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35'h Anniversary
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Wedl"!8adaY, May 12, 1993

OhlQ

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SAVINGS• • •

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Vol. 44, NO. 11 .
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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

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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
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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.

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EASTMAN'S

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F.REE!

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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
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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,_
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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.
..
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. 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 '

•

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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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Thursday, May 13, 1993

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Is President Clintiln now "Pres-

Pomeroy. Oblo
. DEVOTED 1'0 11m INTBRBSTS OP 11IE JIEIQS.IL\SON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE1T
Publisher.
, CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mlllllgtr

MARGARET LEHEW
ContrOller

OF OPINION are welcome. They sh9uld be less than 300
ID editing aod must be signed with namo,
address and telepbolle number. No unsigned !etten will be publisbed. _Letten
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not pmonalities.
.
~S

words. Au lotten are subjec:t

A free
lunch ..,in
.
the stock market
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Busl- Aulyst
NEW YORK.-- When stocks are discussed, the person with a portfolio or blue chips, the kind fa,vored by institutions and brokers, is usually
considered an astule investor.
·
·
In contrast, the portfolio filled with the very s~est stocks, those with
equity or less than $Hl0 million - sometimes only 11 fraclion or that fig·
ure - is viewed wilh skepticism, and its owner may be deemed an ama-

ident Quota"? ReJ.Iublicans may
make that case, belpmg themselves,
and helping America.
The Clinton campaign for
"diversity" in appointments is a
bad joke. The u.s. government
now has high 1iobs earmarked for
"skins." But ' non-Hispanic white
females" complain they are losing
outiO "twofers," that is, black or
Latino women. Many deserving
white males have been kept out of
government. Loyal Democrats,
they march silently to oblivion.
Welcome 10 .Quomerica.
What comes next? Don't ask.
Consider the story recounled by
James Adams of Tlie Sunday
Times (London). It concerns
the
head of a Clinton transition 1team
who, when not offen:d ajob, ,complaiDed 10 a White House official.
He was then told his team had no
:'00( (~y gay men), reveal10g his unwillingness to encourage
diversity in govemmen~ No job.
Beyond that. there IS a passage
in the. new CliniOD education pro-

Rarely do impression and reality contlict so sbarply.
Exlensive research shows that dver 811 exlellded period, the weD-chosen portfolio of smaller s10eks is likely 10 outpedonn that portfolio of
larger stocks. and by a considerable and f111811Cia1Jy significant margin.
One study, by Ibbotson Associales of Chicago, traced 67 years of
returns for tbe smallest and largest 20 percent of New York Stock
Exchange listings. Results: The small ~turned 19.6 peltCIII annually; the
large, 11.6 percenL
.
.
Even when adjusred for the added nsk, smallez siOCks sli)l outscore the
larger ones ova- periods of sevezal years. If such stocks are beld rather
than traded. they might even double the return of large-stoCk holdings.
While studies of even smaller stocks show such consistent results it is
hard 10 deny the existence of the small-company effect, about 15 years
after its discovery it is all but ignored by many investors.
Why? Big inslitutions Cannot effectively enter the small-stock ~~rena.
simply because_ there aren't enough shares available. To a great extent,
theRfore.large ·broJu:n do not even fonow or analyze such stocks.
Becan"" of this and sane lesser factors, the supply of news and information about such shares is limited, allowing for inefficiencies in pricing.
Often, the ineffiCiency is reflected in a bargain price, which become
future gains.
For tbe patient investor - s(IUI]I siOcks have streaks. measured in
years, of superior and inferior results - the results can be astow1&lt;1ing, a
free ilmch in a JJ181'ketelace that generally offers nolhing without a fi$hl.
Other factors contnbute. none more than the entrepreneurial spint and
. management responsibility that oftqt exists in smaller comp~mies. Mana,gers usuaUy oWrl a iaJge peltCIItage of the stock, and they work hard 10
profeCiiL
.
· Eventually, many good small companies become large enough to
atttact the attenlion of professionals, and have a large enough volume of
, shares outstanding 10 accommodate the big-block purchases of institulions.
As growth conlinues, they leave the small-company calegory and enter
the larger world. No longer are they ignored by the media. No longer are
they as inefficiently priced. Early, patient investors obtain lheir reward.

menL But voters would oppose iL
So Professor Guinier has another _
idea: Administer and re-interpret
the existing Voting Rights Act to
make it happen, which would put
federal resources behind a coun
defense. In hez pow¢ul new position, if COI)firmed, she would be in
Guinier, OiniOD's selection as bead charge of allthaL
of the Civil Rights Division in the
Guinier' s articles are not.idle
academic
specula_tion. Reading
Justice Department.
Judging from her recent (1991) them, it is clear that she believes
law jourftal writings. sbe believes passionately in what she writes.
a) in quotas for minorities in local
Finally, we will soon see .what
legislatures; b) that quotas aren't Clinton does about the awointment
enough; c) that minorilies should of a new Supreme Coun justice.
have the rightiO veiO many signifi- The Wall S!feet Journal reJ&gt;!!rts
cant laws passed by lhe majority; from !be White House: "Quesaons
d) that the minorities must be . ~nused~tsomeposslblecan­
"authentic" (not "middle class d1dates. H1ghly regarded federal
blacks," because "black represen- judges Amalya Kearse, Stephen
tatives are not just physi_c ally Greyez and Jose Cabranes are seen
black")· and e) minonties should as too conservative.... Advisers
be entided 10 enact, alone. a pro- agree that fmal choices wori't be
portionate share or tegislati~, for ~~ unti! the presi~t's vt,ife
example establishing
set- we1ghs JD, which she hasn I yeL
asides." '
·
Too conservative? Perhaps they
In theory such wild action oppose quotas. And what about
. would need a ~stitutional amend· Hillary Rodham CliniOD? It's said.

Ben Wattenberg

r'"'TJ{etJ CaMe- SoMe.T~ittG

"Tife. Vr~o Ga~ .
Clfa~~L." THaT'S
Ttfe l.aST eHTRV.

C2L~eD

Today in history
Today is Thursday, May 13,1he 133rdday of 1993. There are 232days
·
left in lhe year.
·. Today's Highlight in History:
On May 13, 1981, Pope John Paul n was shot and seriously wounded in
SL Peter's Square by Turkish assailant Mehmet Ali Agca.
On this date:
•
In 1607, the English colony atJamesiOwn, Va., was seuled.
In 1842, composer Sir Arthur Sullivan, who collaboraled with Sir
William Gilbert in writing 14 C01J1ic operas, was born in London.
In 1846, lhe Uniled Stales declared a stale of war already existed
against Mexico. '
·
In 1914, boxing champion Joe Louis was born in Lafayette, Ala.
In 1917,1hree ~tchildrennearFalima, Portugal, reported seeing a
vision of the Virg10 Mary.
lb. In 1918, lhe first U.S. ainnail stamps, featuring a picture of an air·
plane, were introduced.
In 1940. in his first speech as prime minister of Britsin, Winston
Chun:hilliOld the House of Commons, "I have nolhing 10 offer but blood,
toil, tears and sweat...
In 1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed into law the St.
Lawrence Seaway Development Act.
In 1958, Vice President Richard M. Nixon's limousine was battered by
rocks lhrown by anti-U.S. demonsntors in Caracas, Venezuela.
In 1978, 1talian officials beld a state memorial service for former prime
minister Aldo Moro, kidnapped and murdered br lhe Red Brigades.
In 1985. a confrontalion between Pltiladelphia authorities and the radi·
cal group "MOVE" ended as police dropped an explosive onto the
group's headquarters. Eleven people died.

•

"Don 't you HATE it when a kids' lad- li/(e
_
untied shf'estrings - gets pickeq up on ~r old

people!"

·

'

.

and imagine the speakezs _debating _ o!IC's country ~ not gefll;ler speDelores. "Delores, you m1ght ~ve cific. Anoth;ct
lhey will ~ver
known every lmob, bolt and shtm- · understand .IS ~w 11 feels 10 be Just
my of a P-47 like the back of your as g04?d at a JOb as someone _else
band. You m11y have _flown_ hun- and still not be allowed to ~ 11-:dreds of successful f11ghts m the becanse of race. gendet, ethnic on·
middle of the most gruesome war gin, sexual pererence or whalevez.
in the history of mankind. But If they d1d ~nderstand, they
women just don 'I have what it . wouldn't be SISymgi naytk' d
h
takes 10 make it in combat. And
The WA Ps ta e . to I at
hey; what did you gals do when aflemoon were sad .and b1~ ,lh;at
you had them PMS days, any- !heY,had been_ classified B_ll CJvilwar?"
.
·
J8JJS and dei!Jed the ~mce bene· · feel confident those points fits othez soldiers rece1ved after~
would have earned the debaler a war. (More than 30 _years ~ter,_10
surprise uppercut 10 the chin wben 1977, Congress passed legislation
his guard was down, or at the very that conferred ~ status ~ the
least a mild cussing. If the talk WASP~. an~ ~.resident J1mmy
turned 10 the risks of rape, I thinlt Carter Signed it m10 law.) But what
Delte's would hav() ~idezed the affected Ileiores most afler the war
arguments politely before fixing wll!,the loss ofberbebeloved planesial.
him with a steel blue fire ... Are
. I wanted .10. a com~erc
you trying to tell me that's any _ Pliol. but~ lit~ ~dn I ev~
worse than what the fellows went thlook hadatus. sbeallllll!~~ ~y Sllthed
throullh on Bataan?' • she ·might
ey
'?save . u"'
for ..
say. '"And that's my risk 10 take, men, who_d been 10 ~real war.
my decision. It's not yours to For 50 years, an eh!~ group of
give."
women have been WBJtiDg for tbe
Something the women-in-com· ~hance they have earned. Only die
bat naysayers will neva- understand Iaces and the names have changed.
is that commitment, the need for
Sarah Overstreet Is a writer
the ultimate challen~e of one •s f'!" Ntw~paper Enterprise AIIO·
abilities and the desue to serve Clltloa.

thin'

Voucher plan levels the field -of play
It may be the most significant R·rated mo~ie ('An Ofllcer and a
·civil rights case since Brown vs. Gentleman') in a hiSIOry claSs. •'
Board of Education. The pnrents of
California is but one of an
34 poor Los Angeles schoolchil- increasing number of states in
dren have sued the state of Califor·
,nia for violating their children's
f"!stitutional right 10 an education.
The parents ask not that their
kids be bused to far-off suburban which lower-income inner-city parschools or that more good money ents are seeking liberation from
be spent on the inferior inner-city such horrible public schools. Bills
schools to which their children are providing families at least some
now captive.
semblance of lhe school choice that
Instead lhey want Sacramen10 to the Los Angeles parents seelc were
proffer them vouchezs equivalentiO either introduced or pending in
what the state spends on lheir chi!- two-thirds of state legislatures last
dren's education . That would year.
enable th tl, parents themselves to
Lawmakers finally recognize
see to it that their children are that Americans are ready 10 end lhe
placed in betler schools.
public school monopoly. In fact, a
Debra Hackett, one of tbe 13 Harris poll last year, publisbed in
low-income Los Angeles parents Business _Week, found that seven or
inyolved in the lawsuit, sa'ys lhat 10 ~men~ans favor c~ice amona
m1ddle-class parents cannot imag- public, pnvate or parochial schools.
ine just how bad schools are in her
Moreover, the same proportion
neif.hborhood. ·
·
· of people said they had no problem
'The teachers are scared of lhe ''with government money going 10
students," she says. "They spend poor o~ midd_le-income child~en
10 minutes standing in the hallway attendmg pnvate or paroch1al
:1
.
after the beU rings saying 'get in schools."
class.' Then it's 15 minutes of."Sit··-.... The ·growing school chbice ·
down; Be quiet; Don't do that; movement is borne of lhe recognlLeave her alone~· like they're 2· lion that for aU the tax doll.-s that
year-olds. Radios are going tbey're are spent on public educati&lt;lll year
talking crazy. It's a zoo in there."
by year, America's school children
· · Susan Arviso has observed"the are learning less and less.
. same kinds of goings-on in her
. Over the last thlee dccadea. pet·
· kids' classrooms. "They're pupil spending throuahout the
allowed to cuss and swear;• she country has more than doubled,
says. "They're allo~.IO lislen to from rourhly $2,400 for the 1961rock music. They w~ ~alching ail 62 schoo year 10 $6,100 for 1991-

Joseph Perkins

Berryts World .

unsulistanliated, that she and two
friends, Marion Wright Edelman
and Susan Thomases, work behind
the scenes doing the quota stuff.
But it doesn't matter. No 011e elect·
ed Mrs. OiniOD. It is Bill Clin100
who is president. He alone is
responsible. His party faces elections next year. Will Republicans
make the case?
On the surface. it is easy. A
recent Gallup/Newsweek survey
shows that by 77-20 percent Americans spwn the idea of race preferences. Previous polling has shown
that a majaity of blacks also reject
iL
· ·
But it is scary politics, Mishanilled it could be inflammatory,
yielding a media ftrestonn about
"pliying the race card.:' And so,
unlit now, most Republicans have
not froptally raised the q~ issue.
But, then again, unlit now. quotas
have never been so purposefully
advanced from the White House.
· Quotas are wrong. They set race
against race. They imply that
minorilies are inferior. They tarnish
the reputations of legitimately sue·
cessfu1 blacks, Latinos and women,
of whom there are many. They
erode America's first principle:
meriL
,
' Republicans might consider
drawing some public li..~s. Why
not introduce.legislation reaeruming the grandeur of the 1964 Civil
Rights Act? Something like, "It
shall be unlawfuiiO grant prefezen·
tial trellment pursuant 10 any fed·
eral statue, regulalion or guideline,
based on race, sex, elhnicity, religion, sexual r,e!erence or language
proficency. • Additional clauses
could then validate authentic affumative-aclion programs like "out·
reach."
Would President Clinton support it? If not, there is a slogan he
can run oil in 1996: "Putting Some
p 1e F'trsl"
~n Wattenberg, a senior ret:
low at tile Americaa Enterprise
Institute, Is author Ill "The First
Unlvenal Natloa," publlslled by
tbe Free PrtiB ,and a writer for
Newspaper,Enterprlse Assocla·
!loa.

