori, Stovaa, Wuhera
And Dryers, All Ruconditloned
And Gauranteedt S100 And Up,
Will Deliver. 614-e&amp;e-6441,
61~·256·

/AEA\ LOt\F
TOI-IIGHT 1

Tflt.. Bf\TT!:J!.I(~
I1'-1 11\(. ';)Mf))(£
1-r-on.---.'·'-- OCTE:C.TOR. 7

790

Pass

Pass 4 •
All pass .
Opening lead: • Q

...,

'_27_~----------------

I UNO r~5LEt'oO :

..,

1912 Slarcraft pop-up camper,
sleeps six, alnk, stove, refrigara111r, $500 OBO, 814-992&lt;1273.

-:e '"'""
loJitlo, .ANOTHEfl,.

WOMAN~.

•s

f"'~

"'- look.ed

\l!:eru'\

''"'
.st\len\

fr i en

107• Mldaa, 21', gaa heat, hot

'~

water, equipped kitchen, bath-

room, 614·992-3789 or 614·992~ ·
7272.

&amp;ros~ .

1978 24 Ft Noll'lild Camper, Sell·
Contained, AC, Dual Aile, 2 Door.
$3,000, 614-44&amp;-1137

J

t994 Torry 3Z Queen Bod Ex. lg.

'

Shower, Balh, Sleepo 8, Mony Ex- ·
trasl $14,000,6141·2415-8511 .

.
'

,.

il

..
.

f\1'\iS "'.

NO-'

.. " ... ,...,vst
t-

E't

wre:f\Chu•\q ntws ·! Bv+

K 0 D K U

I Y Z 0 D, K K
S B Z J P
PEMD ' KUDRO?•
PREVIOUS SOL\JTION : "Love truth , bul pardon error." - Volla~re
"II is by forgiving that one is forgive.n."- Mother Teresa ,

'::~;t~~' S©t=t~lA-l&amp;£tr~·
CLAY R. POLLAN
Rearrange . letters of the
0 four
scrambled words be-

wou
GlMI

1~11o~ ~,

low to form four words.

MY 0 H N I

I I· I, I

UL•EED

~

I

----""'-

....· ,N_OTB--,Cr-A-r.:--i/_: : :

If you are interested in
doing household repairs you
should take my grandpas
·
advice. He says lhat nothing
,..---------------. will match the ·one w~h pen
E G GA NE
and checkbock. , •••• I

I I I I•

l()

.._.._

o~.
¥..~1'1"1

l':tt

· SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS ·

HOW? How Will he

br 1ng vP
cflff icvl t

-a
toprc.?

svc~

-

Relish- Peril· Unfix· kaiser· SHR/NKERS

-.._

A neighbor was always dreaming of wearing a dress
. two sizes smaller than she really wore. Her husband says

ir:l L1.
tU. th
)...,Y

~

that dieters can be called wishful SHRINKERS !

\) d

Home
Improvements

ASTRO·GRAPH

C&amp;C General Hom• Main·
tanence- Palrulng , vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths,
mobile home replllr and more. For
1979 Cadlllo&lt; Seville, 102.000 lree eatlmate &lt;:all Chel. 614-lil92·
miles. excellent condidon, serious 8323.
inquires only. Call 614·992·3955
Jo~·· Home Maintenance, vinyl
-ngL
lidmg, roofing, extertor paintlrig,
1980 Corvette Good Condition, power waahlng, free eatlmatua.
law Mileage. 814-742·2264.
814-91i12·4451.

.'

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

'Your

CSirthday

Friday, June 9, 1995

Taahlbo 20" color TV. • t 50. See
Siovt at ApL 37. Village Groon.
AMn&amp;01.
Used R40 OitchWitch Trtnch•r
wlll1-8t4o884-18o12.

1988 Suzuki Sarruari 4w4, $2,500,
81&lt;-245-1300.

I Y K

tel I

\

Ace VInyl Siding 20% Off Sale.
Vinyl Sidli\Q !ReplaCement Windows, Roofingl~S Years E.-.per~
eince, 6t4-367-w13.

820

E' L

K U E 0 M

~ar-t-

s~o oc

0

1978 Dodge Aapen 2 Door, V-8,
Aull&gt;. Air, $1,500. 8t4-379-~57.

1981 Ford Graoada Greallnterior. And Exterior, low Mileage,
814-258-1012.

K J y

L J

KDDI&lt;U .

BIG NATE

TRANSPORTATION

'81 Chevy ChGYene, good condl·
tion, 111-4-992-6872.

ABPRD ·

UBND

'E

Complete the chuckle Quoted
_
.
.
.
•
•
.
bv hllmg m the mrn1ng words
L......L-..L..-L.....L-..L..-' you develop from sU~p No 3 below.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
1
Unconditional liletime guarantee.
3D Acru Mixed Gran, On Local tefarenc:es furnished. Call;
Shares, Centenary, 814·4.41 · I 1800) 287-0578 Or (Bt4) 237-•
0486 Rogera Waterproolinu . Es-'
1013.
tabllshed 1975.

71 0 Autos for Sale

by Luis Campos

Ce~ C.ptw cryplograrN ilfe cr.ated !rom quolatiQfll b;"tamou!i people, pas1 and presem
E~~th let!Bf 11111le ctphar &amp;1iinds '.or anot!ler Toc»~y "1 CluB P IIQUII/s l

~-,,.-5-lr.-~16'-yl-;lr--1

'87 Pace Aro, 31', 454 Chevy engine, only· 16,000 mUes, air, bBsem~nt model outside grill. Can ba
seen at Royal Oak Resoft Pomer·
oy, Ohio, ·304·275·871 1 or 304·

35' sen contained, fully loaded.
like new, '$10,500 firm, call614· '
QSS-4306 aflef 8pm. Serious inquil'kts orly.
:

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

!

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

STORAGE TANKS a.ooo Gallon
Uprlgh~ Ron E¥1111 Entorprltte.
Jadlaon, Olill, 1-1100-537-9&amp;28.

