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By The Bend

'Ihe Diiily_Se.ntfuel

\

Bulls
defeat
Cavs -

Tuesday, May 11, 1993

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Page-11)

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Landi'ords should not let ·someone into
apartment ~ithout tenant's permission ·
.

'•aden:

. LOTIERY WINNER • T••1 c..cnrr, a
!line year e•ployee of Sua Full. Pell&amp;OIIIIl
Racine, 101d a wlilitiJII "Spriq FIIDI" tkket to
her brotber·lll-law, Jell CUdilf of Toledo. CUDdllf
. was turkey bUDtilllin the area wlltll be pur·

.

'

ctwed two of the $:1 tlcketL Tile flnt tldet be
rub~ orr resulted In a $10,000 will. Mrs. Cuadlff stated her brotber-IQ·Iaw would receive
• $6,850 after taxes.
.

OVC announces honor roll for fifth six weeks

-,

· The following students have
made the A Honor Roll for lhe fifth
six weeks at Ohio VaDey Olriitian
SchoOl:
First grade: •Megan Adkins,
*Rachel Blackwood, Hannah
Burleson, Brittany. .Cox. *Jessica
Curnutte, *TCIIII HaJerly, Dianna
JBI:~is, Joshua Jarvis, •Matthew
Maloyed, ··•Colby Richards,
·• Angela Turkovich, .•Lindsey
Wheeler, Britt Wiseman, • Alyssa
Ziri)le, Nathan Bowman, John
Moran, Ashley Pyles, Clinron Shelton. Crystal Taylor, Nathan BeaYa,
Timmy Hall.
Second Grade: *Deanna Bryan,
•wmiam Burleson, *Jeremy
Evans, •Scottie Frans, *Chelsea
Gooch; ·*Stephen Henry, •Kelsey
Silisbury, *Christina Taylor,
•Rachael Walker, *Seth Matheny,
·•John Polcyn, *Maria Wasna.
Third srade: *Am it AJrawal,
•Stephen s-den, Hannah BeaYa,
•Dawn Chamberlain, Chad Dailey,
A.:di!ID Holconib, *Michael Jenks,
Ginny Miller, •Sam Sullivan.
•Rai:hel Tucker.
Fourth srade: Brad Bowman,
Eri.ca Massie. Nicholas MuiOOiand,
Mtssy Rossiter, Andrea Sims,
Arilanda Wilcox, Nalhan WiUiams.

Firth Grade: Meredith Clark,
*Travis Frasher. Courtney Gooch,
*Jonathan Taylor, Erin Walker,
Christen Zirille.
Sixth grade: Rebecca BirchfiCid,
GabrieUe Blackwood, *Dani Jenks,
Natalie Pyles, Stephen Roberts,
• Ji1~6am~sicsa. . · Walker, · Andrew
W
Seventh grade: •vandana
Agrawll, Jeffrey Burnette, Jessica
Cames. Suzanne Clark, Bo PoUard,
Tony SIIIley, Lisa Vollbom.
EiJhth srade: Joy Chaksupa,
Benjamin Taylor, Melissa Brown,
BiUy Miller.
.
Ninth grade: *Michelle Burcham, *Aaron Holley, Jill Mock,
• Amy Pollard, Anesa VanMatre,
Nan WiUiamson.
Tenth grade: Emily Asbeck,
Jenny Hlqjer, *Robin Rice, Melissa
Smith.
.
Eleventh grade: Jodie Hage~.
*Elizabeth Wooren.
·
Twelfth grade: *Sandra Adams.
The folfowing students have
"!*the B Honor RoU for the fifth
SIX wetks:
First grade: Beth Hill.
Second grade: Ryan Carter,
Joshua Evans, Kevin Queen,

CompDedby:
Emmogelle Hamilton
Becorder, Meigs County, Oblo

.

'Chester H. GorreU, 1.12A. S.36,
R-11 T-3 to Randall W. Hickmllll,
(Jilll~ne E. Hickman, OliYC. .
• Jack B. Freeman, Dolores R.
Freeman, Lot #375, to Steven H.
Dunfee, Teresa R. Dunfee, Midd
Vii.Dwight P. Medley et al, Sh~·
ifr s deed. to Secretary of Veteran s
Affairs. Chester.
.
. ·Eugene Triplett, Karen Tnplett,
Corrective Deed, to Charles E.
Orim. Marilyn W. Grim, Sutton.
' Katherine T. Weaver, I 1{2 A.,
S.- 16, T~7. R- 14, .to D!-&gt;~na M .
CbeAdle, Jim T. Fams, Scipio.

'·John !,.. Hagerty, Dorothea A .
Hagerty. 10.015 A.•. S.3, T-9N, R15 W, to. George E. Scarbeqy.
Angels L. Rowland, Columbia.
Kimmy Pierce, Baraber Pierce,
R/W, to GTE North Inc., Salem.
Lee T. Swain. Me'an L. Swain,
to parcel, Lyle J. Swam, Oranae.
Linda 1. Lambert, 7 A., to James
P. Lambert, Salisbury.
Kirk D. Chevalier, Karla Chevalier, aka Karla K., tracts, 10 Kirk D.
Chevalier, Chester.
Charles J. Knapp, Michelle R.
Knapp, Naomi G. Smith, 7{20 A., ·
10 S.35, R-13,10 Kathy Jeffers, Salisbury. . ·
Scou Nelson, Karleen Nelson,
parcel, to F.20; S.21, T-9, R-15, 10

.

Rick Karns, Trustee, Columbia,
· Olita F. Heighron, Hlirotd Emerson Heighton 111, Seren L. Livingston, Troy Livingston, Lot, to
Bart P. Tidrow, Rebekah L Tidow,
Midd, Viii.
Roy Dowell , Mary Dowell,
Ease., to Ohio Power Co., Rutland.
Kenneth H. Rizer, aka Kenneth
H. Rizer Sr., Deborah Ann Rizer,
22 A., to Deborah Ann Rizer,
Lebannon.
Kenneth H. Rizer, aka Keneth
H. Rizer, Sr., Deborah Ann .Rizer,
parcels, _10 Kenneth H. Rizer, Sr,,
Lebannon.
Louise R. Conde, parcels, to
Willis H. Durst, Sharon S. Durst,
Porn Vii.

5500

BuckeyeS:
11·28·33-24-36

child's immuniz&amp;:tion recOrd.
POMEROY - Precel'tor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta' Sigma Phi
Sorority, Thursday, 7:30p.m. ,
home of Charlotte Elberfeld. l!ISiaiJation of officers.
POMEROY - Pomeroy AA
Group, Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred
He8rt Catholic Church. Call 9925763 for Information. .
POMEROY - Public dinner,
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center, Thursday, S-6 p.m. Cost is S4
per person. The Classics will perform. Free_will offering. Public
Invi~.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at
the post home. Officers will be
installed.

RADNOR, PL (AP) - Kirstie
Alley says tapinJ the final eoisode
of the NBC sitcom "Ch~f' was
like a funeral . .
"It's like when someone dies,"
Alley, who plsys Rebecca, said in
this week's TV Guide. "You just
know that when ewrybody goes
their se~ ways, you're going to
lose it.'
.
·
Producers decided 10 end the
series after 11 years white the show
remains a hiL The 90-minu~ series
finale, episode No. 275, airs May
20.
.
Cast member GeorJe Wendt
also worried about life arter
''Cheers.''

e

BURBANK, Calif. (AP) Actor Dennis Quaid will portray
Doc Holliday in the Watner Bros.
movie "Wyatt Earp, " starring
Kevin Costner as the legendary
lawman.
"Wyau EArp," which beains
principal photography in July, will
be direc~ by Lawrence Kasdan.
Kasdan also will co-produce the
film with Costner and the actor'•
Tig Productions panner Jim Wil·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 12, 1993

~HARRISONVILLE • Har·
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE • S_pecial meet·
BRANSON, Mo. (AP) -Fire
· risonYiUe OES I11WS Tuesday 7:30 ·
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP - ing for aU Eastern seruors and their gutted the lobby ·of the Mickey
p.m. JIWOIIic haU. Ritualistic work Free community immunization parents Thursday 7:30p.m. hi_gh GlUey Tbealre on Monday, but lhe
clinic, Columbia To~nship ·Fire school cafeteria regarding semor ente~ has decided 10 rebuild. ·
wiD.be exemplified.
.
Depanment, Thursday, 9-lf Lm., class llip.
·
WEDNESDAY
ages two months through kinder. REEDSVll.U: · Eastern School Jlrten aJe. Brimr child's immuCHESTER - Shade River Lodje
Board, speci~ meetin~, W~es - nization record.
No. 453 F&amp;:AM. Thursday, 8 p.m.,
dlly, 4 p.m., hiJh schoo ·cafeteria. .
Chetter Masonic Hall. RefreshHARRJSONVD.l.B - Free com- menll served:
S~ve Trussell. Lons B011om,
· ·MIDDLEPORT - Middleport munlty immufti1.ation.c6nil:, Scipio
.
•
gra!luated in March from Ohio
Literary Club,'Wedneiday, 1:3.0 Townshitl
DejabiiCnt,-Thun-~ -'"' ROCKe- SPRJNOS' -· -Rock.. S~ Univenity,wilh a dcpee In
. p.m.. homt of Mrs. Eldred Panons. day, l -3 p,m. age two. months Springs Grange mee1a Thursday, 8 _applied ICience with ~In turf
Group review of Jane Byte by throu1b kindergarten age. Bring p.m. Racine Grange will visiL
. ··gi'llff and golf course manapment. ·

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12

Trussell graduates

716 North $econd
Middleport
992·6491 '

P'U'C
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60s.

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2 Sections. 12 Pao- 25 OMia
A Multimedia Inc. New apap ar

ln.case involving drugs, sex and money

Opening remarks macJe ill Lemasters trial
By JIM FREEMAN
accused of four charges of aggraSentinel New~ Stan'
valed murder iii the Feb. 8, 1991,
In what was portrayed by both shotgun slayings of Jeffrey L. Halsides as a case Involving drugs, sex ley, 36, and 12-year-old Jeffrey S.
and money, representatives in the Halley, both of Gallipo6s.
. aggravated murder case of WiUiam
Prosecuting Attorney John R.
D. Lemasters D painted two differ- Lentes described Lemasters as a
elit portlaits of the defendant, one cool and -aloof kiUer as he warned
that of a cool, calm killer and the jurors of what'lhey will face during
other a victim of a former co- 'the trial ahead.
. . .
defendan!'s ha~. during opening
'~ You will hear terrible facts.
statements in lhe Meigs County You will see terrible pictures,"
Court of Common Pleas Tuesday.
Lentes said as he described bow
Lemasters, 26, of Racine is Lemasters allegedly engineered the

CAR ASSEMBLED """' Lemast~rs' rormer
co-clefuclaul aad alate'• wltuess Fred Drameu
watches as the rear ball Gla 19111 Poallac Gr111d
Am, similar to bls car wlildl wulnvolved llllbe
19111 sltoolinp of Jeffrey L. HaUey, 36, and Jef-

murders of Jeffrey L. Hatley, 36,
and 12-year-old Jeffrey S. Halley,
both of Gallipo6s.
"Ladies and gentlemen, during
llie next few days the evidence l'resented 10 you from this courtroom
wiD show a iale of robbery,kidna}lping and cold-blooded murder,"
Lentes said.
"Lemasters considered himself a
hard, tough man and he clllistantly
.denigra~ and shamed Fred Dri:nnen (his former co-defendant)
because' of his supposed lack of

· frey S. Halley, U, bolla of Gallipolis, Is assembled 011 the ftoor or tbe Melp County Court or
Commoa Pleas. (Sentinel pboto by Jim Free·
man)

nerve and manlinesS," be added.
said. In exchange for her wtimoDrennen got involved to prove ny, she was granted immunity and
10 his wife, Michelle Drennen, and charged with nothing, he added.
Lemasters that he had enough
Co-clefeadlllt's teslimollJ
nerve and was manly enough to do
The ~ called Lemasters' forsomething criminal, he said.
mer co.defendant Fred Drennen,
Drugs, sex and love
currenlly a prisoner at the Ohio
Following Lentes' statement, Correctional Facility in Lebanon
Lemasters' attorney William N. and fonnerly of Ravenswood, as its
Eachus of Columbus said Fred fustwimesslnlbecase.
Drennen killed the Halleys as he.
Drennen, who on March 1
depicled Lemas~ as ail unwitting pleaded gui~ty 10 three counts of
victim of Drennen's hate, drug · aggrava~ murder in the cue and
habit and need for mouey.
receiv.ed lhree concummt sentences
"The case is not a simple a case of 20 years to life in exchanse for
as the proseculor h•s painted," ~timony against Lemasters, fuiEachus said. "II involves drugs, filled his part oflbe bargain. ·
sex, love and maybe even money."
Drennen testified that be and his
During his opening statement, wife, along with Lemasters, fabri.
Eachus related how Lemasters was ~ a plan one night at the Drenhaving an affair with Michelle nen residence 10 rob the elder HalDrennen while be was 6ving in the ley.
Drennens' home in Ravenswood,
Drennen's testimony was.
W.Va., and emphasized that the unusual in ihat the rear half of a
relationship between two wiD play 1991 Pontiac Grand Am, similar 10
an imporumt role in the case.
the car reportedly used in the
Michelle Drennen's affair Volith crime, was placCd in the courtroom
Lemasters startel:l shortly after the as a visual aid .b jurors.
Drennens' marriage and they all
The plan caUed for Lemasters 10
three lived under one roof; Eachus drop me off in an isolated area
said. Fred Drennen came to hate while be went and brought Halley
. Lemas_~rs .
bac.k 10 the scene, Drennen said.
"You (the jury) will hear how Upon Lemasters' return with HaJ.
Drennen spent $180 a week on ley, I was to rob the pair and take
drugs," Eachus said. When he the car which would be deserted
couldn't afford it, he decided 10 some distance away.
i'aise the money in other ways.
Drennen said Lemasters
Atlacl:in¥ the prennens' credi- dropped him off the afternoon of
bility as witnes~•· Eachus said Feb. 8, 1991, at a remo~ location
.Fred Drennet2nJ)~~~ky \O ..o{( .~Poni'P'J.a.l--i!a J nhnon
.three colllll$ U:~ munler ToivDSI!iP' w~K'li!, ai-essed in coverin the case II lliii he liimillell no ·ails and armed with an semi-autowrongdoing and repeatedly gave malic sl!otgun and shotgun Shells,
false StatementsiO law enfoo:ement he waited foe Lemasters' return • .
officers.
Approxima~ly two hours ls~r
Drennen killed the Halleys, my wife pulled up in a pickup truck
Eachus said, he then saw a chance and said Lemasters had called and
10 save his own hide and be lOOk it. said be would be late, Drennen let!·
In addition, Micbelle Drennen tified.
gave false statements to officials
Eventually Lemasters pulled up
and denied ·any knowledge of the and backed Into a small area used
incident, Eachus ~
for turning around, Drennen said.
She has been in and out of men- He opened the door and the dome
tal hGspitals and has been both 6ght came on revealing some blond
homicidal and suicidal, Eachus hair I assumed belonged to a girl or

a child iri the back of the car and a
man in front wearipg a baseball
cap, be added.
.
. Lemasters got out and asked me
if I could go tlirough with it, Drennen said.
"No, I don't want 10 do this,"
Drennen said.
l..eQJasters then indicated that
Halley had a gl!n and would ltill the
both of us if I didn't go through
with the plan, Drennen . said ,
Lemasters got back in the car and
he and Halley both got out and
went to the front of the cat, he said.
'- At that point in the testimony,
LenteS had Drennen hold the sJiot.
gun and positioned himself and
Assistsnt Prosecutor Charles
Knight at the front of the car on tbe
courtroom floor, simulating the
~~fed positions of Lemasters and
. y on the night of the shooting.
I appratcbed the twO and heard
Lemasters say "easy, easy," which
was a code word we had plamed in
case Halley was armed, Drennen · .
said indicating he fued a warning
shot at that time and then fired
another shot hilling Halley high in
the left chest. ·
Lemasters said "you should
have shot him in the head" and
attempted to take the gun from me.
Drennen said. Duriug the struggle,
Halley was shot once again, he
added.
At that point I froze and Lemasters took~-~ from me, relOaded.
lllld..sbolHaJJpy -in the head, ltilling
him, Drennen ~stifled. Lemasters
then said "the child has go to go,"
be -added. Lemasters then wentro
~car, opened the door and pulled
the child out, Drennen said
· I heard the child sa,r "Billy, is
my daddy all right? to which
Lemasters said, "Yes, Bobby.
Hurry, we J.wve to get out of here,"
Drennen Slid
~
·
Lemasters took two steps
toward the rear of the car with the
boy and s.hot him in the head,
Continued on page 7

..

Teachers, aides ask board
to reconsider decision

'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· Seutblel News Staff
A request 10 reconsider a decision 10 lay off library aides in the
district's elementary schools was
made by sevall teaChers and aides
to the Meigs Local Board of Edueation at Tuesday night's meeting
In the board offiCe.
The Board vo~ last month 10
abolish four aide jobs. Funding for
thOse positions has come from
DDPP (disadvantaged pupil funds)
through the Ohio Department of
Education . Those funds are no
longer available to pay library
aides. it was reported, and there i,s
no money in lbe disllict's general
fuDd tu ftnance the positions. The
disuict is already in the state loan

program.
Pomeroy teacher Cafol
Oblinger read a SIII.CIIIC!Il from that
scbool' s teaching staff; and Car·
olyn Nicholson, libdry aide there,
'presented a "Save Our School
Libraries" letter.
Ohlin11er detailed the importance of library aides in their assis·
tanee to teachers u well u chil·
. dren. She said that aides in the

expense. "Money ~ for aides is
just no lOnger available, • said
Rupe.
Ohlinget susses~ that perhaps
the time has come to ''put pressure
on the vo~rs" 10 pass a levy and
P!"lposed that a.committee be organized 10 wqrl( on thaL
,
In other personnel matters, the
resignation of Ed Bartels as head
teacher at Salisbury Elementary
was accepted. The retirement of
Mary King as a bus driver as of
June 15 was noted llid her resisnation ~with regreL
The board voted 10 enter into a
purchased services agreement with
Judy Ganqway 10 turor a handicapped student not to exceed five
hours per week at $11.72 per hour.
By mutual agreement, tbe board
adopted&amp; new lime schedule for
secretaries In seYerlll schools. For
• SPECIAL RECOGNITION - ROIIIIe Stery who will retire at
this school year lbe days worked is
tbe ead ot lbls ICbool year after 37 Jell'S- pmt special reecll!li- ·
being cut from 203 10 197. Next
tloo aad 1 Jetter or commendatloa from tile Melp Locll Bo..-d' ot
year, according to the board ac'tion,
Educatioa at its m~tiDJ Taesday llllllt. Here Board member
secretaries at Bradbury, Har·
Roger Abbott presents the letter IDd coqratulates Story.
risonville, Middleport, Rutland
Salem Center will work 192 days
while the secretaries at Pomeroy, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Sllisbury, and Meigs Junicr High

::!::~r~dethe~~w}~: ~~:Sa::!atn~~~=ys~ere

son.
Quaid's movie credits include
"Breaking Away," "The Right
SwtT," "Oreal Balls of Pire" and
"Pollcards From the Edp:."

'

Vol. 44, NO. 10

MultiiMCIIatno.