WASPs proved that woolen. .belong ··
Sa•ah Over.'"treet

J

conditions

By The A-=iated Pres&amp;
An approachin~ cold fropt will
pump cool Canadian air into Ohio
tonight and Friday, causinJ temperatures 10 dip ..~ tonight will be
in the low to mid-40s and highs ·

I

I

posal that apparently seeks to avoid
the strictures against "race-nooning" in the 1991 Civil Rights AcL
And consider Professor Lani

Every time I iead another ilrticle bat, but 38 of them were killed in
about women being allowed to fly the war and more than 30 others
combat missions, or hear another were injured. Many of them sufyahoo on a radio talk show fered hearing damage from the
expounding on women pilots' menstrual cycles I wonder what
Delores thinks.'
•'
o3
'I'd love 10 ask her, but I've lost
track of her in the years since I loud planes.
interviewed her. I wonder if she's
There aren't that many days out
still competing in cross-country of my entire )ife that I'd like 10 live
races and pushing ber plane down over. but that day, listening to
. beaches by its wing. She was 62 Delores and her fellow WASPs tell
years old when we last talked, and war siOries, is one of lhem. I hadn't
she'd he about 70 now. I'll bet if had nearly enough when it was
she's slit! walking, sbe's stiU fly- time for them 10 shoo me away and
ing.
climb iniO cocktail dresses for lheir
I met hez at a reunion ofWASPs banquet that evening.
(Women's Airforce Service Pilots), ·
For someone who wasn't all that
the elite corps of 1,074 women crazy about flying. their stories
pilots who flew the biggest. fiercest should have been rerrifying- taltand best planes the armed services ing off with ice on their wings
had in World War Il. They ferried because the fighting men needed
planes to 1nale pilots· waiting at · the planes so badly • watching
front-line airbases, and they flew engines fall.off, being shot aL But I
worn-out planes to reclamation was too fascinated 10 feel anything
centers. They towed targets for but the emotions they relayed gunners to practice on, and they gritty delermination, cool calculasimulated a variety of dangerous lion, the absence of imy tbou,ght but
miSsions. And they did it all with a what it would talte 10 bring m their
tower accident rate than their male ailing planes.
.
non-combat counler)lwts.
I hear the current arguments
The WASPs didn't fly in com-. against pulling women in combst

Accu-Weather• forecast for
MICH.

92. Meanwhile, American high
schoolers today are scoring 100
points lower on the Scholastic
Aptitude Tests than they did 30
years ago.
The deterioration of public education falls hardest on America's
disadvantaged. Even when poor
school children manage 10 obtain
diplomas, they almos.t always find
themselves way behmd non-poor
kids who have benefited· from better schooling. To the minds of concezned inner-city parents. vouchers
are a way of levelmg the educational playing field.
Yet vouchers are vehemently
opposed in California as in most
other states by lhe powerful teachers unions. They argue that innercity children will be hurt most if
parents are able 10 use vouchezs for
non-public schools.
But it is hard 10 see how poor
school children could be any worse
off than they are now. Drop·out
rates in most inner-city schools are
SO percent or higher. Academic
performance is well below the
nalional average. And, most alarming, school-related crime is ram. pant
.
All of thiS was duly noted in the
suit filed by the Los Angeles parents. Only 42 percent of Sllldents in
that city's school system gradlllle
from high school. Fewer than 5
percent of ninth 11rade students
score above lhe national average in
eithez English or mathelllltics. And

' city ·
in a recent year, Los An~eles
schools reported two kilhngs, 570
sexual assaults and 23,495 propezty
crimes.
This hardly is an environment ·
·;
conducive Ill obtaining a g09d education. And it is understandable
lhat the Los Angeles parents are
unwiUing Ill consign lheir children
to such wretched learning condi·
lions.
You would think that poor
inner-city parents who are largely
minority would be joined in tbeir
crusade for sehool vouchers by the
civil rights community. But civil
rights leaders ..have sold out the •
inner-city poor to the teachers
unions.
Jesse Jackson may be the most
hypocritical of the lot. He says that ,
the public schools should not be · ·
abandoned, while sending his kids
to privale schools. He would deny ·
, poor inner-city parents like Debra
Hackett 1nd Sus an Arviso the
school choice be has exercised for
his own children.
By forcing poor children to
attend bad schools, Slalea are guilty
of the unequal treatment that the
Supreme COun declared unconstitutional in Brown vs. Board of
Education. The way for statea to
comet this siiJJalloo is10 gumwnee

~~~~~~he~:~~io:t~;.-·-:·
·· ·
~~~
.
a eol•mnllt · ·
for The s.. Dleao Ualoii•Trl• '•
poor

!June.
. •'.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

· Frontal system bringing cool air, rain

Friday, M11y 14

'

.

~.

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thureday, May 13, 1993

·Quagmire in Quomerica

111 Court Street

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ex-lover...

IMa~sfiald l1o·I I·

Friday 6S· 7S.
More rain is likely for Ohio with
passage of the front" on Friday
nighL Showers and thuDderstorms
are expected 10 continue into Saturday.
Temperatures on the weekend
probably won' t climb out of the

60s.

this date at the Columbus weather. for lhundets10nns, while clear skies
station was 88 degrees in 1982 prevailed early today over the
while the record low was 35 in soggy central Plains.
1946. SunsetiOnight will be at 8:37
p.m. and sunris.: Friday at 6: 17 Hospital news
a.m.· Veterans Memorial
Around the nation
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
A sharp cold front collided with - None.
tropical air over the mid-Atlantic
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
states, producjng conditions pe!fect • Edward Whitlatch.

The record-high temperature for
Contiaued from page 1
him
am
added
that
be
was
good
10
IND.
~
ber two children.
McLane also asked her about
hez relationships with Mr. Drennen
and I..emaste.rs.
Mrs. Drennen said Lemasters
movecl
in shortly after she and ber
•
husband were married in Septem'
ber of 1990, and that she quit hav, ing sex wilh ber new husband soon
after; partly because sbli disagreed
with his srrong disciplining of hez
two children.
W.VA:
She said her affair with Lemasters stirted· shortly before the
events of Feb. 8, 1991, and lasted
unlit May or June of that year.
She said Mr. Drennen eventual. ty came to despise Lemasters.
'
McLane asked her if she still
~
'
had feelings for Mr. Drennen.
-~
"Yei," she replied.
~J
McLane pointed out that Mrs . .
Drennen
10ld Bureau of CrimWhite, Alfred. Cuulnabam Is tile - Ill BeverWIN CONTEST • Boblllt Wllite, ten, and
-----...;...--Weather----~ inallnv once
'
·
lnvestiptor John
ly Cunningham, Pomeroy, ud Jamea Cunllilla·
'
1·
•
Chuc:k CuDDlnJbam, riaht, were first 1nd ~·
South·Central Ohio
derstorms Saturday~ Lows 50-.55. Perry th~usbanddld~ot go
ham, also or Pomeroy. White and CU!!•ln_P•m
oad place wiDen, _respectively, I• the Account· Torught, mostly clear. Low 40- Highs in low 60s north to near 70 to wOr1i at midnight me night of the
Ing Skills Contest held receally at Hqcklllg Col- • bllth plan on atteading coUeae and ~ In
acc:ountlng. Also pktured with the studeats Is
45. Friday. mosdy sunny. High in south. A chance of showers Sun- killing bec•nse be had the flu.
lege. Rlloada Gibbs, a studeat at Meigs High
Clint
Mullens, accounting teac:ber at Eutem.
the low 70s.
day. Lows 4.5-55. Highs 55-65. Fair
111
award
of
honorable
men·
School,
received
"You never attempled to give
on Monday. Lows in the upper 30s Bill Lemasters an alibi?" McLane
Extended forecast:
tlon. White Is the daughter of Robert and J&gt;oy~
• asked.
• Saturday through M011clqy: · to low 40s; Highs SS-65. .
A chance of showers and thun·
- '"No," sbe responded.
During a recess in Mrs. Qren·
nen' s testimony, Judge Fred W.
Nine were fined and 13 others tion; Wendi Shreve, Cincinnati, ing; George Ramsey. Pomeroy,
Crow III on·ce again reminded
forfeited
bonds in the court of $44, speeding; J.eremy Roush, $42, driver seat belt violation;
jurors
that
their
decisions
in
the
.Georgianna L. Shumake Donna-Latbey
case are 10 be made on fact alone Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed Mon- Racine, $651 speeding, and $42, MicheUe Pratt. Alhens, $62, speedGeo~· L. (Goodnite) ShuDonna J. Lathey, 57, of llld not swayed by sympathy. ·
daynighL
seat belt violation; Pamela ing; and SIeven James, McArthur,
•
C01o died Lanpville. died WedDCidlly, May
were
Brian
Smith,
Mid·
Fined
$42, seat belt violation.
Doughit~, Reedsville, $68, speedOlrered
to
-tch
Jeffrey
"make, • of Arvada.
·•
12, 1993, at the Holze.r ~edical
dleport,
$63
and
costs,
disorderly
Jurors also heard testimony
,May 6, 1993 in Colorado.
Cen ~,._
She was born on Nov. ·8, 1929
ter,
.....
from ·a Rio Grande woman who manner; Donald C. Riffle, Jr.,
·in West Columbia. W.VL, daugbBorn on
. 15, 193.5 at Mid-' said sbe off~ 10 watch JeffreyS. Racine, $16 and costs, passenger
ter of the late n...-e and Maggie dlcport. lbc was the daughle[ of the Halley while his father went to seat belt violation; Aaron Hayes,
U~5
late Don Stewartllld Zelma Deem
Dexter, $43 and costs, stop sign
)ohnson.
·
Sle'Nart. She WIS a housewife and a Meigs County wilh ~mastq'S.
Tina Barcus satd slle saw violation; David Pauley, Pomeroy,
: Sbe attended Wahama High member of th8 ML Union Baptist
School. She worked at a Wal- Church and Harrisonville Chapter Lemasters at the Halley residence $313 and costs, destruction of
Meigs County's ftrsl "Show and an antique tractor pull in the infield
in Gallia County and he told her proputy, and '$63 and costs, litter-green's drug store in the Denver ~SS, OrderoftheEastan Star.
Swap"
will be held this weekend at 1 p.m. and a draft horse fun
'area for sevem ye~n.
.
Sbe is survived by her husband, that be and Halley weze going "on mg.
show at 2 p.m. Entertainment on
on
the
Rock
Springs Fairgrounds.
Ronnie Lee Dugan, Pomeroy,
; Also preceding her in death Charles A. Lathey, Langsville; two a run" 10 Meigs County.
the hill stage will begin at I p.m.
Activities
will
be
going
on
bOth
.were one brother and one sister. ·
ff and
"I offered 10 watch Jeffrey," she $63 and 90sts. failure. to comply
wilh
lhe Out of the Blue Band folSaturday
and
Sunday.
The
gates
; Survivors include two sons sons and daughters-in-law, Je
· said; but the elder Halley declined, with a coun order; Vicky Quillan,
'·(Phillip Otis Goodnite o f Point Patricia
Grate,
Columbus.
and
Gteg ~g 10 talte the boy wilh him.
will
open
on
both
days
at
8
a.m.
lowed
by the Chester United
Harrisonville, $63 and costs, disorand Eli71belh Lathey, Vinton; two
Methodist
Church Children's O!oir
Counsel for Lemaslers declined derly manner; Norma Boggess, and the admission charge is $2 a
Pleasant, W.Va. and Danny Lee brothers and aistera-in-law, Thomas
at
2:30
p.m
. and the Lickskillet
Pomeroy, $60 and costs consuming day.
Goodnile of Arvada), one grand· o. and Joan steWart. Rutland. and to cross-examine.
Band
at
4
p.m
.
. Featured in' the new commercial
alcohol under a,ge 21; Paul Boling,
· Cbain Ill evldeace
thild,. five sisters (Paul.ine Cun- Ralph E. and Charlotte Stewart,.
Several food stands will be open
Other witnesses weze also called · CharlesiOn, W. Va., $25 and costs, building and outside that building
ningham and Doris Roberts of Pomeroy, and a granddaughter,
on
both days and some special
will
be
a
craft
'
a
nd
antique
show
Slop
sign
violation.
in to verify the autheJ!ticily of
Mason, Lorna Johnson of West Kristina Gnlle, Columbus.
and
display
on
bpth
days.
Also
exllibits
have been planned by
MiddleBronson
Laudennilt,
Columbia, Ruth Cuber of Toledo
Besides her parents, she was state's evidence to be presented
.
organizations
in lhe county.
being
held
on
bbth
days
will
be
a
port, $63 and costs, expired license
and
Mary
Capehart
of preceded in ~th by two daugh- against Lemasters.
show
and
the
antique
tractor
The
event
is co-sponsored by
car
Moundsville. W.Va.), faur brolbezs ters. .
Witnesses included Meigs plates and $63 and costs, operating show.
seve_
r
al
organizations
including lhe
under
suspension.
·
(Earl and Dana Johnson of Mason,
1
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby,
,
Saturday's
events
include
qua&lt;·
Meigs
County
Fair
Board, the
Forfeiting
bonds
were
Amanda
. Don Johnson of West Columbia
Funeral services will be h'e d Game ProteciOr Keith Wood and
ter
lKirse
races
at
I
p.m.,
a
cat
show
Oldies
but
Goodies
Car
Club, the
Stobart,
Racine,
$63,
speeding;
and Alton Johnson of Chester, Saturday at I p.m. at tbe Ewing Meigs County Sheriff's Deputy
trophy
presentation
at
5
p.m.
and
a
Big
Bend
Farm
Antiques,
lhe Ohio
·
d
FuneralHome,
Pomeroy.
The
Rev.
Kathryn
Reitmiere,
Pomeroy,
$32,
·W. Va. ) an d severaI meces an
Joe Sayre will offiCiate and burial Isaac Mohlec. •
draft
horse
halter
show
at
6
p.m
.
.
Valley
Draft
Horse
and
Mule
AssoAnother witness, BCI Firearms passenger seat belt viol11tion, and
nephews.
will be in Miles Cemetery, Rut- .
Entertainment during the day on ciation, and lhe Meigs County Pio$80
pennitling
an
unlicensed
driver
The funeral will be Sat\ll'day at land. Friends may caU at the funer- Expezt Ronald Dye. who examined · Ill opell!le ber ~hicle; Ralph Hall, . the hill stage will include Middle- neer and His lOricai Society,
l p.m. at West Columbia Untied a1 home Friday from 5 to 8 p.m. the weapon allegedly used in lhe New Haven, W.Va., $60, failure to branch at noon, the Born Again
Camping locations are still
Methodist Chun:b. The Rev. Terry EaStern Star services will be held shOotings, identified the firearm as yield; Dennis Musser, Pomeroy Believezs at 2 p.m., Idle Time at 4 available at SIO a night or $18 for
;Aiveraz will OffiCiate. Burial
by Harrisonville ......,....at 7 p.m. a 12-gauge Winchesler Model 1400 $32, passenger seat belt violation; p.m. and the Midnighl Cloggers at both Friday and Saturday nights.
. ,will
.
serni-auiOmalic shotgun.
be at Suncrest C~melery 10 rOID1 Friday.
.
Water and electricity will be pro·Dye said the shotgun had a Kenneth Romine, Rutland, $67, no 6p.m.
Sunday's
feature
event
include
vided. Anyone interested is asked
insurance.
.
Pleasanl
I
•
, In lieu of fiOIVen,
':OIJiributions , lY.I. eJOS
lY.I.1 UnitS C!IP&amp;City of three sbells - two in
·to contact a fair board member.
Mary
King,
Pomeroy,
$60,
the magazine IIIII! one in the cham·
JIIIIY be made 10 HOJIIICC of Metro
b '
·
ba
- and was ~so unfunctional at improper bscking; Pelj!y Snyder,
Denver, 3955 E. Exposilion Ave. QnSWeT
No. 500, Denver, Colo 80209the time of his examination Middleport, $60, atop hght viola'5033.
Units of thMeed~elgs SCou~ty because of a bro~en hammer
: There wiU be no visitalion.
Emergency·
1cal crv1ce . Spring.
: · Arrangements are being handled responded to six calls for assimnce
Dye identified some 12-gauge
Moderate damage was incurred by Foglesong Funeral Home.
on Wednesday and early l'huraday shotgun wads found where the~- 10 two vehicles in an accident on
·ies were discovered. The waddmg, East Main Street, Pomeroy,
n
at
Dye explained 10 the jury, follows Wednesday evening.
Middleport unit went to
ey the shot pellets out of the bam:! for
According 10 Pomeroy police,
•
Street for Evelyn Murray. Sbe was a short dislance, but then falls from Rhonda Core, 27, of Pomeroy,
tax
transported 10 Holzer Medical Cen- t!te shot path due to its lighter pulled from the lot at the old MGM
ter.
ighL
City iniO the path of a car driven by
At 8:24 p.m; the Rutland and weaDye also said several number- Donald Barnett, 34. Point Pleasant.
• April30 was lhe last day for fil. Columbia TOWIIIhip Filii Respontwo shotgun ~llets were found at Barnett was traveling east on East
ing a 1992 fmal re111m and .lhe'fU'SI der went to County Road l for each
aeene. Although not the most Main; His vehicle llad moderate
"quarter for ~3 estimated income Edith Lyons. She was taken to common size of shot. pellets, Dye damage to the front driver's side.
~. aecordirig to Carol H. CantreU, O'Biennes Memorial Hospital.
~ administrator tor· Middleport • The Middlepnlt unit went 10 Art said tbey are not unusual. He said . The Core vehicle's damage was 10
some expended 16-gauge shotgun the left driver's door. There were
;VIIlago.
Lewis Street 11 8:25 p.m. for shells IRi a .22-caliber bullet found no injuries.
She encouraged those who have Jimmy Cuto wbo was taken to
ll the scenes could not have been
Barnett was cited for no operahi!ed 10 'file the forms 10 do so a8 Holzer Medical Center.
.
the
suspected
murder
tor's
license, and Core for failure to
fued.from
.IOOIJ as possible 10 avoid additional
At 9:08 p.m. the Olive Town- weapon.
yield
the right of way.
~nalties and interest. Failure 10
ship and Tuppcra Plainl flie departUpon
questioning
by
defense
file the village return·and pay the ments went to Rucker Road for a
GET A LOW
lUes due may result in a fine and · structure fue at Dennis Rucker's attorney William Eachus , Dye
PRICE TAG ON
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
jail aenlence, said CantreU. Addi·
explained that a shotgun would
446 4514
.,. ~ ..
Jior111 infonnation may.be obtained ~Racine unit, at 11:40' p.lil., gerMnle a considerable amount of
AMAYTAG!
)ly contacting the lax offJCC in Mid- went 10 Mile Hill Road for -Twila n:coU when fired but would not be
illeport village hall, ~-2827.
too difficult to rue with one hand
DEPENDABLE MAYTAG
Clark who was treated but not only.
.
transported.
WASHERS
Testimoa1 to continue
On
Thursday
at
3:06
a.m.
the
• Lasts longer, neecs tewer
The Diilly Sentinel
. Following Dye's testimony,
Middle~ u~ went 10 Brownell
.
:c ;:~a~rs aM costs less to
Crow recCS8ed the trial until 8:45
~ e ~1 c e
· Avenue for TOdd Ackerman. He a.m.
•lqday ll which lime testimony
• No . 1 Drelerretl brana·
Puhllohlll ....,. allomoaD, Monday
was taken to Ve1erans Memorial was.,
cattinue.
llll'lll&amp;lh rnu.,. 111 C...rt 8L~ ~-·
Hosoital.
. .
.
Ohio loy· lho Ohio \!tRoy noollohlow
After jurors were released,
~y/MaiiiiiiOclia
Inc., Pti&amp;41'0)',
Meigs announcements counsel for both sides in the case
Ohio 467811, I'll. 11111-aJM. 8econcl cla.
. . . . . paid •• PI;..... , Ohio.
Dlnaer ptaalled .
~ the entry of items as evidence
while withdrawing other
111e-. The Ao lot.od Pnoa, and lhe
A smorJubord dinner will be
Ohio No-por -.don. Nati.
beld May 22 II S p.m. at the Long items 111ch u the spent 16-gauge
Adftrdllar ~ntou... Branham
Boaoin Community Building. Sevshells.
No~ s.1... 733 Thlnl A.. nue.
era! meats, en'-• noodles. scaiThe prosecutioo is expecled 10 •
No•lWk.N"!'Yor\IOOtT.
~-.
finish
its testimony lllday. II is still
lo~~sten and drinks will be
· 1'0111'MA8TBR: Send " " ' - to
iiiCI
.
Colt
is
$5
for
adults
or
unknown
whethel or not Lemasters
The J)al1y loatlntl, 111 Cwn Ill..
$2•50..or c.WUI..,,
~""will tate the staad In his own
IU•-Io OHio 41178fl.