Whl~pooi Sido Br, Slcfo RafrtQ«ator lfreeitr, W th let l Wa1er
DiaponHr In Odor, Whlto, $385,

Pass

Phillip Alder's ne-w book, "Get
Smarter at Bridge,I· is available,
autographefl upon request , for
$14 .95 from P.O. Box 169. Roslyn
Hts., NY 11577-0169.

Will Install Windshields S1 00 &amp;
Up. 814-368-9062, Or 614-446PART.

810

Walk-Fi~

1•

2•

and kings of the bridge realm!, was
happy to accept the try, jumping to four .
hearts.
After West had led the club queen,
South saw that the deal was ideally set
up for a cross ruff. Yet he had to be
careful to avoid an overruff. South won
with dumm)i's club ace. cashed dummy's diamond ace, ruffed a diamond in
hand, cashed the spade ace. ruffed a
spade in the dummy, ruffed a diamond
in hand and ruffed a spade in the dummy.
Declarer had taken the first seven
.tricks. Dummy, on lead, was left with
the K-10 of hearts, the J-4 of diamonds
and two clubs . South had the A-J of
hearts, the spade jack and three clubs.
South made rio mistake. He ruffed
the diamond four w1lh h1s heart ace.
ruffed the spade Jack with dummy's
heart king and ruffed the diamond jack
with his heart jack. Even if West over·
ruffed, dummy's heart 10 was declarer's lOth trick.
By ruffing high twice. South avoided
any risk of an overruff followed by a
trump return.

SERVICES

614-

Pass

singleton and good controls tthe aces

AND i'LL .

••

•

lloneaa

35 Sgt., e.g.
38 Jocob'l oon

7

a

monater
4 SPlllm

More up and down

OKAY, 'fOU
LOOK TI-!ERE,

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

eu t18 tU11 Atw 5 P.U.

3L~h -

34 Born Fr. .•

a game-try. North. with four trumps, a

Buy or sell. Rivatlne Antlquea.
1124 E. Main SG'HI, on Rt 124.
Pomeroy. Hou11: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 1D 8:00 p.m., Sundar- 1:00 ID
6:00p.m. 614·992·2526.

MERCHANDISE

510

33--

South into four hearts. Two spades was

VIRA FURNITURE
'
6t-H411-3158
OuaUty Houoohold Fumitunl And·
Applianc:os..Greoi Dealt On
Cosh And Cerryl RENT-2-0WN
And layaway Alio Avalilble.
Free Delivery Within 25 llit.a

Sa!ellite Dish With Box
6970'.

31--

41 Slfl!ptd
II LMUW puncll 42 Actor Solleck
•1 2 430Nlln1M
Uery 45 Sllnl
13 Coon41 Arllll gorment
(atoriM)
'50- porm-..t
14Wicle-alze 54~
15 ln11alllllty
contAol17 Farnele
55 Hevlng hearing
OMdpip.r
organa
18 Beginlt'~
5I Worker1' aaan.
19 lleby
57 IRMCI egg
21 Expenllyor
58 Robuat
23 Realon
59 llemstoin, lor
24 BeHroom
ahorl
daonce
27 Roiatirlg to
DOWN
· Interval•
1 Vehlct.
30 - Haahanah
2 Smell bird
31 '-'!rue rodent

We say that one crossruffs back and
forth. But in a bridge column, perhaps
we should call it "up and down;· since
the North hand is printed above the
South hand. Whatever the semantics of
the situation, while crossruffing, as we
saw yesterday. it is usually advanta geous to avoid an overruff. Today's deal
highlights a variation on this theme.
Some aggressive bidding pushed

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
Olivo St. Gaillpolla. New I Ulod
furniture. heattrl, We1tarn &amp;
Work boola. 81......a-31 !ill.

Furnished
Rooms

Rooma for rent • week or month.
Starting at $1 20/mo. Gama·Holel.
at ....... gsao.

Jr[.JLLI.Jt?(.
CO:Jl:A{, PO?{£

PICKENS FURNITURE
NowiUitd
No appllancea, Hou ..hotd furnishing. 112 mi. Jerrlcho Rd. Pt.
Pleaaam. WV, call 30-4-175-1450,
81-H411-B«&lt;L

Vary clean one bedroom apart·
ment and two bedroom house in
Middleport. call ti14•992·5304 or
614-4o06-3091.

Qlr\t" bedroom .au ira; living room
IUilt; 1 pi•ct dinette IBI; 014·
992·5085.

I

SUPPER,

WHAT IN
THUNDER
IS IT?

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
.
Complete home furnishings .
Hour~ : Man ~S at, 9-5. 61-4-448...
0322, 3 miles out Bulaviile Pike
Froo Delivery.

New Nordic Track
81 ~- 949-2682.

ar.~n.-

-111-Puufo

By Phillip Alder

Upslllira, 3 Rooms &amp; Balh (1 Bed:
rpom), Furnished, Clean, Refer·
ence and Dapoail RequIred, No
Paill 61-H411-1519.

Room and board lor handicapped
ot elderl1 With low income. Famlty
home atmoaphenl "wilh TLC, 814992-5o42. Mlddt.porL

2•

PAW!!

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washtra, dryera, refrlgeralors,
ranges. Skagga Appliances, 76
Vine S1reet, Call 814·446~739 8,
1-800-4911-3ol99.

