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Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

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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.
"

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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.

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because they're Act1on recliners. you 'll be
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·

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

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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

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Rockar ~cliner. It olara generously proportioned
.ruftod baok and ..., with pillow anno.

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...

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:
25-26-27-30-31

•

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.

Biscuit-tufted t&gt;P.autyl

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Hil~to-toe comfort comes natunllly
relaxing on this ultra-culhloned casual.
It featu,.s a hide a nay chaise reclining
footrest, padded pillow arms lind a
, POsh blsquiHulted back .•.

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Smart, soft and ready to snuggle into ·
this chaise delivers t.Jml)lete head-OO:toe
comfort. Wl!h a bustleback, button tufting
and pillow arms, Its trendsetting style~~~
get In the way of,pure, soothing comfort.

.

8S6 3rd A~t.
Wt Wtlcomt Vow
_ GaHipOHs Vlll..llutlrclnl or DIIOII1wr\
44&amp; 3045

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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

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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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Comment~ry
The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Apr11.7, 1993

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Thursday, April 8

·. Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers

judge that presided over the case' who was an elected official ..:... .
overruled the jury and ordered
McMillian to be sentenced to
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By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
dealh."
Tho!lgh his life was spared,
McMillian languished on death row
for six years before his release last
monlh. Even before his conviction
on charges cif murder, McMillian
was treated like a malted man. He
was ·given a·dealh row "prisoner's
·orientation," a. death row prisoner's manual and subjected to all
restrictions and treatment received
by every death row 'prisoner in
Alabama. .
The story began with his ·arrest
in,June 1987, when the 45-ycar-old
McMillian operated his own pulpwood business in Alabama. He
spent 14 months in custody awaiting trial after the state moved for
postPQnements of his trial. Such

delays between arrest and trial are
not uncommon for poor defen ~
cbnts, .nor are most tried within a
year of their arrest.
But McMillian's case was .
· marked by several unusual features, startlllg with the fact that he
spent 13 of the 14 pretrial months
sweating it out in a five-by-eight
foot cell in Alabama's death row.
The trial - which took all of two
days-· wasn't much fairer, It
began at !:IS p.m. on Aug. IS,
1988, and was finished by 1:52
o.m. on Aug. 17. Tliil usually complex and prolonged process of jury
selection began at 9 a.m. on Aug.
IS and was completed by noon.
Bryan A. Stevenson, executive
director of a private, non-profit
organization that provides legal
assistance to death row prisoners,
. recently told Sei)B!C' investigators
that race played a large role 10 Ibis
apparent miscarriage of juStice:
"While lhe crime took place in ·
Monroe County, which has an
African-American population of
over 40 percent, venue was
changed to Baldwin County, Ala.,
which has a black population of
less than 15 percent. Only one

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Accu-Weather• forecast

conditions and

MICH.

. Capital punishment's flaws are evident

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IToledo ls3• I

African-American served on Mr.
McMillian's jury after the State
excluded other black potential
jurors through peremptory striltes.
The District Attorney alsci impropedy told the jury tiJat Mr. McMillian was rumored to have had an·
iffair with a young white woman.
The introduction of this evidence
had no purpose or relation to thi.s
case other than inflaming racial
. di ,.
.
preJU
CC.
li
.
.
· . After setting sue JUeli c•'al speed
records, one .would imagine that
Alabama had an open and shut case
against McMillian. The opposite is

4

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11'(0.

•!columbus!ss•

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uue.

Ronda Morrison was killed at a
dry cleaning store loc.ated in the,
center of town on a Saturday morning in broad dayli$hl. McMillian
wll$n 't charged with the offense
until six months later. At lhe trial,
no credible motive was presented
nor was there any physical or
forensic evidence implicatins
McMillian. The state's slar witness
was an alleged accomplice who
· had several prior felony convictions and another capital murde.r
case pending against him. Other
witnesses who _stepped forward
received large amounts of reward·
money, acco~ding · to tes!imony
· recently submitted t.o Senate Judiciary Committee. ·
· Ultimately, McMillian·~ legal
team wu able to establi$ his innocence by proving that his truck
didn't match the description
offered at trial ,' and that law
enforcement officials concealed
exculpatory evidence. One of the
slate's witnesses recanted bis testimony, and acknowtet!ged being
pressured by law enforcement offi.
cers . After numerous rounds of
aJ?pcals, all charges were finally
dismissed against McMillian.
Alabama joined in seeking dismissal of the charges. ·
F&lt;r Bryan Stevenson, lhe moral
of the stay is Ibis:
.
"That it took four and a half
years of litigation with lhoussnds
of hours of investigation ... shows
us lhat there are disturbing prob ~
lems which must be corrected within our criminal justice system."
Jack Anderson and Mkhael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Rain. expected to return to Ohio .·Thursday

OHIO Weather

Page 2:_The Dally Sentlnf'l
Pomeroy~lddteport, Ohio
·Wednesday, April 7, 1993 .

WASHINGTON - Since the
111 Court Stnet
reinstatement Of the death penalty
PomUOJ, Ohio
in 1976, 197 people hav~ been exe· DEVOTED TO THE~ OP 1'IIB IIEI~IIASOI'f AR&amp;A
cuted in the United SillieS. Walter
McMillian came close to becoming
numbe~ 198 - and there's evidence that tha state of Alabamawould have had the death of an
innocent man on its C911SCimcc.
ROBERT L WJNGETr
, McMillian's story· is require!)
Publisher
i reading for a Supreme Coun that
· wants to expedite the pace or exe1
cutions, and reduce the delays
CHARLENE
HOEFLICH
PAT WIDTEHEAD ·
'j caused by time.:COnsuming llllllC8ls.
General Manager
Assistant Publlsher/ControUer
· But one man 's delays can-be an ·
LETI1!RS 'OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be_lela than 300
.innocent man's due process- as
!
McMillian's experience in the rural
words. All-letten are subject 10 editing llld must be signed with name,
community of Monroeville, Ala.,
odclleas and telepllooe nlimber. No unsiped lenas will be publisbed. Leaen
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
· illustrates. Led by Sen. Howard
L..;.;;;;.;;;.~.;;;,;:;.;.;._;..,;,__...;;...__..;.._________, Metzenbaum, D-Ohio; the Senate
Judiciary 'Commiuce has launched
a nationwide probe of capital punishmenL
·''Nearly five years ago Walter
McMillian was convicted of mur•
derin~t a convenience ·store cleft,"
explains Metzenbaum. "He had no
previous criminal. record, except
for one misdemeanor charge. His
By Th Associated Press
.
·.
FoUowing are excerpiS from rec~nt editorials on national and state trial lasted only a day and a half.
The jury recommended that he be
issues in newspapers across the slate:
given
a life sentence, but the state
• Tile Atllelll Metsenaer, March 28
·
·
No other industrial lllltioo puts 90 much of its GNP into heallh protec~
lion yet gets such an WICveb relllm on its in'ri:SIIiiCIIL
1n 1980, total U.S. health spending stoOd at $230 billion. A decade
laler, the figure had jumped to $605' billion, even !hough some 37 minion
Americans stiU lacked basic health insurance and ll!illions more were
inadequately insured.
.
Pi'esident Clinton says he will guarantee heallh insurance to all Americans. That. promiSe is easier rbade than lcepL Indeed it won't be unless lhe
president and his hc:llllth-care liiSk force, headed by Hillary Rodham Clinton; insist on far-reaching reforms.
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The Clinton team should consider drafting a truly universal health
insurance bill like the one sponsored in the House by Rep. James McDerrn·ou. D-Wuh., a physician, and in the Senate by Sen. Paul WeUstone, DMinn.
Their single-payer, publicly funded health-care proposal would insure
every American, regardless of income or employment status. The bill, patterned after Canada's national heallh-insurance progmm, would hold
down cQSts and put restrictions on high-tech medicine by negotiating
these issues with providers.
·
·.
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.
Any plan lacking these components can't seriously be called major
. heallh-care reform.

Pomeroy:-Middteport, Ohio

W. VA.

Pt.
C1 993 Accu-Wee.ther, Inc .

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-~--~-weather----Friday, showers and thunderstorms likely. Lows 45-55. Highs
in the 60s. A chance of showers
Saturday. Lows in lhe 40s. Highs in
mid-50s to low 60s. Fair on Sunday. Lows in mid-30s to row 40s.
High~ in the 50s.

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in
. ihe mid-40s. Thursday, increasing
cloudiness. High 70-75.
Extended forecast:
Friday through Sunday: .

By The Associated PresS
A.rouacl the aatioo
Sorne sunshine and mild tem A mix of snow and rain fell
peratures are on tap for Ohio lpday. from the Dakotas to the Rockies
A mix of clouds and sunshine is today, while the Gulf Coast and
expected, with mihftemperatures.
southern Plains states braced for
SoutheaSt winds wiU bring some , another band of tlwnderstonns.
mild air. through tomorrow . AfterSnow advisories extending
noon highs today should range through this morning were JIO!lted
through the 60s, 'with slightly high· for the NebraAa Panhandle and
er temperatures Thursday.
northeast Colorado, where it
· Showers are expected in the snowed late Tuesday.
state Thursday as a low pressure
The chance of heavy rain was in
front spreads through the area. the forec;ast for the COiists of Texas
. Sbowers and a few thunderstorms , and Louisiana and parts of
could spread into western parts of Arkansss, Oklahoma, Kansas and
the siate Thursday afternoon , with Missouri.
lhe most threatened area lhe north. Dropping temper.uures at higher
west. Cloud cover with Ibis sys1em elevations in Arizona brought agri~
is likely to be spreading over the cultural advisories ssyinB protecstate late tonight and thickening on tion might be Deeded for apples and
Thursday. ·
other frost sensitive plants tonight.
Eastern temperatures were
It looks as lhough the cold front expected 10 range Cram the SOs ih
wiU be passing IICrtlSS Ohio by late nonhero New England nnd along
Friday and Friday night, so ihe the ~oast as far south as NQrth Carchance of wet weather is like Iy to olina. Sixties and 70s were anticiremain through Friday night ·
pated across a wide are;~, wilh 80s
The Columbus wealher station in Aorida. ·
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s~ys _the record high for this date .
In the central United States,
was 85 in 1893. The record low highs were forecast to range fnim
was 14 in 1982.
the 40s in Minnesota to the 80s in
Sunset. tonight will be 8:01- p.m. southern TexaS. The Denver
Sunrise Thursday 7:04 a.m . .
had forecast highs in the 30s.

.

· In the West, tempera lUres were
expected to range Cram the 50s in
Seattle to the 60s as far south as
San Francisco; with 70s across a
wide area and 80s in the extreme·

southern California and Arizona.
The high temperature for the
continental United States on Tucs·
day was 94 degrees at two Texss
towns, LajiiiiS and Presidio.

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TOP COOKIE SELLER • Bridaet Johnson, a member
Junior Girl Seoul Troop No. 1276, Middleport, was the top seller
of Girl Seout cookies ia Mrigs County. She sold 505 boxes. Her
troop was also tbe top seller ol the cookies.

area

Misunderstanding causes
_Meigs announcements_
money to .be cut from budget
Nazarene will feature a
Services set

Hope Baptist Churcli in Middleport will have Good Friday services at2:30 p.m. Public invited.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
l!:gislJitor ssys lhe Ohio House cut
$22 million from the governor's
proposed budget for special education for handicapped children
· because of a misunderstanding.
Rep. Wayne M. Jones, chairman
of the House Finance Committee's
education section, said lawmakers
lhought lhe $22 miUion for primary, secondary and preschool special
education workers was extra
money that wouldn't be spent during the two-year budget cycle.
"Tliere was no .intent at all to
cut special education funding," he

-dramatized
version of "The Sermon on the.
~unt" on Easter Sunday at 10:30
-~ by Rev. Kenneth Maynard.
Everyone wc;lcome.
. ·

ssid. "I was told the money would
not get spent because the units
(special education workers) were ·
already .fully funded, but I found
· Egg bulu pl1111ned
out lJiter tliey weren't."
·.
Country music night
There will be an Easter egg hunt
c·_on_t_in....u_ed_rr_om--=p_a.:.ae_l_ _ _
He said the money can be at the Forked Run Sportsman Club
Country music night will be
restored in the House-passed bud- on Satwday at 2 p.m. Public invit- held at lhe Louridge Community
both groups, Carol Ohlinger of the
get eilher by lhe Senate or during ed. The hunt is open to children C!lDter on Saturday from 7 p.m. to
MLTA and Charles Williamson of
negotiations wilh lhe House over a ages 12 and under. ...J
·
. midnight. All bands are welcome.
OAj'SE, how their respective
final budget.
Refreshments will be available.
members might view the change.
VFWtomeet
Everyone
welcome.
Jones, D-Cuyahoga Falls; said
Ohlinger thought the MLTA might
The
Tuppers
Plains
VFW
Post
the money was redisuibuted by the
take a positive view, although she
Literary club to meet
House. For instance, $7 rilillioil No. 9053 will meet Thursday at
sail! the change could cause the
The Middleport Literary Club
loss of a month's retirement if the
was put into basic aid, a general 7:30p.m. All members are urged to
will
meet Aprif 14 at lhe home of
auend.
state fund for schools.
additional make-up day takes lhe
Mrs.
WendeD Hoover. Mrs. Frank
John Herner, special education
school year into June.
.
Regan
will review "Mother of an
director for the state education
Applications available
Treasurer Jane Fry explained
Army"
by Charles Ludwig. Mrs.
dep
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h
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h
·
The
Meigs
Tlnited
Methodist
that a teacher cannot teaCh a single
ar men , S&amp;i .I e cut m t e Cooperative Palish will be taking Sibley Slack wiU review "CrescCI!t
· CLEVELAND (AP) ~ The $1.08 biUion special education secday in any month in which he
holders of four tickets naming all Lion of Gov. George Voinovich's gand8rden ~ed aPPlications Aprilthl5 City" by Belva Plain. For roll call,
she
draws
retirement
benefits.
,.
The (Findlay) Courier, March 29 ·
6
10
· T ues day ·budget would mean less money ••'or
From the more than 50 attendfive..numbers drawn m
rr. 1 .rom
311 ca.m.d to noon
s at ine tell of a Jewish friend.
William Bennett. the former drug czar and SQCretary of education, has
0
night' s Buckeye 5 game win teachers, tlierapists and others who
ace,
on or treet
Board to meet
..
ing lhe meeting, one minisicr and
shown himself for many years now to he one of diose thinkers who prods
$100,000
apiece,
the Ohio Louery work with students with leaml,!ls._ -~~~eroy.
one
parent
spoke
out
in
support
of
people into uncomfortsble but helpful thinking.
d h · lil d' · ·
·
The Racine Board of Public
Good .Friday as a school
said.
.
an P ys•c5 0 issb•lities.
Pr....am slated
Affa•'rs w•'ll meet Monday at 10
. · His latest prodding has been publi!lbed as an "Index of Leading Cul. holiday.
The winning tickets were sold at
About 1 million was cut from
The ~ F' Ch h f the
turaiindicarm," And it is a scary delailing of Ameriq~'s cultural slipJohn 's Party Store in Rossford, special education and preschool
·
JrSt urc 0 ·
a.m. at'theanne•.
·
·page in recent decades. Using Census Bureau figures, it shows the ugly.
Friendly Drug in Warrensville speCial education, while $12 mil·
truth of our nation's "social regression."
\
H,eights, Bill's Food Market in l!on :-vas ·taken from the $100 mil- --L
Most importantly, it makes one wonder how President Clinton and
Dayton and Chip's Convenient hon tn lottery profits that were des·
·
.
Viola
V.
Tillis
many of the Democrats in Congress can still _prQmote social welfare
Mart in ~~y_noldsburg.
ignated fo~ ~~on. · ,
. Six calls for _assistance 'w~re , driclcs. He was ~en to-Veterans
spending programs .that not only don't wort, but, in lhe long run, add to
Viola V. Tillis, 95, of J'urner
~
answered by_uDIIs of the Me1gs Memonal Hosp•tal. ·At 2:46 p.m.
lhc harm and misery of those they are ll'ying to help.
·
.
Rd., Chillicothe, died Monday,
&lt;::ounty Emergency Medical Ser· the uriit transported Mil~ed Hub·
We would like to think there is hope America can g~ . itsJICt togelher
March 29, 1993, at her residence.
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v1ce on Tuesday and early Wednes- bard from the Syracuse Fue Station
.
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Bo1n Jan . 30, 1898, in Ross
and react sensibly to our' social problems. But it wiU Jake a different lead·
Each year, Obi.Oiins generate an · boxes or paper bags·• one f&lt;r news- lion _new~fpers every day and 3861, New York, NY, 10163.
day
morning.
to Ve1erans.
.
County to John and Mary Lump
'ership from what we have in WashingiOD today -on bolh ends of Penn- enormous amount of solid waste: paper, aluminum cans, glass, and throw out · ut44~million of them. Request that your name and
On
Tuesday
at
8:47
a.~.
t~e
.
At9:56
p.m.
,the Middleport
Harris, she was married March .6,
sylvania Avenue.
·
.
·, · more than 14 million tons. That one for plastic . Additional items That means the equivalent of about address be removed from mailing
.
.
Rutland
un11
went
to
White
s
Hill
F1re
Department
responded to an .
1915, io Rev. Roy Tillis, who died
averages out to seven pounds per may be recycled, if the Opponuni- 500,000 trees are dumped into liSL • ·
.
Road
for
Dustin
Eads
who
was
auto
accident
on
Route 124. The
The Columbu Dispatch, March 31
Aug. 30, 1965.
person each day or 1,000 tilnes our
HUNTINGTON , W.Va. (AP) have been godd .to me,:' he said. trnnsported to Hqlzer Medical Cen- Middlepon unit treated but did not
. landfills every week. . . . . . . . . . .. .. . .. A voiding unnecessary waste is
How has Boris N. Yeltsin manated to survive as president of R11ssia? . adult weight in waste in a lifetiine.
· Surviving are daughters and
- State Delegate Steve Williams "I'm not bitter. The message was ter.
You
can
also'
reduce
waste
by
th~ key to successful precycling.
transport Jack Stanley.
sons-in-law,
Mary
and
Elwood
An impor1111t reason may be lhat neither his hardliner opponents nor lhe
At lhe same time we are producdefeated incumbent Mayor Bo,Pby that the people want a change."
making environmentally-sound Think about what you have thrown
Long
At
10:04
a.m.
the
Tuppers
This morning (Wednesday) at
Russian people would want the kind.of anarchy and chaos that could ing large amounts of solid wuste,
Rinehart and Ruth and Carl Bower,
Nelson has served· three terms Plains unit wem iO Rou~e 7 'for 12:47 a.m. the Middleport unit
Nelson in lhe Democratic mayoral
decisions at the store and l?revent away this wee11: and what you could
all of c;:hillicothe, Es.ther and
result if Yeltsin were to be deposed.
Ohio is facing a landfiU crisis.·1n
each in lhe House of Delegallis and Herman· Carson who was taken to wem to Maple Street for Angie
primary:
needless waste from entenng lhe have recycled or pm:ycled. PrecyWayne
Kennedy
of
Langsville
and
Consider lhe stakes for the West, too. Yeltsin may have been exagger- 1991, lhe Ohio EPA estimated lhat ties exist in ypur comm~ty.
With all S~ precincts reporting, state Senate and two terms as Camden Clark Hospital.
waste stream. You should look f&lt;r . cling will reduce waste, conserve
Teaford who was treated but not
Meredith
Ratcliff·of
Circleville;
ating somewhat when he described those who oppose him as warrim .of 67 of Ohio's s·s counties have
To f10d what recyclmg opportu· products with the least amount of- resources, and save money and
unofficial results showed Williams mayor. He said he. would support
The
~yracuse unit went 10 Main transported.
· sons and daughtcrs·in-law.
the Cold War stripe who· could once again turn up the heat under lhe insufficient Solid waste capaciiy. · nities are available in your area packaging, avoid products pack- landfill space. With just a few extra
had 2540 voteS, while Nelson fin· the pany ticket in lhe general elec- Street at 1:35 p.m. for Larry Hen·
Jonathan and Wilma Tillis of
worldwide arms race.
,
The best lhing Ohioans can do is contact your local recycle program, _aged in two or more different mate- minutes at the store, we can all
ished with 2,229 vote's. Cabell tion June!.
Reedsville. David · an~ Dorothy .
Yeltsin's opponents seem to realize lhat among·the people he enjoys change our waste habits at home, solid waste management district
In lhe Republican primary, Jean
County Commissioner Bob Bailey
and buy products packaged in have an positive impact on the
Tillis
and
Rev
.
Amos
and
Ruth
more suppon than lhey do. He is, after aU, the nation's fmt-ever elec1ed· school, and lhe woitplace to make office, or ihe Ohio Division of Lit- rials,
was
lhird
with
I
,806
votes.
Dean,
a former direcior of finance
recycled packaging.
environmenL
'
Tillis, all of Chillicothe, Curtis and
president. So even !hough the reforms he has insisted on have brought Ohjo a•cleaner and healthier place. . 'ter Prevention &amp; Recycling at
and
administration
for the city, won
After,
conceding
defeat
la'e
Another method of reducing ,
If you have questions or comConnie Tillis of Kingston and Rev.
pain, he remains the people's choice.
'
· One alternative to waste dispos- (614) 265-63~3.
.
with
2,167
votes.
Her opponent,
Tuesday,
Nelson
said
he
does
not
waste is to stop or reduce the menis on this or any other issue
William and Naomi'TilUs of· Penns
Outside Russia, Clinton and other Western leaders believe Yeltsin is al is recycling. Recycling can be
know what he will do after ,he fin- paramedic Daniel R. Booth, had
The benefits of recycling are amount of j11nlc mail you receive. pb:ase feel free to conlact me, Sen~
Barbara A. Windsor, Middle·
Creek, Penn.: 36 grandchildren;
lhe only power woith backing. No one else gives the impression of being done wilh just a few extra minuteS tremendous, for example, we ssve You can do this by writing: Mail ator Jan Michael Long Ohio Sen350 VOteS.
.. · ·
ishes his term June 30.
·
port,
filed for a divorce from
a figure who would carry refonn forward. Outsiders see the choice as a day and a small space in the enough energy by recycling one
several great-grand and great-great·
Williams, a former acting city
"I've been in politics for 29
Preference,
Direct
Maiteting
Asso.
ate
Statehouse,
Col~mbus,
OH
Robert
Windsor Ill, Lucasville,
being between Yelts10 and chaos.
grandchildren.
.
garage, basement or closet. You aluminum can to run a TV set for c~abon. U West 42nd St., P.O. Box 43215 or call, (614) 46681 56.
years and lhe people ,of Huntington manager, said his emphasis on ecoMonday
in lhe Meigs County Coun
Olher survivm include a sister,
can start recycling wilh four sturdy lhree hours. Americans buy 62 milnomic issues won him the suppon
of
Common
Pleas.
Goldie Tillis· of Fmnkfon; brother
of Huntington's business commuDivorces
were granted Monday
and his wife, Harry and Oss Harris
nity and workers in the primary.
of Chillitothe; several nieces and
to Woodrow Hendrix Jr. Cram Cory . II-!!!!!:!:!.!.!~~
Marie Hendrix, Rebecca D. Taylor
nephews and a .daughter-in-law
from Chad L. Taylor, and Connie
~
Kalhleen Tillis of Rutland.
AID
Ele
Power
....................
36
1/2
Jo MeHaffey from Patrick L.
Dear Editor,
because she is there for aU the kids
She was prec¢ed in dealh by a
~
Continued from page 1
Ashland Oil.. .... ..................27
MeHaffey.
WAS,HINGTON (NEA) - No this question will be raised. again, campaign, if a candidate received reported before the election Packdaughter, Nellie Krebs; a son ,
We are always. hearing about lhe no matter what the problem. •
AT&amp;T
...
.'
.....
:
...............
~ ......57 718 ~ comments or face a possible
.
Contiaued
from
page
I
_
.
In addition; dissolutions were
bad lhings teac_hers do, but not lhe
· Jenni is in Mrs. Jo Dunn's matter Where You look around as Wl·u qu-tJO
' ns about whether her public funds.
•
wood would certainly have been
Sherman TiUis, and an 'infant son,
Bank One..........................:57 'lfl
change of venue.
.granted Monday to Connie Sue
gOod things.
.
homeroom and when she missed Washingto)l these days, unusual role is vlolating the so-called
No one is happy w.i th the defeated.
·
John Clark Tillis; brothers, Myrl, ordinance Includes a narrow scope
BQb .Evans .. ........... ,........... !~ S/8
"'These were emotionally Mfi-· Jones and Charles ·E. ·Jones, and
. of weapons and is' neede(l for lhe
Now an anti-Packwood Orego11
Pearl and 0ttie Harris:
I )lave two ¢tughters, Jenni· and · .. school because .o f lhe loss of her . and vexing legal questions seem to ·Kennedy ,. Law, which prohibits results . -The problem is ho·w to .
Charming
Shop
..................
l4
.7!8
cult
charges 10 pursue," Lentes Darin Doyle Roilch and 'Donna '
Lucy, who attend Bradbury dnd grandpa, she brought Jenni 's and have came to lhe foreCront.
change the system v/ilhout violat· citizens group has filed petition
She attended the High Street health, safety and welfare· of resi:
said,
Chmp
Industries
................
.12
.
1
/2
"'but I am committed to lhe Leigh Roach.
Middleport Elementary , All the my nephe)V'"Davy's work to them
One example: Is Hillary Roding lhe First Amendment and run- with tbe Senate Ethics Comll)itli:C
Church of Christ in Christian dents. ..
City
Holding~ ..................... 22
priliCiple
that nobody is above tbe
"The capacity for liarm is so
.teaehers are very loving and com- and 10 see if they needed allything. ham Clinton simply a private citiUJ
ning afoul of the Supreme Coun? · de~ that it unseat Packwood
,Ugion whl:fC funeral services were
Federal
Mogul...
................
.l8
1/8
law,
and
that
includes attorneys. It
•
Finally, a question that seems -which' il has the power to do"helcf'rhunaay; A' ril .l. wlth Revs. • apparent and so obvious,". she said.· GoodyearT&amp;R ..................74 1/2
passionate.
She also deserves a big pat.on lhe zen who happens to be married to ·
is
important
that,
under the law,
lhe president of the United States
almost co~ Can 'the U.S. Sen- O!! the basis that h•s lies were so
Donald Pfeifer. ~oben Isaacs and ''The sky does not have to fall
We lost my stepfather in Jan- back.
Key Centurion ...................24 3/4 · .~v.ery(lp~ ..is..tr~tl:!l. ~~~~~Uy .in the ... ... '.' ...
ate refusct 10 s&amp;t one of its duly fundamental to the outcome that... · ...... .. ...,. .... Hubert ·Salley ·o(ficiating. Burial .. before the council or legislati.ve ... • ··~"" 'E"""="·
uary and the girl's were having a
I think lhere should be programs or is she a quasi-government offi...............
IIU ... , , ,,.,. ......
, . .. .. , ..... ~"318·
-"0
·COunty S COUI1 system."
body is expected and entitled to
cial,
albeit
without
P.ii.Y.•
with
aU
the
nepotism
in
the
executive
branch.
.
elected
members because he lied they wm the equivalent of election
foUowed in Greenlawn Cemetery.
hard time coping.
10 -give teaChers special recognition
Limited
Inc
.
......................
23
3/8
Mullen and his attorney
act.'' .
Anolher question vexing Wash- during his election campaign. ·
fraud. , . '
. ·
·
Lucy is 10 Mrs. Twila Childs because lhey don't just teach our rights and .responinb•lities that go
Multimedia Inc ..................32 3/4 declined comment. .
.
The court' ssid it would consider
ington: Can you have meaningful
lt is generally acccpled lhat can- ..... Pack'rood .. has argued that .the ............. ,. 1
room and Mrs. Childs would take kids but these teachers love lhem · wilh high government office?
Point
Baneoip
....................
l3
1/2
· ··- --~:' Tlt-eUni:lySeutinel-· · ···· the arguments, but did not say Rax Restaurant...................3/8
her free time to liold and console also.
·
This question arose within the . camraign reform without running didstes on the stump· teU less !f!an Committee does not have the power
Plan alurimi banquet
•
when il would rule.
: . the complete truth most of the ume. 10 malce such a judgmenL He cites
her when she was upset. She
Mrs. Phyllis Howerton. context or tlie first lady heading the afou ·of the,First Amendmel)l?
IUSPS Zi3-980)
ReliaiiCC
Electric
................
21
The ·ruling will have an impact
Virtually every campaign If every word of every candidate the Supreme .Coun decision in the
deserv!JS a big pal. on the back
Middlepon presidential heallh-care-reform task
Publil;hcd evr.ry al\emoon . Monday
Robbins&amp;Myers ·................17 1/4 . · The Eastern High School alumn,i
lht1)Ufth tnday, 111 Court St .. POI"t\Croy,
on similar ordinances in Columbus,
force. The panel was doing its reform plan, Democratic or Repub- · were closely ·analyzed, you would Adam Clayton Powell case in the ·
coordinating committee is c:urrellly
Shoney's Inc.:., .................. 22' 1/2
Ohio by tt~c· Oh~o W,nllcy 1•ubli11trinc:
Dayton
and
other
cities
around
tbe
T .
work hehilld closed doors, and sev- lican, centers on regulati'!g who have to conclude ·.tliat, at one time .1970s. Experts say the matter is far '
Cdmpany!Multimodia Inc., Pomeroy,
Slat' Bahk .......................... .36 3/4 malting plans for the 1993 lilwnni
state, said Don Ferguson, an attor.l
era1 interest groups filed suit clliirri• can giye how much to political or another during the heat of a from clear, and lhe ·comrilittee may
Ohlo 45769. Ph. 992-2156. Sceond eiiUitl
Wendy Int'l........................ l3 ~/8 banquet to be held June 12 at the
~tll gP. paid IlL f'61TWITO)', Ohio.
ney OppoSing the Dayton measure.
ing Ibis violated the federal govern· campaigns, and how much a candi• . campaign, everyone lies.
have to rule on whelher Packwood
Worthington Ind. ...............27 3/4 high school.
· By The Associated Press '
ment's open-meeting rule. 1
date can spend. Democrats want to
However, the q tiestion has commiued a fraud serious enough
"The right to keep and bear
Mcmbr.r: The A.&lt;~twcht tOO 'PrcsH, And Lh&lt;1
Any alumni not conlacted w.ithStock reports are the 10:30
Today is Wednesday· April 7• the 97th day of 1993. There are 268 ·
The question came down to limit.the amount of contributions arisen in a more serious context. It for the Senate to unseat llim.
Ohio Nnw,.pnptrr A"HOciaUon, N11tion11l
arms is no less a fundamental civil
a.m. quotes provided · )ly in the past five years should contact
Advulisin,; Reprcsrntativo, llranham
days left in the year.
· .
·
Mrs. Clinton's precise slatus;.lf she and how much can be spent on involves Sen. Bob Packwood; RRobert Wagman Is a syndlcatright lhan c71e right of free s~h
Brian Collins .at 985-3593, Julie ··
Ncw~~p~~pr.r &amp;.k~. 733 Third Avenue,
Kemper Securities, Inc., o
,
·
was a government official, lhen Senate or House campaigns . em.. who is fightlpg charges that ed writer for Newspaper EnterToday's Highlight in History: ·
or freedom of religion,'' he told
Nf!w.York. New York 10017.
Elberfeld Dillon at 992-2006 or
GaUipoUs.
On April 7, 1862, Union forces led by Gen. Ulysses S. Grant defeated the meetings .would not have to be Republicans want to eliminate con- he sexuaUy harassed many women ,:..·...:P::r.::lse:::..:.Assoc==ia::t::loo=-.---~~
. reponers after today's arguments.
Leonard Koenig at 992-9918.
PO~ MASTER: S~nd addTello8 chftns~• to
ConliOne~~':t!~ the Battle of Shiloh in Tennessee.
·
open. If she was a private citizen, tribution s from political action over along period of years. · ·
" It also guarantees that the most
' The DRily Sentinel, 111 Court Sl. ,
Pomm~y.·OHio 45169.
humble of citizens be secure and
thim the meetings would have to be committees while increasing perThe WiisltingtOII Post .was work· Berry's World
In 1927, an audieiiCC in New Ymk saw an image o( Commerce Seen:- open because.the law ssys that any sonal contributions.
ing od the story as the campaign
safe from criminal aaack."
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
IN CONCERT
By Carrter or Motor Rou.to
tary Herben Hoover in the fust successful long-distance demonstration of presidential panel containing pri."
However, don't individualS have entered Its final da.YS last Novem·
The Legislature is considering
One Weck ............................ ....... ,.......SI.60
AT TBit
television.
·
·
vate ·citizens must m~t in public a right to spend whate~er they want ber. Tliree days before the election
two bills on the issue. The first
' One'Month .......... ...... :..o......... ,. .......... $6.95
0
In !939,.Italy invaded Albania,. which offered only token ~esistance. session except when national secu- in support of a candidate? And lhe Postlat down with _Packwood
would give the state .exclusive
One v.. r.; ....iii'N'ili.E'cl'ii&gt;Y:..........$63..2o
0
(Less than a week later, Italy annexed Albania.)
·.
rity is involved.
, doll't candidates have a right 10 to ~y OU! the chargei being leveled
power
over firearms re~tulation ;
·
PKiOJIJ
In 1947, auto pioneer Henry F&lt;rd.died in ~m. Mich. at age 83.
In a preliminary .ruling, Judge spend&lt;what they wanl on their cam- . · agamst JUn:i by five w~.
...
)lally...... ...... :................ ,.,... ......... .2.GCon'\M
negating oi'dinanccs that c1~es have .
.
,.
already passed
.
·.
In 1948, the World Heallh OrganiZation was founded.· · .
..
Royce Lambenh found a middle palga? In other words, do~sn 't
He deru~ overyt!iin' 90 force·
substrilHmi noc. dcahing. tQ pny \he cam.
In 1949; the Rodget$ ancl Hanimerstein musical "South .Pacific" ground. He said that Mrs. Clinton cam"gn fmance refotm ny in the fully, and m such ~WI,_ that
.
lhe
. A second bill would req11ire
· r.r m•Y tl!!.mil in' AdVA~ dircttl to The'
••
0
O.nily 8ontinc1 oh a lh1w, Mix or 12
opened on Broadway, ·
. •
.·
· ·
··
• ··
was not an "officer &lt;ran emj!loyee face offree speech prorections? · Poll w., forced 10 IDVCSilpte fur·
handgun buyers to wait
days
•
month' bnKiK: Crr.diL will lx! ~Yt'in carrier
In 1953, the U.N~ General AsSc:mbly elected Dag Hammarskjold of · of lhe federal govermncnt" Within · In I97~. the Supreme Court tber. It wu DP.' able to report the
to
finish
their
purchase
while
~ch wt'ir.~ .
'
.
.
'
Sweden to be sccrerary-general. ·
"
· ·
' the context or the so-called Sun- said, effectively, yes and no. In a . SIOIY by ElecliOn Day.
.
IWla
police do ...................
--,.-- chec:b..
' No 14ub8aiptioM by IMil, pennil!f4 in '
·
In 1957, lhC 1$ &lt;ifN'ew York's electric troUeys compleied its fimil fllR
shine Law. As such, BJiy "Worma- complex. decision .(Buckley vs .
To inab,IIIIUel'l worse, a local ·
w(sail.,.....~
nn•" wham hontc earner MCrvu:e la
'-:' I
IIVftilllblt..
A ' In
..
· from Queens to Manhattan. · · ·
. · · ..
' ··
. tion gathering" sessiOns of the task Valeo), it ruled ~ il was uncon- Or~go!l repor,er ilot wind that
.'illllldo
a~••• s.t.crlptloru
AlftoD
'
...
_. ....
· In 1966, the United, States recovered a hydrogen bomb it had lost off. •force will haYe to be ·public. But stitutional to put spending lirtiits on something- up and asked Pile~·
.'
. .
H.ospillll
"'"''
Mclll!f Coanl)'
.
lI
the-coast·ofSpain. ·
· ·
·
· :
when she ai::ts as a ."presidential. .campaigns., and that individuals wood wh.Y he h!UI broken off h•s
i3 Wooko.: .................................... ...$2i .llol
County Cheniber Olllce,
Vl'l'i:lt4Ns MEMORIAL
rn 1976, China's leaden!hip ilepoiCd Deputy Primj: Minister Deng . adviser," regardless of whether she could spCnd as much as they want CllllpliJIIIIIIIto IPCIId hours with a
26 Wooko,..................... .'................... t43.t6
•nd Fndh Ptwmlcy In
52 Week•;,,, ......... ..... ........................&amp;84.78
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS·
Xia0pi11g and 'appointed Hua Kuo-feng prime miniSter and f~rst deputy · is a priv~ citizen, meetings coUld on their own campaigns. However team rrom the l'ost. Packwood,
'I
\)atllldo lllolll!f CoUIJ
...
~
.
.
.
b:IDD.
.
..... Pt. Plll'llnt. .
chairman of the Communist Pany.
.
.
· be held behind closed doors.
it al10
that eontribution limirS through biss!Aff, lied about the
..::: :;,~t,..:;;· ,
13 w,.ko....................,..............,......123.40
·
'IVBIDA
Y
DISCHARGES
•
:16
wooko
........
'"-10
Vlllllnd
Ini99!!, ac,4isplay of R~~[lCMapplcthethorpe p~~togrlh·aphs opened at
As .Mrs. Clinton becomes · to 1 campaign .were conJtitutionat: subject of the inlei'Yi;ew. .
·-·....- ·
1.
...,
52 WN!klli.;.. ..................... ..................U8.40
.Priced
Cincinnaa s. ontemponiry _,...,. eniCf, . ·same ....y e center and its
increasingfy'. active in the daily· as )Yere disclosure requirements
PaclcwOod. won .the elcctlOII by a
l
direCtor were indicted on obscenity charges (both were later acquitted).
•functioning of the Wliite House . and th.e limiting of the .~ost of a narrow JIUII'JUI. Had the story been L-....:......,........:....---'-~-:--..,..-' 1

