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The, Daily Sentinel.

By The Berid

Ohio Lottery
·Pick 3·,.,

Tar HE:els

. Monda~Aprll5; 1993 .

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~

l

win national
cage crown

Page-U

Community calendar

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120
Pick 4:

Page4
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and Cbe day or tbat.event. Items
m~ be received wen in advance
to assul"e publication in tbe cal~ndar.

. MONDAY
POMEROY • First Southern
Baptist Church will hold revival
services through Thursday at 7
p.m. Pastor Lamar O'Bryant mviteS
the public. Evangelist will be Rgndel Martin, Columbus; and solofst
will be Morris Wood, Gainesville,
Ga.
MIDDLEPORT • Revival will
be held through Wednesday at 7
p.m. nightly at the Hope Baptist
Church in Middleport. Rev . Fred
. Hill, director 9J l\-lissions for the
. State of Ohio, will be the evangelist
]

ANNIVERSARY OBSERVED • The 85th anniversary of the
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of tbe Americln Revohltion, wu observed during March with a luncheon at •the Holiday Inn ia Gallipolis. Pictured, 1-r, are: seated: Mrs. Ronald

HONORED GUESTS· The Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters or tbe American Revolution, observed its 85th anniversary in March. Pictured are honored gues!S at tbe luocheon: 1-r,

Reynold&amp;, Mrs. Ralph R. Bush· Jr., Mrs. Wendell Cleland, Mrs.
Josepll Colburn, Mrs. Gordoa Knight. BliCk, Mrs. Keanetb Welsh,
Mrs. Robert Moser, Miss Eleanor Smitb, Mrs. Lois Baumgardner,
Mrs. James Roush.
.

MiSs Eleanor Smltb, Mrs. Lloyd Sboaf, Mrs. Gordon Knigllt, 'Mrs.
Ronald Reynolds, Mrs. Josepb Colburn, Mrs. Ralph R. Bush·Jr~
and Mrs. Wendel Cleland.
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RACINE - The Souihem 1unior
High Boosters will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m•. at the junior high school.

BEDFORD -· Cl~ari-up of the
Bedford Township Cemeteries will .
begin next week. Anyone wanting
to keep flowers and grave decorsLETART • Clean-up of the tions should have those items '
Letart Cemetery will begin Mon- removed by Tuesday.
day .. Anyone who wants to remove_ _
flowers or other items should have
POMEROY • The Ladies FOE
them removed by that time.
Auxiliary No. 2171 will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. There will jJe a
ReEDSVILLE , The Olive potluck at 7 p.m.
.
Township Trustees will meet Moo-, .
day at 7:30p.m. at the Shade River · REEDSvh.IJ&gt; . The Communi,
State Forestry Building.
ty Education Committee for East·
ern J,.ocal School District will be
LETART • The Letart Township , Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the high
Trustees will meet ~onday at 6 schO&lt;!l.
p.m. at the office building.
POMEROY • Preceptor Beta
RACINE - Racine Chapter No . . Beta Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi
134. Order of the Eastern Star, will Sorority, wiD meet Tuesday at 7:45
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. All p.m. at the home of lane Walton.
members urged to_ attend.
Officers will be elected.
f
WEDNESDAY ·
SYRACUSE • The Suuon
POMEROY
• There will be a
Township Trustees will meet Mon- regplar meeting of
Lodge
day at 7; 30 p.m. at the Syracuse No. 164 F&amp;AM onPomeroy
Wednesday
at
"Municipal Building.
7:30p.m. Practice l;lXe!Cises Will be
at 6 p.m. at the Middleport
RACINE - Racine Village held
Masonic
Council will meet Monday at 7 invited. Lodge. All .master maSons
p.m. at Star Mill Parle.
•
RACINE • The Racine Church
PAGEVILLE - The Board .of of the Nazarene will hold revival
Trustees of Columbia Township with Rev. Dave Cllnfield, Wedneswill Pleet Monday at 7:30p.m. at day through Sunday at 7 p.m.
t,he fire station.
nightly and at 10:30 a.m. and 6
,
p,m. Sunday. Rev. loy Sizemore
MIPPLEPORT cTheMid!\.le:..... w.i!!P~"i!.l!l special music. Public
port Community Association will inviteil.

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. By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Starr
The Pomeroy Village Council
approved a request from Village
Administrator John Anderson for
$24,000 for two engineering studies at its regular meeting Monday
night.
The studies are needed for Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
approval of two proposed village
projects, Ande~n explained. EPA
approval will aid in getting .grants
for tbe projects.
One.of the ·proposed projects .
involves replacing the ~oeif on the

vilhige' s 250,000, gallon water
reserv.o ir on Lincoln Heights,
Anderson estimated ihe total project cost at $90,000.
The other planned project is
phase II of the water line replacement project from around MeDon.,
aid's to Farmers Bank. Anderson
proposed upgrading the water line
in that area from eight to 12 inches.
Anderson said the money spent
on the studies will be reimbursed to
the viUage once the grant is issued.
In addition, the council agtee\l
to purchase' a shed for the waste
water plant for $9,479. Anderson

said tlie building wjll be used for'
storage of dried sludge for the
sewer department
Project revised
The council also granted Ander.
son permission to remove 140 feet
·of the new water line near the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.
. Anderson explain!'d that the
140~foot section ran through an
area contalfNnated with fuel oil
from an old underground storage
tank.
.
To prevent the fuel from leaching. through the new water line,
,Anderson .suggested replacing .the

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Advisory board_seeks.inp~t .
from community residents
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CLEANUP BEGINS- Work ~!egan Monday
on cleanup behind the Meigs County Museum
where a landslide early last week deposited tons
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::St~~e~on~u~:n~c:u~:~; ~~;d:;:n~o~~'tro~ib;it~rs:~~ ~:~~~~~;,e:~~n?~ ~~

. meals to beprovided as well as free JO a.m. to 3 'p.m. Slie encouraged
lodging, materials and ttaining.
members to take their children and ·
· f.iembers were 'lilso asked to ~uggested that sucll an event m~ht
notify Bolin if they want to l)ltend work mto the local community
the Statewide Community Educa- · education program.
tion Conference in Columbus, May ·
At the planning session were
· 10-11. ·Registration d'eadline is ·Bolin, Carpenter, Reed, Mary Pow; ·
April 19. Speakers will be State ..ell; Powen,1eaneue Thomas, MarSchool Board member Shirley garet Edwards, and Willford.

ti

The annuai·Easter egg hunt in
Middleport wiD again be held East·
er Sunday with festivities to get
underway at 2 p.m. Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman will sound a ·
horn to start the hunt 1be event is
spOnsored by the Middleport Community AsSociapon;
Each egg • and there will be
.I ,500 eggs - will conjain a prize. · ·
ManY. of ibe eggs will ~tai.n dol· ·
Jar b1Us. Peoples Dink IS agam fur· · .
nishiilg,the go,ld ·egg wOrth $50 and
.the silver cq worth $25.
•
· Tbere ·wtll be four age cate·gories for participation: one for
ages two, three and four; one for
a11es five, six and seven; one for
eight, nine and lei!·YW70lds; and
one for u and 12-year-olds:
·.
Two subj~ts were cited by lleputies over the weekend on
· Parents will not ~ Jl~Vl~litted in
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the ~ area. accxirdinato Mitch
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· -.~.-·--· __on
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t._•u_ed...;~...
n...pa_ae_·..' ...·;...
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· ·_...,·...;..·_ _.. . . · · Contla~~d on pa1e 3 '
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Two cited by deputies

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Hawk, and John Marrick and
Robert Brown who will talk on
educational reform. 'theme far the
conference will be "Creating a
Vision fQr Tomorrow." BQiin and
Carpenter will attend. ·
R:"th Powers reported on t!Je
status of the by-laws revision
which she is being assiSied with by
Kimberly Willford and Mary Wise. ·
She noted several questions conceming ihe desires and intent of the
membeis and will contmue to 'wodc ·
on the revision regarding setting a
regular meeting dafF.and place and
factors regarding the.budget
~uzy Carpenter llllnouneed that
a "Kid Fest" will be held at the ·

.planned for .Middleport

, 'lbe Fourth I&gt;i~t &lt;;owt of Appeals will convene at.the Meigs
County Courthouse Wednesday to hear cases from Gallia and
Meigs counties.
.
·
. . Gallia cases to be heard inClude: State vs. William A. Mathias;
Paul E. Van Hoose vs. Oallia County Board of EdtK;Btion; State vs.
Daniel and JI!Stis vs, 1ustla•
Meigs ~ inch-!e State vs. Crisp and Pickens vs. Pickens.
· The pnmary funcliOn of the appeals court is to hear appeals from ·
common pi~, munjcipal and county couriJ. ·
.
·
· The thrce-jiJdae p&amp;nel will consist of Judst Earl E. StephensOn
from SciOto County, Judge Lawrence.Orey from Aihens County and
Presiding Iooae Wil_liam H. Hanha liDrn Pidcaway County. . ·
.
, 1he Fourth Dislrict Cow:t of Appeals COIIIills of Adams, Athens,
Glllia. Highllllld, Hocking, Jaclclon, Lawrence, Meigs, Pickaway.
t&gt;lkc· Ross, Scioto, Vinton and Wllhing1011 counties. · •
· following the lellion, the court ()f lppe8ls judges will be a guest
· of tho Mei&amp;s County Bar Associatioo for a mcetiag and lunch' host-.
·
ed by Judge Fred W. Crow mat the ~use.

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test. John Redovian, University of
Rio Grande, supplied Mrs. Bolin
with the program .jpformation and
· asked the Commllflity Education .·
group to assist with the ,project
when it starts classes this summer.
Bolin .reported ihat only two
members of the board can at(¥nd
the Community Educational Orientatlon Leadershif Training sessions
at the Nationa Center in Flint;
Mich. during a single session.
Bolin and Suzy Carpenter will
attend the August sesston, but two
other members may attend tire
training, April 20-30. The $100
registration fee will be provided
through ihe grant money but those

A~nuai egg hunt

Appeals court to meet

JOINlNG HER STAFF

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,...;;o---Local briefs
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SHARON ICENHOWER

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Plans for cQnducting a needs
assessment as a f'lrst step toward
coming up )Yith community educalion classes will be carried out by
the; Meigs Local Schools Communi ty Education Advisory Board this .
month.
The board ·will be mailing out
forms to residents in which they
will be asked to indicate what
activities or classes they might be
interested in having offered bY. ihe
advisory board. Responses will be
used to determine what classes will
be offered 'later this summer and
next fall.
·
The question of how many resi·
dents wtll rTFnd to the surveys

A Vinton man was arrested .. vehicle and a partial iicense num· , The ·sheriff's department plans . inCrease ·the respon$e and that per·
Monday by Lawrence County sher- ber. The Lawrence County Sher- . to charge, Marcum with br~aking ' haps some surveys might .be con. iff's deputies Monday in eonnee- iff's Department monitors the and entermg and attempt to extra- dueled by telephone.
lion with ihe robbery of a Hunting- · police radio and deputies were dite him from .Ohio as a fugitive of
During a recent meeting held at
'\On, W.Va., tobaeco store.
given a description of ihe vehicle.
justice, ihe Dis~ch.reponed .. ·
the Meigs County Public Library,
Accor4ing to 8 report in The
~urn was ~on U.S: 52 ·
The robbery IS still under mves- 'Janet Bolin, director, discussed
. (Huntington) Herald-DiSpatch, one mile.east of the Suneon Wiii.JS ligation and author-ities arc still ..Project M~PS (Making Access·
David J. Man:um, 46, Stllte Route Bridge, which connects Ironton · seeking the two suspects who fled Possible which will seek to help
325 Vinton waa arrested shortly with Ashland, Ky. Marcum and from Marcum's vehicle.
students pass ihe state proficiency
af~ 5 a.m. -' &amp;bout one half hour two passengers fled the vehicle, but
The TribUM placed ~Is to the
after a witness reportedly saw peo- Marcum reportedly returned and Lawrence County Sherifrs Departpte lll!lding. carton~ of cigarettes anem'pted to disarm ehe deputy ment Monday and today, but was
mlo hiS vehicl~ outs1de the Tobac· · before being subdued.
.
. told an official press release was ·
co Hut, 4756 u.s. 60. Huntington,About $15,000 in cash and mer- . heine ~ and no information
W.Va. .
chandise were taken from the vehi· wou ~. ,availa,ble untilitsdrele&amp;S!l.
. . The witn~ss called Huntington cle. All of the pro~ny was recovNo moormatJon was rna e availpolice with a description of the ered from ~urns vehicle.
, -able as of noon today.
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JANET'S HAIR-GO-ROUNO

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or earib aaci debris. Here, workers using shovels
and a wheelbarrow remove ciirt fr9m the slide.

Vinton man arrested in tobacco store robbery

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•1o.oo ott Perms .
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- force. said Friday that a "health likely apply rust to patients who :
dent Clinton's health-reform plan is security card'' for everyone could receive free or aasistcd medical lilcely 1o require every Arnencan to . ·· be part of the reform plan Clinton care under the reform plan. Eventu•
carry a health identification card e~pects to . give Congress this ally, every consumer could get a
bearing his or her Social Security spring.
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· . health card. An estimated 3l mil· .
number, congressional aides say.
Two congres~ional aides. with lion Americans currently do nol
Social Security numbers could ties to ihe task force, both speaking have bealth insurance. ·
be used for computerized tracking on condition of anonymity, said
It's not clear how sophisticated
of medical or insurance records, Social Security numbers were the medical ID cards would be-· ·
cutting the h!llilth industry's $35 being considered as the identifica- as simple aa a plaslic 'Cird with a
billion annual paperwork bill, tion nutnber for ihe cards.
name and number or something
More than 200 million Arneri· closer to the cards used to access
according to aides involved in
drafting the package.
cans have Social Security numbers. · automatic bank teller machines.
But some worry that using All parents who want to claim a
Magaziner told consumer and
Social Security numbers on medi- child as a tax deduction must now health advocacy groups Friday tbat
cal ID cards could jeopardize the get a Social Security number a "smart card" that would CIIT)'
confi&lt;!enliality ·of a'palient~s m'edic before tbt baby's' t'irsi birlhd8y: '·"", the cant liolder's detailed mCdicat
' cal histOry.
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One of the congressional aides hisiory in a microchlp ·is several
Ira Magaziner, .coordinator of · said the. medical ID card would . years away.
,
the president's
health
care
task
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WADE, M.D. INC.

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new PVC line with a wrnpped due• · · Andrews·and Mik&amp;Jones. · ·· · · · · · the (property) lines are, but I won.'t
tile iron line with neoprene gaSkets
The landslide destroy.ed a sec- . promise you anything."
and concrete casing. .
tion of a lane, People's Terrace, '
Jones said ihey approached the
Anderson estimated cost .to the · behind the museum. However, ihe council, not to complain, but to
village at $600. .
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ownership of the lane remains .. find out how to stlirt on repairing
Even considering ihe revision to undetermined.
People's Terrace. "We don't lcnow
the project, Anderson said the pro-.
"Quite a few families depend on where to start," Jones said. "We
ject is going ''real well." The new (People's Terrace)," Andrews said. need someone to show !IS where to
line has been tied into Middleport's "The road is on nobody's deed.".
. go."
line, but has not been turned on, he·
''The road is a no-man's land,"
Commends workers
Reed
commended village wottsaid.
Andrews said.
Discuss landslide
However , Mayor Bruce Reed ers who aided during last month's
snow emergency.
The counCil discussed the land- maintains it is not a village street.
"Those who haven •t been in a
slide behind the Meigs County
·"Our understanding is it is not a
Museum l)n Butternut A,venue with village problem," Mayor ·Bruce truck behind a plow can't apprecitwo affected property owners, Ray Reed srud. "We'll find out where
Cootinued on page 3

Task force looks at using
SS numbers for me~ical. IDs

Meigs Chapter DAR celebrates 85th anniverSat)'
GALLIPOLIS - The 85th Lewis : Martha Mervdith Lust. events chBirman, OSDAR, chapter . trar; Mrs. Clarence Struble, histoii- the. original owner of WaldschriJidt of a Perfect Day," accoJ!Ipanied on
anniversary of the chartering of Einma McQuigg, Bertha L. regent, French Colony Chapter, an; Mrs. Virgil Atkins, librarian; House, built the small stone house the piano by Mrs: ~nna Weber
The Return Jonathan Meigs Chap· Osborn, Kate AlleQ.Osbom, Addie Gallipolis; Mrs. Charles Brubaker. Mrs. J\eith Ashley, Mrs. Robert · for his daughter, Catherine "Cate" Jenkins.
ter, Daughter of the American Rev- R. Roush, Florence Russell Smith, state program chairman, OS DAR, Ashley, Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, when she married.
Mrs. Clelan4 acknowledged
olution, was celebrated Match 20 Florence Ralston Russell, Kathleen chapter regent, Franklinton Chap- Mrs. Paul Eicli, Mrs. Mark
The project involves raising · appreciation to, the luncheon comwith a lunches&gt;n at the Holiday Inn Randall Titus and Hortense Reed ter, Bexley; Mrs . Robert Moser, Grueser, Mrs., Roy Holter, Mrs. funds for the renovation, planning mittee: Mrs. Ronald Reynolds,
in Gallipolis. The chapter was char- Watkins.
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state hostess. OSDAR. chapter Stephen Jenldns, Mrs. Dwight Mil- and the start ·UP of ihe renovation. : chairman; Mrs. George Skinner,
tered in 1908.
Mrs. Wendell E. Cleland, chap· regent, 'Nathaniel Massie Chapter, hoan, Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs. Gary The Children's Attic of Cate's Mrs. Paul Eich, Mrs. Roy Holter
The scroll at the table for each ter regent, welcomed all present Chillicothe. Mrs. William Chuko, Moore; Mrs. James O'Brien, Mrs. House will be an integral part of aJ\d Miss Eleanor Smith. '
guest revealed a copy of an article including the honored guest. and state vice-chairman program com- Gerald L. Powell, Mrs. Harold Sar- the project. Members are asked to
The benediction was given by
from the Meigs County newspaper speak~r. Mrs. Ralph R. Bush Jr., mittee, OSDAR;. chapter registrar, gent. Mrs. Arthur Skinner, Mrs. locate .and donate toys and chil- Mrs. Eileen Buck. Mrs. Cleland
'on Feb . 12, 1908 as follows: State Regent, Ohio Society Daugh- Franklin Chapter; Mrs. Kenneth Clarence Stratton, Ms. Nancy Van dren's furniture from the period · closed the meeting with the Lord's
"Daughters of the American Revo- ters of the American Revolution. Welsh, state co-chairman Ohio 90 Meter, Mrs. Vernon L. Weber and early 1800 through 1904 to f!Jlllish prayer and thank-you's.
lution. A chapter of one of the Mrs. Eileen Buck, chaplain, gave plus celebrants, OS DAR, chapter' MJ:s. James Werry.
the attic. Mrs. Bush invited mem.
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co~ntry's leading patriotic societies the invocation.
regent, Delaware City Chapter;
Miss Eleanor Smith, vice- bers to attend the National Conti- ~~--~--------. .
was organized here Saturday with ..:. '· ..FollowingAhe luncheon, Mrs. Mrs. Jack Kauff. state membership regent, introduced the keynote nental Congress of the Daughters rJOHN A.
20 charter members. and named Cleland continued the program chairman, West Virginia State . speaker, Mrs. Ralp~ R. Bush Jr.
of
the
American
Revolution
in
Return Jonathan Me•.gs Ch:i.pter, with the DAR ritual, inc1uding Society DAR, Col. Charles Lewis Mrs. Bush became a member of ihe WashingtOn. D.C .• April19-23.
Daughterso~iheAmencanRevolu· Pledge of·Allegiance,led by Mrs. Chapter, WVSDAR, Point PleasDAR. in 1965 at which time she
The program closes with Mrs.
EAR - NOSE- THROAT •
lion. The ObJects of the. soc1ety are George Skh:mer. treasurer; The . ant, W.Va. ; Mrs. David Gralfam, joined· the Daniel Cooper Chapter, Arthur
Skinner
"The
End
best ·g1ven m words of Its constitu- American's Creed, by Mrs. Pearl state vice-chairman, Platform Dayton. In 1970..71 she waa instru.ALLERGY
tJOn: I) To perpetuate the memory Mora. corresponding secretary; and Pages, OSDAR, French Colony mental in organizing the Rebecca
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BOARD CERTIFIED
of the spm_lof the men and women The Preambl~ to the Constitution Chapter; Mrs. Dennis McGuire, Galloway Chapter, Fairborn, of
who achieved American Ind~pen- of the United States of America, by sta~e flag p~ge. OSD~. chapter which she is a chartec memb«. She
SPECIALIZING IN
dence by the aequJSJUon and pro- Mrs. Robert Ashley. The Star correspondmg secretary, French is a second generation DAR mem•ADULT
&amp; PEDIATRIC
tci:tion of historical spots, and the Spimgled Banner was sung by the Colony Chapter; Mrs. Thomas ber and the widow of a SAR mem·
ALLERGY
erecuon of monuments; by the Madrigal Singers from the Gallipo- Richie·, state. page, OSDAR, chap· ber. She it also the ·mother of two
•HEARING AIDS
cncouragement of historical lis area.
ter recording secretary, French DAR members and the grandmoth•RECURRENT EAR
I:.
·research in relation to the RevoluMrs. Ronald E. Reynolds pre- . Colony Chapter, Miss Molly er of two members of .the Children
1!'4FECTIONS
IN
CHILDREN
I .
, tion and the publica,t.ion of its sented the national defense repqrt.
Brubaker, state page, OS DAR, of the American Revolution. Mrs.
•ASTHAM
results; by .the preservation of docMiss Eleanor ,Smith, vice- Franklinton Chapter: Ms. Lois Bush has served the Ohio Society
•HEADACHES
uments and rdics and of the regent, read a message fro the.Pres- Baumgardner, chapter I:egent. Col. as.State Chairman of Conservation,
•RUNNY NOSE
records of the mdivJdual semce.s idem General, National Society Charles Lewis Chapter, WVSDAR; Junior American Citizens, Children '
•SNORING
•
of Revolutionary soldiers and patn· DaughteiS of the American Revolu- Keith Ashley. president, Ohio Soci- , of the. American Revolution.
ots, and by the _pr51motwn of ~le- lion, Mrs. Wayne G. Blair, Wash- ety Sons .of the American Revolu- : Southwest Districi Director, State
•MANAGEMENT OF SKIN &amp;.
brauons of all patnouc anntver- ington, D.C. Mrs. Blair noted that tion. Ewings Chapter OSSAR, Corresponding Secretary and ViceFACIAL LESIONS
.
sanes. 2) To carry out the mJunc- she has visited chapters in 19 states Pomeroy; Jack Kauff, chapter pres- Regent of lhe Ohio Society. She is
MEDICARE ASSIGNMENT
tion of Washingwn in his farewell during the past year and observCd ident, Ewings Cha~ter; Ms. Chris· past president of Hobby' Club, a
· ACCEPlED
.. address to the Ame.ncan JlOOI?le, to with pride the accomplishments tine Napier, chapter ·vice- re~cnt, member of lhe State Officers Club,
·~75-1244
promote, as an ob;ect of pnmary and dedication .of chapter members. French Colony; Miss Mary B1erly, The· Waldschmidt "100" Club and
.
Importance, lnStllutJons for the She challenged members to help · chapter · recording secretary, the new Ohio Junior Club. She
Suite 112, Va.y Dr.,
... :.. s.cne.r~L~·fi~.~ ~.I!R .of. knowledge, make society more relcxant ilf Nathaniel Massie Chapter; Miss hold membership in many his!Ori• Pt. Plea~at, WV.
~.
MRS. RALPH BUSH
thus developmg an enltghtened today'S America and in shaping her Marjorie Bierly, corresponding sec- ·cill and patriolic socielies in which
,State Regent
pubhc opm1on am,l afforcjmg to future. The presi~ent general spol;;c rctary, Nathaniel Massie.
. . she is active at the state and nation~----~-.----~
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¥Dung and old such ll!lvantages as of the plans for the renovation of
Also attending fro in French 81 level. She earned a B.S . in Edushall ?evel.op in them the Iargent Constitution Hall in Washington, Colony Chapter: Mrs. William cation, B.A. in HistOry and a Mas·
capaCtty for per~ormmg the dulles D.C., the major conference hall in Brown, Miss Virginia Carson, Mrs. ter's in Education from Wittenberg
of Amenc~n ctllzens.3) Tocher- the: complex o.f DAR buildings George Grace. Mrs . Geraldine Universby. She is a member of
1sh, matntam and extend the msutu- whtch fill an enure blOck.
.
IS PLEASED TO HAVE
Reed, Mrs . Pauline Rife. Mrs. · \ Delta Zeta. She was one of the
lions of Ameda~~~ freedom , to fosMrs·. Cleland presented Mrs. Charles Wood, Ms. Pris Petzinger, original group of four· high school
ter true patriofism and love of Reynolds, member of the DAR Franldinton Chapter; from Ewings counselors to institute the youth
coumry and to aid in. securin!1 for N'ationai ·Speakers Starr, · State Chapter SAR: Robert Ashley and employment work experience proOF POMEROY, OHIO, .
m~kind all the blessmgs of .hber- Orgaruzmg Secretary, Ohio Society
Ronald E. Reynolds. Representing gram at Wrighi Patterson Air Force
ty.
DAR (OSDAR) and Chapter Reg-· Children of the American'Revolu· ..Base.
.
The Return Joqathan Meigs istrar, who introduced the follow- tion: Miss Rachel Ashley. '
· Mrs. Bush spoke to members
. Chap~er, National Society Daugh- ing hono.red guests: Mrs. Ralph. R.
·Others attending: Mrs. Cla'ra and g11csts on the theme of her
SPECIALS FEATURED ·
ters of the f.merican Revolution, Bush, It., .state regent, -QSDAR, Conroy ancj 'Mrs. Rose Reynolds, administration, "Reach Out and
FOR SHARON
.was orgamzed February 8, 1908 at Rebecca Galloway Chapter, Fair-. )\(tiddleport; Mrs, Virginia Hoyt, .Touch." She ·urged members to
•
the home of Mr$. Mary Daniel born; Mrs. Joseph Colburn, vice- . Mis, Helen Maag-, Mrs. ,Doro\)ly reach out and touch those in need;
THRU APRIL 19
Plantz when a group of ,20 women president general, NSDAR, Whet· Sayre, Pomeroy; Rev. Deron S. promOie palriotism, encouraae new
•
•
met. The chaj&gt;terreceived itS name stone Chapter; Columbus; Mrs. Newman,
Syracuse;' B.B. members to join the DAR and
from Rtturn Jolla than Meigs, son · •Gordon Knight, national speakers Matthews, Gallip()liS . Chapter embrace the goals of 'the Society
Off Highlights
of Jonathan Me1gs, a hero of the staff, NSDAR,. itate historian
members present: Mrs. Wendeil and the basic tencnll of DAR •
52.00 Off Hair Cuts
Re~olutlonary ytar ~d one of the OSDt\R. WheiSton Chapter; Mrs: Cleland, regent; Miss Eleanor · God, Home 11nd Country. She
earhest senlers m Oh10. The charter . Lloyd Shoaf, national speakers Smith, vice-regent (daughter and · pointed out the need to recruit
members were Mrs. Mary Garfield staff, Northwest District Director ·grandda~ghter of charter members JUnior members to carry on the
.Daniel Plantz, Helen Osborn·Criss- OS DAR, Delaware City Chapter; Florence Russell Smith and Flo. work of the society. Mrs. Bush
. m1111 •.Pearl Evans, Helel\ Augusta Mrs: B.B. Matthews, Kate Duncan renee 'Ralston .Russell); Mrs. Eileen . reported on the progress of her
f'eiger, Fanny Wilson Field; Lucy Smith Board of Trustees, NSDAR, . Buck, chaplain; Mrs . Frances state regent's projeCt, ihe rcnovaGrant Boggess. EJecta M. Grant, · secretary, Waldschmidt House Roberts, recording secretary; MIS.. lion of Cate's House, a IIDill ltone
. Gt~ce L. ~orton, ijelen Horton Board of Trustees, OSDAA. Frencll Pearl Mora, corresponding score: house near the state society's
Keiser; Lydia Thomas Hugg, ?ylaria · Colony Chapter; .Mrs. James tary· Mrs. George Skinner, treasur- Waldschmidt Houle muJIC!ilm at
Montague 'Lasley, Laura Wells , Roush, . state · commemor.a tive · er; Mrs. Ronald Reynolds, regis- . ·Milford .. ~hristian Waldschmidt,