1 and 2 bedroom aportmenll. turnlahed and unrur,;lhod. 11curlry, 2 Year Old Queen Size Waveless
depoall required, no peta, 01'· Waterbed Manreu and Heater,
1192-2218.
Excellent Condition $100 OBO
81-H411-8313.
1 Bedroom Second
Untur·
nlahed Aparlmant, In
I , 288 IBM Compatible Compular,
With Slave, Refrigerator.
Color Monitor, Keyboard. Mouse
Mo. Depoall, Relerenc;ae Re- &amp; Printer. $525, 61 ...... -9730.
Reglatered 8 Week Old Shih-ztu
qufnld, No ..... 614 448 44:!&amp;.
Puppieo, 2 Feme lea. ·1 Malo, et 43 Ton Cenral Air Conditioner 882-7571.
2 Bedroom Apartment, 458 112 Package, Syltom Or Spilt Syllom
Second Avenue, AJC, Appllanc· $1,250 Installed, 5 Yr. Warranty 580
Fruits &amp;
eo. $400/llo. Utllltiol Paid. $200 All Parto, 1-800·287-8308, 814Vegetables
Oepaait, References Required, --8308.
81----2129 8:30-4:30.
Cabbage For Sale, $1 .00 A Head,
40 Gallon Salt Water Tank, Ac - 79 Spuc;:e Street, Gallipolis, 814·
2bdrm. apt.J., total electric, ap. cessorlaa And Lots Of Fish $300,
441 -0834, Artus E. Hurl
pllancea furnished, laundry room 8H-«t-1433laaw Me ...111.
tacilidea. close to achool In town.
Strawberriet You Pick Or We
Applic:adonl available at: Vll!age 5 Pc. LR SultB, Gold Tweed $75, Pick, Taylor Strawberry Patch,
Green Apta. 148 or call 81.t-Q92- 814~.
Ope~: e-8 Monday ·Friday, 8
3711.EOH.
Bingo. Cherokee, NC, Juno 16 I Noon Saturday; Closed Sunday,
. 814·2~5BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 11.. $50,000 Coverall, S148.00 281&gt;4 Kerr Road, BUOGET PRICES AT JN:.KSON Trip and Pa&lt;:kagea Call &amp;14·-448· 9047.
ESTATES, 52 Willwood Drive 1923.
Strawberries, Pick Your Own,
from $228 to $291. Walk to shop
Claude Win...._ 614-245-6121.
&amp; movies. Call 814·446·2568. Booto By Rod Wlna Chippewa -40
To ·50 Oegrets, H.H. Brown
Equ,; Houolng Oppornonily.
Guaranteed, Loweat Pricei, The
FARM SUPPLIES
Furnlahed 3 Rooma With Bath, Stoe Cale, 61~222.
Air Conditioned, ·AIJ .Utilities Paid
&amp; LIVESTOCK
Excepl Electricity, Private Park· Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Galton• Ron ================::
lng. 814-«8-2002.
Evafls Enterpriaes, Jackson, OH 610 Farm Equipment
Furnished Elllc:ier:~cy $1 05/Mo. 1·800-537-9528.
1982 MF 85, $3000, 614-949 Utilities Paid, Share Bath, 6C7
Second, Gallipolis, 614-446·«16 Dinette set S7S; love aeat &amp; 2362.
couch $450; new Condition. 81+
Altar 1 P.M.
Tractor UF 85, $3700 firm, 814949-3228.
Gallla Manor Limited, Equal
949-3:)11 .
Houolng Opportunity. Elder~ Pro- Factory made brocaded pull
drapes with shears. 180x64 each 630
Livestock
ject 61&lt;-.......a311.
panel, can ·be seen at 786 High
2 HarMS For Sale, 2 Veer 04d, a
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedtoom s·~ Mlddteport. ono.
3 Year Old Registered, Appaloo·
apartmentJ at Village Manor and
Rivertlde Apartment• In Middle- Hlde-A·Bed G,ouch For Sale, Ex- 11, Call Aller 5 P.M. 614 ·448port From $232-$355 . Cell 614- cellent Condition, 614· 4146·9529 21241
·
992-58511. Equal Houolng Oppor- After 4 P.M.
Ho'raea, 3 Green Btoke, 2 Broke,
tunitlaa.
JET
1 Srar181', 614-446-4110.
AERATION MOTORS
Unfurnished apartment Pomeroy,
aecond no or, " .room a &amp; balh, no Repaood, Now &amp; Rebuitt rn Stod&lt;.
peta, referitneas &amp; dopoait, c:all tall Ron Evan~ t-800-537-9528.
alter 6 pm, 814-1192-2275.

450

1•

1 GOT A BIG
SURPRISE FER

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise ·

Waaher, Dr1er, ~eftigerator, Air
Two bedroom mobile home, rur- Conditioner, Microwave, Color
niiMd, udlllloo (lllld. two -'&lt; In · T.Y.. 814-258-1238.
family, no 'Peta, reference• anc:l
530
Antiques
depoalt, 814-387-(1811.

440 . Apartments
for Rent

7 4 3

1

4 Luke.,.,.,

37FM1olle
lriCJII 1

I

New and greater desires for material
gratification could ftre up your ambilions
In lhe year ahead. Motivation would help
you aoqu1no whal the wo~d has to offer.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) II you get
Involved In some sort of friendly compatillon today. keep everything light and fun.
Do not permot yourself or others to take
the involvement too seriously. Get a jump

on life by understanding the mfluences
that govern you in the year ahead. Send
for your Astra-Graph predictions today by
mailing $2 and SASE lo Astro-Graph c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Box· 4465 , New
York, NY t016J. Be sure 10 stale your
zodiac sign .
CANCER IJuno 21-July 22) If you don't
operate on a strict sch8dule today, y¢u
might fi_nd that the duties you should have
finished earlier overlap with later ones .
LED (July 23·Aug. 221 Your inslincts will
direct 'you to the right things in matters
concerning your security today . Try to
use the same discretion tn social and
commercial situations.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You usually
try to be a giving and considerate person.
but today you might step oul of characler
and display some stinginess toward companions.
•
LIBRA (Sept.· 23·Dct. 231 Lei sotuations
lhat presenily lunctlon smoothly run !heir
course$ loday . II you step m and lry to
orchestrate changes, you might jam up
the machinery .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov . 22) Guard

'&gt;

agamSi"Thi irlciTnation to misread the
intentions of· associates . They .could saY
and mean one thing , and you could mterpre;t ''entirely dtfferently
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Pr~de
may cause ·you 10 19ok for scapegoats
today ~ lhings dOn'! go JUSI as you hope.
You mustn't try to. m9ke others look bad
to make yourself look good
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jan. 191 You will
know your proper course of action loday,
yet you might still operate against your
bener judgment T!)' not to trlp over your
own shoelaces.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19) Rec•procate in a like manner today H friends go
out ot their way to help you . A fatlure to
do. so will leave a bad, lasting tmpress1on .
PISCES (Fob. 20·lolarch 201 Today 1t
would be better,to say no up front than to
make a·n agreement ·vou can't keep The
former plan will win admirers, the latter
wtlllose lhem.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) You woll gel
more accoi11JIIished today If you dO. what
noods doing on your own •nslead ol waitmg for someone else to tssue dtrecttv$S
and serve a$ an overseer.