=-----~

Meigs ... __

L.Ottery Dllffi befS

or .

•

Area death

:VMS responds t 0 SIX
• caJJs

Recycle, reduce, reuse!
'

.
d
t
N
I
•
I
lams
el
ea
s
e
son
W 11
• .mayoraI primary
•·
In

'

Sen.}an M.

Divorces and
dissolutions

Letters to the editor

Teachers deserve pat on the back

Stocks

Legal questions vex Hill lawmakers

Local..

Supreme ..

a

Robert J rragman

'

L.OUU~

' ·aY l•n·.. h'. ,· st'.ory
0d

RtJTIAND

·cmc CENTEI\

I

seven

SAT., APRIL •7
.·. 8:00P.M.

Sweet Greetin1s

'

ann

rwed

L ................ . : .......... ....

•

··. .

~

\

.,

·,

•

0

•

..

....

·Cookie Bouquets For Easter
(And All Oceaalona)
·To Order

~~ ~~~

Ceu....,,.

~

,,

•

�/

.

'

Wednesday, Apr117, 1993

Sports

~'iants, Pirates record victories
..In.NL
opening-game action

The Daily Sentinel

I
- . ~--1'--

..

.

Wednesday, April 7. 1993

·

Page-4

OHSBC
Hall of Fame
.
to welcome Bowen
as newest inductee
"'

.

.'

. pi ..JJ\S

KIM MICHAEL

JAIME WILSON

ERIC POWELL

Four named Eastern's 'Athletes of the Month' ·.
Although the weather has been ·
unfavorable this spring, students
participating in spring sports at
Eastern have been working hard in
the gym and braving the cold to
prepare for the upcoming baseball,
softball and track SCl!50ns.
Risint: a1&gt;ove the call of duty
. and earmng March "Player of the
· Month" status at the school were
Kim Michael, girls' track; Tyson
Rose, baseball, Eric Powell, boys'
traek; and Jaime Wilson, softball.
Kim Michael, the daughter of
Gary and Sharon Michael of
Racine, was nominated by track

coach Arch Rose. She ·is very
active a1 the school, participaling in
Tri-M and earning honor roll status
for the past four years. She is a
member of the track team (3 yrs.),
Varsity "E" Club, yearbook siaff,
Student Council, National Honor
Society, 4-H Club, Solo &amp; Ensemble Band and a member of ihe
senior play. She has earned the all
"A" honor roll for two consecutive
years.
Tyson Rose, die son of Arch
and Debbie Rose ·or Long l!ottom,
was nominated by Coach Dennis
Eichinger. Rose. a junior. has been

a 4-H member for seven years, a
three year member of the varsity
football team, baseball team and
Varsicy ."E" Club. He has been on
the honor roll each time for the past
three years, is a .member of the
Honors Tutorial program, National
Honor Society and is a perfect
atteildance award·winner.
Eric Powell, the son of Wilson
Powell of Reedsville, was nominal~d by Arch Rose. He has been a
four-year member of 4-H, a mem.ber of the honor roll, varsity track,
the Army National Guard program,
Varsity "E" Club, cross country

and swim team. He is an hOII(Jr roil
student, has had perfect auendance ·
and is a m.ember of the senior play
cast.
Jaime Wilson, daughter of Beryl
and Linda Wilson of Reedsville,
was nominated by coach Pam
Douthitt. Jaime is a. three-year
member of the Volleyball, Basketball arid softball teams, a·member
of National Honor Society, Student
Council and the senior play cast.
She has been an hohor student for
three years, Buckeye Girls State ·
and Regional Scholars program.

RG men net first place at Glenville ·invitational
The University of Rio Grande
men's ttack team took fif$t pll!ce
and the women's team second out ·
of a field of seven schools participating in last weekend's Pioneer
Invitational at Glenville State College.
·
The men's team earned 159-1/2
. points to best Glenville State, West
Virginia Wesleyan; Robert Morris,
Frostburg State, California (Pa.) .
and West Virginia State in the
competition. The w0111en, with 143,
trailed West Virginia Wesleyan in
first place and went ahead of
Glenville State, Robert Morris,
California, Frostburg State and
West Virginia Stare.
Taking fust place in individual

events for the men were Tim Mur!
phy, high jump six feet, four inch- ·
es; Jerry Smith, long jump, 21 teet,
6-3/4 inches; Murphy, 400 meter
hurcpes, 55.1 seconds; Chris Smith,
5000 meter, 15:43; Chad Benson,
1500 meter, 4:()(); Jerry Smith, 100
meter, I 1.1; Murphy, 110 meter
hurdles, 15.3; Benson, 800 meter,'
1:57; and James Johnson, discus,
129 feet, 1-1/4 inches.
.
~lacing second were Jerry
Smnh, 200 meter, 22.5; mile relay
team of Benson, Marc Michigan,
Chad Cannon lind Murphy, 3:29;
and Candy Richardson, 1500
meter, 4:10. Third place was taken ·
by the 400 meter relay team of
Jerry Smith, Dave Rose, Cannon

and Murphy, 44.4; Michigan, 400
meter, 51.5; and John Miller, discus, 124 feelln fourth place were
Cannon, long jump, 20 feet, 5-112
inches;' Richardson, 5000 meter,
16: 19; and Dan Longcay, triple
jump, 33-1/2 feel:.
Placing fii'St for the Redwomen
were Bonnie Evans, 5000 meter,
18:43; Renee Peck, 1500 meter
4:49; Kim Sowers, long jump, t6
feet, 9-3/4 inches; Stacey Riuer,
200 meter, 26.7 seconds; Peck,

Alexander edges Meigs·4-3
. pitching a good game. He strUck
By DAVE HARRIS
out eight, walked seven and also
Sentinel Correspondent
. .
Shawn Hamon slammed a grand gave up four hits.
. Last Thursday, Wellston broke a
slam home run in the fii'St inning,
and fired a four hitter on the 3-3 tie in the third inning with two
mound to lead Alexander to a 4-3 runs and went on to post a 6-3 win
win over Meigs in Tri-Valley Con- over Scott Gheen's MaraUders. The
ference baseball action Monday ·game was called after six inning
due to darkness.
evening.
Although boih teams are mem •
It was the season opener for
Alexander, Meigs drops to 0-2 on bers of the Tri-Valley Conference,
the season. The Marauders lost a 6' it was a non conference game since
3 non conference game to. Wellston the league play is limited to a single round robin in baseball and
last Thursday evening.
CHRIS STEWART
Hamon gave his team an early softball.
.
Meigs jumped out to an early 2-. Stewart gets start
4-0 lead in the fii'St inning. Meigs
pitcher Keith Jones walked Jim 0 lead in the first inning when Jim
Nicholson. Scott Chapman and Pullins hit a two run home run. But on mound for KCC
, Man Rolser.·Hamon then slammed Wellston came back in the bottom
a one out pitch to clear the bases of the inning to take a 3-2 lead, two
Chris Stewart, a 1991 graduate
of which came on a two run home of Meigs High School, is continuagainst his former teammaleS ...
ing his baseball'career for the KenMeigs plated three runs m the run off ihe bat of Ken Storms.
With one out in the bottom of tucky Christian College Knights.
third inning on the c&lt;lmbination of
·Stewart started recently against
two walks, a ground out and sin- the third Dan Hendershott singled,
gles by Mike Welsh and Jim advanced on a wild pitch and Johnson Bible College of Johnson
scored on a Jason Via double. Via City, Tenn . Stewart started the
Pullins. ·
Hamon led the winners at the stole third and scored on a sacrifice game by pitching three perfect
innings, striking out seven consecplare with the grand slanrand a sin-. fly off the bat of Chad Stevison.
The winning pitcher was Steve utive batters as KCC jumped out to
gle, Bryan Johnson and Man Hawk
added a single each. Hamon scat· Hendershott, left bander Mike a 1-0 lead.
· Stew:u;t was lifted in the fifth ··
tered four hits, walk;ed. five and Vance :was the loser .for Meigs,
·suuck out five:
··
'Both pitchers went the route and inning with the Knights holding a
Mike Welsh, Jjm Pullins, Vince each gave up.four hits.
, 5-0 advantage. Stewart in his founh
Reiber and Aaron Drummer each
Weather ~ permitting,
the innings of work struck out 11, and
had a single for the Marauders hits. Marauders travel to Belpre today. gave up only one hit. The Knights
Jones was ihe losing pitcher despite The early part of the schedule and were unable to hold the lead as
the weather have worked against Johnson City came bac1c to post a
Meigs. It will be the third game in 6-5 win . Stewart also had a good
·a row for the Marauders against ihc game at the plate with two singles
toughest teams in the TVC. The and a stolen hase.
In action this past wed&lt; against
two games have been the only
Thomas
Moore College and
These are the results of recent · times ihat Me.igs has been able to
Cincinnati
Bible College, Stewart
.action at the P:Omeroy Bowling go outside this season . The wet
has
raised
his batting average to
gfounds and rain have caused
Lanes.
.385.
.
Meigs to hold all work outs inside.
March31
, League -Early \Vednesday
~-·-··-!~"""-------·--·--·Mixed
. Teams (in order of 'finish) Hackett's Roofing (73), Tony's
Carry Out (72), Sports &amp; Stuff
(63), Rutland American Legion
(58), Banks Construction (54),
be
Teaf&amp;rd Golf &amp; Trophies (40).
Team series - Sports &amp; Stuff
~'"
(1689)
.
Team game - Sports &amp; Stuff
FRIDAY, APR. 9, 1993-9 a.m.·Noon
(679)
Men .
I• Dr, I. JaciCSOI Balles' Office
I
. High series - Dewey Smith
. 110 Mec•••lc
I
(536)
Second-highest series - Sam •
ThOmpson (525)
1312 Ea•ter• Iva•• (lo,te 7), hii•H•
High game - Sam Thompson

3000 meter, 10:19; and the mile
relay team uf Kristy Lindsey, Sowers, Ginger Smith and Ritter, 4: 16..
Second place went to the 400
meter relay team of Lindsey; Sowers, Smith and Ritter, 51.7: Tricia
Holmes, shoq&gt;ut, 36 feet, nine inches; Rit,t.er. long jump, 16 feei. three
inches; and Evans. 3000 meter,
10:54. In third place were Holmes,
discus, 112 feet, one inch; Ritter,
100 meter, 13.2; Lindsey, long
jump, 16 feet, one inch, 1111d 200
meter, 27.3; Sowers, triple jump,
33 feei, four inches; Smith, 400
meter, 1:06.
In fifth place was Jennifer.·
Beyer, 5000 meter, 22:08; Lindsey,
100 meter, 13.4; and Cristy Cox,
400 meter, I :.07. Taking sixth place
in ihe javelin was Jennifer Owens,
77 reet, two inches.
The teams will next compete in
the Dogwood Relays at Knoxville,
Tenn., Apri18-10. ·

AI Bowen , a former Eastern ·
He and his wife of 29 years, the
High School cage coach ·wbose former Rita Hinton, now reside at
career spanned 31 years, will be Canal Winchester and have five
inducted into ihe Ohio High School · children: Matthew, 23; Mark, 21;
Baskeiball Coaches Hall of .Fame Martin, 20; Mary Ellen, 16, and
during a banquet to be held on Sat- Molly, 15.
·
·
· ·
urday, Apri124 in Columbus.
Tickets for the Hall of Fame
Bowen coached the 1964-65 induction banquet, to be held at the
EHS cage team that was Southern · · Holiday Inn on ihe Lane, 328 W.
Valley Athletic Conference and Lane Ave., Columbus, can be purSEOBL champions, as .well as win- chased for $16.50 each by coni8Ct·
ner of the Racine tournament ·and ing Don Henderson, 1414 Easlgale
sectional championship, while · Road, Springfield, OH 45503
amassing an overa)120-2 record.
(phone 513"399-3534), or by phonIn all, Bowen spent 26 years as ing Bowen at614-837-5669 . .
head basketball coach and his
teams won 312 games while losing
229. He came ltl Eastern High for '
one season after being head cage
coach for six years at the former
Ames-Bern High School in Athens
County. After leaving EHS, Bowen
.was head coach at Columbus Central for 13 years and then six years
at Walnut Ridge High School in
Columbus. Bowen's teams won .
nine league titles, seven seetional
and two Central District champi·
onships.
Honors bestowed on Bowen
during his long coaching career
·include Athens County Coach of
ihe Year, 1962 and 1964; coach or
the year in the Central District,
1972, 1981 and 19&amp;4; Columbus
City League Coach of the Year in
1988, recipient of the Lou Berliner
Memorial Award given by the
Columbus DispaiCh in 1989, DisALBOWEN
trict 10 Hall of Fame inductee in
1991 and selected to coach District
. Sports briefs
10 AU Stars in 1981 and 1988.
A District 10 Baskeiball CoachBasketball
es Association scholarship for tlie
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) benefit of sons and daughters of Portland Trail Blazers guard Clyde
basketbiall coaches was estilblished Drexle~ was placed on the injured
in Bowen's name in 1987.
list with a strained .left hamstring.
Bowen, in addition to serving as Drexler must sit out at l~t the
aihletic directa: at various schoori- next five games, making him eligi.
for more than 20 years, coached ble to rejoin the Blazers iln April
football for 10 years and baseball 15. The Blaws activated Delaney
for 13 years. During. his seven Rudd from the injured list to
years as head baseball coach, his replace Drexler, who was injured in
teams won 128 and lost 35 games, Saturday ' night's loss to WashingcaptiXing 12 championships.
ton.
Bowen graduated from Colum.
Basketball
.
bus South High School iri 1952,
LARAMIE, Wyo. (AP) -Joby
Ohio University in 1958 and Wright, a former Indiana player
Xavier University GradUate School and assistant who was 61-29 in
in 1975. He has served as a board · three seasons at Miami of Ohio,
member for District 10 Bsketball was named coach at Wyoming.
Coaches Association for many Wright succeeds Benny Dees, who
years and helped with State All resigned last month after six seaStar games.
·.
· sons.