Non-smoken will be assisned to move more and more away from
rooms with other nonsmokers, smoking in common areas," he
which has been done as much as said.
·
possible in the past, said Bob
About 6,950 students liYC in 40
Hynes, direcror of residence and residence halls, according to
campus auxiliary services. Studenll Hynes. The J?Oiicy doetl not COYer
wiD be asked to cheek their smok- two Universuy-owntd apartment
ing prefer~nces on their housing complexes.
acceptaiiCC &amp;peement.
·
North said the new smoking
Students living in residence · policy was a compromise' that
halls preYiously decided on their would "allow smoking in places
own smoking policies building by where people live in a way that
building, Hynes said.
limits exposure to secondhand
"But as the momentum grew smoke."
·with research of smoking and its
Hynes said the University may
debilitsting effecis, we began to be one year away from a total
smoking ban in residence halls.
"I anticipate that by the fall of
1994, we'll be comple~ly smoke
free," J:Iynes $Aid. ''That year will
give us time ror transition and lbe
opportunity 10 malce adjustments in
The 'marquee above the the~r anticipation of being smoke-free."
collapsed inro the lobby, and h~
Ohio University's Board of
and water damaged the theaier's Trustees approved a policy April
936-seat auditorium.
·
17 10 ban smoklns in aD classroom,
1bc fll'C is belieYCd to haYC been lidministJ:ative and sen-icc build·
il!D!~ by an electriCal spark, offi- ings, and University-owned vehiCials said. The blaze burned for cles on the -Athens and reJional
about an hour before it was con- . campuses. That policy lake$ effect
trolled.
Jull I, althoagh offices will have
No one was injured.
until Sepl I 10 fully implement the
Gilley opened th'e theater in ~·nNra:u:U~: GoY. GeorJe v.
1990, the same year his Gilley's Voinovich issued an executive
nightclub In Pasadena, Texas, was order malcing smoklnJ iUegal -In an
ravaged by an arson fli'C and ~ · s~ate,owned buildings and vehicles.
razed.
' J
·d
University residence haDs and
Manager Rodney ones sai
prisons were exempt from the
Gilley was told about Monday's executi~e order, which was
fll'C an~ plans to rebUild the thea~ announced a week after the U.S.
in Branson, an Ozarks tourist town.
· df
f
h · EnYironmental Prol.ection Asency
G1' ll y game
arne rom t • released a IIIUd~ 11~. secondhand
1980
movie
"Urban
Cowboy,
"
· which featured seYCral of his songs
smoke kills ,000 mericans a

"It's tough to think lhpt this is
probably the best work any of us
wiD ever have done," Wendl: said.
"I could cry right now."
_Y_ear_._,_,_ _ _ _ _ __
Woody Harrelson felt differe~- and his Pasadena nightclub.
ly.
.
NEW YORK (AP) - No joke. publicity siunL Is this a man with
"I think the show .has run its Comedian
Jackie
Mason ·no place 10 go, nothing 10 do, lookcourse," he said. "They're runninB announced Monday he's runninJ lng for a
10 make a speech?" '
out of stories."
·
for the city's Office of Public Mason
But even Haii-elson was sobbing AdYOCIIe.
.
The 59-•,ear-old
when it came time for cast mem"A lot of people will start saybers to take their final bows, execu- ing to themselves, 'Is Ibis a
a
tive produc:a Dan O'Siiannon said.

Low loDigbt In 50.. RaiD.
TbUI'II!dl y, parUy cloudy, blgb Ia

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Ann

People in the news ...
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students rooms·at OU

Comlnunity Calendar
Charlotte Bronte.
TUESDAY
ANTIQUITY - Tent revival, 7
POMEROY - Pomeroy Merp.m., Faith Fellowship Crusade for
christ, Antiquity, Brother Hurest chants Association, Wednesday,
8:30 a.m., Bank One conference
Prater. Everyone welcome.
room.
·: j..ONG BOTIOM • Faith Full
POMEROY - Am~ur G&amp;rllen·
GOSJ!el Church, three day seminar
en
Oub, Wednesday, 7 p.in .. home
on Holy Spirit by Rev. Mary Diaof
Mrs. Harold Lolise,. Wolfe
mond; AddiSOII, Tuesday_tO Lm. to
Drive,
Pomeroy. Alice Thompson
nQPI) and 7-9 p.m., Wednesday 10
will
present
program o~ oriental
a.m. to 2 p.m. Public inYi~.
arrangements. .
POINT PLEASANT. W.VA.·
Sin}ing by the Lake, Krodel Part,
POMEROY - Uni~ Fund for
Point Pleasant, '!'·Va., 7 p.m. Meigs County, Wednesday, 3 p.m.,
nightly, through Sunday. Ed Craw· Meigs County Chamber of Comford, Conrad Cool! and Calvary mace Office, Pomeroy.
~hoes. Paul Chapm1111 will emcee.
q n 304-675-1383 for lnformaaion.
SYRACUSE - Revival a Syra·
cuse Mission Church begins
· POMEROY - Tuberculin skin Wednesday-. Saul .McGuire, CYanttaling clinic at Ohio VaDey Chris· ge\isL Services 7 p.m. nightly, 6
ti311 Assembly Tuesday from 5-7 P·~ · Sunday. Rev. Mike Thompson
mVJletl everyone.
p.m. Free service.

749

Smoking to be limited to

fJ_eigs .County property transfers
.,

Pick 3:

Page4

SPANISH IN DAYTON
De. Au
I live lloae , .- - - - In my own ~ In the 111M
DEAR DAYTON: Thanks for
1
rown u my pan:nll. I have no
unloadinJ in my space.· You've
8111wain3 •hinc. ao when I want
written a fairly Incendiary letter. rm
10 tate a bllb cr do aomelhlng lhaa
JOinf 10 Ilk the readers to tell me
~ privacy, I like the phone
how II grabbed than, and I will print
off lbe boot.
tbe beat letten.
.
. One clay wbilc liking • balb (I
Dear ADD Laaclen: You often
llways keep my door locked), I
IIMie. women to ast dlanael-.
belnl 1011- waltiq 1111111111 ill
• Ale you bea.cr off wilb or witbout
my 6vinJ 100111 a~m,. my 11&amp;1110. It ccmpllllioa employ people 10 do him7"' Well, men sbould ut
wu my C... He bid 11!J11e to lbe bUiinea? If !hoy don't do ~ lhemseiYCSthe ume qw rtioo.
buildina IIIIII8F llld goaen him 10 tbae woa't be a company.
My wife and I agued too mudL
unloclt the door.
My gnMhlber wiD tell ~ that She bad 110111C faulll dill ceve me
Aside from Ibis flagrant invuion wben he worked, there were no null. One night, l c:ontelnpla~
of my pri'VIIC)' and ICiring me hllf -.a man•aement progr11111 for leaYinJ. I got out a paw:ij and liDd
10 dcalh, I woncleiM why alJuildins employees. Nowadays, compani~ aU the lhinp about her tbat I didll't
lllllll8llf woWd abule a ieaant's right offer a full nnae cif benefits llld lillc. Thai in another column,llililed
IO'pri'VIIC)'tbis way. And whatiflbe "wenneu• prosraml, employee aD her sood points. To my surprile
man who pined entrance 10 my assistance, child care, family and emluaamall, tbe liit rl sood
home had lied about beins my leave,eu:. Inlbe-.ime,l\-e~ poin11was four times •loa&amp; u tbe
fllb«llld wu actually 110111e nut cr ao much soofing off, It mates me bill points. I mali""' thea thlt rd be
I rapiat'1
sick.
• fool to let her JCllwaJAnn, Ibis is not lbe life world
Ale aanpiD)IIIJIDveeeas wiDing 10 Jill fonh
1 now blOW how kdj I am 10
people UBed to Cl'ljoy seVeral yean !heir belt effcrt 10 poduce. ullitY ~ have her. Thank you. -- D.C.,
ago. Pleaae, pleue adviae all product'1 Or n IIIey siliing ~ . ATWOOD, IlL.
building JIIIIIIIOII, landlcrdl . and wilh one eye onlbe .lob llid the lllhcr
DEAR D.C~ You're welcome. I
superin~ndenta against lettins eye 6n lbe cloclc? I work for a
suggestlhaa others wbo lie cridl:al
someone iniO a tenant's apartment · Fortune 100 CQmpany 'In• buman of their matca ta1te a page out of
without prior pcrmissiori fmn lbe resources. My company pays yourbook.
..
~L .. E.W., USBON, OHIO
c.xtremcly well and provides
Is life passi11g ~ by? Wllllt 10 .
DEAR ·E.W.: . You told tbent -- excellent benefill, includins the impro.ve your sotiollldl/S? Write /Of'
11111! very nicely. After that inclckru, abovc-mendoned programs. Tile
AM I a•ders' MW bookll!t1 "HfiW to
did you have a talk with your ·other day in lhe lunch room. I heard Malee. Frie11ds 011d Stop Bei11g
. buildlnJIIIIIIIIP'llf not, you abou1d an employee say, ·nc 1eaat Ibis LoMiy.• Stllll a self-odtbuscd,lo"'.
haw.
' COIIIJ*IY could do II povlde decent biiSITies.s-size tiiW!lopc ONl a clttck
Dear ADa lucien: You let me silvorwn.•
OT IIIDMY order /01' $4J5 (llris ilt•
down. You seemed 10 support "Any • .~Ilk diOie clowns wblit IIIey clllks postDge a1Ul ltalldli11g) to:
State, . USA," who thinks her wtU do whCI'IIbeir eot11p1111y '-Is Frielllls, c/o AM l..aluleT•. P.O. B011
husblod'a compeny OWIWOib ill fer the bolder bectn!IC it can't affll'll 11562, Clricago, /U. 6061 UJ562. (111
employeea. When wiD we 1e1m lhst 10 keep them happy. .., LEARNING · CO/IIIdo, selld $5.05.)

Amanda Taylor.
Third grade: Lauren Browninf
Elizabeth Rice, Jonathan Bee '
Jeremy Frazie.
'
Fourth srade: DQn Ashworth
Tom Curnutte. Jason Holdren'
Adar_n Newbeny.
,
'
Fifth grade: Ap~H Agustin,
Amanda Brown, M.Ike Francis,
~ PoUard, Jessica TurlroYich.
Sixth grade: Lisa Bowman
Daniel Sizemcire.
'
Seventh grade: Chris Bryan
Stephanie Jenltins, Deanna Martin'
S~ven Rice.
'
ATHENS - Smoking wiD only
EiJhth grade: Rachel Hamriclc,
be
permitted In IIIUdent rooms with
Jared Leach, Nathan Smith, Leisa
the doors closed as part of a new
Walters.
Ninth grade: Rachel Cochran, smoking po6cy for Ohio University
Jami Gianechini, Nathan Lusher, residence haUs, campus officills
Shawn Rice, Joshua Sel!er!. Joh11 have announced.
. Smoking will not be aUowed In ·
Theiss.
. .·
any
other areas of Athenscampus
Tenth grade: Ashlee Saunders
·
rOsidence
halls, including hallways,
Sarah Marr, Karen Sanden, sarati
bathrooms
or lounges. The policy
Newbeny.
'
goes
into
effect
when students
Eleventh srac~e· Jason Beaver
rerum
fall
q~.
. Melanie Blizzard: Byron Burke:
The new policy was deVeloped
Andy Brumfield, Amy Carnes,
by
Residence and Campus AuxilAnna Hamrick Sarah Mill
iary
Services and~ by ViCe
Twelfth g~ade: Jerr~·Back,
President
for Admmistradon Gary
Christy Mock Meredith PoUard. .
North.
' ·lndic•w' straight A's.•
·

Ohio Lottery

planning period, in addition to gran~ to Kathaine Deskins. The
exposing !be children to boob. She · board also J!lll~ u .a clock day,
a1ao spoke of tbe positiw infiiJC!ICC June 1,100tbA~y· Wtlod.
of haYC another adult In lbe school
w• . . . . .
to interact wiih the children.
, The boald agreed to pay WhaNicholson talked about the l,ey's Auto $700 to haul in two new
trained staff members who are cars from Pontiac, Mich. which
included in lbe Jay-off and said that havo been dondd to the school to
·by not haYinJiibrary aldol in lbe be~ 'II sed in the auto mechanics
achoola, the quality of education class. The can are for classroom
will be decreated. She aaid that instruction only, and .cannot be
many ol the students do not haw licensed, tided. or driiiC!I.
boob in their hom.es which makes
The list of aenion to p-adua~
tbe achool library even more 011 May 23 at 4:30p.m. in l..,arJy R.
•
liDL
Moniaon Oymnaalum was
the requesiiiO JeCOIIIIder lbe approved. It WM ~poln~ 0111 that
lay-offs of the aides, Bolrd Prell- . paWl n be1na ilotlflod or delldellt Larry llupe ubd Oblinger ciencica wbiCb cCu1d Jli'OYCIIIIOIIIC
and Nk:bolaon If,.._ bid.•Y .,,,_ IIUdatta tJom m:el.....,. c11p1omu. .

"To

~~~oo~~~~~
-~

..
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.

.

PRil'SENTED COMMENDATION LETTER- Lois WyBIIt, a
Meigs Local bus driver, was recogaized at Tue&amp;dey nipt's meetme or lbe Meigs LocaiiiGerd Gl Education. She was cited ror ber
c:oacem ror. cbildreu, ller apprec:latloa ror and care of tbe eqnlpment, 111d lbe plllillve Image IIIe projects toW!lrds Meigs Local.
Bob Bartoa, board member, presented tile letter of c0111meudatlon
to Wyent.

L ocal brtef:s·-----------------.
•
.
,~

w::rce~r!l~or:~an~~~::%:C~

Woman injured, citedforD.UJ.

A Coolville woman IUitained miDor injuries In • one-YCbicle
~ccident Tuesdaabi!~ and 1¥111 cired for driving under the
~uencc, the G
Meigs P~ orr- SWo lfilbway Plltol ~.
Mep L. Cantley • 28• 5925 Prost Raid. wuiiiiiS)XIrted by Meigs

County EmCI'JIIICY Medicll Senice 10 VCIICIIIII Memorial Hospital
wh~':y"~..~~'r::!s~ca::,., Route 143 wben she 1111 off the
right side
_ of the
whllc~a- ,_,. ~·- The ... LI'cle
- · - ·~
•.,.,
then came back onto the
• slid o tbe lel't lide, struck an
embanlcment and overtumed 01110 ill side.
·
·
Cantley was alao ci~ for uaale apeed and' DC) liCit beiL·TbC
vehicle ~ liJht dlmlp 11111 WPB ~ fmm lhe ICCI'IC.
r_o a d

Ace:' ".lent·
.. p"·•obed
1
~ ' '

Two Tuesday acdde ll have been reported by tbe Meial County
Sheriff's De)iatmerL
.
. The fust accident octurred early ~Y momlna on Brier .
Ridte Road. AecordiDJ 10 the report Xevhi Oiler ' ORWSYille

..

flames, according to lbe report. The truck was heavily, damaged.
. The second"ccldeM occurred at ·the parlring 1o( • Meigs High
· School somelkiiiC on Tuesday. Acconling to the report, a_ 1991 Polltiac Sunbird. owned by Jenrcy ~. was !llfbd in the front lot
. when it waa llriJCk bY a vdlicle owned by liriaa CJelend, Middleport. The~ lllllllltbere wu 110 driYer in lhe Cleland vdlicle. lt
apparently Jlllllpecl OUl of &amp;e*' and clri6ed Into the side of Baker's
Yehicle. No damage wu n.c1 10 Cleland's 1981 CheYCtte.
·
~-ma·~ed

·

Y.F.ehicle
rI •
uu

a

~ichard Fetty, Rulillld, rctpCirted Saturday night ui the Meip
County Sbaift's Depanmenl dill his vehicle wu damapl whUe
parted at Melp HiJb School during lhe prom. A sbarp Instrument
w
tbe j)eint on lhe hood,.trunt~~-~!des of hit
19as
88

';!::iie•

Gas stolen

· The Gu Phis S1ation in ~ Plajna reponed iUeaday 10 !he
Meip County Slierifrs Deputment 1!111 aroqnd 6:40p.m. t~ lillb- ·

~~~3 . ~· L~-~~~~~~~M~~~~~~~and~~~~ln~to~a~~;-:L~~~-~~=·~-~:~~~L·-~--------~-·~C:•=b:•:·:•:•~P=P~~~--------·--~
i

•

c

~
r

••

•
i

"

�,

Commentary

•

Wedneeday, May 12,1893

Pomeroy . llddl..,orl. Ohio

OHIO WeJthr:r

.....--~Local. briefs
... ----......
..

Page---2-The Dally Sentll181
Pomeroy...o.Middleport, Ohio
Wednel)i8y, May 12, 1993

Thunday, May 13

Welfare's downw~rd spir~l in mountain town ·

. FLEMlNG~NEON, ICy. - Ten
years ago, wllen Mot1lor Theresa
went scouting for the ..pooicst or
the poor" outside .India, sbe found
this mounlainous alUIIty - Lctcber County - in eastern Kenlncky.
The locals may have been povzled
that the Catholic Missionaries of
Charity wwld t:brJrw a fundamcntalist Baptist region 10 lJCl up shop,
but none of any denomination
doubted the need.
Before ~e tali:e_s ap welfare
refonn, ~t Clinlllll would be
well-advised 10 take aaqwate look
at Letcber County, as well as the
rest of i\ppalachia.

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DI!:VO'BD TO 'lliE INTERESTS OF 11IE IQ:IGS-JIIASOI'f AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less tban 300
words. All letters are subject 10 editin&amp; and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, sddressing issues, not personalities.

.

lnLetcherCounty,paydayis~

.rustofthemontb, wbenpeoplc!iJ!C
up at the post &lt;;~ffi~ .to get theu.
welfare and .&lt;hsabillly cbecks.
So~1al Secun~y chec~ usually
amve by the thitd, CIUSill&amp; anochei'
bonl~neck at the post oflic:e. Then
the hne moves to the local \!alMart store, when:, says Ftemmg- ·
~eon native Willard Hall, "For
ftve days out. of the month you
have a .boommg economy, ~n.~
Wai-Mart gets 90 ~t of IL
ByWALTERR.MEARS .
'
~ the~ settle m and Slrelch
AP Special Corr~mt
penmes for the rest of lbe
thetr
WASHINGTON - With 80,000 vilJains, the hero can't miss. That's
monlh.
the script President Clinton is using, with WashingtOn lobbyists cast as
the heavies, in his quest for political reform.
"There are 80,000 lobbyists in WaslliniJon malcing sure that I can't
Jake care of your interests," Clinton IO!d a crowd at a Cleveland shopping
mall Monday, 'an&lt;! said he's working to curb their influence.
.
Guesses at the number of lobbyists- people paid to influence legislation and government policy - vary widely, ruillling as high as the estimate Clinton used down to about 12,000. Only about 7,400 are registered
under the loosely drawn law requiring expenditure reports to Congress.
The Yellow Pages list only 70.
.
But lobbyists seldom call lhemselves lhaL They are lawyers, consultants, association directors, legislative Iepiesentatives. LobbyiSIS got a bad
name in the 19th century, and the ealling hasn't shaken it yeL Business
and interest group lobbyists always have been a prime target for reformen
who, in tum, lobby for reform.
And that was before Ross Perot made high-priced lobbyists in thousand-dollar suits and alligator shoes the emblem or his complaints against
insider Washington. That's still part or Perot's standard speech. The cam·
paign that won hinl 19 percent or the presidential vole is still on, for his
message an&lt;l his Of!lanization. The inlpact is evident
The Senate has JUSt voted to require detailed accounts of who is lobbying, what for and what they're paid. There were only two votes against the
bill, It would require disclosure or any l~st gift to a lawmaker or staff
member that is worth $20 or more, and that 111Ciudes doing lunch.
Clinton's tax bill would eliminate corporate deductions for the cost of
lobbying, and the money saved would be used 10 subsidize congreasional
campaigns under his reform bill. That measure also would ban campaign
contributions or fund-raising effons by lobbyists for members or
Congress within a year of any effort to influence them.
"If adopted, believe me, !his proposal will change the culture of Washington," Clinton said in his Salitlday radio lalk. It also would invite end
runs - donations from the same interests, but from people who aren't
engaged in lobbying.
And not yet, in any. event. Once approved by Congress, it wouldn't
Jake effect until after the 1994 elections. 1n the interim, fuad·raising congressmen - and Clinton political lieutenants - are looldng for contributoiS where they have been found before, on lists that include those same
lobbyists and interest groups.
·
They say, accurately if defensively, that the(re following the rules and
May is a wonderful month for
will until the rules are changed.
.
making up, ancfBill and the bass
Thc!'Ciinton Democrats are trying to line up contributors, lobbyists really ought to tala: advan11ge of i1.
among them, for a $1,500-a-plate fund-raising dinner on June 28; one
Actually, the brass have been
inducement is a weekly policy brieliilg for major donors. Republicans did pretty m~~:h the passive party in the
the same during their 12 White House years.
dispute, so the burden is mostly Oil
"I think it is inlportant that we do our best to reconnect people to the Bill. The sezvice aeadcmiea will be
· political process ... who could never afford to come 10 a dinner like this, holdirig graduation exen:ises 10011,
but desperately care about their country," QiniOfl said at a $1,500 Demo- and the president could 8lleild 011C
cratic congressional dinner on May 4.
.
and address the difference~ that
" ... I believe we ought to pass a campaign finance reform bill, not h•ve strained the relationship
because I don't want you to gtve but because I want them to be able to between the White House and the
' ' IOO."
l
gtve,
.
Pentagon. Memorial Day is coming
Proposing the bill on Friday, Clinton said he was bearing down on up, too, and Oimoo could visit the
"the lobbyists .wh~ sr_mbolize the reason !hat nolhing ever seems to get) Vietnam Veterans Memorial or
done here m thtS ctty.
.
.
aaend services for lite nation's war
He called it "a veritable influence industty."
dead at Arlingtoo National Ceme" Now the lobbyists are lining the corridors of Washington as never tery.
before," he said in Cleveland. Ointon said he needs clear public support
A group of.hardbeads led by a
to hold his program together against their competing interests.
retired North Carolina lawyer have
But modem lobbying works both ways. Clinton also has acknowledged organized a j&gt;!~Stcard protest to
that lobbyists have information that should be heard, and lhat "we in gov· warn t1Je ptes1dent against pllticiemment often benefit from their views.''
pating in any sort of services this
The administration has its own cadre of lobbyists. They make the case month. "Please in view of your
directly in Congress, and they also use the techniques or their private activities during the war in Vietcounterparts, enlisting corporate or professional interests when they'll nam, let's not
you engage in
make common cause for administration ainls.
any hypocrisy by auending cerePresident Truman once was asked how he felt about lobbyists who monies either at the Vietnam Wall
favored his programs.
. . .. ..
_or the Tomb of the Unknown SolThey wouldn't be lobbyists, Truman said, they'd be citizens appearing dier," reads the ,message on ihe
in the public interest.
card. ''Whlle your 'esteemed' COil·
science led you to organize events
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, has reported oa Washington and
national politics for more than 30 years.