:ltEJ:=]73:J·

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---Pomeroy Court-news----

- --Area deaths--

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First 'Show and Swap' slated
this weekend at fairgrounds

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w IIIIIY Nmilin 114...., cll- 'lo The
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Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, May 13, 199S

..

Pear A

.•

In the NBA playoffs, ·

Knicks sting ·Hornets
NEW YORK (AP) - Palrick
Ewing did exactly what he ' s
expected to do, exactly what he did
many times while leading the New
Yorlc Knicks to a 60-win season.
What rookie Hubert Davis is
~xpected to do is practice hard and
sit on the. bench during games.
Luckily for the Knicks, Davis
didn't play that role Wednesday
night.
.
Ewing and Davis keyed a 19-6
run in the final 6 1/2 minutes of
regulation, then Ewin~ took over
with eight of his 34 po~nts in overtime as the Knicks beat Charlotte
105-101 for a 2-0 lead in the Eastern Conference semifmals.
Davis' seven points in the last
5:15 of the fourth period included a
three-pointer that tied the game 9393 with 44 seconds left. ·
" They double-teamed me with
his man, and he's a good shooter,
so he had to take it," Ewing said of

Davis' clutch three-pointer. "He
was wide open. I wasn't afraid to
pass to him. He's a good player or
he wouldn't be on the team. He
hasn't been playing much, but he
makes those baskets every day in

practice.n

·A wide-eyed Davis, who played
in just SO of 82 games this season,
smiled when he was told what
Ewing said
" I miss a lot of those in prac·
lice." Davis said.
The. Knicks trailed 87-74 with
6:49 left before starting their come'back. Before 'that, they missed 26
of their fllSt 31 shots in the second
half.
"It was an incredible, incredible, incredible win," Knicks coach
Pat Riley said. 'I've been in 150
playoff games and never saw anything like this. We were dead in the
water. Then things started to happen for us."

105~100

in OT; Sonics ground Rockets

Davis, put in the game because
of Doc Rivers ' back spasms,
appeared in just one of New Yodc" s
previous five playoff games. .
"I was never so nervous in my
lif~:," Davis said. "I wasn't expecting to play at all. I didn't want to
feel like it was aU on me. I didn't .
want to be the one to ruin everything by missing shots:" ·
Ewing took over in overtime.
His jumper broke the last tie, 99·
99, before Dell Curry missed a
three-pointer that went out-ofbounds with 14 seconds lefL
John Starks' two free throws
with 12 seconds remaining and
Ewing's dunk made it 105-99 with
3.4 seconds to go.
. "We just gave it away," Alan·
zo Mourning said. "It' s hard to
believe, but we just gave itaway.'
The best-of·Seven series now
moves to Charlotte Coliseum,
where the KniCks won bOth meet·
ings between the teams this !168SQn.
Game 3 is Friday night and Game 4
is Sunday.
Mourning scored 24 points for
the Hornets and Larry Johnson
added 16 despite a bruised right
leg. Charlotte again was hurt by
poor shooting from its outside
players, Kendall Gill and Curry,
who missed 19 of 29 shots.
Starks finished with 25 points
and Chari~ Oakley grabbed 16
rebounds for the Knicks.
Sonlcs 111, Rockets 100 '
Eddie Johnson hit from mid·
coun and thrust his arms high in
the air as if to say, "It's over."
For the Houston Rockets, it was.
"If you throw it up, anything
can happen," 1ohnaon said after his
momentum-building three-pointer
to end the third quarter helped the
Seattle SuperSonics to a 111-100
:victory Wedoesday .night in Gam.e
2 of the Western COnference semi·
final series.
"I was lucky ..l'd miss that nine
of the next 10 times. B,ut it was a
' backb(eaker. We really got rolling

in the ftrSt six minutes ot the fourth
The Rockets believe they need
quarter.
to win the next two games to get
Sam Perkins picked up where back into the series.
Johnson left off, hitting 'four three·
"We have to hold serve at home
pointers and scoring I5 of his 23 to stay alive,'' RockeIS coach Ru!)y
points in the. final quarter as the Tomjanovich said.
Sonics took a 2.0 lead in the bestThe Rockets led 75-70 after
.
of-seven Series.
Kenny Smith's fastbreak dunk with
The Seattle Coliseum crowd of 1:47 left"in the third quarter. Fmm
14,732 chanted "Eddie, Eddie, that point, tile Sanies went on a 19Eddie" when Johnson made his 2 run, getting the last·sevat points
47-footer.
of the third quarter and then
"We got confident after that outscoring Houston 12-2 in lhc fli'St
shot," Sanies coach George Karl · 3:59 of the fourth.
said. "It got the crowd into the
The Rockets admiaed"Johnson's
game."
·
shot was critical. ·
·.The chant mrned to "Sweep,
''A lot of people lost their comSweep, Sweep" after the Sonics posure," Tomjanovich said.
made it five victories in six games
.. W~en you're only down by
against Houston this season.
two pomts, you can't lose focus "
The next two games are Satur- Kenny Smith said. "But we did.' 1
day and Sunday at The Summit in
Gary Payton scored 22 and
Houston.
Michael Cage had 14 rebounds The Sonics hope to' get a split in both career playoff highs - for the
Texas and then wrap up die series the Sonics.
in Game 5 in Seattle on Tuesday ' The Sonics hit II of 16 shots in
night.
the fourth quarter in outscoring
"We're not in the driver's seat Houston 34·25. They tied an NBA
yet," Johnson said. "We have an record with nine three-pointers and
opportunity to get a game dQwn made their ftrSt l2 free throws.
there. If we can do that, we're in
Perldns, acquired ·in a February
control."
~ from the Los Angeles Lakers,
tl

NATIONAL LEAGUE
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.424
.406
.333

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J..co Jln&amp;elel 9, O!ica&amp;O 3 .
florida 10, M....,...t?
CINCINNATI 3. S111 Dieao 2. S in-

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Wednesday's scores
Olicqo 6, Sealde S
MiNu&gt;U S, Catifornia2

SEcnONAL WITH
RECLINING ENDS

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CLEVELAND 6, K..u City 2
Milwau.ltte.4. New Ytl'k I
Decroit ll, T......, I
Bodon 2, Baltim""' 0
Oak...SI,Texu7

Today's games
Kanp• City (Pichardo 2-1 ) &amp;l
CU!VELAND (M. Youn&amp; 0-0), 1:35

p.m.

s .. Fnnci.... a,Cdandol
P!illoddpba 4, Piwblr&amp;h I
St. Loooit 6, york

s

Today's games

San Dies• (l!i...S 0.1) at CINCIII·
NA11 (Scililey O.SJ. 12:3S p.m.
New Yort (Scbourek: 1-3) at SL.

M-

Lauil(Cannia' t-2),1 :3S P·"'·
San Pr..,.._ (Bud&lt;.. S.O) tl Coi-(Rutrm1·1),~p.m .

Plorida ( - 3-3) aa
4-1), 7:3S p.m.

(J. -

Friday's games
- &amp; h (Cooke 1· 1) a1 Chico&amp;o
(lWitoy 3-IJ. 3acl p.m.
New York (f..- 2·2) at Mm...t
(-2-4J.7C!Sp.m.
~ (Alltby 0.2) .. Clt!Cit!IIA11 (Plop 2-3). 7:lS p.m.
PhiloMI,m. (Mo1hollon4 4-3) at

Detroit (M. Leiter 1- 1) at Toronto
7,35 p.m.