2 Sectlona, 12 Pill" 25 cenll ·
A Muhlmedll Inc; Newllpeper

Council 0 Ks studies, discusses museUm· landslide

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/P~mero;·Middleport, Ohl~, Tu~sday, April 6, 1993

Vol. 43, No. 238
Copyrighted 1993

.

BURLINGHAM- ThC Commit·
tee for a Bedford Township Volun•
teer Fire Department will meet at
the Modern Woodman Hall in
Burlingham on Tuesday at 7:30.
p.m:
.

a1

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LOll' IODI&amp;bt In .mld-3ts.
Cleu'Jna. Wed Millay, lllllDf
blgb In mld 60s.

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TUESDAY
POMEROY - American Legion·
Drew Webster :Post No. 39 will
meet Tuesday, Dinner wiD be a1 7
p.m. with meeting at 8 p.m..

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meet Monday at S: 15 p.m. at the
People's Bank in Middleport.
Everyone welcome.
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. PIUi:PAIUNG POR THE HUNT • Mnlbtn
of the Mlddltpart C-•1111lty AIIOclatto. Ire
pictured ...., prepare tbe
eaa tat wm
be 11Jddet1 d111'111 tile IIJIIIIIII Easter eg h!llll at
Hart1D1er Park 111 Middleport. Thf! hunt .willaet
onder~_y promptly at Z p.m. oa Sunday. Pic.

lured, ltudllla, ue Marcia T..,, Ill 'in••
Bob Gll•ore. Seated .are
Emma PuP, LIDda lrtate, JtM Nd,
Tlileker, Jeu ~1'-'t; ,f ila CoiU. aad Mild!
Meadows.

nd

t.soo

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Te• D't'l;
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· DEVOTED TO THE INTERE8T8 OP THE IIEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LE'J'l1lR5 OF OPINION IR w~lcome. They abould be less tban 300
words. All letrers are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telepboae number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
sbould be in good taste, addressing i5Sues, not personalities.

House GOP
•
enJoys.resurgence

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By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
. COLUMSUS - Republicans had more influence in lhe 11ouse on
Ohio's two-year budget lhan at any time since 1971, when lhey lost conirol to lhe Democrats.
·· Some of their school and welfare amendments were accepted last week
as lhc House sent the bill to lhe Senate. Fifteen Republicans voted for it
and more might have, eJicept for strategi~ reasons,
"I'm pleased with lhe input we had,'' said Minority Leader JoAnn
Davidson of Reynoldsburg. " It's a new day in Ohio," proclaimed Rep.
·• Randall Gardner of Bowling Green, party whip.
· .
Why the minority clout?
·
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\
The main reason is lha1 110der newly aligned House districts created
last year by a GOP apportionment board, the Republicans gained eight
seatS to reach 46- four short of a majority.
The 53-member Democratic caucus is lhe smallest since Speaker Vern
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, assumed his post in 1975. Last session, he held 61
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sealS.

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n a1 daJt, April 6, 1993

WednfSday, AprU 7

OCALA, Fla, - 1 am cUIICndy ·
a prisoner in one of the most
bizalre COmers Of lhe COUDIIJ,
I speak of Florida, "land of the
flowers" to the Spanish explorers
who dmtshed about it in search of a
fountain whose waters would
endow them with eternal youlh.
WQnder what they would name .
it now? The place sijll teems with
flowel'$, of c.ourse, but lhe radiant
flora compete for lhc eye's attention with so many more unique
attractions. And just to ma1te sure
you don' t miss any of them, the
landscape is lit with neon and
planted with billboards directiag
you to lhem.
First, you got your quariums. As
in aquariums, gulfariumS, seaquariums and serpentarlums. Then you
got your jungles, as in Orchid J110gle, ParrotJ ungte an.d Monkey J110gle, Choose carefully and you
might even find a j110gle in which •

ETrA~'Q!I3
!WLMe'

10-

you can grab a jeep safari ride into
lhe wilds for a close loot 111 such
indigenous wildlife as giraffes,
zebras and ostriches.

.joseph Spear
Then you got your lands, as in
Marineland and Gatorland. And
your many worlds, as -in Seaworld,
Reptile World, Butterfly World and
that Big Enchilada of worlds, Disney World
If you grow weary of quariums,
jungles, lands and worlds, there's
always the Tupperware Musewn in
Kissimmee.
I mean, this place -~ a bip. You
notice tl!is lhe moment you aoss
lhc SL Mary's River from Georgia
and pass .the aging orange $Cdan
with the rumbling -muffler and
black-tinted windows wl)ich,, .iudi!-

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. 11ie Republicans say they can win the House in 1994.
·
They will have had two years to recruit candidates and raise money in

the new districts: Some districts were strange to both parties last year,
when court battles over boundaries delayed the start of campaigns,
In 1992, GOP candidates claimed the Del!locrats have been in wwer
so long that the two-party sysler!l was in danger. They plan to 'continue
thatlhcme next year if they remain shut oot.
_
. · Riffe doesn!t plan to give, lhem lhe opportunity, nor will he allow
Republicans to deny ~sibility for the lludgeL He withheld support m
December from Voinovtch's $1.1 billion tax increase 110til it had notable
GOP Sllpport.
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Riffe said last week: ' 'They were iri on lhc budget from lhe start. ''
. At one point, the debate became too sweet for some. "It's time someone said something negative about this budget," said Rep. Robert Corbin,
R-Dayton. Ht voted against it, claiming it is 110der funded.
Before lhe roll call, Republicans left lhe floor for a 20-minute, strategy
callCIIS, reportedly making. sure that too many of them didn't vote for a
bill that Voinovich claims is now $200 million out of balance.
•
Republicans may hav,e gained clou~ indirectly following a November
ballot issue lhat limited laWmakers' terms to eight consecutive years.
· Gardner, die third-ranking GOP leader, said voters sent a message that
lhey want the process- not just lhe seats of power- to be more open.
The House passed last monlh a bill requiring open legislative commit·
• tee meetings. The bill bad a Democrntic sponsor but Gardner claimed it
was a GOP idea that lhe Democrats embraced only under public pressure.

"It's frightening the way Koresh could get away
people inside his compound."
·

in&amp; m. 1111: ...,..,..
or Bast" hoops or especially lhe silv~-painl­
buau , coalaiu a llalf dozen ed dude in lhc ton who docs lhc
spriD&amp;IJ ieu YOIIIdiccilllp ia SIIIIJC IICI.
w11eo
1iJr -.:
· &amp; 81
Bact aortb you go, past the
JU8
~s
E
. to .Saraso...
•• and St .
liCK sa• ies
w m11er a-vet~1"""s m
deals rlitw 40-foal f:lk Wills fjJr Petersburg, and finally to Ocala,
fun ud ....niDI iaD.,..,Ie suzi10 wbich is where, thanks to a family
wresdiDg sails to do bnUie widl medical emergency, I became a
colbiJrs
P''*-• ·
· ·
~ .
Wbaa yau 11il k y Wc:sa. JOil
No problem, I thought. Ill JUSI.· .
~for- Jllll ae ill a 111 r
go 10 die front desk of my motel
land. 1 say dlis willa deep+ 11.,.,, IJid cxtea~y sta&gt;:. beS~rry.'.~he
as 1 n:.llld dais ruty ~ al ckR says....., town IS . mg ,_en
lhc eoc1 or 1111: lliPWAJ as - of · over !JY- ready for lh1s --: a gang
lhc INC 111"•h• of 1111c wodd.. But .of nuddlc-a~ motorcyclists. No
if )'Oil ~~aft Ilea ufi · 1 IK Yel- moms for miles around.
.
lowtn:t Rmd ill
.,. of OE, 111
_I search QUI ~Y antagorusts and
JOil ba~ 10 do is joia die 6nlag ~vet two lh~gs: They are not
dial jjilhcn Cldl cw · 1 al Mn1Jo- amqae t~ ~ond~, and they are
IY Squlie Dodt 10 Yir:w 11111: a-t . e~ly me~ people. T~e
to tnow dial yaa 11Pe And yuur ~ Wmg Road Riders Assoctadcstinirioa. H tbe Cootie Lady lion, they call themselves isn't hint eaougb, cbcct oat die SO_.OOO o~ners of Honda..Gold
c.ribbta csaa••a.;., or lbe gay yo'~ ~g ~rcJes ( ~ade· .
with die c:ats IUl j-p dlrotzgb ID _MIIySville, Ohio, they qwckly
·
JIOiill out), 1,400 of whom~ hol~­
iag aa ~nnual state gathenng m .
·Ocala die very weekend I am in
dt:apc:aa ac:cd of a motel room.
If JOil haw: never wandered into
a 1ar1e pack' of follically chalJaccd, weight-disadvantaged bik. as, let me iell you it is a breathtak. U..sigbl. They all ride lhe big Gold
Win&amp;s, many of them equipped
wilb radio, tape deck. , CB. and, yes,
reJio'• telc:pbone; They emphasize
flmily val11e5, safetY education and
1111: implrtaDce of .not mixing alcohol 8Dd gasoline. The booze-andbroads Harley crowd doesn't ·
1pp11tieiale lhem. I did.
Meeting lhe WiDgs almost salyaged my week in Ocala and
ct 1 ~ my mind about this !'Cnin·
salar Slate. BIll then I ran mto a
weiHiresscd man strollin&amp; down a
IIIOiel COiridor carcyiDg a steaming
bot Oriealal Beef ·and Vegetables .
TV diDner -at se~ iD the mom- ·
iDg. ''llllemtiag ~ast," I said.
' 'I don 'I like eggs,' ' he growled.
Help.
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,. Jwepb Spear iS a syndicated
wtiln for Newspaper Enterprise
with brainwBshirig

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AUII'bldoa.

·Let's put ·the genie back.in the ·bottle -

"Their determinatiOn' to acqUire . genie Is ooi Oiil}&gt; oi.t ot lhe bottle, it would bcc:ome a serious. cvea- good, China, for reasons of greed
weapons of mass destruction, I has touched down on every conti- . haadcd ~ Tile n:YCJalioos IIIII pratige, haS been recklessly
think, leaves Iran as an intemalion- ' nent in lhe world.
about tbe full cxrcat of ~·s Sllpplyiag would-be prolifer~tors
al outlaw." • •
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Sadly. enough, the Uniled StaiC$ nuclear....-_. 1Kdil6cw!t.s lllda aslniii. .So bas Norlh::Xorea,
Wilh those words, addressed to
fiQcd by die Inp:1wi+ I AIAIIir - a s it builds its own capacity.
Congress, Secn:tary of State War- u
Eaagy Ap:lrcy (IAE.A..) ill w:ri- Western business and industry
ren Christopher announced a new, nO
~
· fyillg B..,..,.,., . . . . , _ wen: rem•ias infested with companies
tougher American position on
scAJe:iu&amp;. E - ns i1t:aa1i11c IIRC- williDito )Jilt profit ahead of com- ·
Iran's relentless quest for the_ is among lhe leading culprits in 1111: meats between die Ullilal'StnleS --orinlemationalsecurity.
nuclear bomb. To decry,- however, story. For reasons of alleged neces- 111111111: ro. m:J •...-1 iDkri- And tbe United States is still .too
is not the same lhing as to prevent. · sity during the ·Cold War, we tor stales or 1111: old Soviet Uaion inclined to decry the mote in the
· What rem·ains is for the Clinton applied a double standard to our offered llape" dw 1111: ducal of a eyes of olhers while declining to
administration to put in place a non-proliferation policy. Unfriend· naclelr hoiocM"' llad f
d, dlie mnove lhc beam from its own.
. comprehensive approach to nuclear ly regimes such as Iraq wen: hec- speclcr of. a MIZid ss..te safe for
'
What is required is a non-prolifproliferation. Yesterday would not tored, pressured and reprimanded " Jesser'" nuclear eagagemeu11s alllion policy applied wilh consisof
be too soon.
repeatedly. Nations whose coopera· beg:m 10 bM IIIJt%
u:ncy, strength and passion . Our
tion
in
other
fields
was
deemed
know
a
little
old
man
who
smoked·
Nothing
bet~er
illustrates
just
Founcea
.....
w
Les
Aspio
objectives
sliould include. a univerDear Sir,
·necessary,
as
with
Pakisian
and
two
packs
or
cigarettes
a
dar
and
how
critical
lhe
issue.
has
become
offCRld
ax-Pet
lided
""Rum
DacrSlll
bm
oo
nuclear tests, an end to
Heavy smokers never cease to
Soulh
Africa;
or
whose
close
asso-:
lived
to
be
over
a
hundred.
(2)
You
than
lhe
s~te
of
h~nes
that
prereoce
to
Oat~
Dealia&amp;
wilh
tile
production
. of fissile materials
amaze me. They like olher people
ciation
with
the
United
States
have
to
die
of
something
.
(3)
1
•
ceded
Chnstopher
s
app~ar~nce
Prolili
••i&lt;la
ID
die
19!10L"
Willi.
used
ia
lhc
production
of nuclear
awake in lhc morning, get a cup of
encouraged
benign
tolerance.
,
SDCh
don't
care
bow
long
I
live
I
love
to
before
.a
House
Appropnauons.
he
WZOie
•
a
Wi1J1S
*I
sbouW
•c:apa:s
and
a
vastly
slrengthened
coffee and read lheir ,newspaper.
They check the Dow Jones aver- smoke and 1 am not going to stop Comm!ttee. panel last week : as Israel, were admonished pub- be die -ling poial for' die adlaia- I.A.E.A. More to the point , the
.
. licly but led to 110derstand privllll:ly iouMiou be ZKIW sencs a auaay lJailal SlateS should lead the way
ages, The averages of their favorite until I die. Concerning the first Among lhem..
ariswer
they
always
mention
lhe
.
South
Afnca
admitted
that
.It
that nolhing woold get in the way of dcfc:aic.. Asfin fill die case sim- in ·forging an international con sensports person, The average rainfall
·exceptional
case
of
lhe
person
liv\
~-ad
successfully
developed
a
of
more important business.
pi · ~baldly: "Tile prolifa,... sus, with international enforce.. of the monlh, and lhe avernge cost
The
United
States
also
repeateding
over
a
hundn:d
.
They
neglect
~uclear
w~ns
J!fOgr&amp;m
and
was
Daclear weaposis is IIOW the ment. Oli the COntrol of nuclear
of living percentages .for lhe · year.
mention
lhc
person
who
dies
at
ow
abandonmg
II:
North
Korea,
ly
demanded
that
other
nations
chief scaaily dln:al we lace in •lite weapo11s. That means one aiined at
They accept lhcm as facts.
· 10
·our frieads as well as at our ene:
There is one avernge they never age 30. To balaiice out the taw of · on the pre_text lha1 II was outraged watch what it said ralhcr than what post-SovictU'I."
Aspin o«aaJ a • 4• z of rec- lilies, and one for which we would
•
get around to check. That is the averages there has to be one of ~Y exce~lve deman~ ~~r IDSJICC· it did. While calling for universal
·
lion of Its nuclear facdib~S, w~lh­ adherence to the Non-Proliferation ommeadalions, some of wbicb have to sacrifice soll)e of. our
medical average life. expectancy of them.
The
laws
that
govern
us
are
drew
from ~he Non-Prohferabon Treaty, it refuSed to take steps that ha~. been .,.U.U,- 81 all of n:maining unilateral advantages .
people getting cancer who smoke
made
by
men
and
can.be
repealed,
Treaty.
A.hair-~smg article m The might cap its own nuclear activi- wbicb are -iaeatly scasible. huiog lhc nuclear genie back in
two packs of cigaretres a day. On
but
there
is
one
law
that
can
never
New
Yorker
la1d out lhe story of ties. Washinglon backed away Amaican laws I!JiiCiniu&amp; lbe sale the boUle may soprrd impossible,
average. they take seven years off
be
repealed
lhat
is
lhe
Iaw
of
avernarrowly
a.verted
n~clear ~ar from a Comprehensive Test Bali abroad of~ ..r ....ill llala world made safe for nuclear.
lheir life or about one minute for a es
between
India and Pakistan dunng .Treaty with the former Soviet that migbl ;sed ia a DUCiear tenorism IIIII war is unthinkable.
every cigarette they smoke.
g Sl n
the Bush presidency. And in down- Union because U.S. weapons mak- weapons pmgraa llaYC IIcea
.Hoddia&amp; Carter III, former
When confronted wilh this .evig ed,
town Manhatt•n. the massive ets claimed it would weaken our SIIOil&amp;'howl 'l1le LA.E.A., ..,_rp · Stat•
Departmeat spok,sman
• dence they will give you · three
Louis G. Bossmeyer! explosion that rocked the World huge nucleanrsenal. Each time We
stilltiiiR
a
fiPCI'
ti&amp;er
ll.a
a
ID1tt
....
award-winning
report~r, edi
stock answers in Ibis order (I ) I
Louisville Ky. Trade Center was an emphatic conducte!l an undergrouad test,
n:gulalilr,lzas
lila!
011
a
ZICW
hill:..
lllr
and
pablisller,
is
president or
•
· reminder of how easily a nuclear governments interested in develop- Coopaatioa betwcea RISSSia IIIII MaiaStnet, a Washin~ton, D.C.•
device might have been substituted ing their own nuclear ca~bility Ihc Ullilcd SIID:s in 1111: -.polif- .._. telrrilioa produciion com.for
,elalive.ly primitiye charge . .would JDaiql ,oo.te of.our !lyt)ocrisy. aatiun field a•i1•cs 10 pow.
·me first tOOt.but didn't that night. · that the
poJ and a writer for Newspaper
Dea'r Editor; ·
was-used. · ·
·
Each time we looked away as a
But the bad news. ud CYeQ , Elllrrpiist AssoCiation.
.
I could see Old Dave was getTime for another "Tin Lizzie"
What aU those events underlined
ting kind of penurbed. I happened was lhe chilling, though. IIRStated, friendly regime took anolher step wone~••I • .CIIllWDPdle
experience.
·
Whoever rode with you in lhe to look down, and to and behold, I message in Warren Christopher's toward developing or adding to its
weapons of. mass destraction, less
front seat was the "co-pilot.~ His · hadn't turned the switch on.
condemnation
of
Tehran.
The
fact
.
friendly
countries were' encouraged·
•· job was 10 twist her tail.
. I sneaked and turned it on and is lhat he could have substituted the
in
lheir
own,
similar punuits.
·
,
One Saturday night an old 1old him to try her again. He did names of at least a·half-dozen other
The
end
of
lhe
Cold
War
offered
: buddy of mine (1 won't giye h.is ·and she swted and we drove on natiQns for Iran' s. The nuclear
the hope that non-proliferation
··
: right name, I will just call him "Old home.
Now
you
can
bel
it
was
several
• Dave") and I toured the local night
: , spots and en~ up:at Old Shenang days before I tOld Old 'Dave why can't drive anywhere-You 'can't. l)e rome of lhe dirt tliey're putting
: Springs a! closmg ume.
.
lhe old girl wouldn't stan.
just decide 10 go and get something by McDonald's, or ihe rocks and
After closmg, we went out to
Virgil Walker . to ·eat. You can't send your chil· dirt they're moving down in lhe
lhe old Modei·T tri drive"home.
Racine dren to school. You can't go visit "Pity Me" area. Or ~ny higl!way
The old girl usually siarted on
friends. You can't keep any they're redoing•. Anything. A liuJe
appointments or pay any bills. You at a lime could really mean alot.
can't go anywhere-Just stay home,
Please don't say" If you can't
also if you work .. We have senior take the water ger outl"
1 just went out and bought a it so lhe mail canier isn't bothiired citiz9JIS living on this road. One is
Would you leave your home?
•
79 years. old.
· .
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No one wants to leave lheir homes .
Sunday's paper. What's so special .wilh our mail on lhe route.
' aboutlhat? 1 had'to take a'boat ride
we have complained about this
Back to the working .man. He You would not .want to leave your
to get it
problem for. a long tilll.ll with no either bas to take the boat out and home knowing there is a. way to
We have been flooded in since success. This is sappclsed to be a hope no one steals it or walk solve Ibis problell). .
·
• Tac$day·March 23rd. And still are. . caring community. Where are all. through the mud, water and briars. . . And for lhe ones who still say
The Ohio .River crested friday- · the caring people?
Would you feellilce working after a they w.ould mover who do' you lhink
• the water pn our road went down
Maybe if we were a lawyer, week PI' two of this?
would buy it lqlowing it floods .lhc
: mayb.e a fooL At this rate-we 8ie ban)l:er or a president of some com7 · How many of YOu can say after . way it does.
·
.
· .
gq_ina to be in here for araother . pany we'd get SOII'Ielhing done?
~ week ·:you could. do it and not
· Instead of being up a cre·ek
: weet ot
We're not asking for a highway have a complaint or two?
· without a paddle -we re being
:
In today s paper (Sunday' s) it to be builL Were not.even asking il
We~ some help and we need · floodc&lt;l by the Ohio River back up
• swes ''No reportS of closmg roads to .be blacked topped. We'll seuJe. lhc help of our whole com·munity. · water.' This is not a flash ' flood
: . due to high
in Meigs Coun- : for our old d~sly bumpy COUI)IIJ
Our· trustee can not do it alone. problem.
.
If anyone can help please come
: ty ~ . Do we have to report this road. At least lhen we·could come They need the, help_(jf the people
. ·. ; evecytime it happens? we:re locat- and ~o as we pleaSe. · . .
.
who know who to contact and how· forward and show liS and everyone
ed at lhe lower end of Middleport, . I .wish everyone that doesn' t to get tltem to help. Just one ~ else in Meigs County, that we do
. '·
, near Hobson. Everyone coming thirik Ibis is a big problem for us, . can't do this job. Maybe wiih the ·. live in a caring commllllity.
.
. "L.islfn, Ode;,give me sotttelfling to lower. my .
'i.'.
l and goin$ from Middleport can see
espei:ially our: trusteeS ,. would lake ' help of .others we can solve this .·
· Debbie Engle · '. ·
·
·
. one week arid prelen4 they couldn 't problem.
. .·
,Rt.lll ShadY Cove Rd.'
our roachs flooded.
tes~. ~I'LL TEAR YOUR Ht=AD OFF.."
~.
We.calllhe .post'officc; torepOn ilrivemn of their driveways. You ·
Maybe one ~flhe l!()lu!lon may
. Middlcpol1,0~45760

ddzng C ter JJJ
7

Letters to the editor
Law

averages

ap

or

7

.