-

'

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EutemDI•IIIoft

.. Team
W
Phlladclpltio .............2
NewYor:k ................ l
Pllllbur&amp;h .............. :.1
ChiCIJO.................... I
Floridl ..................... l
M.,..,... ................0
SL Lwio ..................0

Will

. BELlONE HEARING

·
. 614- 446~1744 . . ·.
.
WEDNESDAY, iPR. ·14, 1993-9:00 1.11.·4:00
CaHill! Free 1-BOQ-634-5265 IQr an lnwnediate Appoinlmenl
IH tilt• 'wf 6e flY• it, • LI-H H..... AIUp~thlll

I
I
I

1

P·•·l

. Second~high game - Dewey
Smith (W7)
. 1
. . . W11men
.. .
High series - Mary Musser
. I
(515)
. .
Anyone who ha.s lroulllt hearing or underslanding COI1VInlllion Is irwlltillo have a I
Seco~·blfbest series - Susan . FREE hear.lng 1es11o see If rhis problem c• be helped. Brint rhls coupon l¥lfh you for
1
Mossman (Sil) .
.
,
yo11 FREE HEAliNG TEST, a S75.00 value. .
·
1
Hl1h game -Mary Musser 1
uMWA
-UAW
•
woaos
(Ofllftii5A11(1HIIlll
.
·
' . .. .
.. 1 · · .
(187) . .
. • : WICO, AND~ ontO lllliiiWK£ l'lOilDIIS
·
' 1·
I
Second-high game - Susan
.
WAll-IllS WILCOMI
.
. •
.
I
Mossman (I

LoiAngdec ............. l

Colo10cl0 ..................0

S..Oie&amp;o ·····'"····....o
H~ton

.'

~

'

j

I

I
I.S
I.S

I
1

2

.s

.soo
,000
.ooo
.000

.s

.I
I

I.S

Tuesday's scores
·

Pitubu.ra,h 9, San Di.•o 4
Jltliladof~a 5, Houlton 3

Loo Anploo 4, FloOdo 2
SI;Jl FranciKo 2, Sl LoW• 1

Today's gamea

Colorldo (Rutfin 1-6) at New York
(Sobcmop3-S), I ,40 p.m.
Atlonlo (A"'Y 11·11) 01 Chiugo (Hi·
bboftl10.7), :!aQp.m.
.'
Montreal (K. Hill 16-9) at Cincinnati

Phil•delpMa (D. Jackson 8-13) . at

Howi.Oa (Hamiaeh 9-10), I:OS p.m.
•
San Franciaco (WilJon 1-14) at St .
Loud (Com&gt;icr 10.10), BS p.m.

-

LAWN &amp; -GARDEN

.

.479
,444
.306

w· L
s........................... l o
NowYGd&lt; .............:.. l
Bfltlm""' ···············.,O
a...w.d .................o

•

I)ctroil. ....................

o

1'&lt;1.
1.000
0 1.000
I .000
1 .ooo
t.

GB

Central DIYIIIGn
~--~~ -: ·.:::" '"" '50 22 .694
~ .......41 T1
.625
Allonoa ................... 39 34 .134
Charlode ......... ,. ..... l7 3S .514
lndiano ................... 36 .36 .SOO
Deooit... ................. 34 17 .479
Milwaukcc .. .... ,...... l7 4S .37.5

Quawa.......... ..... • 9 66 4 22 190 372

19

~

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Norrb DI.Uioo
Tum

s

II.S

13
14

15.S
. 23

Twn
W L Pet.
•·HOUltOn .............. 47 25 .6.13

GB

.611

3
5.5

21

31

.57S

Dcnv« .................:32 41 ' .438

t5.S

.254
.111

21.5
39

Pac:lkOI.WO.
• · l'llocnU ..............56 IS .789
. ll·S.ttie .................49 2A .671
•·l'llnWid ......:.......43 21 .606
I.A. cu_. ......... 36 37 .493
L.A. Labn: ............ 34 31 .479

13

Ooidal s.... .......... 30 42
Saaamao ............ 22 51

,.o..n,;, ...........

y·Toronw.... ...... 42 26 11 95 277 229
SL Lwio ........... 35 34 II 81 267 266

so 2.62 m

Minne5(Ma ... ...... 3S 35 10

Tompa Boy ....... 22

y·Ca!auy..... .....
y-Loo,Anpoo ..
y· Winnipca .......
Edmmton .........

51

6 !iO 229 307

· ·W•Iem DiYIIIOII
Califomia ................. 1 0 LOOO
Cl!i"lo. ..... ..............l 0 1.000
Oollind ...................1 0 1.000

_..,91,W-79
Alllnla !0!1, Now Yodt 104 (OT)

116,

By KEN RAPPOPORT
· 'We have a great work ethic
AP Hoekey Writer
.
here," said Neely, who has ei!lhl
Boston's Cam Neely and Min- goals in 11 games since retummg
nesota's Brian Propp arc trying to . Feb. 25 from a knee injury that had
make up for lost time in the NHL. sidelined him from ihe start of the
They've picked a good time to season. ''I think that's a big part of

l6 46 8, 60 231 318

start.

Phlladolpbio 4, Wmnipcg 2

21

Toolgbl's games

26.S
· 3S

Hud'ord al O&amp;uwa. 7:40p.m.
MontJC&amp;l at Pittsbu1Jh,7 :40p.m . .
N.Y. Rqm atN~ Jmey, 7;40 p.m.
Edmon&amp;on at Vancouwett, 10:40 p.m.

Thursday's games

100

Quebec •t Boo.on,7:40 p.m.
~o 11 N.Y. hlandcn, 7:40p.m.
Dc::trGilll Tampt. Bay, 7:40 p."'. •
Wubinata~ a~ Philadelphia, 1:40 p.m.
1

Tomnt.oat Win.rtipee:, 1:408.m.
San Jc.c at to. AnJdca, 1 :40 p.m

Donwer l 01 , Sacramfllltl 100
Po!llond 110, Uo119S

Tut:\lday's ~ores

·

Both were offensive forces
· Tuesday night, leading their teams
to crucial victories in the stretch
run for ihe playoffs.
Neely had two goals and an
assist as the Bruins moved into rust
placeintheAdamsDivisionwitha
7-1 victory over the Quebec
Nordiques. Propp scored twice as
Minnesota inoved within a point of
St. Louis for the fourth and final
playoff spot in ihe Norris with a 3·
1 victory over Buffalo. The Blues
tied Tam\)8 Bay 2-2.
The victory was the seven !I) in
eight games for the Bruin~, the.
.hottest team in· the NHL asid(froro
· the Pittsburgh Penguins.

SanJo.c S, Edmonton 2
·
CaJa,.uy 3, Loa Angdt1 3 (tic)

Orloodo
I'I&gt;Bod~90
aJ!\II!U.NI) liS,
.

1:
I

37 33 10 14 323 322
37 36 7 11 304 307

801tpn 7, Qu~ I
N.Y. blandm 3. Wu:hi,ngtcn 2
Sl Louif 2. Tatnpa Bay 2. U.o
Minnea.cu 3, Buffalo I · .

22

Gol&lt;lon Sill&amp; 125. Son""""-"olll
Do1loo 109, ...... 101
' Ph...u.l liS. I.A. Lokas 114

300 TIO

Tuesday's scores

8

Mil..,...., 113:au.ol" Ul9
Houolaoii4,L.A.Ciloom 101

40 29 11 91

SanJose ............ ll 68 2 2A212402
Jt· cllnched divisioo tide
y·dinchcd playoff berth

J_,.as ·

htitiana 98, Now

0 1.000
1 ·.(X)()
I .000

W L T Pll. GF GA

44 28 9 '11 349 Til
, y-OW::aso ......... 43 25 ll 97 263 219

Tuesday'• scores

.(X)O

S..Wo ...................... t , 0 1.000

.

.417
.301

Milwoukoo .......... .,...O I .000
Toronr.o .................... o t · .000

Tou ................ ~.~... 1
Xuua City ............. 0
Minnoocu
...... .... 0

Neely, Propp propel
Bruins, North Stars
to wins in NUL action

16.1

· - - ployolfbatlh

iL"

We Are Your
Spring Garden
Care
Headquarters!
'

Featuring:

•Grass Seed
•Turf Builder
·Nutra 'Lawn

·

Propp's goals were his .first
since OcL 13. Propp was playmg in
his sixth game since returning to
ihe North Stars from an assignment
in Lugario, Switzerland, where he
spent most of lhe season.
··since I came back, I've
· noticed we've been playing tense,"
Propp said. •'To get a couple of
goals and help the team win is a big
boost."
Elsewhere, it was the New York
Is'tanders 3, Washington 2;
Philadelphia 4, Winnipeg 2; San
Jose 5, Edmonton 2, and Calgary 3,
Los Angeles 3. . ,
· · ·

~~(tl)

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MISONf W.·V•.

w....,_

Toolghl's $ames

Calitmfti.l3, Mllw&amp;lkoc 1
Oticago 10, MJnnoocu 5
Saon1e

7,30 p.m.
. .Orlanda 11 Charlat\Ool p.m. .
.
Indiana ll Mianoloca, • p.m.
Philo~"

a. r-,..1

'

Tbanday'a pmes

Doonli1 ot Now 1...,;:'7,30 pa
_,_y.._,~,.,

MWni at Nilwaut-.1:30p.m.

I

~.A. CUppen al Saa Antonio, 1:30

pn.

.

White, Red, Black Araucanas

TAX TIP OF ·THE WEEK
MUST I FlU ATAX ROURN?
Whtlher you muat flit I In notum

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FRIDAY, AP.RIL 16, 1993 • NOON ,

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Neful~nl-nt tor your ftllng 1111•
andagt.
You 1111f alto be raqulred, ar wont, to·tlt
• """"If:

JNSIRTION DA1Ei
FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1993 .
•

• you qtiallfy
cndll.

tor

In tamed

t-

Chicks••••••••••••~ 6/s390

.White &amp; Cqlored
.· ssso
Rabb1.,s•••••••••••••••••
Pekhl &amp;MaU•d

·
:SJ380
Ducks..................
·

IN STOCK.
FEEDERS . &amp; WATERERS

• you lllvt 1 noM!d due Y!IIL You u;e
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.992·2155: ...

•

•you-~t-.

kMp In mind Ill! ,,.. dlouglla lldtfll

rllurn It nctl requl""', rou .., be
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•
.
NquiNd to .. 1 llltl Glfool! NIUm.
' Do you hive qllilllona about fttlng ywi rtllm IIIII Otll 1(1 Call yaur loOII
· Block olllce. Better ytt, atop by 1111 aM,_... J111L Will rNdr Ill hllp youl
KARL ·KEBlER EA

.

IIILIIIUI

'

·H&amp;R BLOCK

~

{

9
10

w......,...............21 51 .292

Minn-.. ........ ,.... 18 53
, O.Uu ............... :.......B 64

Euttm Dl•lakm

T..,.

'

.

Oriu&gt;do ..................34 17
Miomi .............. .....32 «&gt;
J'hilod~o ...........22 50

•·Son.......44
:..·Ut&amp;h ............:....... 42

AMERICAN LEAGUE

•POINT PLEASANT REGISTER
~GALLIPOliS . DAILY •TRIB,UNE
•POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
.

.513
.S61

MldwtltDI•.._

'

IN THE
'

Bm~em ....................4l 30
. New Jenc)' ............42 32

'

SPECIAL SECTION
.

Mariners, White Sox, Angels
notch wins in limited AL action

WESTERN CONFERENCE

San Franci~e:o (Bl•ck 10-ll) ~St .
Loud (Mopano 1·2), l•lS p.m.
San Diego (Orca HuriJ :'f-1) at Pittai.nh(Wolk 10.6), '!,os p.m.
fa An'elol (Candioai 11-15) at Atlanu (Glavmc ~8), 7:40p.m.

.'·

.".

Winner John Burkett and lOser G~U:man, who retired the fust 21·
Bob Tewksbury were tied at I batters, fmished wiih a one-hiuer.
through six innings. Will Clark led · Guzman struck out seven and
off the Giants' seventh with a walked two ..The last Cubs' no-hit·
ground-rule double, advanced ter. was pitched by Milt Pappas ,in
when shonstop Ozzie Smith bob: 1972.
bled a grounder in a rush to make a
A day after Greg Maddux and
play al tl\ird and scored standing up Ailanta won 1-0 at Wrigley Field,
~ri Bonds' long fiy, • .
. John Smaltz pitched a siX-hitter for
Burkett left after six innings. the Braves, He also struck out
Rod Beck pitched the ninth for a seven and walked two.
•
save.
·
The Cubs scored in tbe first
Tewksbury, 5-0 in exhibition ·inning when Rey Sanchez doubled
pla_y •. allowed six hits in eight and Mark Grace singled.
mrungs. He walked none, following · · Dodgers 4, Mar 6os 2
a year in which he was baseball's
Florida batters struck out 13
best control pitcher wit~ only 20 times as Ramon Martinez .and two
walks in 233 iDnings.
relievers made the Marlins look
Pirates 9, Padres 4
more like an expansion team.
Knuclcleballer Tim Wakefield
Martinez fanned nine in six
y.'OD y.'ith one of the oddest pitch- innings and was the winner. Todd
mg hoes to be seen this season: Worrell worked the ninth for a
Seven-plus innings, two hits, nine save.
.
during Tuesday nlgbt's .National League game
walks, nine strikeouts. He also
Tim Wallach had two hits and
BELL TAKES THIRD- Tbe Pittsburgh
threw his first-ever wild pitch in scored twice for Los Angeles. SacPirates' Jay Bell makes .i t to third t JSe ahead or . 1,n Pittsburgh, which tbe Pirates won 9-4. (AP)
the majors.
·
rifice Oies by Martinez anQ .Eric . tbe tag by San Diego third sacker Gary Sheffield
'
Still, Wakefield improved to 9·1 Karros put the Dodgers ahead for;, .
lifetime, not including.his two vic- good after thr.ee innings against
tories in the NL playoffs. lie loset Jack Armstrong.
PbiDies s, Astros 3
helped himself by going 2 for 3 at .
Gre~ Swindell, Houston's new
the plate, ·matching the career hit
total for the former miqor league $17 million pitcher, gave up, four
runs in the f1rst three innings and
first baseman.
Kevin Young, one of seven lost his Astros debut.
beat Minnesota 10-5 and California
While Sox 10, Twins 5 ·
ByJIMCOUR
Cun Schilling pitched into ihe
rookies on the Piusburgh roster,
SEATTLE (AP) -The Tor.onto defeated Milwaukee 3-1 .
Chicago took its seventh straight
droxe in four runs. He ·had a three- ninth inning and the·Phillies beat a Blue Jays desperately need an
Morris didn't have any excuses.
opener, winning at the Metrodortle
run double in the fifth inning; pin· big free agent for the second effective Jack Morris if they're
"The.bottom line is they beat . when Tim Raines' three-run homer
ning the loss on San Diego starter straight day. They downed Doug going to have any chance at sue•. us," he said. "They beat u~ bad.. highlighted a six-run fourth iooing.
Andy Benes.
Drabek in Monday's opener.
cessfully defending their World We have 161to go.'' , ·
Jack McDowell, a 20-game winCubs 1, Braves 0
Lenny Dykstra led off the game Series title.
·
The Chicago White Sox repon· ner.last season, got the victory
• Jose Guzman almost pitchi:d a with a triple. Dave HoUins hit two
They didn't have that in their edly have been trying to pry John· despite giving up two-run homers
no-hitter in his Cubs' debut, losing doubles and Pete lncaviglia home- season opener Tuesday night.
son away from Seattle fQr Wilson to Kirby Puckett and Dave Winhis bid wben Otis Nixon singled red for Philadelphia. Mitch
Lou PinieUa's Mariners battered Alvarez and George BelL But field.
with two outs in the ninth inning. Williams·i!Ot three outs f&lt;X' a save.
the 37-year-old Morris for seven Piniella has steadfastly l!Jld the
Kevin Tapani, who had won
runs on 10 hits ·and four walks in 4 Mariners • front office he wants to ~ consecutive home openers for
1/3 innings while Randy Johnson's keep Johnson because of the 6- Minnesota, allowed nine ~s and
· fasiball was a1 its dominanting best foot-10 left-bander's enormous eight hits in 3 l(l innings.
·
in an 8-1 SeaUle victory.
po~ntial.
Angels 3, Brewers 1
nCIICU (Delhaie14-7},1:0S p.m.·
Houaoo at \J~, 9 p.m.
"When ·Johnson comes with
In eig)lt innings, Johnson talk¢
Mark Langston, 0-4 wiih a 6.29
Boaon (Viola 13· 1'2) at Kanu• City
L.A. J.Qen at GOlden Su.te, 10:30.
good
control
·
and
velocity
like
he
Piniella
into
)etiin~ him make 120 · ERA in his last four opening-day
(Cone 17-10~ S:JS p.m.
p.m.
Detroil (X.rueJCf 10·8)' at. Oakland
had, it's tough to win," the Blue pitches. He said h1s back stiffened starts, pitched a three·hitter and led
Phoc:nU atSammcmo, I 0:30p.m.
(Dulina 15-10).10,05 p.m.
Dtp.u at Portland, 10:30p.m.
Jays' Roberto Alomlll' said.
up after he walked OameU Coles JO California at home.
Milwaukee (El~ 1t-2) at California
(Fmlcy 7·12), 10,05 p.m.
.The Blue Jays are without II lead off the sixth, but he was able
Milwaukee, the most aggrcasive
-*NHL•players
from
their
championship
to
work
out
the
kinks.
·
team
in the majors on the bases last
Tbunday's games
Jim
my
season,
including
pitchers
Last
season's
AL
strikeout
king.
had three runners picked
season,
OU.c.ao (Fcmandc&amp; l-ll) at MinnCI0WALES CONFERENCE
11 (Mahoma 'J.4).l :1S p.m.
Key, David Cone and Tom Henke. fanned 14, tlie third;highest total in off by Langston. He struck out
Patrklr. DIYia.la.
Douoil. (Dohcrt' 7-4) al o.tland (S .
Team
W L TPb. GFGA
With Dave Stewart on the disabled his career, and walked just tWo. He seven and walked three.
•·PiwbwJjl ...... SJ 21 6 112 343 2S3
Oo"' 7-3~ 3:15!""· .
list for at least a month, they're has led the majors in walks for the
J.T. Snow, acquired in the win·
Now Yolk (MiliLe1lo 3-3) at Clevd&amp;nd
Wuhin.l1M ..•... 40 32 7 87 3102'/3
(Bicl&lt;lclti 2-4), 7,0S p.m.
• N.Y. Iofondem... 31 34 6 82 310 273
especially hurting for starting past three seasons.
ter
trade that sent Jim Abbott to ihe
BOIIoa (Hca.keth 1-9) at Karuu Ci\y
Now Jcn&amp;, ....... 3&amp; 15 6 82 2&amp;4 21S
He
allowed
seven
hits,
including
pitching.
'"
Yanlcees, homered in his first game
(o.Ji&lt;zo 7-6), a,n p.m.
N.Y. R~!"' .... l4 33 II 79 294 212
Phillde!pllil ...... ,31 17 II 73. 2911 3lMI
In the willliup of the .two-game .an RBI triple by Joe Carter in the for ihe Angels and Gary DiSarcina
~•NBA•­
Seattle series today, Toronto man- . fii'St inning, and retired the last nine also connected off loser BiD Weg' AduuDI ... Ioo
ager Cito Gaston will be forced to Blue Jays to face him.
,.a....n ........... 41 2li 7 101 313 261
man. Greg Vaughn homered for the
EASTERN CONFERENCE
y·M..,IRal ........ 47 T1 . 6 100 317 266
use
AI
Leiter
in
place
of
the
ailing
Johnson
got
all
the
support
he
Brewers.
A.~nUc DMII011
~
y·~ ........ ,. 44 2li 10 98 334 281
• Stewart.·
needed in the frrst on Ken Griffey
Twa
W' L PeL GB
y·Bulralo .......... ll 32 10 86 323 T/8
x-NewYOik ...........!H 21 .701
In the other AL games, Chicago Jr.'s three-run homer.
Hartfotd ............ 1.4 49 .5 S3 261 346 .

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Scoreboat·&lt;l

PBL .results

. COUPON

.

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Barry Bonds was a big hit in his
debut with the San Francisco
Giants ,•even without.a hit. The
Pittsburgh Pirates, meanwhile. did
not miss him, at least for one game.
In St. Louis, Roods lofted a sacrifice fly in th~ seventll inning that
scored ihe go-ahead run and lifted
the Giants over the Cardinals 2-1 in
Tuesday night's opooer.
Bonds. went 0-for-2 with an
• intentional walk and a sacrifice Oy.
It was his fuSI game since signing a
free agent contract wonh $43 .75
million for six years, making him .
the highest-paid player in the
majors.
. ''I've never been off to a quick
start in April anyway, so I never ,
worried about it," Bonds said.
"I'm very happy.'.'
·
' In Pjilsburgh, ihe Pirates; famt
with trying to replace their twotime MVP, opened with a 9-:4 victory over San Diego.
.
AI Martin, taking Bonds' place
in left field, had two extra-base hits
and scored .twice. He doubled just
under a •'Barry Who?" sign in left
field in the,first inning and later
tripled.
1n another NL game. Florida
lost for the first time, 4-2 to Los
Angeles . Also, Chicago beat
Atlanfa 1-0 and Philadelphia
downed Houston 5-3.
• The Giants won in Dusty
,Baker's first game as a major
league manager. He is one of six
~managers with new teams this sea- .
son, and only Colorado's Don BayJar lost an opener.

'

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P~meroy-Middleport, Ohio

In NBA action,

.

Wednesday, Aprll7,

.

Suns top Lakers on

buzzer~lleating

J

Wednesday, Aprll7, 1993

199i

.