•.

.........
r •

Vulnerable: Eal!t-West
Dealer: North
South
West North East

w.;r-~
C 1~ oy NEA. Inc.

UntumlaMd 2 Bedroom llobllt
Homo, Crown Cit)', $225/lolo. +
Oepollt, 814-258-e520.

This newspaper will not

day.

Fri -Mon, 381 Skidmore Road,
Fourth Road On Right From Hoapilal.
.

·

Willing lo grill ' odd job'l,
814-11112-5085.

Wanted To Buy: Junk Au101 With
Or Without Motors. Call larry
Live~. 814-388-11303.

Wanted :~ Lillie Tykn Outdoor
Cutlo In Good Condltlon. 814245-58117. '

"""" tor o~gn~

do--.

phono 81&lt;11112-3173 or 11..--11861.
Wll

Wanl8d
and01'ultd
furniture,"'nobuy118manliquo
too large
tDo II
amall. Will buy one piece Of complete IIIBIIa. Otby Martin, 614·
1192-7441.

3 family 111rage 11kl, June 9 a 10,
9am to ?,. Denver Weber real·
donee, Reedsville, toys, clothing,
misc.

9th, 1Oth, 4 Family : Baby Items, · All Yard Salea Mull Be Paid In
Tennla, Golf Equlpm~nt, lamp, Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm lhe
Dishes. 8 Men Suits, 104 Second day before the ad Ia to run. Sunday edition- 1:OOpm Friday, MonA'o'81'11e.
day &amp;dltion 1o:ooa.m. Saturday.
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m. Fri.-Sal. June 9-10, 9·4, 1371
tht day before lhe ad 11 to run. Duskey Alley, Syracuse, Randl
SUndoy edition - 2:00 p.m. Friday. Hill rusidonce, furniture, clothes.
Monday edition • 2:00 p.m. Satur· toys, household goods, baskets,

tiquea. Mite, June 81h, 9th, 10th,
4704 Patriot Road. Cadm.JS,

land: thr" mllee aouth ol Car·
poniOr, Ohio, IlL Union Rd. !Colo
umbla TR 14); 7.145 acrH.
•7IIGO; 5.047 OCIOI, 14542; IOihlr
~rcola avalt.blol. Owner financel4~alt lor flOod map, 114-5911-

Mlke'l Lawncare, will do y1rd

4 StNII ~To Good . - . ,

o..r.
S Gr., &amp; lltte Whitt, 114245-1201. 114-3711-211011.