(S~wart~Ml),

Friday's games
(Dol&gt;orty 3·2), 7:DS p.m.
T......, (Guzman 3-0) Olllew York
(Widtman 4.0), 7:30p.m.
Boston (Viola 4-2) at Minne tola
(Ericbon 1-4), I :QS p.m.
CI.EVEI.AIID (Ciort 1·2) 11 Mil·
waultce(Boddicl:"' 2-t), 8:0S pm.
01iclso (McDowell 6-1) 11. Teus
(Brown 4-1), 1,35 p.m.
Kanw City (i:one 0-S) at Calif..-.
nia (!An&amp;- 3· 1), IO,OS p.m.
Seattle (Hanson 5 -0) at Oakland
(Hilqu 1-3), IM5 p.m.
·

Floral Print

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... .... i - (JJnndoy 2-2) • s ..
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TEXAS R.llt!OERS: Pla&lt;:ed Nolan
Ryan, pilcha-, m lllo 15-&lt;lay disabled
list; - · • 10 M~y I. Retoiled !elf
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By JOE KAY
opening.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Kevin
" Who said I couldn ' t run?"
Mia:hell rounded second and head- said Mitchell, who's had two Cortied for lbird, and aU Jose Rijo could sone shots in his broken left foot.
think was: Somebody tackle him.
·Good thing he didn't ask for a
. ~ was Mitchell, playing on a show of hands. And it was a good
'lxoten left foot, trying to stretch a thing for Mitchell that tlte Padres
'hit with two out in the fifth inning, were a little slow getting the hall
the score tied and a storm moving back to the infiCld.
in. Why did he have to try for his
"Once the center fielder missed
lirsuriple in two years?
it, I thought I had a good chance t,o
' ...To be honest, I wanted to go Bet around to \llird,:' he ·said. "I
out there and stop him at second Just took a chance."
!hlise," Rijo said. .. I didli't think he
When Sabo lined a single to
·wasgoingtomakeiL Then, I want- center, only his second hit in 15
ed to go out and push him to third career at;bats off Benes, everyone
base."
on the Reds' bench knew they' d
Once Mitchell slid in safely, won .
everyone knew it was the CincinThe downpour began while
'nali Reds' nighLit was almost anti- Randy Milligan was at the plate
_cliimactic when Chris Sabo fol- striking out. The tarp came out as
19we4 with a single, and a down- soon as he missed strike three,
later turned it into a making it an·official game, and tlle
victory Wednesday umpires called it after I In. hours
San Diego.
of steady rain.
is a great. great beginning
It was perfect for the Reds, who
somethinJ!: good that •s going to have won three straight - match·
. happen to this dub," said Rijo (S- ing their longest winning streak of
1), who won his fourth straight the season - and six of eight
• ··~ ~ "Luck is on our side. All
"It shows this team is coming
we've got to do is help the luck.''
around, especially when we get
That's what Mitchell was trying clutch hits with two out," Mitchell
do in the fifth.
said
Things just keep going badly for
A storm was ·moving in as
Mitchell dug in - the dirt was the Padres, who have lost six of
up and the swirling wind eight on a road trip that ends today.
~::~:~ dance in the outfield. If Benes lost because of two bad
r1
made an. out, the score pitches: a fastball that Mitchell hit
L'::~ be tied 2-all when the rain for an RBI double in the ftrSt and a
":c
resulting in a tiJakeup game. hanging slider that he tripled off in
He drove a slider from Andy the fifth.
~:~~:(S~-~3) towards the gap in
"It was important for me to
field. Center rielder come out and stop the bleeding,
Bell made the mistake of and I just didn't 'et it done,"
diving for it instead of playing it Benes said. "I didn t get the out I
':,•511fe and holding Mitchell to a dou- needed to .get. I koew it was going
Ben ·missed, the ball went to to start pouring and that would be
:-- the wall, and Mitchell saw his

~

· 'With 6·2 win over Royals,

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the game.'·
Instead, he got beat again by
Mitchell, who has a .391 lifetime
avera~eagainsthim.

RiJO gave up five hits, including
solo homers by Fred McGriff and
Benes, anc;l struck out seven. Jeff
,

Gardner had one Of the hits,
extending his hitting streak to 14
games, tied ror the longest in the
Nation:U League this season.
Cincinnati's Bobby Kelly also
singled to keep his streak going at
14 games.

_
De~it's Tony Phillips eight days

earlter.
,
.
.
••I _don .t th1nk hts hand was
bc?thermg h1m. No one ';Old m~ th~~
h1s hand w~.s bothe~m~ him,
McRae sa;d. But he dtdn t l()(Jk as
good as _he h~d t!te last fe:ov ~mes
out He JUSt didn t make h1s pttches."
Four Kansas City relievers held
the Indians scoreless on one hit the
rest of the way, but the damage was
·done. One of the relievers was ·
Mark Gubicza, who had started 184
straight games since his last relief
appearance in 1986. He was avail·
able becau se his scheduled start
Saturday was rained out.
.
Jose Mesa (3-2) made the lndt·
ans' early lead stand up, allowing
two runs, one of them unearned,
and 10 hits in, his first complete
game _ and the Indians' second
-thisseason.
"Our bullpen needed a rest,"
Hargrove said.

1992 OLDS
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1988 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS

He still wore the brace on the

::: worked out Monday at the Ben.. gals' mini-camp. Bentley and his
.. coaches expect that he will be
- ready to go when the team opens
:· its training camp at Wilmington in
;:July.
"' He was glad to be womng out
Cat, the mini-camp, even though he
sprints and did llcxibility exer~ cises off by himself. He has spent
.. months of rehabilitation therapy
:" Slrellgtheoing the knee and regam~ ing its r.mge ot motion.
,.. "I'm just glad to be able to be
~out here with them. It means some~thing to me," Bentley said,. nod·
~ding toward Bengals players and
"'cmches. " It"s quile an ordell, to be
with you. I'd seen it happen
~ to other auys, but when it's you,
" ,on really sec how hard it is.''
:::: He hun bis right tnee in 1989
l:wbile with Bni&amp;Jo, but was able 10
,..
;..rec::oua wilboul suraery.
t:' Linebackers coach Mike
:lfaluehat said the Benaala arc
--counlinJ on~ Bendcy IB;k tci
signals and dinlct lbe Yl*"...
· ~the~ is working tnto us

1991NI$SAN

1992 DODGE
DYNASTY

A liVERS

"'
.;

'

BACK TO SECOND -San Diego's Bob Geren dives on his
stomach back to second base abead of tbe pickoff throw to Cin~in·
natl shortstop Barry Larkin during Wednesday night's game in
Cincinnati,' where tbe Reds woo 3·2 in a contest stopped by a down·
pour after five innings. (AP)

fior jilrSI tackle
B ent..ey walling
b b
k
to erase
ts a out new nee

Coacb Dave Shula said it is too
to say wbctber Bentley will
in blck bis lllr1iDJ job. Bentley
bUJ he knows he has 10 en iL
"Ray is 1 valuable guy who'a
~ a !0( of Cllpelie11ce playing in
~ lalgue, •• Shull-tlid.
- · "I tliint-lbe 1e1111 .-11 me or
.
r1t •
- lib IIC, becMI"' we ve
JIOl a lot of young guys. Someone

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By CHUCK MELVIN
year and· was hitting over-~ two ing six runs i? the ftrSt tv.:o innings.
.. a£VELAND (AP)- Even in weeks into the_season. But m the . Wayne. Kirby started~~ by scor; 1 slump, Carlos Baerga does things
14 games lf:l!dmg _up_to Wednes- mg a ru~ m the ftrSt, commg home
: an ordinary bitter Wlluld not.
day; he ~d e1ght hits m 51 at~· from thud as the Rorats caught
!:'' Baerga timed a chang~- up a .157· chp that has dropped h1s Albert Belle atte~ptmg to Steal
"'expertly and hit a two-run smgle average to, .260.
. • .
second. Kansas Cny manager Hal
; that capped a five-run sec~nd
. He Cli!JmS the slump 1sn t get- McRae sa1d he was hapW to trade
• inning Wednesday night sendmg ung to htm, but the numbers sug· a run for an out at that pomL
• the Cleveland Indians 'past the gest otherwise. He misplayed a
"Any time they want to run a
City Royals 6-2. It ended ground ball late in Wednesday's guy fmm third with a power hitter
· Z the Indians' fJVe -game losing game for his seventh error, the (Paul Sorrento) at the plate, we'll
streak..
.
most on the team.
take that," McRae said. ''Our
'
"That's a two-out base hit on a
"I'm just struggling right downside there is one~· We have
.· nasty change-up" Indians manager · now," Baerga said. "I want to pm- to score one run to wm the ~arne
• Mike Hargrove said. "He's that duce, because that's not me. As a . anyway, and it was very early. '
· kind of dutdl hittu, and has been hitter, you have to think positive all
Sorrento, howeve~, started the
~ all his life. He's going through a · the time. You .can't go up there Clev~land s~cond wllh a do~bl~.
tougb spell, but he'll come out of scared."
the f•n:t of f1ve Cleveland htts m
"
The Indians toOk control early the mrung that produced five. runs.
Bae~RBJtO( off to a fast start this against Mark Gardner (2-2), sear- Fel~x Fer~in had an RBI smgle, ,
r
• •
Jumor Oritz doubled home-a run,
and Kirby hit a sacrifice fl:,: ~fore
·
..1
Baerga's two-run smgle ftmshed
uOU
Gardner.
.
. .
Gardner was malnng hts fust
.
needs to tell them where to go,'' he a~nce since getting hit o_n the
..
ByJOHNNOLAN
pitchmg hand by a ball htt by
:_ CINCiNNATI (AP) - Ray said.
: Bcru!eY says he can't wait for that
"' rust tackle to dispel any doubts
!;'; about his recoVery from reconstruc·
~ live knee surgery that cost him
::; D.ost of last ~ with the Cincin... nali Benpls.
.
;: The Aengals signed Bentley .a
.. year ago as 1 Plan B free agellt
:;: after he had spent six years with
r the Buffalo Bills. He had estab~ lisbed himself as a leader on
:. defense when he was injured.
~ "I am looting forwatd ro that
:" first hiL Tt's been a long time since
•· J hit somebody," he said. "I got
:: hun in the secood game and had to
": sant-.1 a long time."
It was the fust time in a seven:: year NFL career that Bentley, 32,
...had 10 have surgery. He tore liga:., ments in bis left knee in the second
: game last yeat, against the Los
• Angeles Raiders, and missed the

..

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1992 MERCUFW
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;Indians put end to five-game losing streak

:au

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Reds beat Padres 3-2
before downpour

Csurgically rebuilt knee as he

......

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PHILADELPHiA (AP) - Ring
· historians rate it one of the gtatest
punches in the history of boxing, if
not the grcatesL
It was thrown by Rocky Mar·
ciano in tbe 13th round of his
heavyweight title fight against Jersey Joe Walcott in Philadelphia's
Municipal Stadium ..The date was
Sept. 2:1, 19S2.
'Less than a minute of the 13th
MINE! - In a meeting ol Georgetown alums, Charlotte center · mund had gone by when Man:iano,
the challenger, caugbt the wily
Alonzo Mournin&amp; (left) puBs down a rebound in front or New York
champion with a right hand that
po~tman Patrick Ewing dur1D11 Wednesday niaht's NBA Eastern
dropped Walcott to the canvas.
Conference semifiDal series game at New York's Madison Square
Walcott was counted out offtcially
Garden, wllere the Kalcks won 105-101 in overtime to lead the bestat 43 secOnds of the round.
ol-seven series 2-0. (AP)

s of 6 three-poirit lril!s and is
12 of 30 in in the playoffs.
'·' To build up my confidence
from three·point range, I' ve been
taking 40 or 50 shots a day from
different angles." Perkins said
Hakeem Olajuwon had 28
points on 13-cif-24 sbooting, 13
rebounds and five blocked shoes for ·
Houston, and Vernon Maxwell
scored 25 points, nine in the founb
quarter.
Olajuwon is confident the ROckets can tie the series in Houston.
..But we have to play SD18111:C,"
he said. "In the playoffs, the game
is all mental.''
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·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 6rThe Dally Sentinel

In the NHL playoffs,

Thursday,

.

.

'

May 13, 1993

Thursday, May 13, 1993

Community _Calendar

.

Islanders beat ~enguins 7-5 to drive series to seventh game

. By KEN RAPPOPORT
UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) The New Y orlc Is~ders sudden!y
have become the big~est story 10
the NHL playoffs. I! Isn't news to
thePiusburghPengwns, however.
" I never thought to talce them
lightly," Pittsburgh's Kevin
Stevens said. " They're tough. I
feared the Islanders all throughout
the year."
He had good reason. The
Jsl!lllders almost_ played the Pengums to a standsnll durmg the regUlllf season, wmrung three of seven
games, and now wo~jld appear_to
have them on the run 10 the Patnck
Division final.
The surprising Islanders outplayed the Penguins at their own
run-and-gun style in a 7-5 victory
Wednesday mght to send the bestof-seven .s~ries back to. Pittsbl!fgh
for a dec1dmg seventh game Fnday
night.
Who would have thouglll of
such a scenario? ·
The Islanders were expected to
~ffer little resistance to. the d~fend· mg ~tanley Cup champtons wtthout
leading scorer Pierre Turgeon, who
was injured in the fitSt-round victory over Washington.
But other play~rs have come to
the forefront, parncularly Ray Ferraro and and Steve Thomas. Ferraro scored his playoff-l~ding 12th
goal Wednesday mght, and
Thomas had two goals and two
ass!~ts. , .
. We re JUSt a bunch of guys
with a lot of heart and COUfllge and
I know we can beat this team,"

ThOmas said. "We've been patient
and gouen our chances and we'.ve
captitalized on those chances.
"The checking line has done a
tremendous job throughout the
series . It's going to be a gutwrenching Game 7."
Wednesday night, the Islanders
did some things that didn't show up
on the stat sheet - like the work
that pesky Darius Kasparaitis did
on superstar Mario Lemieux, the
league's leading scorer.
. Lemieux did score a goal, but
was hardly the. dominating figure
th~t controlled so many of the Pengums' games this season. At one
point, Kasparaitis upset the Pittsburgh star when he roughed him up
in the second period.
"I told Kasparaitis we were
together for a reason," said Rich
Pilon, Kasparaitis' mate on
defense. • 'With Lemieux and
Stevens, if you bang them enough,
you can throw them off their
game."
The Islanders, who finished in
third place, 32 points behind the
Penguins during the regular season,
also won a shoo tout over Pittsburgh 6-5 Saturday night in Game
4.
Wednesday night's game was
more of the same, except this one
started early.
·
Brad Dalgamo and Derek King
scored first-period goals for New .
York and Martin Straka had his
first of two for Pittsburgh as. the
Islanders took li 2-1 lead. When
Dalgarno scored 25 seconds into