,

•

trey

••

.•

. By ne Associated Press
do 116, Philadelp~ia90; Cieveland utes and 16 points on 4-for-17 sh0otingandl6rebounds.
•
The three-pointer has been a liS, Miami !OO;Detroit 91, Wash· shooting, but his backup, Duane
The Magic blew the game open
major weapon in carrying the ington 79; Atlanta 109, New York Ferrell had 17 points on 8-for-11 with outside shooting in the third
Phoenix Suns to the beSt record in .104 in overtime; Milwaukee 113, shooting, wliile Kevin Willis had · period. Dennis Scott and N1ck
the NBA. Against the .Los Angeles Chicago 109; Houston 114. the Los 29 points and 11 rebounds and Anderson hit a pair of three-point- ,; .
Lakers, it Was a blockbuster bomb. Angeles Clippers 101; Golden Moo~Blaylock20poin1Sand 13 · ersapiece,andScottSkileshadone :
The Lakers turned a 20-paint State 125, San Antonio lll; Dallas assists.
·
as Orlando led by as many as 21 ~
fourth-quarter deficit into a 112· 109, S eaule 107; Denver 10 I,
. Bucks U:i, Buns 109
points.
·•
109 lead with 23 seconds left Sacramento 100; and Portland liO,
Blue' Edwards scored 10 of his
facers !IS, Nets 85
..
before Dan Majerle hit two three- Utah 95. · ,.,
. 24 points in the fourth quarter,
Reggie Miller scored 21 points ~
pointers, including a 40-footer at Mavericks 109, SuperSonics 107 . helping Milwaukee defeat Chicago and the Pacers snapped New JerDallas, trying to avgid the wont for the frrst time in four tries this scy; s eight-game home winning ..
the buzzer, giving lhe. Suns a liSrecord in NBA history (9-73), season.
streak.
..
114 victory Tuesday night.
The finish extended lhe Suns' improved to 8-64• when Jimmy
Michael Jordan scored 30
Pistons Ill, Bullets 711
~
winning streak to eight and gave Jackson and Derek Hamer. hit two points, including a basket and . Deiroit be:&amp;t Washington for its ~: • .,
them a 5-.{l .s.eason .~weep of the free thi'Qws apiece in the final 11 three-pointer during an ll-2 Bulls seventh stra1ght home ~1ctory as
Lakers, therr firSt ever.
seconds at Seattle.
· run late in the game.
I oe Dumars scored 38 pomts.
~
"It was a once-in-a-lifetime
Jackson _scored 18 ~ints as the
Rockets 114, Clippers 101
·
Cavaliers 115, HeatlOO . ..
kind of lhing, I guess," said Majer- Mavencks unproved thetr reconl to
Halceem Olajuwon matched a
Cleveland won for the lSth ome,
le, who finished wilh 20 points.
. 3-33 on the road after an 0-29 swt. season-high with 42 points, .and in 16 hoine games, beating Miami .:
AfterMajerle's first three-pointTrail Blazers lJO, Jazz 95
. Houston lOOk advantage of a IS-O with Brad Daugherty scoring 20 ·
SIGNS WITH PACKERS -Former P~lphla Eagles defenPortland, playing without Clyde run in lhe second quaner to defeat points in the first half and Larry sive end Reggie White llolds up his new Green Bay Packers jer5ey . er tied lhe score 112, 112 with 10.8.
. • ,
shortly after announcing his signing with the Packers for four,years seconds left, Anlhony Peeler's 14- Drexler, won at home against Utah Los AngeleS for the 14th consecu- · Nance 18 in the second.
footer
gave
Los
Angeles
a
114-112
as
Terry
Porter
scored
25
points.
tivc
time
a1
tile
Summit.
Daugherty
finished
with
. 27 ·.
and $17 million. (AP)
· lead with 1.6 seconds remaining.
Karl Malone scored 25 points · Danny Manning led the Clippers points on 11-of-14 shooting and 10 ~
Then Majer!e' won the game with for Utah, but only two in the final with 24 points.
·
rebounds. Nance scored 20 points·-•
his high-arching shot.
quarter when the Blazers pulled
Warriors 125, Spurs 111
and Grant Long had 18 for the v
Kevin Johnson scored 32 points away with a 9-1 spurt tha~ gave
Tim Hardaway .scored 18 of his Heat:
·
· ,
and Charles Barkley had 23 points them an 89-13 lead.
30 points in tl)e third quarter and
·Nuggets 101, Klnp 100
and 11 rebounds for the Suns, who
Billy Owens finished with 29 as
Robert Pack scored tb.e' final ·:
Hawks 109, Knic:ks 104 (OT)
led 103-83 before Los Angeles ralAtlanta won its lOth straight Golden State won at San AniOnio.
points of the game on a dunk with \:
lied.
home game and snapped Ne)¥
Latrell Sjlrewell added26points 1:10 left and Denver w90 for the
Elden Campbell scored 10 of his York's six-game winning streak for the Warriors.
(Cunnngham) and a lot or other
· first time iri five tries at Sacra- ~
ByRICKGANO
quarterbacks in the league."
21 points in the fourth quarter for despite a subpar performance from
Magic 116, 76ers 90
meno.
-:
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) White said at age 31 he feels the Lakers. ·
the flu-weakened Dominique
Orlando won at home against
Chris Jackson scored 23 points '
Why Green Bay, Reggie White?
Philadelphia behind Shaquille for the Jl!uggets. ·
"
Brutal weather, no championships · very. much like another popular . Els.ewhere in the N'BA, it was Wilkins..
Philadelphia
athlete
who
left
for
a
Indiana
98,
New
Jersey
85;
OrlanWilkins
was
limited
to
26
minO'Neal's
35
points
on
17-for-23
:;
sinee the 1960s, no playoff appearances in a decade, no inner city for new team and a new start. The
pmcticing ministers. ·
'tiT
Packerswentfrom4-12inl991to
San Francisco beckoned and so 9 7
my situation as '
.
did Washington during a whirlwind
"
37 -day tour and sampling of the being a Charles Barkley situation.
~ By JIM LITI,(E
hOJT~:ndous stumble, Brown picked over again from the bottom of the his teani.one day. Back in the gym.:
NFL. But in the league's smallest Hopefully my career can "b'~APSportsWriter
him~lfbatk up, helped lhe.Hoyas pole.
and comfortable with the idea of
city, the Price was right. Four years rejuevenated," White said. "I · Chris Webber can't get away win their first nation~! champi"I loved it, I worked hard' at it, getting involved again. he caught"
for $17 million, most persuasive think every (other) team is from 1·, b 1 he can get 0 er 1·L Fed on ship, earned his degree and · but' basketball was a game to me. the bug •a•in.
the $9 million frrst year - half in Shoc•... ed, but I th1'nk I m'ade the Brow n~ saut down and tovld h1'mras almost nobody noticed. Six years And after it happened, I truly said
For lhe
....-moment he sees hi..-··"
.......,.
salaty, the other half in a signing right decision."
much in a Jetter. And he should later, he was one of IBM's top- lP myself, as long as my coach arid staying in the high school ran~;~
bonus.
White, whose 124 career sacks know.
grossing !Blesman before leaving to my. teammates - the people who until his middle child, 5-year-old
"This year is probably the year outnumbers his galllfs played in . The same awful thing that hap- swt his own business. Today, he sweat in the gym with me- know , Fred Brown Ill, is old enough to. :
to do it," White said Tuesday.
the NFL (121) was courted by the · pe
· ned to Webber two n'ghts a~&gt;o has a wife and three children, I did my best, I've got nothing to .play for his old man. Then he sees;
"When· the salary cap kicks in, Redslcins, 4~rs. Jets and Browns, happerted .to Brown 11 y~ earlier . working at the same game he'd be ashamed about.''
both o( them headed for the college.
teams are not going to be able to among others. And he said he on tJie same court on the same day turned his back on almost a decade
StiU, for the frrst few years after ranks.
pay lhe money I got paid.
wanted to play for a team that against the same IC8IIl and in front ago.
,
leaving Georgetown, while Brown
"It's funny. When I played, I•
•'A lot of people will say I went · could go to the Super Bowl: ·
of the same outsized audience. And
· ."I grew up in the South Bronx. played pickud basketball, he almo~t didn' deel the pressure at all," "
for the money and money 4oes play
The 49ers .offered a five-year, · he offers himself now as proof that A whole slew of things came with never tume on the TV to watch Brown said. ''And as a coach,J
·a pan of it."
$19.5 million deal but much of the sometimes things really do tum out that environmem and almost none other people play. But a few more that's the feeling I'm trying to~
White, an ordained minister, money was· on the end of the con- for the best.
of them were good," Brown said. years passed and he found himself teach the kids who play for 111e: &gt;. '
said he plans to use his wealth to l;raCt that wasn't guaranteed.
•'The thing that stuck with me "I was in the top 10 percent of my making good mo.ney, raising a fam - Play the same game ever.y time ...
build for those who can't.
''It just had, 'I'm going to get through all of this was something class academically, I thought I was ily, and sti.ll. somehow, missing Once the baU goes up, 'it's a game.•.
White. a seven-time All-Pro cut sooner or later,' wntten aU over coach (John) Thompson wd right getting an education. But when I something . A friend who was It's what you've been doing sinceu
with the Philadelphia Eagles, said it and it really did," said Jimmy after it happened," Brown said got to Georgetpwn,j had to swt all coaching asked Brown to speaic to you were a child."
he also had a sense about Green Sexton, White's agent .. '.'This (the Tuesday over the telephone from
Bay •. even though when he first Packers offer) is structured such. the coach's office at Episcopal .'
decided to visit the town, he told. that we got enough guaranu:cs we High School in Alexandria, Va.
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) _ Miarn
. i Lion and would contaCt Johnson to
"'
.Packers coach Mike Holmgren it feel gOOd enough for him."
·
"What he said was if that was
£
tell hun' that.
.
· Paul Risser to discuss· the .
was "the farthest thing from my
''I felt the. dollars offered by the last mistake 1 ever made, 1 was University has begun looking or a
prospects.
mind."
· Green Bay were just far 100 much going 10 have a wonderful life...
· successor to basketball coach Joby · Miami assistants Randy Brown
Johnson said there was no way·•.
" 49
·de Car
Wright, who accepted the head and Jim Stoll are to be considered . Miami could have matched
But he liked the way Holmgren
ers presl nt
. .
For the longest time that just . coaching job at Wyoming,on&lt;Tues· as possible succe~ to WrighL . W-voming's, C)ffer - An .annual,.
was building the team with young . to overcome,
men
Policy
said.
·
didn't
seem possible to Fred day.
'
Johnson said he hearil from sa{ary of $90,000 and l $140,000
players, the way defensive coordiThe
Redsllins,
meanwhile,
Brown.
·
.
"W
t
1 · Job
d
e
e regre osmg
Y an w
numerous posst'ble app1·1cants whil e total package including outside ·
nator Ray Rhodes allowed his play- 0 ffered $!4 'IIi ~ ~
982
ml on or our years.
In 1 • he was a Georgetown wish him well," Miami athletic he was attending the NCAA's Final earnings from shoe, television and ,;
ers input in the schemes, the grass
''This teani (the Packers) has sophomore playing against North director R.C. Johnson said. "We F
· N Orl
1
'd 1
field and the commitment to always been in the back of my Carolina for the national champiour m ew cans. twas WI e Y summer camp deals. Wright's
improving with a new practice mind, .. White said. "I've been onship. And at the end of the game, WaJ!t to get the best possible coach known that Wright, a former player salary at Miamt was $66,700.
doing up and down. I thought 1 had in the bat of an eye, he made a in the shonest period of time. We'll and assistant for Indiana coach Bob
In his three years at Miami, '
facility in the planning.
White also liked the Packers, he my decision made and it changed. 1 decision and it turned out to be the bely.~!n a national search immediate· Knight, was interviewing at Wright had a ·record of 61-29, one"
said, because they have a young thoughi I had it made and it wrong one. Wherever he intended
Wyoming, 'Houston and Washing- Mid-American Conference title, a,;.
· 1
lh real
th
·
Bruce Weber, a Purdue assistant ton.
.
first-place tie for the MAC title, a •·
quarterback in Brett Favre, whom ~ changed agruq.
10
came
c
• to row the ball, mexplicably, he coach who was a finalist wi'th ·
"Th
'II
f
·
''
White predicts will one day be a ization this weekend
this is the wound -up throwing it to a wideere w1 be no shortage o tie for second. place in the confer-..
open James Worthy of North Car· Wright for the Miami job three candidates," Johnson said.
ence and appearances in the NCAA'!
b¥tter quarterback "than Randall team 1 wanted to be with."
lin
.
years
ago,
said
Tuesday
night
he
is
Johnson
said
he
expected
to
tournament and tile NIT.
::
0 ma, a11 owmg the Tar Heels 10 ice stil.l interested in the Miami posi- meet today with Miami president
a63-62vicl0ry.
.
In a scene eerily reminiscent of
~or
link~'est
that game, Webber found himself
J•
:1•
in the same situation and he made
plete avoidance of errors; the pro- an. equally bad decision. With 1 f
By BOB GREEN
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)- Swing jectio~ of an air of inevitability seconds to go and his team down
by two points, the Michigan sophoguru David Leadbeuer lOOk a long about It all.
There are differences, too. more called for a timeout when his
look at a famous pupil named Nick
Faldo's swing tends to be more team had none left. North Carolina
and delivered an opinion.
· "You're going to .catch fire methodical; more mechan-ical, went on 10 win again, this time by
soon," Leadbetter said and walked more manufactured. Price's is more 77-71.
People never forgot what hap·
away from the perspiring man on a natural.
While the· comparison with pened to Brown, whicl) makes him
pmctice tee in Florida.
·
The opinion became prophecy a Faldo wa$ inescapable, considering certain they will never forget what
few weeks later when Nick Price their mutual association with Lead- happened 10 Webber. Ever.
"I told him lhe important thing
- not Faldo - turned in a run- better and the same first name.
away, wire-to-wire, record·setting there were aspects of the viciory is to remember is that he's never
victory in the Players Champi- that were Priee' s alone; an air of going to be able to erase it, whether
joy, a spontaniety. sudden flashes he turns pro or goes back and wins
onship.
Leadbetter, who gained a mea- of brilliance rarely exhibited by a championship," Brown said.
sure of fame as the man who Faldo. ·
Two years aft.er he took that
.. rebuil.t Nick Faldo's ·. swing and
helped turn him into the· ga·1~ ' s
dominant player, also works w1th
Price.
&gt;,
And there was more than a little
L!&lt;n':S
simi~ty~ faldo'at biallcsl
and Price at his peak ill the Players.
Th~re was the single-minded,
intense conccnlralion; the smooth,
.
j ' ..,
repeating swing; an almost com-

White sign$/our-year
contract with Packers

B·rown
·
·
'd
't
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pens on .. worry e' er . 0

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Price in
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57·59 Court St.
G_altipolis, OH.

I

Sports deadlines posted
The Gallipolis Daily TribiUie,
The Daily Sen'rinel, the Point
P/easam Register and the SIUidayTimes-SenJinel value the contribu- .
tions their readers make to the
sports sections of these papers. and. these contributions Will·tontinue to
be published.
·.
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed. The
deadline for photos 8nd related arti·
cles for baslcetball and other winter
· sports is'the last !lay of the NBA
. Finals.
Likewise, the deadline for submissions of local baseball- and
sofiball-related photOs and related
articles, from T-ballto the majors,
as well as other spring and summer ·
spons, is the day of the last game
. of the World Seri!IS.. The lleadline .
for photos and related articles for
fOOiba.U and other fall SJ)orts is the
Saturday befCR the Super Bowl. ·
These deadlines have been institurcd to give readl!rl pl¢nty .of tirile
to get their photos back from ~
photography studio of cboice and
.to giye the staffs the opportunity to
publish these $porta photos and
articles during' the 'appropriale season for that aport

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Reardon looks
to.develop
knuckleball
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jeff
Reardon doesn't have one 'Of the
best kn'uckleballs ill the National
League. He docsn'teven JMVSSari·
I)' have the best on the Cincinnati
Reds - third baseman Chris Sabo
can throw a pteuy mean one.
But Reardon's got one, and that
alon,e demands notice. Baseball's
all-time saves leader is trying to
extend his career by extending his
fingertips.
"I'm going to use it as my third
· pitch," Reardon said.
Sounds funny, doesn't it? Jeff
Reardon, once a power pitcher,
toSsing up puff balls. But it's that
willingness to adapt that helped
Reardoo, 37, save 357 games since
1979.
•
. "Throughout his whole career,.
Jeff has done what he--had to do,''
Reds pitehin§ coach Larry Rothschild said. • That's probably why
· he's been successful. A lot of guys
put tliemselves.in cubbyholes when
· they have success. He's not like
that at all."
He's always· looking for an
. ·edge. He thinks he found one in
spring training.
Reardon; who came to camp as
a setup man for closer Rob Dibble,
figllred it was time to add another
pitch to compleme.nt his fastball
and breaking ball.
•
The right-bander tried a sinker,
but buried it after he got shelled in
his first spring training game.
"I don't have the arm motion
for a sinker," he said.
·
So he went to a pitch he's toyed
with for several years - the
knuckleball.
'
There's nothing .unusual about a
pitcher trying to flick one off his
fingertips. Even position players
experiment with the knuckleball
while warming up. SOme of them
get pretty goOd.
'
"I really th'ink Wade Boggs
could pitch iD a pine," said Rear·
don, ,who was a teammate .in
Boston. "Nobody wants to play
catch with him when he's throwing
· · iL I'D tell you, if he throws you 10
. of them, you're going to miss six or
seven. He could get a few bitters
OULn

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!J.Ie!!l off a little."
·
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same.

!ii'·..lt's decent," R~hild said.

1':· He throws it a little too hard
iometimes, but it's decent. It's
jood enough ror a third pitch.··
w And maybe beyoDd.
· :;; "Every time I play ~ now, I
dly 11111 10010 and go· ~tit to
'- ~.
.,JcbpU " Reardoo said. "I
·ttant tQ keep experimcnlilla with ic
t;d be happy if I could.get it to be
No. 2 piu;h."
•
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ill have IQ bleak one habit- chew·
jpg his fmpmails.
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laic( "I've got to remember not to
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err

Average

Lb.

Sf?

Sara .·Lee
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Fruit ..Pies
99'

Your

Choice

37 oz.

."..cAll
Varieties .·
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Food Cll)b Vegetables

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Pillsbury Plus

Corn, Peas or
Green .

eMix.
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15 oz. Con ·

Ready To ~preod

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I I ox.

~A!j

No Salt

59

Maxwell House ·
Masterlllend
CoHee
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11.5 oz.' Can

Regular or

Frottllllgl

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No drll8l Qr alcobol wae fl ..

Partyflake or Cloverleaf ..

Big lear
Brown &amp; Serve Rolls
l2 Pack .

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16 •••
' 17 •••

c.• .

Pepsi, Diet Pepsi, .
Cuffel•e free Diet ~psi
or Mt~ Dew
20 Pock · 12 oz. Cons

who diod in a plane crash last

•eet, Sullivan County Sheriff
t(eilb Carr Ilk!.
.
• Carr lllid mcclicll mem!ner Dr.
tillliallll'kCclmill:lt told 111m tbn
. . . 110 e¥ideta ql dnl&amp;l (lr 111:01111 i1 tile COli' wflo cllel Ia 'l'llun•y•a ClUb tlix milia Dbitl enst ol
1\i~ Rllicml Allpan. Pedeaal
' , .itVOIIIJ. . UVC recovered the

.

••.m·n.... aad. propellen or the

·,

Fllldllld Mlltlil300lild n IR""
.dptina the CIUIC ot t11e c:ru~~.• ;•

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2

i1aa Kulwicki and 'three oth.eu

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Ohio River ' Plaza · • Gallipolis, o•Jo ·.

Lb. Sir

limit 2 Con&gt; P~r Fcmily, Pleo&gt;e

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Pin.eapple

be lilce Charlie's or Wakefield's.

~bOdies of NASCAR chamPion

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In Juice or·Syrup

11\uJJose.
" . .
• ·"There's no way 1t s gomg to

t BLOUNTVIllE, Tenn.

'- ' OPEN·NIGHTS
ANO SUNDAYS,

···~

The Dally Senti .

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Reardon, did pretty well in .IJis
spring experiment He lhrew about
IS knuckJers ·in Aorida and gave
up just one hiL He Bot a few strilce·
outs and a lot of strange looks.
"Some batters will say. 'What's
that? Where did he get that?' "
catcher Dan Wilson said. "He's
Surprised a couple of people. That's
why it's been so effective." ,
The first one went to Detroit's
Tony Phillips. a tough leadoff man
who's hit Reardon well.
"He's always been tough on ·
· me,'' ·Reardon said. "He's touBh
on everybody. I Bot him 0-2 and
figured it was a ROod time to tty ii.
He took it and footed at me like,
'What was that?' ·'
Phillips also muttered someiting .to !hat effect as he walked
""ay from strike three. The look
ln his face told Reardon he was
!!RIO something.
" ""I really haven't thrown it much
wilh guys on base, bul I'd like to
fet to the point where I could do
Dat," he said. "Just to let them
· ~w I've gcit that other pitch."
.. Reardon has no delusions. No
floe's going io mistake him for
Charlie Houp; Tim Wakefield or
candioai. But
as bat·
~ mislake it for a f
until it
lilaves his fingertips, it'll serve lhe

...

Right now, save on, ALL ST;YLISS or WOMEN'S. MEN.' S and KIDS'
shoes and accessorl~s-rrom casua.l to dress to athletic and
.,
a l~t morel When you buy any .Z items at ~exuiJ!ir price,
.
·:~ .• you'll receive a third Item or equal or lesser price FREEl

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my

A WEEK!

MONDAY- ORIENTAL NIGHT
TUESDAY- FRENCH NIGHT
·WEDNESDAY- GERMAN. , ·HUNGARIAN NIGHT
THURSDAY .!.. /TAL/AN NIGHT
FRIDAY "" FISH &amp; SEAFOOD
NIGHT
SATURDAY- ALL AMERICAN
.BEEF NIGHT .
SUNDAY.- · THANKSGIVING DAY·
.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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The Dally

Ohio

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COPYRIGHT 1103 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES G000 SUNDAY APRIL 4 THROIJOii '
~'!!f'l'dl::il!~;o. 11031N POMEROY. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMiT QUANTITIES NONE :0:.

The Daily_Sentinel

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Wedne$day, Aprll7, 1993
Page-8

·Living _with Ross Perot, sort of
Dear Ami Llllderl: Life in our
home has become mighty strange
ever sa)lcc the clcction. My husband
was a great admirer of ROss Pl:rot.
It was almoat a case ·of hero
worship. •ChliCit" '''was very
disappoinlt;d wben Perot lost his bid
for the presideocy, but now be has .
swu:d to think. and llllt like Ross
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· PROGRAM TO BE PRESENTED • The
program, "Wash Their Feet," under the direc·
·uon or Marilyn Williams, will be presented at
the Rutland Church of the Nazarene on Maundy
Thursday at 7 p.m. by the church choir. Scenes
wiD be depicted of Jesus healing the blind man,
. tbe .Last Supper, Jesus washing the reet or the

:·disciples and Jesus carryiag his cross to Cal·
vary. Jesus will be portrayed by Rodney Wright.
. Harold Carson will be the narrator. Solos will
be.sung by Keith Keanedy, Bev Adkins, Tammy .
Taylor, Harold Carson, Holly Williams and
Darlene Vanaman. Bev Adkiu is pianist. Pastor
Sam Basye invites the public.

•

Lydia Council discusses projects.·
The March meeting of the BradPlans fo~ \he mother-daughter Bradford Church on April !8-23 at
ford Church of Christ Lydia Coun- banquet for May 17 at 6:30 p.rn. at 7:30p.m. nightly.,.
:r
cil was held at the church with the church were finalized.
·
. Hostesses. for the .-&lt;'ti&gt;ril meeting
Suzie Will, Cherie Williamson and
A craft class .was held recently wtll be Brenda Boltn and Ja.nice
Gerry Lightfoot hostesses.
at the church.
.
Feuy.
: I an ice Fetty presided at the
The Sllflshine basket for March
· Devotions were given by Cherie
meeting wtrich opened wilh prayer was given to Jackie Reed.
Williamson. "Water, Water Everyrequest and prayer. Officers reports
Madeline Pa~nter wiD have com- where" from John and "Remem)WCre given.
.
mumonfor Ap'!-1. .
. ber." Suzie Willli3d prayer.
The council wiU purchase playSu~se sel'VIce wtll be held 111 7 · '
Refreshments were served to
~ round equipment for the Ohio a.m. wtlh breakfast to follow m the Becky and Bethany Amberger
Valley Christian Camp.
.
basement. Sunday sdlool will be at Diane Bing, Janice Fetty Paul~
Paula Pickens is compfting a 9:~0 a.m .. and worship.will be. at' Pickens, Jane Hysell, Karlita
church directory and members are JqJo a.m. Sunday.evemng servtce Stump, Carolyn Nicholson, Terri
to get infonnation to'Mrs. Pickens w\11 be ch_anged ~o7:30p.m.
Withams, Cherie Williamson,
as soon as possible.
. A revtval wtll be held at the S~ie Will and Gerry Lightfoot
.

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~antata

present by Syracuse choir

. "We Have Seen the Lord," an
Easter mustcal by Many Parks, was
pre~nted by the Syracuse Charge
Chou on Sunday. Rev. Deroo
Newm~n was narr~tor !ind Mrs.
Mary Ltsle was muSical director.
,,; J'hct .. P.~ogram op~ned with
Alleluta by the.. chmr. Cantata
Specials mcluded We Have Seen

He makes pie chans and bar
graphs of our household budget and
income projections, just like Perot
did when he gave his series of TV
lectures on government spending.
Chuck has stopped taking our old
Chevy to the garage mechanic,
because he waniS to be under the
hood fixing lhings himself. The
· lieighbors can no longer borrow tools
wilhout leaving something of equal
value as collateral. ·
.·
When I told Chuck. his behavior
· was driving me nuts, , he couldn't
understand why I was so cynical.
He said, "If my own wife doesn't
have failh in Perot's !IPPfOIICh, ·she
pi'obllbly doesn't trust'me eilher."
Thankfully, Chuck lias agreed w
sit pown, hold hands and' work out a
~promise. If Ano Landers will teD
hun to drop the Perotmaniac act, I'm
sure he
c1o it because when you
give advic., he's 'all ears. -- M.S.,
ARLINGTON, MASS.
DEAR ARLINGTON: Perot did
have some good ·ideas, but I bope
Chuck hasn't told his boss that he
wiD wqrk for the next rour years
without a salaly. Tell him -he's no
Ross Perot llld to drop tbe act.
1 should warn you howe'll:l' dll1
Chuck's hem has no plans to walk
quiedy into the sunscL It would be a

will

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convulsing, and 1 began to cackle
tii\'&lt;1 I couldn'ntop. He was abnost
blue, everyone was trying 10 help
him, and I was .on the floor laughing."
Depp says his laughter is a com-·
bination offear and p1111ic.
· "IIhink it's that there's nothing
you can do that gelS me," he said.
''But I'm scared II the saine·time. I
d9~ 't 'f'ant anypty to b~\~llfl:' : . .

Retiring after 45 years of service·
with Kroger. Thursday, ·April 8th

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Come in· for·free
coffee and cake-to
wish John weir in his
retireme t!
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t~:r, coconut or maple egp. sucbrs,
crosses,ducks, peanut cluster$;
almond bark, chocolate cruncbies •
and bori bons filled with peanui
butter. coconut or mapte. If your ·
~re Interested in purchasing an
1tem, an order can be obtained from
an FHA member,liom a home
•
nomics student, for from tbe hiah
school. Orders must be placed by
Friday.
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announced .

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New arrival

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CHOOSE 110M:

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Bo'h's Has The Quality Produce ·
That ~ou'~e Come To Ex~ect

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TIRE SALES .

lb. ·

Whole Boneless smoked Ham

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KrOger Grade A Large Eggs

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CUMBERLAND ~p (7·9-LB. AVG.I WATER ADDED

I

UIIIT 1 CAntJII WIIH COUPON &amp; $10.00
· ADDITIOIIAL PUilCHASE

OF

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LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER

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COUPON GOOD SUN. ~PfliL 4-.SAT. A~fL 10, 199!

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All stores Open Easter SUnday

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BamUntiiSpm

we will open Mon., Aprll12th.at 7:00am
ant:l resume normal hours

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. FLORIDA
· ·NEW POTATOES

'NEW OWNER ;.. .MILLARD
. SPAULDING

· NRnr 01 Tit Sttso•,.
·.~ Texas · Grown

..

$up•r Sweet

•

. Onions · ·

(I SIZE!

PURCHASE FOUR NEW TIRES .

It IUCIIMORE'i

FREE

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FRO~ND· ALIGNMENT ·
UNIROYAL:• FIRESTONE • MASTERCRAFT

lb.

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Offer .Good until April 15, -1.993. ·

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742~3081
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lb.

U.S. GRADE A 14·7--1.8. AVG.J KROGER .

·Fresh Turkey Breast

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..Fresh.ASPifSIUS .

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State Route124

18-Ct.

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•Symbolic Easter lillies • Fragrant Hyacint•s . ...-. ·
Tulips ••tl Potted Mums
·
•Hartly Bloomieg Azaleas (Red, White anti Pink)
or Try Bolt's .Custom Made Fruit Baskets
.Packed Fuli of Fresh,.Delicious Fruit

·~ J ·· Ancl To Help Make_Your Ea~ter Dinner Delicious.~·.