6·8·95

•4

~~~~~~'fi:S~ 1814-251-1218 .11'!11.
:~40r48.;E."'·
REMOTE, boaudlul, rldgo-top
Adult C...,

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

�Thuf1Uy,June8,11111

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pqe 18 • The Dally Sentinel

Reds rally,
top Astros,
hike lead

Sister needs to mend relationship as well as knee injury
Ann
Landers

"••-Loo-

~~.;'

Dear A•• La•den: Last
December, my sisler'160-pound dol
ran into my knee and caused
considcrablc dlmage. I bad 10 have
anbroscopic: aagery, which resulllld
_inthelouofbalftbecartilqeiamy
knee. I went throuab a greet deal of
pain, to say nothing of the
.inconvenience or being laid up for
several days.
After learnina thai my sister had

iuuruce-policy lhat ~vc~
peiiCIIIIlinjury.lda:idcdiOfllcuuit
apilllla
·
Mysisl«isfilious.SIIeinsislslhll
I have displced die family because:
"aelaliveulooouuerelalives.• Now.
11111 COIIIidered bodldle villain and
die ~lim, IIIII my Billa' is no longer
spealdnaiO me. '
J feel I had just1causc: 10 fale tlw
claim. My sister. however, _doesn't
believe tbal her doB did "alllhat much
damage." Meanwhile, the cJoi is still
permitted 10 run free around her
home.
. Was I wrong10 sue her? Bolb my
sislerandlaaequltebittcraboutthis.
. I hope, bowev~ thai we Clft resolve
·
1ft

the problem after reading your
reapoiiiCin die~- ON niB
MBNDINClJ!VIL\ND
DBAR. CLBVELAND: Several
thin&amp;• aot olf tracldlOIII die very
bcJinninl. F'll'll, when your lists'•
dol inilnd you.lbc llo•ld have told
rou diat. abe bad penonaJ injury
UIIIIIJIICe&amp;nd IIQlificd die inlunDce
carrier. Sec6ad, you llbould have
iafonned youuilrer lllat ,ou felt
cnlided 10 compallllion lmtcad of
surprisinJ her with alawsuk.
·
Allseeit,dleleilplentyofbllme
10 10 around. Since ,ou both 1111 11
fault, I IIIUCit that you meet each
other halfway and put this thing
behind you •• and the .OOner the

bcaer. Tbe 1oqer die rift contjeges,
dlellllderitwillbeiOiilelld.
Dear Al8 Laadera: I feel
compcllcd 10 reapond 10 die leU«
from "Confused in New J~" die
- w h o Wllllhoclr.ecl wbelllbc
saw her boyfriend liaing on 1 bar
111001 daelsc:d ua woman.
I am a ~. famUy IIIII child
counaelor with broad experiCKe
In die field of gender confusion. So
liule is known about tbil _complex
.disorder that 1 would like 10 help
clarify some of the more paenlent
concerns.
It is imperative thll"Confuled" •
a clear understandina · of her
boyfriend's cross-dnssing bcbavloc
v~. thr.mainritvnf~•

far cry from. "bobby,• u yoa
IQIPIII:Id,Ann.Aitbouchilllllfbe
flllloylblefOrlbetrllll di n;iutill
pa~e~adllcmma because: ohociety'a
prejudice. AI of this dllc,lberc i1 no
way 10 111n1 tbil pocli"ty llound or
aet rid of iL .
n Ia VCI)' ilfiJK*IIIII- for lbc public
10 Jmow dill aou-daeuina is not a
IIOIJby,
Ia ila 1111118' of~· .It
is a condition lhat&gt;lllually bepl m
early childhood and end11res
WOUJbbut tbo 'me 1pan. Oreat
uadcntandins Ia required
the

the ydr. Gifts were also presented
to Linda Keesee Sarab Fowler,
Betty Barker Nai.cy Larkins and
Phyllis Hudn~L
'
The program included a skit,
"She'll be Comin' 'round the
Mountain" by Angie Hall, Jennifer
Asbley, Linda Keesee, Wandit Ash·
ley, and Patsy lind Kimberly CornelL There, was special music by
the Knepsbield family.
Barbara Arnold and Nancy
Larkins served the dinner to those
attending, Linda Keesee, Angela
·

Hall, Wanda, Jennifer and Jessica
Ashley, Angela Keesee, Betty
Barker, Heather Barker. Sarab
Fowler, Flora Marie Gibson, Lisa
Ellis, Shen-y Jarvis, Kasi Ellis, Sue
Adkins, Connie Adkins, Suzanna
Runyon, Lisa Johnson, Molly Johnson. Burton Smith and Lois Haw·
ley.
Sandi Laudermilt, Audrey
Young, Kathy and Christeena
Young, Tammy Ball, Hazel Ball,
Eva Schreiver, Nicki and Elizabeth
Roush, Shirley Roush, Lori Crisp,

u awwe~ "' i"'*'"'eaeseaes. ••

NO, CALli'. --'-r. ........
OEAllPRESNO: • ...~ ~·.-

OOfM!Illll

-~ ~~~ .

a dloice bula condiliOII:&amp;. ~ f&lt; _
. -will uely help rub"'" euer or.
. many .cro11-dreucrs ·~ 0 are

•

DILLON HILL

5.9%*
:

APR
48 MONTHS

:t\~:

$1500°

0

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MARATHoN

"-----'®

.

I

-

• ••

...,#~

By MINDY KEARNS .
and MICHELE CARTER
OVP News StafT
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Mason County
will have its new consolidated high schooL
. The West Virginia School Building Authority
. voted unanimously We~nesday to give the local
school system $14,439,600 to build a consolidated
high school in front of the Mason County Vocational
School.
, "This is one of the bigger rrojects to be fun~ed liy
the SBA," SNA Director Clacy Williams said. "It is
the lirst fully-funded project awarded."
Williams said the county put $1 million up front
for the -project The money provi~ed by tlle SBA is
from excess in the state's general fund. Back in U1e
spring, tl1e legislature directed the SBA to use the
money to finance rrojects not previously funded in
December.
State Sen. Oshel Craigo, D-Putnam, said he is

thrilled with the funding decisi()n.
"It should have come sooner," he said. "The winners will be the ldds."
Craigo said that where students 'now have possihly
50 optiOns for classes, the new state-of-me-art facili·
ty will offer 110 tQ 120.
"What a way to begin the 21st century for all of us
in Mason County," Superintendent Michael Whalen
said. "It is going to mean something great."
Whalen said the projecte4 completion date for the
facility will be 1998. The money will be available on
July L
"This will be the lirst time for over 70 years Utat
Mason County students will enter a new secondary
school," he said. "The new high school will rrovide
our students with the neces.sary back~round to compete m U1e 21st century lor JObs and lugher education
endeavors."
Assistant Surerintendent George Miller said U1e
county used the state fonnula, ba.,ed on th e :unoum

STOCK •95389

- •••••••••••

Ally.., s.tp.nooo""" ) t -

1995 THUNDERBIRD LX 2 DOOR

(From AP, stall reports)
defendant because of his coopera·
Both men charge~ with the lion, the fact that he has no prior
February robbery of the Coolville record and that a substantial por·
BankOne have been sentenced to tion of restitution ha.~ been made."
six 10 15 years in prison, according Goldsberry said during Lynch's
to Athens County Common Pleas sentencing_
Court records.
,
The maximum sentence would
Thursday afternoon, Athens have been eight to 15 years_
County Conunon Plea~ Judge Alan
Lynch can file for supershock
Goldsberry sentenced Jamie Ford, probation after he has served at
22, of Belpre, to six to 15 years for least six months in rrison , and
robbery.
would be eligible for rarolc after
On Wednesday. Brian Lync h, serving four years, Athens Co~nty
20, of Little Hocking, was sen· Prosecutor William Bi~tllestone
'tcnc ed to six to 15 years and said.
ordered to complete making restituBiddlestone recommended
tion and pay court costs within· 60 Lynch be sente need to no more
days,
than five to 15 years since he C()()p- An undisclosed amount of ermed witl1 authorities.
mon ey was stolen from th e
Ingram is cqarged with complic"nankOne branch at about 8 a.m. . ity to robbery, eonsriracy to comFeb. 28, according to the Athens · mit robbery and two counts each of
County Sheriff's Department. A comrlicily to ki~nappiQg and conformer bank teller at U1e bank .sri racy to commit kidnapring_