OVDH&amp;MA posts'r esults
of draft horse field day
The Ohio Valley Draft f!orse ·
and Mule Association held its
annual field day May 2 off S.R. 7
near Chester, where the organizalion recognized winners in five different categories.
Glenn Tuttle, Terry Lewis,
. Lester Parker and Rodney Tuttle
came home the big winners.
Residents from Meigs, Gallia,
Athens and Was~ington County
were present as well as visitors
from Mason County in West Virginia.
·
Winners, listed categorically in
fl!St through fifth, wereTwo Horse
Walking Plow: Glenn Tuttle, Rodney Tuttle, Melvin Burton, Lester
Parker and Tim Bearhs; ThreeHorse Optional Plow: Glenn Tuttle,
Rooney Tuttle and Douglas Carr;
Two-Horse Sulky Plow: Terry
·.Lewis, Glenn Tuttle and Rodney
Tuttle; Log Skid: Rodney Tuttle,
Tim Bearhs, Cliuck WIUttington,
LesterParkerandEric Tuttle.
The Feed Run was won by
Lester Parker and helper ·Douglas

the game o~ .the. rebound of a shot
by Kaspar.uus, It marlted the fitSt
time in the series New Yorlc scored
first
·
Ferraro had said before the
game the Islanders would try to
reverse that trend in the series.
Lemieux tied the game at 1: 16
of the second Jieriod ou wrist shot
from the left circle before Feiraro
came back with a goal in the midst

ofafive-minutepowerplayhanded
the Islanders as the result of a highsticking penalty to Ron Francis.
Twenty-four seconds laler, the
Islanders got another two-minute
power play.. While the Islanders
dido 't score, the Penguins lost
momentum trying to kill all that
penalty time.
·~~~was the difference in the
game, if you take those seven min-

utesoutofthere," Pittsburgh coach
Scotty Bowman said.
·
Thomas gave the Islanders a 4-2
lead with another power-play goal,
scoring on a wraparound at 11:20.
The Penguins came back to tie
before the period ended on goals by
Straka and Stevens. But the
Islanders went ahead for good 5-4
at 5:42 of the third period when
Muilen scored from m front on a

By ED SCHUYLER Jr.
BALTIMORE {AP) - .· Trainer
Tom Bohannan hopes to follow a
second straight Kentucky Derby
disappointment with a second consecutive Preakness victory.
Bohannan trains the Loblolly
,Stable gelding Prairie Bayou, who
finished second as the favorite in
the Derby.
Prairie Bayou also could go off
the favorite in the Preakness on
Saturday at Pimlico despite the
presence of Derby winnru::~ea Hero
in a probable field of II three-yearolds.
·
Entries were to be taken Thursday morning.
Last year Bohannan saw LoblolJy's Pine Bluff finish flfth in the I
1/4-mile Derby, then win the I
3/16th-mile Preakness.
"I had a whole Jot of confidence
going into the Preakness with Pine
Bluff last year," Bohannan said
Wednesday, "and I'm very confident with PrairieBayou."
While he was disappointed with
the result, Bohannan said, "I was
very pleased with Prairie Bayou's
race in the Derby::

Prairie Bayou had to go around Memorial.
horses and wide in the stretch while
"He ran faster than Storm
Sea Hero charged along the rail for Tower ~winner of the Wood but
a 2 1/2-length victory at Churchill 16th in the Derby)," trainer Bruce
Downs on May I.
Levine said of Koluctoo Jimmy AI.
The Preakness will be the sev- "He didn't beat much, but he ran
enth start of a year for Prairie · fast. He 's growing into himself,
Bayou, who had a string of four and Pimlico is conducive to
straight stalces victories snapped in speed."
the Derby,.
"He's handled it very well,"
Bohannan said of the tough campaign. "I think his races have been
spaced properly. You might wonder if he was a filly or a highstrung colt. but he's a gelding and a
laid-back horse.
"He's run his race every time
-fast pace or slow."
Prairie Bayou, who would have
been the eighth gelding to win the
Derby and the first since 1929, will
try to become the sixth gelding to
.win the Preakness and the first
since Holiday in 1914. ·
Another gelding in the Preakness will be Koluctoo Jimmy AI,
whose third victory in five races
this year was in the 1 1/8-mile
Cahill Road .in his last start on
Apri117, the same day as the Wood

.FiVe other of the. 19 Derby
starters are expected to join Sea
Hero and Prauie Bayou in the
Preakness.
·
•
They are Wide Gale, third in the
Derby; Personal Hope, fourth;·
Union City, 15th; Rockamundo,
17th, and El Balcan, lSth_

'

POMEROY - Public dinner,
Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen-

;..

I

•

league spokesman, Chuckie Lester
was heard saying that "Luther was
cutting a demo record of how to
yell at football·and basketball officials" while in the countr}' music
capitaL
·
The seniors are still open for
more players to join the league. So
f;rr this year, 49 different seniors
have taken part in the league.
The top 20 players are Greene,
Lester, Winebrenner, Rice, Jim
Wikoff, George Burns, Don Wilson, Bill Hannum, Harold-Clark;
Lew Gilland, Jack Nugent. Sonny
Chandler, Bill Winebrenner, John
Ferguson, Carroll Norris, Jim
Capehart, Elmer Click, Keith
Woods, Luther Tucker and Earl
Johnson.

'

MIDDLEPORT - American
Legion Fenney Bennett Post 128
Ladies Auxiliary, Middleport. bake
sale Friday. Rummage sale Friday
and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Handmade cemetery arrangements
·available both days. All donations
appreciated. Tbese events will take
place in the park across from the

POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers, Saliinlay, Trinity
Church, Pomeroy, noon. Call 9923887 for reservation.
RACINE - Southern Junior
High Boosters, western round-up,
Saturday, 6 p.m., for sixth, seventh
·and eight graders.
BURLINGHAM- Burlingham
Modern Woodmen of Amer-iGa,
Saturday, 7 p.m. PotJuck dinner.
Recognition of mothers. Plan for
matching' fund dinner on Memorial
Day.

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange, fun
night ~d potluck supper Saturday,
6:30p.m.
·
RUTLAND - Dance, Rutland
American Legion Hall, Saturday, 9
p.m. -to I a.m. Music by Pure

·.

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The "Dial:!etes Update" series is
one of the American Diabetes
Association, Ohio Affiliate's CoOlmunity and Consumer Education
Programs designed to bring the
highest quality diabetes education
to persons in Ohio affected by diabetes.
The Pomeroy series is slated for
three consecutive Tuesday
evening
. s, June 8th, Ju_ne 15th and
June 22nd, from 6:30-8:30 p.m. at
· the Pomeroy Public Library - 200
East Second Street.
The registration fee for the
series is $30.00, which includes
books and materials. Each registrant may 11ring a family member or
friend at no additional ch~ge. Reg-

istration is limiled, so call early; a
limited number of scholarships for
the series is available.
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monitoring, complications, and
general hy~iene. Session n covers
meal planrung, exchanges, individual meal plans, and menus. Session
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reading, eating OQt and community
resources. _
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Hennessey, RN, CDE, and Robin
Roht, RD. For reltistration or additional informauon, contact the ·
American Diabetes Association at
(800) 232-6366.

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BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
t:::::::::::2J_
PHARMACISTS ·
To almpllly lha •urgary by which tloclora lnMrl amall lubM In lha

Announce birth
Kim and Charlie Barrett III
8J1S10unce the recent birth of their
son, Charles D. Barrett IV, at Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed six pounds
and five ounces and was 19 and
one-half inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Harold and Susie Stewart, Middleport. Maternal great-grand mothCr
is Emma Radford, Pomeroy
Paternal grandparents are
Charles and Kathy Barrett Jr., Rutland, and Ann Barrett, Rutland.
Paternal great-grandparents are
Charles and Florence Barrett Sr.,
Rutland, Katherine Weaver, Harrisonviiie, and Donald Weaver,
Harrisonville. .

- • of children who auftar chronJCI' alii' lnfec:llona, a New Jaraay
phyalclan haa lnvanled a tuba with-a aharp edge that cuta lte own
way In and producaa a hole luat the right alza. Mora tMIIng Ia
naaded.

•••

High blood preaaura may cauae deadening of brain tluua on the laft
aida and an lncraaaa In fluid on boU. aldae (e algn of tlaaua loaa),
ICCordlng to a report In Hypartenalon.

•••
Vllamln E may help alow alheroaclaroala, raaurch al the Unlveralty
of Tuaa Southern Medical Center auggeata.
.

. ..

'

New atudy at Creighton Meclcal School In Ohama ahows that women
keep growlllll bona even lift.- they reach full height, adding bona
maaa throughoul their 20a. Doctora recommend plenty of calcium 1o
help.

•

• ••
What'a normal? What'a a fever? New, mora accurate taatlng
lndlcatM lhat 98.6 Ia no hard-and·faat rule, and lhilt normal
temperatura for adulta rangaa from 116 to Ill dagraaa, hlgheat al the
end of the day.
·
.

Country Band. Public invited.
MIDDLEPORT · Bethel No. 62,
Middleport, International Order of
!ob's _Daughters, semi-annual
mspecuon, Saturday, 6 p.m., Middleport Masonic Temple. Reception afterwards honoring Dorsel
Thomas, grand junior custodian,
and Beth Clark, grand bethel
recorder. Queen Kim Mattox will
preside.

•••

Whafa new in meclclne? We keep up with currant .vente, the batter.
Ia urva you al . ,
•

5WI5HEP LDH5E

•

Pharmacy

Ko.-h lloCIIflaugll, A. PH. . ~ Alllll, R. Ph.
Ronald Homing, R. Ph.
llltu Sot. 1:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Sllnd.ly 10:00 a.m. lo 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 112-21&amp;5
E.lloln
F - y S.rvlc:e
Pomoroy, OH.
Open W- Nlghto tN I

SUNDAf
MIDDLEPORT - American
Legion Fenney Bennett Ladies
Auxiliary, Disttict Girls State Tea
and orientation,. Sunday, 2 p.m.,
legion annex. All delegates and
alternates must auend.

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creditcard with m

PHARMACY
TOPICS

CHARLES D. BARRETT IV

Sound quality that rivals

interest every day. "

Stitt, both of Crown Citr (magna
cpm laude B.S. in electncal engineenng and M.S., respectively),
Joy L. Swain, Reedsville (associate
in applied science), Tamara L.
Theiss, Syracuse (B.S., pharmacy)
Steven E. Trussell, Long Botto~
· (associate in applied science) and
Charles D. Young II, Bidwell
(B.S ., food science).

Diabetes update series offered

ance wiD earn you_

THAT WILL ALWAYS

Eight students from Gallia and
Meigs Counties were among the
1.873 people receiving undergradu·
3te and graduate degrees from Ohio
State University.
They were Sherry Kay Queen,
Crown City (B.S., food science),
Jeffrey Bernard Shrivers, MiddlePO!"! (master .of !!flS.), Glenda~S!dnner, Gall1pohs (master of sci·
ence), Richard P. l!.n~ St~ven W.

FOUR GENERATIONS, Pictured Is tbe four generation family or Charles Barrett Sr., Charles Jr. is holding Charles IV and
Charles, m.

The ~hecking bal-

GIVE THE GIFf

.

,

... H3 -566

Uses just one microcassene because your outgoing
message is recorded on a computer chip! Voice stamp

lets you know when each message is received. Phone
leatures 211-memory speed-dialing. For desk or wall.
Ret- 111.11 •43-m

,

MIG"DNTA'

, . , . . J b llllllftrtlw'
• Measures ACIOC vottage
and resistance

• Radio Shack teSiers are
famous for high accuracy

$500 Rebate To Qualified
Buyers on the energy saving
·Lennox Dimension• heat pump.

and excellent value
Reg. , ._.. 122· 214

Theres never been a better ttme to purchase a highefhctency Lennox system. Energx swings. Reliable
performance. And your choice of a big rebate or 0%
financing Add it all up , for the
best chmce in home comfort,
· :·.o:"'·
Lennox has you covered.
~
So call your quality Lennox
I
dealer today.

!IJl!.N~~

.... --"'"''"'_ ,
•

. . $ylllrn wllh ~ VGA color monllor.

J Qllfla: . Add ,.,....;c digitll•terto
tound 1 0 - mulltrMdlll ~-. 126·1081
7

. . . . .

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT
HEATING &amp; COOLING
Whatever it take
,
B.w
MemborFDJC

W•

~
.
C 1993BANC ONE CORPORATION 'CredilaervicesondTHEONEitCard sub1~ 10appr011a1.

POMEROY
. '\•

ter, Thursday, S-6 p;m. Cost is $4 annex on Milf Street.
per person. The Classics will perform. Free will offering. Public
TUPPE~S PLAINS - Tuppers
invited.
.
Plains VFW Post No. 9053, Ladies
,
· · · ·-1\:iiltiliary, round and square' dance,
. TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- Friday, 8-11:30 p:m. Musit by CJ
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 and Country Gentlemen. Red Carr
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at and Melvin Cross, callers. Public
the post home. Officers will be invited.
installed.
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
REEDS VILLE - Special meet- Meigs Chapter NSDAR meets Friing for all Eastern semors and their day, 1:30 p.m., Meias County
parents Thursday 7:30 p.m. high Museum, Pomeroy. Historical proschool cafeteria regarding senior . gram ~ Mary K. Yost, hosless.
class ttip.
POM)&gt;ROY - Meigs CooperaCHESTER - Shade River Lodge tive Parish, garden seed packets
No. 453 F&amp;AM, Thursday, 8 p.m., available, Friday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
•
Cbester Masonic Hall. Refresh- unlimited supply.
ments served.
LONG BOTTOM · Faith Full
Gospel
Church, Long Bottom,
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
hymn
sing,
Friday, 7 p.m., Dailey ·
Springs Grange meets Thursday, 8
p.m. Racine Grange will visit.
· Family and other local singers. Fellowship follows.
CHESTER - Ohio Valley Draft .
Horse and Mule Association meets
SATURDAY
Thursday 7:30p.m. Chester VolunNITRO, W.VA. - Liberty
teer Fire Department. New mem- Mountaineers, Saturday. Cin-San
bers welcome ..
. Theatre, Nitro, W.Va.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT • American
Legion Fenney Bennett Post 128
Ladies Auxiliary, Middleport,
annual poppy sale Friday and Saturday.

'.

Eight get degrees from Ohio State.

POMEROY • Royal Oak Dance
Club, dance, Saturday, 8-11 p.m.,
Royal Oak Resort Music by Montage.
·

virtually anywhere lit the •

Ji

POMEROY - Prec~tor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Stgma Phi
Sorority. Thursday, 7:30p .m.,
horne of Charlotte Elberfeld. Installation of officers.
. POMEROY - Pomeroy AA
Group, Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred
Hean Catholic Church. Call 9925763 for information.

-

992·3785

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP Free community immunization
clinic, Columbia Township Fire
Department, Thursday, 9-11 a.m.,
ages two months thrmrgh kindergarten age. Bring child's immu, nization record.
HARRISONVILLE. - Free community immuniution clinic, Scipio
Township Fire Department, Thursday, l-3 p.m. age two months
through kmdergarten age. Bring
child's immunization record.