-.RUTLAND

.RECEIVE A

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Candy available ''

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Stee1e pefSOllal

Meigs County students at Hocking College named to the dean's
.. list for the winter quarter include: .
~obert ·Bauer. Dana Fick. Glenda Hunt and Amy Hill, all of Long
Bottom; Philip Blackwood, Kip .
Grueser and Gary O'Dell, Rutland;
Ronald Casci, Todd Doczi, Angela
Ouckworth, Kimberly Hanning,
Paula Haynes , $hannon Hindy,
·Chaflene Meadows. Mary Woods
and James Garey. M!ddleport;
Vicky Dent, Stephen Dononue,
Melodic Forbes, Dennis Gilmore,
· Tara Humphreys , Ray ·Pickens,.
.Linda Priddy, Priscilla Riddle,
Gary Snouffer, Brenda Warth,
Trudy Williams and Lloyd SaYfe,
Pomeroy; Terrace George, The
plains; Amy .Hendrix, Coolville;
Crystal l&lt;aylor; Jeffrey Kimes,
Reedsville; Rebecca Ockerman,
Dexter; Laurence Ebersbach,
Richard Flagg, Syracuse; Daniel
Short, Chester; Michael Smith •.
Tuppers Plains;'Rebecca Smith,
Frederick Thompson, Sheila Warnor, Racine. '
.
Each of tfiese students has
achieved at least. a-3.3 quarterly
grade paint aveJlse and completed
12 or mQtecfe4it hOurs. ' . ;
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Lan''ders·

band leaves her•••. HUSBANDS
·HAVE RIGHI'S TOO ·
ANN LANDERS
DEAR H.H.R.T.: lllftiC 1ba1 the
"1!1!13, Lao Aaceloo
decision 10 ~ 1 child sbould be
~:.,~~:.._..
made jointly bf bolh husband llld
wife. But in this J*licular case. the
pregnancy WIS IOIIlly WlpJanned.
miSiake to Ullderestimale Mr. Perot's The woman was surprised. Her
determination ud tenacity. Just hnsh!md w8s UJ*l. .
•
Ielllemba' dll1 old Soulbem saying
The fact Jer111ins dial the baby is
.. "Every shut eye ain't sleepill' and coming, and the woman did not get
every goodbye don't mean he's preanant by .benelf. I said the
gone."
•
husband hlld darned well better
Dear Au Lauden: fd lilte 10 cheer I!P about iL I predict ~
. respond to lhe woman whO decidocf. aft« lhe baby gets here lhe fllher
to ,proceed wijh a [*gnaacy over will be nuttier about Ibis late
. the objecli0111 of ber 46-year-old dividend than he ever was lbciut the
husband. You .US tbe baabanclmllll - lllhets.
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. 'be a "nut cue• and "v..id go for
Gem of the Day: If yOu want to
counseling if he doesn't cban&amp;e his write something that will live
mind when the blby comes.
forever, sign 1 mortgqe.
Your. answer wreaks of the
Wile11 pkwtillg 11 wcddillg, who
unhealthy trend of ex~remist pays for whDI? Who llllltd.r wllefd
feminism, which has IUnied women's 'TM AM La-dus Gllidlfor Bridu"
rights totally topsy·tuny. The lttu all lilt (IIUMT&amp;. s-1 11 seV-tld·
decision 10 have a baby should be drused,lo~~g, bUitul-liu ~~~VC/opt
with the mutual consent of .bolh tbe IUld a check or IIIOMy order for
man and tbe woman. Why do )'011 S3 .65. (rhis i11~ludes pcnl4gt alld
~ume a mature 46-year-old man /rtutdling) ro: l)rldts. (:fo AM iAn·
who already has three children is . tiers. P.O. Box 11562, Clticago, //[
going to "change his mind" afta: tbe 6061l ·056~. (Ill Ca11tul11, :re11d
baby comes? Sl!ouldn't he baWl an $4.45.)
eq.ual say in the maniage as well as
.·in the decision of whether or not to ·
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conceive?
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The husband is not a "nut cue" ·
jllstbecausehewantstoplanforhis
The ·Future Homemat~rs of
retirement without the finaucial America llld home economics Sluburden and time commibllent of a dents of Meiss Hish School are
fourlh child. The obvious 1ac1t of c1111e11lly selling homemade Easter
respect sbown.by his wife for their candy in the home economics
,
kitehen of the high school. The~

NEW YORK (AP) - Actor
Johnny Depp breaks into uncontrollable laughter when he sees
someone choke.
·
"lt's terrible,'" he Says in the
May issue of Details magazine.
"One of my good friends in ·
L.A., he was eating a club sand·
wich and I hear this (gagging .
sound) and ' he was stretching his ·
neck ~ut 8J!d llle9the s~~QSl ,

Rarrisonville~rea.happenings

Named to dean's,list ·

she hid beUer geuomecouaseling •
• and fast .- l!efore her IIIPY bus-

Choking is not a laughing matter · · ::!~li~ b:.i~:?itfiedr.;::tS:t- ;,

the Lord," "He is Not Here," "On a Lisle, ttmor and Dorothy WineFriday Noon," "Lamb of Gqd," brenner, soprano. Ann s 'auvage
~·Hallelujah , The Lord is Al.ive,"
presented "Once For AU "and Rev
"Like Him, We Shall Rise." and Newman presented c'an He B~
·"He is Lord" for the benedicljon. Seen in Me" and prayer.
Solos were presen~ by Rochelle
· Choir members include Rick
Jenkin~: R&lt;_&gt;y. Rose Ann and KPn· .Hauber, Roy Je~ns,:Kenny Wig;
berly, Th1s Do m Remembrance gins, Bill Winebrenner, Jamie
of Me." "Gethsemane''.by John Smilh, Rev. Newman, John Lisle,
Dennis Moore,' Dick Ash, Wilma . ·
Reiber, M11r~ia Arnol(l, Donn!!
Arnold, Cathy Moore, Beulah
Ward. Dorolhy Winebrenner, Ann
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop Felts, visited Mrs. Judy (King) Sauvage, Kathleen Fryar, Rochelle
spent two weeks in Florida where . Coomer of Kankakee, Ill., over the Jenkins, Janice Lisle, Hope Moore
Hilda Weaver, Helen Teaford:
_they visited his. uncle, Mr. and Mrs. weekend.
Abe Preece and Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Darold Graham Jr., with the ~lle Warner, Kimberly JenkHoffman.
USAF, stationed in Panama · is vis- ms, Rose Ann Jenkins and Mary
Miss Robin Gibson and friend, iting lhe Harold Graham faniily. He Cundiff.
Refreshments were served folHayden. Columbus, were 'dinner also visited his grandmother
lowing
the presentation in the
guests of her grandparents, Mr. and Bessie Graham at Overbrook Nurs:
social
room.
Mrs. Bob Alkire on Friday.
ing Center in Middleport.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
NeUie Lowe just returned from a
Bob Mahr were Laura Krebs and visit wilh her sister, Helen Young
Ida Cheadle. Carpenter: Cindy in Three Mile, W.Va.
'
The Past Matrons of HarFoley. Syracuse; and Justin and
Becky Broderick Steele is a
Chris Wan~ing, Snowville. ·
risonville OES met Wednrsday · patient at Holzer Medical Center
Mrs. Mtlhe Grueser and daugh- evenmg at the home of Pauline where she fs undergoing major
ter, Mcron, Middlcpon, was a Sun- Atkins.
surgery.
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day guest of Exmae Christian. '
Mr·. and Mrs. Mike l'rice,
Portsmouth , were F~iday evening
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guests of her molher, Lorj Eshel•
man.
,
Meig~ County residents named
lcne R. Christia Smith, Portland;
Mrs. Deloris King, Mrs. Mary to lhe Dean's List at Ohio Univer- Jennifer Jayne Arnold, Matthew
sity for lhe fall quarter have been Scott Haris, David Charles !hie
announced:
Kathryn Louise Ihle, Greta Lyn~
Jonathan Vance Merritt, New R1ffle, Arthur Dillon Roush
James and Merri Amsbary, Haven, W.Va.; Suzanne Gaul Clay, Janelle Darlene Williams, Racine;
Pomeroy, announce the birth of Chester1 Lori A. Harris, Andrew Steven Ronald Barnett. Reedsville;
their second child, Christian Lee, Alan Law and Jennifer Marie Melissa Rae Bissell Gray, Daniel
Stephan, Coolville; Jessica Lynn Scou Kennetjy. Rutland; Cheryl A.
on March 12.
The infant weighed four po!'lnds Combs, Heather Christen .Daven- Pape, Robyn Ann Stout', Syracuse
and seven and one-half ounces and port, Leigh Ann -aedovian; 'Monica
To. be named to the list, a stuLayne Turner, Amy Michelle Wag- deijt must have earned a grade
was .I 7 inc he's long.
Maternal grandparents are ner. Pomeroy; Darrell David point average of 3.3 or beuer on a
William Ault, Middleport, and lhe Hawthorne and Keilh Lee Spencer, scale of 4.0 for the quarter am!
late Lorena Auh. Maternal great- Long Bottom; Frank Edwai~ have earned 16 hours, 12 of which
,grandmolher is Elma Cindie.
Blake, Christina G. Weaver, Robby were taken for a letter grade. ·
Paternal grandparents arc Wayne Wyatt, Middleport; CharNanna Custer and the late Dr. Kenneth Amsbary.

Qh' U dean ,s 1'

marriqe pennenhip IUggella 1ba1

Ann

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. ,;IN THE DEu.PASTRY SHOPPE"

SMALL PAAS

Easter Ell · ,
CDIDrlnf Klt.'J"..~ ....... ,.!J,."

. . . . . $; ICe cream . "' "" .1~- r .
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14.5
. 15.25-oz~
STOKELY'S FINEST WHOU KERNEL CORN.

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SW&amp;'TPEUOR

CutDI'NII

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1~The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Comm~nity
. Comm11aity Caleadar iu••
appear two d8JI before • eveat
Md the clly ol that eveoL Ite1111
.must be received. weD i)lldvuce
to assure publication Ia tbe calelldar.
WEDNESDAY
. POMEROY • First SoutheJII
Baptist Church will 1\old revival
·services through Thurslllr at 7
p.m. Pastor Lamar O'Bryant mviteS
the public. Evangelist will he Rondel ·Manin, Columbus; and soloist
will be Monis WO!ld. Gainesv.ille,
Ga:
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calendar ·

.Wednesday, Aprll7, 1993

F.amily·

potluck dish.
SYRACUSE • Holy Week set·
vices fer the Syracuse ~ United Methodist Chun:bes are: Maun·
dy Thursday at Forest Run· with
communion at 7:30p.m.; Good Friday services 'at Asbury at 7:30
p.m.; Easter Sunday sunrise services at Minersville at 6 a.m .
Breakfast will follow in the church,
social rooms. Public invited.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:Researchers:·Reducing blood lead linked to·IQ.gain:in .kids

Ohio University ,
'
Colkge of Oste~pathic Medicine

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

your .conditinn without examining
you, it is possible that you have a
.
couldn't serious underlying condition that
FRIDA\" ·
remember the number.
·is very needs 10 be treated. You may have
SYRACUSE - Good Friday ser- unusual for me. I even had troUble simply hid an "early warning" sign
vices at the First Church of God in figuring out where 10 loOk for lhe of daiJger 10 come. I strongly urge
S)'racuse will be held Friday at 7 number. When I finally did call you to see your family doctor as
MIDDLEPORT'- Revival will p.m.
him, I had trouble .finding the soon as possible. He er she will do
be held lhrough Wednesday at 7
JULIE llll,L
words 10 say what I wanted 10 say. a physical examination and order
p.m . .nightly at the Hope Baptist
POMEROY - Community Good After a few more miautes, I was some tests and may also ·refer you
Church in Middleport. Rev. Fred Friday services, sponsored by the back 10 normal My friefl(lthinks I 10 an neurologist 10 help determine
Hill, direciOr of Missions for the Meigs Ministerial AsSociation, wiU may have had,a rruni-strolce. Wbat the cause of your symptoms. Don't
State of Ohio, will be the evange- be held at Grace Episcopal Church do you think?
·
assume that there is nothing serifrom noon 10 I p.m.
list
Aoswer: The 1ymptoms you ously wrong just because your
describe could be caused br seven! symp10ms have now passed. Your
Allison N. Gannaway !)as beel!
MIDDLEPORT. Meigs County
RIPLEY, W.VA. - The Uberty things. Worry and anx1ety arc symp10ms may be a early sign of selected as Meigs County's recipiSoap Box Derby plans will he fur- Mountainec;rs will perform Friday amongthe ~ common Cf1USCS ~f , blockage in the carotid arteries, the. ent of the Franklin B. Walter Allthered at.ameeting to be held 11 Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
su~~e and ~ef changes m o~e s ' ones that carry blood 10 the brain,
Scholastic Awanl811d will attend a
'' ......., ' ' V'{«;(d~r !117 p.m. at .the office
'
.
G"
ab1hty to thtnk clearly. Medica- or of other potentially serious but special recognition luncheon in
of the :Blue Stte&amp;k Cab·Co;;·'l72 .... ·R'I;JTLAND·· ·The ann~ ood lions, particularly some of the types treatable problems. See your dociOr Columbus on May 11 along with
North Second Ave .. Middleport Friday all-night gospel sing will be used 10 conttol bl~pressure. can soon. If your problem is carotid her Jl8l'llnts and seveml school omAll officers and others interested in held Friday at 7 p.m. featuring 12 also ~ _the~ sympiOms. Anoth- artery blockage, time is not on your cials.
participating are encouraged to groups _at the Freewill Baptist er poss1.bibty .IS that
proble!D side. Proper diagnosis and treatThis fourth annual Scholastic
. attend the meeting. Sponsors of Church m Rutland. Everyone wei· was the result of a disturbance m ment in a timely manner could pre- Award Program designed t.9 pro- ·
cars, help with building cars, and. come.
the circulation 10 the brain.
vent a stroke.
mote student achievement and to
race officials as wen as olhel wod·
The brain requires11,1 constant
''Family Medicine" is a weekly recognize outstanding students will
LONG BOTTOM - Good Fri·
ers are needed
of blood to
prope!· column. To submit questions, write be ·held at the Radisson Hotel on
day services will be held at the supply
ly. Even a momenll9' · sputter" m 10 John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni- Sinclair Road. Dr. Walter will prePOMEROY - Tbere will be a Long Bollom United Methodist the flow of bl~ will cause prob- versity College of Osteopathic sent awards to the county recipiregular meeting of Pomeroy Lodge Church at I;30 p.Jll. Rev. Norman lems. The particular type of prob- Medicine Grosvenor Hall Athens
ents.
No.· 164 F&amp;AM on Wednesday 11 Butler will be speaker. Everyone !em varies, depending on the area ohio 457ill
'
'
The Meigs High School senior · .
7:30 p.m. Practice exercises will be welcome:
or area&lt;~ · of the brain that itre being,
·
is the daughter of, Thomas and
JEREMY BUCKLEY
held at 6 p.m. at the Middleport
of !he necessary level of
Judith Gannaway' of Route I, Vin- Hill of Racine; a senier II Soulhem: '
RACINE • Good Friday services deprived
· Masonic Lodge. All master masons
blood needed to supply adequate
ton, She has a 4. grade average at HiRh School.
at Racine Baptist Church wiU be at
invited.
amounts
of
oxygen
and
nutrients.
SCh
,
Meigs
High School and has
Buckley will enter the pre-med .
?p.m.
In a stroke, some area of the
enrol.led at Ohio U~versity with a program at Ohio State University
. RACINE - The children.' s Easter
brain
is
permanently
damaged
by
The
application
deadline
fer
the
therapy map.
.
m the fall. ·HiJI plans a c~ in
POMEROY · Easter candy is an inlemlption of circulation. The Rutland High . School Alumni physical
pro,ram will be presented at the
The
other
two
sllldents
normnatphysical therapy and is enrolled at
Rae me Baptist Church on Wedoes- available until Friday from the 'word "permanently" is importanL Scholarship is May 1.
c&lt;!
for
the
award
were
Jeremy
Ohio
University. ·
'
Future Homemakers of 'America
day.
To apply for the scholarship, Buckley of. Pomeroy, son of~- ·
From the nominees, Jolin:
and the home economics students Since your symptoms didn't last
very
long,
they
weren't
permanent
applicants
must
be
a
1993
graduate
and
Mrs.
William
Buc,ldey,
a
sen_10r
·costanza,
Kitty Hazier, and SupL'
·
RACINE - The Racine Church 11 Meigs High SchooL
You,
therefore,
did
not
have
a
and
a
child
or
grandchild
or
a
Rutat
East.
e
rn,
and
Iuhe
Ann
Hill,
John
Reibel
made the selection of
of the Nazarene will hold revival
stroke.
A
mini-stroke
is
one
that
land
alumni.
daughter
of
Thomas
C.
and
Sally.
Gannaway
fer
the award.
TIJPPER,S PLAINS • The Tup- causes damage 10 only a small area ·
with Rev. Dave Canfield, WednesApplications
must
include
a
day through Sunday at 7 p.m. pers Plains VFW 'Post No. 9053,
the brain, but it is still permanent high school transcript, a resume of
nightly and 111 10:30 a.m. and 6 Ladies Auxiliary, will SPPnsor a of
damage.
So, you didn't have a activities .and career objectives, a
p.m. Sunday. Rev. Joy S1zemore round and square dance Frjday ·
either.
current photograph for publicity,
will provide special music. Public from 8-11:30 p.m. Music wiU be by mini-stroke
A circulatory problem , that the name and graduation year of
True Country Ramblers. Red Carr. begins suddenly an,d lasts less than alll!"ni. parent or grandparent, and
invited.
NEW YORK· (AP) - The on- . the newspaper.
' will be the caller. Evecyone wei; 24
hours'·
is
ca1led
a
trans,ient
the
name
of
the
intended
higher
again,
off-again relationship
The baby will be her fust and
,
TUPPERS PLAINS - The come.
ischemic attack (TIA). A TIA often educational institution.
6etween Donald Trump and Marla Trump's fourth: he has tbree with ,
Orange Township Trustees
produces
an
inability
to
move
a
All
applicants
wiU
be
evaluated
Maples is apparently back on. The ex-wife Ivana, ages 910 14.
'
MIDDLEPORT - The Return
meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
body
part.
such
as
the
arm,
or
the
on
grade
point
average,
course
of
!&gt;tillY
News
reported
IOday
that
she
Maples,
28,
and
Trump,
46,
·
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
home of the clerk, Patty Calaway.
of the American Revolution, will loss of other important functions study and compliance with require- IS two months pregnant with his became a public iiem more than
like speech. These are exactly the ments; with consideration of extra baby.
five years ago. The affair led 10 •
TUPPERS PLAINS - The meet Friday at I :30 p.m. at the same problems that occur with a curricular and co-curricular activiMaples,
currently
co-starring
in
Trump
•s ugly divorce, which ·
· Meigs United Methodist C~­ home of Mrs. Daniel Thomas, Mid· stroke. The difference is that in a ties and career objectives.
the
Broadway
musical
"Will
became
fmal in December 1990. ·
tive Parish Lenten drama "Lord Is dleport
TlA the symp10ms clear up in less
Applications may be mailed to Rogers Follies," plans to leave the
Since then, Maples and Trump
II I?," will be presentt4 at St Paul
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full than a day. The damage is not per- the Rutland High School Alumni show in about a month, the News have had a rolJercoa..,. romance, ·
United Methodist Church in Tupmanent as it is with a stroke. A TlA Scholarship Committee, Box 125, said.
.
.
meticulously chronicled in the
perS Plains on Saturday at 8 p.m. Gospel Church in Long Bouom that
only
involves
a
small
area
of.
Rutland,
Ohio
45775.
·
As
for
marriage:
"They're
dismedia.
Publie invited. Sharon Hausman, will have preaching and singing the brain could be ble cause of the
cusSing it," a friend of Mljples 10ld
Friday at 7 p.m. with a communion brief memoryand•'speech problems .------'-------f.-'----_.;.:.,.-_;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......,
pasiOr, inviteS the public,.
service. PasiOr Steve Reed invites yQU experienCed.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- the public. Fellowship wiU follow.
ACtually, I don't think it iS very
port Park Recreation Committee . Easter sunrise services will be Sun· likely that your symptoms resulted
Making the most of '.
• will meet Wedl!esday at 7:30 p.m. day at6:30 a.m.
from a TIA. This is because it is
at the council chambers in Middleuncommon during a TIA 10 have
Y&lt;&gt;ur money is what our
RACINE - Good Friday services problems with memory recall withport. Public invited.
will be held at the Racine United out having additional signs of
new Value One. Account
Methodist Churc~ at 7:30p.m. A injury 10 other areas of the brain. I ·
THURSDAY
is all about.
POMEROY - Communion set· cantata will be presented by the think it is more likely that your
Southern
Cluster
Choir.
vices at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
symptoms resulted from a side
. Simply by keeping
will be ThUrsday at 7:30 p.m. with
effect of a medication you take,
SATURDAY.
Rev. Amos Tillis. Rev. Victor
from emotional stress, or other les!!
a combined balance of
BURLINGHAM
~ Burlingham
Roush inviteS the public. There will
serious problems.
Modern Woodmen will hold a
be no Wednesday services.
A final word of caution is in
$1,000
. . in any linked savpotluck Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the order. Because I cannot diagnosis
POMEROY - Maundy Thursday hall. Ham, eggs, rolls, coffee and
ingsor MlneyMarket:IRA
services at Trinity Church in pop will be furnished. Bring a covaccount, you'D qualify for
RACINE - The Racine Legion
Pomeroy will be at 8 p.m. with ered dish. Everyone welcome. ·
Post 602 will hold its annual Easter
communion.
no-fee checking with unPORTLAND - Cemeterjt clean Egg Hung on Saturday at noon.
CHESTER - Shade River Lodge up will begin in Leb8non Township The event will be hel(l rain or
limited checkwriting And
No. 453 F&amp;AM will meet Thurs- on Saturday. Anyone wanting !0 shine.
day at 8 p.m. Refreshments will be keep flowers should have them
if you don't want Joworry
POMEROY · The Meigs High
re~T~Qved by that time.
·
served.
School Class of 1978 will hold a
abOut keeping a minimum
: POME;ROY - The Pomeroy
FAIRPLAIN, W.VA. - The Ub- meeting Saturday at 2 p.m. at the
balance: just pay a small
Group of AA wiU meet Thursday at erty Mountaineers will perform home of Tom and April Smith,
1691
Lincoln
Heights
m
Pomeroy.
7 p.m. at the ITPA building. Fur- ~aturday at the Jackson County
.monthly fee and you can
Plans will be made for the class's
ther infonnation may be obtained Jamboree in Fairplain;W.Va.
15th
reunion.
by calling 992-5763.
~aD the same privileges,
POMEROY - Wells Cemetery
POMER.OY " The LadieS Auxil- •
POMEROY ·· There-w.ill be an will be cleaned Saturday, AnyOne
You'll also receive THE ,
iary
of the Chester Volunteer F"ue
. organizatio~J meeting of the wanting to save flowers or decoraPomeroy Hi . Class of 1968 on tions should remove them by that Department will hold a bake sale
CX'IE.Card:'Itworks like a
Saturday at 9:30a.m.' 11 Kroger's in
Thursday a1 7 p.m. a1 Pizza Hut in time.
Pomeroy. All donations will be
check for ordinary purPomeroy t plan for its 25th
POMEROY - The youth groups accepted~ Donations may be left 11
reunion.
chases or like an ATM
in Chester.
·o f Trinity Church will hold their Newell's Gas Station
.
TUPPERS PLAINS · A free annual egg hunt Saturday at the
card when you need cast!
RUTLAND - There will be a
community immunization clinic parsonage on Mulberry Avenue in
dance at the Rutland American
will be offered at 1he Tuppers Ponieroy from 2:30-4:30 p.m.
in a hurry. ~you
Legion Hall· on Saturday from 8
Plains Fire Department on Thurs·
day from 9 a.m. 10 3 p.m. for ages
MIDDLEPORT - Thtze will be p.•. 10 midnight,Music will be by
will illMl instant ·
two months through kindergarten, a round and square da.oce at the Pure Country Band. Public·invited.
acces,s to your
'• • Children must provide· an immu· Old American Legion Hall in MidHOCiaNGPORT
There
will
nizalion record
dlepon on Saturday from 8-11:30
money, anytime ·
p.m. Admission is free. Children be a round and square dance at the
POMEROY - Brickiayers.Local ·are w,elcome with adult supervi- Reynolds Building in Hockingport
and virtually arty- ·
No. '32 will meet Thursday at the sion. Bring·soft drinks and snacks. · on Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m. fea.Pomeroy Library at 8 p.m.
Melvin Cross will be the caller. turing the country band ''Out of the·
. wherein thev.uid.
Music wiU be by C1 and the Coun- Blue." Ronnie Wood will be the
caller. Everyone welcome.
. SYRACUSE - Ordinance at the try Genllemen.
Andtomake •
Syracuse FirSt Church of God will
}OOri'eCordkeep- '
be Thursday at 7 p.m. with communion.
ing simpler, we'D
•
RACINE - An organizational
send
you
an
easy'
. meeting for the ~acine Fourth of
'
· July celebration w1ll be held Thurs, to-understand ..
day at 7 p.m. at ~e f!re stati~&gt;n.
.
'
1
W.1•1J'• 5p.eflal;
Any group or organiZ8llon wanung
summary eo~ery month:w-"
. 10 participate should have a, repre'
•
Caneinandaabout
sentative attend the meeting,
·
.
''
'4lue
One
It!!
what
your
.
RUTLAND - The program, .
'
''Wash Their Feet," under the
bank is doing Jo help.
direction of Marilyn WiUiams, wiU
i
he presenled Thursday at 7 p.m. at
,.r
the Rutland Church of · the
Nazarene. The]~ublic is !Jivited.
'