Lobbyists ·are
Clinton's new villains

This county' would collapse
without wolfare iDd federal assistance. Like those in urban ghettos
the government has hooked th~

By ·J'ac
.kAnde·r.'SOn
l
and
·

Michael Binstein
people in the most impoverished
alUIIties in Appalachia oo weifale.

So much so, says one minister here,
that "there's a state called the
'mountain disability' where you IiierallselfSICY:• ~chologically make yourk."
•'The government will set up
crileriJ! for people to get benefits;"
the minister said. "Now they will
narrow down the criteria, because
they don't want to give out too
m~~:h money. And the poor will fit
themselves into that criteria.
Fathers who love their families will
move out so the 'single' molher
with chi1dn:n can get benefits."
Anothe{ 'minister, the Rev.
Robert Hatch, and his wife, Jill, nm
th~ FellOwship Presbyterian

MICH.

•
ITotedol60" I

Church in Cromona. and· they see o.ur associate Dale Van At~ ~
the social fallout from the cluonic any federal effort that d1dn t
unemployment and poverty. The encourage people to help themmen are not used to working says selves was destined f(lr failure:
Jill Hatch because "their wed. has "Doing something in was:c
never be~n regular and there's !0 help the_people!lown in the ·
never been enough of iL Women IS »&gt;tt or like. m
making love through
could always do boosework. They an inner-spring mattress. ~.Pial!·
could wash dishes, be waiJresseS."
ning is baffling. The execuuon IS
Today women in Appalachia painful. The results are frustrating,
are going' back to school; another and botb parties are left in
threatening development for their despair."
.
husbands. At nearby Hazard ComSome old-limelll in ~ area .are
munity College, the enrollment is shocked . at !h~ mcreasm11
7S percent women. A few men, AppalachUIII addicbOO..IO the govoften in lbeir 30s are also swallow· ernment dole. Seventy-year-old
ing their pn'de wid fear by heading Alice Schaller .of Linden, W.Va.,
back to school. "Work here was was the youngest daughter. of
always with your hands," Rev.. Anderson Boggs, a Chrisu.an
Halch ~ys. "If you said the word . !'dvent ~preacher who died
'work,' you never meant anything ' II) 1961. .
bet father lleciiiiiC
but physical work. So; there~;re, . s1ck early m. h c~r, ~ d her .
people really have to think w en • mo~r had diabetes, Alice
her
you say, 'Work hard studying."
13 siblings waul~ work on
farm
Yearsofmisguidedfederalanti- anddo1Nhatever11tookto
f&lt;;lod
poverty programs and ill-dispensed on the. table. When local offic11ls
welfare programs may have done would. 'Sho.w up at t ,=
h mily
more to hurt the region than help it. doorstep IP offer public · :
•
Productive vigor, collective will fur Preacher Bqggs would
tt down
new teadedhip and change are every time. .
•Jio!i"l
lulled into lahguor -or its finest
Today, Mr~. 1 Schlilt~ speaks
people migrate out of the region.
proudly of the l~s le&amp;!'Ded f1:om
· One retired federal offiCial told , her father. "We never got a dooe
from public assistance. Poppy said
it would ruin the country. And you
know what? I think it has."
Gone are the days wben the following story about an old mountain
woman said it all about the independence and hard-scrabble timber
of the people eking out a living in
Appelacltia: Seems ,PCOJIIe in western North Carolina had been
snowed in for several weeks up in
the mountains, the story goes,
when the Red Cross arn ved to
help. They beard of Ibis old lady
way back in the mountains, living
alone; so they set out in a fourwheel drive vehicle to see about
her. They fuiauy slit;JIIed and stidded over the mounwn and got into
the high cove ~ she lived, got
out and knocked on her door.
When sbe appeared at !he door.
one of the workers said, "Hello,.
we're from the Red Cross." Before
they could say anything else, she
replied, "Well, I don't believe I'm
going to be able to help you any.
It's been a right hard winter."
Jaek Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers ror United
Feature Syndicate, IDe.
.. '

see

that provided aid and comfort to
the enemy, American soldiers were
maimed and killed obeying the
legal processes of representative

Joseph Spear
govemmcnL w
. ·
You'd think an auorney, even a
retired one, would know the law
better than that, especially lite Con"stitution and that part where it says
"the l'resident shall be Commander
in cruee or lite Army and Navy or
the Uniu:d SUiteS." but then again.
degrees and·diplomas are no guar·
antee of good sense. Fortunately,
several prominent ~ 8f0!1p8.
including the Amencan Leg1on,
have fOISW(JIII the protest and rearfumed their respect for the presidency and our system of civilian
conblll or the military. A3 a result,
the proteSt will probably come to
ltallghL
Still, it is an indication of the
bitter feelings that mariy veterans
and active soldiers have for Bill
Clintai the former war protester. It
is an issue that should not be

Base-cl~sure

Berry's Wo.rld

\l
. '/:, ..,,.
.i , \ 'I

'i t ,, rr. i (.
••

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WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission is facing much
· tougher choices than it faced two
years ago, aild it now seems disposed to make some. very bard
• decisions that have been duclred by
the PentaJon.
. .
Back 10 1991, the commission
considered closing bases not on lbe
Pentagon's originallisL AJ.Ibe last
moment it backed away, because
its statutory authority was unclear.
Congress has since passed an
aroommentrothe~bmre~w

giving the commission s~cific
authority to close bases on 1ts own
initiative so long as it gives communities 30-days notice to. allow
them ro·be heard.
·
·
On May 21' the ~jOn has
scheduled a meeting during which
it· will vote on whether 10 add any
bases 10 the Pentagon's list.. It now
appem vinually cenain lhal more
than a few bases will be added. .
Actllally, the comlnission has
already added three ~ to the
original list: McClellan Air Force
Base in SacrameniO; Calif., the Pie. sidio in Monterey. Calif., and Great
Lalles Naval Slation. The two California facilities were eliminated
from ihe · Pen~ori list by Defente
Sectel!lryLes Aspin, who was
.under lreniendous pOlitical pres-

allowed to fester 'any longer. He
should address it now.
Some or the things he might do
and say:
·
·
- He should learn 10 return a
salute, and he shouldn't act so confounded timorous about it. The
salute is an act or respect, not syco-·
phancy.
- .He should call a series of
meetings on his turf-somewhere
in the While House-between top
civilian and military· leaders and
decide how to go about lifting the
ban on homosexuals in the ranlcs.'
Not whether, but how. He should
personally chair the meetings and
hear the concerns of those who
command the troops.
-He should tell the brass, and
the nation, in suaightforward fashion that his avoidance of the dnift
and his antiwar protests were
directed at an obnoxious and even
criminal conflict that he and millions of otheiS despised, and were ·
not intended to malign !he military
as an institution. Yes, he did write
that ill-advised thing about
"loalhing" the military, bu\ it was
done in the context of the times.
-He shou.l.d inform the impu·

dent, extremist, politically correct
children on his staff that the military does not have to be venerated,
but it wiD be respected, and the
next person in the While House
who says-as some young woman
did to Gen. Barry McCaffrey-that .
be.or she does IIOl''speak 1o JICOP.le
in uniform" will be summarily .
sacked.
·
-He should take his youthful
aides with him when he goes 10 the
Wall and to Arlington Cemetery
and, precisely as Ross.Perot sug·
gested, make them "walk through
all those gravestones and get a
sense or what it takes to keep a fret.
society IRe." ·
All or this presumes, or coune
that President Clinton really ~
grieve for those who d1ed in
defense of freedom, that he really
does respect the people who wear
the uniform, that he really does
appreciate the need for somebody
to deal with the Serbias and Soma-'
lias or the world.
If he doesn't, then it's a matter
to be sealed in 1996.
Josepb ·Spear Is a syndicated
writer lor NeWI)Iaper Enterprise
Assodatloa.

panel's tough .choices

Powell simply lhrew up his hands, '
· Many com111unities are defend- admitted it was beyond his power,
ing its bases by presenting evi- and has left the commission to deal
dence that other bases should be with the problem. . · . ·
The commission· has two
options. It can 'force cross-service
use of depots by closing a number
not on the Pentagon's list. But
considered for closure instead. In some on the commission staff
order to fully investigate this possi· question whether they have enough
bility, the commission needs to add d11ta to make decisions on what
these other bases 10 their list. ,sl~DQ~d stay open and what sbould
Among these are the Portsmoulh, close.
N.H., shipyard; the Long Beach,
The other option would be to
Calif. shipyard; possibly the Nor· remove~~ depots from this year's
folk, Va., shipyard: and the Ingel· closun; ,iiJt, and order the secretary
.
f.· .
Sl'de , ...
, exas. naval stabon.
Of defCnsCI10 do ~ 1study Of ClOSS•
The commission's biggest prob- servicing,. th.e. n
. w
. ; ;ror the 1995
lem concerns maintenance depols. round of c~gs
· lve the probEach unifomi .ervic:c 1\!!!1 its 1own lem.
maintel18!1CC depol.l. The Pentaaon . Then, 100, lbe N is in trouble
has found thai there is currently again. T~
o, lhc Navy did
overeapacity approiCbing SO per- a slipthod ~f
ding which
cenL The problem is dill eacb au- haaea 10 c1oae. This year it oveaevice fights to JllllleCl its own turf, acted, developiag computer models
and there is little CIOIII-IIIfYice uti- ' and bulldirig a musive paper trail
1ization ~ mainlaUIIICC flcilities.
to justify the bases it hal cholen to
Eighteen moaths ago, Joint clole or move.
·
Chiefs Chairman Gen. Calin PowHowever, the Navr is being
ell decided 10 do ~g about •"rird from sidea. Community
iL He uulaed all the aervk:el to IICI . , . community hu brought fur·
together and CiOIDe up wilh a depol . ward Clllvjncing arawnems that,the
CJ'OII-onriUutQ ......
Navy hal llllde deCisio!l&amp; that defy
- It didri't happen. The r.Jatlne riliunal explanation.
'
Corps refused to tab Jlll1. demlnd·
· For ~. the Na~ waniB 10
· ing thai ill t"!"l ~~open . move six major commands from

sure.

Robert]. Wagman

1

;il;··.··.

au

"

.

office. buildings l~ Cry.stal C t ,
.Va., near the Pe~~. alid spread
them over the eo'llilpy. The Navy
saY.s that bver ·a 20-year period this
w1ll save taxpayers $S92 million.
However, Uiillin hired by Crystal
City businesses have eliamined the
Navy's n1111ben and make a strong .
case the relocations will actually
end up costing taxpayers an extra
$216.9 million.
The Navy says it has developed
"90 cubic meters" or data to sup- ·
port its·'--closing decisions. But
as retired Navy Capt Robin White,
who is fighting to keep the
C~arleston Naval Station open,
noted, "If all that data is as bad as
some I bave seen on Charleston
then thef have 90 cubic feet of
. lhe base-closure
· !llrl!lie.
A3 ou.d'--"
u""' 1!1
proce11, the ~~e~;~tary of defense
SIIJIPlles 10 the C0111mission a list or
bMel tho Pentagon proposes fo,
.
cloture or realignment. The ~ ,
million l'Civicws the llstllld has 'iJ!e'·
ablolute right 10 remove any J:ilie1
from the lilt if Jt rmdi that the Pen-' ,
tagon ."substa~tlally deviated"
from e14ht ~if~~:" Clita'llrllllelt m ·
determ1ne If a base shclul" be
ckllled.
. .
. I "
Robert Wap~aals a s~dlcat­
ed writer tor Nl'lrlpaper Eaterprise Allocladoll.
.
'

'

-·

' I '

STORE HOURS ..

Freeman returned
•

•' leotumbusl64•

.Monday thru Sunday
BAM·IO PM

Douglas E. Fnanan, Pomeroy, was n:tumed to Meigs County
from the Licking County Jsil on Tuesday. Meigs County JIIDes M.
' Souisby n:porU lhat Freeman has indicated be would ajllleB! in the
Court or Common Pleas on a bill of information charging forgery.
The proaeculinicIIIIOmey 's office has been contacted 10 prepare the
jlliJCIWork. .
.
Freeman remains in custody of the sheriff pending a hearing.
Freeman also faces charges in County Court for failing to comply.

Al

IND.

I

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
RESERVE JHE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICIS IOOD THRU SUIIDAY,IUY 15, 1993

A"ests, cillltions made
· Marty 0. Poling, l.atR!ville, was arrested Tuesday evening by .
of lite Meigs County Sheriff's Department on char~es of

'!"J"f:ies

driving under lbe influence, no operator's license, and failing to
maj,.ajn r ~uon•hlc control Of his vehicle.
Also cited 10 court for aJIISIIIlling beer in a motor vehicle were
Colin Maidens and Rusty Buskirk.
.
.
Jon B. Hill, 22, Middleport, was arrested early Tuesday morning
at a MiddlqiOI'l residence on a violation of probation order and on a ·
charge or p: IJI •sing a firearm while wider disability. He is being
held in the Middleport Jail pending a hearing in the Court of Com. mon . . on violalion of probation charge.

W. VA.

Mailboxes damaged ·

Meigs County Sberiff James M. Soulsby reports lhat a number or

mailboxes on Smilh ROIMI wen: reportedly damaged over the weekAriyoni: with any information as to who might be dOing the
damage IS asked 10 COillll:t tbe sheriff'S department

end.

-----Weather----FriCiay throqla Suaday:
Soutli.Central Ohio
Fair on Friday. Lows in lbe low
Tonight, showers likely early.
Thundellltorms also possible. Low and mid-40s. Highs 6S-75. A
near SO. Chance of rain is 60 per· . chance of showers and. thundercent ThUillday, becoming partly storm$ Saturday. Lows 4S-SS.
sunny. Cooler. Hig· h in the mid- Highs .in the 60s and low 70s. Fair
60s.
.
on Sunday. Lows in the upper 30s
and
40s. Highs in, upper SOs to
Extended lorecilst:
upper 60s.

Meigs annpunceme~ts
Clall to.-eet

- day at7 p.m. with the·Dailey Fami·
ly and other local singers. Pastor
Chester C&lt;iuncil No. 323, Daugh- Steve Reed invites the public. Fel,
1m or Americ8, will meet tonight lo.wship wiU.follow. . .
. .
(W.ednesday) at 7:30 p.m. Erma
Cleland and Dorothy Myers are
Re~ival '
hostesses
Revival will be held at Freedom
Gospel Mission in Portland May
Guest pradter
19-23 at 7:30p.m. nightly. Rev.
Rev. Eddie Buffington, Gallipo- Marvin Welsl\ will be evangelist
lis, wiJI be the guest minister at Pastor Roger Willford invites the
Naomi Baplist Church in ~ public.
on Sunday at 10:4S a.m. Public
Ada Van Meter
Hontemakers to meet
Ada van Meter. 90. or BeverlY. invited.
The
Syracuse Homemakers will
died Monday, May 10, 1993 at ber
meet
Tuesday
at 9: 15 a.m. at the
Hyamsin1
home.
Syracuse
Municipal
Building for
Faith Full Gospel Cburdt, Lon~
Born on OcL 28, 1902, at Syrathe
trip
as
planned.
cu.se, she was the daughter of the · Bolulm. will have a bymn sing Fn·
..:
late Seymore and Ellen Jones
Blake. She WJS a member of the
continuec~rrompaget
Order of Eastern Star and the
Daughtm of the American Re\'OluThe Past Councilor's Club of

--Area deaths-Ben Batey
Ben R. Batey, 89, of Middle·
port. died Tuesday. Mar 11. 1993.
at. Veterans Memoria Hospital,
.

~y.