Meigs men _win races
.at Vinton Raceway
Meigs Countians took home the
lion's share of the purse last Sunday at Vinton Raceway in Vinton
where Meigs County drivers wo~
five of the six races held.
In the V-8 Pure Stocks Todd .
Smith of Pomeroy claimed the vic. tory in the Anderson's Furniture
car, while B~ Bailey of Reedsville
was second m the Barber's Auto
Parts car. R1ck Blake of Reedsville
was third. ·
Hears went to Smith and Bailey.
In the four&lt;ylinder Pure Stocks,
Delben Roush of Reedsville came
home the winner over Bobby Bailey ,and John Flora of Southside,
W.VL
·
Last week, Brian Bailey of
Reedsville brought home the winner's trophy.
.
Racina will re1ume Sunday at
Vinton RaCeway at I p.m.

SYRACUSE - Revival at Syracuse Mission Church with Saul
McGuire, evangelist. Services 7
p.m. nightly, 6 p.m. Sunday. Rev.
Mike Thompson invites everyone.

~

Mariemont's Brzezinski eyes
chances at sprints, long jump
CINCINNATI (AP) - . The
blast from the starter's gun and the
sound of feet pounding down the
track brought a smile to Larry
Brzezinski's face.
· "How's Shane doing?" he
asked as the roar from the crowd at
Anderson High School's Brown
Stadium -,grew even louder at a
recent meet. "Did Shane win the ·
race or was he second?' '
When informed that Shane
Brzezinski, a sprinter and long
jump specialist from Mariemont
High School, had finished second
in. the I 00-meter dash, Larry
Brzezinski broke into a wild cheer.
"I'm proud of my boy," he
said. "I've never seen him run or
jump but I know he's the type of
kid who will always do well in
sports.' '
Born blind. Larry Brzezinski
occasionally attends track meets in
order to share 'the thrill of victory
with his adopted son.
·
Brzezinski's wife, Dianne, also
is legally blind. But she can see
images and often infonns her husband of Shane's position during the
I00- and 200-meter sprints.
"A 16t of people know we're
blind aild they tell us what's going
on," Dianrie Brzezinski said.
"Shane is a God-given blessing to
us and has been' an easy child to
raise.''
,
A siate-qualifier in the long
jump and 200 meters last' year,
Brzezinski became even more visi-

•

Greene team first in Riverside
Senior Men's League action

Carr, Tim Bearhs and Lester Parker
were second, Rodney Tuttle and
Eric Tuttle third and Chuck Whit' Clark Greene of Hurricane,
tington and helper Melvin Burton
fourth.
West Virginia jumped into the lead
Judging for the day's events was of the Riverside Senior Men's
conducted by Louie Arnold. Bren- League after the first month of play
da Tuttle was the announcer. Con- at the Riverside Golf Course in
cessions were provided by the Mason.
Eastern Local Band Boosers. Halpreene has amassed a total of
ters were given to the winners in 36 pohits to lead Chuckie Leslel' of
place of trophies. The halters and Evans, W .V~ and.Dana Winebren:
events were sponsored by various ner of Syracuse. That duo is tied
for second with 30.5 points.
business and patrons in the area.
Door prize winners were Pam Greene:s team shot 10 under par on
Parker, Charlie Shain, Sue Fry, Tuesday to post him a first place
John Riebel, Tim Bearhs, Bob Har- position. Greene's team consisted
ris, Jessie Shain, Douglas Carr, of Harley Rice of Reedsville,
Betty Watson, Bob Murrey, John Harold Lohse of Pomeroy and
Rose, Brian Keirns, Rubal Cald- Harold Clark of Ravenswood,
W.Va. .
.
well and Dave Powers.
The team krrCicked in several
The next Ohio Valley Draft
Horse and Mule Assoctation meet- long putts to shoot tl!eir winning
ing will be held today at 7:30p.m. .score.
, "Whispering Roy" Crawford of
at the Chester Volunteer Fire
Millwood,
W.Va. made his 1993
Department. New members are
· debut after the winter in_Titusville,
welcome.
·
Florida and immediately lodged a
protest on the Greene team, saying
that there was no way Greene could
have improved that much. Milt
Maxwell of Chester also made his
1993 debut after spending the winter
with his wife Marge in Florida.
ble by winning the 100, 200 and
Luther
Tueker had to miss this
long jump at the Princeton lnvitaweek's
action
after visiting friends
tional this season against many of
in
NashviUe,
Tenn.
According to a
Cincinnati's finest.

,
THURSDAY
ANTIQUITY • Tent revival, 7
p.m., Faith Fellowship Crusade for
Christ, Antiquity, Brother Hurest
Prater. Everyone welcome.
•
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. Singing by the Lake, Krodel Parle,
Point Pleasant; W.Va., 7 p.m.
nightly, through Sunday. Ed Craw.ford, Conrad Cook and Calvary
Echoes. Paul Chapman will emcee.
Call304-675-1383 for infonnation.

feed from Thomas on the right .
side. Stevens scored for Pittsburgh
before Uwe Krupp wrapped it up
with an empty-netter with 18 seconds left.
"Give the Islanders credit"
Stevens said. "They battled Ita'rd
and are a good hockey team. We're always trying and trying in this
building, but it seems we can never·
get ahead here."

Prairie
Bayou slated as fave fqr Saturday's Preakness
.
.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

.

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_.._ __ ..__...__.....,..

391 ....._. Seco•d•MWdllport, OH.

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ends-ling.
ShJUb 1nd Tree
Trimmlng 'A R•nowl

IWOIIIIU PIICU

CIU IIC
992·7204or
7~2·2223 .

FFEE ESTIMATES

.t/1111311 mo.

, ====~1

.

To place a~ ad

a j
!I lo for ....,.. aflor lint da7 (olaoek
(or ........ ftnt cla7 ... , _ ill,apw~ Call W-I.GO P·••
clay alter ,.Wk•d M ..U OOI"'ectaoa
• Ado .... · - .......... ow~- .....
Cardol......... . HappJAdo
Ia M-ortaa
Yard Soloo
• A d· Ulwcl od•wd
t ploooclla tho Caapollo O.U,
T..U.... (aoopt Claooillod llioplay, B . - Card or Lop)
N~) will aloo appear io ... Polat ....._. R al tor llllil
.... o.u,
_18,000 .._
0

Call992-2156
MoN.

thru FR1. 8u1.-SP.M. - SAT.fl-;12
CLOSED SUNDAY

pPUCIES
HONORED • As a J1!1rt ol NaUooal Nui'RS
Week, May 6-11, tllree "auraes of tile year"
were lloaored at Veteraaa Memorlalllolpltlllln
Pomeroy Tuesday llfteraoaa. ne tllree ~re
· seleded by popular voCe • by members of tile ·
IICISpital nursing staff. Tile t11ree llooorees were
pr-•ted plaques ud t8cll wiD receive ooe ·rree
meal a moatll at tile llolpltal c:al'eterll over tile
aext year. Tllelr JUilDell llllve been pllted on a
plaque In tile bospital lobby. Pictured during

•

tile preseatation eeremooy from the left are
Director of Nursing Rlloada Dailey, Hospital
Administrator Scott Lucas, Sllaroa Mlellael,
registered aune ol tile ,ear; Ellajaue MeDBDiel,
licensed pradkal nurse ol tile year, and Brenda
CuaDIDgllpl, QtSeS aide of tile year. Relresllmeall were served by tile nutritioll departmeat
ud al members of tile Jiarsiag staff atteDdlng
received souvealr haadle jugs.

·Medicare trust.fund may be exhausted
by 1999 unless some changes are made
Social Security's combined lnJSt
funds are solvent well into the 21st
century, but the primJIY Medicare
lnJSt fund is likely to be exhausled
in 1999 unless changes are made,
the trustees of the programs reponed. :,
"fhese new estimates show a
significant worsening in the economic health of the Medicare program; said Health and Human Services Secretary Donna E. Shalala.
"They reflect many of the problems
that we see across the boanl in our
health care system today, and they
are another demonstration of the
need for system-wide change."
The. estimates are contained in
the annual reports of the Social
Security and Medicare Boards of
Trustees. The reports contain actuarial estimates or the fmancial status of the 4 Social Security and
Medicare trust funds: Social Secu. rity' s Old Age an~ Survivors Insur-

ance (OASi:&gt;I)"trust fund and its
Disability Insurance (DI) trust
fund; and Medicare's Hospital
Insurance and Supplementary Medical Insurance trust funds.
The tr.ustees report that the
. OASDI pro~ over the next 25
years is not m "close actuarial balance" because of projected declines
in the combined lnJSt funds in later
years. However, they project the
combined funds will have enough
income to pay benefits without any
changes in current law (tax rates of
benefit structure) for about 43
years. They recommend continued
study of ways to address the long
term deficit and that options for
future action will be develOped
The disability fund l'aces a
short-term deficit that requires
immediate action. It also faces a
long-term deficit. Based on the
trustees" estimates, the DI fund
would be exhliusted in 1995 undez
.

the current allocation of the 6.2
percent OASDI tax rate- 5.6 percent for OASI and 0.6 percent for
DI for each employees and
employers.
During the history of the Social
Security program, inadequate
assets in either fund have frequently been remedied by reallocating
part of the tax rates l'rom the more
adequately fmanced fund. This has
provided additional income from
the inadequate fund without requiring an increase in the ovemll Social
Security tax rate. Therefore the
trustees are recommending that a
payroll tax reallocation should be
legislated immediately to remedy
the shortrange fmaocial shonfaU in
the Disability Insurance fund. Taking such action would not jeopardize the financial solvency of the
OAS I. The trustees also urged
Consress to talce action to control
Medicare program costs.

I

A phone call would have meant a great deal
De.- Au !•aden: My bu~
and I bad been manied lea ibu a
. year wileD his ex-wife~ 10
aend his two childreD to Jive wid! Ul
if she didn't &amp;et cbild-luppon
10011ey. SiDce we bad decided DOl to
have any children whell we married.
we opted to iDCreue tbe child
support nther than take custody.
Over the years, tbe ex-wife
n:peaiiJdly applied for employment
in other statel and was finally ·
successful When she moved, she
asked us to lake the kids, and we
felt the~ was rio way we could
refuse. or &lt;lOUtiC. the kids did not
Wlllllto live with US, and there were
maoy pl!lblc:nis that caneed a r.ir
imounl or llreiS in our nuwriage.
W"llh a lot ol wodt and IIIIIIY praym,
we made iL The kids ue almost out
of college now, and ~ can flll81ly
~the light It the end of the tunnel.
I would like to make an appealiO
aU the diYOited motben who, for
whatever rea1011, have assigned their
parenlll Jesponsibilitiel 10 anotbct
WOJIBI, Plelle, occasionally write a
note, buy a card or make a telqlhone
call and tell tbat woman you
awreciate ba' efforts and the sacrifiCCS she is making. Mlet all, sire is
the one doing the job you signed on

for.

Any divorced mother who
believes her remarried ex-husband
has assumed the bulk of parental
responsibility is kidding hmelf. It's
his wife who does dlis. How ironic
that alia' having made the decision

There is

Ann

0

agreat deal of titedom in

•

•

111111

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..........

Haun:T-.,Wod.,Fd.
- · ..... Cloaetl

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

Bl'LLETI:\ B&lt;&gt;ARD
BOARD

t

.

•TRUCKING

D. A. BOSTON

-FIREWOOD

1MIIua,ll'ltAw.

Bailey Hunter, Sr., Latua NOTICE OF CLAIMANTS
Jane RMCI Hunt.r, -g.eret
lame Gerrell and Llllibua OF THE STABIUZATION
Grabel Gar18tt
RESERVE FUND
You are hereby noUII..S Purauant to Section ·
that you have bean nam..S 3701.• of h Ohio R8VIud
DEADLINE
Reapondenta In a legal Coda and Section 33 of
Bulun..
v
0
action en.tltllld Jannllar L. Amended Senate Bill No.
4:30 ·P.• .. Dl•• IEF RE
Shaata,,,, ~lnlatratrlx· ol .201S .of. Itt! filth GMaral · ,,
the Eatale Of Guy E. Huntar, Mllmbly (Section 33j, the. 4
Pu.LICIIION
Docoaed, va. The Eatata ol remaining moneya of the
-.,.,;-;::=~=.;;;;;,;;:=~~--t DIIVId G. Hunter, Dacaued, Steblllzatlon RaaJVa FuiMI
PRICE REDUCED! ·
et al. Thli action hu .._, (SRF) will. be clatrlbutad to
Tho price has been rac:tuco&lt;l to $611,!100 ond
alllgn..S Caaa No. 28,803 the hoapltala and lnclvldual
owner ttnandng ol up to 80% ol pun:haso
and Ia· pending In the phyolcl.,• on whOIIa behalf
amouat may be ~tor """lying pot'·
Common Pleaa court ol the monep w...., originally
.son to buy very nlco homo on 3)1....., tn
Melga County, Ohio, contributed. Each paraon
RIICine. 4 BR; 3 blllls, 2 _ . , rented 1
Probate Dlvlalon,' Second . having a claim qalnat the
BR apt. P...,..ay- 4,800 oq. ft. tann
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio SRF muat prMMt a dalm to
bldg.
45768.
_
the Superintendant of
COl 61ol-992·7104 t..The obJect of the Petition lneuranca (Superintendant)
le to determine the halra, within 180 daya altar the
next of kin lind pareone Superintendant compllaa
entiUad
to the alate ol Guy with the atatulory notice
TURKEY SHOOT
E. Hunter, Daceuacl, In requirement contained In
ordar that a clatrlbullon 01 Section 33. Clalmanta of the
Gallia Co. Guri Club
aoid utata _,be llllde.
SRF m.,. p,_ta delm to
You
ara
ltarllby
required
the lul*intandant by fully
May 16, 1993
to anawar the- Petition '!Ompletlng, . and promptly
within twenty-eight (2l) retuinlng, tho SRI' Proof of
Stationary Shool1 0:00 a.m.
daye altar the Ia at Claim Form. Clalmanta m.,.
· Trap Shoot Afternoon
publication of thla notice raqueat the SRF Proof of
wh'oc h w111 b• pu bl lahacl Superintendent
Claim Form by writing
the
BEHIND SPRING VALLEY
at to
Ohio
once a weak lor alx (I) Stabilization RaaJVe Fund.
OFF OLD RT. 35
aucceulva weeb. The IMI
publication wYI be made on P. 0. Box 267112,
Call 446-6209
the ~nd day of June, 1 ~, Columbua, Ohio 43226·
and the twenty-elglil (2a) 7112. a·e aclvlaacl that any
For More lnfonnalion
day a for anewerlng .will claim preaented to the
~=::::7.:=~~r:=====~~ caee
commence
on that
date. to
In Superintendent
which Ia
of your
failure
poatrnark..S alter November
Publl Not
anower or otharwlaa 12, 11113 ahall be foravar
C
Ice
PubliC Notice
rapond 11 requlr..S by the barrOd •• to al partlaa, Mid
_.....:....:::..:.:~:..:.;.:~- Ohio Rulaa ol Civil no payment ehall be made

.oozEAS
.SACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER

• aUGHT HAUUNQ

Tloun. ..... " . . pm

PubliC Notice

.PubliC Notice

SHRUB TREE
IIIMaad ··
REMOVAL

Rtpqlr

, BILl SlACK
992-2269

..........
=:.
..........