Three area students
receive scholarships

'

func!!on

By DAVID DISHNEAU
blood iead levels and increased deciliter of blood.
.
Associated Press Writer
inleUigence scores, Ruff said.
The most common source of
CHICAGO ·- Children with
The research is complex and lead poisoning is peeling or chip-:
· llloderate lead poisoning scored open 10 interpretation but it "does ping paint in buildings built before
better oJ!)ibteJiigence tests after the indicate a need for further work 1960. Soil near heavily traveled
amount of lead in their blood was . looking at whether the .effects of ·' major highways may be contamif!:duCed, researchers said Tuesday.
lead are reversible," Dr. Sue nated by the exhaust from cars
:- While the findings offer hope Binder, chief of the lead pois&lt;iiling burning leaded gasoline.
tllat the effects of lead poisoning prevention branch of the Centers
Past studies have demonstrated .
9" b,e reversed; they do not estab• for Disease Control and Prevention that hig!t blood lead levels corre!ISh a cause-and-effect connection, . in Atlanta.
.. spond to lower inteUigence scores.
the research team said in Wednes·
In a related project that also
Ruff .and fellow researchers
day's.Journal of the American appeared in the medical journal, found a mean, or ~verage, increase
Medical Association.
another group of researchers con- of 1 point on a "cognitive index"
"The relationship we see here is eluded that removing lead-contami- scale derived from standardized
consistent with the idea that 11\ere is nated soil does not reduce blood · inteliigence tests for every decrease
~orne reversibility." said chief lead levels enough 10 justify its cost in blood lead of 3 micrograms per
author .Holly A. Ruff, a develop- in most cases.
. . . deciliter.
mental psychologist at Albert EinLead priisonin)! ·can cause menThe children , ages 13 to 87
stein College of Medicine in New tal retardation, learning disabilities, months, )!egan with blood lead levYork. "It doesn't tell us that, but it stunted growth, hearing loss and els of 25 to 55 micrograms per
is consistent with !hat';
behavior problems. The CDC esti- deciliter, which the researchers
:·The six-month study of 154 mates that 3 million U.S. children characterized as moderate.
children is the frrst 10 find a reJa- have lead concentrations above the
Over six months. -their mean
tion.ship between a reduction in · danger level of 10 micrograms per blood lead Jev.el felliO 23.9 micro•
grams per deciliter from 31.2, and
their mean cognitive index score
rose 10 82.6 from 79.0.
................................
.. ., '
The children were selected from
a
lead-reduction
project
Sixty-one
Ree.ves, Ryan ·Terazopolous, ' Matthew.. ·.1
LOS ANGELES (AP)- The
_The show drew a 51 "share,"
STUDENT ADVISORY COUNCIL- A stuWilliamsoa, Darrel Jenkins, Jessie HershiiJao,
65th Academy Awards ceremony which represents the percentage of were treated at least once during . dent advisory council bas been named at
the
period
with
edelale
calcium
disMisty
Clay, Heather Hysell, Jasoa Murdoek,
Pomeroy Elemeatary to make )lositive suggeshelped ~d ABC the trophy as the sets tuned in, and a 31.2 averal\e
Kathy
Jones and Beth Shaffer. Back row, 1-r,
most-watched network, ending rating, meaning more than 29 md- odium, a drug that helps the body
tions aad pve Input 10 various areas of educa- .
eliminate
lead
.
Stephanie
Burdette, B.a rbara Wilson, Brenaa
·CBS' two-month winning streak in lion households were watching.
tion at the school. Members of the councll are.lSisson,
Adam
Shaak, Timmy Heldreth, Amber
r, front: Ben See, Jenairer Brickles, Jason
the weekly ratings conteSt.
· ABC also had winners last week Rutland Rebels meet
Wi!Uamson, Stooe;y Day, ClioBlackston,
Mike
Strong showings by Barbara in the comedy "Home ImproveThe Rutland Rebels 4-H Club -DeMoss; Angela Wilson, Jesslc:a Blaettnar, Janie
. too Hendricks, . Jonathan Wyatt and Stepba!lie
Davis, Thurieo Carter and Jwllin .DeMoss. Sec- ·
Walters' traditional Oscar ni,11ht ment," which ranked second, and met ~ecenlly at the home of CarPickens. Not pictured is Andrea Krawsczya.
ood
row,
J.r,
C.D.
ltllis,
Chris
Pickeas,
Jodi
special and two ABC comed1es "Barbara Walters" (her 12th Oscar olyn Nicholson. Nine members and
•
also helped boost the network to celebrity interview special) and the three advisors attended.
No. I in the March 29-April 4 rat- comedy "Coach,'' Which tied .for
Th
d.
newS-----~ings, according ~ figures recleased third place.
then~~r~fpthe~~~~~~ead !~g~~
•
. ' . . •
..
. .. . .....
Tuesday
by the A.C.
Nielsen
A pairand
of "Seinfeld,"
NBC comedies,
Tilled "Gangland," the movie
ABC earned
a 14.5,
average rat· "Cheers"
lied for . salePIandco.
f mmunity services. ·
LOS ANGELEs (AP) - Sci- . "We want to have children, a
ing, followed by CBS with 12.4, fifth, followed by ABC's
ans or the upcoming year ence meets science fiction when home and a very normal life," will foeus on the downfall of the
NBC Wl.th 10.2 and Fox Broadcastwere also discussed.
physicist Stephen Hawking auest Becker said in Stem, a weekly Ger- Gambino crime family chieftain.
Re.res
• hmen ts of cookies, K oo1
"'
·
·
Th
· t 1s
· bas ed on a .Howard '
l·ngCo.w 1· th . 7.5.0ne~••ngspo 1·n 1 :'Roseanne"
R d. in seventh
h place.
starSonthisseason'sfmalepisode
manmagazme.
· escnp
10
"'"
. oun mg out
were. •'d and ch1'ps were served bY car.- · . of "Star Trek: The Next GeneraBec ker an d Fe1tus, who have Bl urn bo ok to be publ'shed
th 1s
'
represents 931,000 homes.
· t e ·top
t
1h CBS
1 "D 'd ~
e
magic
spec
Ia
•
avt
olyn
Nicholson.
.
.
·
lion."
.
lived
10gether
for
more
than
a
year,
fall.
No
release
date
for
the
movie
2
Tedhe March. h 9 ~car cef:muonsy Coppehrfield: Fires of Passion," in
Officers will be elected at the
Hawking, author of the formalized life engagement March has been announced.
snar a lgger poruon o e . . . eight place, and CBS' "Murder, next meeting.
. d • • B . fH'
5,the magazine said in today's edi"Gotti is a great character, and
television audience than any She Wrote" and "60 Minutes,"
Michelle Miller is news
accla!me
A ne utory of tion. It did not say when they•plan this will be my new 'Batman,' "
Academy Awar&lt;ls show since tied for ninth.
reporter.
Time," is featured in a scene
1983.
·
.
involving a holographic poker 10 marry.
·1 • Peters said. "It will be a big epic
~ame with series r~ular Brent
Becker, who has not played a movie.''
'

°·

Marla Maples is. pregnant, Donald
Trump is the father,· say reports

'

Literary program presented. to grang~

pir~~i~~!.'t~;,\c~~ti~~ta~ l~~:~nitnsw~;r~~~ri~~:;e~ nin~i;:ra~~eK;:~~~n~ :~~~~~~~;

A P.Otluck dinner preceded the · . Members repoited ill were E!iz- Will, "Who Said They .Would Do Albert Einstein and Sir Isaac Newrecent meeting of the Hemlock a beth Roberts, Leo Story, Art It," Norman Will gave jokes and · :d~~ take part in the fantasy
Grange. Five members of the Har· Shumway, Betty and Dave wise sayili~, Stella Atkins,. "What
g
·
risonville Grange were.visiiOrs.
McConnayhay and Ron Eastman. · Is God L1ke? ," George White,
Hawldng, professor at CamHelen Quivey gave the SP.C£ial
· The literary program was pre- "Why Wait1 ," Margaret Haning, bridge University in England and a
committee report on the budding pared by visiting lecturer Norma "April Showers," Sylvia Miilkiff, .· fan of the series, asked 10 appear on
fund.
Lee, "Spring Time Beau~." Read- "Slow Me Down, Lord," Harley the TV show after visiting the set
. Th · .
fiilm'
.
Ziba Midkiff, legislative ·agent, ings were by Sarli ullums, Haning, "Position Isn't Every- recently
reported that the price of milk lias "Nature Glory," Naomi 'Reed, thing," Zilia Midkiff, "A Forgiving ·
e episode,
mg this week,
dropped to the farmers but that "Harbengers of Spring," 'Leota ~ Father," Helen Quivey. "Christiani- will air in syndication the week of
Juile21 ·
t~e):e, ~as been.M change at the Smith, "The Cardinals Sing, " ' tyAt Work." ·. •
·
'
markets.
Paulin~ Atkins, "History of Easter
The program concluded with a
HAMBURG, Germany (AP) _
A communication .was read Seals," Cl~nce ~lOry, "B~ck !O · game that was played by alL Sara Tennis star Boris Becker popped
from Star Grange 10 aUend the ded- Nature," Hilber Qwvey, "Raised m Cullums was the wmner. .
the question to 1\is longtime girlication of a new room just ·complet· the Country," . Pauline ,6;tkins,
.Donations were asked for prizes fri . B
F
d h
ed. The dedication will be held ·'Ea'Msat·mma10's. ~EilmsteprtyBConhnw~r"," "AD10o..nra·s to' be given at the banquet
end arblira e1Ius an s e ·said
,.,
fCS. .
Aprill8 wiJh a chicken barbecue.

.

will

•

With Remote, TStyles-Peean or Oak · ":! ~n·Screen Programming

$463
13" COlOR TV

$233°
l

, DISTRICT WINNERS :.._ Libby King and
Bill;y Crane, students at Meigs Juaior High
Schoo!, both.recelved superior ratloplqthe dis. trict wmpellllon at Ohio Unlversll)' ~or their
ence proje«:IS. Kiq·also received the Governor s
· Award for EoeriiY Re&amp;e~~rch and second piBCe in

sc:- .

·'

to sing National Anth~m

'

$1.·79 .

'

..

,

'

'

'

·· ..

.

".

.·~ .I

. ""

junior high physics .ror her project,. "Keep
Warm." Crane also reteived first place 1n eoglneerlna and a monetary award ror bis projeCt
"llow iSoes An Amplifier Work?" They will
'compete In state competition on April 17 in ·
Dellware. Eleven junior hlgb studeaiS were represented ·a t the district rom petition.

Grateful Dead members

'

'

19" COLOR TV

TURF
•Brown, Green, Gray
•12 ft. wide

0

LIVING ROOM ·
SUITE
•

.

'

PORCH &amp;
PATIO

•Rernote Control
•PIIrfect for Bedroom ·

'

.

$243°

0

00
•

.

POMEROY - The Rutland Elemenlarj' spatS banquet will be h~ld
Thursday at ~:30 p.m: at Me1gs
High School. ,Brmg drmks and a

nitely over,''said Becker, 25.
NEW YORK (AP)- Odd cou. ·
ple
James
Carvillepolilical
and Maty
LOS ANGELES (AP) - ·"Bat- Matalin
will provide
.anai· :.
man" co-producer Ion Peters and. ysis for Newsweek on upcoming•
"Basic Instinct" screenwriter Joe elections.
Eszterhas are teaming up for a new
The magazine also will feature
movie about convicted mob bQss excerpts of their bOok: on the.l99
John Gotli.
. ............presi~ntial race, due next spring. 2

. snvAN,...
~ · CONSOLE TV ·,· •2 Head •Remote Control

'

ISH ·TAIL

considering reduced playing time · Ya~i~ty _ reported Tuesday.
to help Feltus pursue an actillg ~~:e~~~a'::~f~o':ti~n=~
careeThr. h
·
w· bl d
sammy Gravano ·and rom crucse
·
e t ree-ume
1m e on
champion has been practicing in is up for a part as an FBI agent.
Monte Carlo for the beginning of
Eszterhas reportedly could
the upcoming clay court season,
receive $3.4 million for the screen, "I years
have of
at tennis,
the most
six play·
·
more
thenfive
it isordefi-

,.,.~ 2~" . COLOR

.

'

·~....

NameS l'n .th e

D.eadline.posted for
alumni Olarship

.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-11 .

"

·Oscars·give ABC ratings wih

:rour

DillY. VALLEY

...

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - · Oh,
say. can you see ... what a long,
·s19Jnge trip it's been? ·
Members of tl)e' Grareful Deac!·
who rose 10 counterculture pronnnence in the psychedelic '60s and
remain one. of rock's IIIOJl enduring
acts, will sing the ·nati~ anlhem ,
at the San Franciaco Giants base·
ball home opener MOildaY .in Can,
dlestick Park..
.
.
. Lead 'guitarist Jerry Garcia,
rhythm'guitarist Bob Weu and ~y­
boardist Vince Welnick will ,smg
•'The Sw Spangled Banner" a
· ~ cappelli•before tlie Giants play. the
Florida ~ns, Giants promouona
manager va! erie McGuire said
,. Tuesday,
. · S
The i)ead formed 10 the an
Franciico Bay Area in 1965 and
are known for their live concerts,
which draw legions of devotees,
. and for .songs such as "Truckin' ,"
with its line "What a long, strange
trip11J'rbeen.''
· ·

·Easter Savines

PUiow arm sofa and matching chair.
'

"

.

'

$499°0 ". :
DEUYERED •

GAS o'r ELECTRIC
RANGE SPECIAL
30• WIDTH • WHITE.

s.2

30%oFF
ALL COMMIES

THIU SATURDAY
f11fe

•

.. SHOE PLACE .
.

'

,.

N. SECOND
MIDDLEPORT

9 -oo

IN STOCK ··

·Vinyl 'Floor Covering
. l~ Patterns-12Ft. Width

.IAI.E

$4'99 ".·
' .

.

SQ. YD.

.PETERS .. REYINGTON

LIGHTED CURIO CABINET
5 Shelves, Side Door Entry, Mirror
Back, Cherry Finish. ·

REG. SJ1t.OO SALE

$2 3900

�..
1-· - - · · - -

Page

12-Ttte Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'' .
'

'

1171 A

'

•

';:
'

J·VERSARY SALE

,,

v

36970 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

CROWN · COLA

SIZED LIMESTONE

24 PAK 12 OZ. CANS

. 8AM·10 PM

s

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. .
.. .•
.• WE RESERVE THE .RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., APR. 4 THRU APR. 10, 1993
..
•
•
•

.

I

•
•

..
•

.

59

••
•

GRADE A.WHOLE . . .. . .....

•

.

.

__
:- - - - - •••

~---.....;.

19

(

•

•
•'

FAMILY PACK ASSORTED

•

.

.

~

''

Pork Chops..........................La.

Ch::~e~~~~·-·~-··---18. $1
9
9
(
R .
.·
$199
Sliced
Bacon
.............
~.12 oz.
. ump oast. . . .~...............La. .
·usDA •smcr. BONElEss
aonoM ·$2 59 .
Rouna S ak..............La.
.
$1 9
Chuck Roast...........
.
.
9"
9(l
Bo na.........................

,. . URSDA ..

'
1.-

$ 1·49

69

BALLARD'S

.
.••

..

DOG FOOD
20 LB. BAG

'. $ 99

ZESTA
CRACKERS

.. POUND BOX

c

IEEF ·

USDA SELE

BONELESS. BEEF

~

.

LB. ·

ECKR CH

Would like to lh.,k all

ot our frlende,
neighbor• anci f..,lly
wh!l helped In •ny W8Y
during our Ume of
aorrow and loll of our
aon •nd brother, Duane.
. Thoee who Hl'lt ihelr
.

992·2487

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable
Rates

JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138

2aoz~

LB.

c

2

GROUND ··

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 Of .

.

•be

217 L S.CHdSt.
POMEROY, OHIO

REG. s.199 s1zE

FLAVORITE
-

.

$299
·J4:s
. ..
. · oz•.

CLO.ROX. .BLEACH

.6.9(
'

.~

.·GAL

518.

lAG

57·59 Court St.

~;~I

Shoe~

. REASONABLE RATES

~

Repair

T,.,, woc1, Fri. ·

8:30 101&gt;1;30 pm

Thurs.&amp; Sai.10am-3p.;, .

104 llulbolry Avt.