Recalls "Tin Lizzie"

7

Berry•s World

. Problem still exists

7

tonr:r. ,.

·.

warer

...

.,

.

Council...

Continued from page 1
Accu•Wealhere forecast for
ate -the job they do," Reed comconditions and high
mented. "Pomeroy is not an easy
MICH.,
place to run a snow plow." .
Some roads were inaccessible to
the plows , pausing delay s in
Toledo 59"·
cleanup, wblle other snow plow
drivers were berared by residents
PA.
after lhc pJows dejlosited snow in
e
,,J
. '
freshly cleaned driveways, Reed
said. .
·~.
T)le village needs to look into
IND.
parking problems in areas, Reed
said. Snow plows were unable to
opera~e in some locations due to
· .. parked cars.
.'
Reed, who wen.t along with
· • lcorumbusls3•1
snow removal crews, said workers
''did a tremendous job." .
.
Otber action
•
In other action, Reed infonned
collRCillhat its downtown revitalization grant was rejected this year
by lhe Ohio Department of DevelW. VA.
opment
No explal18tions have yet been
given by the department, Reed
said.
Amanda Neece, Cassie Vaughan, Racbel 'l'aylor,
In olher action, council:
.TOP. SELLING TROOP - Junior GlrJ
Brltni
Bevan, Muff Davidson and Mellaa BlltW· ~. Discussed controlling algae
Scout Troop 1276, Middleport, was die leading
. er. Back rCJilll, J..r, Cbaalty Stewart. Stacey Brew·
in Mulberry Pond. Using grass carp
seller or Girl S.:oat cookies lo Meias County.
..
er, Brldaet JobDSOD, Ashlee Vauahan, Brandy
copper
sulfate
were
two
options
Troop
leader
Is
Pam
Jobuouwith
Carin
Taylor,
or
SUnny Pt. CkJudy Cloo.dy
SteveJIS, Cbasity Fowler and Sarab Brewer.
·
discussed.
·
co-leader. Members or the troop are,_1-_r!..~nt:
01993 ~cu·Weather, Inc.
- Discussed areas with execs·
sive amounts of litter or garbage.
Council tentatively scheduled
• 0•
spring cleanup for the week of
. C0 nt' d f'r
South-Central -Ohio
Thursday, fair. Lows 35:45. April26 and wamed ·that people; .
JRile OJII page 1
Tonight, ~tearing. Low 35-40. Highs in the 60s. A chance of displayin$ Junk appliances, etc:, Meadows, chainnan of_lhc event..
.' ' ·
.
. · · •
: We&lt;Jnesday, moStly SIIRny. High in showers and thunderstonns Friday. would be cited 10 county court If
The Middleport Frremen will .
__.
the mid-60s.
Lows 45-55. Highs in mid-60s to lhey 1\id not get rid of them during also assist wilh lhe hunL
The Meigs County Board of- existing contrm:t wilh lhc COI_DJliiDY
Extended forecast:
low 70s. Saturday. a chance of , that time period. .
Meadows stated about 1,000 · Commissioners, during an emer- to handle.. h~abng and cooling of
, ThurSday througb SaW,day:
showers. Lows in lhe 40s. Highs .
-. Discus~ . a possible mobile . children usually_ parljcipate in the gency meeting Monday, approved · county ~~dings. .
'
55-65.
·
11ome park ordinance.
.
annual hunt ·which has .been held the purchase .of new boiler for lhe . The J81l and sheriffs department
~
Atteilding were Reed, Ander- every ye.pr but one since the jail and sheriff's depanment build- IS currently heated by hot water
-~--.;....
son, council members Betty Baron- 1950's. It has on occasion been · ing after lhe old boiler cracked Fri- w.ltich circulates through radiators
ick, SCQtt DiUon, Larry Wehrun,g, postpOned.due 10 inclement weath- day.
·
.
in 'the. b'!ildi.ng. Friday~ leaking
.
Thomas Werry, John Blaettnar and er.
.
The new boiler purchased for water exbngwshcd the boiler aeat' Critt Harris
Carson' Lingerfelt
Bill Young and Clerk Kathy
The Easter bunlty will also be $19,639 from Johnson Controls ing the J?OICntial for a gas leak,
Crill Harris•.64, of Sharples, W.
.....__ J~
'
·-•t, 11 Rt. 2 Hysell.
.
there and all newborns up to age · Inc. of Nitro, W.Va., will be more Roush said. .
.
~ . .._ .
·. Ya. died Sunday, April4,-at Veter._....,., ·
""
•
•
Council
will
meet
at
6:30p.m.,
two
will
be
grecte4l
by
lhe
bunny
efficient
than
lhe
30-year-o'ld
boiler
Roush
sa_Id
the
new
ooller
'tal · H ·
Wv
Letart, died
ty, April6. 1993,
April 19, to tour the old Pomeroy and presented an egg.
it replaces, Commissioner Manning should be d~livered between 7 and
.. ans Hosp1 m untmgton.. · a. in Holzer Medical Center.
,
Born on Feb. 18,1929 m Mon~ . A retired worker at Kaiser Junior High Building.
Roush said. The commission has an 12 days with three to five days
.
,
being needed for insrallation. The
clo, W. Va he was ~ son _of the Aluminum, he was a member of lhe
late Henry and Alafan Harris, for Ftlllowen of Christ.
EMS responds to four . propos'al from Johnson Conttols
merly of Meigs County. He w~ a
Born March t, 1916, in Etowah,
L p - ' calls for assistance
v~teran of World War n. Bes1~s Terin., he was a son of the late
.
Correction
square
dance
at
lhe
Old
American .
r
. . c
fully functional boiler.
.• hu par~;nts, he was preceded m Charlie and Nana (Linderman)
0 the Meigs
There
will
be
an
organizational
I:egiop
Hall
in
Middlepoi;t
on
S~·
Units
ounty
The old boiler will be used In
dealh by two brothers, Ishmel and LingerfeiL He was also pieceded in
meetingofthePomeroyHighCJass.' urday from 8-11:30 p.m. Admis· Emergency Me&lt;!ical . Service lhemeantime.
HermanH. · . . d b ,
.
dealh by his first wife, Edith, his
10
. . ~_Is sumve ,Y .our sist~rs, · only son Paul two brolhers and of 1968, not lhc Racine High Class sion is free. 'Children are welcome responded four calls for assis- . Present were. commissioners
of 1968; on ThursdaS" at'7 p.m . at wilh ildult supervision . Bring soft tance on Monday and early Tues- Robert H'artenbilch, Janet Howard
~
. v u~m1a Cook of Middlepor; Al~ce . two
Robmson of Rutlan!l, ~y Daily
Surviving are his wife, Mildred Pizza Hut in Pomeroy to plan for drinks and snacks. Melvin Cross dayO~~:day at 9:!6 p.m . the and Roush, and Clerk Mary·Hob.
wiD be the caller. · ·
Pomeroy ·unit went to East Main stetter. All three commissioners .
of Pomeroy: ll!'d Sue Mitch~ll of (Mitchell) Lingerfelt; two stepsons, its 25th reunion.
Hays, N . .C., ~Ix brolhers, Milia¢ Keilh. Adkins of Gallion, Ohio,
Street for Blythe Theiss who was approv_ed JllllCha;se of lhe boilu.
Dance planned
Egg bunt pltutned
of Ecorse, Mich., Dan of Wyan- John David Adkins of Kenova; two
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
The Racine Legion Post 602 laken to Veterans Memorial Hospidot~. MI~h . , Clyde of Eaton brothers, Charles E. of Point
No. 9053, Ladies Auxiliary, will will hold its annual Easter Egg ll!l.
Rap1ds, ~h., Charles of Lake W. Pleasant, Olester of West - Palm sponsor
On Tuesday at 12:23 a.m. the
a round and square dance Hung on Saturday at noon. The
Va., Jessie of Sharptc:s. W. Va., and Beach, Fla.; and a sister, Aileen
Middleport unit went to South
Friday· from 8-11:30 p.m. Music . event will be held rain or shine. ·
~ Woodto~ of Layfollite, Tenn., and Brammer of Pompano Beach, Fla.
Fourth for Mary Steele. She was
will
be
by
True
Country
Ramblers.
_ several rueces 8111;1 ncp~ws.
A graveside service will be held Red Carr will be lhe cal,ler. EveryReunion meetln11 planned
laken to Veterans.
._.. Funeral serviCeS Will be ~eld Friday, 2 p:m.,' at the Kizkland
The
Meigs
High
School
ClasS
of
. At 1:50 a.m . the Racine unit
.· Wedpes!'&amp;y at 2 p.m. at the Ball Memorial Gardens with Rev, Char- one welcome.
1978 will hold a m.eeting Saturday responded to Willow Lane for
; Chapel m Sharples, W. Va. 'l'he lie Hargraves offic~tin_g. ArranDAR Jo meet
at 2 p.m. at the home of Tom and Ayward Jones who was transported
HIBBING, Minn:. (AP) - A
0
Rev. Joe. Lane ll!'d lhe .Rev. ~ ~ gements an: under lhc direction of
The Return Jonathan Meigs April Smith, 1691 Liqcoln Heights to Ve~rans.
food processing company said
~· Blake
WID oflic18fll an~ burial. will
Chapter, Daughters of lhe Ameri- · in Pometl)y. Plans wiU be made for . At 1:53 a.m. lhe Middleport Fire Monday it will e7b
· nd a plant iD
be In Memory
Gardens m Madison, the Foglesong Fllllerlll Home. .
the
clasS's
15th-reunion.
Department
responded
to
a
strucJ
kso
·
tead
b
'ldin
'
.
' w. Va. There will be military riles. M s
I M E~ esb'
' can Revolution, will meet Friday at .
·u~
- at lhc Wilmer Hatfield res- one
ac in n,
w
w g a new
lure
fi
Minnesota.
, Friends may call at the Handley
r
ar C . r
. 1 : 39. f ·m·. at the. home of Mrs . . ·· ........ Sunrise service
idence. The Middleport unit tranS·
Jeno Paulucci said Llligino 's is
· Funeral Home in Danville w.va.
Word has been received here of DBDie TbOIT18$, Middleport
Easter sunrise services at the ported Alzada Halfhill to, Holzer under pressure to expand produc~
'
· lhc death of Mrs. Carl McElfresh, ·
FeUowship Church of lhe Nazareoe Medical Center.
lhc former Edith Orr, of Ashley on
·
tion capacity to meet market
Sunrise service
in
Reedsville will be Sunday at Middleport Court news · demand. He said a big factor in lhc
·
March 27, 1993. She is ~ved by
Silver Run Baptist Church,
. Veterans Memorial
a daughter, Mrs. Jim (Mary Story's Run Road, Middleport, will 6:30 a.m. with breakfast to follow.
Five were fmed and thn:e others decision was Jackson has a plant.
! MONDAY ADMISSIONS - Kalhtyn) Piatt of Ashley, and three hold Sunrise services Easter Sunday 'S110day school is at 9:30a.m. with forfeited
bonds in lhc court of Mid·
Details of lhe expansion were
·Edward Maaox, Middleport.
·
grandsons. Mrs. Ethel Orr of at 6 a.m. Pastor llill Litde invites ·worship service at 9:45 a.m. Rev.
not immediately available.
John Douglas invites the public.
Chester isa sister-in-law of the Jate. the public.
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Mon•' Expansion in Ohio ~&lt;_an be
MONDAY DISCHARGES
Wesley Smith.
- Mrs. McElfresh : Burial was at
day
nighL
done
much quickpr," he said. ··
· Danee ptanned
Bake sale slated · ' ·
I
.
'
.
Leonard:sburg.
Fined
were
Jason
D
.
.
He~drix,
"Further
delay may have cost us
There will be a round and
_ HOLZER MEI_)ICAL CENTER
The Ladies Auxiliary of the Pomeroy, $10 an~ costs, passmg on the opportunity to expand oui JackChester Vol110teer Fire Department a double yellow line; Roger Green, , son plant."
• ; . Dischirges, April $ .:.... Laura
wiJI hold a bake sale Saturday at M1d_dleport, $25 and costs, con- ~ Hibl)ing City Administrator
:- Grady, Gleruta Williams, Kyle Kin.
9:30a.m. at Krogec's in Pomeroy. Sllmmg al~l under age 21: Ellen John Feilo said he's disappointed.
nim, William Roush, Lillian Unroe,
}
All donations will be accepted. ~"7'1· Middleport, $100 and co~ts. . "We all felt we were fiahting a
,' Lee Sayre; Frances Roush, Mary
I
Continued from page 1
Donations may be left at Newell's glVIng false state~ents "! a police time clock," he said. "I tliint the
;.; Rife, Hannah Hughes, Eileen
·Gas Station in Chester.
officer; Barney I:Jiles. Middleport, final offer at least on paper, seemed
•• Cochran, Ebony Jamison, Mary
charges of underage consumption of alcohol. 1
•
$~5 and -costs, di~derly m~r; to be a better paclr•ge, buJ we felt
:, Grifftit, James May, Erin Hatfield,
One juvenile will appear in Meigs County Juvenile Court while
Services
set
and
Brubara A. Wmdsor, Middle- we were at a disadvantage Secause
.~ Miranda Yoong, Michelle NeWIOII,
an 18-year-old will appear in Meigs Co110ty Goun, Sheriff lii!Des
The Mt. Olive Community JKII:I.. $425 ~d costs and thn:e days of the. lillie factor."
, M. Jane Fick and Terry Hayes.
M. Soulsby reported. .
·
Church in Long BoaOm will hold m J811, physical control of a motor
.
Deputies had Stopped a vehicle lhe pair were iD, Soolsby report·
s
unrise ~ervices Sunday at 6:30 . vehicle while under lhe influence
: Name contest winner
ed. Parenrs·of lhc ju~ile were notified and he was released to their
.
a.m.
Pastor Lawrence Bush invftes of alcohol.
;: James Parker of 39610 Suite
custody pending lhe hearing.
. .
Forfeiting bQnds were Jerry T.
lhe
public.
;, Route 7, Reedsville, was lhe win- c~
Bradley, Gallipolis,- $49, speOO.ing;
" !'er of lhe March 28 myslery flmi
Preaching
and sinalna
Mary
M. Scott, Leon, Yf· Va., $_60
" contcst. He was one of 16 to corFaith
Full
Gospel
Church
in
bond,
rut;tmng a red hgh.t; ~eith
· "Spring time brio~ out itinerant repairmen who wani to do
.~; .reedy Identify lhe fann aa that of
Long
Bottom
will
have
preaching
Scott,
Middleport, $210, dri~mg
repair work for you, .Sheriff James M. Soulsby advised. "Know
. :; Mr. and Mrs. Jake Gaul, located on
and
singing
Friday
at
1
p.m.
wilh-aWKier
FRA
(msurance) suspensiOn;
whO you are dealing w11h."
• Lover's Lane Road at Flatwoods.
commua!on service•. Pastor Ste~:-To-meet Wednesd~yIf you have anyone trying to pressure ·you into leUing lhem do
' Parker's .name was selected in a
Reecl mvites !he,public..Fellow~lnp . . .. · ·. . .
. . . .. ..
Dave .
the work, P.!st tell lhem _."no" and call t)le sheriff!s department,
drawing to be lhc winDer of the SS
will
follow.
Easter
sunriSe
services
Anyone
mteres~ 10 helping
Soulsby aaid.
.. · · ·
· ·
.
.' .
; prize in ihe contest sponsored by
will be Sunday at 6:30a.m
with the Meigs Coimty Soap Box
. ,. Try tO &amp;et the !~lie plate .number and description of lhe vehicle
• lhc Ohio Villey Publishing Co. and
·
Derby is invi~ to auend a meeting
·· of
~ the Meigs Soil and Water Conseras well as a'~pbon of the person, Solllsby S31d ..
Dance plallned
to be held al 7 p.m. Wednesday at
vation District.
There will he a dance at the Rut- the office of lhe Blue Streak Cab
Rlfl..t ·
huid American Legion HaU on Sat- Co., 172 N. Secon~ St., Middlef.....
TI1e Dolly Sentinel
urday from 8 p.m. to midnight. port. Especially needed are spanA Cheshire area man is in stable condition at !be Holzer ~edical
Music will be by Pure Country sors for ,cars, help wilh building
CUSPS 313·1110)
Center wbi:re he was taken for lrelltment after an early morning ftre
Band.
Public invited. .
cars,
and race offic1~s.
Publioht¥1 cveey •Rcmoon , MondRy
at his Little Kyger Road home.
Tho mor• pillh you have, the ....
.
.
through Friday, Ill Court St: . Pomeroy,
Wilmber B. Halfhill suffered from trauma and smoke inhalation
pull yo~ need. ·
'
•,
.
Women Alive to meet .
~...':{y~~lu!:i. v'l::i..
and wa.S admiticd 'for ueaallent. His wife, Aizaba HalfhiU was treatThe.
only
pollllcll
p.ny
that
knowa
Women Alive will meet Mon- · CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2IM. Second elua
ed for trauma and n:leased. The two were tmnsported by emergen~y
how to run the countrY I• llwaya
pc&gt;otri'gn Jlllid ot Pom&lt;lloy, Ohio.
·
vehicles from Gallia County and the Meigs EMS.
day at 7 p.m. at lhe-Kyger Creek· Monday night's Ohio Lottery
lhe one lhoro out of olllce.
•••
Clubhouse. There will be a devo- selections:
·
•·
Member: ·The ilfiiUCIHIOCI Pnu. and the
Jeff D!lrst, Middleport Fin: Department chief, reported that the
Shortcut:
o
route
on whlohyou
Ohio Nainpof"T Auoeiation , 'Nati....
call came in at f:S3 LID. this morn~·
. The frame house and all its
tional speaker and craft demonstra- Pick J Numbers
can't
lnd
anybody
to •k wliwa
·Advcrli• ing Rep,....ntativo, Bnl)ham
con•-••
..__._,
•111 ..... lire.
I sat'd that. it appeared the
liill).. Refreshments will be a soup
1-2-0
Newapapor S.loo, 733 Thi~ -ue.
,...,.. w-v -"1...,
"""
you••·
.
••••
New Vork. New York 10011.
fll'e started IRIUDCI a WOQd burlier, While he could give no estimate
bar:
(one, two, zero)
Q: H- mall)' polltlclano .._ It
Pick 4 Numbers
. POSTM~ER:'Send- • ..._to
of lhe'fllmlae, be llid thai lhe HaiDiills have insurance.
'
Services announced
toblo'gre•e., ongln•?
9-5-1-1
'""'
...~.ilyHISoo!'s~~-· Ill Coun Ill..
Middleport'~ wm: usmd by lhe,Gallipolis Volunteer
Ho.ly Week services for the
A: One, If you run hl111 through
rll'e ·DepianmeliL Fiiefi&amp;hli:n were fin lhc ~for more·than three
o • reol•l-.
• sua&amp;eJUPTION J1AU8
•
hours; ·
· ·
·
·
Sytllj:uae Charxe, United·Methodist
•••
B,r Carrier or-..,...,
Churches are: Maundy Thursday at
Ev• noticed lllal when you're on
One Wcck ...................... :....................neo
Forest Run with communioa at
the highway, everyone go!::J
olower
lhon you I• rm Idiot,
~:~h::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.::::::t::=.
7:30 p.m.; GQ9d Friday services at
everyone driving faster Ia i
COPY .
·.
Nk:b-'•. .......,;...at 7:30p.m.; Easter Sunday
mMiac? ·
·
. SINGLE
PJUCE
. ..... K •
; l7, .l""
~.v Norlh
. . Ave., Tall rnadge, was ct'ted
I ' •
oon~ ..... ..,.................... :........... :......2&amp; con~o
early
n10m
by.the Oallia-Meigs Post of the State ,Hiah· . · stmise services at Minersville at 6
. and Ieft, o f center. . · .
a.m. Breakfast
s.t.ocn"""' ""' d...tnnc·to ·""1 it.. camW!tY Palrol or .w..~.~
,..~·"• ·-'-·
....... .....
"""I'nDaence
h
. will follow in. . the, ...,_!!!!..!!!!.!!!!!'-!!
I1T mRY romil in ad••""' dl,.cl to Tho ·
Churc SOCial l'ooms. PubliC invil· . .
DRily ·8cnl1ncl o.n .11 Lhroo, rix or 12
II
:.
i·;d
t.
ed.

.I

I

•

I

••

-

-"r.,...

7

•- - - - - - W e a t h e r - - - - -

Annual

·p

c. ounty
commz·ssl·on .OK.s .
h
if
b •l
u•c ase·0 new Ol er .

Area. de'a· ths

---Met·gs' ann ce ..__entC'
.
oun . m
7

7

•

si....;,.

~i~=:vi~:=:t;t:v:v~

' ·

Luigino's to
expand 9hio
pasta plant

7

c

Hosp.··tal news

~"""'"---- Local briefs.. ~------

..

Sheriff issues warning · .

·

· ·

By

Grat,_.