.. Born on March 21 ,- 1904 at
~y. he was the·son of the l8le
George Batey and Uphemina PiaU
Batey.
·
• He is survived by two.grandsons
and their wives, Daniel and Grace
. Lewis, Sr.. Lan'sville, ~ Robert
and Peggy LeWIS, Jr., Middleport;
three great-grandsons, Daniel, Jr,
· Timmy, and Matthew · Lewis,
Langsville, and three great-grand·
daughtei!l, l!enny, EDen and Cindy
Lewis, Middleport; a sister, Viola
Bayles, Middleport, and several ·
nieces and nephews.
. Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, Bertha
·Eden Batey, two sisters, Celia Hite
and Bessie Quillen, a brother, Jim
Batey, and a son-in-law, Robert
Lewis, Sr.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at I p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home, Pomeroy. The Rev.
Jinl Seddon will offiCiate and buri·
a1 will be in Rock Springs Ceme·
tery. Friends may call at the funeral
home Thursday from 2 10 4 and 7

Bill must address the military thing

.,

'

Coatined " - p•e 1
jects in a silver oolored Subaru station wagon with tempor-r tags
pumped $7 worth or aasolinc•and drove orr without paying. The '
vehicle wall north on louie 7•
An inmciption is continuing.

forecast for daytime conditions llld

·The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

79
C
PICNIC 'HAMS....~~:. .

SMITHFIELD SMOKED

Teachers...

tion.
She is survived by two daughterS, MIS. Elbert (Marjorie) Holter
of Malta, and Mrs. Don (Pauline)
Brewer of Reedsville; 10 grandc~ildren, and several grcat-gran~­
children and great-great-grandchildren'
.
two sisters, Elizabeth Hogue of
North Olmstead and Suaie F'ilber
of Racine; and two brothers·,
Lawrence Blake of Parma, and
Charles BlateofSymcuse.
Slie waa preceded in death by
her husband. Benjlmin Van Mettt
who died in 1984, two 110111, Danny
Dunn, and ~cbard Van Meta', Jr.
and one dallghter;'Melissa Dunn;
two sisters, Mae Reitmeire and .
Ruth Blake; and three brothers,
William, Pearl.and David Blake.
Funeral servicel will be held at
1 p.m. Thursday at the McCunly
Funeral Home in BeverlY.. The
to~9-p.m.
Rev. DoUglas Thompson will officiate at the service. Burial will be
WiUiam Ritchie
in. the Beverly Cemetery. Friends
. William J. Ritchie, SS, of 39341; may call at the funeral borne 2 10 4
State Route 7, Reedsville, died and 7 to 9 p.m. W~y at the
tuesday, May 11,1993, at the fam· funeral home.
ily residence in Long Bottom following a brief illness.
,
• Born in Keno on Jan. 1, 1938 he
was lhe son of Mary E. Swindler
Sylvia Johnson, 36, of Clifton,
Ritchie or Columbus and the late
W. Va. waa cited for failure to
Wayne Ritchie.
A 19SS graduate of Chester yield following an accident TuesHigh School, he was employed for day at'oiCIDOOol on WCIIt Main Street,
several years as a li'Uclc .driver. He Pomeroy.
Pomeroy police reported that
recently graduated from Hocking
Johnson
pulled her vehicle from
CoUege as a paralegal.
the
Marathon
service station into
Besides his mother, he is surthe
path
of
a
car
driven by Lester
vived by three daughter. s, Cindy
Rector of Coolville, Robin Jones of Dodson, 80, or Mason, W. VL
Amesville, and Brandy Ritchie of
There was moderlte damage 10
Coolville; two sisters, Eileen Kuhn both vehicles, the left side and
of Canton and Emma R~odes of . front of.Johnson's 1987 Pontiac,
Navarre; four brothers, Eugene and the rigbt side and front of Dod·
(Jack) and Joe ~Columbus, Elton son's 19118 Buick. Neither the
of Tuppers Plains, and Earl of drivers nor their passengers were
Long Bouom; two grandchildren, injured in the collision.
and several nieCes and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
siturday at 11 a.m. at the WhiteBlower Funeral Home in Coolville.
•
the Rev. 'Jerry Wilson -¥ill officiate and burial will be in' the TupDamage .was minor in a bam
pers Plains Christian Cemetery:
Friends may call at the funeral f~re on the farm of Dr. and Mn.
home Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 James. Witherell, Naylor's Run,
early T\leaday evening.
p.m.
According to Danny Zirkle,
chief of the PotneaO)' F'n Depart·
ment, the fire stariCd on tbli top
•
fiOOf. or the ~an· and !hell da'fllild
through the floor 01110 • tiOOIIIble
" ·· A brealting and enta'ing at But· burning a pwlion of iL Zirkle aid .
and Bowl, 100 East Main SL, they could not dctr.rmine bow the
Pomeroy, sometime ovcralJbt msllriCd.
,Tha Pomeroy Fire Depanment
Moilday telllllins UDder Ill• = 1'111~
called. 5:12 p.m. and - 011
lion by PanerOy Po1lcc.
•
the
SCeiiCI
about 40 minldol. The .
According to ~• reJIOrl from
department
responded witb lS flrePo1K:e Chief Jerry RoaaDio the . . .
IIICII
and
two
ln1Cb and called in
'w.S entered from the ._ck door
the
Mlddkint
Fire DejaiiiiCIIl fur
which had beea pried open. Scismt•nce
.
.
sors had been Uled to open the Cllh
· reaister. A ._g of moaey, ~ut
' StD7 was atkal from the
1 •
WhirC .orne 1111np were eceqnad
about, nothing else waa taken,

.

.

BROUGHTON

Driver cited

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May'9 thn1 May 15, 1893

·

ldmlt1 P., Cuatomer

420Z. REG.
470Z. With

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v..., Fflller

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TISSUE

Good~ At Po-u·• Super Vatu

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AND SEUaOitiXED EQUIPMENT

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• Good Only At Powell'• Super Valu

Dolly, Monlhly. a or 8 Mona•.IIKI Annual
M1mll1rehlp Rldll AWIIIIblo.

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Offer Good M8v 0 lhn1 May 15, 1893
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Limit 5 Per Cu•IOmer
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216

Jluth Bush, Hlrtf!Wd, W.VL

II

Good Onlv At Po-u·a Super Valu
OflerGood-..15, 1993

RIVERFRONt BARBELL

01111' 11 ......... DR ,

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-Now Open-

TUBSDA Y ADMISSIONS Caroly!l t.ic.IClnlloy, Ponlllloy.
. TUBSDA Y DISCHARGES -

COFFEE

-----7~~w------~
·r.:r--------,uurunr---------••
:1 NINE LIVES CAT FOOD !:
III'
60Z
. ~~I.j III I

111 Secontl St~ Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AIENIS SEIVIN8
MEIGS COUNIY
SINC.E 1161

'ton

I

. $449 _........ ,.~,, ...~ . . . :· !:·

IJ.....,. .....--.1.

INSUUNCE

B&amp;Eprobed

police said.

~

MAXWELL

Ill .~

DOWNING CHilDS
"MULLEN MUSSER

Fire damage
mmor

rea

K.......~~~: ..... ':

2%

89

-

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Sports

Southern tops
Eastem8-4 ·

The n ·aily Sentinel
·

I .

WitA MJ's 43-pt}illt tuSIIUII,

Wednnday,lllly 12, 111S
Pqe A

Bulls .defeat Cavaliers 91-84 in second-round playoff opener

This was his answer to Gerald
By JOE MOOSIIIL .
CHICAGO (.t\1') - Miclulel· Wilkins, who had claimed the CavIardlu. who Jei!IIIS 10 hive a per- aliers hid signed him to stOp Jor101111 YCDdetlli iopinst lbe Oeve- dan, wbo bas averaged nearly 39
111111 CaVIIicn, weat a diaD willla poinls a game against Oeveland in
. _ , _ Tuelday,.....
~ cornpetirinn..
•
'I
felt
the
Jmdan
SIO(llier
had
a
"l'bey pride themselves on
tough
lime
IOnighl,"
said
Jordan.
playing me OIIC-oiH!nc.•• slid Jordan, who sand 43 Pamu in lead- " When I'm at my best, it's tough
. illg die IWO-Iime cllimpio8 Cbica- for anyone 10 'guard me.''
Wilkins, who led Cleveland
80 Bulls to a 91-84 (victory in lbe
opener of the Easlcm ConfcmJCC .widl 19 points, found that OUL
semifinals. .
I
"ll is my job to stop Michael
The Cavalien stayed dose and and I enjoy it," said Wilkins. "He
lrliled oaly 64-63 JOill&amp; into lbe was out to SIXlle !alight and I could
final paiod wballcJr8IIOOR:d 16 see it in his eyes. He wasn't com.of his pninrs H!i JUde die lint four ing OllliO get any assists."
Jordjm had to be 8l his besL He
~~:
~~ qnicldy sensed bis 1ea111matcs were
1eac1. .
I ·

68-6!!;£-r:!
&lt;ri •

' ''fi·l "

''a litile out of rhythm, slow. get- with 10 points. Scotlie Pippen had
ting to loose balls and a liUle out of nine points and Horac;e Grl!lt had
sync. I had to elevate my game."
six after seeing limited duty
How high ca11 he elevate his because of an ankle injury.
game?
.
Sllltey King and Scott Williams ·
"How many wins do we need?" came off the bench and combined
asked Jordan. "I am die leader of for 17 poiniS u they rotated in ftllIbis team and I witt do whatever it ing in for Grant and spelling center
takes to get us to die next level." ·
Bill Cartwright in guarding Brad
The best-of-seven series contin- Daugherty.
'
ues widl Game 2 Thursday night at
Daugherty had" IS poiniS and
Chic4go Stadium. Then die seene Mark Price scored 17, but saw linle
sbifls to Richfield for games Satur- . action in the fourth quarter.
day and Monday.
"! didn't bench Mark," said
"We know Cleveland will make Cavalies coach Lenny Williams,
adjustments and we will as welt," · who went with Terrell Brandon.
Jordan said.
•'Terrell was playing well and I
The only other Bull to score in couldn't afford to put Mark back in
double figures was B.J. Armstrong and have two smalll!llatlls."
~

.'

A w- 1
ally sputed the
SCIIIdlera Tonadoes to an 8-4
n
li+ 1 I - I ft:ay over the
F. a &amp;ala Tuesday night in
sccJiee•l bucltall toarnamcnl
.
Sc--· (13-1) wiD play in the
DivisiuM IV dilbitt .....wn1· in
A*- SMaday. Loot f« further
HiM ••• iJI Tif: Dtlily SellliM/
as10
lllep~~eliale.
·

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

Wilbos said Jordan was "really said Jackson, ,;taO had wanaldle
pumped Up Ill play. When t.e ~ot Bulla to be atat for lhe type of lay-

the bill and we double-teamed bim,
we dido't bold it long enough. He
II8Cd the double-leanl for screens."
1bete wu some question u to
tho condition of the ~wo teams,
wilh the Bulls having a wtet:long
layoff and Cleveland playing until
Sunday to eliminate New Ieney•
"The ~ have just been more
rested ~an we were,'' Wilkens
said. "That happens when one
team flllishes early and another finishes late."
Bulls coach Phil Jackson said
the comparisons were interesting.
''They attacked the ball 111d
were crisper·in their execution,"

--

off leldowns suffered lbc ... t.o

· "Maybe we starred out a -.
relaxed, but we picked up oar
intensity level as die game weal
on '' Annstrong said.
'"we may have star:ttd a little
sloppy, but all in all it was I gtal
game,'' said Pippen.
"The Bulla ue all good plaJaJ •
and they did a aoocJ job,'' Daaalterty said. "We stayed in thele for
u long u we could. The diffuca:e
was Michael Jordan at ·the fl'llCIbrow line. They were rested IIIII
we just fmished a five.game aeries.
We gave them our best sOOI." ..
.

=~st outing against Pittsburgh,
I got one ant and lhat was on
a bill driven to the wall in center
licld."
The only lbing he hid to fear

n-lay night was Jhe San Diego
PDes' defense. Whitehurst. matin&amp; his lint sran since the surgery
Jut October, pitched five s1rong
inninp but wouad up losing to the
Cincmn;~ti Reds 4-2 because of
four PaiRs errors.
· Whitehurst (0-1) gave up six
hilS and lbree runs - only one

-•B•uW•-

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NADONAL LEAGtlE

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expires May 31. 1993. ·

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AMERICAN LEAGUE
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M.IOE FROM TH( GRAIN ltiGMf.ST IN ~FIOT(Iff

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Jeaes led off widl ·a double.
w • RBI siii&amp;Je. SIOk:

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ty-.JtGse uri 1to11ert Reed

way his elbow felt afterw..-ils. It
wu a big day for him in ....Jw
way as well - he had an cady
flight home today to be widl his
wife, Roslyn, for the 'binh of dleiir
fust child.

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'l1tc wia- Saadlem's third

•.

earned- in five innings. He Siruck good."
·
er said. ' 'I was staying away £rom
out four and dido 't walk a batter, - The Reds got a good perfor- my faslball "
and had no problems with the mance from dleir bullpen to move a
Milt Hill (2-0) got out of the
elbow.
·
half-game ahead of the Padn:s, who threat by slriking out Phil Plantier
He opened the game by getting h~ve lost five of their last seven. and Derek Bell.
Bip Roberts to bounce bick Ill die Their only concern was an injury to
"I knew lbc bitters were trying
mound. That settled him down.
Tim Belch\lr's pitching ann.
to be &amp;gg~CSSive there and I had to
•'When Bip hit the fii:St pitch . Tony Gwynn lined the ball off be careful and mate p,itches die(
· righ~ at l!'e, I grabbed~~ Usuall~, I . !lel.cher's right forearm. in the first weren't.looong for, ' said Hit,
let It hu. my body, ~e sa1d. 1nrung. Belcher stayed m the aame who pitched three scoreless
"Things seemed to g.et bact. to.nor- despite a large welt, pitching into innings. "I threw them both offmal after ~at I~'s. ~? a whtle. I the third in~ing. ~y then, the ann speed pitches and they swung
hadoosp~g.tralnlJig.
.
.
was bothermg h1m too much to lbrough them, and lbatlet me get
San. D1~go s fielder.s played like continue.
ahead."
· .
. .
they dido t have any, e1th&amp;. They . "It was all right as long as I was
Thcl'adlesgot~fourbitsm 6
dropped a fly ba:ll ,' bo?t~ a · throwing," Belcher said, relaying '113 innings off Hill, Bill Landrum
grou~der, and ~ad t~o}nf1eld his comments through a team 8!l'i G.eg ~ wbo got the last
dlrowmg errors, mclu~n~ one by spokesman. "It got stiff between SIX outs for bis fust save.
Whitehurst That ran theu season innings."
·
"The .bullpen was sensational,"
total to 34 errors in 31 games.
He gave up an RBl triple in the Belcher said.
·
And those were just~ offiCial third to Jeff Gardner, who has hit in
1bc Reds won't know for a coumistakes. They also un"rcut an 13 sttaigbt games, then an RBI sin- pte days whether Belcher has to
mning widl a basenmnil!l!. mista!'e . gle to Gwynn. Manager Tony Perez miss a start. He said the seam
and set up the Reds'. firuilirun w11h decided it was enough when Belch- marks from 'tbe ball were still Visia ballc.
er hit Gary Sheffield and wallted ble on his arm afler lbe game. .
Ma.~ager Jim Rig~le.man Fred McGriff to load die bases widl
"There's a lot c&gt;f stiffness and
couldo l fmd a way to explain It all. one out
- swelling to get rid of,'' Belcher
"We didn't play good tonight,"
"I'm sure if I was 100 percent said.
he said. "We just didn"t play he would have let me stay,'' BelchWhitehurst wu thrilled by the

I.

saaiPI o.a- Fanen (2-14) this

Reds,JOE'-cash in on four Padres errors to_capture 4~2 victory .

1 By
UY
CiNCINN An (A.P) - One
memory,.,.. 111 Willy Whi• 1 •st
u he climbed a major-lelpe pilcbing monnd for lbe rust time in
eight !!!CW!Ibs
•
He flashed met 10 his last a.~ in
the major leaaues. He thought
abont bow farlbe blllnvclle4(
And IUddculy tbis "•h:be t from
elbow swtp.y .IC ·fN:'I a 1iaJe Jess
exciting.
·
"Fear. Fear is tile b i =
word," be aid. ''I IIIIM'I(!c
·

.•

in Division IV
sectional play

...

·

The Dally Sentinel Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Page &amp; Thl Dally Sentinel

. Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.I

•

A bridal shower was held
recentl)l for Marybeth Brewer;
bride-d&amp;ct of Vaughan MitcheD, at
· the Middleport First Baptist
Church. The shower W&amp;s given by
Judi Cowan, Sharon Hawley and
Cath Riggs.
The room was decorated in
peach, teal and white.
·
· Gamea weze played with Diane.
Owens the winner. The door prize·
was won by~ MiiCllell..
.
Pre&amp;enttng 1ifts wele Elizabeth,
.Searls, Clarabcl1e and Junior ~ey•.
Betty Lou Gilmore, Terry Wolfe,
Jeri Pullen. Shanin Hawley, Kate
Wilson, Sarah Fowler, Rosemary:
Lyons, Judi Cowan, Nola Swisher,.
Clara Mae Darst, Mildred Riley;
Dorothy Anthony, Fran Parker,
Ouida and Harold Chase, Wanda 1·
Shank, Tracy Casto, Kathy ancf..
Dan Riggs, Jean Thomu. Kathy
Mitchell, Linda Mitchell, Karen•
and Bill Stewart, Shc~ty Brooks, ·
Angie Hood, Ruth Ebersbach,
Eileen Halley, Lilly Hubbard, Edna
Wilson, Carolyn and Darrt ·
Mitchell, Shirley Spears, Loshta ·
Mitchell, Jan and Sonny Haynes,
Joyce Douglas, Diane Owens, Mar-·
ilyn Fultt, Catherine and John MeF·
zger, ~q~d Mary Brewez.

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

Question: I asked my docta for for it in writing. Records obtained
my medical records so that I could by simply requesting "my medical
have them when I move. He gave records" will not contain tliis kind
me a file, but it didn't have every· of information. Question: I want a .
thing. Don't I have a right to all my . family physician in my new town
medics] records? Answer: You who is both good and one I can
generally hal(e the right to your afford. Can you give rDe some SUg·
medical records for any reason you gestions? Answer: Recommendsdeem appropriate. lt101ght be, as in tions from trusted friends arc
your situation, because of a move. always a good source of informsThere are also many other possible tion, but you may not have this
reasons. For instance, yo11 _might when you are new in a conununity.
want to:
The telephone book. is probably the
-show them to another doctor least selective source of informawho is examining you for a second lion, but it csn help you locate a
opinion,
doctor who's close. Most hospitals
· · -read them because you absorb keep a listing of staff doctors who
information beiter in written form are taking new patients. The hospi' .
REGIONAL SCHOLARS • The 1993 12th Troy MiUer, A1lsoa Black, Chrlstilla TII,.W, and
than verbally,
tal wiU probably be able to teD you
Allllual Relioaal Scbollrs Program was •eld at Gayle Ya~auchl •. Plct.red, 1-r, are students:
-look over the recoids to satis- about the doctor's specialty area
Burr Oak Lodge Ia Gloater recently. Ninety Michael McKelvey, Soutllera Local; Jamey
fy your curiosity, or
·
and other additional qualificstions
students from 27 school diltrlcts participated. Smith, Southern Lotal; Andrew Wall, Eutern
-review them for insurance or he or she might have.
Speakers lac:luded Roaseaaa Gill-Jacobson, Local; aud Jaime Will!loll, F rinr ~
legal purposes.
Many individuals get their
Roger Jerome, of En1land, Bruce Peterson,
So you're basically correct health care through a managed care
about your right to your medical program these days. The 1,11an
records. Further, your docta can't office can help you fmd particlpatrefuse just because you"Je angry, or ing physicians that are convenient·
because you haven't paid all of ly located for you. .
·
your bills.
In your question, you asked
An award for the recent mem- on Pomeroy's parldnJ lot at the·
However, there are some condi- about two im~t items - fmd· bership drive of American Legion conclusion of the parade. Membezs
lions under which your docta
ing a "good . doctor and one you Drew Webster Post No.. 39 will be . of the post hold eight different
WID be gfvea Ia Melgs/G•• C01aHes bJ,
· may withhold this information.. cOUld .afford. Health-care costs are presenllld at the post's next meet· memonal services at cemeteries
Your doctor ~Y refuse to release a major concezn for aU of us. That mg Tuesday;
around the county. Times will be
your records when he feels that the is why health care is such a hot
The award will be preSented to announced at a later ·date for these
FRIDAY, IllY 14, 9 Lnt.•IHn .
mformation -contained in, them topic now. That is also part of the the member who made exll'JI efforts services as well as tlle speaker at
would pose a threat to your health. reaSon for the growth of managed to ~ecure membership for;" this Ponleroy and~,
I• Dr. I. JICbn •Ills' Office
This type of situ&amp;tion is quite rare. health-care plans.
leg10n year. Pony year pinl will
strt..t.
There are also a few other excepIf you are not part of one of also be presented to Howard
tions to the general rule of full · these programs, you have the right Knigbt and Frank Vaughan. Fortyaccess to your records that may to ask about fees. And, you should five ~ pins }Viii be presented 10
cause some confusion, so I'll uy do this before you are examined. Elza Gilmore, Louis G. Vaughan,
1312 E............. Cl•te
GemPOiis
Bane Ohio National Bank, affiand explain them for you as well.
Don't feel embarrassed asking Richard Vaughan and Carl F. Will.
davit,
to
Natio11al
City
Bank,
614-446·1744
Your doctor's version of your about cost. You are buying the docA parade will be held in
medical record probably contains tor's service. You get an estimate Pomeroy on May 31 (Memorial Columbus, Meigs.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 1,9, 9:00 a.a•4:00 p.M.
John L. Hagerty, Dorothea A.
information that came from con- before you leave your car at the ·Day) at 9 a.m. Leo Story, World
Hagerty,
5.585
A.,
to
Darren
RobiCall ToR Free J-8Q0.634-S26S for an lmmec&amp;atdppoinlment
suiting phy.sicians or other sources body shop, don't you? You have War I veteran and bis family will
- · in other words, records that your the right to get an estimate when . be parade marshals. Anyone inter- nette, Sandra Robinette, Columbia
Robert 0. Bowles, Mary A.
Jh '"'' wl 6. fir• lty
, _ , IIJ S,• +l&lt;t
I
doctor has in your chart but did not you take your body in for service, . ested in ·being in the parade are Bowles,
Anyone
who
has
trouble
beari111
ar
Is
lliViled
Ia
have
a
J
parcel,
to
John
Seidenabei,
create. It is unlawful for your doc- too.
invited to do so by contacting John
Raymond
L.
Andrews,
Megan
L.
FREE hearlt)g test to see If this prOblem a11
Brlnt lh
with you lor 1
tor to release this "outside" infar·The American Osteopathic Weeks or Wayne Milhoan. Bands
Andrews,
William
Michael
Jones,
yotr
FREI
HEARING
I
wlue.
· I
mation. Release for it must be Association has produced a from Meigs, Eastern and Wahama
uaa
.I
Deborah
Jones,
Porn
Vil
obtained from its author, the con- brochure which gives short answers will be marching.
Alice Houdasheldt, dec'd; affid.,
MD AU 01111
I
suiting physician.
to many questiOns like the ones you
A memorial sezvice will be held
to
Meryl
F.
Houdasheldt,
Bedford.
Not all doctas saictly llllhen: to have asked about patient's rights. I
~-·--·-·-·--·-·-··-·:::::-_,
-------~
this rule, because it ca~ consid· would be glad to send any reader a
erably more work. and mconve- copy of this brochure. Just write
nience for you. the patient. But it me and request the brochure.
may be why you didn't receive Please enclose a self-addressed
wha~ you thought was aU of your stamped teuer-siZe envelope.
'
medql records.
. . . .., . ''Family Medicine" is a weekly
There are two special SJtuallODs column. 'ro submit questionrr;
th~ requ~ you to 5PI'C!fy that=- write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
•'
ta1n senstttve matenal can be Oblo University College of Osteo'
released. If you want details about patblc Medldne. Grosvenor Hall,
•
'
~chiatric care or any aN testing Athens, Ohio 4570 l.
•
tncluded, you must explicitly ask

Awards presentation planned

FREE HEARING TESTS

.· BeAt»u· HEARING AID CENTER.