\

31121!13

lit~~!"
Sewhot, ..,....,

C•••s... s.-··~"k•
~~~-··- 1770
Caftlr......
20+ ' "· '-•· SnriM
Solt·f

upa~JI. O..tinva.-.tl buelnllt• opporllnlty. $33,000

WE NEED UITING8i CALL U8 F.OR DETAILS ON
USTING YOUR HGIIII! DRPROPERTYI

·

~_!!!.00

NURSES' AIDE

ROOFING

'

...

HEIIIRY I. CLBA.ND- o ooo oo Hooooooo o.oooo ooooooooM o OOOOH . . . .. . , , ,
KATHY ILILAND.........................................._.iiM'It'l
TI'IACV IRINAGER•••••- - .......

--·--·----..a411
~.....:........-- -..-·····················"''"""',.....

,, 1 ? . . . . CDm:nl....l

.......t.?

FIAIWODD FOR IALI

-...

HEY GUYSIII ~ Gille Want
To Tall! Tc You! I 1 - •o~
Ex1. 1204 lUI Per Min. Mutt
le 11 Yro. Unlolor Co. 102-GI0115.

,. WITH CPR .
TRAINING.
LOOKING FOR

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
, ~ Painting

NO AROUMEIIT81 NO NACio
GtNGI Juot Tha lla1e 01 Choicolll 1~ Ea.
5540. 12.11 Porllln. llua1 8o II
Yra. Unlatar Co.·(IOZ) 131-otl11,

SOMEONE TO
. TAKE CARE
Of IN OUR
HOME•.·
'614·992·7698

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168 .
3·16-93-lfn

REDUCE; Bum 011 Fal Whllo

You~

TU. OML Avellllltoo
A1: Fruth Plla,_,..

1--·lbi.

With lloeulllul Gtrtoll
To HNr F - Youll
Par llln. .. 111
Co 102-131-otl15.

PRESCHOOUCHILDCARE
514 North s-ndAIIIdd~part, Ohio 45710

Aato-Rentals.
Sprfnl Tfme . , .
. s,ecfal

,_...,_
RODGIRI 1-1
WtAlloHovo
7112

14111 State
RL, 7
'

tho Ope1l1g of t•elr
.l1fa•t/Toddler PrograM

IIIIOUICOI

We will NOW serve children

6 months to 10! ?ears Qf age ...., -····
Call us lor more Information
4) 992-732.8 :;;:;;:;

614 ·446·07 36

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
·
Box 189 •
Middleport, Olllo 45760
. (614) 843·5264

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

To Y-

wrlh.l~~'=:
~ ... IOS,~o,IN

Howard L W}ltesel

Accldenr •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

.

llMtllrolltll Fof Quellfted ......
. - . No fnvMI-. Par Clnty
For You lei. Add Fut
S.Hing
Memortll
Arlllclll

·
You-Cori
High Add
Guiltyl&amp;Oti.OO
· - Aleo.
TG

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •

lhnllln ,._ :n1n11n1ng

~a. 0051·32

3 Announcements

6181'11211

ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

. "-11••~·
~no. Wtulno. 111c1

Lie:.

Announcements

a.-

KELLER'S ·CUSTOM
BENDING ...
47269 St. Rt. 248 e 1Y. •ilo OH Rt. 7

,.,. Rester o•lt. 241

PH. 614·985·1949 .
IIOW Offlllllt.." ..
. .·.

OIL UD lUll SIIIICI

1111 IINII AID IOTin• .

,,

1/2• .191/ 1 •

1 Kilton, Wllfto ·WIIh Bilek

Spota, 114 4tl Dltl.

·---~-. -

175-3273 -1:10 Pll. . ~

I Wook Old ............ llodlum .
.
Sized, 114411..141.

~
Sybertan ....,,, 7-he ~
'gOad .doa. ~ ~~ will ...

--""*"' . .

To Gaod ~ lllontM, FuM
liDO did Lab. Rellrtevw. feinlt._
114 2111117.

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and •

.· 1·1H-I27·1460

FREE card.

~·

FREE t:STIMATES

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS

.

Thi• ad gaod lor 1

992·3838

· D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG
(614)
667·6628

.MIIITEIIAIICE
t49•2HI or

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Earl~ Bird 5100 P•yoff

~ first!

F-ra ToY- P,_.l.lne 01

BULLDOZING

varloua

• · EAGLES
CLUB

SAVE STEPS!
. Shop the ~
~Want Ads;

l i e - " - U PrieM
f!engo Fnom .... To 121.H.
4:onijlotlll¥e Wllh

RIC EICIVITIIIG

~ooee from

EVERY THURSDAY

UMESTONE·TRUCKING

:1125113tt

LAND.CLEARING
WATER &amp;. SEWER
UNEB "
BASEMENTS &amp;.
' HOMESITES
HAUUNG: L.lmatone,
Din, Gravel and Colli

•BP Diesel Supreme...Tty it, there Is a
difference.
•Minimum 50 Cetane
•Low ash and sulhlr
•Will not gel in winter time. ·
1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
MARCH 15TH thru MAY 31ST
Speclallarm Ierma with p-vment 4 tlmaa a year .
and NO INTEREST or FINANCE CHARGE.
Larry E. Miller
1-80()..598-5654
614 446 1157 '

BING

CIEITIOIS l

BULUDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES end
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED :

3-8-t31 mo.

Real Estate Gtneral

.,..,.., SUPERIOFJ FUELS AND
· LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
HARD FOR YQU.

.

EXCAVATING

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING .

6 DAYS A WEEK
11 :15AM·1 :45 PM
LUNCHEON BUFFET

6 PM·8:30 PM
EVENING BUFFET
12 Noon-8 PM
...:s~~_l].AY 13.1-lEFEf .

DlriVEWAY WORK
alii UMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE

GOOD SERVICE IS
OUR GOAL .

'regardless of income
'regardless of grades
•plus $20k guaranteed.loan
'regardless of credit
· · To collect your scholarship moriey
call614-985-3556
Open Mon.-Fri. 10.7 or Sat 10-4

Hours: SUn. I lion. CloHd

POIIIIOY, 011.

BUFFET

. .

11113
.

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406
318/lln

Guaranteed Sctlolarship Money
tor all
lege bound students.

loot

-- HOWARD

SMALL DOUR

992·7553'

coMMERCIAL IUILOINO ·W. Maln St. In Pomelor '
h"vtly ..awtad ..U 1100 oq. ft. 4 bedroom ~~

· ADr. 4 thru Apr. 10,
. L1m1 i Per Cuato"* .

.

RACINE, OHIO
614·949·2202 . -~ 614·7•1l•:ZY'IO

MEADOWS SHOE
LEATHER REPAIR

IUY • SELl • TRADE
31711. 2nd St•
Mlddlaport, Ohio
Molt.·Frl. I 0:00·5:00
Saturday I 0:00·6;00
Clo..t• Su.nday

· 525 HOUR

Gallipolis

•• .,. ·---· Cllll tOt ddllo &amp; too:aliontl

GoodQ~~ At Pli...l'l Suf* Valu .

' Olt.ar

742~2328

Vioa &amp; Master Card

·NEW AT OSCAR'S

.

36358 SR 7

Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto ..
and Office Seating

985·4473
667·6179 '

Point"'~ 011. 45761

BUllETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

RIVER FRONT LOTS- Several to

'

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

· "Helping l'ou To Rec(!ver Your lnvestllient"

FilE ESTIMATES

'RACINE. 8.5 acraa with 197li 12 X 65 mobile home &amp;
older hou1e, 2 l aptlc ayatam1, TPC water. ASKING
S23,DOO '

SUGAR
.SJ.-19

S.ltllay Calls)

Shade -River.Saddle Shop

~
Snodgra·ss Upholstery

··-••li•t

POMEROY·"-nt lot on Spring Ave . a poaaible good
site tor ·mobile home p11ved atr..t, ulililiea, Immediate
pouauion. 11,000

GREAT

614·992·7643 .

DO ROOFING

20 Years Exp.

Stop &amp; CoMpare

OEXTER· 1 112 Story frame home wilh 7 room1, 4
bedn&gt;oma. callar, garden area, added lnsulation,large
Iron! po!d!. 111,000 .

BOXES

Ohio

•CoMplete

REDUCED! lllddlepori- 2 .•tory frame hom.e with 3
bedroome, newer rep~~ln, new electric heat pump,
llrep'-. attic 1pace, buerrient on approx. 1 acre ol
ground. Now Aeltlng ..,1,800

.

MASnR .BLEND · COFFEE

Pomeroy,

.

. -

.,__

TROMM BUILDERS

•Garagtl

12·5-lfn

. (.
99
Potato Chips_~"~"". .
7'!. Oi~
$.
Mac. &amp; Cheese. . . .. 4 1

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES ·

15 YaArll

· · T-Shlrts • Hats • Uniforms
V•rltlly ol T-Shln Colora and Lettering Style.•

COIISTRUCTION
•NowHo•s

PH. 614-992-5591

.

New Homes • Vlnyi .Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS •

. V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

985-3561

LICENsED ll)d BO~

.

•

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

AND EVERnHING UNDERNEATH

992-3577

90
MR. BEE

/

2251 Sixt• St. • (61 4) 992·5315

Painli"ll
·
. (FREE ESTIMATES)

&amp;ere•• ,,.. Pe1t Office

BOOK
IARN

Bt LL ETIN B&lt;&gt;.\RD

BEEF

·~

',.,

ROUSHi$ PRINTING

2-7·92-tho

~~--------~ ~------------~-­

'

"

2112192/Un .

WE

always be
One cif all

'

"·'

'

(No

Plclc Up.

ut not forgotten ;
our hearts you 'II

Gerald, Lucy &amp; Larry

s

10 milaa aouth of Galllpolla
on Bladen Road
PH. 614·2~160

· lriJIIII .. Or We .

w~w•11y,God

·

-::

12131/92Mn

may begone

Bl..a and Th.,k You I

60Z.

'&gt;;

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

warda and to the
· F~J~~f'!'!!l'al ..,
. Homewnow-ao
kind. To av..yona who
hM .,_, ao ldnd •nd
helped In ao many

CAT FOOD.

.

\

J. S. MARINE

••IIALL liliES

In Memory

epprecla'-1. '
A special thank• to Rev.

TWIN PET

'

313/931fn

being there were graaUy

'

;

Po..-d by Mwc:ury Outboard•

3-4-93· 1 mo.

comfort and con•ollng

CATSUP

'

;.

Save Big on Voyagera •

MICROWAVE OVEN
VCR REPAIR

prayera, c•rda, food,
flo-•, phone Clllla .r\d
mon.y and for Juat

~·

l

(6111) 992-5449

3-4-93·1

George Hoachar for hla

DEL MONTE
SQUEEZE

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

PHONE 992·7036

· IN MEMORY OF
"OUR BABY
KRISTEN MAY"

.CARD OF THANKS
The Family Of
GERALD 121!AME
JOHNSOffJir.

•

SUQER
IMAGES

Quarterly and
Year-end Reports
REASONAE!LE
RATES

card of Thanks

We want to thank
, everyone who sent
• llowers, cards, those
' who came, the Ewing
Funeral Home and
stan, Veterans
Memorial HoapHal,
Doctor Vlllanauva,
Ministers, Elder
· Roush, Overt!rook
Center stafl and
nurses and anyone
who helped In any
· way. Thank you lor
your kindness.
The Fam lly 01
A nacomau

·SUNSHINE ·
••

•

•. ''f

'1

. Jeanie Howell, EA
NOTARY
311J:t mo. pd.

Association Is
looking for current
addresses of Meigs
graduates for April
mailing for Alumni
Dance on,
May 29, 1993.
Mail addresses to
Meigs Alumni
Association, P. 0 .
Box
Middleport,
45760

2 Miles 011 .Hyseli
. ALL HARDWOOD
Ru11 RoodOH
Seasoned
Rt. 124
12 S.ssio•s $20. $40.00 a Load
16 hulo•s $25
Delivered•

•

•

....

USED RAILROAD TIES

3-11-93

COTTAGE ··
CHEESE
24 oz. ON.

s

BILL SLACK
992-2269 .

OWNER:
JeH Wickersham

•

.HOWELL'S
BOOKKEEPING
&amp; TAX SERVICE

•LIGHT HAULING
, •FIREWOOD

·992·3470

BROUGHTON

•
•

SHRUB &amp;
TRIM and
REMOVAL

: WICK'S HAULING
.SERVICE

AL

. · .. STORE HOURS ;Monday thru Sunday

..

------· The Dally Sentinel-Page 13

·

2 Fro•t Struts ·• Laltor
e 4 Wllttlllit•••t
Prices Startfnt .t
1

129.95 +Tax

�•

5

•

•

'

4-The
;

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
tomllf garogo aaio- Friday,

72 TruckS tor Sale

J

PHILLIP
ALDER

hcu~

' heme. rot=ldng cttalr. pitlo table
: l umb~Wta, bed lniM, mort,

, April 10. S.lem str.- ottht ana

NORTH
tAQ lO

• ot

INch Grove. Kld't Clolt.t,
• targt ·women .. 1nd bit ....,..,
• ck)lhee, .._ of knklk~118Gh,
: upright I I'POr.

4-~11

tAQ7U
tJtl2

EEKANDMEEK

Yanl Satoa Muot Be Paid In
, Adva-. Dutllna: 1:00pm thl

: All

EAsT

• claw 'betoN the ac1 Ia to run,

•n

tK~U

• Sunday ectnton- 1:OOpm Friday,
lion~
edHion· 10:00Lm.

I

S.1urclly.

tKJ109Z
.Q4

llh,~ raln

or· thhw, 341 Rutland Strwt,
Mldd&amp;aport. Baby cloth•, cur·

ttl
.AK1073

t5

tA1076~

Vulnerable: Neith~
Dealer: North

Publlc5ale
&amp; AUction

8

Welt

Pass
Pass
Pass

~·

IT WAS ENUFF TO
MAICE YORE
HAIR STAND
ON ENDU

WHAT A TERRIBlE
.:SCAllY NttiHTMAilE II

WATCH YORE
TONti II Ell

!Ofl -

Paid: All Old U.S.
Co1n1, Gold Alnaa. su- Colfta,
Clold Colno. ..T.t. Coin Shop,

1224.

.

W.- to buy: uaed homea. 114 411

am

-

Employment Serv1ces

U..

tlt'M with

Remodtllna And .Repair Work; · Cantury 21 Shoroek RoaHy, 304·

114--•t3.
~210.

•AVON' ALL AREAS I Sharo your
You"l love thll

·company. 1.-.Da2-4311.

Coupll Far 111anagoman1 ·a
......_
Afllll'llll*1l
Pro¥idad Plua S.lary. Equal
l:!aualng OIIDortunRy. Sand
Aaauma To: 'CLA 214, olo GalUpolla ~ Ttltun_!I1 _82S Third
,_.., OOlllpolla, un w:n.

-fl!a.-

Stop By Slo_p Lawn Coro, Complolo ~wn Sorvlco, Wo Do nAll,
114-441 • .
Trt41... Traa 5antlco. Topping,
Trimmlngha:::.-'lng, Ramovol,
&amp;lump
vel. Fraa Eot-ao. 114-317-0553.
W.nled: Houaaclaonlng, Rlla
llayna, 114-368-i8711.

Full-T1ma Saloa Poahlon, WHh WI~ _do .QeMral houHCINnlng,
rHidenllll or comn~lal, have
T!Bat
retaranc11.
S.nd Roo._ To:
CU.R.....
2116, Nd.
C/Q 1~ and
Galllpotla Dally T~biHIO. 125 Conlaet Paula .. -·2447.
Third Av-. Galllpolla, OH
4!131.
.

Fmanc1al

lmmadlata ()paning Available
For PI~·Timo RN, Midnight Shift
Aallol
CoriiooiHivo
~ DlfleranUol Wlih Ex-

-laor.

=·. J:t

&amp;.
Of

.:::-DiractJ
.,..- ~-- ~·
- _,. ,.....,..
1111 ~1Wo1 llrl¥o, Gal-

tar,
llpollo, OH 45131, 114-446-7112.
Local lualnaaa Look!ng For
Worldng
floiituir•
Manual · LAbor ~With
lllnaaina And
ng A
Orwti llual Ia
bla.
S.nd A - To: AC P.O. lo•

-11-.

-ion

21

Business

Opponunlty

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
racom"*ldo the! you do buol,..... with people you know, and
HOI' to aand menay throUQh thl
Nil until you ltavo lnvoatfgatod

_•hl=o:;-11er~lng.~::-;;;::.:;::--;:;-=:-:

Local Vondlna Routo: $4,000 A

Month Potonlbol. Muot Soli. 1·
-..53o4313.
\
_

Popel routa, Mlddlapon, Ohio

452, a.tllpolla. OH 41U1.
••. teven mac.hlnea curl'*riUy
Mlddlaport Parle
Ia placed at Mlobllahod locatlono
·laking eppllcaltlone tor pool h,OOO. alrioua Inquire• only,
..._
l lltoguanla. Apo 304-417U15!J.

ptlcaiiOna can ba jllekad up at
tho lllddlopolt Cny Building.
No Ex~ S&amp;OO To SIOO
w..llly IPolentill Pt curing
FHA 11oft- Rotunda. OWn
Hourw. 140f.l te 0503 Ex't.213.
24 Houro.

••••o

·-or
rnonlh.
Oallla Halo!.

•ceas. $85,000. firm: Asi tor lllarllng .. ~.
Bryan Sm~horo 304·7279888 or 111

1om Buldlng, Fonco Building,
lecll'- And Oozor Work, Call

Y£NOINQ ROUTE: Gat Rich
OUick? No Way! But Wa H••• A
- · StMdy, Allordoblo, Buo~
n..._ Wo"'t Last 1..aD0.2u.
11313·

757-t968.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
11 Aero MIL Vacant Land Water

lEite Available, George•, Creek

Stooping with coclllng.
Alao
lr11llor
·
All - 304·7'73...pa.
Cal ••• 2:00 p.M.,

For H._ wood bunlf; beds, S&amp;Oi
phona 304-182-3300 or 304-182·
3041 aak tor Carol.

588i,III-.WV.

For Sola: Dryar And Rolrlgorator
$50 Exoh Cilll Aftar 4 P.M. 614258-t750.-·

46 Space tor Rent

For S.li: Ar1r Bumprr And

.... . . .

public water. 1 acre lots wtth

Clyda Bowan, Jr. 304-57&amp;-2336.
Charvlolo Hill Lako Eatola Lot
119, 2.08 Acret, Mfl Equatlnttr·
oat In And To ~ka, Dam l Spill
Way. Loot Avalloblo ~1 $15,500,
et4-38f.8780 Allor 5 P.M .
1.o1 For Soia $5,000 · On Stato
.Route 554, 7 MIIH Frvm Routa
7. 114·38f.ll43, 814-367-7010.

3&amp;

Real E"ate
Wanted
Homo, Double
Lot
Smal

~~--·
--' ·
1ZI
81, Ripley, WV. -

...~ paftlna -

Noflh
St. Muat ba _,lo ._ialo.
Court
m-.

56
-

Ohle 414131.

Soo-10 To Btoy With II

~y

Whc - l y Had A Slorl&lt;o,
- - . lui Con, Alford To
Pay lluch,
Conaldar
GIVIng- And- Aa Palt

w-

Of Pey. MIMI ltl¥e RifMIIfiCIII
can --..m For lnl..,taw.

Salary:
-·· fcic.cma
...~ •. .. ,,
....
t.ct·
coriiiiCt
-31·23112. Dudllno 19r opp41canta:' 41'12/13. EO£.
·

--·

51

Household _

Goods

AVON I AH Areaa I Shlrtay

Spaaro, ~14211.

WANTED: '!Yo Port-Timo (20 Hro

1M) c-n11y Sldno lnotructor. Neadld lo ANIIt ,.,..,.

h12 Carpot $101 • All Vlltyt In
lllodt $4.49 Yd. · - car.
pota, Rl. 7 Nortlt. 1-11144.
YI'RA FUANilURE AND AP.
PUANCES
·114 448 4428 OR 814-44W151

Guitar, $35; temlr rhoeit, rlze.

10.112, 11, SID; banlo
nunator,

$55;

~m

and

11...387-7728,

Eaotor BUMiaa For Exchi Can s. In W.tcnForllgn.
liular 675o31121.

118

t1~tl8111

-

Ootdan llalrtovW, '1 .,., Old
......
_...._,
Colt

limhailon or dtscrlminatlon

seK lamMIII status Of naUonal
origin, or any lnteftlon to
make afro/ such Pfelerence,
limitation or discrimination."

1978 Ford,
$10;

,_

..

--

.,, ........

~~ -

SWAIN
.t.UCTION l FURNITURE. 62
Oliva 81., &lt;llllpotlo. Now • Uaed
tumKuro, ltaa1ora, WMiam l S.taiHo

OUR LANGUAGE

Apartment
. · for Rint

Campers &amp; ,

Motor Homes

Q. We've oft~n heard the words "the
last straw." Where !loes··that come
.from?
'

.'

••

11111 Flera aT, low mil-.·.
11S4717aftor 6:00PM.

ST

~lnatNmentl

Balftilo

Plln6M

..

Mudo 121 OT, turbo, 5

=.~

Muslcsl
I

=
-

Roland

k

Toahlba

rwcolvor

__ .._

blowrr, $100, ..._.2-1134.

BIWnlng 10 Oauga Pump Now rlollng , _ with.
$825; Crilllomon f8 HP &lt;llrdan
12
""'-;;.:::::
Tractor tt,OOO, 114-441-7367 A~ .,. lti-111'1,
• f
1M8P.M.

~·

1111

tor

WIOD,

. Pon•ow.
21121. .

132

lut-

-lac Bolo-. axe
- . •!!..11!0....... 080. :IOWTI-

' .1M7

27ZioraJHOTL

..

Improvement•

011, . - .

IIASEMENT .

WATE-OOPINQ

NC
4 Sntall field

. 5 Sk11er SonJa

Lahr•r
IMwehour
7 AdJective

ending
8 Scolda
I Pllywrlghl
Clifford 10 V.llow'ocher

17 Concerning

20!.t:'
24 Soon
25 No1wlt
27 North C."*'

n• college·

28VMIIIM "

21 Turn• ltgh1

30Midlc:el

·

1tt1~nt

32 Gr•t1ed. In
herllki!:J:
35 Anlntal I loo

351Jnlform
-t
35 T.mtlle
41 Art clec:o

• lllullrator

44!1.,. . .

46 OOUflltltUI.... podroll

u eapn.1o1

41 Nol•
52 Encounllr ·
53 Flnltltel ·
54 N. of Fla .

55 Abllrtcl
· being
: ,
57Mu*bult'i
purch50N...U¥e

prenx

62- In the
Mood lor

\

Love

'VLXB

LJ

ITWIBI

WLJII

N .X

JTIZ . LIIIJ

TVV

'
VNNFLRC

X N I

V L F 8

D a'

T

TII

W S B

FBG . '
TVTR
A8RJIIBWW . .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "lis a lyricist, Sammy Cahn set a standard that
, all ~!tor lyricists can only hope to aaplre to." - Carol Sayar Sager.

v

'::~::~' SCC\t~~-~t.~s•

....

tAM I
- - - - - - 141to4 by ClAY I . POllAN=--~~• Roorronga ' loiters ol tho
. lour ocrombled words below to form foUr simple words,

.,.,

.

'

. , .. T A N U T .E

. I I' 1 I I 1
2

II

N 0 B R A,
3

I 1I

I

I
I ':'

L y NN0

I I" I j

Lasl summer we visited our
son at camp. We asked him
about his activities. "There's
L.=~·~-==~-;::;~·~-~~..., plenty to do around here,· he
I"
Informed us, "but the counGT H8 I L
I selors won't let -- do ·-!"
~-,.,.::...;l&lt;s.:.:.,,F_
-..,...,...:_:.._r,-f
Complele the chuckle quoted •

1-T.""T"-'"'Tir-i

1

.

e

~Y filling in the missing words
'---L-.1-....1-.J.......JL.....J you develop from srep No. 3 bolo'!".

.

.

. .

.

.

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
11:11' THESE SQUARES
A

V

UNSOAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER ·

SCftAM.I.RS ANSWERS
'"'
Frolic - Yeast - Motor - Hunter - YOURSELF

.,

.'

A man and woman stOOd at her doorstep after their

fits! date. "I'll forgive you for beiog so rude." she con-

ceded. "After all you were just being YOURSELF!"

UneondldaMI lifetiMe

'
l

gurranl

.... Loeal , ......................
Coli l-.ai7-G1171 Qo 114-JPV

~ Wal-oollrtg. Eo;
trbllahelma.
. t

~~~~~§~~w~o~ri&lt;~~M~a~ll~$~2~1
·~~=~~~~~=====::j long.
sell-addressed, stamped envelope to
.

-4-....... . .,.,. . . ,.,.... ,
= 1-

ASTRO,QRAPR

BERNICE'
BEDEOSOL

-Hog ............
M' Ill Dlle tiOO:
Buolt
0110.,.,. ......
Tlytor 114 1a

your
i
espe·
cially lltose that
olalinancial or maleri·,
MatCttma~er, P 0 . Bo1 4465 , New York. al nalure . It's very likely you'll be richer
NY 10163.
• today than you,were 1esterday.
. TAURUS !April 20·May 20) Grab the SCORPIO lOci. 2~·Nov. 22) Instinctively,
baton and lead the way today of you '.re .you'll know .how to mix the right dose ol
mvolved in a partne'tship arrangement with

emol1on with the correct amount of logic

a~ther. Your foresoght and percep1ion are

tod~y . This bodes well for i nvol v~me nls

exceptionally sharp when they are focused
on a target

. Plumbing &amp;
. t~~etlna

'
·''~.·. .

•
,;.un :...hr::f
~~ ;
, c ••·. :
_

_
. . . . 1111.

l

,)
'\
l
'!

t'

,.
•• .1

you II have woth people from all walks of
. ltfe.

OE..NII-.y 21.June 20) Allhcugtt you'll . SAGITTARIUS INov. 23•Dac. 211 Follow
be exercising considerable effort. it might yo~r hunches and inclinations 1Qday and
not appear so to others today, because n strive to dO whatever comes most eas1iy
.will look to them as though everything . and naturally. Currents lor personal gaon
tU....
comes rather easy. This cotlld be a very .' are now trending In your lavor.
produC11¥e day:
CAPJIIIC()RN (Dec. 22-Jen. 111
CANCE" !June 21·JUIJ:21) Your bltst lnvolvemenll wlllt thcugltl·provriking i~di•
_a sMI !QdJy could be your ability 10 Improve v•duali could t[lggar a rah of InnovatiVe
,,
,
.upon 1111 ldaa1 and euggtatlona olfored 10 ideas today. If other• have a good idea,
.A Prtll. 1813
you by Olhare. especially II you are d~eet· . chances are you'll h•v• an .even bellfr
· inta~giblt lorces ihat have blln holding ,g a critiCilllldRvor.
one. .
.
you _beck shculd start to dlllipale In_lito i.EO l.ltdy D-AIII· ~I You might be the AOUARIUS (Jen. »M. 11) The palM. year ahead. Wi11t your neiiiiOulld IINI'iglhl recipient ofa
haro WOraltip, tOday tri&gt;m bili1ies for lui1HIIf1G. your amDi1- Objlc·
ar'id indepenclet1C8. your cttancH lor _IUI&gt; a -person you've been helplul1o recen11y. tives 001! aXCIIInl-,, p.ovldad you'tt
cesa will be considlrab/y ~!1~\~nCtd .
This :parton lan't likely .to forget your prepared 10 roll UP, your IIU&lt;t~~lflel 00 to
ARIES (Mirc/1 11·~ It) You're CIPI· ~,
.
work instead 01 w.tl1n(l lOr 11t1ng1 to Npbie of blending an art111iC IOuCit willt_pniC1I- VIR~ (Aug.
22) Favorable lines _pen. ·
.
caliiY today ~ laclorl Wll b1 evident In o1 QO!IVIIuniclllon cin bl e818bllelteo 1oday PISCES IFeb. 20 Mlralt Ill
II a. good
almOSt Mry1lling you do, In helpitg 1wilh people whO ate in posrtionato do you day to contad tltal _lpiiCiflc PMCIII who II
$0nteDne alse. Tr'jlng to ~ uP 1 tlrolcen a 101 of good Something s ubltanUal may , p•rt!nent to your tmrt~ed•at• plal)e. ~ou
rom•nce? Thf Allro-Qraph Matcltmlker come .ol rt,
•
should recel•e the typt Of. recilpllon lor
can ltaip you io undal'l111ncl..t14.t"'D do 10 · LIMA (llpl. u.oat. 23) SucceBI .is indi· . which you've bten holllno. ·
.
.
.
·
,I .
. ll lllta: NEWSPAPEREIII'ERPiusE~ .

.'

'•'tJt On.Droll
c..l.......
. . Aalll1lli
"tUIIIII AIW

2 NoHa, Mdl
or3 Neighbor of

12 or..llng
14 Ught- 1

6-

,.

•

Antiques

!1111,
Pot Pl.
11'.11.

e.g.

•

I

54 MIICellfneous
Mtn:hllncllll '

...,.,.,.

1 Welahman,

33 Behold!

Oldo illltllonMgon, all : : - - - : - : - - - - - -;
1t1a1t ..taaaa.- valuo 81
Home
'

~on 22-,c~ -una
Saara Vltamallar
-ltllto,
......._
tnvelld,
toofl, 4-pa " ~
Clla:rlel
............
Ulnr,
uc.
noir ~ A-1 altapa,
no
$88,1
. ·2334. .
.
- .• m,.,........,

53

31lrNnd

Se1v1ces

aIIA00;-11
CUIInlora,.,....,..
.... ......

12,11110, -

DOWN

WE

~~-nmr1rge.

61 Farm Equipment

dncrambtrr, 10 ft. black mHh,
SIOOO; .... lurnaca with

A. This overused phrase' is a short
form of the expression "the straw that
brok~ the camel 's ba~k." Charl~s
Dickens usecl the term tn . one of hts
novels:' an earlier version of the saying
is "the Ills! feather that broke the
horse's back." Each of these refers to
the addition of one item too """'1•1
'forming a crushing burden. For example, if I bear just one more cliche,
it will be "the last straw."

BEFORe I F&lt;:XJNO our
TH.6:T' FI.Ar ~ ~
6KIP~ W6.TER.

.

· for Sale .

44

By Jeffrey McQuain ·
An obsession or unhealthy attAch·
·ment is a FiXATION. Fix any mispronunciation ofthis noun: FIXATION
should be pronounced "fik-SAY-shun."

~~-~- .~... 11,000.

11. Li''~&lt;;Jr.

814-112·2034.

contract.

,..., I'DOI, loMid, 45,000
- · lib now, 1 , utondad

f "'Ill Supplll:o

2 badroom trellor lor rant, Itohind P - , 1144f2-2312 or

52 Sporting GOOds

~ IT ~- ~(.KED IN ! ~

79

Her.lnkl
22 Rd.
230.Ve
rnohl1ure
2ll Oburvtl
21 Singer C.mpbell

Tlbe1

sbould
thinkinghave
tbatled
tbe bearll ·
brealtlng 4-3, might not be
risk the f~ And If he pull up
spade ~· he pes down in

11111 Cadillac Coupo DaVIlla,

-

Pass

51Rooa..-le
61 C.ught light
of
63 Show dl..
approval
64 _.. Trllllaflt
65 Rlngellbbr•l

11 llao - tung
21 NaU.a of

anotb~ :~~::~~~

'BORN LOSER

1$10 ~ c:or.. Grar 78
Camping
•!
Wlh Red llt~p11, I
All
.
a FM eaaoare,
bta,
Equipment
)\
100,GGO ...... Aaltlna: $400. 11 ......._ llolofhemll,~.:. .,,I'
Goad Condlllui• 114-:zd.1412.
"""""'
"""· good
lerl,
, _ Olda llaiUo ... 4 Do::.~, _..... lnqulrtaj
Gilly, 1-lo,
PI, PW, 'lliii1~C 2355.
·
,

.,-..-....ae; .

114-446-31511.

•

1111 - . Ooocl Condition,
. . _ , T·Topo, $1,500. 114-441·
1:131.

1M7 Ford Tanpo, 4 Dr1 __AC,
- . 711,000 ......

-a.

-

Z
.
. _Oodao
, JullDavtona
Powar,Turbo
AiiiFii
C...U., I Speed, ..._, llnl,
Auno I LooU Clralll 13,300.

Thts newspaper wMI nol

Worll

~-··

....... $3100,-

1N4
_'
.,
·
-"
-Cornorv zoo~•
Pl. 350
Ena. T·T- '-dod, Trada Frv
~~-.
Fawn ·In Color ttoa, ,~ &amp;-1t, Or &amp;-10 ...... 304-675flUAA•IP.M.
11132.

Evonlnga, 114-441·1320.

.· ·

Odl Dr&lt;&gt;p tAo! Tabla $55; WOOd
~uth Bod $45, 114~6-1422.
'Pink Southorn S.ll Promo-a.
Troln lo Long Loyared Mh
Rullloo, Slza 1~14 Aaklng: $1110,
614-255-1482. • .

baseb on race, color, religion ,

~~ ... ,; ....... 't• ""' .... ..

=i

~

33x52, '30; 614-8112..2563.

to aa.-ertlse ·any prelerence,

.. ~

lor aa1a. -

recll.n ti, S50i two oil
palnlln!JI by Ronald G~mm,

Ihe Federal Fair Housing Act
ol 1968 which makes I IQegal

-

,.·

· Olda Oalla ... ~
~ bed, maka Olfor.

Nice

All real esaate actJertllinQ In
this flewsp.,.pEH Ia subjeC11o

With IIR/00 In CommunHy
Uvlnll 1n 11a1go Countr. Hl~h
SchoOl ~·· Volld Orlvor 1
UolnM, GOod Ortvl~ Record,
TNM Yaara Driving Exportonco,
And Adoquato A~omobllo ln.AI:, G•• Heat, Full
auronca Cc¥0- Aaquirocl. Carport,
BJ~-.menl, Recently ~ted
'f!lhy pay rent - · you con
Satarr: $5.00 IHr, To Sla. lt. II In· Throughout.
.own a 1913 14S71! lladman wtth
1-'"'1 ~oct Coclllo AI 1· 441-ll4l9. Prlca: $84,DOO,It4.· .
5 - - y. .._ aldrtlng,
-11·2302: Daedllno For Al&gt;dollvenld lnd aalvp lor StllrnO.
p!lconto: 4-12-13.' Equal Opo
Cal lor lnlarntatlon, 114-31632 Mobile Homes ·
pOrvtnlj Emptcryor. ·
tl21aoltlorl-

.

1111 Curlaa a-to, a door, vI. AIC, Pw, 111, low ....... good

Slzo f·IO, Worn Onc'!t_Claanod,
Prico: $40; 114 448 OSr;o.

Ka:a•·

~!

1m Clw¥iohlt Malibu Cllalc,
UCIIIInl eondlllon, 81,000 IC·
1UIImllrl, l2200,114 9115 • Ul. ·

lovely Prom Oown. Turq. Blue, ·

2 ladr-, Parllo!IY Fur•
nl~. Air, Cablo, Overlooklng
Tho unlo Rlvor In
C1aan, Oulal. Follar'a
1e
Homo
Park,
114-446-1102.
31 Homes for Sale '
3 ledrooma I 112 lalh, Total
111 Ac. 4 Bedroom HouH, Rural Elactllc, Nlco, Clun, Haa Air
Water, GrNI Hunting, $85,000, Condhlonlng. Adcllaon Araa, No
814·25&amp;-e842.
.
Petti, IM--317·11t:ll.
.
3 bedroom brtCk ronch, Gol- Fumlahed, 2 or 3bdrm., tor rtnt
llpolia Farry. Brand now ~nno1 In Country llot&gt;ile Pork. -hlrl
hlal pump, rww appilancao, at· dryor, llr, $2311 mon., 114-112tached gal'llge, llrge ~..1... nice 2117, 114-111-1227.
nalghboihooa. 304-175-5'"".
llpol, Big Ylrci~::·Up
llprlng Yoltay Aiaa, Dok Drl,a, &lt;Ionian
For HorHa. DoPcan,
"'o.
Irick 3 Btdroome 1 112 Bath•, 114-31J.a289.
.

'

~

=:.~8.':-=.= Nllw....,. l

-

441 Call Araa Ent.,.l..,.nt c.ntar'o .,.. Or 3:00pm.
111. 114o886- $5.52 WMiti Da c klhllver ..,._ Hld. .-bad couch, upiiOiatary
lng $21.11; Aacll...... 1121-,_'!ofa riNds radonl lair Wpe S20i
Ariel Chalr11 $286 Or -13 chllda choat 01 draware, $5; 814Rentals
Woak; Co1toa And End WHh Da2.em, 814-llt2·7758.
llclcn tlllll ~i 6' T - With I Llten11 file or dis~ cabinet,
Cholra &lt;:!~-~~-:,- 36"x25"x6i"1 ld)UI1ab51 lhtla
41 Houses for Rent
~t'~~,. ~; uln
- · rolatn and locka, $415·
counter, ' l'a28"x32" ani!
N; a.~ llhlor lo!dga PiaU
2 Bedrooma - . c:t..o, To Or • llllaa OUt 141 Ori Unooln 45' hlglt, aN larmlca, $525j
office Willi, 3 eectlona 4'x5', z
Holz•, Fa1111 8oltlng 1300/Mo. Pllui.
eeotlon• 4'x4', .3 wOrk turf1cea,
61W7W4Z!.
$500; oloctrlc algn1 ~"tt21" with
3 alz• of I.Uer., ;J;N0i 11...912·
1122.

opportunitY basis.

'"1

tA.II . .. P.M.

2871.