Patricia Lynn Ingram. 45, ()f Sue·
Ingram initially tolU investiga cess Road, Reed svi lle - faces tors U1at she went out to her car to
numerous charges in connection retriev e something and the two
witl1 !his robbery .
men ambushed her in the parking
On March 17, both Ford and lot and forced her back inside the
· Lynch pleaded guilty to one count bank, according to the Athens
of robbery_ Botll n\en will not be County Sheritrs Derartment .
fined, but must ray restitution,
Afler robbing tlte bank, U1e men
according to court records.
fie~ in Ingram' s car.
"The court would agree that
Ingram's trial is set to begin
some consideration be ·given to the July)5 .

~!~~

*TAX, TITLE FEES EXTRA

.. Paymenls based on 24
.
thru
CredH company. All payments Include $2,000 down plus first ~ayment and'
security deposit and RCL cash Iron\ Ford where applicable. True, Title and Fees not Included.

'

Fields had to mamtain the lines
ended June 1, Eads -said.
''You don 't dam up U1e creek to
cover up water lines that were supposed to be buried," Eads said_
"They ,won't fix those creek cross·
ings unless we force it. I tllink we
ought to force that."
The lines will be exposed if the
creek is dredged out. Ea(!s added_
"(Fields) said we didn:t specify
how it needed to be fixed." Eads
said. .
.
Rutland Maintenance Supervi·
sor Dale Han said when the two
creek crossings were installed the
typ e of pipe was change~ from
specifications, adding $6,000 to the
project.
·
"The deal was we would wmcb
it and see if it worked," Hart said_
This pipe decision is also being
discussed, he added.

All events will be held in OlC Pomeroy Parking Lot unless other·
wise noled.
FRIDAY
7 p.m.- Heritage dinner at Meigs County Museum wi01 speci'~
recognition for World War II veterans. E•i tcrtainment will be hy tllc
Historical Society Singers_
1
7 p.m. - Hymn sing by Hillside Baptist Church.
SATURDAY
10a.m. - . llerik1ge parade downtown.
10:30 a.m.- Puppet Show by Hope Baptist Church .
·10:45 a.m. - Big Bend Community Band.
11 a.m. - Ohio Center of Science and ln~uSir y program on
''Body Bui ldin g: Bionie&gt; _and Transrlants" at the Meigs Count y
Public Library.
11 :30 a.m. - D'urial of time capsule on courthouse lawn .
ll :45 a.m. - Piano concert by Daniel RusselL
\.

LTttq iH..: t

p.m . -

ga,mc...,, ;uuJ.trc:t.~o~urc hulll ..

~pecks

of 0 luc Grass.'

. RUTLAN() LINES· Rutland Village offidals met Thursday((&gt;
dlscLL~s

work don~ to (.'nmple t~ the walcr line pruject. Jim Birc h~
field, directpr nf the Birchlield ~" urwral Home, said lht rocks piled
up Hruund tht! water will only act as a dam. Rirchfidd suid the
. recent lloods hHd caustd $60,000 in damage to hi.&lt; rrorerty. Th• .
stones culler a water line nurth of M;1in Str~:ct n~ar IJirchiield 's.
(Sentinel photo hy George Ahat&lt;)

early _

Judge Ito halts Sim·pson se
ANNIVERSARY QUILT- Work on the 175th anniv&lt;rsary
of Meigs County C[Uilt is continuin~ 11nd will he displ~yed at the
museun1 this, weeki!nd in conjunctiun with

Herit~g~

W&amp;!ekend. The ·

&lt;1ullt features I he cnunly ·replica in blue, a hannerr in r!d, and
!75th Anniversary in white across the banu&lt;r. R~)' s from the
county replica extend to a blue border bearin~ the names or the
townships. Inside the rays the n!lmes of Meigs County families are
embroider.d. Once completed the &lt;JUilt will hang in the museum.
Ht!re Rosalie Story, left, chairman for the 175th anniversary, and

Ethel Brandt work' on the &lt;]Uilt.

With our product line and our pricing policy • It's hard to imagine anyone not buying from us••• _
However, If you don't buy from Turnpike... Please Buy American! ·
.

"The water line s are not going
"They wrote us and asked us to
to freeze even if they are above fix them and we did." Fields said . .
ground," Davis said. "If we have "We've been trying to get along as
another flood something could best we could."
Jim Birchfield , director of the·
come through, hit it and break it
Birchfield Funeral Home, said tlle
off."
Fields piled stones around the rocks piled up around the water
base of the Leading Creek line will only act as it dam .
"They put the creek crossings in
crossings north and soutb of the
Main Street bridg e near Birch· wrong . Their raising the creek bed
field's Funeral Home and the Rut- increases the rate of flooding,"
land Volunreer Fire Hall, said Jeff Birchfield said,
Birchfield sent a complaint letfiel(!s, Fields Excavating manager.
Recent nooding hit the village ter to the village detailing his con·
cerns, he added. The recent Ooods .
hard, Fields said.
"Any time you do a water line had caused $60.000 in damage to
project you'll have some settling," his property, Birchfield said.
Birchfield said he has contacted
he added.
.
All repairs were completed the Army Corps of Engineers to
according to the direction of village inves ti~ a te[ t.he creek crossings.
Ruuand Mayor JoAnn Eads said
maintenance supervisor Dale Hart.
she wants to see the creek crossings
Fields said.
_ '
Fields spent about $2,000 this fixed.
The onc.ycar
in which
week repairing !he lines, he added.

Heritage Weekend schedule

I :30 to 2: ;\0

In Stock

• COLLEGE GRADUATE REBATE INCI.UDED WHERE APPUCABLE

GEORGE ABATE
· Sentinel News Staff
Rutland Village oflicials are dissatisfied witlJ two-water line creek
crossings and plan to hold a meet·
ing with 'the companies who
installed them last year, CounciJ..
man Danny Davis said Thursday _ •A pair of creek crossings from
the water line projt ct have been
uncovered and ·were visible in
Lea~ing Creek, Davis said.
. "The creek crossings and the lit·
lings are not right," Davis added.
Rutland council members will
contact the con_tractors - Engi·
neering Associates of Columbus
and Fields Excavating Co. of Ironton, Davis said.
·
On Tuesday and Wednesday-,
Fields Excavating perfonned main·
tenance to some of tlle water lines
in tile village, he added.

horseshoe pitching.

r

$15,949*

"It is going to be_a bumpy roa~ ... Miller sai~- He
said if people would sit back and consider the pros
and cons of tl1e new school, while keeping in mind
the children's education, they will see bow positive
U1e school will be.
Local hnsinessman Bernie Riddle went with a
group of business Jea~ers to !he SBA meeting a few
months ago after the county 's project was overlooked
during tile fJrst round of funding.
When the local group. attended tlle meeting, Rid~le said their rurpose was to say "hey, this project .
was ranked high. in the state, you need to look at it
again_"
Riddle said the funding will allow the county to
receive a new high school without having to pass a
bond levy or rai se taxes_
''I'm glad to see Mason County finally getting
back a little of the tax money we have already sent to
Charleston." he srti&lt;t

COl.JIIly.

12:30 r-'n-- Clogging, Inc.
I p.m. - CJ. and tl1c Country Gentlemen .
I p.m. - i\nnual duck derhy.
I r .m. -Meigs County Museum opens .
•
1:30 p.m. - Sheer shearing demonstration by John Rice. retired
Meigs County Agriculture Extension Agent. at U1e museum_
·
2-4 r .m_ - "The One More Time String Band" from Columhu.s
on t11c musemn grou nds.
2 r.m. - Contests for homemakers at tltc museum _
SUNUAY
I fl.ID. - Museum opens at 1 r -"'- with antique traclor disrtny:

$240
~~~~H
24~NTHS
$18,450.00
YOUR PRICE ONLY