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Property transfers

BELlONE HURING AID CEIIIER

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~

.

··wildwood Garden Club meets
.at home of Kathryn Miller
•

Members of Wildwood Garden
Club enjoyed the flowers and
scenic view of the Ohio River
when they met ·at the home of
Kathryn Millez,
The enuance to the home featured a large arrangement of pink
dogwood and large baby breath in a
tall glass container made by Nellie
Zerkle, Middleport. Sbe also had a
miniature arrangement of purple
violetS .and baby breath in a miniature flowezed vase.
Mrs. Miller presided at the
meeting which opened with everyone saying the club creed. Devotions featured a reading from Reader's Digest, "Honoring Thomas
Jeffezson,» foUowed by a pmyez.
RoD cal1 was answered by member naming their favorite . flower
they like to grow.
I anet Theiss gave a report on the
OAGC regional meeting at the
Holiday Inn in GallipoiU,
Doris Grueser, Evelyn Holter
and Kathryn Miller attended the
county meeting ,at the Meigs County Museum.
Juanita Will reported on the
club's outing til Riverview Flowm
imd Herbs.
A thank-you note was read ftom
Overbrook Center for the club
meeting with them last month.
Mary Powell, director of the
Meigs County Park District, was
guest speaker. She spoke on _the
history and restoration of Sugar
Run School. It was built in 1975 on
Lasley Sb'eet in Pomeroy. Grades
one through eight weze taught. The

'•·' •'' ,,, ''" ''

.

school closed in May 1961. It was
donated to the park dislrict in mem·
ory of U.A. and Marie Cornett It
will be convezted into a c.hildren's
'museum. Donations are being
sought to replace the roof and windows. Mrs. Miller presented a
donation on behalf of the club.
Peggy Moore reported on the
importance of compost for the garden. The three most important need
of your vegetables ar good loamy
soil, good drainage and usually
sunshine. Loamy texture is
achieved by a well-balanced mixture of compost or manure, peat
moss or leaf mold and sometimes
sand. Compost is made up of laym
of soil, vegetable matter such as
green weeds, grass clippings, tops
of garden gJants, coffee and tea
grounds, frilit rinds and vegetable
peelings, pea pods, com husks and
an occasional application of lime
and wood ashes. It takes a year or
even two for it to decompose
enough to use in the garden.
Mrs. Moore read a poem about
compost and had a game unscrambling favorite garden vegetables
· with flowers presented to winners
Juanita Will, Evelyn Holter and
Dorothy Smith.
For t~e arrangement of the ·
month, Dorothy Smith had pink
and white tulips and flowering
almond in a ~ted Minersville jar.
The meebng adjourned with the
hostess serving a dessert course
and Mrs. Powell won the hostess
door prize.

'

DAIRY IlLLEY
CHICKEN PAniE

$1.49

..

~

As required by Section 4927.04(A) of the
the Commission files its Entry of approval
Ohio Revised Code, The Western Reserve
and acceptance of the Application.
Telephone Company (the Company) gives
notice that on March 12,1993, it filed an
Any person, firm, corporation, or associaApplicatiqn (PUCO Docket No.93·230-TP- tion may file objections to the proposed
AL T. the Company's Alternative Re_gulaadjustments in rates and charges, and to
tion Plan) for an alternative form of
the proposed chang~ in regu,lations and
regulation with the Public Utilities Compractices under Section 4909.19 of the Ohio
lflission of Ohio (the Commi5$ion). This
Revised Code. The objections may allege
Application affects telephone services of
that the proposals are unjust and discrimiall customers of the Company through
natory or unreasonable. Recommendations
changes-in the General Exchange Tariff.
which differ from the Application may
its Local Exchange Tariff, and certain rates. be made by the staff of the Public Utilities
Services governed by agreements with
Commission of Ohio or by intervening
other telephone companies are not affected. parties.
The farty-one telephone exchanges
affected are: Ashtabula, Aurora, Austin'
The Comrany's Alternative Regulation
burg,' Bainbridge, Bloomingdale,
Plan shal be effective for three years from
Centerville, Chardon, Chester, Coolville.
the date that tlie Commission issues its
Cumberland, Dor5et, East Clandon,
approval order. The Plan will include:
Fairview, Geneva, Hinckley, Hiram,
Hopedale, Hudson, Huntsburg, Kingsville,
CLASSIFICATION OF SERVICES:
Little Hocking, Madison, Mesopotamia,
· Local exchange telephone services, includ·
Middlefield, Montville, Morristown
ing access services, are classified into
Newbury, Northfield, Old Washmgton,
three general categorieS: basic monopoly
Parkman, Peninsula, Perry, Pierpont;
services, discretionary-monopoly services.
Powhatan Point, Quaker City, Richfield, · and competitive services.
Rock Creek, Russell, Thompson, Trumbull,
and Twinsburg. The Company proposes
COMMITMENTS: The Company will
changes to certain regulations and pracmake an obligation to provide services or
tices relating to its service and will file
enhance their value to customers pursuant
appropriate tariff sheets reflecting these
to the Plan. The Company commits to
changes.
·
infrastructure improvements and addi·tionsor customer service as follows:
Any interested party desiring complete
detailed information with respect to all
(A) Flat.rate basic local exchange service
affected rates, charges, regulations and
Will continue to be available during the ·
practices should inspect a copy of the
three year period of the Plan.
Application and all attached Exhibits at
the office of the Commission,180 East
(B) .Rates for basic monopoly services
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43266-0573, shall not be changed during the life of the
at any public library within the ComPlan, except terminating premium carrier
pany's service territory, or during normal
common line charges and theaccess
business hours at the public business
charges.
offices of the Company located at 245
North Main Street, Hudson, Ohio 44236;
(C) The Company will conduct periodic
4616 Park Avenue, Ashtabula, Ohio 44004; surveys to (i) educate and inform itscus.205 Hambden Street, Chardon. Ohio 44024; .tomers of new or potential services and
and 66 North Fourth Street, Newark, Ohio · technologies; and (ii) determine and eval43055. In addition, a Noticeof Intent,
uate the immediate and future telecominu"
'which summarizes portions of the Alterna- nications service needs of its customers.
tive Regulation Plan (the Plan) was mailed Customer satisfaction with repairs, instalto the mayors and legislative authorities of lation, and overall services will continue to
all municipalities and all public libraries
be evaluat~d.
'
throughout the territory in which the
Company Operates. The Application and
(D) The Company will invest a minimum
Exhibits as approved by the Commission
of $4 million in deployment of
will be sent to the same officials and
technology and serviceseat;,h year
·
libraries as the Notice of lmeni at the t.ime
of the Plan. This i_nvestment will

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be in addition to the normal investment
necessary in meeting the Commission's
Minimum Service Standards. The deploy·
ment may include such items asinterac. tive video to public schools, upgrading the
system to digital technology, and deployment of fiber optic technology.
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tioos between the Drenncns during
the summer of 1992, Michelle
Drennen told Fred Drennen that
she had made a statement to offi·
cials to which he replied she didn't
have anything to teU because she
was home with me at the time.
road.
He told MicheUe he dido 't have
Lemasters and I then lifted the anything to do _with (the murders)
boy's body, partially wrapped in and neither did She, Eachus said.
plastic, into the trunk of the car
During the second·phone conbefore proceeding tb a nearby area versatioil, Fred Drennen told
off Sellez's Ridge Road,'Drennen Michelle Drennen that she was
said.
unable to remember that he was
Oncethere,Lemastersgotoutof home the night of the murderS
the car and dragged the boy's body because she on drugs .
into the woods, Drennen said.
"Do YQU really believe the drugs
Lemasters and Drennen then affected her memory." Eachus
went to ·a wash in Racine where asked. ·
Lemasters washed blood from .the
"No. Not that much," Fred··
outside of the car, according to Drennen replied.
Drennen. Then they went to
Other testimony
Lemasters' mothez's home on TanFoDowing testimony by Dren·
ner's Run Road where they dis- nen and Eachus' cross-examina:
poSed of Drennen's coveraUs.
tion, Dennis Salisbury, chief
. Michelle Dre~n~n was not ~eputy of the GaUia County Shezmforme4 of the kllhng upon the ifrs Department, was caUed to the
'pair's return 10 the Drennen home, stand.
,
Drennen said.
· . Salisbury testified that at the
Drennen said he participated in time of the Halleys' disap~
the robbery because of Lemasters' he served as sheriff of Gallla CountauntinF.• his assurances that he ty ani( received a missing person
wouldn t. get caught and the need report concerning 12-year-old Jefformoney.
·
frey S. Halley on Feb. 11, 1991,
Cross-examinatioa
and another on Jeffrey L. Halley
Upon
cross-examination, shortly thereafter.
Eachus asked Drennen how come . Upon . cross-examination,
hedidn'tlcave when his wife visit· Eachus aSked Salisbury if Jeffrey
ed him at the crime scene prior to L. Halley had been known to be
Lemasters• arrival.
involved in the drug trade. Salis·
Drennen replied thaJ he was bury replied that he had.
afraid of Lemasters reaction.
In addition to Fred Drennen and
When. asked how . come he Salisbury, the state called-John
didn't abandon the plan when he Clark of Gallipolis to the stand.
saw there w~ person in the back
Clark testified that he was at the
seat of the car, Drennen replied "l Halley residence the night of the
don't know."
.
shootmg and had met Lemasters
Eachus then attacked Drennen's there. Clazk said he and Lemasters
credibility by asking about his for- went off in search of the older Halmer sta~ents to law enforcement Icy.
officials.
Clark said he and Lemasters had
On Oct. 7, 1991, Drennen said talked about growing marijuana
he told Ohio Bureau of Criminal and recalled that Lemasters had
Investigation and Identification mentioned taking Halley to Meigs
(BCD) Officer John Pt"Zry that '"All County to sell him some marijuana.
I know (aboitt the disappearance of
Eachus then asked if Clark' was
the Halleys) is what I saw on at the Halley residence that night to
posters,in the supermarket.»
,
buy marijuan11 to which Clark
I said I was home with my wife replied, '"Yes sir."
·
on the night of the Baileys' disap.Agents · q~lled .
pearance, Drennen said.
BCII investigators Thomas
During an interview with Perry ,.Hubler and Jo~n Pe~ty :were also
on OcL 23, 1991, DrennC!I. accord- _-, called as witnesses.
ing to his own testimony, said he · During their testimony, they
didn't know anything else about identified fragments of evidence
the homicide even when offered from the murder site and the sites
immunity in exchange for his testi- where the (Wo bodies were found.
mony.
Following Pe~ty's initial testiOn Feb. 18, 1992, Drennen tes- mony, .Judge Fred W. Crow III
tified that he told Perry and his recessed the trial until 8:45 a.m.
attorney that he disposed of the today at which time Perry may be
shotgun because he was afraid his cross-examilled by the defense and
wife would shoot him. Drennen testimony will continue.
·said he was asked at that interview
Earl~ T~y. a female juror
if he disposed of the shot11un was excused.by Crow for medical
becau~ lemasters used it agatnst reasollS. In.hez place, male alterthe Halleys an!l he replied "No.» na~ was seated making the jury
Drennen agreed that he sliD gave consist evenly of six men and six
no indication of his knowledge women .
about shooting.
It is unknown at this time if
1ore. Eachus said, dur- Lemasters will take the stand in his
convezsa- own defense.

ear

a

12-Pack
12-0Z. Bt/5.
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, DIET COKE,
SPRITE Of?

coca Cola Classic

Beat of the Bend.. ~

6-PACK 20-0Z. BOTTLES ... $2.39

by Bob Hoeflich

~

'(E) The Company will reduce the terminating premium carrier common line
charge (applicable to long distance companies interconnecting with the Company)
a total of 21/2 cents per minute of use, to
be phased in over a three year period.
(F) The Company willfilefor approval of
rate reductions through the.impfementatton of Extended Local Calhng Service
(Measured Rate EAS) to the various county
seat exchanges of its service territory
where technically feasible.
(G) The Company will file for approval to
implement one-way calling from within
the Compally's local exchanges to the public elementary and secondary sc~hools
within its customers' local school districts
on a "no charge' basis.

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(H) The Company will reduce the rate for

residential T.el-Touch service to $.75 per
month.
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PROGRESSREPOilTS: TheCompany
will file annual progress reports with the ''
Commission providing a progress evaluation for each commitment.
PRICING FLEXIBILITY: For competitive services the Company may Mjust the
rates according to Commission-determined
criteria for minimum and maximum
·ranges deemed appropriate.
EAilNINGS: No earnings review or adjust,
ment proceedings related to tile Company
. shall be 1mttated or conducted by the
Commission during the term of the Plan as
long as the Company does not seek to
· increase basiC service ra.tes.

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Drennen said.
Arter the shooting
After the shooting, Drennen said
Lemasters dragged the body of the
older Halley into some brush near
the site while he used a pop can in
an attempt to wash blood from the

h

MON.-SUN.

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-

Opening•.. _c_on_lln_ued_rro_m_P_III_e~------

Bridal sltower held
for Marybeth Brewer

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine .

'

Wednesday, May 12,1993

Wld..edlly, May 12, 1893

II .

•

Seniors of Meigs County high
schools' and their parents should
noie that soon The Daily Sentinel
wiD be publishing a souvenir "tab"
deali,ng \\jth this spring's gradwitions.
· The Sentinel is making an effort
to publish photographs of every
member of each class in the publication and this is wheze you come
in. You are asked to turn in a stu·
dent photo at The Sentinel or at the
student's respective high school
office. Final coUection of the phn-:
tos is this Friday afternoon. Plio·
tographs should. be billfold size or
3 112 by 5. The name of the student
and the student's high school
should' be written lightly on the
back of the photo. .
So if you seniors are really
rushed for time what with the closing of school activities, then your
parents, I'm sure, will he glad to
see that your photos get to The
Sentinel Office. The "tab" will be
something nice ·to look tiack upon
in later years. ~o let's get those pictures pouring in. ·
Thank you.
......:..,

Modem Woodmen and the Community. Money from the dinner
will be used as a matching fund.
project to help the Bedford Volunteer Fire Department Committee .
Betty Frazier of MiddleJ?Ort had
cared for her brother-m-law,
Charles Frazier, for the past 22
years. Twenty-two years ago,
Charles became paralyzed at the
result of a stroke. He died last week
at the age of 7i and Betty is so ~~~~~~
grateful for the support of friends ;:;~
as well as the Middleport Emet~en~
cy Squad, Veterans Memoriai .Hos·
p1tal, and Bruce Fisher Ill the funeral home. Betty says the food that.
was brou~th t in and the money
given her to help with expenses
were such a lift. Everyone was
wonderful, ·she comments. I_
KNEWthaL
•; ,____

There are nice people around.
Recently an unideiuified couple .
traveling on State Route 143 saw
flames coming from benepth the
mobile home of Randy and Lori
McDaniel who at the time ·were
vacationing in Florida. The couple
Jason Witherell, a junior at drove into the driveway and while
Meigs High, did sonie nice art the man toOk care of the lire comwork for the annual junior-senior ing riom under the end of the resiprilm. He crested and hand-painted dence the woman went to a home
the atb'ICtive tall wooden figures; nearby and caUed the fue departmost of them from Aladdin. Jason ment.
copied the figures Cram a picture in
T!Je fJre department arrived and
a magazine. Some of the figures . merely chll(:ked to see that everywere eight feet tall--quite a nice thing was okay. There was no
addition to the prom setting. A big structural damage and the mobile
effort on Jason's part, I'm sure. home ""as saved even though some .
Talented Jason is the son of Dr, and undezpinning was damaged. ·
Mrs. James Withezell,
, In the excitement, no one
thought to get the name of the help- .
· Memorial Day weekend tends to ful couple. Lori and Randy cenain·
be a vezy busy one. Irn you don't ly would like to know their idcnti·
feel like cookin.' on top of every- ty. If anyone knows who. they are
thing else, you miaht want to head would )'OU please advise the Senout to the Burlingham Modern tinel Office, 992-21557
Woodmen HaD where a fund raiser
dinner will be held on Monday,
The Delta Queen quielly moved
May31. .
.
.
downrivez past Pomeroy Tuesday
. Sezving will be from 11 .Lm. to evening, No calliope aild not a pas6:30 p.in. with !larbecued nbs and 'SCII_f!!• not any other human being,
chicken-noodle dinnm to be rea- lri ~hL It was at-like a "ghost
and in addition to a lot of baked ship . How coyld they do that to
goods, 'Cirry-out dinners will even
us? DOn't IIley !mow that calliope
6e available. The holiday event is . helps us to keep smilin'?
sponsored by the ·Burlinliham