Cheshire man hospitalized

.L ottery numbers

P=;:,

=

·¥ an cited for D. u .I.

g::

Sundag

nianlh booiM. Cnldit
OACh whok .

lY~

,.;u ""(liven canier
•• :

.

~:·='0i:.!,&gt;" ::"~f':~~ ~
• ••ii•blc.

MoiiS•bacrisll•na

I3 -k!.~~. ~~·-~....~,~~~- . . ~184
62Woek:;;;·j;;,j;.;·iihiP''Q;~~i;...a&amp;4.76
1s w0oko. ..,....................."............... t23.40
f::·~
· · · .............................,................ , :
26 weo~uo............ .............................. S43.I6

: ::ta.. . . . . . . . ,. . . . . :,. . . . . .
-

'

PAT WIUTEHEAD
Assistant P\lbllsber/Controller

OHIO Weather

2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tales of a str~nger in a ·strange land

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Stnet
Pomeroy, Ohio

Page

~

Commentary

Tuesday, April 6, 1993

.

• ace en '
an c....ed In

. .

. .

A Coolville woman W&amp;jl ciled fot failure to yield Monday aftci-noon following a two-vehlclnccideot in Chesler ToW)lship.
According to a report from lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of lhe Slate
Palrol, Ruth A. Malta'S, 41, 53190 Lydia Road, Coolville,
__.. -~dlboundboundftom T~le
ip ~oadb92Ton!lownwship Road 9 1
.,,.. .......... •1011111
venA. driven Y :un.,..,y • Cliatfee, 43.
Recdsvllle.
•
.
. , ·
No
~ lJOih vellicles sustained light dalnage
an!lwae
from
scene. . . .
.
. . ·

=•Y

.
·-1

.. .

Caata~ planaed

.

Hillside 'Baptist Church -,viii pre-

I.S.VI.-•

sent an l!asla' C,Olat8 on SURdity at
I La.m. and 6 p.m. Rev, James R.
,
Acree Sr. invi~ the public.
.
~enictl-;t , .
. Good Fnday servaces will be
held . at the Raclae .United
· Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m. A
cantata wm bC presen~ by the
' . Li..____...,_ _ _ _ _ _""":'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,. Southern Clusterl C~olr. ·
· ·

Ew•~ Lew Pslcls.

Set Us AI

Rutl•• Fwr•lllre

:n.

..

lt.124 , .........
·742·2211 .

,,

.

',

~

�.Sports

-

..

.•

The Daily
.

I'

.

Tuesday, April 6, 1993

Sentin~l
Tuesday, Aprll6, 1893
.

~· Brayes,

Marlins, Reds among
winners in NL season openers

.

Peg~

,In NCAA men's championship game,

North Carolina tops ·Michigan 77 -71 ·.
By STEVEWILSTEIN
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - A
classic Final Four ended with an
epic blunder.
Nonh Carolina's national championsllip will fore...er be marked by
one wnehead timeoutCl!il by Chris
Webber with 11 seconds left, when .
Michigan had no ti!IICOUts remaining.
That call guaranleed Nonh Car-

olina's v~ctory, 77-71 Monday Webber said. : wng no excuses
·
night, and overshadowed Dean for his mistake.
Smith's ascendancy into the elite of
His call will be remembered
coaching history. His second more than his 23 points and 11
national title IUmed out oddly remi- rebounds, more than the 25 points
niscent of his first in 1982, a gift on scored in brilliaAt outside sh!JQting
the same Supetdome court after a by North Carolina's Donald
. botched play 81 the end by George- Williams or the 16 points scored .
town's Fred Brown.
i¥e by Eric Monttoss.
•
"I cost our teani the game,'~ . '~It's so much a mental game,''

•

W~LL·WISHERS GET AUTOGRAPHS.....,.
Ohio State basketball player Nikki Keyton (rar
right) signs auto11rapbs ror well-wishers wllo
W!lited ror ber and her teammates Monday at

MUW.- (Eldtod .11·2) 'ot Colifcwnio

- • Baseball•-

Tbursday's games

~-- -

'

L
0
0
0
0

· Pd.
1.000
1.000
1.000
.000

SL l...ou.il ..................0

0

.000

Chiaao ....................o

lol- ..................0

oblod U... Op&lt;ionod )ohn• Hudek, pochet,
to Tolodo ot .Jle Arnericm Anocittion.
KANSAS Cl!TY ROYALS -Pur·

(Finley J.l2), IMS p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
TW
Aorido ..................... 1
Now'Y..X ................1
l'llill&lt;lelj&gt;hio ..... ,....... l
Pilllbmjlo ................ 0

Columbus International AirpoJ:tln llooor of the
NCAA women's runner-up squad. Approximately 250 people showed up to cheer the Buck·
eyes. (AP)
·
,' .

ou..ll"" Mion-..1 :\5 p.m.

Gl

-Detrult .. Oakland, 3:15 Jim.

Ntw Yotk It a.J3VBI..AND, 7:0S p.m:
BMon al Kanau at,, , :35 p.m.

'-

.l
.5
1
I

1 .ooo
I . •000

chued ~ cantrKU cl. Hubie Broob, 'in(iclder, and Fnnk DiPino~ pitcher, from
Omtht of lhe American Auocittion. S11111t
Rick Reed, pitcher, outri&amp;ht to Omthl.
Optioned Bill Sampen, pltclier, to Om1h1.

MILV(AUKEEBREWERS- Woivod
Otl1 Oroon, pitcher, and Tom LtmpUn,

-•NHL•-

Cll.thcr. Optioned Jou ValcnUn infiC!ldu

to .NeW Oileans of'the Ameri~ Auocia~
tioo. Pun:hued lhe con~ract of Bill Sucro,
inflCldct, from New Orlwu,
MINNESOTA TW1NS - Placod
SctU Erick100, pitcher, on the IS·dty dil·
tbled Wt. RC(:tllcd Brett Mcrrim&amp;n, pitcher, from Por1J1nd of the Pacific CoiSl
IM!II•
•
. NEW YORK Y ANXEES - Optioned
Jeff John~cn. pitcher, \0 Colu.mbut o( 1hc

wALES CONFERENCE
Palrkll Dl•llloo

Allatlla ..................... 1
CINCINNATI .......... !
San owto ................o
Son Pnocioco ..........0
Colorado ....... .... .......0

0 1.000
0 1.000
0 .000
0 .000
1 .000

IIOUIIan .........:.........0
LooAnp .............O

I

,(X)()

I

I

.000

I

T...
x-PinobwJh ......
Wu!Unpon ......
N... Jonoy .......
N.Y. IIlmdas ...

.5
1

y-8\lffllo .......... 31 31 lD

New YOlk 3, Col.ando 0
Allonu 1,0Uoago0

Today'• games

Allanta (Smolu: 15-ll) 11 Chicaao
(O=non '"11),2:20p.m.
Lo1 Anaolca (R. Martinez I - ll) at
Aorido (Annooona 6-15), 7:35 p~ .
Son Di... Ill. . . )3- 14) " """""f'h
(Wuofiold B-1). 7:35p.m.
Phil•delrhia (Schilling 14 -1 J) u

Tum
W L T PIL CF CA
y-lloboi! ........... .... 211 9 97 349 271

y-ou...., .........

43 2:111

y•ToroniO ..........
SL Louil ...........
lotinnMda .........
Tompo Boy .......

34 35 10 78 259 276
22 51 5 49 2Z7 305

Wednesday's games
Colondo (Ruffut 1·6) at New York
(Sobcodlo"" 3-5), 1:40 p.m.
Ad.anla (Awry ll · ll) at Chic.llao (Hi·

a

x·clinc:hcd di.vi.aian tide
y-olinched ployof(borlh

COLORADO ROCKIES - P1occd
Rud' Soe.nez ... pitc:hcr, ~the 60-day di..
&lt;~ bled lin . Purchucd the contnct• ·or
Monday's score
Bruce Ruffin 1nd Br,n Smilh, phchcrs·
Hudon!!, N.Y. Ronll'ft 4
Gcnld Young, ou tfielder: 1nd D1nnY
Sr;bacffer, cuchor, frC¥n Coiottdo SprinaTonight's.games
ofll\e American Auoei1tion.
B(!!Mn tt ~.1';40 !).m.
.
·
FLOR! DA MARUNS - Purch••cd .
N.Y. J.lltnden n Wuhi'naton, 7:40" · ·
· !Jle contract:. oC Joe Klink and Bob Me·
p.m.
·
· .
Clure, pitch en, 1nd Rich Renterit ,. in·
• · St.l..cuit tt·Timp.·Baf, ·7:40 p.m;· .. · ...... , · ·ficjdcr; from Eitmt~~riton · orthc P~elfi c
Buffalo It MinneiO&amp;a, 1:10 p.m.
Co11t Lotp.
.
Philodclphio II WiMi~a. 8:40p.m.
• HOUSTON ASTROS - Woi•od JaCalatry at·l..ol AnacJCI, l 0:40p.m.
aon Orimtlcy, pi1el\ci. Purchased the con·
Edmonton,It San lOire, 10:40 p.m.
~of Eric Bdl, piltAer, and Rick Padt·
er, .,utlidder, fran Tue~or1 oflhe Ptcific
Wednesday's games
C,o•n League. Announced thtt Mike
Hanford "Oatwt, 7:40p.m.
S11nm1, oulficldcr, deelinod mincw lr.tJUc
Montrea.ltt Pitllbw)h, 7:40p.m.
•ulgnment tnd elect.cd free •Janey.
N.'(. RanputNewJmey, 7:40p.m. .
. LOS ANGELES DODGERS - 01&gt;' .
Edmonton It Vancouver, 10:40 p.m.
honed Pedro Mutl net, pitcher; Don

'Philadelphia (D. Jacklon 8- J 3) at
Ho.a~UJn {Hamiach 9-10), 8:M p.m.
San Fr.ncii&lt;:O (Wil1on 8-14) at S1.

Louio (Con.ioo 10.10), 8:35 P~•

Thullday•a games
MmtlfAlatCINCINNATl, 12:3.5 pm

San Franciaco at St. Lou.il, J:3S p.m.
· Son Di'IOII ~.·3 :05p.m.
"· ~ · ' "' 'Uii';(ftJWI'at A~..-..,AOp.m·. ·

·

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EULtnl DlwW.

GB

0

.000

.S

I

.000
.000
.000

..S
l
I

Dettoit ..........,, .........O . I

.(XX)

I

1

Dlvlalon
o· 1.000
T&amp;1M ....................... !
0 1.000

• Amerlcaft ~~au•

Colifomlo .................o

o .ooo
Chiaao....................o o .ooo
SCIIIuJc ......................o
IC.Int~~t OJ, .......... ,..0

'

0

.000

I

.000

.s
.s
.5

o. .ooo

.s
I

Monday•sacores

· 1

New Yedl9, C1.EvELAND I
Tbu 7, Baltlmote 4
Boaun :!, Kantu Cily 1
Ooilond 9. Deuoit4

Today's games

·

MitWiilbe (Wc:IJ'IW' 13·14) It Ctli·
t""'" (l,.onpolllH4), ~:05 p.m...
.
Chic•ao (MeDow.U 20.1 0) 1 t Min· ·
ne~CK~ CT•,W 16-11), 1 :~ p.m.
·
• TotGIIIO
21·6) II S..ulo (John· .
"'"12-14), 0:35P;"'·
.
.

IMoaia

Wednesday'• games
TOIOidO (I.Ai.., 0.0) It Sc.ule (BOliO
16-6). 3:35 ·p.m.
N,•i Yridl (,\lobo~~ 7·15) 11 CiJlVE. ·
LAl'!D (Mallo 0.2), 7:05p.m. '
, '

" Tu.11 (Lei~r1ndt 1·2} It Baltimore ·
~ ll-,).7: ~u.·
auooa• (lolcC
12-13J " Min·
(lliohaloo 4-7), 1:05 p.m.
•
..._(ViOla Ii· l2) at Kun11 Cit'
(C&lt;M 11-lll), 1:35 p.m.
Detroit (X.rueaer 10·1) tt Oakhnd
(t)ulinA 15·10), 10:05 p.m.

·

Melcndct, pitdlei', aild Tim Naduing and
J~ ValCir'ltin; infi!=lden, on tho 15·dl)'
.,_'olocllilt. ~ Britn COI'U'O)' tnd

• Nata Mlodoey, jllldleio, ·lli Powlllekot o1
~ lnlelnltliontl IA.aue. Pun:hd:ed the
CMIIICl of !meat Ril•, infieJ.dcr, rrom.
Pawtucket.
.
•
CALIFORNIA ANGELS - PIO&lt;od .
Mike Butcher, Victor Silvero •nd Juli~ n ·

Vt.:j_UU., pit.chen , an the 60-dtr_ ~•bled ·
.liR. Pun:kuod the conLnot or Oene Nel·

p\u:her, arid Jerome Walton, outftdd·
cr. from VancoUver of lhe Pacific Cout

tori,

l.co!U~

. .

.

'

CHICAGO WHITE SOX - Pur·
chased the cornnct of CarlLOn F',_k, Cl tch~~J~ N"hville or the American Auo-

CLEVELANO INDlANS - Plmd

Q.no Mliclr.i, pitcher., •nd Joel Skinner,
cttcher, on .lhc 60-dty diubled Jdt. Optioned J~•n Anduju, pitcher, to KinnOn
or the Carolin• League. Purchased. the '
eontrtctt of J~nior Ort.iit, calcher; Je'rt
Trud'w •y, i.nf'lclder, and Mike Bideclki.
plLchtr, from C1nton•Akrqn of the Batt·

oml.coJUo.
.
, DETROIT TIGERS - Pltced Alto ..
Tr~mmell, in fi elder,

...

...

.

on the. 1-'· day db·

By HOWARD SINER
Today's questions in the world
of sports:
• Will the new '''hurry-up" policy make it citSier to enjoy baseball?
That's .the idea, of course. The
commissioner's office believes its
guidelines wiD re5ult in beiter orga-

"

... '

PURCHASE FOUR· NEW TIRES

FREE

·RECEIVE A
FRONT END .ALIGNMENT

ihe .-... Tt:!
u"iafihe
........
JlftTD
PIRATBI- &lt;lPl!-J
ol lhe

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS - Op·
iione4 T0111 Urb1nl, pi~eh'•r~ Ollie
Can.MOG, .afiiWir, ... Tim . . . tn4

S..Jtoyw,W' Jdm,.O~otlha
ArMriOan A.n oR rl L

,...hi_.

"

l h c - ofllaw lliJ.ooll, ............
Bob 0...., COICbior,- 1M VOJU ol

....n~~awrn- ......
chtiOCI Lhe conereCt of Cnia Colbert,

........ .

..-.r-l'lloonlxotdtoPooi&amp;Cooa

.

,. . . u..... ..