, used lo bring even mnrt1 inuovalive programs into the

Noon- Dazzling Dolls Baton Coq1.s .

Gl WAGON

tOtAL IEFORE DISCOUNTS

of sq uare footage required per studen-t, to make a bid
for the funding .
·
Whalen said the county submitted the plan on a
stud ent enrollment of 1,300_ He said a schematic
drawing of the possible outside of the facility was
selll with the project, but nor a "for sure" rlan.
Miller said tlle SBA funding, along witll the $1
million pledged by the county, will cover tlte cost~ of
construction, furnishings and architect work_ Any
atl1letic complex , including fields for ~ifferent sports,
are not covere~ by the SBA fun~s. he coJrunetllcd_
· Accordi1\g to Miller, the county wants certain
t11in gs il!Cluded in the facility like a full-si1.e gymna·
sium ami an auditorium_ The whole facility will be
air conditioned. he said.
Miller said !he new consolidated' facility will save
the school system money in maintenance and orera·
tiona! costs_ He sai~ tl1i s "freed up" money could be

Pair are sentenced for Rutland hopes to fix water line crossings
Coolville bank robbery By

LOS ANGELES (AP) Autopsy photos showing the fatal
slash across Ronald Go ldman :s
throat rested on an-ca.,cl in the OJ.
Simpson courtroom, jusl a few feet
away from a juror In tl1e front row.
A few feet beyond th e easel,
Goldman's father. sister and step-

Thursday storms cause
damage across state

motl1cr quietly cried in the first row ' Thursday, the 37 -year-old wo •
of U1c audi ence. They dabbed thcu· motioned to a b:ul1fl, got up and
eyes with tissues and sipped water ni.., hcd out of the counr"oom. /\s she
from liule paper cups. At one point left, she braced he"c It on tl1e backs
of chairs and dabbed her nose with
the father 's chest heaved.
The gore an~ emotion were too a liS~U C.
For five tense minutes, she
much for the juror near the photos_
Just 10 minutes after a break remained in lhc jury rooll] while

th~

courtroom wa' paralyzed. The

Jud ge, rcmainm,g jurors, auomcys

and audience members sat nearly
motionless as a national television
audience waited.
Fred Goldman · took off his
glasses- and wept at the dl'sniption
ol the fatal slash to hiS son.

AEP, Corps agreement focuses on environment

An agreeme nt ' between Ameri~an Electrk Power Corp. and the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers'
Huntington (W.Va .) District has
been reached to correct common
environmental problems, Tburs·
day's Huntington Herald·Dispatch
reported.
Erom AP and staff report~
power knocked out overnight in
Under tl\c agreement, the two
The National Weather Service Jackson County. caused by a lightsaid a'stonn which caused damage ning strike directly on the Buckeye organizations wi II share. informain the-southwest part of Logan Rural Electric Coperative Echo . tion, said Jim Evcnnan, chief of the
County, Ohio, was a tornado, while · Valley Substation around 5 p.m. Huntington District's planning
division.
high winds which downed power Thursday.
The agreement docs not deal
lines and trees in Knox County ,
BREC officials hoped to have
with
issues affecting AEP and
were violent dowmyard gusts the equipment connected by mid-Corps
dealings as a private compaafternoon today. That would restore
known as microbursts.
ny
and
government regulator
No major damage was reported· power to about 1,200 BREC mem·
requiring
pennits,
Evennan noted.
around Meigs Coumy.
·
bers northeast, east and southeast
Efforts
have
been made "to
A portable emergency substa- of the Jackson area.
make
sure
we
don't
get in com protion was b-rought in to restore ·

'
'

A Multimedia Inc. Newopapei.

·-

·

p:,u••.

ctock/cass.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

An American Company
Serving America ®

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cen..

..