USED ltAJLIOAD DES

FIDimMrU

WATER a SEWER
UHES
,BASEMENTS a ·
HOIIESII'ES
HAUUNG: LliniiiiiiiiJIDicme,•

IISSILL &amp; IURII
COIISTIUCDON

EICAYAnN&amp;

Admlnlelnltrlx
'oflheEa-ol

·Guy E. Hun•, Den=ed,
Patltlonar

Dtrt•ed, etiL,

Rnpondonta
CASE NO. 28,803

Procedure, judgment by

Docka113 " - 285
NOTICE BY N01fFICATlON
10: The Unknown Haira

default wl.ll be r•daracl
agalnat you lor ·the relief
dem11ndad In the Pelltlon. ·
Datad thla 23rd day 01
April, 1893.
Roberi E Bu""
· '""'
Probata Judge
Lena K. N•·"'r....a
~-~ ·
.., --. .....,,.
28~~) 5, 12, Ill, 28;

Landers

l

CLUB

IN POMEROY
B:U p.m.

LAND a fARING

Speclaol Eerly Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 005t·32

THE BOOK
BARN

lHP ·11 HP

Htwcri L Wtllesel

FIIIAIICIIG AYAIWIE .

ROOFING

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downapouts
Gutter CINnlng
Painting

SW.IIIIILCC..7l
111&amp;1111, 01.

742-2455 1+13

FlEE ESTIMATES

949·2168
3-1&amp;-IIS-tfn

.....

a..ckM .. IU11 ..

J&amp;'
IMPIOYEMENTS

o£010 111111115

. ....

a111151KUT1ll5

, _ FuuJcll1a te

···~~··-••'IL
''-'WWI l"IW'
MillS
.EQUIP-NT

.._ e.tln ill I,

........ ,c..
01.

Loweo.IL
Woilc au-e-:1

614-949·2335 •
614-593·5010

.....~-

Gall.. :•:lad7 ......
luewe? 'an11arlle?
Cllat:ll out ay

,....Int.

· "lnsplrationa"
. Flower Shop
'

Clean Out Your Closat1.Basament,
or Garaga ... And Turn 1our Unusad
or Unwantad Artlclaslnto CASH With A

'""'171

1171.21111St.·
IIWtllepart, Ohio

T-Shirta • Hatl • Uniforms
Vtrlefy ol T.Shirt Colort and l.elterlng Sty I•.

101111 '

.....frL 10:110·2.00

........ _

ClOSEI niiSIAY

992·3577

24 HR. EMERGENCY SERVICE

Quality
·Stone Co•.

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614·992· ·
6637
St. lt•.7 .

New Wiring, Rewiring,

Trouble·Shooting
COMMIRCIM &amp; HSIDENTIAL

Licensed, Insured &amp; Bonded
FREE ESTIMATES

(6·14) 742·2345

Chsltire,.

,. HAULING

JOE II.SAYRE
SAYlE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

(614)992-7878

mo.

4-22·'13-1

MARl TECH
INDUSTRIES .

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
36970 Bal Rva Ropd
Pomeroy, Ollio

Reasoaaltlt
Rates

SIZED LIMESTONE

992·3470
OWNER:
Jeff W"Kkersham
3-11-93

3-4-93-1

Announcemonts

HAULING
SERVIa
36970 .......
·Pa•rroy, OWo

SIZm LIMESTONE

992·3470
OWIIR:
Jell W1cbnllt.

ENRRPRISES
Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
Paint Mobile
Homes and •
Aluminum Siding ..
Washing

FIEIImMAns

915·4111

3 Announcements
HEY OUYSIII ~ G1rta wan:
To Taill To Yout 1-»:s:lltl ·
Ext. 117!18 ~- Pw lltn.lluat ..
11 Yaw. Unlofaor Ca. (1112) 131·
GIStS.

Auto-Rentals
Spriii8T1Jne
Speefal

W.AiooHM
7&amp;

p -. .

RODGERS 1-1 RIDE

~LDH::;;E;;-,LY:;;;?-;:N,-,ood""t""o""'HMr--,A'""Sof'"'ft­
-lna Volco? '• 1--.oni
: Ext. I!G2:, ~~~ Pw IIIIo. a. 11 Yaw. Un- Co. - CIIS11.
i

614 446-0 736

Giveaway

Steel Fabrication
'
and Welding ·

MARTECH INDUSTRIES
(614) 992-7878
FAX (614) 992.-7878

-

••a and Ave.

201 Narlll

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YUU l:'ft:H UIIEMEJ OF OWNitQIUIINEII? - Thla bualneu Ia equipped with

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iiiiiCIIIIII, 4 • •,.. ~ :nachlna,
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•sELL BUILDERS, INC. ·

a-

New Homes • VInyl Siding

New Gara~ • Replacement Windows

..DOJ,.EPORT - Hamllto:t ..,_. - Looking lor a nioa

(NOTE: 15 WORD UMIT AND YOUR SEWNG PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, THIS DOES NOT APPLYTOYARDSALES)
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MAIL TO:

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·f[fie tJJai[y Sentine[

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111 Court Street, Pomeroy, .OH 45769

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' - io loMI, an a qplet - l Thla 3 ~. 1'/,
aav home Ia lull tho one. It hu a lot of ho:dwaod loon,

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL _;.d'llESIDENTIAL .
FREE ESTIMATES

fi~, 2 luiiNolha, 4 poftlhoa. 8lta an 1 - r lot and
tho llclmtla ... oaNd lor.
.... Mil

c

614·992·7643

IIAU. RUN ROAD - M by
Mil In 'tho counby
dncrlballllt ha:M wllh 3 ba_,a, '-livinG - ·
dining - · t1tt1no on .81110~. Has ., older log houM
110- tho t'OIId and Glhorbuldnga.
.
S17,1011.

(leS....,c.llsl

RUTUIID - I!Wn llreel - A viiOMI.Iat wilt ollf
.. g and .... avdlllle. Nee lor. mobla ha:M, elc.

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POP AOf -Old lltHn Aw. ·'IWo big lola with •

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dol
IIIIa fda wilt 3 bad:_.., a bllha, flmlr - •
and • new IN:It jlo:ah. KIIDhon Ia
dllt •at-. ._ ..nl air, and 1 WDiar
IGftatoer. AI In gaod,oaucllan.
ate,

io•iiria • ,_

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TO PERFORM • Brad and Dawa Stahl wtll perform SuDday
at New Life Coveaant Cburcb of God Ia Chester. Tbey wtll be
ministering Ia both tbe 9:30 a,m, an!f 6 p.!JI. services. ney ire
graduates of N!lrvel Hayes' Bible College In Teanessee. Pastor
· .
Gary Hines lnvlta tile public. ·.
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SEE US FOR YOUR TEAM NEEDS.

LIMESIONE,
GUYIL &amp; COAL

OFFICE 992·2116

Ia ... ,.,... f!.dllt•t!!!n.,_~~

t .

2251 Sixtll St. • Syr•cne, 011•
(614) 992·5315

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crMm nolldllna, and g:11. AppiOX. 1 acralat

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ROUSH'S PRINTING

F,.. Horw Mlnul'll. Hannon

TiiiS OFFER GOOD NOW THRU JUNE 21, 1993

. (Q~R EXPIRES 6/21 /93)

htter•Rt

Backhoe and
small Dozer
Work

Simply Oip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad And Mall It To Us Or Drop It Off·At Our Office•.
Your Ad Will Run For One Week- One Item Per Ad

the Union army.
Applications for membership
may be a~quired by calling 9927874 as late as ll'p.m. nightly.

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I Wlilk Old Waikar Pup, 014- 1 0,

To

graves of Union veterans.
Anyone interested in membership may obtain help in order to
locate an ancestor who served in

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Let us Help
Your spring Cleaning!

1.....m:

EVERY THURSDAY

IH•RLL•TUDI

i

.Steel Sales
No order
too small or too large
Orders welcomed
(614) 992-7878
FAX (614) 992- .3053·

IUUDODIG

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nor •ny aollan maintained

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MARTECH INDUSTRIES

. EAGLES

PH. 61.992-5591

on the claim. The
Suparlntabnl dan~ 111baoonl 11
raaaona y pon . a, w111
give conalderatlon to uc~
claim praaantecl. You will
only receive written
communication ll your
d by Ina
"'
·
1e raJacta
sclaim
ptrlntanda l

Resldentl•l Roofing Is our

EBLIN'S

667·6621

PONDS
· SEPTIC SYSTEMS

MANCO
·MINI KARS

Rocky a. Hupp, D.c.u. •Agent
lox 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
(614) 843·5264 1/U . . . .

·CDII,.RUftiOI

312511 mo.

uc

915·4473
667-6179

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health
• Accident • Annuity, IRA ··Mortgage

(614)

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IN TIE PROBATE COURT
OF IEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
JENNIFER L SlEETS,

NURSES' ~IDE
WITH CPR
TRAINI.NG
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.
614-992-7698

4-1

Sloii&amp;C....-re

forgiving. I can achieve any goal!
.•
N.xl Of Kin' D.vl ••••
wish without the shackles of blame.
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VI
Legaleaa, .Admlrilatntora,
._
I have no sc:ore to seule with my THE ESTATE OF
Exacu tora an d A••·.-·•
of
JlllfCDIS. I don't keep I tally d. wrongs DAVID G. HUNTER,
Guy E. Hunter, Thom..
(4 28 ; (S) 5, 1 3tc
done
to
me
by
them.
I
awake
every
ANN LANDERS
morning me and UDChained.
"19!13, Loo AD&amp;&lt;I.,
Pcsitive thinking is healthy.I doD'I
Tim• S)'DIIkok
Cnolon S,...UC.to'' .
get sick like I used to. It is a
acientific fact that negative tbougbts
not 10 have cbildreD of my own, 1 · can 8UJIIIl'CS8 the immuae syaan.
ended up rearing IJIOdw woman's. Many boob have been wriam lbout
A pbone call or 1 110110 of 1141Jecia- this in the last few years.
·
lion would have meant 1 great deal
Life is so very, very short. Why
10 me.- JACKSONVILU!, FLA.
spend~e on negative thoughts?
DEAR JACK: 1baiJk you for an They uluy hurt the pel SOil who feels
excellent letter. 1 c1nnot recall ever them. I( you must have revenge, then
having received one like iL While forgive. That is the, best revenge o.f
we're on the 111bjcct. fathers whose all.
-ex-wives have I'CIIIIIIicd and.'tlkm
So, Ann. please urge your rt.adm
the kids should do ibis u well .
to think positively and forgive, for
Dear Au
y 08 recently . their sake. It's generous, and it's
printed several 1euas £rom raiders healthy. - D.S., KENT, WASIL
explaiiling why they ·neglect their
DEAR D.S; I've said it 1111 many
elderly pam~ts. 1 really connec:led times in this space rm aliaid rm
with thole who wrote and hope )'011 bqinning to sound like I broken
have room for one more. Mine will record, broken record, broken
be a liale different.
reconL Thank )'011, thank you. thank
Yes, my parents were abUsive, you. thank you.
both vemaUy and physically. They
Wllal's tire lnllh about pot, conever bothered to control their caine, LSD, PCP, craclc, spttd aNl
tempers; and they took out their downers? 'Tire lnwdowli 011 Dope"
frustlations on each other and on us has up-to-tire-minute illformotiOII 011
children: However, we are all Slill drugs. SeNl 11 ~If-addressed, IOilg,
loyal to our parents. We have • biUIMu-siu tllvtlope tutd11 check
simply
lllrived to raise our own or money order for $3.65 (tllilill"
·
children differendy.
clruks pon11ge ll1lll lriutdlbtiJ to:
•
Forgiveness isa put healer. I 110 Low~Jqw,., c/o A/ill Ltutde1, P.O.
This
Is
Your
Invitation
Sell Any Item For '100.00 Or Less
longer hold feelings of anger over . Boz 11562, Cllic11go, Ill. 60611And Advertise It FREa .
what. happened to me u 1 cbild. 0562. (/11 Clllltldtl, settd $4.45.}

Gov. William Dennison Camp
No. 125 of the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War anno·unces
the formation of a Ladies' Auxiliary Sons of Union Veterans of the
Civil War.
This century old ladies group is
a patriotic and educational group
that supports the same goals as the
Sons of Union Veterans. Charter
membership is available to any
woman age 12 or older who can
show blpod ancestry to a Union
veteran or the brother or sister of a
..... ""'"" Union·vetemn, Membership ·is also ·
operi 10 wives,. sisters. mQthcr and
daughters of members of the Sons
of Union Veterans.
Both the S.U.V. and its a~liary
·are active in educating the public
aboutthe Civil War, preserving
monuments and artifacts of the
Civil War, re-enacting the Union
solqier and nurse; and marking the

American Legion Fenney Bennett Post 128 Iac!iel Auxiliary will
-- hold 1 District Oilti State Tea and
Orientation 11 the illnex in Middleport on Sunday It 2 p.m.lt is mand

MEADOWS SHOE
LEATH!R REPAIR

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· • Ada 01111W. d.t10...tj yovacl npu a..a ie F ; .W
~ Roe.l.. cllooout for odo poW .........
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• Prioo ., ... f« aD eapitol._. io dooildo price of owl _.
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Women's group forming in area

Orientation slated ·

S..tiMI io -

IIIIIICIN GINIUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURDCE COMPANY

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Ohio

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:. Thuraday, May 13; 1993

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Thursday,

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42 llolllle Homll
.lor Rent

NEA Crossword Puzzle

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ALDER

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Con'

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52 Spoltlng Goodl

NORTH

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. EEKAND MEEK

72 Trucka tor Sale

+Q 105

WEST
+J983

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SO\ITH
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Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

cloth (Brit.)
38 - Mljor
311- de
cologne
41 Analoltllcal
Uaaue
42 Parcel ollarld ·
43 G11m
45 ROdent
46 Bttwetn NB

1 - porridge
· 6 Food holder
11 Far !rom
lreoh
12 FlU wilh g11
14- PliO
15 Witty
atatement
17 Recording
abbr.
18 Sporta
Implement
20 Place
21 That woman
22 And others
(2 wds.)
24 Ancient
25 SingerCampbell
26 Baoemtnl
28 Eill
30 Cartltll
31 Wlda shoe
alzt
32 Abounded
35 Dealer In

and ND

47 Sadden
411 - plua ultra
50 Antenne
52 Pleca ol
dinnerware
54 Short song
55 Swagger

DOWN

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1 Stn11ol
taste
2 .;.. m11oe
3 High card
4 Drinks alowly
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All pass

an.,75
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•22-24 points

Opening lead: • &amp;

·SOME VARMINT SLOWED
OUT TH' LANTERN AN'
CLEANED OUT TH' CARD
GAME!!