__

lb.
U.S. Gf?ADE A 14·7-LB. AVCi.l PEI?DUE
(ALL WHITE MEAn YouNG

Fresh rurkey Breast

Gat.
f?EGULAFl SCENT

ctorox Uquld Bleach

. COLDEN FliPE

Dole Bananas
"IN THE DELI·PASTI?Y
~~~PPE" MUSTARD OR

An.r General merican Deli
MRiscereal Potato salad
,7-20-oz.
Pountl

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By The Bend

Wednesday, May 12; 1993
I
Page-l

. GOlD SlmCEIS
. OURIOAL

......

city..,

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Landers

DEAR SWEETHEART: lillie 'ANN LANDERS .
what smokinB is doiils 10 your · Mt!19J,Lc.AJ1celeo
'"··'"'" I'm afraJ.'cl Y?'J won•1 be · ~Spd!ente
...........
c-..n S,.Ucolo"
II,IOIIIId to grow old Willi me. Your ~!P-'l!!'.....,.,.....~;:;;;..~..,......

I

SUPERIOR FUELS AND
LUBRICANTS THAT WORK
HARD FOR YOU.
"As

lb die
rpiLifiMIIJ
c1ec iW if • •
• ., a..e •
c• h ' _.jilt • lllle lloar. &amp;c.
bull WC)IIId ., lllllllr at • ....
fiad . . dg•• ... .,

Ann
;

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cough has become part of your ~""
pmonality. You have freqQentoolds doing odiCI' lbinp behind my bet.
and Oilier respinllory problems and
Thanb, Am, for gM!Ig me an
often complain of beinrl timd. Can'I opportuaity to aet this oft' II!Y cbcll
you see what you are doing 10 1 feel bc;tlcr IIIW. Pleale ligD Ibis yourself'l
.
LOVE YOU ANYWAY IN
You pmald to be a 11011zsmoter. WISCONSIN
I'm embamlsscd by this. I suspect
DEAR WISCONSIN: Wh8t a
our family and &amp;iendS know becai'Se poignlnt leUet. I c. pRimile you
of die smell, die cough and all die dill it will hit a raw nctYe iii a peat
other signs. Your duplicity is !Dilly readers. Thanks Oil behalf of
making you kd foolish. If you have Ill die people who misbt conllidcr ·
enough willpower 10 keep from ditching the filthy habit after
Sliding publicly, why can't you SlOp reading today's cOlumn.
smclci!lllitogelber'l
De.- AIID L!mdera: May I have
I WfJlty !hal one day·you may set the ~word about your reply to the
the house on fire. I see the college sl!ldent who lived widl a
WIIU·soaked buus in various places, bunch of slobs? You said. "Once a·
incluclins wastmastecs. What if you slob, liways a slob. Their mothers
are in a hurry llld cbn't put enough blew iL•
W8IU on those bulls? Do you ever
Ann, I dlink you blew iL Affa'
wonder how much more you might yan of nagging, dualening llld
get dOIIe if you weren't speliding punishing, I decided my 18-r--old
time l.hinkina oC when and whele 10 C1!1 keep his bedroom looking 111y
sneak your next cigarette and bow way he likes.lclose lhe cbor,llld if
10 hide the evidence?
·
he isn't ashamed 10 entertain bi&amp;
Whenever we meet after being friends in a pigsty, that's OK wid!
&amp;(Jilt and I smell the smoke 011 your me.
· ··
breadl, in your clolhes and in your
Yews ago, when I couldn't 11111111
hair, I feel a stab of disippni!ltment. iuny longer,! wquld clean up 1ft«
1.wonder then if perhapl you 11e hiln. Two holn larer,lt would kd

Nowlledac. .ii-·

· ,,_,

""'IOI&amp;a-...._

but

....., ,__._ """-a -

•
I .at

I clta'l poe a

I&amp;C

fuD~IIII!IIIIIIIIa&amp;Baf•ataf

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND ClEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER

aleepiaa q!lllun UJ _ , l!e
m.
So, A • , old pt. ,a. qaa1e,
"O!Ice a slob, al•)a a
il
limply . . ne.. M) lliece wa a
t.S a lAY - ..._ lillie li1e4 a
home. but.,. 1llll llle"s
w.
her
ila • -11e.
Her• 1 c.'l' r seiLSipilli

"*' ·

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.·
Singing by the Lake, Krodel Park,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., 7 p.m.
nightly, through Sunday. Bet Craw·
ford, Conrad Cook and Calvary
Echoes. Paul Chapman will emcee.
Call 30Hi75·1383 for infonnation.
REEDSVILLE - Eastern School
Board, special meeting,' Wednes;
'day, 4 p.m., high school cafeteria.
POMEROY • Amateur Garden·
Oub, Wednesday, 7 p.m., home
of Mrs. Harold Lohse, Wolfe
Drive, Pomeroy. Alice Thompson
will present program on oriental

ers

arrangements.
POMEROY • United Fund for
·Meigs County, Wednesday, 3 p.m.,
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce Office. Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE • Revival at Syracuse Mission Church begins
Wednesday. Saul McGuire, evangelist. Services 7 p.m. nightly, 6
p.m. Sunday. Rev. Mike Thorn~
invites everyo.ne.
THURSDAY
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP Free community immunization
clinic, Columbia Township Fire
Department, Thursday, 9-11 a.m.,
ages two months through kindergarten age. Bring child's immu·
.nization record.

flemMoy, OIL '41JW

GROUND BREAKING , Hillside Baptist
a.rO •ecad1 llrole ar01!J1C1 for Its aew build·
ill&amp; e\FaMe 'Ale _., addfdoe wiD be used for
aore cluarooas for Suada:r scllool, more
rab wa~, a llaptlsaal aDd a fellowslllp ball.

r•
I

SUS (tllil hdst r JOP 1 11M
tm1U.,) 10: Brilla. do A.,_
der1, P10. k 11562, c:war,o.
60611415621 (1• Cud•• .eu

GORDON .JENSEN
Singer • Songwriter
Will Be In Concert Uve
'

s.--,.

RACINE. OHIO

RACINE - Southern Junior
HiP Bo0S1cn, western round-up,
S..dat. 6 p.m~ for sixth, seveolh

1'lle dlwdlls located 4 ....
Ott of Radle • St. Rt. 124
Invites
The Public
..

IIIII c:i&amp;lll &amp;~Mbs.

SALEM CENTER - Star

Legion Famey B •!W.I Posll28

61-.e ..t Sllr Junior Grange, fun
=~ P"'uc:t suwer Salurday,

TUPPERS Pl-AINS - The Tup- Ladies Auxiliary. Middlepon,
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 anni!III poppy ale ftida}' 11111 sa,
.
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at urday.
the post home. Officers will be
MIDDLEPORT - Americ:u
iDstalled.
Legion Feoney Bmneu Posll28
REEDSVILLE • Special meet· ladies Auxiliay, M'~.,.
ing for all Easlem seniors and their sale Friday. Rw-., IIIIe Friday
parents Thursday 7:30 p.m. high and Saturday, 9 a.m, to 4 p.m.
,.
schoot cafeteria regarding senior Handmade ..,...,..,., ••
available bod! days. All t.i ;....,
class ttip.
II(J(IIO
These ewaa wiD lib
CHESTER- Shade River Lodge place in the Pld: across liom die
No. 453 F.tAM, Thursday, 8 p.m., II!IIIClt on Mi1f Sao::t.
Chester Masonic Hall. Refresh,
POMEROY • RCI!!I!lJ........

992·2124
.

2 MEDIUM PAN PJZZIS

a~

&amp;

stnnon MTD, ~.

· I.D.C. Replllr Ceilllr
PICKUP Mil DEUVER\'
Houra 86- M-F W Sat.
CIOHd SUncil¥
949·2104

$1 Q99

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&amp;Auction

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---.

.... _ ......

PUBLIC.
AUCTION

-.&amp;CO"

recli-.

1w1ve1
wlillt oa1t m. hide-Heel
OueenAnnechaira.mahogany
IUill, labia will4 ~--· maldllng

IOUIICIIII!Ipla labia, map1a c~w~ra. ~U~aoiMidl
a ""'lA beauN kill) lire 12 '*-' ba(&gt;lo •
I mim,latge 3 18eliolntrellinll mlryor. 3 pc. Line

11141

117-1121

.........

...
'

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tt.

F

._

5

0

7

F

MARTECH INDUSTRIES
Steel Sales
No order
. too small or too large
Orders welcomed

, ..

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112-KJO

'PII!l:

candy dllh. melon tland
dish, crysl81 cancleholderl,
.
llllld wooden video holder,
limps,
1111 I*'•
Iampi, 4' shop light bru1 pale lamp tlched ay11181.,...,
comlllln&gt;iellheMng unill,llhow CB~~tstant ,..q piu.much
111018• •

'

MASON; WV

77M715

....
----

lluaJL"l I

D

cs

7

I

7

G T 0
p
7

TERMS: CA8I&lt; OR CHECK WITH I.D.
Nolltw;
lor IOCir:ler* or kill of PIGPifiY

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.._..,_lnONo.-,a-..,.._

This 1B Your Invitation
Sell Any Item For •too.oo Or Less
And Advertise It FREE.

::.

(614) 992 - 7878
·
FAX (614) 992-7878

~

_

· G•llty

'I

SPa UIIESTONE
FOIWE

c••.. ,.1
h. Rt. 7
ln,

· of Fans.
•featuring 20" Box

~NUM»~----~--------~--~--~---­

. (SORRY, THIS DOES NOr APPLYTOYARDSALESI

'

N~-------------------------------MAIL TO: .

BoaiB, campers, and RV's are your Iew•d far wodr' ft .... If
you wantto put_morefun in your future.
dte good timts 1ri1b a Peoples Blink 1\1 iiOiilllJ 2 ft 0" a.
They're fun folks.'

a.e•..a.......

·'The tJJaifySentine{

PICKENS
HARDWARE

ll1 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 4?769
(OFFER EXPIRES 6/21 /fJ3)

992s2259

RACINE- lsohen Rd.· 8.5 .ecres wllh 11178 12 1 65
. moble horne .nd older houM. TPC - · 218ptic .......
a-t•n• for Mure bulldng locadan. ASKING $23.01!0

VACANT OAOUNDI 28.2811

•Uiitf.t

'
. A1Uflll

IILUI

LOWIU

"J-I'WJi

--·
-...
,
...
·-ills• •

7~1'''

·

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WE NEED UBTIHOBI

...

FE

...,.•

.

--=·

·-·

f14.
Pormltted.II1llke A Kid Flehlftglt
No Aloilllolh•• ...

and
Repairs •. -

MARTECit INDUSTRIES
(614) 992-7878

11

0115•
LONELY? To 11-. A 8oft
SmUtng
1~
Ext. 11021, SUI Por IIIII. Be 11 Yra. Unlotor Co. 4J02.131.
0111.
REDUCE: lum 011 Fol While
You-.,. T.... OML Avoiiob!e

·- ?

AI: Frulh'Pho""""'.

4

111111

small Dozer
Work

a

IIDUSTRIIS
I

•

~~~·;..:-

Stocld!IJI

Gtvuway
put · Oormen ·
u.y

,........,7.CoiU.,

llerd -

16Yura
EIJ 114.-

..

1J71M7 ,._7111

I j

41.10

Plumbing Installation

PH. 114:258-1160

M.F' Z'X

•

,_

9e~11s

1D mil• Huth of O.lllpalla
on BJ.ilen Ro.d

p:
]

Nooth

J. S. MARINE

Backho8and

IIIXIEfl·11i2tiOiy!QM7_.,u . . . . . . . . .
garden •P-· eddld lniUietlon, ltrg~~ fr9111.parall.

V1nt011, 0111o, ' 111 -

Po u1red by M.-cury·Outboanla

tncl~de• 11170 2 bedroom m~lle hOIIMI, 1 bedroom
.mc;ency llll8tltn8nl. !lddlllonlll trliltr hO!)k Up. 1+ ICre
eulttlng ..,ltiCUIJ8Ilfly Nnllld. ASKING $24• •

RUTLAND- lrlok lt.- 1 floor frame ~~ wtlh 2
tactroOmo. gu heat, one Cll' garage, garden .,.., fNit
.,_, eppliln-, 8111 160 lot. ASKINCI8111,1100
.

,_,. eo.. Fle~~tng Lib,

1=0P"_API•o,

a

ftl.nll•

3 Announcements

Big on Voyager~

-117ELWIL
· - · ?F

Clllllt

"Inspirations"
F·lowe• Shop

CHESHIRE· 11-h I.e- NICOl liut, reil181 ln--'1

'

•••• l.l.IIT lllllti.YII.LI 'fll.&amp;.lliliS Tl•a•u

~71·11~, '"~1161 tlHH6 196-il69 . "l~l

"""'s located' on Rl 884

neetH.m-'1111. loll ol polarltiiii.ASKINGS18,000

ASKING $t8,000

'

. .n

..... c•.

C.l614-992:
6637

THIS OFFER GOOD NOW ~U JUNE 21, 1993

. POIIEAOY· Oldef homl with 3 loll. 3 bedrooms, ba!h .
Home io In nsed olrer-ir. ASKING $9,500.

llraL

Announcements

=-....u-·a=.
:&amp;::;lt;;l~f:s.:~•;c;•:::l~:;:;:::====;
_;;;.;.;:.:.:.;;.._;;;;.o~.l ~:m•";; ~-.:-= .• :.!
'-=======j;::======~...;._------.1-JW,

Your Ad WW Run For One Week- One Item Per Ad

CNOJ'E: 15 WORD UMrr AND YOUR SEU,INC PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD&gt;

129.95 +Tax

=?m:....":',no..:..:=

Check out my

'

HOlE-

Simply Oip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
FDlln 'Your Ad And Mall It To Us Or Drop It Off At OUr Office.

Let Pickens
Hardware Cool
You' Off With Its
Large Selection

1

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

m

1JUCF CARE
OF • OUR

J

sJ
-15.-s
Mt-2111

..

• 4 Wheel AliJ•Ment
Prices Start1ng at

Steel Fabrication
. an d Weld"ang .

wnH CPR
lRO•IG
LOOICII&amp;
FOR
...

2 Front Strut1 • Laltor

. (614) 992-7878
FAX (614) 992- 3053

I

$land, 4bars!Dols, -a.g

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
OWNERS: JEFFREY a RUBY WERRY

To

I·

.....

LUNCH ·

.

!'

I

'Blr

BICIC liB•RUI ADCi ill Cl•

.

T-5hhu • Hllta • Uniforms
Vlll'i!!ty of T-6hlrt Colore end LAttttrlng Styh111.

OS!&amp;:
, ,

5

•liMCK•CMI
•111Ui:M IG

.&amp;ucno• CONDI1CDJt ar

PICIIIP • DllMIY

SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS.

. 992-:MJ

'!.a.

c

4Mirl IS

Heat?

'

-

5

c

PubliC Sale

'

A

Need Relief
From The

' .

lk'

.4/2

118/'1211

AUC110NEER NOTe: A Good Oppotftlnhy To ,..Ill 111 '
Nll:e Fumlfln, RMdy Ftw Your Home.

1

MASON, W.V• . ·

I

2251 Sildlllt. • Sp....., Oh•
(614t 992·5315

a

•
Claaa Out Your Closat1.Basamant, ·
or Garaga ... And Turn YOur Unusad
ar Unwanted Artlclaslnto CASH With A

811 W.IWII slimofGE'MT

992-3838

~

(614) 742·2345 .

7

LOCATED AT 893 SOUTH 2ND AVENUE IN
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO. WATCH FOR SIGNS.
MR. MRS. WERRY ARE MOVING AND
WILL BE SELLING niE FOLLOWING:
Sec:tlaillll rap 8/0Und "*n size hide-a-Ged willlndlnn.l

Your spring

DOMINO'S PIZD

UMESTONE-T*'&lt;:KING
FREE ES1UIATES

•

FREE ESnMATES

a

n.EESI

SATURDAY, .
MAY 15, 1993 • 10:00 A.M.

·Let us Help

i,.,

.......

Authorllllllll:

. LAHDCI:£AAING,
DRIVEWAYSIN8TALLED

PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY

CO. .RCW &amp; RISIDEIITIIL
Lke•sa•, l••und &amp; lo•de•

Puts ... s.m.

TRAILER SITES,

8

....

Ti'

tft.IKI

••

T_
' •• A
u ll

a

Mowers- 0.. Sns

SEPTIC SYSTEIIB,
HOllE SITES Mil

7:00.P.M. AT THE ·

ReliRd T~

-SINK

-

5

·•wEI
cu•
WAWI AU.Ef

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
.nd TAACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.

FRIDAY, MAY 14

POMEROY , Meigs County
"'"h-'- Trinity
ClluR:II, 1'\'Jmaot, 110011. Call 992·
3887for• I . . . . .

..

a

....

llew Wiring, Rewiring,
Trouble·Shootlng

UCIIE

HOWARD

EXCAVATING .

•

1

a

5

rm§"'z

667"6179

Picture, l·r, front: Gene Humpllrey Sr., Dan
HOod, Rev. James R. Acree Sr;, Joe Humpllrey
Sr., Ron ·Clonch. Back row, Cllarles Reynolds,
Rev: Cllarles Willett, Jolin Dean, and Gary
Jones.

m. - - - - - - - - - -

SATURDAY
NITRO, W.VA. • Liberty
Mllll'"nseen. Saturday, Cin-San
1'llellrc, N'!IIO, W.VL

. . _ .

StoJ&amp;.=t
Fill
985-4473

1

POMEROY Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, Thursday, 7:30p .m.,

' .

24 HR. E.RGINCY SERVICE

••••••••••

HARRISONVILLE· Free com·
munity immunization clinic, Scipio
Township Fire Department, Thurs·
day, 1-3 p.m. age two mon~hs
through kindergarten age. Bnng
child's immunization record.

Fans and Oscilating
·
Fans.

Chester, Oh. 45720
985s3406

EBLIN'S ELECTRIC

· eC·~

el&amp;

Hone and :Mule A&amp; • i+..!.,.. IIICCII

6U 4461157

3/8/lfn

IIJftly

,
VolllaPOMEROY ·Public dinner, n.nda:r 7:30p.m. a
Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen· teer Foe Dcputmeal. New manter, Thursday, S-6 p.m. Cost is $4 bers-loome
per person. The Classics will perform. Free will offering. Public:
nDDAY
invited.
MII;&gt;DLEPORT , Americ:u

36358 SR 7

a"''A-.

· eG•r•~

Wlia ; 1 • • 11 • ff'W, ..,
fJ1111 for wlltil1 1VM
't wlilft'!
"llltAIId md -sGtlille/llrlltiild'
l!aull du•ntiiiiO s-111
tftiMI. """· 6 ·
·
1
llllil 11 dwct or_,.-, /llr

·

104 'I

........

no.: kaiD

home of Charlotte Elberfeld. Instal- maus awd.
lation of officers.
ROCK SPRINGS , Rock
POMEROY • Pomeroy AA S)Xings Granae lllllliiS 'lll!nday, 8
Group, Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred p.m. RaciDe c:...,.. wiD visiL
Heart Catholic C~urch. Call 9925763 for information.
CHEST£R - Obio Vrlky Dni1t

1 Topping

r-.. Wed. FrL

BISSELL &amp;
COISTIICI. .

. •ty ca1endar
Commum

· WEDNESDAY
ANTIQUITY • Tent revival, 7
p.m., Failh Fellowship Crusade for
Christ. Antiquity, Brolher Hurest
Prarer. Everyone welcome.

II

Larry E. Miller

1

If,_..,..
,a.
., U... 1!J
ic
•

7 -- -

1:3111M:. . .
Thura. a B&amp; 10 11M,.

12 5-lfn

~ WI'QtmSS: n...b far
,0.11 •MJ.IlwaG~~eaf..,• .
I bow II) all wilD _ . m 111e0111...

t'

fl

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

Houn: ..... ' ... Cloel4l

LICENSED llld BONDED

PA.

~
- 10 •

•as

flepolr

PH. 6.1..992·5591

- A wnNESS IN LANCAS1ER.

&amp;•I •• wpa' a
Wi1J - · · ic
Oem af 1111: Dl):

~~ ·

' UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
' HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Lii!IMtone,
Dirt, GJ'IMiend Coal

**"

Shade Rive(

LEATHER REPAIR

BULLDOZING

He ca 111111 cae afllis

diB hJJ

Mcip O.,«t NSDAR meets Fri-~-~~---.;,$4..;·4~~.;,.}_ _ _ _ _ _ __, day, 1:30 p.m., Meiss Couq,ty
M!W'U!D 1'\'Jmaoy. Hislorical pro.
ID'!LMirJLYost,hous

.....

-------=~---

•BP Diesel Supreme...Try it, there is a
difference.
•Minimum 50 Cetane
· • •Low ash and sulfur
.
•
•Will not gel.ln winter time.
1993 SPRING LUBE SALE
MARCH 15TH thru MAY 31ST .
Special term terms with payment 4 time• a year
and NO INTEJ=IEST or RNANCE CHARGE.

- _.,

bil'• *J. . . ·

''

'

,,

•

1993

Duplicity making smoker look foolish
Dell' Aulawclm: .Mywifeiaa
clollet _._... rve tried 10 tell . .
for ,em bow I feel, but I I:OIIId
never bring myself 10 cb it Pleale
help me out by JKinling this leaet.

1

n'

The Daily Sentinel

.

'

-

'

-• -

•
0111 -

"""' ....

~!!~~~ f~·
-T
o'IYPI!
-Ill 'i;"'Joll'
:::
~
Dog,

IIISELL BUILDERS, INC.'

.