•
ad...,ertlaements lor real estate
wltiCh ISirl violation ()fthij. ·

eover~ae

'

mw Tlluatpll TR7, 15.000 mllea,

kno.wlngty a&lt;eept

turann

310 4 loll llaln

Aqua; . 41 Rock CD'o. 814-446LNVI M. . lge.

Nice clean ..utfed arm chrlri

are available on an equtlt"

Acceaorlea

7081

whlla antiquo klk:hln cupboard,
614-112·~12 aftor Spm.
·

advertised 11'1 this newsp~r

Auto P811S "

76

AND ERNEST ·

4 .............. tina, 11.1144IILT, 112 tr.M; $2110, 114-1112-

Merchandise

Real Estate

JAw. Our ra~rs. are Hereby
1rt1onn&lt;K1 lltat ail dwellngs

Transportation

Prom Gowns SlU: i, 1 Pink, 1 .

814

a.u~po~~a,

'

IIIII HI~...,.~. . . .

llalall

/R:::&lt;r.-

II.

"fi.:

Cockatlala and Padl For 11189 Toyota Pick-Up &lt;21
$100, -7l'UII13. .

Truck, Sliding Tr11Y, Modo In
Mlddlopc~1 Ohio, P~oa: 11100.
....,..ry Experlanca I!Oqu!M, For llatga
eo. St.,., Apply AI Acqulaltlon
~,_111 Sacond . Avonuo,
· aau.,.....;llon - · 1o-12.
lmoH Local l u a - ~
For Expotlancad Sacratary
Iaaie Office
K ·
Roqulrocl.
Sand
o: AC11 P.O. lox 462,

,

11117 :11 "'· ....... Wlnda • ....;
"-'"' ~ c:.bln 230 HI!
Fuaeo..ca._T lllrlnt
-:i!_Y*•UIIO
Ttlm a..
~
a.tt
AII/I'M
_
h4,DOO, 111111 For ......
-*a:, 1Mo441-4111 Allor , I
lt.ll. IM 411 3ttt A* Por-KiaJ.

w-.

approv.ct aaptlc syatem Mer·
cera
Bottom
Bub-Oivitlon.

SLEA"' !!

DID 'IOU KNOW TI-IAT? YOU
I'NE\IE[( DO AN'I'THIN6 EXClTlN6

Flahlng "llotar Outdo", alactrlc.
- - . -!lftalnl $1:U:
Ramlnalm!2" ehaln - · 2.0 e1;

Road, 114,000 Finn. 114-446.
Traitor llpace AI Eo• .....
. n For
0529.
R..t tiOOIIIo. Davt11111: 114- $75, Phcna: 614-367·78111.
o - and ..._
Shop Pat
45 wooded -acree, co~o~nty wal•r, 44i31111, EVW!Inga, ·~'7111l For S.li: Several P1lrw M... s 0-lng. All lsiaida, olyleo.
In Gallla County, 3o4-t75-5104.
Show, Slzr: 11-·0 (Ntw), $5 P•r lama Pol Food Oaalor. Julia
P•lr, 614~48-0803.
..,
49 , ForLeese
Colll14 44Hm.
t AdJoining Lola, 1 Through t,
In Plantz S"ubdiYIIIDn. All To Oo Far nnt or ..._, ...., Fow 14"' C:hromr reverHd
To One Buyer. Utltitl•• Avail· rwnovaiMI IDDil:IMI'dll IDeation whaalo with llrao, good condiobit. By OWnar, 6--3657.
dllactty
acraaa
lnlm tion, 11100, 614-912-2323 baforo
z:oopm.
COullIn
......,,
wv.
Buelnea or r•ldtntlal 2 1crM
location
with
porldna
G.E. S.II.Ciaanlng OYOn SISO; 2
wHh 254 tt Rl. 2 ~ontago bat•
WHn Alhlon &amp; Apple Grove,

I

30447'5-1111.

Molal Tool lox For Plck·Up

Sataa:

'{OU LEAD A 80RIN6 LIFE,

Flbaralua .... . boat, " :
Yamal1a (IJU MWI Trolling•
-or ptua axtraa. Will leapt.;

Furnished
Rooms

45

pt~ltU1'11, 50 .em crop, •m•R
IINOm. Baautllul land wlgood Roconalorrent

SmaN Engino Ropalr And Tun•
Up, '1"'!0 And Four Crclo, 614·

Help Wanted

11

lcNil, 81 HP J;l,neon Trall41r, f

~ghto,

.

PEANUTS

Fully Ellt'ippod, 13,1100, 114-441·,·

lmlll hOUM, 8 ICfH fenced

111-A - Galllpala.

.

vor11blo top, covar, SliGO, ,814tla2-®23.
' ..
:
1m 15' lar81ta Tri-Hull Ski

163 acrao wlmlnoral

tt

~wlul

Eaat
Pass
Pass
Pass
!'ass

· If you are defending and know that a
bad split is waiting just around the
corner, try to make the declarer com·
mil himself in another suit before be
finds out about the bad split. Today's
deal exhibits the idea.
The bidding wouldn't meet with uni-.
verllal approval. Some Nortbs would
rebid two cluj)~, not one no-trump.
Soutb overbid 'sliptly with tbree
clubs, but two clubs .would bave been
truly feeble. Now North railed to four
clubs, boping for a slam. South almost
pasaed four clubs, but a game-forcing
auction is a game-forcing auctiOJL
West led the spade two: queen, .....,K,·,
nine. Back came a crafty heart two:
ace, five, four.
. DeciBrer knew that the percentAge
play lor one club loser WIS to lake two
finestles. But as be probably oeeded
two heart ruffs in the dummy, Soath
played ' the ace and anotlter club to
West's kin&amp;.
Back came a naive diamond ~--. 1
Declarer rose with diQIImy's
ruffed a diamond in band. cubed
heart king and ruffed a heart in
dummy. £ast's spade discard was
shock. However, South bad
string to his bow. He ruffed a
iD lland and led a spade
Wbelt It won, be claimed 11 tricks:
apac!A two hearts, oae dl•mond
sb: clubs (four in band llld two ruffs
tbedmnmy).
When In with the club

.'

•

It
INT

56

58-m-

By PltllUp Alder

18' opon with 125hp.'
.lohneon outboerd, trtllllr, con-~

0825.

Nor~

15 IIH. olllcer
16 Poetry loot
18 Seta

•

Wilder

the pressure

'

33 Fanns for Sale

Slate

51 Uttcle
54 Ac1or -

Putting on

. ,
Yamaha 400, Good CondJtion,
•
$400. 814-441·1333.

l!laa Paula'o Day Care Cantor 1
B - Wool 01 HMC On Jackoon
Wonlad To Buy: Junll Auloo Pille 11-F I A.M. -5:30 P.M. II
With Or Wlthaoil llot- Call Ou!lllly And Exparilnca Ia ·Th•
11 COnoom For Your Chlld'o
~, Uvaly. .,. 1101.
Core. Coli Uo For A YlaM.-Infant
Wanlad to buy: old - · motor ITodd..,. 114 441 1227. Pm-and troller, f14-tl2.7231.
c-... ISc:hoot Ago 614.446-

1 Tv network
...... dl¥.
e Klnt oi ·Crete
11 c.cl gArtll
13- Nallonel

0pen~D~lead: • 2

1087 HOfHII Hurrlclne, very
ahlrpll $2.000. 304 882·2482. :

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for5ale

45 Songbird
48 Printer'•
m..eure .
50 Mormon

34Conllrtlrlt
37 - B.
Johnaon
38 - tu, Brule
40 S.Ck of neck
42 C.itt
43Gender

SOOTH

taint, eonwthlng lor everyone.

ACROSS

P.t

.,

• 114-IIIW395.

! :,:1-F==-"am~~y
-'::-"'a.;:.••:raoo--•-,••:-.-cs:-:a
;
-:-tunl::::;.a-,r,

Garage ..Ia: April 8111,

NEA Crossword P.uz:de

. BRIDGE

=-''

glrta, .boya, Infanta •

clolnoo,

ALLEYOOP

101 Slidh l IWn 81. lliwly
rwnad. ' d . , _ .pp!l ACJI,
- I n c - . Mpool,..
304-1J11.?131 or m.

lih, ..3jim.. Rogar Ka11
, rellldenoo, 1M'! Hope Ad., follow
1 ligna
In CI\Mter. llono,
• loddlo!a

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Ohio

1 '•droom ll*. ·aooclloella.n.

: April

, wome.-.,

17 1993

1993.

44

SNAFll'il.,by Bruce Beattie

Pomeroy,
~

Ohio

®

...uur

'Birthday
, , _,
-

'*

•sapt.

~

·,

f!tit

'

.

..

'l

..

•••

�Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

IP.,ta-rao~~~r,-llllllddleport,

.

•

Ohio

•••

'

•

•

•

'

Wednesday, Aprll7, 1993

Ohio LQttery

57th

Masters

Pick 3: ·
. 886
Pick 4:

underway

9586
_ Super Lotto:
2-22-24-33-34-39

Page6

Kicker: 9i3524

Easter Lilies

.

Low toalcht .. mid-50s.
Partly doudy. Friday, cloudy,
high In 70s.

•

•

a1
Vol. 43, No. 240
Copyrighted 1993

.

'

FOODilND

Boneless
Tavern
Ham

____ __

~ongress
'

lB,

LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND $10.00 ADDITIONAL IPUiiiCIIIIASiE_J

._

r.,---------------- ---,
EASTMAN'S VALUABLE COU PO 1\
Expires Sat., AprillO , 1933

~

v-os ...... .
IOIIUS SIZE

. Styling ·
Products
lllrr

·

IE •"-"1

.., ......

• •u n C.• m~ lf(OVklea
· 2

let

'

••111wq
,
.Mid
'

'

99 '

CAN

¥·05
·~25
1~"~.--.?Hair $229
....--•-::~
.... Spray . . .

I

WIS...,_, er COIIDmONER ~--

·RED.-RIPE

Str.awberries
.

LENDER'S

~; . Bagels

~Ianning

for the .future

Work begins on RG's student. center annex

Authorities are trying to piece·
together story of
nian ·

'

.

.

briefs-.
Cuomo.reje.cts nation's high~st court offer ---Local
Theft of dog probed

State to change system
of.issuing license plates

'

;

· Howard said.
· By Jir., FREEMAN
-Hocking County Commissioner .
.
Sentinel News Stall'
Rober!
Oaubenmire explained his
Alhens. and Hocking County
coumy
wanls 10 join wilh Athens
Commissioners carne one step clos·
Counly
to see thai the old Route
er 10 forming !heir own separale
691
Landfill
is closed properly due
wasle dislrict afler Meigs Counly
10
po1ential
damage
10 lhe I.e-Ax·
Commissioners Wednesday said
they do no1 oppose the two coun • waler syslelll which supplies soiitb·
ties leaving lhe existing six-county em Hocking County.
Daubenmire said the old landfill
disbict.
,
Meigs Counly C9mmissioners is aboul located a mile upstream
Janel Howard and Manning Roush from the I.e-Ax well field. He said
said they would supporl 1he 1wo Le-Ax waler syslem will be
- coumies in leaving 1he disuicl inslalling new lines from the forwhile Commissioner Bob Harten· mer Poslon Power Plan! site near
bach said he wanted to survey !lie lhe old landfill.
The six-coumy disbict has said
issue-Junher. ·
Commissioners of the two coun· il will not assume ownership of the
ties ar~ visiting the other four coun· landfill which was closed in 1985.
' lies 10 ask for support before House Closure Qf the landfill, located near
Bill 723 goes inlo effccl, allowing the Athens-Hocking county· line,
counties 10 withdraw from multi- wiU cosl aboul $1.5 million.
"I lhink (making our own dis·
county districts during a 90-day
BREAKING GROUND '- Wielding shovels
Welherboll or lhe Community College Board or ·
bict)
is our only way out," DaubeR·
period
starting
April
16.
to break ground Wednesday for lbe.$1.75 mil· Trustees; Rk:bard Haft of Morrison's Hospitali·
"As
of
April
16
...
we
are
going
mire
said.
lion annex to the James A. Rbtldes Student Ceoly Group; Stale Rep. Mark 'Malone; and Dr.
Irwin said he and Athens Comto make a formal !IJ'Oposal to ask
ler at tbe University or Rio Grande and Rio
Barry M. Dorsey, president or Rio Grande. Con(the commissioners) to release us missioner Bill Theisen originally
Grande Community College were several Rio struction is expected lo be complete by early
ou1 of the six-counly disbict along supported lhe six-counly -solid
Grande ofric~ls, including Robert H. Eastman
1994.
with Hocking Counly," Alhens wasle disbicl plan bul changed 10
or the university Board ol Trustees, Manning E.
.
Counly Commissioners Broc Irwin supportiqg the two-county flan
said.
after lhey became aware o the
"We just wanted 10 come down problems ·surrounding 1he Route
and lalk 10 you 10 see whal your 691 landfill.
feelings are," Brae added.
"We have 60,000 people we
"As far as I'm concerned, it's have 10 answer 10 in Athens Coun:
going 10 be fine with me," Roush ty; Irwin said.
said . "If 1ha1's your wish, you
The 1wo commissions have
'While one lnajor consiJ'uction will seal400, a significanl increase denl Dr. Barry ~- Dorsey ciU:d lhe won't have any problem oul of already met with the Gallia, Jack·
job at lhe University of Rio Grande over lhe 250-person capacity in the project as an example of the public me:·
son and Vinton Board of County ·
and lUo Grande Communily Col- currem facility in the basemen! of and private pannership lhat exists
"I have no problem with it,"
Continued ~n page 3
lege is being completed, anolher is 1he SIUdent Cenler, and will be belween lhe universily and lhe
gelling slarted. · ·
localed on the second floor along community. Funding for the project
Ground was broken Wednesday wilh the kitchen and some small is provided hi part by Morrison's
.
Hospilality Group, the firm wilh
for a $1.75 million annex 10 the meeting rooms.
The
frrst
floor
wiU
comain
one
which Rio Grande contracts for i!S
James A. Rhodes Sludent Cen1er.
~issing
The two-story, free-S1anding sttUC- large meeting room, a facully-slaff food service.
ture will be located on the green dining area, a ltiiChen siOrage facil·
Dr. Dorsey also delailed the
ATHENS, Ohio {AP) · between ·Boyd Hall and the new ity and the building's mechanical need for the annex since lhe universaid it appeared Tippie had-been
dormilory ope·ned in the fall of plant, Koby said. Expanded s1udent siiy has become a social and cullur· Authorities in Meig' and Gallia . bealen and his feel were in poor
enrollmenl and the addil\on of the. a! center for the area. On any given counties are trying 10 piece togelh- shape afler he allegedly tried to
1991.
The consii'Uction sile is located new dormiiOTy prompted consider· nighl, he said, il's nol unusual 10 er the fragmenled s1ory of an walk home from CharlesiOn, W.Va.
near the $2,8 miUion annex 10 Lyne ation of a hew ·dining hall, Koby find rooms in the Sludent Center Albany man who was missing for Meigs Count~ Sheriff James ,
Center, scheduled to be finished by said.
and other buildings being used by 12 days.
Soulsby said T1ppie has 1old a
April 17, according to Rio Grande
The annex will free up space ill studenl and comm.unily organi~­
The family of Mount Tippie, 63, chec~ere~ s10ry of ?lhers driving
Vice Presidenl Dr. Herman L. lhe Sludenl Center uSed for dining tions for meelings, seminars and reponed him missing on March 27 , h1m m h1s car, which remained
Koby. The' general conl.l'actor on and banquel purposes. ll's hoped banqueiS;
afrer he failed 10 reiUm to his home missing. He has said thsl a Aorida
the SIUdenl Center annex is Crace thai evemually, such sludent-relal·
Following Dr. Dorsey's address, on t.farch 25. He resurfaced at 4:30 minis1er befriended hirn, gave him
Coruitruction Co., Piketon, ani! il ed services as admissions and brief commenls were heard from a.m. Tuesday at a Gallipolis molel, money and pul him on a bus,
was designed by Cincinnali archi· records, now hOUSed in olher build· Roben H. Easunan of the universi· where he asked for help in contacl· Soulsby said.
'
leet E.A. Glendening.
ings, can be moved into lhe Swdent ly Board of Trustees; Manning E. ing his brother in Athens.
Tippie also said he was IUmed
Scheduled for comple1ion by Center 10 provide a central, handi· Wetherholt of the Communi1y ColTippie suffered from lack of a way by Charleston police as a
January er February of nexl year, capped accessible location. The lege Board of TruSiees; Richard insulin injections for his diabe1es drunken drifter, the sheriff said.
the 16,000-square fool annex will umversi1y's booksiOre, now in the Hafl of Morrison's; and S1a1e Rep. and was admilled 10 Holzer Medi·
Au1hori1ies said Tippie was
not only provide new dining basemen! of Holzer Hall, may also Mark A. Malone. The group was cal Center; where he was listed in found wilh bus tickets in his pockarrangements for studeniS, faculty be moved into the cenler, Koby joined a1 lhe· groundbreaking by slable condilion.
hospital ets from Clearwaler, Fla., Augus~a,
and s1aff, bul will expand meeting
·
.
spokeswoman
Candace
Pope
said. Ga ., Columbia, S.C.; and
said.
Alan
Crace,
owner
of
Crace
Con·
.
room space on campus.
AI a recep,lion prior 10 1hc · sl.l'uction, .and by uo.ivcrsily offi- Wednesday evening.
Charleston.
•
The new sludenl dining room groundbrcakil)g, Rio Grande Presi· cials and studenl represenlatives.
.Gallia County sheriff's deputies

' He served po\itical commenlator and Slate
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - He
Cuon!O ·has been been saying-for governor of New York.
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment arc investilwice counted himself oul of the months _lhal .he's preparing 10 run from 1959 untillale 1973, when he Umversily of New York political
gating lhe theft of a dog from the Meigs County Dog Pound'. ·
· race for presidenl. Now he's for a fourth fou~·year term nexl resigned to head a national com· science professo( who is close to
.'
According 10 Meigs Coumy Sheriff James M. Soulsby, William
removed himself from considera- year. He's been governor the past mission. He was Ialer appoinled Cuomo. ·
Dye,
Meigs Coumy Dog Warden, reponed lhallate Friday night or
tion for the nation's highesl court.
"Obviou'sly, he loves being
I0 years.
vice president.
early
Salurday morning tbe lock was cui on the door a1 the dog
Just what does Mario Cuomo want?. . Only· Rockefeller. a Republican,
"He ·sees the opponunily 10 set governor," said William Cunningpound
and a blue tick hoWld was 18ken.
.
Apparendy a fourth lerm as govbas been elecled 10 four 1erms as . a record." said Alan Charlock. a ham, a veteran New York Demo!hat
the
dog
had
been
picked
up
on
Cook Road
Dye
reponed
ernor of New Yorlc; to maiCh Nel·
. cralic political consliltant who has
after
il
had
been
there
a
couple
days.
Nothing
else
was
bothered at
son Rockefeller's record.· ·
worked on a number of Cuomo
the pound.
"This is a simple lhing. It's a
· campaigns. "Maybe he's just not
commilment 1·fe~l toward lhe
ready 10 go iniO the .cloistered life
slate," Cuomo said Wednesday
of lhe Supreme Couit"
.
afW ipfo{ll!ing ~.!It Clin)bo •
He's as much as said so himself,
Gene Clegg, Long Boltom, was cited 10 the Meigs County Court
by Ieber dial he didn't want to be
likenin$1he Supreme Court job in a
by
the Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment on a charge of no ~ra­
The stale had issued 7.6 million ~nt m1erview 10 bolh "heaven"
considered for the Suprep~e Court
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) IOTS
license foUowing- an incident on Swe Roule 7 Wednesday in
sell that wiD open .lip when Justice
The Ohio De~enl of Highway new plales for renewal registrations and being "entombed."
which
a coffee mug feU from the lOp of his vehicle, bounced off lhe
• Byron Willie retires !his summer.
Safely says !t will b!l&amp;in issuing ..e'le~y . five .years, said Milch ell
f!e also likes lhe limelighl thai
highway
ll!ld smashed against the windshield of Vicki .Wamer's
· ·, · -In lhe letler, ·Cuomo said he · fewer new hcense plales to save Brown, Bureau of Mo10r Vehicles comes wilh being governor, and the
vehicle, causing a slighl semtch in the glass.
reg!strar.
.
wanted to remain governor 10 help nloney.
·
ability to have· an immediate
Brown said the change will save impact: "The feeling when you get
New York's economic recovery
The department will issue new
and 10 give political suppqrt 10 pllites only 10 vehicle owners who Ohio lboill SIS million every five up in lhe rnornil)g dlat tbele are 111 .
Clinlon's "good work."
· .
are regisrcriDg for the first time or years in the making, s1orage and infmlle number of things you can
David Carnahan, Tuppers Plains, reported to lhe Meigs Coumy
·
Cuomo, 60, kept people guess· who have lost or damaged their disbibution of plale$.
do 10 make life beller for some· .
Sheriff"s Department Wednesday lhal Tuesday afternoon a tool box,
inJ through much of lhe early . jllales, dcpanmenl Director Charles . . Shipley said the deparlment one.'' · ·
saw •. two Sllllders, an amplifier and other 10ols'~ taken from the
decided not 10. cut. expenses by
stages of tbe 1988 and the 1992 ShiPley said Wcdneaday.
Cuomo has been considered a
back of his pickup ttUCk which was park,ed at his fCSidence. ·
presidential campaigns, POIIderina
· 1'he swe had been issuing new eliminating front license plates. contender for lhe Supreme ,Coun
' '
'
.
.
was
recommended
i"
.
Thai
idea
the PFPJ and COIIJ so Jlllbllcly tbii
plates 10 all vehicle owner• every
since Clinton sinaled him out last ·
he gained the nickname '"Hamlet · five ·years; Now most owners will 1991 by Gov. George Voinovich's ye.-u a "superbr;- po~e~~lial candi·
on the ·Hudson." He eventually ··keep the 18111e plates and receive Operalions Improvemenl Task date. He had 'ell'leQied IS the ~
·. ' Roger C&lt;WS, :Bailey Run Road. Po(IICIOy, ~Sunday niahV
Fonce.
:·
bcued off both races.
· ··
v~lidation slickers w-en the)'
that somelime during the day someone apparently iried II! enter Ttis
wing's sentimental chqic.e .since
"We wanled 10 keep .tho two White's announcemendn March,
· · -·fhere was .no dithering thit renew their reaistralions, Shipley
house 1ly blelldng oul a ·besCmenl window.
.
license
plales iyslem to aid law though the Clinton inner -circle
lime. Cuomo said he lOki CliniOA
said. The fee,will be lhe IIIIIC.
Blood wu found on the wall under the window, ICCOI'Ciilllto 1
he Wllll'l inlelelled Apil I, when
Tho dcpirlmcnt expciCIIIO issue enforcement,. and tbiJ coi1-cuttina n~ver tipfed its hand about . · sheriff"s depanrnent report. It was believod that no entry was lllllle
·iniO the hOuse:
·
·
··
rile praident c:aUed him io, disCuss 2.2· milliOn new plaleiiM..Uy for effort will sali~ the ru:ommenda· . Cuomo's
chances;
·
•
Shipley sai4. ,
lhe VICIIICY.
·
new regisbatiou and replacemenll. lioJi of lhe
'
'
•

.

$1''

• Atl4 ' Slwa...., clean••
~~~rr-..vn laav•

.

'
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi·
dent Clinton lllday sent Congress a
$1.52 'billion budge! for nex1 year
that spells out ~ow he wants to
atlack the deficit through sharp cuts
in defense and higher laXes on the
wealthy, corporations and li.nergy
users.
He said his plan would "resiOre
hope in the hearts of the American
people."
Clinton's frrst full-scale budge!
l.l'acked 1he broad outlines of the
plan he unveiled in February' Bul
iii just two months his estimates for
how much the deficit could be
reduced over five years declined by
$31 billion. .
The administration budget prt&gt;·
posal projects spending S1.52 bil·
. lion for the· fiscal year lhal begins
Oct. I, up 3.2 percent from currenl
spending, essentially keeping pace
with inflation.
However, CliniOn projects that
revenues will rise lhree times as
fas1, climbing by 9.2 percent 10
S1.25 billion. This reflects lhe sub·
stanlial lax increases Clinton is
proposing. .
The deficil, the shonr'all
belween revenues and spending,
would shrink 10 $264.1 billion,
down from a ~ftC'fllf~e-dl'd
deficil or $322 billiOn lhis year.
. Today's budget document spells
oul Ctinton's line-by-line proposals
for every govemmenl program plus
providing funhcr informalion on
his package of laX hikes.
The .oemocralic-conlrolled
Congress already has approved- the
broad oumnes of Clinlon's plan
and for lhe firsl lime in a dozen
years a presidenl' s budget will no1
· be declared "dead on arrival" on
..CapiiOI Hill.
·
Bul thai does not mean that
ther~ will nol be ballles over the
details of·CliniOn's program, 'whicli ·
he projects would shrink the dencil
by $447.5 biUion over five years, .
Even so; Clin1on proi'ecls 1ha1
lhe national debl will stil ,grow by
$1.19 trillion over lhe next five .
years. a pace only slighlly below
the levels se1 in the Reagan and
Bush years.
Still, Climon argued that ·his
proposal reverses lhe nalion • s
course toward ever-increasing debL
"Therefore, I ask your cominued supporl and help," he !Old
Congress. "Togelher we can get
1he American economy moving
again, bring federal finances back .
10 a sound fooling and res10re hope
in the hearts of the American people."

liMIT ONE
WITH
ADDinONAl
PURCHASE

I "

'

"

,

AMuHimedla Inc. ~paper

Commission
OKs split in
waste district

t

•

DOZEN

---------

President's
budget
goes to

SUPERIOR'S WHOLE ORIGINAL .

Large Eggs

2 Sectlone; 12 Pev-e 25 ...,,,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, AprilS, 1993

Man cited for no OL

·.

Theft of tools reported

.

10·12 OZ. PKG.

.

'

. Attempted B&amp;E investigated

EASTMAN'S

LB.
-·- - - ...
...

orr:

l
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32349">
              <text>April 7, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="211">
      <name>harris</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1376">
      <name>tillis</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