""'

1995 CONTOUR Gl4 DOOR SEDAN -

,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 9, 1995

Mason receives funds for school consolidation

Terri Bishop, .Linda Bates, Ruth
and Beth Jenldns, Frances Young,
Dorothy Anthony, Oeida Chase,
Myrtle &lt;;!uillen. Bessie Fisher,
Joyce Qutllen, Jane Snouffer, Jane,
KendraandLaShay Snouffer.
I Phyllis Hudnall, Franni~ Oldaker, Helen J~neBrown, Rlla Radford, . ~arJone Parsley, Ada
McHaff~e, Martha King, Carol
Knepshteld, Holly and Shelly
Knepsbield, Patsy and Kimber!~
Cornell, Verema Barkman,_ Brl!lldt
Hysell, Melody and ~hchelle
Ramsburg and Ten-y Phalm.

announced

.:·

•
.

at Friendly Hill, Members were books will be audited before
Recognized were Edna Clark, J'
reminded about contests and the inspection by Nancy Radford and the oldest mother, Barbara Fry, tlle
group's toy program _ Harold BarbaraFry.
.
youngest. Both were presented
Blackston reported on the need for
Hemlock Grange member, plants. There was group singing,
a new llag ,at the Rock Srrings Jessie White bad the program using Rosalie Story bad a patriotic rea&lt;J,DANK VISIT - ·Rutland Elementary firth grade students
mini-park and also for more !low- ·"Remembering Memorable Fash- ing, and refreshments were served.
recently toured the Rutland Dauk One brauch. The studen\J wrote
ers to· be planted _ Several rose · ions'' as the theme. Participating
essays and evaluatilms about the experience. Pictured from left
In 1972 the NCAA ruled that
bushes have been planted, be said.
were Mrs . Fry, Opal Grueser,
lire: (front row) Rachel Garey, Melissa Richmond, Brad Baylor
Grange
inspection
was George White, James Fry, Vada freshmen were eligible for all
and Darrick Knapp; (back row) Addle Hubbard, Amber Snowde~
_sports.
·
announced for June 8 at. 8 p.m. Paulsen, Golda Reed.
aud Joan May, Dank One branch manager.
with practice set for June 6 at 8
p.m. It was noted that the grange

:?~-~·

Low tonight in 6011. Partly ,
doudy. Saturday, partly cloudy,
bfgh around 90

7

"t

Hill birth

Heath' and Diane Hill announce
t11e birth of their son. Dillon Ry•m.
Born May 19, he weighed_9
poun~s 31ounces an~ measured 22
inches long _
Maternal grandparent is Evelyn
Hachmeister of Lenora, Kan. Paternal grandparents are Don Richard
and Mary Hill of Racine. Maternal
great-grandparents are Wilma
Evans and Ferdinand Hachmeister.
both llf Kansas. Paternal great·grandparents are Et.hel Euler of
Pomeroy and Inez H11l of Racme _

Sports, Page 4

aor

Grange charter draped for long-time ·member
The charter wa.~ draped in memory of Ada Holter, a 55 year member, when the Rock Springs Grange
met recently at the hall.
William . Radford, master,
presided at t11c meeting and wei·
corned members from Hemlock
Grove _ Rosalie Story, Hemlock
master, spoke briefly.
· A legislative report was given
by Oral Grueser who gave high-.
lights of the meeting she attended

Pick 3:
746 .
Pick 4:
7028
Buckeye 5:
7-11-14-32-33

llriiJihna for understandml and
~·
'
Feel1111 preulll'td 10 /IGw "~·
HDW well·ilt~d Ill! ]0111 Wme
for AM Lt••dm booklel So llltd 1M
Ttt/1-Qft':• Seltd a st/f-ad.dtrlltd,
10111. buslllt&amp;Nist tiiWloS3pt ~(,.:
c/r.tc/c 01' IIIOIItY otdtrfor ·. 1
IJIOUIC . .
"'
_
iltc/lldt;r po#alt qltdlttutdllllf) to:
I have worted with muy crou- TttiiS, c/o Alt11 Lditders, P.028D:Jl
drm e 1 over the yelh,lild ll'el1_18in 11562. Clllcago,lll. 6061/.056 · (Ill
bopclulthat.xqA&amp;rtcewillconbllue CtliUida,.stltd$4.55.)

Mothers recognited at church banquet
Recognition of mothers was a
feature of the mother·daughter banquet held recently by the Victory
Baptist Church at Overbrook Center.
A. sunflower theme was carried
out. Gifts were presented to tbe
oldest mother. Eva Schrejver. 92.
the youngest mother, Lisa Ellis, the
one with the most children, Margaret Nunn, and the one traveling
the farthest. Ruth Jenkins.
.
Speaker was Carol Knepshield.
Mrs. Nunn was named motllcr of

=

Dille IIIII llelerole11111, bat tbil II a

Ohio Lottery

mising situations." he. added. "One
area specilically was wetland ereation . Tnat comes up often in permit applications_"
Five areas of cooperation are
detailed in the agreement. including:
• Use of lly ash from the Gavin
plant at Cheshire to neutralize acid
mine drainage on some AEPowned land.
• Jointmopitoringofzebra mussels.
• Joint consultation on wetland
infonnation and expertise.
• Fanning a parmership to focus
on a clea11er Kanawha River valley.
• Fostering professional de velopment throu gh information
exchanges and shared training pro-

the AEP division operating the
grams.
plant.
Ever man said t~crc are some
If approved, EPA will allow the
areas where A'EP and the Corps
''have common concems and inter- 70.000-cubic yard area that
ovcrexcavated to be used by
est in common goals.''
· In a rel ated development, the plant. giving the landfill • .,,,uu:r
Ohio Environmental Protecti.o n seven days of capacity, he sai!f.
Ohio rower uses the landtlll to
. Agency announced Tbursday tllat a
pub he hearing on a landfill penn it dispos ~ of such coal combustion
modifiCation application for the byproducts as ash and scrubber
Gavin plant has been set for 'ludge.
Berger sai~ wntten comments
Wednes~ay, June 21 at 7 p.m. at
will
be accepted at the .hearing and
River Valley High SchooL
·
·
can
·be
submitted to the EPA DiviEPA spokesman Rob Berger
sion
of
Solid and Infectious Waste
said a pennit for the 255·acrc land·
Management in Columbus until
fill. 1.25 Jlliles northwest of the
June 28. The pcnnit application is
plnnt, was granted in 1993. Ovcrex·
available for inspection at the EPA
cavation of lhe site prompted EPA
Southeast District office in Logan ·
to request a rermit modification
Berger said.
'
application from Ohio Power Co ..

\

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