• J'ooCbaU·

~~~.
NEW YORK ll!'fl ...,_Tra•ad Ken
O'Brien, q~, 10 lhe Orwe Bty .
Pock., for 111

ondlo4laolol .,.,. choOco.

North Carolina's Smith a constant ·
ignor_ed for top coachi.ng honors

· Trimble beats Southern 3-0 .

1-llionlllAopo.
PIIILAili!U'IIlA I'HILLII!.Il - Pllr·
choood
ol
ao, pildt·
•• tn.nR

SAN liii!OO 'PADIW-

ceremony in memory of two lndians pitchers killed in a boating
accident during spring training.
A sellout crowd of, 73,290 second-largest ever f:or ·an AL
opener- stood and clapped as the
jerseys of Steve Olin and Tim
Crews were presented to' their widows at home plate.
Jimmy Key held the Iildians to
one. run ain! three liits in eight
innings, while Danny ·Tartabull,
Matt Nokes and Pat KeUy homered
for th.e Yankees . .Loser Charles
Nagy lasted S 2/3 innings, giving
up seven runs 81ld I 1 hits .
Athletics 9, Tigers 4
· Eric Fox hit a grand slam and
Ruben Sierra drove in two runs off
former teammate Mike Moore as
Oafland won its home openec.
Fox, who hit three homers in Sl
games for Oakland last season,
homered off Tom Bolton in the
eighth after the Athletics loaded tbe
bases on ihree walks by Mark Leit· .
er.
.
Moore, who spent four seasolls
in Oaldand before signing as a free
agent with Detroit for $10 million
over three years, took the loss. He
al!o)Ved six hilS, walked three and
struck aut two in 4 2/3 innings.
Dennis Eckersley. who led the
majors with 51 saves last seljSon,
got the save after pitching out of a
bases-loaded jam in-the eighth.
Bob Welch, getting the openingday start for Oakland following the
departtire of .Dave Stewart,. got his
200th career victory. He went five
innings, giving up two runs on four
hits with no wallcs.

JIM

NEW YO'IK lll!TS - Oplioncd

.

Rangers, Red Sox, ·Yankees
post wins in.AL season openers.

Visiting Southern plated three . Bing singled twice, and SoUie sin.runs in the third inning, then went gled. .
'dn to post a 4-3 girls' softball vicSouthern plated asingle run in
·tory over Trimble Monday night.
the first to lead 1-0, then blasted
, Southern is .1-0 and Trimble &lt;l" I home a three-run· third inning .
both overall and in the Tri-Vlilley Christi Maidens reached on an
Conference.
·
emir, Mathews singled and Angie
Coach Howie Caldwell's club Swiger·delivered .an RBI single.
blasted nilie hits and received great Codner reached on a fielder's
pitching from junior Jodi Caldwell, choice ihat folted home a run, and
who fanned 10 and walked ooe bat- Raberta CaldweU had another RBI
ter in the fust outing of the spring. .
single .for a 4-0 SHS lead.
Bing suffered the loss for TrimTrimble scored single runs in
ble, fanning six and walking four. · each of the fourth, fifth, and sixth
' Southern was led by Megan innings, but Southern shut the door
.Wolfe and Marcy Mathews who in the seventh on the TomcaJS.
'each singled twice, while Christi
Southern plays Wahamli Thurs- taking tbo long to change pitchers
Maidens, Angie Swiger, Jessika day.
Codner. R,aberta· Caldwell and InninJI tolllls
Tabitha Willford each singled.
instructed to be more efficient
SoutNern: 103-000-0 = 4-9-1
' Waldeck led · Trimble . with a Trimble: 000-1 I I-0 = 3-5-Z
By
LITKE ·
.
What he still didn't have Moo- he knows - and that ·he could ·
Games are to begin on time.
double and single, Antle doubled,
Preliminaries are to be completed
NEW ORLEANS (AP) _ Th~: day night, however, was an apolo- recite completely - lhe numbers
no less than two minutes before the system changes subtly ~very sea- gy from the same &amp;roup that has that provide resonance to that life's
offil!ially scheduled srarting tirlle. son, the faces that mnke)t go a few · slighted him season after accom- work. So here they are:,
The home team is to be on the seasons after that
· plished season. The same people
'· The Trimble tomcats took curve ball which bounded away field, with its pitcher ready to
He is the constant, solid and who vote his teams to t!te top of the
. More games woq than any Diviadv.antage of three Southern pitch- from the SHS caJcher Billy Jones, throw .the ftrst pitch.
stolid, which might explain· why polls every season, but somehow s1on I coach except Adolph Rupp.
'ing miscues to claim a 3-0 Tri-Val- aUowil\g Day to reach safely.
Thereafter, the lead-offbaJter of Dean Smith is taken .for granted. can't scrape together enough votes Thirteen'Atlantic Coast Conference
ley Conference baseball victory
Day went to second on a wild every half inning is to be intro- And why, at Nooh Csrolina; really to make him Coach of the Year. titles outright, seven others shared.
over the Tornado diamondmen. in pitch, then was balked tQ third. duced by the public address . good· !lever quite seemed good And this year, of all years, they Eighteen straight NCAA tourna·
Southern coach Mick Winebrenner announcer 1 minute, 45 seconds enough.
Trimble Monday night.
, ·
·couldn't even scra!)e together ment appearances. The final 16 for
• Trimble . is 1-0 and Southern is felt that his club had Day' picked after the third out of the pria- halfSmith did not bounce, throw, enough votes to get him past the .12 straight seasons, nine final
· 1-1, &lt;l"1 in the 'IVC.
off at second, but just didn't exe- inning. Fifteen sec&lt;ilids later action shoot. or so much as touch a bas- nominating balloL
fours. A top 10 team in the fina)
. ' The game took the shape of a cute. Tom Hardy then walked to is to resume. Suilsequent batters ketball Monday night But. he' won . .:\t age 62, after 32 years at AP poll for 10 straight years. More
torrid pitching duel from the onset. men at the corners, stole second, will be introduced no more tha.n this nati!lDal chamDionship as surt• · Chapel Hill, Smith is n~ng .that graduates than most People have
. . In fact, during tile. twp-run second .. and both runners. advanced. on a ftve secQDds after tl\e.priot oliL ... ly as he won his ·tirst one 11 Yll8fS .stage iii. his life and his work when time to read about '
··
· ··
· · inning; Souihern's Andy Grueser wild pitCh, the score 1:-(l ... · ·
Will this actually work? Only .i( . ·ago iJi a town that is no saanger to · his legacy is becoming very, very · And. now, two national chiinpi- ·
Another wild pitch allowed everybody c~tes .
· struck out four players•. including
.' .
• strange happenings and voodoo is . important. He' will not admit that · onships.
·
the eventual first run of Justin Day. Hardy to come beirne.. On the play,
Similar guidelines were used almost a panicipatiori sport.
bay took a wild swing on.the shon Jones and the Trimble batter co!Hd- last year in the Arizona Fall
ed before Jones could make·the rag League. The six teams each played
Slceptics will note that George·
Sports deadlines posted. at the plate. There was no iriterter- ~ re~lnr season games. Average town's Fred Brown was the strange
ence call and the runner was safe.
wne: JIISI 2:23.
.
· happening, the youthful mistake
But rushinll thrOUj!h the Great wa,iting to happen back then, as
The Gallipolis Daily TribW!t,
· The Daily Sentinel, the Point
Southern had several chances to Amedcan Pastime ·lSD 't such a Michi11an 's Chris Webber surely
.
·
will be regarded now. And ·they
Pltasanl Register and ~ SliNJay- · score; but couldn't. Winebrenner good'idea.·
Times-Sentintl value the cootribu· said, "We had men iii scoring posi- · bne of the a~£!ons of base- will remind us Smith had Michael
NEW OWNER - MILLARD SPAULDING
tions their ~eaders make to the tion, but we just didn't get the job ball has always~ absence of Jordan and James W!)nhy on his
side back in 1982, and that he had
a clock.
sports sections of these papers, and done. Early in the seuon you have
Watching the Boys of Summer Donald Williams and Eric Moothese contrib.Wons will continue to to make the fundamental plays and
is supposed to be relaxi,ng.
troSS this night
be published.
we didn't do that either."
After all, time flies when you're
But the faci remains that Smith
· However, certain deadlines for
Leading 2-0 without the benefit
having
fun.
.
.
.
·m..xe than the freak plays nearly
submiasions wiU be observed. The of a hit, Trimble scored another·
And
there's
plenty
.
t
o
appi'eciate
a
dozen
years apart, more than the
deadline for photos and related arti- , ' tally in the fourth when Brett Lack··· clea for basketball and other wiaJer ey sinjled, stole second and third at the ballpark. Remember the old pro players who grace his bench fa
· .was the only consWit
sport, is the 1a1t day of the NBo\ 'and canie home on anbtlier wild saying thai baseball is only a dull a timegame
to
duU
people.'
Overlook
for a moment the
F'mals.
pitch to mab the score 3-0.
• What can coUege athletes do to str81ep aitd the helter-skelter sul&gt;Likewise, the deadlhlll for subSouthern hluers were Billy
UIIIROYAL · FIRESTOIIE • MAtTERCRAFT
· · ·· '
stitulions that wore down Micbiminions of local baseball- and Jones and Ryan WiUiams Wilh dou- help each other?
1
•
gan''s awesomely' talel)ted kiddie
soflbaU-related ~ and ·related . bles, and Jeremy Nonhup two sinOffer GQocl until April 15, 1913
articles, from.T,
to the ~· , gles. Trimble had bul two hlu, a
Quite a bit. Espeeially through corps. Ignotc the choreography thai
goes in.to an offense that produced
as well as other apring and summer single by Lackey and a single by personal intervention:
· SJJ(lrll. is the day of the last game Hook. •
.
,
At Gettysburg College, for the oppor1)1nities Williams cashed
of the World Series. The deadline · Grueser suffered the loss with .example, each v8r$1ty spon bas two in With one silky jumper after
f:J.~ and related artlc:les for
relieNrom Williams the .last two players designated· as STARS; another. Assume even the desire
fi
. aild other fall spOr1l is the . innings, They combined for 12 . which stands for SDidents Tl'!lining and the resilionce Cirolina disSaturday before the Super Bowl.
'strikeouu and five. walks; Day AthleteS Responsibly,
· played on both ends· of th.e court
came from within. ·
· ··
'l1lele ~ have been ~~~~- . posted the W\n and went the dis..
Throw
it
all
.
out
and
even
then, · · ·
tu!Od to give reac1e1J plenty of.wne tailte, posting eleven SUikeouu and
The two STARS; who lire !IOIIIithis
much
still
must
be
laid;
Sinith
·
to get their photos back rrom the three walks.
' i1ated and votCd ori 'by team memmanaged
to
be.
ln
the.
right
has
pllotograpby al!ldio of choice and · . Southern will plaY. Wahama ben, act Is ''peer helpers.'' They
can aerve to communicate between place at the right time. And now ·it
to live the stall's the OIJIIOdldlity to T!tunday.
State Route 124
Rutla1d _
players at GettYsburg and coachea, ha~ hippened often. enough th"t
pu6Iialt. theae apona pbotoa and Innln1 tataiJ · .
·tratners, counselors. and other ·even his fieJ:l;CSI critics ~·t call it
articlea darlna the .approprille ~- Southern: 000-001)-0 " 0-4-1 .
742~3088 .
'·
administrators. . .
coincidence. , .
son ror that aport.
Trl!llble: 020-100-x • ·3-2~2

or~i=~officials~alsobeing

Kmzt Bt-. ia&amp;W., UJ·Nod'olk of !.he

'

al's Tim Laker at tbe plate during Monday's
National LeaiQJe game in Cincinnati, which the
Reds won 2·1. \AP)
·

By Tilt Associated Press ·
also helped prevent a Kansas City
There was a presidential pitch in run in the founh when he made a
Baltimore and a royal Roger jn good relay to shortstop Luis
Kansas City on openin~ day.
Rivera, who then threw out Brent
After President Chnton threw Mayne at the plate.
out the ftrst ball in Baltimore, Juan
In other American League
Gonzalez and Dean Palmer each games, the New York Yankees beat
homered twice as the Texas . Cleveland 9-1 and .Oaldand defeatRangers ·beat the Orioles 7-4 Man- . ed Detroit 9-4.
da;t. .
·
Rangers 7, Orioles 4
In Kansas City, Roger Clemens
Baltimore starter Rick Sutcliffe
held the Royals to six hits and a run had a rocky oqting; giving up nine
over eight innings in a 3-1 Boston hits and six runs in six innings.
victory.
·
The Orioles took a 1-0 lead in ·
The Orioles and Rangers were the first when Bra&lt;jy Anderson
excited to play in front ·of Clinton doubled and scored on a groundout
and a ~rowd of 4(i,~45 - . the 60th by Cal Riplren. But Texas got five
· Major League· Baseball Executive consecutive sellout at Camden runs in the third on an RBI siligle ·
Council.
Yards.
by Rafael Palmeiro, and two-run
The average length of an Aineri"I got my picture taken with homers by Gonzalez and Palmer.
can League game in 1992 was 2 him, shook his hand. -... He e.ven
Texas starter Ci'aig Lefferts got
hours, 53 minuleS; in the National used my bathroom," Baltimore the victory despite giving up four
League, it was 2 hours, 45 minutes. manager Johnny Oates said. "He runs in six innings.
On average, games in each league walked through my .door and said',
· Red Sox 3, Royals 1
were about 20 minutes shOrter in 'Where's the' iohn?' and I said,
Kansas City, which got off to a
1977. '
'I'm right here. '
1-16 start la~t season, lost its sevLast season, the average AL
Clinton, a left-bander, wore an enth opener in the last eight years.
times ranged from a low of 2:41 in Orioles jac~et as he threw a high
Consecutive doubles by Wally
Kansas ·City to a high of 3:01 in opening pitch to Baltimore catcher 1oyner and George Brett put
Boston and Detroit. The average Chris Hoiles.
.
Kansas City ahead in the third. But
NL times ranged from 2:35 in
"I told him he needed a 'texas Boston took a 3-1 lead in ·the fifth
Chicago to 2:52 in New Yorlc.
Rangers jacket," said new Rangers on Greenwell's triple after loading
"The gui!lelines should increase manager Kevili Kennedy.~"Some- the bases on Rivera's two-out do,ueverybody's level or awareness to body is goilig to send hint one."
. ble, Scott fletcher's wallc and BiUy
speeding up games," says Wagner.
Clemens struck out five and Hatcher's single.
the league presidents - Dr. waikcid three ·while improving his
Loser Kevin Appier allowed
Bobby Brown or the AL and Bill · lifetime record against the Royals three runs and six hits in six
White of the NL - are trying to to 13-3; At Roy!JIS Stadium, inning&amp;. Jeff Russell, making his
make games 20 minutes faster.
Clemens 1s 6-3 with a 1.4S ERA.
debut for lhe Red Sox, pitched a
Cooperation is .being sought .
"I've always felt comforrable . perfect ninth for the save.
from .umpires, managers, coaches here," be said. ·.
. Yan~ees 9, Indians 1
and players.
.
·
Mike Greenwell drove in all the
It was an emotional opener. for
Key woes: pitchers taking too Boston runs with a bases-loaded Cleveland, which held a pregame
long between pitches, batters step- triple in the fifth. The left fielder
·
.
.
ping out of the batter's box too ,

~~ntoc:h!~u~-:"~~:'an~;!s

.

......... ._

to Buffalo

nized and more concise games. The
plan is to avoid boredom, increase
el'citement and draw fans.
"Our (loa! is to eliminaie dead
time dunng our games without
having to impose rule changes or
gimmiclcs," says Dick Wagner, the'
assis.tant to the chairman of the

Southern softball team beats
~Trimble 4-3 in first contesl

without a forest.

MONTREAL EXPOS - Pun:hucd

•
~A. · iftft=,

YOU'RE OUT! - Cincinnati backstop Joe
Oliver (left) gels ready to put the tag on Montre- ·

RUTLA.ND
TIRE SALES.

\he contnell of lltnrny lone~ 1nd Bruce
Walwln, pi&amp;cben, r..- Oa.aw1· at U\e In·

.•

,

policy ·hoped to hold
f~n intere~t, b~seball execs say

Pictu~~- the·Seve~ Dwarfs
'

.

;·'Hurry~up'

.

.

, tho Ptcific Cout U.gua. Set~\ Rip Orou,
pitcher, outriaht to Albtlil'!"QUB.

BALTIMORE ORIOW - Oplionod
Bnd Pautiftaton..pi\d!et, aad John Voip,
outftel.dcr, &amp;o ROcholt.cr bf Lhe ln&amp;.ematiooal la&amp;uo. Sent Anthony Telford, piLd1e..
outri&amp;ln to Rochetw.
BOSTON RED SOX - Ploc&lt;d Jooo

Sports ro e

Hudson.making up for late
start in bowling with two jobs

Rodriauoz. ourJicldet'l, t.o Albuquetquc or

BasetiaU

Wattrn

1

said Monttoss, who watched Web- .
her's blunder from the sideline
while waiting to get back in the
game afltr a brief rest. "It's ucnible mistake, but at the same time I
don't think that's an excuse,"
Unlike Duke's blowout of ·
Michigan in the title game last
year, thiS one was close all the way
and had great runs by ·both tealps.
If not for Webber's mistake, the
. ~ame very well could have gone
1nto overtime. •
Smith displayed his impeccable
talent for slidin11 player'S on and off
the court in a nonstop pr.essure
at~k. getting not only 12 poinu
and 10 rebounds ou1 of George
Lynch but excellent defense by
lesser-known Tar Heels like Kevin
Salvadori and Henrik.Rodl.
.
Mi~higan coach Steve Fisher
never let his team drift, leading
them back from a 48-40 deficit
early in the second half to a 67-63
advantage with four minutes left.
Williams' three-pointer and
· Montross' monster dunk opened
and closed a 9-poilil rua that pve
Nonh Carolina a 72-67 lead with
I :03 left. But a jumJ?Cr by Ray
Jackson and an offens1ve rebound
and layup by Webber closed it to
72-71 with 36 seconds 10 go.
Pat Sullivan madeit 73-71 when
he hit one of two free throws with
20 seconds to go. W:ebber pulled
down the rebound of the missed
second shot and took off downcourt as if determined to leap ~
length of the floor for a game-tying
· dunk. Nollh Carolina players and
MONTROSS SHOOTS - North CIU'OIIna poltman Eric Moo·
coaches screllllled t!taJ he nveled,
trosa pull up Ills sbOI against the dereose olrered by Mk:biJian's
but no whistle blew.
·
Chris Webber durln11 Monday nlabt's NCAA. cb!llllplonsblp pme ·
Picked up by first by Derrick
in New OrJeaos, where the Tar Heels erased a second-bslr dencit to . .
Phelps, then by Lynch, Webber
win 77-71. (AP)
·
dribbled furiously into the comer
•
neaJ the Michigan bench and called final three-pointer at the buzzer;
"Even if that timeout hadn't
timeout as he spun around to prot Phelps·Dun11 the ball in the air and occurred I think we had Webber
teet the baD.
Norih Carolina celebrated.on the double-teamed and could have han"First I though! he traveled . court.
dled him,'' Smitll said. "But it
dDWD 11 the Olhel end, and then he
. S!Dith, showing the class for made things a Jot easier when Donwent down and I thought ~e D'IV· .which he's alw•ys been known, ald stroked the free throws. I don't
eled again," Monttoss said. "And went right over to Fisher to shalce lhink lhe timeout won it for Nonh
then he-called a timeout, and I his hand. Fisher has one NCAA Carolina or lost it for Michigan. I
looked down and I heard every- title, 1989, and has lost in the fmals think we would have won even
without that."
·.
body yelling that they didn't have · two years in a row.
any more. (Assistant) coach (Bill)
(luthiidge ~I of a sudden broke out
in a . srin· I knew coach Guthridge
would know. He's thC: statistics
· man. I just started gi~ing."
Webber said he dido 't remember Fisller's n:minder during a · AKRON, Ohio (AP) _ Bowl- ·thing that I can't be good at,' • ·said
timeout with 46 seconds left that ing got a late ll8rt with Rick: Hud; Hudson.
.
.
Michig~~~~ had DO m..xe timeouts.
b hu he
-·-'·
•
"In the heat of the moment, son, ut
ever """"' up oor - He soon began taking lessons
lost'time.
from Fred Borden of Akron, got his
stran1e lhin11s happen,'' Fisher
He has two jobs in bowiing average up to 200 and was a solid
said. ''Chris said he heard someone
and ·
hollering and calling· for a timeout now:
JUSt lboul intaeepiS peo- player in · the All-Star Classic
ple to talk about bowling.
League at Colonial Village Lanes.
It's an awful way for the season to
"I love the game. It's a lifetime
Eventually, he made bowling a
end. No one feels worse than Chris, span and one of the greatest games career.
~~~~ 're not here except for ~ is,"llllid Hudson. "It is going
He bought intO Bowling Concellts
wiJh 'Borden and his panner,
· Rather than calling rot a time- through a time now when inten~st is
down. I just Wish there was lOme· M1ckey Ciriello. He is prcsidenl
out, sevellll Michigan players were thing I could do to help turn it and managins parmer of the busi•
' yelling, "No timeout,'' Ray J~k- arollnd."
ness, which sellS wrist liners, bowlsiJn said;
Hudson, 44, certainly is doing ing books and videos.
''It happened so fasL He seemed his part.
· He has had dealings with th~
to get caught up in the moment, but
H ·
f
B
1·
· I don't blame his one mistake for
e IS part-owner 0
ow mg PBA through the years, and when a
Concepts. an Akron-based compa- friend, told him about job opponu- ·
us losing a whole game,'~ said ny tllat distributes bowling-related nities on the Tour, Hudson jlpplied
Micliigan's Jalen Ro~. .
,
products.
• . and got a position.
:
· Rose is Webber's beSt friend on
Hudson also ~tly joined the
"The more I saw of the PBA
.the .tellill and .the .one . who hugged · Professiotml Bowlers Association throuJih the years, the more
and soothed Webb9: when he cried as part-time assistant tounlament impressed I became and lhe m..xe I
uncontrollably after the loss to diret:tor for the Senior Tout. ·.
wanted to get involved," said HudDuke • year ago. On Monday
. He's an avid and lllknted play- son. "I want to watch the Senior .
night, they shed no tears in public, et, too, with three career perfect • Tour grow. With all the babt
though. the disappointment was as gam~ 11111, 1 high serieJ of 798.
boomers turning SO, it is going to
deep.
Hudson ....,w up in Uniontown, be a success. I'm ge~ng in on the
ult's the same, lhe exact~e," '
.. - fc:l
f) oor. ..
,.
Webber said in a soft; sad voice.
Pa.; and pl~ed ootball in high
North Carolina was awarded school. At allfomia (Pa.) State .
vast exPeriences in bow ling
College, he was a diver.
h!lve left him with a lasting imprestwo free throws on the technical,
B 1·
f
h
•
Williams hitu.·ng both for a 7S·71
ow mg was or ot ers, not SIOn.
him.
•
"The
thing
thai
stands
out
about
lead, then 11lso got the ball back
. It was 1979; when he was bowling is the people. I like the .
with clack still at 11.. seconds. almost 30, when be took up bowl- challenge
of the game and the com•
Forced to foul Williams 011 the ing. Or, more p!ecisely, it took up petition. But
it's .the people thai
inbounds pass, Michigan watched h1·
make
it
what
is," he said. "I
him sink two more free throws with
"!;1 had never bowled before. 1 have met rhe it
nicest p~ople you
8 seco.n~ to go fof an unbea~le .got hooked fast and .I' wanied to get · could ever nieeL '.' · ·
.
6-point ~: When Rose.lfli'Ssed a better. I refuse to compete in any-

Wikttmtllu, cttcher; Rtftcl Boumia•l,
ahontop; •nd Rt11l Monded ind Henry

- * )'ransactions • -

Ookloncl ................... I

MiMoo&lt;lq ................0

ATLANTA BRAVES - Pu«:hued
lhe contra cts of Steve Bcdroailn, ' ' '
HoweU,, and Orcs McMichtcl, pil.eheu ,
from R1chmond or the lnternationtl
IMBUe. Pl1ccd Mtu. Mum,, pi ~ hc r, on
the 60-dty diu bled list

~poJ .. . .. . 37 35 1 II 302 303
t.on ......... 26 .,,
60 219 111
San)~ ......... ,_. 10 68 2 22 2lJ1 400

Monttell (Nabbolz 11·12) i.t CINCIN-

0

Nation• I LetRill

y· Cal..,Y .......... 40 29 10 90 297267
y·l.oo ""ada .. .37 33 9 83 320 319

NATI (llel&lt;b"'ll·l4). 7:35 p~ .

0 1.000

3.5 34 10 80 26S 2.64

y- VItiCOUvcr ..... 42 -28 9 93 319 253

.bbonl 10.7), l:!Q p.m.
Loa An1elu (Kevin Orou 8-13) u
Aori&lt;lo (Hommond 7-10), 7:35p.m.

Now Yodo ................ !
Milwau.ll.ee ...............O
Toronto ....................O
Bahirnon ..... :...........O
CLEVELANJl .........O

97 263 219
42 26 II 95 277 226

Sm}lhe Otwlllon

.

L . Pc.L
0 1.000

TEXAS RANGERS - Pun::hued the
conlOicu of John Ruudl, cttc:her; Buu:h
~ D•vi•, outfielder, ·•nd Bill Ripken and
Doug Stnnae. Wieldcn. from Oldahan•
Cily or the American Auoci1tion. Pur·
chucd the c:onta«;t of Denji Gil, Wielder,
from Chtdcston of the Soulhcm l..caBUC.
Moved Hoctor Sa~ardo, ritch~r. tnd .Jeft
Fl)'c, ·Inntlder, from.lhe !5-d•y to the 60day dU.blcd list· ·

~

NorriiDiv~

San Pnnci1co (Budr.eu 13-9) .at S1..
LoWa (Towk.sbluy 16-5). 1:35 p.m.

Ttam
W
8CJII.OJI,..................... 1

Wielder, to a onc.ycucoruncL

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

.._.1.011 (SWllldellll-1), 1:0.5 p.m.

)

116 32'1275

IWifonl ............ 2A 49 5 53 261 346
Otilwt ............. . 9 66 4 22 190 372

Aill.ao.lphia 3, Howt.on 1

.

OAKLAND ATHLETICS - Pur·
chuod tho c:onllllcta ol Rich OOINJO tnd
Ed )Via Nu.nez_J&gt;itc:hcrs, tncl Eric Fo-.. o.LI·
fielder, from Tacomt of the Plcific Cout
.Waue. Op~onecfHcnry Mercede~, cttch·
cr, •nd Craig Paquette, infielder, lO Tl como .
SEATTLE MARINERS - Pltccd
Ed an M•n.i.net. third bneman, on lhc 1S·
dty dil1blcd li.Jn. Signed Wally B1clcnun,

•• - .... ........ 47 27 6 100 317 266
y·Booton ........... 46 26 7 99 306 260
·-~ .......... .... 2!110 98 333 2&amp;1

.: floWh 6, Lo. Anjda: 3

·.•·

lntetnadon1l Letau.c.

Adami DIYilto.

. Moaday'sS&lt;ores

_

&amp;0 !I 7 17 301 270
38 35 6 82 214 275

37 34 6 10 301 271
N.Y. R"'J!"' .... 34 33 11 79 294 282
l'bilodelplli.u... 30 37 II 71 294 306

.5

CINCINNATI 2, M_. I

.

W L T P1L GF GA
53 21 6 112 343 253

By BEN WALKER
to David Justice, and. that was runs on six hits and six walli:s in
.AP Baseball Writer
enough for Maddux. ·
five innings.
·
. Greg Maddu~ had a nice stan,
Maddux drew jeers when his
Reds 2, Expc111l
too.
name was announced before the
With banned owner Mar~e
. On an opening day dominated game and during his fust .at-bat A Schott watching from an upstairs
by the debuts o'f the expansion ·fan also threw back a foul ball box, Cincinnati won for the lOth
Florida Marlins and Colorado Maddux hit into the stands.
time in the last II opening days.
Rockies, Maddux pitched like a Cy
Milrlins 6, Dod1ers 3
.A crowd of 55,456, the largest
Young winner Monday. •
Charlie Hough, the 45-year-old in regular season history at' River·
Maddux, who won the award knuckleballer who grew up in front Stadium, saw Jose Rijo shut
last year with the Cubs, returned to South Florida, pitched six innings out Monll'eal on five hits for eight
Wrigley Field and led his new · and won at soldout Joe Robbie Sta- innings. The victory came in the
team, the Atll!nta Braves: to a 1-0 dium. Bryan Harvey, unwanted by Reds' first game with Tony Perez
. victory over Chicago.
California after last season, closed as manager.
·.
Maddux, booed loudly by the with one scoreless inning . for the
Rob Dibble relieved Rijo to stan
fans who used 10 cheer .him, gave sa'Ve.
the ninth. He gave up a two-out
up five hits ill 8 1/3 innings. Mike
Jeff Conine went 4-for-4 and home run to Larry Walker before
Stanton fmished for the save for the Walt Weiss drove in the Marlil)ll' finishing up for the save.
two-time National League phampi- r~ two runs with a triple off Orel
Chris Sabo homered in the secons.
Hershiser .. Bret Barberie got the ond inning off Dennis Martinez.
"It was motivating," Maddux fi!'St hit 'for Florida, a single in the Kevin Mitchell, acquired by lk
said. "It was fun and I don't blame;:. fi!'St inning.
·
Reds to hit for power, produced tilE
them, not really. It's the one woo .
Hough struck out the ftrst two · second run with an infield single in
. don't understand that are upset the batters of the game. He gave up the fifth.
,
most"'
three runs and Hershiser 'was .
Schon·is not allowed to sit in
There were only cheers in ragged for 10 hits and five .runs in the owner's box bMind the du$out
Miami, where Florida won its fti'st five innings.
_
during· her one-year suspens1on.
game, 6-3 over Los Angeles. The
Mets 3, Rockies 0
Instead, she sat in a private box
Rockies, however, lost 3-0 to New
Dwight Gooden piiched a four- behind home plate and saw herself
'.York.
·
hitter and- made Colorado JIIIIIUijl;er . in a taped message to the fans
In other NL games, Cilicinnati .Don Baylor's batters look li,ke played bef~ the game.
-·
beat Montreal 2-1 and Philadelphia exJlQIIsion players at Shea Stadium.
PbiDies 3, Astros 1
took Houston 3-1.
·
: Philadelphia's ":erry Mulholland
. Gooden retired 17 straight bat·
' Maddux left the Cubs and ters 81 one stretch and fmished with pitched a f~ur-hmer and Doug
'signed.a five-year, $28 million con- his 22nd career shutout, and fi!'St in DrabeClost hiS Houston debu~
tract with Atlanta. The Braves 44 stnrts since June 15, .1991. He
Mulholland walked one and
:already boasted the best starting · struck out four and walked o.re!
struck out three in outdueling
Drabek, the 1990 NL Cy Young
staff 10 baseball, and Maddux
~ oined .a team that led the majors
Andres Ualarraga got the first Award winner, who was making
with 24 shutouts last season.
hit for the Rockies, ·but he struck his fust stan for the Astros after six
' Maddux did 11Q1 permit a runner out with the bases loaded to end lhe ' seasons wilh Pittsburgh.
.
past second base. He walked three .. third inning. Galanaga also made a
Drabek gav.e up only four hits in
and struck out four. ·
brural baserunning mistake in the eight inrtings and retired his last I 3
Mike Morgan, one of Maddux's ninlh, getting thrown out trying to batters. But he gave up two runs in
best friends, was the loser. He pve stretch a sin~le into a double..
the fourth - an RBI double to
up an RBI single in 'the first inning
David N1ed, the No. I p1ck in Darren Daulton and a run-scoring
. p . b'
the expansion draft, gave up two single to Jim Eise~ich.

."

"

P

LEASE put cui 9ll 4our coni'pfires ccmplefel4. ·
Because
a burnf forest is ncl a pretlij pidure. .
.
. ·.
.

".
....
,f

'I

Sipledl..,. ,__,lillttiod.
SE~TTLE SEAHA'It'D - ' An·

..

.

'
!I

.I

'

Onl'l You Con Prov~rot Fo~esl f...,,.' .·

nounced t.he IMlnm•n of N•br Olal•
· ·1ow, llf•Y· ··

'•

.

"

.,

.I

&lt;

'

"'

1

..

••

'

RUTLAND · tiRE ·saLEs·

1\ . .J

•

.

�'"

.

'

r.

,. 7

.

ByTheBend
•

....

•

American·students encouraged
nofto smoke; 'Say No, Old Joe'
n

m

Came.:

•

.dw.s

CONTEST RULES

..

.

The S-year-old daughter of a
couple I know has three small warts
on lieF eyeli&lt;l. The doctor told them
it will COil $2,000 to remove them.
I believe if they use my remedy, the
warts wiD disappear and it won't COSt
, 1ban lilY more lhln the pice of a

•

.

•

.....