___ ...

=.::,.:~.,

_..._
. . New Homes • Ylnyl Siding .
.....
.....
New ~l'llges • Replac.ment Windows -·....,....
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL.
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992:7643
(It S.lllllly ~ails)

~

~~~s~.;;;.~.~-~llotl~.,..,.~,-.~~,
""'*

Home In Counl,. Weode
To Run a "- ICI!IL - . A
CelliNI Air Unit. ~ c. ..

..
::rl' • ....,... .,._

- A I CMII

a. .....

=·='*~

1111

....

(814)892•7878
211211211tn ,.._........ fi!M- ...
'----...::;,:::;;.: ll--.-r------....,------,;_,-'1 Sl7-·
I . ..,
,,
'
"

'

�'

SenUnel

Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

51

..

41 HoUIM for

Rem

•
••*"'"' ...... Act.~ta0041o.

.,..... .... ..............
From

Unlo•ll.1lllo-.
_.

................ . .
howe. ....

3 hcdi'OOIW

='...

Cliol.. -

-

And .- .

'
- Wednesday,

•.

HoulehOid

.

'

Ohio

12,1983

NE4 Crouword Puzzle

...... ..,.
--.CUt-.-.
..

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

ACROSS

1. . ~

YI'IIA FURNITURE
111 4413111Qrl1t 1111121
'IOMY8AIIIEASCASH
·oR RENT.a-OWN (NO DEPOSIT)

111Dti'C411c ,..., ' ...... .....

~~~~~~

11:0065:00.

0~-

-Fir,

Wt*e OOIIIIftDdl In OQOd .......

8111'. . .

City

m...-.

· (llrllnol

mlcr.,..

40 Dlllomtn-

auon ·

• 42 Uncle
43 Polrwtree -

14 Lattor

MO

oddltlon

•u
•••

NQK'i1l

I -cut 1 1fl .....

I

37 lllcko out
38- Ungut

org11111m
13 lrtlllt occont

··a=·s ....
•••Wi:
I

\W .... ........,.

IOIIMtll

6RUMI
11 Typo ot

ALDER

ictc::~t.

EEKAND MEEK ,

Loll• Found

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

.

-

tMlHI~I&lt;I~

IGWRE~

SUIT

-ME ...

-~-~-PW.
PI,
aJr, . . - , .. --.w ,

:sE.l&lt;UAL
1-!ARASSMEI.IT

or F'ILI~

•Ku
+KI

flmlly - . 12200, 111t-'.-.s.s~~a&lt;-.

DOWN

SuU111

.Al08H2
ta

Whool track•
Tako wupo
ono from

•u

.lOH

55 Scondlttavlan

An olplooiYO

.Q ..

• K7142

Former

48 Sun god
50 - of London
52 Notched
54 Slloutl

20Loud
21 2511\lotter
22 WOIItbJbUS

EAST

WEST

411 1&amp;oz.

47

1a~:•v•

tQJlOU
+AJe4

St£ S!lLL
WIALLY

IIIII l'onl - . 1,11110 - .
......,AIC,PS,4..._11_
......... 111,1100. ......,. 1111

4611Htlo

15 llgh-protoln
. food
. 17 Dr.

r..IJ.II

1 Wood
product

_tuu·

3Land

IIIOliiUI't

5 BIKk

Vulnerable: Neitber
Dealer. South
Sootli

I NT

BARNEY

,_.............. --:CIA
--·

......

_..

~,

$'

AVON I AU I lllilito,
8joooro, ,.,.._.,.-.
.at, 111• llor ~ YMr Old In lly
--YThniFrtdoY,7:41
~
A.ll. To 5 P.IJ. So Dlpon.114-Mt- .._,No ...... l n - . K

~

n , ~ . .,

.zns.

•b •.

Will gin pl1no looJOIW In my
homo II Applo GrOWl, WV. 304Sla-2481.

lnV. e10
%'Mrllllo Dally Tribune, 825 Yord wort&lt;· mowing ond trim'l1llnl , . , _ Qoiii.,..U., OH mlng and othlir odd Jobe, fully
41131.
tnou ..d, 114-1182-1377.
lnio 'f S · o,.n~ngo Avollabio

Yard 8ale

7

Wlll ..,. lOr thli olck • oldorly,
••!:.'!:,~ rolo,.... oV1111-

For

Gallpolls
• VIcinity .

Cod--.....;; Aida.

Com-

n- . 1 di'OOIII

houoo, ~

Havon, I3IG dopooll,
mondl, ,.,.,.,
r q drM, 114-

MNOeJ.
bl-1

1Wo

~-.
11M12-1Wt--illjani.
-

"'ZxiO, ........ ...,

...... -

!

• lj

- - . 114,.1 o-Hr 21
Bualne
. 88
Llmo lltl, 114-liiHIOS.
"::..!~·- .,_ - . . . . - .......
ALL Y o r d - - . Paid In ...._,; CoiUcl Tho Aoolo1on1 INuiolng,
Opponunlty
~At · z. -~JI!-4teS
•
,_
,.,.,.,... DEADIJNE: 2:00 ...... P
- COn 01
Cantor,
170
alter
... lily blto.. Chi ld .. to ...... P I - D-, Galllpollo, DH
.......,. • '2:00 p.m. 4tlll.f14-Mt.7112.
OHIO VAlL~~'i.~tsHINCI CO• Fu"""""'/.t,:l',:""·· lor ,.nt .In
..... ldlkltn • 2:00
Ncommtndtl that you do bual-

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

,_with_.. you~,_, and
NOT to OII1CI manoy ltv...n 11io
moll until you ltavo ln-lgllld
tlta ollwlng.

80 Acroo ODorlllng lllulno 6
CompgiOUIICI' In lllltwood - WV,
304-273-4091.

~:tz.n ·

,._.,.acroentt~~~oz.;i•llll

53

nla.
llul·--·
..
-N
I

-

.......... .............
~.......

42 Mob_lle Horiiits
for Rent
IVd.
Jiw- --

........
._
-111.....
With
EJporiJ!IOI,
Sign
0n 11118onUJ

~ - In

'\I

I,( ,·(r, ~

1177 Ford 210 4114, Mt II........

=.:=:.,:.--.
1110 ...,. aiAh .... Van. ~
Molor; C.M \Eta ....
· Itt -

110 \lolt llr cond

·

·

'8ALANCIN6 ROCK" ~A5
SEEN PEROIED ON T~l5
CLIFF FOR TEN MILLION
'I'EAR5. AND ...
1

tor one room.

3114-17&amp;-38211aftar 1:00 Pll.
a I'Gidlna CMtoo .....,_ Ukl
8tocka
..., 110 ... •
Th,.. llghlld eft • ' - w¥comera, 1221. Mch or 1100.
lor Ill. 304-875-411111.
20"' Cokw T.V., Cable, R1mot1,
1200, Qun ClbiMt; 15 Gun

ugg:

Solid Gok
Peavoy ~p 3 PA ~ ....biro
;
Peavoy SX 1100 -c Amp $3110,

CopociiJ..

280 gol hot ..., - - fii)O.

-

1100. 2401 llonroo Avo,

Amana oldHy-tldo ,.lrlgorator
Pt. Pll

VAC Coli

a·-

-Hitoh lt,IIOO,

1114417-'IRI, en.. ..........

FRANK AND ERNEST

L:lv8ltOCk

1

a-.... Hclna • 2 .._•• For

Sola, 1414111111

.

---·-·
==-·-.
. . -.

Aluminum a Ft. Tnick T - r
Chow. 1lf7 To 1910 Lona ·aid

QoodShape,lt00,11W8~

Ga- Solo, !loy 13 • 14. Cillo
,Upolli "-• tum II lloolo
SCflool out Iiiii milo, 1:00 IIA 7. ·

-

8~2.

-.. -, "'"'
--a.-.. .
--.......... _ ......

.

2114311.

........., Alao . . _ Ot4t

76

Yard Solo, 2102 lladlaon Avo,
Frldoy, 1:00 tilt ? .

nico clothing!

-

d
mioo.

ond lolt •
oano-.Bottyloyro
n11d1nce. Yelle rbtlllh Rd.,

Rlclno.

lor

new

oc-

m~n~gennl.

IOMI- ljlirl"*11o. Tol1l
CloiO to
and

'rr' -cw

~...

tur.

nllliOd, -In!! II 1210. Apply
II
lauraiMd AI*· IC1 or call
11112 Uncotn 141711, 2 bod,_,., ta 11VIngroom, t both,
exc cOntr, . lata at atra8, 3C)4;. 45
Furnished
Sla-2890,

••a3711.

=:=r-·t....................
.. ..,. ........
Wo....., Lt...,.

J. 0'1 ,..,.. -

ond - -

----..---·-.

12

Cor radla, Ill IPIIkoro, 115; lrll
bulbe, IJi,lbunoh; dr... form,
112; toddy bura, P; 114-192·
5212.

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

. 0o~~n)

.. .

mulls

37 ...... ..,.....
39 DollllpOUI

41 - tltion
4311olfl,-or

r

inte~ting

:an.

NO. YOI!J'/..L tiAVt- TO ·

GET A JOI THAT PAYS

l===~~~~·=:-~·~~~~~~~~~-A-~-O~T-,~Mi1~~~~·~~~~~~N~TH~IS_/~

ldo

to deflect the •-;:::;~!
destiny, call for di
spade jack. When East covers with
queen and you win with the ace, proba·
bly West will draw the conclust.·on.IIIDithaYtl
East hu the 10. You c.-- to u• 111
wltb a club and take the diamoad .
neue, but
West will
lead
tow spade. It should be
watching West's face when you produce the spade 10 and claim an
overtrick.

now

..... CIICl. -

OUR LANGUAGE

_...

By Jeffrey McQuain
MALISON refers to a curse or evil

' I w, UeJJi 6

.-.;~~

Coliaclafo a- or!glnol 71 rpm
rweordl~
of Roy Aeurra
Wolibaoli C.Monball, ftGO, 614317-7729.
.

lOeE~Ie!

HE!5 EIOtNSU!Rl:DlO

IUffll

53 Scartd.
IIIOIIIY

CELEBRITY CIPHER

,_,IY " - .,.u..,w;t..,cu..•;;;;•• .. CtWted from QUDtatlanl byt.moul peop~~~, PMt Met ptee~n~.
Eacll - - In IN . . . . llanclllaf WIOIIW. Ttlll»y'l clw: P ~ W.

••o • R X

VKPVTC

LV M W

CYXXH

YJLLKXL

v

I S

NXXO
' USM

-Z V C C ·XC.

LGUUXMXOI

t-£b PRETTY

I Y X

G

Cl'lft~.:l,mower, 8 hp,

$350. .
Dour 410 ColO 8 Woy Btodo
$12,000,- lottor Thon ,..,.,.go
Condlilon, Low 111111, 814-2455001.

LV 0 D X

W G 0 L

su

WOlD
lAIII

.I__I 1 I t I
NAILLE ·
1

13

I
I I I

c yAc u
1~

r__,;;~~~G,;..8

"Did you have a good time •

very educational.lleamed not·
to go out with -· .. _ ,. ·

...I
. , G)

::,O,..:'
l_;I;....I::,D.....
,

.......L.......I.L.......I.L.....J.'--...1
L.-L.
A

you

Campier~

lho ehucklo quo!wd

by f illing in the miSiing WOfds
develop from step No_ 3 below.

PRINT Nl:IMBERED

~ lETTERS IN SQUARES

tries to combine objects and subjects.
The preposition WITH takes two ob·
jects ("her and me"), not an object
("her")'and a subject("!"). You should
neyer use "with her and I" except in
a sentence such as ''You have a talk
with her, and I will loo." From now
on, "a talk witb her and me" wiD be .
the best wording to use.

lhORRIEO.

I Y X

ZJCGD.'
VMCXOGS
YVKK.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Old age should bum and rage at close of cloy;
Rage, rogo ogalnat thli dying of the light " - Dylan Thomu.

L.._..1. ....J.'--.L.-...J._J_ ~

A. Yes, it is a mistake, because it

CUL.I.JIH,.WNNEISOTA •

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
,. ,,
Quartz - Jerlcy - Drown • Oulput • DROP OUT
"Thai new IJUY is so cute," one coed said to her friend
"Yea," her friend replied, "but he's so d1,1mb that
· needs two years of tutoring before he could qualify as

tMi

a DROP OUT."

.Rooms
-lornlll·-ormonth.
":t2'
lltaOhno. Clollla llolol.
11
1110. .

48 Author .
Umbarto51 Citamlcli

I
1-_-.1-:;.s. .;,. I~F,;......:;.~~ ~. :;~~~~:dS:~~~t~ ~
I.--------=--

words. If you choose fo use this dark
noun, be sure to pronounce the archaic MALISON "MAL·ih·zun."

/II'( CW) HE'420

Oil••

G0 L 0 I

Q_I hear things like "a talk with her.
and 1." Isn't that stili a mistake? '

earn.,.....
Motorttomaa

T1 Jil:ipOtiJiton

lll!'r~!!."3.Ukl- Condition,

47~J•'•

cou,_

Accalko1aa

-, -

bull
"-"-tile
Mood lor
Loft

N

Auto Pens•

ludaal T••

-•nu

for Sail

1187 Redman ,Rl.,.,.,..., 14d0,
2brl_rm., 1 both, llrao living
room with cathac:INI'" ceiling,
Collman goo " ' - ColomrUi
2 tl2ton-.... AJC, 1M._...,
g~ hot .... - · 14.8cu.lt.
rrtgorator, 2 ceiling llillglrt
kit, Ylnvl unciarjilnnlng, lOla
men, $10,500, 114-182-8131.

-

Book .... with ollclng .....
doara, 11211· jiOIIJiblti tlnaor
mocl.tno, PO;· 814-1192·
30711 Mloro 101m.
.

32 Mobile Homes

ANY MO~e!

lor-

a-

VIcinity

wo,~ HE~

.._ ............... -.-

Blua Couch ~nd llalchl"ll
Recliner Chllr 3 v..,. Okf,
~«ion. $100, oao 114448-4034.

Middleport

,

TO

With 2 ..,_ - · " .....,.
7802.

P.M.

Pomeroy,

HAVE

/

. . . . . . 11•111..1,..

Fot lole: I 1M IIIII
loll VI Zlllvtla ... ' 51
E l l -. Couillllon, Coli 114-

Bohamo CruiM e Ooyo 14
Night'!! Undortlookld, Soli.
S211 ,..r Coupio. Umftld Tick•
Ill, 407·71M100 Ext. 111, .....
doy Thru lltunlor, I A.ll. To to

7, I mil• North Gfl Rl. 2,
clolhlillmloc.

111,100-

m

sao; Antiquo
112 Pint II PloCo,

lladt: Sol..,.

Condv Ja,.

d,

1

FFANCINf, ANf&gt; YOU WON'T
/

old. .-w....lJ'I.IIIl .

Anlltjuo Ponlloln lmoU Tablo

o.,.g. .., Ill, lby 15; 1:00 -

-··,
_trl:'
tom
tnltor, ._...-...
_ ll
304o17M141- l:tOPIL

11D11R.--UW

PI-, PTG , Oraoo· - ·
~~rollor, IJl Com-ara.
•
1521.

.......

· - Civlo Cnil, 1111, 144 . . . .

~

3 PT Hook-\111 5' Ollc, 12"

, _ ~-Thin, Pri, lit, 8EIIVICES.
1:00-7. Rt. u 11r.1 mllao pat
Diad ..... Corvo. Witch lor

Public Sale
• AuctiOn •

I-lAVE COME
'I'E5TERDAV..

for Sale

280 Qal. F""l Oil Tank, 135, 114141 21528

- 1. .- WESliRN
Col lliirle;
114••
IIEDIC~L

8

I 6UE55 WE
S~OULD

Boats. MaCon

75

.

31 Homes for Sale
Cla!'lon BOcUonol, 1tao1
diCk, three ~1rkoam, two
IIH'Ii I LPN'o ttl To 111.50. pump.
betM, loeat:ICI M lol k1 Racine
lliill' l!!oqol
Alolg.... lllnlmum
.nl. n.ar
uhoalil, .,.,. nice,
..........
$30,000, e-•2203 or 8141 - - /l'rioll ~­ !149-2041.

~- -

.

Merchandise

114 441 Dl11.

14 and 15,

.

clumollr

3&lt;&amp;-.....r

quiz book called
"Playing to Win at Bridge• bas been
publlsbed by Houg!ttoo Mifflin ('10.45,
The Bridge World, 39 West 94111 Street,
New. York, NY 10025-7124). Tbe &amp;U·
tbor, AustraUan expert Ron Klinger,
bas divided the book into tbree ptirts:
elementary, intermediate and ad·
vanced. There are Z4 real-life card·
play problems in each section. Klinger
baa used deals tbat the original declar·
er or defetlder misplayed. However,
the elementary illl't trivial. Today's
deal is the third In the book. How
would you plan the play in three notrump, West leadiJttl a low spade?
Nortb's raise to three n.,..trump is
norma~ it just so happens that South is
a heart short of making It an ideal Cfl!l·
tract: Luckily, though, West leads· a
spade, not a heart. _
The normal play is a low spade from
tbe dummy a'ftrlck one, guaranteeing
two spade tricks. Suppose you do that
East plays the queen and you ·win with
the ace. You lead a club to the ace and
finesse the diamond queen. West ~ns
with the king and, knowing you bave
;tb:;eerbl.i" 10, is sure to switch to bearts
.11
after cubinl the spade king
you bepD with Ollly two
An

-. ItO E'lf•JI""'Ii

Real Estate

.

PbllUp Alder

·~CM:w ............ 0110.

11:135.

29 TOIII
31 MH• fUll ol
33 Pelforrn

Something ·
for everyone

:104aNtll.

Buy or loll. Rlvarino Aritlquoo,
1~4 E. llaln Stroot, on Rt. 12_~
-oy, Houra: II.T.W. IO:w
a.m. to 8:00 p.m., Sundoy 1:00

,......1

But
All pass

311 8potll

73 Vana 6 4 WD'I

,....,,111•.

3 NT

...

25r.~:

27- F•t llrctlfl

HE PROB'LY

FIDDLE
DEE DEE

!!

Antiques

to e:oo p.m. 814-112-2521.

IEAnN•
FIRE

aod

Norlii

21 Clolltlttg
flllrlc
23 Cef1lltt

Opening lead: + 4

AN' I SfEN A FELLER
AT TH' COUNTY FAIR

S 1pn!"''"

Anllt:
Llallng: Choir Coning
.110
. _... bill lloy Onlj.

::;,.~'*c.~:"...':

I1IZ ·

1,

7=-., ·. -

P!lrll. ._,.,., • 54 Miscellaneous

a ,....,, ..........,......

~- :r

52 Sponlng Goods ·

WHI
Pass

11 lttatrucl

8 lt'a dollcloual
10 Jowllllt Ioiii
. 12 lliand .
13 ROUte to

,. ttttuc•

••-v

action

111 Tit

6 lllbllcai king

4 Typo of

natured

.KQU

1-c...,..,

6~

2 Landlord

30 Exponoo
32 Kunin
33 Good-

SOVTII
.AlH .QJ

·Aftlwer lo PrHII • , _ .

35 Shlit Stadium

1 LocaWIJ

PHILLIP

~ IIW'II.U7I.

l1no
T.V. To

The

71 AUtos for Sale

Goods

1

iWo
-

'

Servtch

Slaoplng - · ........ both,
~w\
....,. TV, ldtchan

logol,-homoy•t-

........:110W7W2711.
:Ill - - ptont,_

Clowln

Situation
Wanted

llnglo box~ IIIII .....

F- 111-ao. Top- = r i d.

-. . . 3neor304

.

To Buy: Junk Autoo
11o1.... Colt
114 IN IIGI.

With

or Without

TGII -

Piild: AI Old U.S.
Co1no. II.T.S. Coin Sltop,

Cotno, ·Oolll Rl._ Sll&gt;w Colno,
Qotcl
tSt-.1-.Cioll~o.

"'='*........ ...
Too...:
f:::•J•Iana.~s,..

Ollloo ..... lor ....~.11 bot·
1:00 15:00, :104-:Jr.l-8633 .

CUrllo Home

Fot Solo: • • Moon 12x80
-~~- ToTM H~
Blddor, ContJCI: Cluy
llorTvw AI: 1-*lclal To Entor
Your Bid, 114-44•2111.

No ' .

.loll

-

...... I(...... ...... ..,:
I
......,.

....... ~'#

1fT W.nted to Rent

Employment Serv1ces

AS'I'aO-OaAPB

BERNICE •
BEDEOSOL

Help Wanted

11

lor W - r .
............,..... 114IZolliM Ilk lor ,11m or Doblilo.