Wbll I need to kllow, Ann, ··· if
Ibis could in Illy way damage the
1ia1c lid's eye. - WILllAM IN N.
IUCJii.ANJj HILLS, TEXAS
DEAR WilLIAM: 1be bauna
WIAnd·n

The Dally Sentlnei--Page-7 .

'

Tuesday, AprilS, 1993
Pllgll 6

0

Landers

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The ·DailY Sentine\

'

DEAR READERS: Ha'e'• a.,_ . A. n
. n
· from the American Medical
· Associllioa on 011e o1 my ra~
subjcc:ls. I ... deli...... 10 111ft il
with you:
Dar AM I 1 ;: In 111 effort
to ua
awaa en llll!llll JUIIIII
hildren .,.. . . ._ 1 smot
cing, u.s. SUfJI'&amp;lll •a-.1
C
Anlrllg•
~ and lbe American MediciJ
Associ Ilion ae II" -·iDa a lillian- $S ,1100 arut for educational
wide e&gt; zr;a caDcd Say No, Old Joe. rr 7 ills or recra?ional eq11ipmmt
The toblcco i""'""h) .is lp!!llding
The en?ries should be in ?be
mil1ioni toeato•naumking. his ll8dent'a own words and lllould
succeeding. Every day. 3,000 iadnde 1be ...,...., iwDe. lddresl.
chikken Jigbtupdleilllintcipft:ae. ll'kPiol~t IIUIIIberand dloolname.
The moR hei110111 of ?be iaduary's EDirics llhould be 11111 10 Say No,
effoits is lbeuaeofa-ldh.giOOI OldJoe,c,loBooks.andBeyond, 309
called "Old Joe CUiel," · wllo Nolth Rios Ave., Solana Beach,
po~aays cipeae a!l!!ting as a "cool ~- 92075. All ealries are due by
thin&amp; to do."
Apri122.
·.
The AMA and Dr. Novdlo want • Dea' AU l.aaclen: I. am I 68·
to enc:oiiiiF """"'" 10 help 110p year-CIId !BY who has enJOyed .fOI:U'
tobecco use 1111011g lhcir peen by colo. IUICe you Slllled 10 wniC m
fJihtin&amp; bact. 1bey - asking Sill- 19SS. I'd like hi pass along a
deniS in grades K duougb 8 10 chw remedy for war?s.
a posta' or wrile a IeaeF poem or
I had a WIKt on my eyelnlw. I
essay one Jll8e or leas,
"Old read tbal I could remove it liy putJoe'
wby be shoo11d SlOp ling lbe peel ~a ripe~ on ?be
• SIIIODig. We hope lbal •ew "" 1 wiD Will. The artiCle I read said to use a
use it 81 1 lflilllboln1 1_0 discuss peel that bad tiJ!1ICCI brown ~d
· the ctx1e11 of lllli*i"C widllheir · sogr:strd pn:aemng the b8llana m
stlldCIIII.
·
aluminum foil in the ;refrigerator.
wu.n will be cholel• ill three The blo.- the beUer:
.
categoriCs .. grades K-2 3-S and 6I followed the mstructloas
8. Each winning Student
receive precisely 8lld the. wart gradually
a $200 u.s. avings bond 11111 1 trip fw wnesmaller andsmalkras I confor two 711 Washinglon. D.C.,IOmeet tinued the b8llana trealllleDL II took
?be surgeon aeacraJ. In additioo, ~venl days, but the wart flll8lly
eatb winnel's school will receive 1
disappealed.

t JkApdl&amp;. 19!D

••••••• S1 S.OO
PillE ~-•· Sl0~001
· - ss.·oo ..'
PIIZE ••••••••••

~or •~oftheyou
_ liltlewho~~Leylhis~
" ...._
uw...

isa pfy, off-?b&amp;-wall gimmick, let
me usme you tbat it can work.
(Note, I said c1111, not will.)
.
,For a very long · time folk
medicine has "cured"~ of WiltS
in a 'llriety ~ 1 Siring
IIIOW1d them, 7lping a copper penny
ovec lbem and ao on. Why this works
I cannot say, but in many caaes it
does.
.
For those of you who want to uy
it. I ,would be interested in knowing
the resu!IS.
All alcohol problem? How Cllll )IOU

SOUTHERN CHEERLEADERS - Tbe
Southern cbeerleadlnll squad bad six seniors this
past season. Th.eser 11irls -were honored Sunday
ror theil"'rmal seaaon cheering on the sidelines•.
Pictured are (L-R) Nikki Ihle, Valeria ConnoUy

help your~lf or someone you love?

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1. Just color one or More ·of ihe drawings on these ·
• pages, fill in t_he bla•k• a•d take your entry to '"•
sponsoring store befo,e 12 Noon, April 1Oth.
.
2. Entries will be (udged in two ·differe•t categories:
. ages 4·8 and •·12.
3. Children 111ay enter as Many pictures as they like
but can win o•ly o•e prize.
.
4•.Crayons only May be used to color pictures.

· and Raberta Caldwell. Back-Christi Mllcleu,
Tamara Hayman aad Jull Hill•.Clll!nOIIJ ud
Hayman w~re lwQotlme Nat1011al All-Star Cheer·
leaders.
·

"Alcoholism: How to Rl!cogllize It,
How IIJ Oi!al With II, How to Conqlll!r It" will give you the IIIISMrf.
$11/IIJ 11 ulf·addussed.- long, busi~ss-mll llnWlopll twl ti checA: or
lrtOJteY order for S3 .65 (this illcludes
poltllfll twl holldling) 10: Alcoltot:.
Suzy Carpenter, Meigs Local conference partially through the o:n reforming science education.
clo AM Ltm11lrs, P.O. Bo;c 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (I" Can- Schools, recently attended the Ohio auspices of the Effective School Ms. Kapitan discussed the reforms
Nutrition Education Leaderspip Rural Demonstration project to for the 90's and use of the twaasada. st/IIJ $4.45.)
Conference in Columbus.
gain information that will help on instructional methods at WOik.
Goals of the conference were to ;Pomeroy Elementary School staff
Charles Warren, .science consul•
promote interdisciplinary teaming develop a giant for nutrition eduCa- tant for the Ohio Department of
designed to integrate nutrition into tion, which if received, could bring Educ(ltion, concluded the comerexisting educational programs at all several t~ousand dollars into the ence. He discussed the cominglllld
levels ofschool and r.o use person- building. Focus of ihe grants is to needed changes in education and
Community Calendar items North Second Ave., Middleport.
POMEROY - Bricklayers LOc:il nel and facilities of the School increase children's consumption of the use of the ,tate proficiency
appear two da)'S before u event All officers and others inlerested in No. 32 will meet Thursday at the Food Service Programs in this pro- fruits, vegetables and grain prod- te,ts. Warren noted that teachers·
and the day of ?bat evenL Items participating are encouraged to Pomeroy Library at 8 p.m.
motion. Other aims were to dissem- ucts, to educate children and their need more time to ·eoUabonle IUid
must be receMd weD Ia ad\'IIIIC% attend the meeting. Sponsors of
inate
nutrition education materials families in wise decision making pii!Jl with olher teachers.
'
to IISS!lre public:atioa· ia lbe cal- cars, help with building cars, and
SYRACUSE - Ordinance at the !Oschools and'non-profit child care when choosing and buying food.
endar.
race officials as well as other work- Syracuse First Church of God will agencies 10 determine the effectiveThe proJect is designed to
OS S
ers are needed
be Thursday at 7 p.m. with commu- ness . of the NET program and acquaipt chtldren with food they
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) TUESDAY
nion.
assess needs in nutrition .education. might I)Ot know and encourage George Jones, Suzy Bogguss IUid ·
, POMEROY - First Southern
POMEROY • There will be a
Mrs. Carpenter, who holds a them to tty new healthful items in · Ricky Van Shehan wen:. selectee!' ·
Baptist Church will hold revival regular meeting of Pomeroy Lodge
RACINE - An organizational B.S. from The Ohio State Universi- various ways. The grant also pro- as hosts of the TNN-Music City
services through Thursday at 7 No. 164 F&amp;AM on Wednesday at meeting for the Racine. Fourth of ty and a M.S. from Ohio Universi- · vi des for in-service training for News Country Awards show.
;;.
p.m. PasiOr Lamar O'Bryant mviles 7:30p.m. Practice exen:ises wiD be July celebration will be held Thurs- ty, both in Home Economics lido- !iChool staff, including food service
Fourteen awards will be~­
the public. Evangelist will be Ron- · held at 6 p.m, at the Middleport day at 7 p.m. at the fire station. cation, is also certified in·elemen- personnel, teachers and adminisb'a- ed June 7 at the Gruel Ole ~­
del Manin, Columbus; and soloist Masonic, Lodge. All master masons Any group or organization wanting cary education and currently feal:h· tors.
·.
·
House. Winners are picked by
will be Morris Wood, Gainesville, invited.
to panicipate should have ~ repre- es second grade at Pomeroy EleThe second day's sessions fea· country music fans.
•
Ga.
Sentative.attend the meeting.
mentary. ·
tured Roxanne · Kapitan, MasAwards will be announced durRACINE " The children's Easter
Mrs, Carpenter attended the sachusetts, nationally known leader ing a live 2 1/2-hour special Oil
MIDDLEPORT - ,Revival will pro~ w~l be presented at the
RUTLAND - The program,
cable TV's The Nashville Networt.
be held through Wednesday at 7 Rai:me BapbSI Omrch on Wednes- "Wash Their Feet," under the
p.m. nightly at the Hope Baptist day.
direction of Marilyn WiUiams, wiD
Church in Middlepon. Rev. Fred
be presented Thursday at 7 p.m. at.·
RACINE - The Racine Chim:h the Rutland Church of the
Hill, director of Missions for the
bold 'revival Nazarene. '(he public is invited.
State of Ohio, will lie the evange- of the Nazarene
with Rev. Dave Canfu:ld, Wedneslist
day through Sunday at 7 p.m.
POMEROY ., The Rutland Ele·
POMEROY , American l.A:gion nightly and at 10:30 a.m. and 6 · mencary sports banquet 'will be he?d
Drew Webster Post No. 39 will p.m. Sunday. Rev, Joy Sizemore Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at Meigs
meet Tuesday. Dinner will' be at 7 .will provide specU!Imusic. Public High School. Bring drinks and a
invited.
p.m. with meeting.at 8 p.m.
potluck dish.

Suzy Carpenter attends conference

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Communiry cal~ndar

H t

llam•-------,...---------l'o&amp;e~ ·

announce'd .

Address, _ __,__ _- : - - - - - -- - - - -

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TUPPj;RS PLAINS - . The
RACINE . The Southern JlDiior
·
Orange
Township Trustees Will
High Boosters wiD meet Tuesday
meet
Wednesday
at 7:30p.m. at the
at 7 p.m. at the junior high school
hOme of the clerk, Patty Calaway.
BURLINGHAM - The CommitTUPPERS PLAINS • The
tee for a Bedford Township Volun;
teer Fire Department will meet at Meigs United Methodist Cooperathe Modern Woodman Hall in. tive Parish Lenten drama "Lord Is
Burlingham on Tuesday at 7:30 It 1?," will be presented at SL Paul
United Methodist Church in Tupp.m.
pers Plains on Saturday at 8 p.m.
· BEDFORD - Clean-up of the Public invited. Sharon Hausman,
Bedford Township Ce!IICICries will pastor, inviles the pUblic.
begin next week. Anyone wanting
'
· MIDDLEPORT - The Middleto keep flowers and grave decorations · should have thOse items . port Park Recreation Committee
will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
removed by Tuesday.
at the council chlunbers in Middle.POMEROY - The Ladies FOE pon. Public invited.
Auxiliary No. 2171 willl'l!eet Tiles· -:-~
.. day at .7:30 jl.m. There.·will be a
·
THURSDAY·
POMEROY • Communion ser·potluck at 7 p.m. ·· . ·
vices .at Cl!lvary Pilgrim Chapel
REEDSVll.LE - The Communi- will be Thursday at 7:30 p.m. with
. ty Education Committee for East- Rev . Amos Tillis. Rev. Victor
em Local Sch011l District will be Roush invites the public. There will
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the high be no Wednesday services. ..
school.
POMEROY - Maundy Thursday
POMEROY · Preceptor Beta. services .at Trinity Church . in
Beta Chal)ter, Beta Sigm_a Phi Pomeroy will be at 8 p.m, with
.
Sorority, wiD meet Tuesday at 7:45 . communion.
p.m. at the home of Jane Walton.
OfficerS will be elected. · ·
·'
CHESTER - Shade River Lodge
· No. 453 F&amp;AM will ineet Thursday at 8 p.m. RefreshmeniS will be
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs County served.
Soap Bo~ Derby plans wiD be furPOMEROY • The Pomeroy
thered at a meeting to be held
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the..offiee Group of AA will meet Thursday at
of .,the.. Blue Streak Cab
. \ .. Co., 172 7 p.m. at !he JTPA lioilding. Further information may be obtained
by calling 992-5763.
..

Birth is announc~d '

POMEROY There will be an
organizational
meeting . of the
Mr. and Mrs. Patric_k .G ress,
Pomeroy
High
Class
of 1968 on
· Columbus, announce the birth of
Thursday
at
7
p.m.
at
Pizza
Hut in
their founh son,.William Adam, on
Jtomeroy
to
plan
for
hs
25th
March 17:
reunion.
·
The infant weighed . eight .
pounds arid six ounces.
·
TUPPERS PLAINS - A free
Other children at home are Ben,
community immuni:tatiO!l clinic
, .jamin, JOtep! and Jonathan.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. will be offered at the Tuppers
Walter Roush. Syraclise, and Mr. .Plains F'ue Department on Thurs- ·
and Mrs. Richard Gress, l&gt;Jiddle- day from·9 am. r.o 3 p.m. for ages
. IWO througll ~arten . Children
J!Oil.Mis.·D9rothy Roller is pa~ must p(Ovide an immuni zation
record.
great_:-grBI!dmother. . .. ' •· • '
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NEW YORK (AP) - Mick Jag- .
ger WJIS willing to rip h's face .in
half for !he video of his new song
"Don't Tear Me Up," but not for
laughs.
Through computer enhancement
- J&amp;~~er !I~ to pull his cheek
out until it nps.
"We had to be careful," J&amp;~~'er
said in .a news release Monday.
"The effect had to be horrific. If it
was funny, we wouldn't use it" ·
The video used seiS based pn the
1919 silent German film, "The
Cabinet of Dr. Caligari,' • with a
triptych portrait of Jagger by the
late Francis Bacon.
.'

Slate Auto's already
low premiums can be
· reduced even more by
insuring both
car
.and l)ome.with the 5~11
Auto Compan!&amp;S.

your

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Let us tell ypu just
how much your savings
canbe. · ·

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IN -THE_

••• __.......________________...,...._.JI&amp;t__,_

•POINT PlEASANT REGISTER
•GALLIPOLIS-'DAILY-TRI-BUNE·
•POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
•

Address. _______________ _ _

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FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1993
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CALL DAVE
OR P. J.
.
FOR MORE INFORMATION ...
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992·2.155_

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~$t.,.Auto

1n..,..nce Comp•lll•• .

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...... , ,.,~"'"'"'·.

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·FRIDAY, APR.L 16, 1993 .~ NOON ·. ...

INSEITIDN DATE:

I
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'1111111---~----------A&amp;L_
.I
. Address: ______•__,__ _ _---"-"--:-....;..------

MIKE SWIGER INSURANCE
·'----~~~_Fl!!f!~~~.!:..~~l;tpE~T.:..&lt;?,_H,!.O_____ j ,

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. ADVEITISING DEADliNE:

•

214 EAST MAIN
. POMEROY
.·992-6687
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LAWN &amp;. GARDEN
s·
P
ECIAL
S
_
E
-CTION
.

Jagger gets facial

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Pege 8 · The Dally Sentinel ·

Tuesday,Aprll6,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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BULLEnI
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
· PUILICAnON ·

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HEY BOYS' AND GIRLS,
ENTER THE 1993 EASTEil COLORING
CONTEST AND HAVE .A LOT OF .FUN AND
EXCITEMENT. YOU MAY WIN UP TO $15
AND ·I T'S SO EASY TO ENTER.
'

.ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR

'

Guttert
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
·
. F~EE ESTIMATES

Tht Pile» hal- rtd&amp;ad .. te1,800 ond

""''"' llnlnclna .. up .. -

"' ~ .

bo poooiblo far quolitylng por10 ...,. 110fY nlot homo on 3'A In

Rldne. 4BR,3-, 2 - · . - ·

. BA opt P10po!IJ 4,8110 oq. fl. farm
bldg.
Cal 014-11112-71041ar
I.
.

aULLDO~R, BACKHOE

"!MMTRA KHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
8EPnc SYITEMS,
HOllE SITESIIIKI
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAIING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALI.ED
LIME8TONE~CKlNG

949-2168
3-16-93-tln

.

NEW AT OSCAR'S

BUFFET

lOTS

WIN
CASH
PRIZESI

OF •

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IASY
'!' TO .
ENTERI

omN

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P~n•--~----~~----~~~-----~

,--~

PRESCRIPTION .SHOP

r-----------

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

"f

Nlmt_~;::---_;_-_ _ _ __.:.::_

1 _
..p

_A•

Address_
· - - - - - - : - - ' - - - -·- - - -

Phone----------.----~.....:_

\

HERITAGE HOUSE/LOCKER 219
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

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I

I Plio_"-

VALLEY LUMBER

co.-

L----------~2~~!2~~9~~-~-------~

Closotl Saaday
992-S$77

(4) 6, 1tc

-

SMALL DOZER WORK,
DRIVEWAY WOII
· 1111 UMESTONE ·
DEUVERY SERVKE

In Memory

992·7553

CHARLIE'S

~-WCOJP 011. 41711

FOR
.. . SALE

..... HARDWOO.D
Seasoned
$40.00 a load
Dtllvtred.
' (614) 992·5449

OWNER:
· Jeff Wkkersham ·

12131192/tfn

3-11-93

MAIIITEIIANCE

PQNDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING .
WATER a &amp;EWER .
UNE&amp;
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limestone,
Di~ Gravel and Coel
Ll NtED anciiiONDED

949·2391 or
1·100··37·1460
Fertlllzli.g, W_.ng. and
Seeding.
Shrub IIIKI y,..~rlmmlng
A Romoval
·

AND EVERnHING UNDERNEATH

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR-sALE

BUILDERS
'

TRO

Call 614-992~

20 Years Exp.

6t37
St. Rt. 7

Ra ISantlal&amp; commercial
F,..EOII,_

FIREYfQOD FOR SALE

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY

.

EAGLES

CLUB
IN POMEROY ·
6:-ts p.m.
Special Early Bild

742·2328

.
313113 tin

-

eire..iN,

12-5-tfn

ROOFING

Quail~ _ ·

Stone o.

~Mowing.

Pl. 614·992·5591

$100 Payoff

Thia lid good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 00$1-32
1112v.2111n

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
YOUNG'S

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE

•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D. A. 1051011
EXCAVAniiG
(614)
667·6628

........

. . BISSILL &amp; I"RIE

CARPENTER SERVICE . · COISTRUCYION
RoomAddillone
.
-a.ctrtcal a!ld Plum~lng

·

-GuttetWorlc

~no

·
Remollel••
Stop I ( OIIPIN

-1-rlar. Exterior

Pointing ·
(FREE ESTIMA'It:S)

V;(, YOUNG Ill

FlEE ESIIIIATES

992-6215
POIIItf'oy, Ohio

10 92

•New Ho••
G
a .,....
.Co~let•

·

L---"!"'~~---·_-tln....

915-4473
667
·
•6179

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows ·
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992·7 643
lllo Su-..-y

·• .._

'... .

Jtaao-ilentals

p_..,._ '
· RODGERS E-Z

ft::~~~,:o;:j
WrttaT~For
~~. ~

N • 61 . . .
1

•

HEY GUY8111

ToiJat!l.

• 01111¥1111, ..

n- -

-

~T~o ,',":' ~~

Be 18 ,,., Unillllr Co. 1112-131.
0815.

.

~r~='f:S~:OO, ~.!;

1 Choleolll 1~

ext.

=.o~~~=~~:'.oe-.1'

Talk Uvo Will llooillll1ut Gltttll

-..11

~ nn
~======:::::=·=====1"'=. c.• - r •-1110

Ext.
All WaHina To
F... 1o
""'II
11:11. lUll Pw llln. 18
YIL Unlolar Co 102411.olll.

Guaranteed Scholarship Money
for •II college bound students.

4

Giveaway

,I Kilt""! White Spole. 114 ... 0111.

"regardless of income
'regardless of grades
· 'plus $20k guaranteed loan
'reg~rdles$ of credit

2 Fro1t Struts • Llilior
• 4 WlleellliJIIMnt

' llack

875-32731:00 Pll. . . .
.
·--~-.-

Old FuiiSiu-- . . . .
9pr1..........1Q3. ·

To collect your scholarthlp money
·
call 614-985-3556
Open Mon.-Fri. 1G-7 or Sat 1G-4

'•ricu Starling at

129.95 +,fax

1

--=======:c=:::i:·:-.:.:::::::::11
·'Viol &amp; ...... Card .... .

. 3/IW

,..

TRAINING
LOOKING FOR

.

SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.

=

~ Cll aMIIod You ;:;r ~
Salnng I l l - "tiJ.,Ial

Canipolillva Wllh ' Dlloount
St-. HJoh 9ua1tY " - - .

c•••'-915
.. 3949

'"/24/IS/ I ••

1419 State Rt. 7· 614-446 -073 6

NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR

Announcements

F-T•Y-Prn.,.Linoot

IIOW OFFERING......
OIL AIID LUBE SERVICE
TIRE REPAIR AID ROTATING

Sprfnl Tillie
. · Speefal

wo Allo Ha..
161z .

•

Yollow LllbhEinon
o Girl.
Old.
Ralud
Wll Two , _hOld

~ ~~"""'

Dog - . .

loS1 a Found .

6

Gingerbread Hoase
PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE

614-992-7698

584 Noltll s-od A,.nut

.

lllddltpall, Ohio 45760

312511 mo.

\

aou1ces the Ope•l•g of their
· l•f••t!Toddler Progra111
We will NOW serve children
6 months·to 12 years of age;
Call us for more .lnforniatlon

.'

(614) 992-7328

May 29, 1893.

311011-

-

Mallllddresses to
Meigs Alumni

Asaoclatlon,-P. 0.
BOx 25, Middleport,
Ohlo45760

·Shade River Saddle
.•

SUMMER
· IMAGES
2 •lies 011lpell
~ -IHeiOH

Happy Ads ·

2112192/lfn

47269 St. Rt. 241' . I y. Mile OH Rt. 7
· ·. Tllnt
r olli Rt. 241

s... ,._ hy_lorwlce

·Molgs Alumni
Association is
looking for c~rrent ·
addresses of Meigs
graduates for April
mailing for Alumni ,
Dance on

Calls)

!,...---......~~~~~~:--2-7:92-tfa
KELLER•s CUSTOM
•
BENDING

a IUIUIIOII

J.lt·f

3

L--------,.--------_.1 ~ ..::'1. =~

c-..- ....... •~....
20tYrs.Ea;. ......

Announcements

For -

- .

....
...
,..............".

CIUIIOIU

HOWII1'1

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nun..

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264 1120193/tfn

. WE DO

BULLDOZING

'25 HOUR
112J113/1-

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. 992-3470

RIC EICAYATIIIG

. REASONABLE UTES
POMIIOY,OI.

I·I"

Box 189

-

Haun: ......... Clooocl
T-. Wed., Fri.
9:30 11106:30 Pill
Sal. 1011M Jllll
104 llulnll\f Awt. · ·

SIZED liMESTONE

3-4-83- 1 mo.

LEGAL NOncE
Sallocl propoeel• wm be
recalvod in the offloe of the
MaiOI County COIIIIIIII•,
elonore, Third FIHr of the
c..urthouu. Po-or, Ohio
until 10:00 A.M. an Aprl114,
1183. Bldt wll be opanod 11
11:00 A.M. at .... IIIII.
location on the ....,,. ..._
Propooale ehall _be lor
ch•oe- o f - C1l 11M
·2

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

Shoe
Repair

36970 Bal R11 Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

. . ReaiOIG.It
RatII
JOE N. SAYRE
SAYRE YRUCKIIIG
614·742·2138

Molga , County ·EMS
Ambuluce wllh tr-..n ol
oldchMola.
0.... 1... Information, In·
. etruclont, proponl l!lfma,
and complole apeclllclllone
may be obWn ... from th•
olllaoo ol the llhloa County
'Emergoncy M..Oul Sor·
Public ~otlce_
vlcei; P. 0; Box 748,
IN THE .
Mulberry Haigh... Pomoroy,
COMMON PLEAS COURT Ohio 45788. (814) 112..S17.
PROBATE DIVISION
Blddart ahlll u.. tho
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
printed forma provided u
IN THE MATTER OF
no ahop ordore or ot_!Mr
SETTLEMENT OF
lorll)a Will be acoeptecl.
ACCOUNTS
:
Each pr......... DIUat oont.in
PROBATE COURT
the lull naiiMI of the puly or
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
partlae 111111dng Ilia propouJ
Accaunte and voucihora
11111111 be 10oomp111led
of - tho following n•m•d
bid bond or
liduelorlet h11'141 beon filed
mlde out to
•
County
'in lhe Probete Court, Meigo
County, Ohio, lor approval Commi11lonere in tho
and ntllement
.
amount ol flv• percent (5'11.)
ESTATE NO. 25188
- 111 tho total bicl Bide are to
Sixth . Annual Account ol be plao... In a oeeled
·nna Marie Collina, Gllllrdiln en'Miope markod "BID FOR
of Tracy Dawn Collin• and AMBULANCE".
Wenll Mlah811e Colina.
Bida lor N• or O.mo
ESTATE NO. 248111 -Fifth unite buill ·to EMS
Annual /Iecount of Carolyn
and or elock
.M. Stowar~ Guardian of
••IJna
o.u r
Mary, Juon, Joremy and
will alao be
Sarah Tll)llor.
·
blddora
ESTATE NO. 275&amp;6 - with QVM approval In the
, Final and Dltlrlbulin ambulance manufeoturlng
Account of Harold · A. · bualneaa
will
b•
Barnhart, Admlnlalralor of conaidarod• . Suooaoeful
. .the Eotato of Auguata L. blddM mual g1111ranlea all
work parform.cl Md hno
· Barnhart, Deceand. ·
ESTATE NO. 27401 - avaltat.le lor demonalnllon
, Final and Dittrlbutlva and/or l111p"llon •Y atock
Account af Marilyn Howery, · or .-no unit bid or a almllar
Admlnlotralor of th• Eatate unit to ehow. ,
"·
of Verlin ;w. Howory,_ _The liucc-lul bidder
IIIUII lilmlah a on.flunchd
O.Called.
ESTATE NO. 27312 - porclftl (100'11.) perfo-a
Final and Dlolrlbulive bond and a . elgnad
Account ol Patricia A. atatement that the bldclor
Bauer, Executrix of tho. underetanda lha epeol·
Eatate of Leona S. Karr, llc:atione for 11M refurbloh of
O.Ceooocl.
.
tho 1 • EMI~Mtbu......._ ESTATE NO. 273U Tho Malga Cou.nly
Final and Diotrlbutlvo Conunlaalonw~~ • - t h e
Account of Nancy D. righl ,lo rejoat any and/or all
Hoboek; Admlnlatratrlx of bide or any pa1....,...1 Md
th• Eotato of William S. io waive any Informality In
Hoback, Decoued,
any propoeal.
· 11o1Q1 Coullty
Unleot ••cer,tlona are
filed thoreto, •• d eccounta
Co!nmlaaiD,....
Mary Haliotetlor, Clerk
will bo for hearing bolqre
uld Court on thalth dll)l of (3) 30; (4) .. 210 .
~. 1913, at which time
uid accounla will be
contldered and continued
from day to dliy until
diiopond of.
,
Any paroon lnl•realed
•may file wrtlt•n ucepllona
to· oald eccounla or lo
/, maltaro pertaining lo lht
·IUY • SELL • IUDE
'· ox.Cutlon of tho lruol .nol
Sl7 II. 2114 St.
leaa than llvo daya prior to
the dolo aatlor haarfng.
Mldtllopcl!'t, Ohio
Robert E. euak, Judge
llon..frl, I ChOO.S100
Common ·Pieea.COurt,
Probate Dlvialon
Sohl,.ay I0:00.6100
Melga County, Ohio
PubliC Notice

I ••---------------AP---

•FIREWOOD

-~~

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Public Notice

.

Accidenf ·~nnui. ty, IRA • Mortgage

LEATHER REPAIR

.

.

u•sroNE,

. YOU LIIEI ·

·~-----------~--------:-----------.

-LIGHT HA~LINQ

USED RAILROAD TIES

.

HAULING

6DAYSAWEEK
11 :15AM·1:45 PM ·
LUNCHEON BUFFET
6PM·8:30 PM
EVENING BUFFET
12 Noo11-8 PM
SUNDAY BUFFET

AS

-

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health • .

Bill SlACK
992·2269,

·

992·3838
.
wn/1 mo.
-'

REMOVAL

MEADOWS SHOE &amp;

Gallipolis

57·59 Court St.

ENTER

TES

FREEES

TRIM and

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and··
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPIN~

SHRUI

HOWARD
EXCAVAnNG

Hown L Wlltesel

CUSTOM SADDlES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

36358 SR 7

' lt. 124

7

Yard Sllle
·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

A U Y n - - loPaldln

tho.,
...... tho
--~=-­

ad lo .. - . .

==-~
;..=:'. t:i
y.

p.

Pomeroy,

Mlddlepon

Chester, Oh. 45720

&amp; Vicinity

985-3406

"12 S.lliHI·$20
PHOII 992·•703161 16 ....... $25

Happy Birthday

Je.,le Howell, EA

000

NOTARY .

, 31111 mo.

I

I

'

. . 992·2481 ' .

ATTENTI~N
CA'n'LE. OWNERS .

3-4-83-1 mo

Kille UndoiiChuilz, A.F.A. cerllflocl journeyman lalllor
hoof trimming eenrialtiO clllle OWftlrL

• a pro!ooolonallarrier.

·

· dane with hand loola (not grindo..)

up 10 1K houra ham Ultl• Hocking. ·
1-;~r:~::~a;;minlln~~n ol15 had o( aaltle Jl8l: vlollto

~~

~.

614·91 ·2405
.PIN............... a .... •l!lllar

ew!rteea
FCe•n~ IHIIiet~a
notCJ

•

-·

you're

•iJIUer(l ·

~.

.,

a~~r.;r;~i·~=IIIKiduba.

&amp;Mom
J.

..

..

, ...

•

I

�•

I

I

'

.,

..

'•'·

I

w.nt1c1 to Buy

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

""~" " ' - , . - ... t!IWII*,

44

r. lluy: Junil Aulae
WMhOrWillloUt-Colt
Larry Lhlely. tM 111 nn.
Warlod

ALLEYOOP

-..-..-.....
-· .,=-10-

'ACR.OIS

Pokli

lnkllm.~......l -

-·-

Cugat

7 Fix ftrmly .
12 Locuel tru .

13Drt"-'1

11: 'llllae on ' Alita. ,., "'
ooll fl4tD.m1. EOH.

!mpla!MIItl

15 Thanke, ln
Btttaln

AM Old U.S.

NORTH

.....

-

te Annor~nv

' t-5-11

11 - tu, Brute
18 MD

.AQIOBH

73 Vana &amp; 4 WD's
1110 a.vy van $1100 Stondlrd,
~= v.y _Dopondllble,

, . _ Oolllpollo.

.......... lilly: -

38 le quieti

1 Mullcl111 - .

PHILLIP
ALDER

....,..,.

•

..

EEK AND ME;EK

••Kz
••

2, SllppefY
fllltel

.K1053

22- Major
24DecrH

EAST

11115 Nioun, 4 WD, Z ongl,.., 41
K .ICiual mllot, !llltol* bruoh

fORA · ~

Hr ..rt,.., Arpit, ttlrwo, IIC:
cond, ganoe kopl, $4,915. finn.

.J

.• • 63

304.a7U151.

.K

(lbbr.)
28 Europun

8 742

33 o,

.At4

ComrMrelel G8a Stove, I Burnol'll, &amp; Grill, Brollor, 1 O.on,
114-446-3886.

Dot&gt;roalon 15: Plcturos SS:
ladiH CO.ta $5; 111na Winter
Coot $10; Bodoprood 18: $2
V•lanca, &amp;~337&amp;.

--·--;- -·.,ioJ

. . . . . .11.,
·~
11_ _ ... _ _
onytlml.

. 1=

~~=
~ .......... OIIIol14-

.

"BULLY"
BARLOW

Spocl-•· seoo. •••·•·•223.

, . _ ,_~
U' r ··~~~~~
..
ur110,11 All ~.40
ConiO,
. nod At 1IU .._. 1'00 .GG, 2,100 ml,
.

J

I

One F-, AI CCMIIJI-•
w 'r wa, 11W12--2122.: Or 114--

-.

_,......,,..,,

Atiw. LlvMtock BalM

~~~~ oprlnO call uJ..
Waadbu ••·· z.lrlok .....,_h Ajloll
::. II tpm,- 30 hood .of
Wlthlaal .... - T N , 1014 . . .
Clftletromonellnn.
All oot.whamnw,tl ·WICOIM.

.
.
.
.
.
.
=

IS AFTER
ME II

Building
SUpplies

Peta for Salle

Hay &amp;Grain

WITH HIM?

infinitiv~

. . . Corvllr, 30W78-1345 ....
larlloonna.

.

.

~~~~~RJ

---·___ _,

WI-lEN CATC~ERS GET

'' TI41N65 FALL
APART; TI-lE CENTER
CANNOT ~OLD"

1111-aaa.

!-liT WIT~ TOO MAN'{

FOUL SALLS.TI4E'r' GET
A LITTLE WEIRD..

•.ooo inl~a,
•n=·· ...... oondl,r.~

--

tm Triumph t~

-aid,-· 304.a1NDI.

AICC

-

A' P ail

-

$100.

,114-

Wlndo -

::::wv•

FRANK'AND ERNEST .

,

+trlmT.... Du.l
f14,100, IIUIIAIIIFIII
Boo ForStetoa
Ajlo
-1110: ,114~ Aft• •
P.M. 11t 111 lttl Mil,_ KIIIJ; . ~.

/

I'M Ill IUSlN~SS fO, _,.,YStLf.

t TttOUtftiT

.X

wAS. TOO; UNTIL.
TAV. TIMe.

Oak nMn

. ~?.
.
:..:::J
.;p . 1t-t-''1s &lt;J -tf.

_In-

" ,•

.,

~'!EA . liE .

luooM For . .It II

-;_Con ..

""""For ..... ' .

-

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

~:.lld~.fo3!,
Cobin 230 HP ,
co._
Top, ... rlno

DOWN
1 Totem pole
2 - IIIUonal
Park

7 Dlllntav·
rltloll

8 Silent

... ···· · ·

split?

I

!'lohlnt "llal• Guido", -

1117 21 Pl. -

or Rille

YQI81

At a dinner in. New York, Mark
Twain !!'lid, "A verb has a . hard time
enough of il in this world wben it's all
together. It's downright inhii!Dan to
split it up." To what was he referring?
Probably, like me, you tltougbt it
was the split infinitive. Some writers
are happy to boldly split the infinitive;
others refll!e to. But actually Twain
wu talking about German. He
claimed that one "Part of the verb is
put down here, oae part oo~ve~rl~ld~~
and German is just sl
in
between•.
On today's deal, despite the dre.adf1tll
trwhp split, South kept bis cool 8J1d
collected 12 tricks.
When the dummy came down, South
wanted to be in seven clubs. But after
winning trick one with dummy's heart
klq and playing. a,club to his ace, be
knew the contract wu quite blgh
enough, perhaps too high.
South ·unblocked the spad_e,;.,fedDal
cashed the diamOnd ace and 11
diamond in the dummy. Now came
spade ace followed by the Spl1del
queen, East ruffing In with the
·seven. Declarer overruffed .with
nlile, cashed the bear! ace and ruffed
benrt in the dummy: Nut came an&lt;llll·
er top spade. East ruffed with the c:lub I
eight a¢ South ovemaffed with the
queen. Soi!Jtt ruffed a diamond with
dummy's club king, havlnl collected
the fint 11 tricks.
East WU left with the J-4 of ·ClIUDII; I
South bad the diamood jaci and
six. Tile lead of a spade from the
my allowed South to acore lila club
with a coup eD passsnt.
"You managed to nicely play
cards.• said North.

PEANUTS

,..

-Ful Cowoir
Cuddr

3 N. ofNC
4 Here (Fr.)
5 traland
8 Removad
dead leavta
from

By PbiUip Alder

·- ll!lanl 7,0001.1.......
Ea-pl
c.Mitlon,
4-446- .
0481, Loovo llosugo.

Tr an sportatio n

AutQI for Sale

-

porpoll8
36 NegaUva

·Was it to

1817 - . Huntcono vary
lhorpll 12,000. 304 IN82.

--4:00PM.

71

83 C.ught .

9Pening lead: t Q

.

____ ......

64

AIN'T THAT

SHERIFF
TATE

$2,000.~0.

114-1112-2322, .Y _,. 400, Goad Cand!llan,
1---3131.
.
llotollld ..... Sun-r Hoy 75 Boate &amp; Motors
RIU,I14 4t12147.
for Sale
Pollcl twwehanl'lnd heifer bulta,
13 _
... 14 _
... brooding
.....,_ outboold, trollor, can- . ......-IIYW!Inp.
Nrtlble top. covw, 11100, 114-

'

Paa

HIDIN' BEHIND
AUNTIE'S APERN H

81 WIH
COUI)HIOr

Pus
.Pus
Pus
Pus

Pus
DON'T RUN IN HERE

sast.·

Eut

Pass

1t81 Kn0111d ' 440 LTD, 3,000
lllloo,
Noodo
BI1111J
&amp;

••·I

(2
48 S.t
UP gOlf
bell)
SO Old Tn..
menl booll
52 Wratt54 ...trle wl.
55 NegiUVt

111111
34 Frnhweter

+AJ832
.AQU
•
Vulnerable: Both.
Deller: North .

BARNEY

de

·cologne
47 TV'alalklng
horu

101111blrd
85 Fleilrtll
31 Formal d...u · 88 Sm1Hhola

SOUTH

Weot

45 -

Duncan

28 FOOd lddiUve

hH

40 PJar araa
42 Future plante

prefix .
58 DIIICar -

21-,ourHII

U9

MID I EA1'

11

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wright

Colne.Ooid"-su-Colne,
Clolcl Celno. II.T.S. Coin Shoti,
.. -

The Dally Senti

Ohio

~::W..1:4a?"'r.
tumllhlll,

'

•

~--~kw~~~~~---1·--~..~~
.,,,

Tap -

54 -.:.lllniOUI

Apertmenl

t

'

1993

1993

Ohio

.'

BORN LOSER

.

......... ~w-. · -.

. ,.,¥.'{ IION£WClRII. ~~T I~ .,
lO Am&gt; 001 WAAT ~ ~IC
~

OUR LANGUAGE
By Jefli'ey McQuain
'
MOLLESCENT means "softening"
or ".rnaldng softer," as in ''m.ollescent
treatment." Soften up your listeners
by pronouncing this adjective ''muh·
LES-ent." .

.

Q. We read the tenn SNAKE OIL
lhe other day. We know what it means,
but how did it gefstarted?

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
HONCOMEWE
IAI..~It:l t\&lt;I.Ve 10

A. As yliu know, SNAKE OIL means
"fake product" or "sham." The idea of
SNAKE OIL dates back to the supposed remedies and. potions of traveling medicine shows, but the noun
phrase itself has been in use only
since. 1925 or.so. These days the term
is primarily .used in the figurative
sense of "fraud" or. QOnsense."

WI-.10-I~T
.)!;lid LIKE~

Clmpera&amp;

. Motor HomM

HAR HAP .&lt;;?l~!l3l

HAR

1-ltot; ~E~
!

44

..
Sr1 v•crs
Homa

ASTRO-GRAPH

8nvelope to Astro-Grriph. clo lh!S newspa- t1me productively today. especially 1n matper, P.O. Box 4465 New York . ~Y 10163. ters that allecl yqurcareer. Plann~ngis only
· Be sure to ttate your zodiac sign.
part ol the job _,_ 8)(9CUtion 1S the essential
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Ntither you element.
BERNIC)l;
nor a person wilh whom you are presenlly SCORPIO (Oct. ~4-Nov. 22) Untort1una.teh1.
IS comple tely forthright wtth the . not, everyone with whom you 'll be inVI&gt;Iveld
BEDE OSOL involveCI
other. Th•s is a no-w1i1 Situation that can b,9 _today will be '" accord wtth your viewS
'•
· ..corrected only through honesty .
opinions. Don't blow ,disagreements .out
GEM!NI (May 21·June 20) 11 you have 10 proponioh. Be open·m111&lt;1ed.
do business with an unlamiliar linn or indi· SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21)' 1t's basi
vidual tOday, ifs best not tO take &amp;nythtng · natlo ·inVolve yoursf:!lf today m enCeavors
lU
lor granted. tf y6u are offered ~pecial perks. where too much ol the control1s taken away
be sure to g~t them 1n wnling. . '
lrom yo~ and placed 1n the hands ol otheiS.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Both· you and They might lack your capabilities.
,
your male m1ghl be more hopelul.than real · . CAPRICORN (Ole, 22-.lln. 19) Friends will
. April 7, 1993
istlc today rega rd ing a mutual deC ISIOn . be cooperl\tivoe wlth you today . but only if
Crossing your fingers anCI guessing could they·_feel you. tn turn, jilre 1ook1ng out for
So.me major changes In your basic lifestyle be a formula lor fatlure·.
.
. . their in"t8reS;tS as welL II you don't QIV8, You
are probabilities tor the year ahead Even LEO (July 23:Aug. 22) Exces&amp;ll('l worryu\g . w!ln'l.get.
.
..
' .,
'alterations you don'l inillate yoursell could about lh1ngs that may never happen could AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Fob. 19) Objectives
tum out tO be favorable in the long ?un.
impede your progress today. Instead of .can b8 achiavoed, provided you persevere
ARIES (March 21 -APrll 19) Oo.not estab· . assening yoursell. you mighl end up with · and prepare yourself tor making reaso,nable
. ,
sacriliees. Thare aren't apt to be any ·,Jree
lish ob1eclives today that you know are ctraw1ng 1nto a shell.
beyond yo~r capabilities. Progress ca~ be VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sept. 22). Usually you ridao on this raUroad today.
made. however. by achieving vlctores one. have a pretty good Sj!nse ot hu1001and are PIS,CES . (Feb. . 20·M•rch
21)
s1ep at a lime Aries. treat your sell 10 a able lo laugh at ycursell when you make Uncha;acteristically, .you ·might baa trttie
birthday gift. Send lor Aries ' Astro·Graph mistakes, bul today you might take things joalouscol th• accompllahmanla ol pals
predictions lor t~e ~ear ahead by mailing · 100 ltliou!liy it lrienas kid you. •
. .
today. \naltld qt •PPiallding lhelr iffcull,
sds plus a 1ong . seH-addresoed · •!J'mped UIAA (Sept. 23·0ct.a3) Try 10 utthre ~r YI'U:may put lliem down. ·
·
' .

®

...

•'

-aOUr

,· ·
.

'Birthday

.,,

•

· CELEBRITY CIPHER

• ··

CtiiOrtty ClpMr CI'YPIOQrlml .,. lnltiCI trom QYOtdoM by fWnoul ptOOII, put and
E-=tllltt•lft the Clphll' ...,.. for .non.. T"*y'l CIIIM,· E i1qtM11 G.

z

.. Z D '

G Z P B

z ,J

J WANG .N 0 R,

z

0 H A·

LRPHA

,J

L B J W

GZALJ

OZ ·T TW

OAZBOZAO
JWANGNOAO
ZOCNAH

R L

P LC H

VZWHA

~t.

R P Z A

GZB
R L •

OZEHA .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Beir\9 'a human being Isn't easy, but 11 can bs
great, rumlllng and snrk:lllng.' - . Zelda Rubinstein .
.

·'~~:t:~' SC!:\\4\llA-~t.trs· ••••

WOlD

14hotl

.

O four
Rtor'tonge ~tters of
scromblid worcb

a.AY I.

~,

P~N

the

be--

low to form four simple words.

13

-.,. ·--=..... ·,-

tI f

T El

T R00M

II

I.

I

A man and woman stllo~~a~t ...,.........;............ .

I I' r ~. ~:~e.~rr~v: ;u :i~:~
......._ _.;_____'_, so rude," she conceded. "After

I

E N T HU R

11

I

•

allyouwerejustbeing--·····!"

j.-.,,;;.7...:.;1,_..;-r-1:.....:1;.,8,.:..:..TI--l G

Complete tho chocklo quo;od
bv filling in the missing words
L-.J·'--'-·-L.-L.-~.--J. ·-vou develop
from step No. 3 below.

8

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

8 ~~;c:~~!ie~ LETtERS I

I I 1· I I I I

SCRAM-LnS ANSWERS

,..

., -r

Twitch • Unen - Issue - Dismal • WASHES

While admiring the winner of a ,beauty pageant, 1
hl!llrd one obviously jealous woman mutter, "I wonder
if she's that
a,fter she WASHES her lace?"

.

.

�'

.

.

.

•

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

.

,.

.

Spring

dinner for volunreers on Apiil22.
Pearl Canaday reported on the
publicity book which received a
grade of92.
Pauline Atkins , O.Orothy
Woodard, Margaret Belle Weber,
Clotine Blackwood, Janet Bolin
and Mareia Denison attended the
open meeting of the Friendly Club.
Pearl Canaday attended the
Home and Garden Show in Columbus.
. . · Pauline Atkins.and Janet Bolin
attended a 'meeting at the Senior
Citizens Center on "Vegetable and
Flower Gardening" and "Landscaping" given by the county extenSion
agent
Ann Webster reported on the
trip to the Gallipolis Development
Center. l'auline Atkins, Ann Webster and Marcia Denison attended.
The April meeting date .has been
changed from April 26 tQit\p{il27.
For the program, Pearl Canaday
presented an article on "Dividing A
Houseplant." She stated late winter
· is the best time to divide plant!:.
They are about ready to enter a
period of active growth so recovery
will be quick. Avoid dividing at the
end of the growing season.
Neva Nicholson presented an
A Ladies Day Rally at
McConnelsville on April 27 was article on "Bluebirds." She said
announced at the reeent meeting of clearing off hollow trees and fence·
the Meigs County Women's Fel- posts disrupts bluebirds nests so
lowship hel&lt;l at the RuOand Church · small wood birdhouses should be
put up.
.
of Christ with 38 present
Dorothy Woodard had an article
The opening song Willi "Leave It
There" and Ruth Underwood gave on "Clematis." Clematis require
about four hours of sun, preferably'
the opening prayer.
Jane Wise sang a sOlo "Make Eastern exposure and let them
My Life a Living Sacrifice" and climb on fences, stone walls or
arborS. They can also be grown on
"Medals, Crowns and Tro~ies."
..
Pat Thoma read devouons with the ground.
Ann Webster had the hint for
scriptures from Romans. She also
the evening stating ''Not only will
read a poem. 'The Secret"
Debbie Mijes. first vice-presi- nasturiums add bright color and
dent, conducted the meeting. Offi- cheerful look to your garden. They
cers reports were given and sick are also helpful for pest control.
Plant them with cabbage as this
were mentioned.
Marge Purtell was the guest fends off cabbage worm and
speaker.
cucumber beetle.
A helpful companion to toma"Take My Life and Let It Be"
was the closing song.
toes is dill. Dill is not only an
The next meeting will be at the aaracti ve plalrt it is more attractive
to the tomato homworm than the
Zion Church of Christ on April22.
Refreshments were served.
tomato itself.
Dorothy Woodard closed the
meeting with "Thoughts for the
Day." Clotine Woodard won th'e
door prize.