D..l. -

~

1

'IIIIIEDiATE IIRINO

I

.

...... l'rw!ghl And
llprwJo .. t'Lf iillnt ..
.,. 200 Unlto.

···c ''* -

Olior:Top Poy,
.

r.1 ercn a11d 1se

.

-

......

1(, •

'

..

.., IS,,..

TNoke.
Con-IIIliAllEquip-

tor ,..... look good lor undo -the other aocomplithee.
endeavor you aliare with · The only
•idld
do nollel · YIAGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 2211f you want llllllolcoufldeiiOiyoumlglilgolloyoura.
lit year ~· plOY~tor you !Ill oorMhJIQ done today, don'llooklor surra- • PIICII (Foil. 20-llorati 20) Rely upon
1
yGI( .,...- Ill gallllo do Mlor you . In lacl, ovon when yGI( logic loCiliy relherlhln your pGWell ol
JOUr- .,.. ... let ...r , . . . you do. yourllll, you might nol parlorm up intuition. Thli world you perceiVe lhmugh
-.
10 rour uauatllandardl.
your emotioollllid leellngo could boa trifle
TN••
!IIOidof II&gt;:. LJ811A (Sopt. 23-0ct. 211 Rogordllu of di8lorlod.
•
''IDtfiiY, liOU
fOU' good .......... lhli 11nonc1o1 cw bilsl· . AIIIU (Marett 21·Aprll111 SlriW lobe _
priD6. ID bO - . . I
Ill you
, _ lidvlca you o11ar 1 friend 1oCi1iy might In ony -.:tot arraJiglrillnla
Iiiii tor ,..,..... .• ,.~ of
~
ltlrmfullhan hliiPiul. N'a betllo flllf hovo wtlil- -,. Thilllolanla·
T"""' ill . . ..
. 1411I _1_ ., 101
itJ8. - whn tomllhing oould go _,.;.,
•
10 MY·-~ ......_ ..

Y41"'P

_ . . IURfiTURE
Nenal''ltll

addressed. slamped envelope to love are judged as interterence. Today you
Malchmaker, P.O. Box 4465. New York, migl11 have to deal wrth this phenomenon
NY 1D183.
firsl hand. Be taclful.
!!£771 (lloy 21-June 20) K you lind your· SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) il you
self in need of advice today , lhere's a make a millake and try to blame it on
cflance,lhatthe coun.-. you'll -will someone eiHIOday, it could create a seri. be the ones who a1111eas1 capo111e of ofler· l ous Incident Keep this in mind belore
_
; pointing I he finger at an innocent
ing ~- BeViiJY . . - . ,_
CAHCEII ( J - 21 · July 22) Aely upon f bystander.
·
your 1iuic 11J0f1illiy loday insteed ol your ' CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 111 li... ally
materialistic motivatiOns. The former -will f you are rather praclicalln buainess ~nd
k"'p you out of trouble, the laHar mlghl 1 financial maHers. but loday you mlijhl be ·
_,you toward H.
prone lo taking chances you ordinarily
LEO (JuiJ 23-Au• 22) in a parinerahlp wouldn'lallempl. Lcok before yoii lelj!: ·· --arrangement loday, both portlea mual be AOUARIUS (Jon. 21H'eb.11) Do not IJY 1o
on the same wavelongth . If not, one mighl .be a self · appoi~tod . leoder loday I n an

,.,. 'Z

"""....,:lit
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HwdraUia Cor' 1.111 ...... - .

.... 111 1tHlOI. .

lntoriat-.t21.0111oi·130. ...... -larrprr
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. . -104-

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.
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can-,.,

"*&gt;Gnlp~~Ot I
..,.J';.. rola- . ICOIII'IO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Somollmes ahcl erNie hlird fHIIngl.
111idli
td to ~ "'plul ..;.... teK· , unaollciled oltempls lo utili poopla we ' · - '
.

........ -- - - .!""'... -.

'

'
,.

•

·,

'

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.

..

.

1

35'h Anniversary
.

.

Wedl"!8adaY, May 12, 1993

OhlQ

.•

SAVINGS• • •

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

• 1 .. ~ ,., 1 ; I''
;.:.. ..,~,.~ ••••,n II! 1!:1 1

a1

Valid 519·5116193

SUNBEAM • 24 OZ.

Ohio Lottery

NEW 20 PACK

Saadwlch

Reds
edge
·Padres

~liiit. Dew •Pepsi·Free

Diet or JleJular

Peps•·,o.
l
a
..

Pick 3:
949
Pick 4:
6168
.Super LoUo:
2-13-20-34-36-41
Kicker: ,
603652

PageS

..

Low tonlgbiiD 401. Clear•
Friday, sunny, blgb In 70s.

88
20 PACK
120Z.CANS

.,

2 SectloM. 12 P~~gee 25 cents

Vol. 44, NO. 11 .
Mulllmedlalnc.

PEP$1................2 liter•••••1.. 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 13, 1993

A Multimecli81nc. Newapaper.

Ex-lover testifies
in Lemasters trial
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The ex-lover of William D.
Lemasters II took to the stand
Wednesday morning as testimony
in his aggravated murder ttial con·
tinned in the Meigs County Court
of Common Pleas.
Lemasters, 26, is accused of
four charges of aggravated murder
in the Feb. 8, 1991, shotgun slayings of Jeffrey L. Halley, 36, and
12,year-old Jeffrey S. Halley, both
of Gallipolis.
·
A 'former co-defendant, ·Fred
Drennen of Ravenswood, W,Va.,
pleaded guilty on March 1 to.three
counts of aggravated mprder m the
incident and is currently serving a
life sentence with the possibility of
parole in 20 years.
MicheUe Drennen, 29, who was
Lemasters' lover at the time of the
murders while married to his· for·
mer co-defendant, testified in
response to questions from Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes
how Lemasters allegedly planned
to rob Jeffrey L. Halley.
"Bill (Lemasters) wanted to set
up a bogus drug deal with Mr. Hal·
ley to rob him along with Fred's
help," she said.
When asked to recall the night
Of the shootings. Mrs. Drennen said
that Lemasters and her husband left
the Drennen home just before dark.
Mrs. Drennen testified that
Lemasters called between 7 and 9
p.m. to tell her he would be late in
bringing Mr. Halley to the planned
robbery scene and that he wanted
her to teD her husband he would be
late, which she did.
Mr. Drennen and Lemasters
returned between 11 p.m. and midnight, she said.
Lemasters told her the robbery
occurred and added that Jeff Haney
was very upset about the robbery,
she said.
Afterwards, they counted the
money and divided it up, she said.
She estimated $2,000 to $3,000
was taken from Halley.
Mr§. Drenneri, who denied permission to be photographed , sat
calmly in the wimess seat wearing
a blue dress, hands clench¢ lightly

- ~-

'\.!!

CROSS-EXAMINATION..,... Defense attorney Bin McLane. cross-examines Michelle ~reo·
nen during testimony In the murder trtal or
WUibim Lemasters Wednesday. Lemasters, lert,

1

watches while his ex-lover respOnds to McLane's
question~g. l)rennen declined permission to be
photographed. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

Merchants association announces pl~ns
for Heritage Weekend on June 12
B)' JULIE E. DILLON
• •· ' Sentinel News Staff
Plans flir Heritage Weekend on
Jl!lle 12 in Pomeroy were discussed
at Wednesday's regular meeting of
the Pomeroy Merchants Associa·
·
tio~mployees of Bank.()qe and the
association are working together to
sponsor a variety of activities on
that SIIIIU'day. The majority of the
activities will take place on Court
Street near the stage area and wiD
feature entertainment, games,
crafters and concessions. The
Oldies But Goodies car Club will
h
th
be sponsoring a car s ow on e
plllking lot that day also.
The day will begin with a
. parade at 10 a.m. from the old
·
H' h d
Pomeroy Jumor
tg
own
through town to Butternut Avenue
• where it will disband at th.e
Pom~y
Fire .Station, Everyone IS
invited 10 participate m the parade.
Line-up for the parade. will be 9
•

lti w

••
.. '

A ... , ...... s.

II

· a.mThe parade wiD be foUowed by
a costume contest, under the direclion of Cindy Oliveri, Meigs Coun•ty Exrension/4-H Agent. Further
information regarding this event
may be obtaininl! by calling Mrs.
Oiiveri at the Me1gs County Ex ten·
sion Office 111 m-6696.
An exhibition of dancing and
clogging fun will also be presented
after the parade with local clogging
and dance groups participating,
Musical entertainment through·
out the day
be provided by
Dee and Dallas, a group that fea-

will

tures a variety of fun music for all
types of peopte'lihll pwppses. •

to exchange one of their plants for
something. new may.do sq. Just
bring your plant to the park that
day.
Further information on any Heritage Days activity may be
· obtained by contacting any Bank
One, Pomeroy, employee at 9922133.
.
The Heritage Queen Contest
wiil again be held on Friday
evening and the selec!ed quee'! ~dl
reign over Saturday s festtvtttes.
Further details on the queen contest
will be announced. Applications
will be ·available at Clark's Jewel·

The.aflernoon will ' feature out·
race races under the direction of
The Daily Sentinel. Further infor·
mation on these races may be
obtained by calling the newspaper
at 992-21 SS. AU businesses, groups
and clubs are urged to participate in
these races and prizes will be
awarded.
To conclude the day's activities,
a rubber ducky derby wiD be held
at 3:30 p.m. with the stanin~ line
near Pomeroy Village HaU and finish line near the levee in Pomeroy.
Anyone may adopt a duck, com·
~Jete with adoption papers, fo.r orobl rj. In addition to these activities on
The
1 1
Saturday, June 12, the Meigs
S per duck.
re are on Y •
ducks available and prizes include County Museum will also feature a
a $1,000 savings bond and a $500 · variety of activities on Saturday
savings bond from Bank One, a and Sunday with the theme "Remi·
membership 10 the Big Bend niscing Meigs County Memories."
Health and Fitness Center, and
Other matters
duck ilinner from Kroger's .. For
In other matters, a plantin~ date
further information about the ducky for flowers in the planters m the
derby contact Dick Warner at . business district was set for Tues·
day, Ma; IB at5 p.m. AU members
Kroger's at 992·5490.
All day activities include an of the association are urged to
,
·antique show in the mini-park by assist.
Joc Clark, president of the assoRuss and Hope Moore of Riverine
Antiques, games for the public by ciation stated the "Welcome to
the Pomeroy Seoul Troop, a dunk- Pomeroy" banners would be hung
ing machine and a putting green for before Memorial Day weekend. He
golfers. Trinity Church will be has contacted Pomeroy Mayor
serving food and ice cream that cil!Y Bruce Reed to seek assistance from
in its air conditioned fellowship . village workers in hanging the ban·
ners.
hall on Lynn S!reet.
Joanne Williams urged all the
A plant exchange will also be
held in the mini-park under the businesses to decorate their win·
direction of Bobbie Karr. During dows for alumni weekend on May
this event, .anyone who would like 29.

,
BI·RITE • 200 CT.

FoOOiand Spec1al
Coupon 11 180
Va lid 5'9·5. 1!&gt;193

I
I
1

Coffee ··. I
Pil ten . '

FREE!
.

WITH COUPON

I

•

Buy One 24 Oz. Carton

l"·•.

&lt;

iI

..

EASTMAN'S

WEIGHT WATCHEiS
COTTAGE CHEESE

G.T. . ONE

F.REE!

..'

A donation from the Eastern
Academic Boosters to go toward
the ,Purchase of computers and
equtpment for a family literacy
progi'lm was accepted by t!Je East·
em Local Board cl EducallOn dur·
ing a
meeting. ·
Tlic
also approved fman·
cial
for eomputen for.
the
which .will be carried .
OUt It
high ecbooJ. The IDIOUDI
approved, pendin1 IPJIIOVal ft;am
tbc Stale Department of E..telltQII,
Is $4,400. That amount will be

AND

rec:;:,rial

t:t=ce

SUP
.

'·

Eastern board accepts
donation·for equipment

700 W. Main StrMt • Pe•eroy, OW. • f!2-2HI
Open .7 AM-11 PM...._ tllnlat,-S••• t • -·10,_
.

.

February.
.
.
Economists luilllllttibuted much
of the March decrease to the bliz·
zard that socked the East Coast and
were expecting the April rise.
However, they caution thai even
with the bounceback, sales are
scarcely better ~ the $169.2 bil·
lion.level reachedm December.
"In essence 'we still ... (are)
looking at a level of April sales
that's no higher than the l'llidwinter

matched with funds from the Fami·
ly Literacy Piogram, according 10
Supt. Rtchard Lee Roberts.
Approval from the state is needed
since the district is in the state loan
prognun.
.
'
. In oiher action the board
approved fUI8DCial ~ to the
Chester PTO of $300 10 help with
the purcbue of a copy mach~. ,
· Attondlng were Ray Karr, JRSI·
dent. Jim Smith, vice prelident, -"d
members, Ron Euunan, Bill Han·
num, and Mike Martin.

a

Drennen admitted lyirig about sev·
eral statements she had made to
authorities.
.
. For instance, she told aulh9rities
tHat she did not know Jeff Halley
or recall any conversations concerning him wqen in fact Lemasters had introduced her to Halley
earlier. She had also stated earlier
that she and Lemasters were just
friends when they were actually
lovers.
Mrs. Drennen also admitted during cross-examination that she lied
about Mr. Drennen owning a gun,
not remembering the night of the
shooting, her knowledge of the ·
Halley homicides and discussing
the murders with Lemasters.
Mrs. Drennen explained that she
lied because she was afraid of
Lemasters and wanted to Pf!ltect
herself and her family.
However, McLane pointed out
where on one occasion she was
asked by an investigator if she was
afraid of Lemasters to which she
replied that she was .not afraid of
Continued on page 3

Jim Tompkins, vice president of guests at the breakfast meetin~ held House.
· . ·.
." ·
Southern Ohio Coal, told the story at the Middlepon Arts Council. .
Paul Reed, v1ce pre_.Sident, con·
of Meigs Min~s 2 and 31 and the
Dan Arnold anno~need ~ pub~c ducted.the meetmg. ~llh the.Rev.
James Gavin Power Plant in a slide meeting on the Galha-Metgs All'· Sh~on Hausman. g1vmg th~ mvopresentation at Tuesday's meeting pon 10 be held at 6:30p.m. Thurs· cation. The meeting arrangements
of the Meigs C~unty Chamber of day at the Meigs County Court were handled by Baker.
Commerce.
.
Tompkins tallced about the prep .
plant, the largest in North America,
the longwaU mining going on Ill the
mines, and the progress on the
scrubber project. at. Gavin .. He. said
the work at GaVID IS so extens1ve a
cement plant was put in to keep up
with the demand. He was intt'o·
Brenda Sue Fry, 43; of Middle· vated felpny of the .first degree, .
duced by Dave Baker , Human port. appeared before Meigs Coon- , punishable by a maxllllum ~ty
Resource Director, of Soutfiern ty Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien of five to 25 years in prison and .a · .
Ohio Coat
on Wednesday on a charge of maximum fineof$10,000.
Denny Evans, president o£ auempted murder.
·
Upon the recommendation of
Local 1857, ~nited Mine Workers
According to Prosecuting Attor· Assistant Prosecuting Attorney
of America, also spoke briefly on ney John R. Lentes, Fry is accused Christopher E. Tenoglla, O'Brien
the hearing held earlier in Canton of shooting her former husband, set bond at $250,000 with property
regarding the scrubber issue. He Michael Hubbard, 44, at Jeffs Car· or 10 percent cash allowed.
said the support from here was ryout in Pomeroy Monday night. , . A preliminary hearing was set
instrumental i.n sa~ing Jobs and She entered a plea of innocent to for II a.m. on Tuesday, May 18.
making the mme sttuauon more the charge and Public Defender Fry has been incarcerated in the
stable.
..
.
. William Safranek was appointed to Galiia County Jail since her arrest
Evans said that anyone mterest· represent her. .
Monday nighL ,
ed ·in taking a tour of the mines
Attempted murder _is an aggra· .,
should call the Chamber offtce for
'
arrangements.
Friutk Smith talked on plans to
.
start a Uniled Way in Meigs Coon·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) an impact because procedures at
ty and noted that tile next meelill'g
wiD be held 111 3 p.m. Thursday at Secretary of S~ Bob Tafi said he license bureaus will have to be
will appoint a l8llc: force to help coinl,!uterizell
· · ·
the Meip County Coon House. ·
Paula Thacker reported on toD·
implement a federal voter registta·
' the bill requires all kinds..af
free telephone service b~tweel\ . tion law that Ia awaiting ~deilt changes in how we administer elccMei11s and Mason .c ounlles ~nd Ciinton's signature. '
· tions. We "-vc 10 dclcnnine exact·
suggested a letter wnttng camJllllgn
The "1110101' voter" law req11ires ly what impa~:t II will have on Ohio
to rep1 es:nlatives. Also reponed on the state to implement a computer- . and the llest medlod .for implemenwas the Route 33 project and the . ized system that would automlti- tation," he said
.
·
surver being conducted by Sver- cally register a driver's license · Taft said he plans 10 appoint a
drup COrp. of Columbus. The sur· applicant to vote.
·
IS-member talk force that will
vey of the route from Derwin to the
Ohio alrea4y provides voter reg- include memben ole local electioil . :~
Athens line is to be completed in istrations at licenae bureaus, as well ' boards, the l.eci$JIIbn, ~pr.laeiu­
24 rponths. . ·
llUlil·in registtatioil, also included lives of the govemor'a 0111ce, aecRon McDade of Columbus in the federal slliiUie. . '
retary of state's ~mce and the
Southern Power
was
among
the
But
Tafi
said
the
law
will
have
B~u of Motor Vehicle~.
.
.
.

Fry's preliminary
hearing set May 18

readin~s,

and that's pretty slow
stuff,' said economist David C.
Munro of High Frequency Economics in New York.
·
Meanwhile, the Labor Depart·
ment said consumer prices in April
jumped 0.4 percent, double "the
increase expected. in advance by
economists and the worst since
Jan~.

Tluit par1Jy reflected the effect
· of West Coast rains on vegetable
crops. But even excluding· the
volatile fond and eneri!Y categories,
prices rose 0.4 pereent.
· In a separate report, the Labor
Department said the Ii!lmber of
Americans filing fnt-time claims
for jobless benefits fell 10 339,000
durtng the week ended May 1·,
down by 3,000 from the week
bef~re. It was the third straight
decline and the lowest level in four
weeks.
Munro and o~er analys~ said
sales and eeonomtc growtlliD gen·
eral .got ahead of themselves late
last year and a slowdown during
the fli'St half of this year Ia In part a
payback ltom the earlier spurt, they
say.

New law will ·have
. impact· Taft '

•

'

together.
She became emotional and cried
when asked why she decided to
come forward with her information
about the shoodn'g.
-..,
"I couldn't hold it in no longer,
what had happened to the boy," she
said, "There's not a holiday thai
goes by that I don ' t think of Jeffrey's mother, because I have chi!·
dren myself."
. Mrs. Drennen said Lemasters
once visited her apartment in
Ravenswood, W.Va., wanting her
to make an alibi' for him.
S~d that LemaslerS wanted
her to c8ll ¥r. Drennan and have
him over so he (Lemasters) could
force him 10 write suicide note at
which point -he woul.d either malce
Mr, Drennan In II htmself or kill
him and make it look lilce a suicide.
"I refused and he threatened me
with a knife and then threatened
my.children," she said. "He cut my
neck with the knife and lefL"
Admits to lying
During cross-examination by
defense attorney BiD McLane, Mrs.

Tompkins presents cha111:berpro~ram_

Retail sales rebound in April
WASHINGTON (AP) - Retail
sales rebounded 1.2 percent in
April after a sharp, weather-related
decline in .March, the government
said today, wbile,consumer pri'es
i~ 0.4 percent
, The retail sales increase, to a
seasoaaUy adjusted $169.7 biUiOQ,
was the best in six months, the
Commerce Department said. It followed back·to·back drops of 0.8pereent in March and O.l percent in

,.

WILLIAM LEMASTERS

•

..

•

•

'

'

)

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