..
retreat ~cheduled ~

The Athens Distric i United
Methodist Women will hold its
annual spring retreat on April16
and 17 at Camp Francis Asbury,
Rio Grande. Jleglstration wiU be
from 4-6 p.m. The evcni~g meal
will be a carry-in ~ at 6:30
p.m. The ftrst session will begin at
7:30p.m.
Bishop Judith Craig will be in
attendance at 4 p.m. for a short
time.
Janet Way will be the retreat
leader and her theme will be
"Siretcher Bearers." Janet, and her ·
husband, Dale, who is pasiOI' of the
Milford Center United Methodist
Church, have three children. She
served the Springfield District
UMW a~ secretary of pro grain

Pauline Aikins hoslr.d the recent
meeting of the Rutland Garden
Club with Clotine B·lackwood ,
assisting hostess.
'
Mrs. Aikins had devotions readiQg "Each Spring God Renews His
Promises" and "Legend of the Rain
DrOp" bolh by Helen Steiner Rice.
She closed with prayer. The creed
and collect were given in unison.
RoiJ. call was answered with "My
First Spring Bloom.".
A letter was read from London
Swimming Pool Commiuee in
Syracuse asking for a donation.
, The Ohio AsSociation of Garden
Clubs couniy bc&gt;atd meeting will be
at Chester on Apnl 17. The countY.
garden club meeting wiU be Apnl
19 at the Meigs County Museum .
The OAGC regional meeting will
be at the Holiday Inn in Gallipolis
on Apri\24.
An invilation was received for
!he group to .attend the Gallipofls
Deyelopment Center re.cognition

Cubs
blank

resources. She is director of~
Clothes Closet, a Christian free;:
will clothing store in Milford Center. She is involved in lhe Reid-10- •
Me program at the elementary_
sch·ooJ. She is a member' of the
loeal church choir and is treasurer
of her local UMW.
The Saturday morning ~ast
will be 7.:30 a.m. with the session ;
begiMing at 8 a.m. and lhe retreat
will dismiss at 2 p.m;· Registration
will be limited to 42 for overnight':
The Saturilay sessions are not lim· ·
ited. The registration deadline is
Thursday.
·
Further information may be
obtained by contacting your local
UMW officers or eall the UM District Office at 797-4581.
"

.

LOVES ATfENTION- J,olm Rice's pet game rooster loves
attention ud will do.Just about aaythlng to 1et lt. He's a real people lover, says tbe former Meigs C::oulity agrlculblre ageat. who
shared this picture or bis pet rooster perched on tbe be~~d or his
brother, Harley Rice, or near Tuppers PlaiDs. John said he round
the l'riendly bird lllong the road several years ago.

Weight control classe'S offered
A series of six-week classes for
weight control will begin at the
Meigs County Health Department
on Monday and'Wednesday, April
14.
. .
There wiU be a choice of nights
for the classes, either Monday or
Wednesday, and classes are free to
Meigs County residents.
Each class wiU be of two hours
duration. Attendance is required at
only one two-hour session weeldy.
Classes will include nutrition education, stress management, weekly
weigh-ins, relaxation techniques,
recipes, diet recall sheets, exercise

techniques and other phases of
weight control.
There will be a limit as to the
number of people who can be'
admitted to eaeh series of classes
which are to be held-in the conference room of the ,multi-purpose
building in Pomeroy.
Residents should register as
soon as possible due to class size
limilations.
..
,
To register, call the health
deparunent at 992-6626. When reg-·
istering indicate your preference of
a Mollday or Wednesday evening
class.

Quanerly binhdays for January,
February and March were observed
when Chester Council No. 323, '
Daughters of America, met recently at the hall with Mary Holter,
councilor, in charge.
Pledges to the Christian and
American ~s were given. Scripture was r
from Matthew. The
first stanza of the Star Spangled
Banner was sung.
It was announced that Clatice
Allen. Alia Ballard and Octa Ward
are in the hospital.
Goldie Fredrick read eards from
lla Faye Kimes and Bulah Maxey.
, A poem from Bulah Maxey,
"Life," was read by Gold1e
Fredrick.
A practice for District Rally at
Logan was announced.
Erm! . (:;J~J!ru! repo..rled oJLthe
Rally at Bethel District 10. She
also read a poem, "Rain."
JoAnn Baum reported on the
raUy at Dayton.
A potluck was enjoyed after the
meeting.
·
A cake, made by JoAnn Baum,
was served. Observing birthdays
\VCre Marcia Keller, Opal Hollon,
Pauljne Ridenour and JoAnn
Baum. ·
Attending were Lora Damewood, Charlotte Grant, Ethel Orr,
Esther. Smith, Evere,tt Grange,
Betty Denny, Lillian Demosky,
·Helen Wolf, Mae McPeek, MJII'Y
Holter, Jean Fredrick, Katheryn
Baum, Faye Kirkhart, Marcia
Keller, Betty Roush, Ada Bissell,
JoAnn Baum, Doris Gruescr,
Piuline Ridenour, Goldie Fredrick, ..
Opal Hollon, Erma Cleland, Jean
Welsh, Elizabeth Hayes, Harlan
Ballard, Ella Osborne, Thelma
White.

·you a second one absolutely freelAnd.
because they're Act1on recliners. you 'll be
sure of qualitY mside and out. Hurry, ro
get in o~ this two for one offer,.
·

The Middleport Arts Council .
will offer a watercolor workshop
wilh .instruciOI' Lee Fri~h on April
23 from 6-9 p.m.; on April 24 from
9 a.m, to 4 p.m.; and on April 2~
from 1-4:30 p.m.
r
Samantha Larie Cummins was. · The workshop will include a
honored recently with a party in lecture, slide presentation and
observance of her first birthday demonstration of technique by the
- given by her parents, Brian and mstructor, as well as exercises for
the student If get the (eel of the
Delani Cummins, Columbus.
·
A "I 01 Dalmatian" theme was medi~m and technique.
can'ied out with refreshments Of
Fntch has boon painting with
cake, ice cream, chips and punch watercolor since 1971 . He began .
~rved, Garnes were also played.
, teaching in 1984. He is .a charter
Attending or sending gifts were member and trustee of the West
Bob and Karen Baker, Luther Virginia Watercolor Society and
Boothe, Cathy Van Ness, Joyce. , has won several awards for his
Deitz, Glen Baker, Dix·ie Sovel , watercolo ~s in West Virginia
'
Waveline !&lt;ems, RoMie and Mar- Florida and Ohio.
valec Cummins, Lisa and David
The cost for the workshop will
Shelly, Todd;, Nathan and-Trevo; be $60 plus supplies. Registration
BeCk, Wanda Findling, Chad Cum· and a non-refundable deposit of
mins, Betty Milhoan, Peggy ·
$25 is necessary by Monday. Fur- ·
!her
information may be oblained
Kath.ry.n Cummins, Lisa and vin
Lute, 'RhOnda ~ummins, Roger,' by calling Gail Hovatter at 992, Daren and ~honda Cojrar and 2606 or Susan Baker at 992-7733
after 6 p.m.
. David l!lld Erick Spencer.

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2 secUO!II, 18 Pagea 25 cerib

'

A lluiU~edla Inc. -Newap~~per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Aprll7, 1993

:~00

left
:Without
:power late
·.;ruesday ·

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Power was restored to about 200
Ohio Power Co. customers in the
: t&lt;~aylors Run area in Pomeroy and
:the Laurel Cliff area late Tuesday
· Utemoon after an outage of several
: houis.
. · According to Ernie Siss.on,
· Pomeroy Area manager. several
: large trees located on steep hills
, along an area of Spring Avenue fell
·onto a 12,000 volt circuit about
6:20 a.m. Several spans of conductor were damaged and poles were
liroken off resulting in the extended
oulage to the affeclr.d areas.
Repair crews worked t~Jrough ­
out the day making necessary
repairs. and service was restored-to
~cUSlOID~~4;3Qp.m. _ -&lt;
"We regret the Inconvenience
our customers expj:rience during
periOds of oulages and appreciate
most, the underslanding of our cus"
torners· througl\ these times," said
Sisson.

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Employees, advance notice of I0
days is required for a school calendar change. Since that stipulation •
cannot be met before Good Friday.
Carpenter said it opens the door for •
grievances from employees.
'•
Barton asked the presidents of
. Continued on page 3 .

Local aUorney'pleads
innocent following
grand jury indictment _

••

By JIM FREEMAN
for hire.
.
Aggravated menacing is a fllSISentinel News Staff
A Pomeroy attorney was indict- degree misdemeanor while comed by the Meigs County Grand Jury pelling prostitution is a thirdTuesday on 12 counts relating to an · degree f~lony punishable by 12 to
alleged series of incidents in 24 months in prison and a maxiPomeroy involving two female mum fineof$5.~.
.
:
The grand jury further specified • .
minors.
D. Michael Mullen, I 663 Lin- that Mullen's 1985 Chevrolet and a • ;
coln Heights, POnleroy, was indict- .357 magnum Smith and Wesson :_:
ed on eight counts of corrupting revolver were allegedly used to
another with drugs. Mullen is commit four counts of the indict- "
accused of furnishing prescription inent Both the ear and gun arc submedicine, namely Valium and ject to forfeiture under the li:nns of ~
Xanax, to two girls, ages 11 and the indicunent.
' ..
13, on March 12 and 13.
Arraignment held
According to Meigs County
Following the. grand jury, ·•
Prosecutor John R. Lentes, those Mullen was-arraigned before Judge
eight counts are felonies of lhe sec- Dan T. Favreau, who is sitting on ,.
ond degree,,punishable by five to the case by assignment
•
15 years in prison with a mandatoMullen er\~red pleas of inno- ;.
ry sentence of·three years on each cent on each' of the 12 counts. "'
count ·
'_..,.
·
·Fa'lteau, §et a .personal recogMullen
was
also
indicted
on
two
nizance bond at $7.SOO. A jury rrial
program.
pioRrainIs working through the
SEALANTS APPUED .. Pomeroy Elemencounts
of
conrributing
to
tbe
delin.,was
·scheduled for August 3 at 9
office ·or Dr. Margie Lawson, D.D.S. Pictured
tary is the firit elementary school in the county
quency
of
a
minor
for
allegedly
a.m.
are Deborah Fulks, R.DJf~ sealant coordinator
for its students to receive dental sealants
allowing a 13-yeai-old girl to operMullen's attorney, Herinan Car·
for Athens County SchoolS; Pomeroy Elemen·
.through a state grant from the Ohio D!partment
.
ate
his
vehicle
on
March
10
and
12.
son of Athens, asked Favreau to
tary student Alisba Werry; aad dental assistant
or Health. Tbe sealants- are being appl~ed free or
Those charges are first-degree order- parties in the case, including
Irelynne Deno, also or Athens.
charge to preyent tooth decay aad many elemenmisdemeanors, punishable by 'a court employees, to refrain tal.king
tary schools in tbe eouaty will benefit from the
•
maximum sentence of six months to the media, a motion opposed by
in the coun~ jail and a fine of up to Lentes.
$1,000. "
Favreau declined issuing the lliiR
Also filed against Mullen were a order statipg that court proceedings
count of aggravated menacing and are public and the public has access
a count of compelling prostitution to court records.
, for allegedly inducing, procuring,
However, Favreau adnionished
soliciting or requesting lite 13-year- the parties involved to limit .their
old girl to engage in sexual activity
- Continued on P.Bge 3
that
defendant
Bnseno
gave
an
...
beating,
which
was
videouiped
by
a
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Both
'
in
~
orrect
motivation
for
trying
to
bystander
and
broadcast
worldsides rested in the Rodney King
...
,
stop Powell?" asked Assislant U.S .
.
beating trial after a dn!matic prose- . wide.
Attorney
Ste,ven
Clymer.
Last
year'
s
acquittals
in
slate
cution finale turned one police·
Koon, who wrote a book on the
man's year-old videotaped testimo· · court on most charges of assault
case,
said he never accused Briseno
and
excessive
force
uiggered
riot· ny into an explosive denunciation
oflying.
ing in Los Angeles that killed more
•
of his three co-defendants.
"And didn't he testify that he
''My perspective was ... too than 50 people and caused about $1
stopped Powell because he thought
much force was used," Officer billion in damage.
The. heavily edited videotape he was out of control?" asked ClyTheodore Briseno said on the tape,
•
a condensed version of his testimo- was shown to the jury Tuesday mer.
"That's
what
he said,"
ny at the four officers' slate court despite tumultuoUs legal maneuvering by defense attorneys trying to answered Koon. ·
trial last year.
Briseno, who broke ranks and
block
it. ·
Testimony ended Tuesday in the
The
defense
later
tried
to
recovtestified
against Koon, Powell and
2-month·old federal trial. U.S. Diser
lost
ground
by
rocallirlg
as
its
former
Officer
Timothy Wind in
trict Judge John G. Davies planned
last
witness
Sgt.
Slacey
Koon,
the
the
state
trial,
forged
a united fu)nt ,.
to discuss jury instructions with
only
defendant
to
testify.
·
with
his
co-defendalits
in the federlawyers today and set closing arguKoon
restated
key
defense
al
trial
and
did
not
testify.
ments to begin·Thursday.
But the videotape may have
. ''The case will be yours for points: that there were no blows
sb'uc)c
to
King's
head,
that
King's
undei'mined that strategy.
decision Friday afternoOn," he told .
were
caused
by
a
facial
fractures
"I just dido 't understand what
t!Jc]ury.
.
. ,
Kmg
fall,
and
that
officers
saw
was
going on that night," he said
• The offiCerS are accused of via,.
from
a
different
perspective
than
of
his
colleagues in his April 3, lating King ' s civil rights in the
the amateur cameraman who video- . 1992 testimony. "I couldn't under!aped the beating. .
stand why they were doing what
But a prosecutor used K.oon's they were doing."
return to elicit a fact edited out of
Briseno said he never considBriseno's videotape - that Briseno ered . King a thr.eat during the
·considered another defendant, Offi- March 3, 1991 beating, whicll
·'
cer Laurence POwell, "out of con- came at the.end of a hig~-speed
trol" during the beating. ,
traffic chase, even though King
"Dido 't you write in your book was twice his.size.

Supreme
Court hears Pros~cution, defense·rest
gun ban .
in Rodney - ~ing beating trial
arguments
COLUMBUS,' Ohio (AP) - A
Cleveland ordinance banning som&amp;.
asSault weapons is uncoristiiUtional,
an 'attorney told the Ohio Supreme
Coun today.
·
"It is clearly affecting the abili·
ty of citizens to have a flTC8ml for
their defense and security," said
attorney Richard Markus, who is
representing Harry Ahlold Jr. and
o~r . Clevelnd gun owners in their
suit against the city.
'Markus said tbe ban includes
toO many weapons, such as those
for huntipg or other recreational
uses.
•'This ordinanco;· is shooting in
the wrong direction and is using a
cannon to shoot a flea!' he said.
Kathleen Martin, the city's chief
assistant director of law, said the
Continued on page 3

""'t

Unwind and pu1 your
up In flit W.U-Save• o1
Rockar ~cliner. It olara generously proportioned
.ruftod baok and ..., with pillow anno.

BUYI

..
...

Gilmore ·earns two national awards

TWOJ

First birthday

.

.
vote
Cllnle frOm Larry Rupe, bOafd .. significance, ,d.~sc,r lbi~g, ii ;,~s . ~p . .. '
'
ti~n.
reversed
a
deci
sion
·they-bad
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH ' ·
made
at
the
last
meeting
to
use
president
imporlant as Martin Luther King Two have one day, two have four
Sentlael News Stair
Bob
Banon
made
the
motion
to
Day, President' s Day and a day days, and five olhers either two or
There will be no school il) the Good Friday as a make-up day.
The original action to have restore Good 'Friday as a regular · given for hunting", and the three days. He pointed out that
Meigs ·Local School District on
schools
in session Good Friday was holiday after saying that he had insignificance of adding another according to the contracts with !he
Good Friday.
by
unanimous
vote; the action to erred in voting for using it as a day at the end of the school year.
Meigs Local Teachers Association
Meeting at the Harrisonville
reverse
!hat
decision
last
night
was
.
make-up
day
at
the
last
meeting.
Supt.
James
Carpenter
said
that
and
the local chapter of the Ohio
'Elemenlary School Tuesday night,
by
a
vote
of
four
to
one.
The
"no"
He
spoke
of
the
day's
Christian
all'
schools
have
days
to
be
made
Association
of Public School
the Meigs Local Board of -Educa•

99

SAMA,NTHA CUMMINS

•

· Meigs will not have classes on Good Friday

PRICE

Class offered

'

Vol. 43, No. 239
Caprrlghled 1993

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Buckeye 5:
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•

Plans to proceed with a Neigh- of Libby Fisher, Tonja Hunter and ;
borhood Watch program were Mel Weese.
approved when the Racine ComA 'committee will be appointed
munity Organization met recently soon to start making plans for a
at Star Mill Park. Frank Cleland tomato festival next year.
will or4er signs to place at the
A new logo has been created
entrances of town.
with colors of red, white and blue.
A rummage sale will be held
The group accepted ~e new by- "
laws.
.
·
May 7 and 8 at SW' MiU park. To .
Scholarship papers.· have been donate items eall 949-2378 or 949distributed at Southern High 2074. Pickup of items can be·
School for a $200 scholarship to be ·.arranged. .
given-to a deserving student Dead.'
New members for the organizaline for applications is April 15. tion are always welcome..
The •SCholarship committee consists

Services set

550

PageS

A surprise birthday pany was hara Colmer, Pomeroy; Steve and
held recently for Mamie Stephen- Shari Blackwell and Amber, Arica
son at the American Legion Hall in- and Aja, Harold ljlld Nlncy WhitMiddleport.
.
. tekind and Shaun, Daniel-and Leah,.
' Gifts were presenled and dinner all of Pomeroy; Jim and Paule~
and an asSortment of desserts fol- Farley and Rick, Marietta; David·
lowed.
Farley, Marietta; ~andY and Jan
Attending were her brothers and Snider and K;ate and Rob.,
sisters-in-law, Lawrence and Bar- Cheshire; David $lid Tammy Johnbara Eblin, Chester; Steve and . son and Jeremy,.Scott, Kimberly
Wanda Eblin, Pomeroy; Art and and Megan, Middleport; Roy and
Adrian Eblin, Middleport; Rev. Shain Eblin and Bobby, Michelle ,
Clyde and Margaret Henderson, and Chad, Pomeroy;_Doug Fr"-.
·Pomeroy; Raymond and Mary man, Pomeroy; David and Amy .
Walburn, Middleport; Rev. Glen Leah and Shama, Marietta; Jamie ,
· and Madeline McClung, Pomeroy; and Missy Lea~h. and Ashley and ,
Diane Zirlde, Middleport; Charles Stephanie, Marietta; and Tim and ,
Kiser, Pomeroy; Pam Perkins and Micki Colmer and Lacie, Rincoq, ~
Jason and Dana, Wellston; William , Ga.
Colmer, Wellston; Jerry and Bar-

Scholarship deadline posted

• Pick 3:

Braves

Surprise birthday party held .

Ladies Day Rally
slated April27

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TUesday, April 6, 190

Atkins, Blackwood host
garden club meeting·

Services' for Holy Week at Trinity Church in Pomeroy have been
announced.
Maundy Thursday services will
be at 8 p.m. with communion.
Easter Sunday sunrise services
will be at 6:30 a.m. with breakfast
to follow at 7:30 a.m. and Sunday
school at 9:15 a.m . Worship ser·
vice on Sunday will be at 10:25
a,m.. with Holy Communion at
11:30 a.m.
The youth group's·annual Easter
egg hpnt will be Saturday at tl)e
parsonage. 213 Mulberry Avenue
in Pomeroy from 2:30-4:30 p,m.
Each child is to bring a cardbOard
one-half gallon milk or juice conlainer for making Easter baskets. If
you do not have one, one will be
furnished. In case of rain, the hunt
will be held at the church. All
members of ihe youth groups ,
.Youth of the church and guests..are
invited.
The choir will hold rehearsal
Wednesday at 7 p.m. for the services.

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Reposing casual.

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NATION,U. AWARD WINNER • 'Willlllll Gllmore'unper!K ·
test seores oa tile GED won for b.. two uta.. awuda. Here he
Is preHDted a - · aad letter of recoa•ltioa fro• tiM National
Georarapble Sodety by Dt. David Flslfer of the Oltlo Departmtllt

ot Education. Dr. Fkber, pictured left, ,alllo pr•ated him with an

..

American Council oa EducatiOilplaque.

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placed by his aggregate score sixth trict governor designate of Rolllry. and Middlepon on a pan·time or as
highest in !he state among the 1991 a guest at the meeting along with needed basis , and is actively
Sentiael News Staff
test
tal&lt;o;rs. ·
. past disb'ict governor Rich.Siegel, searching for full-time employ.
Dr. David Fisher of the Ohio
· "He nailed !he whole teSt," said announced that Gilmore will be ment
Depanment of Education. was in
Dr
. David Fisher of the Otiio honored at the District6690 Rotary
Introduced was Gilmore's wife,
Middleport ~o~y night to preDepartment
of
pducation,
as
he
Conference
to
be
held
in
HuntingKatie,
who is a graduate of Meigs,
sent two nauonal a.wards to
talked
about
Gilmore's
scotes
,
too
on
AJJri130.
·
completed
a secrelary prog.-.m at
William Gilmore in recognition of
Gilmore
took
the
leSt
after
particilnli'Odt!ced
by
Gene
Riggs,
local
Buckeye
Hills,
and has worked
his outstanding scores on the GjiD
pating
in
the
Meigs
County
Adult
club
president,
was
Meigs
County
with
the
jobs
placement
prog!llll of
(general equivalency diploma) ~~L
Basic
Education
program.
SuP.erintendent
of
Schools.
John
lhe
Adult
BaSic
Edlltlllion=
·
The recognition ceremony tOok
The
National.
Geographic
SociReabel,
who
also
serves
as
dirCctor:
.
a
s
an
aide,
She
is
'now
em
by
place at the regu._ meeting of the
ety
award.
was
a
world
map
with
a
,
of
the
lo(;al
Adult
Basic
Education
!he
Meigs
County
Board
of
uc:aMiddleport-Pomeroy R.owy Club
at Hea!h United Methodis\ Church. . Jetter of congrat!Jl~tions. Tb_e ,program . Reibel !han ked the ton as a .substilute teacOO,'s aide for
'
The twO awanls included a map plaque from lhe American Councal Rotary for sponsonng lhe. ABE · the mcnlally handicaPPed.'
on
Education
was
a
national
a.waro
,
banquet
last
year
and
for
,thear
con·
.
Mr.
and'
Mrs.
O'ilmore
who
from the Na'tional Geographic
reside' in 'Middlepon have a seven
Society and a P.laque from the· for distinguished achievement on tinued support with the~at1aining the highest scores on lhe ' . Since getting his GED Gilmore year old· daughter, Heidi, who
American Council on Education.
· Gilmore scored a,perfect score GED test Gilmore was one·Of 70 has completed a police officers' attended t~e recognition dianer
on the social studies (geography) persons who took the test in 1991 training course at' the Buckeye · along with Gilmore's paront1, Mr:
· · .Hills Career ~enter, and is now a · and Mn. Bob Gilmore, ~
seg.m~nt of tb~ te:S.t while ilso· to bC honored by the Society.
Yet
another
recognition
will
be
· fully qualifiel! peac~ offacer. He · A ~preceding the meetiJI&amp;
achtevms supertor scores on wntiven
Gilmore,.
Ponney
Cisco,
41s.assists ,effacers .in Ractne, Pomeroy was served by die women of Headi
g
ing, :;cience, math and reading. He
Church.
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