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Moton:yclel

IIEAim'IIL .APAR'I'IIIHn II.T
IUDGII PRICII llf

18TATI!. •

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I DON'T RIGHTLY KNOW!!
HE WAS LAFFIN' HIS
HEAD OFF WHEN HE
LEPT OUT TH'
WINDER!!

HOW MUCH
DID HE GIT? ·

h±on PIU

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tor Sale

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Tr dnsporiJI•on

7102. .

78

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AAD TJ.US, I TAll£ If, I~ YOUR

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ASSI:STAATI

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By Phillip Alder

.llllllk

Ron Klinger's book "Playing to Win
at Bridge" contains 72 declarer-play
and defense problems in three sections: elementary, intermediate and
advanced. fhe new edition, published
by Houghton Mifflin , is available for
$10.45 from The Bridge World, 39
West · 94th Street, New York, NY
1002&amp;-7124. Previous editions were
published in England by Gollancz, and
in Australia.
How difficult is advanced? Well,
day's deal is the last in the book; move 1
into the East seat and judge
yourself.
Your partner leads his fou,rth-hilzh· l
est heart. After winn ing with the
declarer continues with the ace
another diamond. West wins with
queen; you discard the club two.
West switches to tbe spade jack:
queen, king, four. How should
continue?
You have two options: (o lead a
spade, playing partner for thee ~~~~~::I
10, or to cash the spade ace, o:
partner for four spades, with or
'
out the 10. Which is correct?
Count the high-card .points. •·N·~ 1
trick one, declarer is marked ·
A·K•Q of hearts. He is known to
the A·J o! diamonds. That's only
points, so South must have the A·K-J
of clubs to get up to ~2. . •
How many aiamonds does
hold? The way he played the
marks him with five. With A·J-x-x,
would have entered the dummy
led a diamond toward his jack. Thi~
means. South has only two spades,
yo11 m11st continue with the spade
Then remember to congratulate
partner on his excellent play
spade jack. If he had led a low spade, 1
the contract would have made.

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Q. Recently, I came across the
phrase CRY UP in an old novel. Can
you tell me whal it means?

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NON lVE.i'ORe:rrTCN 'M-'oY
! W/'6 L..OOI&lt;.ING' FCR HIM.

IN 'THE l.Aei FEW ~6~ IN
1He LAeT Ha.JR CRscr.l INlHE
I..AeT c::aJf'I.E OF MINLiiE5~

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A. CRY UP is a verb phrase from
business. Four centuries old, the term
means "to praise or discuss publicly
to increase the value," much as
modern ·advertising tries to do. If a
seller wants his goods to get a better
price, for instance, he may try to CRY
UP their worth . Without that "crying
up" or advertising, his goods may not
sell, in which case he may just cry ..

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57

-Mu*-1

. lls1ro-Graph
today by mailing
or else both you and the olher party .
$1 .25 plun long. seW·addressed, ilamped may later assume something which was
ASTRO·GIUI'PH
1
envelope lo Aslro-Graph, c/o lhis newspa· ' not intended .
per, P.O. Box 4465, New Yort&lt;, NY 10163. SIIGITTAIIIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) In order
Be sura1o state your zodiaC sign.
to receive proper remuneratio n for your
GEMINI (Mtoy 21..June 20) This might not productivity today, you must be careful not
BERNICE • be a good day 10 try 10 negoliale a compli· to put yoursell in Ihe pas ilion where you
BEDE OSOL cated arrangement There's a chance lhat will be poorly compensated for your hard
everyone max no1 pulalllheir caras on lhe work.
table, including you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) You will
CANCER (June 21..July 22) You are likely be a we~me adctilion to a sociai!X'Iherin~ .
to be in a sociable mood today. but in ordar today, provided you don'l compete wilh
10 maintain your high spirits. you'll have 10 others In lrying to monopolize the spolllghl.
avoid domineering fn.nds. Seek lass·seri· Lei everyor)B have a lihle ilage time.
· ous companions.
AQUIIRIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11) This Ia one
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 There Is a very lhin or lhooe days when you mlghl fall to finish
line today between assertiveness and whal you start if the going gelS a b~ tough.
,..
Ill¥ 14, 111113
aggreulvenes8, which mignl be dlffleuh lor Unfortunately, lhis nlay occur in a maher of
you to d!Kem. II you focus on lhe laner. ·considerable importance.
your effarll will be counterproductive. .
l&gt;tSCES (Feb. zo.March 20) If
pretend
.In the year ahead, you mighl become · VIIIGO (Aug. 23-Sipl. 22) Sonlelhing ·you ·• lobo l&lt;nchAetlgeable today about a certa1n
trwotved in a oelf.improvemtnl program mighl f1Rl110181oday oould atill need further IUbjecl Wlllch, In reality, you koow lillie or
~~ COUld comtilelelY revile your . - siUdy 10 iron OUIIhe klnlcs. You might have nothing about, your ploy will be quickly dis·
and ploilolophy In new and adllanlageous lo dnt' wllh a perton who hu a aimilar covered. 11 could cause you embarrassways.
·
.
problem, and ia apt IO give ground.
rnanl.
TAURUS {Aprll20-lley 20) Your wil and · U11RA (lepl. DrOcL :13) A b111ineta mat, ARII!S (March 21·Aprll 18)11 anyone
_!!umOr.,. cjuil8 keen loday ~ ~ ler oould oller you IJolh posaib!Utlei and helps you In a special way lhat 1n turn
IIIJICII&lt;inU.
~· but not if you re lite ~ IDday. 11 mUll bo evalualed loQI· ' leads 10 p1110n11 gain, alrlve to repay tho
lUI ol tho .,... Be prtp~~Nd. lo get what cally, noiii!IOIIonaffy,ln order to accureloly favor, or at leaal make 1 commilrnenl
,l'I!U give OUI, Gel a jump on life bY ....,. 11 -and r,r,alltleo.
·Share ·with lhla peraon taler In some man·
ll8ndlng tho ~~.,.govern· SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)1mporlant, ""'-

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tide 1 bed Couoh. I Aeollner
·lnltNJMnll
Choir, Canllllon. ~
2222.
I · tu In Pllnol I Rollnd

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Eech letter in tne Cipher standi for~ - T~ ....-.,, . . ..::

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " I've always "-1 lhe daJ'k . . _ ...... b ,
maSSt!s. · 1 dance to a different kind of music." - 11111.

'::!::~' S©~4{l\A"'E.~s·
ldllod
ClAf I.
~r

O four
Rearrange le"•n of
acrambled worda
loW' ..to fOrm

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OUR LANGUAGE

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP .

57

.cs

A spicy fish stew is CIOPPINO.
please tl,on't stew over the proper
English pronunciation of the Italian
noun CIOPPINO; it's "chub-PEE·
noh."

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How difficult
is advanced?

By Jeffrey McQuain

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. ,.. PEANUTS .

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PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

11

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Uf'ISC.RAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER
•

rrrlsr r r t
11111 111

SCIIAM-I.m ANSWEitS
Lineal Yucca • lglot) • Dialog • YOU AG.WV
"Did you have a good time, • the l8llow aakad his .-a,
· ·"Oh sure, • his date yawned. "It very edl• r ill
I learned not to go out with YOU AGAINr
7

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~lii&gt;ineroy-.Middleport, Ohio

Thursday,

Poppy sale.
slated.this
weekend

A day at the zoo ...

The American Le¥ion Fenney
Bennett Post 1Zll Ladies Auxiliary
. will be conducting its annual poppy
sale on Friday and Saturday in
Middlepon.
The unit will hold a bake sale on
Friday and rummage sale on Friday
and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p m
Handmade cemetery arrangementS
will ~ !lvailable on both days. All
., donauon_s w1_11 be appreciated.
Money llllsed IS used for the unit's
nursing home projects throughout
the year.
.
.
These events will take place in
the park across from the annex on
Mill Street

FERRET PRESENTED ~ Jo Christopher or the Columbus Zoo
presents a ferret to students at Pomeroy Elementary on Monday.
Christopher and her husband, John, spoke at the school. and displayed several species.

Health

Guests of Pearl L. Russell,
Racine, have been Mr. and Mrs.
William Wells, former Aleta Lynn ·
Russell, Racine, Deltona, Fla., en
route to Brampton, Ontario, Canada, to live. She will return to Deltona this fall.
Other visitors were Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd T. Chapman (Kendll
Russell) and daughter, Kim, Pick·
erington; Mrs. Mark J. Carter
(Shelly Chapman), and daughtet,
Madeline Blake Carter, Baltimore.
Mother's Day was celebrated
early.
•

Edna J. Madden, E~ra Barrett,
Cheryl L. Ferguson, Danny D. Barrett, Tammy F. Gardner, Thomas
Barrett, Trena L. Caruthers, Ber·
nice R. Jones, Timothy J. Barrett,
Peggy I. Russell. , .

•.'
KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
FRI., SAT., SUN.

''

ARMY OF DARKNESS R
AND

LEPRECHAUN R

' Vol. 44, NO. 12
: lluiii!Miblnc.

448-1081

FollQwing testimony, closing arguments

'

Jury deliberate·s in murder case

L ....
. '

't

·t

Pastor Bill Hoback Invites The Public

•

•
CLOSING STATEMENT· Meigs Col!nty ProaecutiDa Allor·
: ney John R. Lentea pre~ents hla case to the jury during closing
• arguments .In tbe Lemasters murder trial Thurlday. (Sentinel
-·
pboto by Jim Freeman)

••

REBATE

9

99
8Siff

"3,.«;r;=,.
·- .
SU9SIIIprice

"'Jti~LENEttdEPLICH

..,
' -Sentinel News Stair .
Details of the process used. in
.I!Ciectina a site for constructioo of a ,
new multi-million dollar airport to
'serve Meigs and Oallia counties
were laid out at a public hearing
held 'ntunday night by the palliaMeigs Regional Airport Authority
in ~Meip County Court room.
. Jean Whitney, president of the
' Regional Airport Authority, introduced Steven B. Cornell, associate
director of Aviation Services,
Woolpert, of Dayton, who reported
Ill the dozen or so attending the
meeting information on site evaluations and the eventual selection of a
preferred site near Rodney south of
U.S. 3S in Ga!lla County.
Over the past 18 months, sites in
both Meigs and Gallia Counties
have been studied with consideration being given to loog-tcrm aviation needs, flood plain, topography
and road locations, ·all factors
·which Cornell said are critical
when federal monies are used.
Construction of the proposed
·new airport has been esu~ated to
cost $10.S miiUon wilh 90 percent
,of that to come from the FAA Avi·
lltion Trust Fund, five percent from
~he Ohio Department of Trans·
portation, and the remaining five
9ercent from Meigs and Gallia
Counties. .
·
• · As for the local part, $160,000
:Would be paid by each county over
(he first five year period with the
lemaining ~90,000 10 be paid from
;the fulh to the 1Sth year. The figvre would include acquisition of
the property, land preparation, terlninal, runways, and lighting.

.

$5.9!1 We price

-

. AIRPORT SITE SELECTION • Usln&amp; maps and charta show·
ing the various loc~tlons In Meigs and Gallla Counties c:onslde~d '
for the proposed new airport, Steven B. CorneD, associate director
of Aviation Servic~s, Woolpert, 'explained how tbe Watson site
near Rodney was selected.

8 cylinder

8

'~41'!~=-

'-··
-·....

services through the Multipurpose addition to this, she says work
Senior Center. It identifies the hours have been decJeased and
needs and specific inlerests of the building costs have increased by 13
aging; gains interest in and support percent per year.
for senior citizens residing in the
According to the executive
county; and provides programs director, the one mill levy would
which will assist older adults in costlhe average taxpayer only four
maintaining his/her dignity and cents a day based on a property
se!C-respeet, and permits individu- market value of $40,000.
als to continue to be of service to
Mrs. Oliver-concluded by sayhis or her community.
· ing "We're asking people to help
Oliver told the commissioners · us help olhers."
•
lhat the only Stable source of fundLmked Deposits discussed
ing for the agency comes from the
MicheUe Jenkins, field reptesen$17,500 allocated by the county tative for State Treasurer Mary
each year. She stated all other Ellen Withrow, attended Wednesfunding, including federal, state, day's meeting to inform the Board
contract and donatioos, is unstable. aboUt the Withrow Plan of Linked
Without money which would be. Deposits.
raised from the levy, services proShe said the program brings
vided by the agency would suffer together Ohio's small businesses
Sid in some cases would cease to and lending institutions in an effon
exist, she stated.
to create and save jobs. The plan
Funding from lhe state level has allows the treasurer to channel a
decreased $16,531 in 1993, while portion of the state's investment
federal funding has been decreased portfolio into reduced-rate invest·
$40,000, according to Oliver. In
Continued on page 3
·

u~~vr~:n:x~~::nsabout . Officials pleased with

Carpenter Hi!) Road ,ili Columbia
Township on Thursday evening
around 9 p.m. The structure was
owned by Tony Osborne but was

.

,....,--Local briefs-Deputies of the Meijs County Sheriff's Deparllll(lllt are inveslisating the breakin&amp; and entering 9f a cabin owned by Tom PQts of
Cenrerburs. The cabin is 19cated an Pfi,ce Run ROIId near lhe Vinton .
Coullly line.
·
· · .
· AccordinJto a report from.the department, the cabin was entered
late Wednesday or ell'ly Thursday morcing when someone kicked
in the baclc door. It was reponed that three guns, a pair of binoculars
. and a microwave were lllren.
An investlptio/t is continuing.

IEMaPJ

By JULIE E. DILLON
· · Sentlllel News Staff
At the re9uest of·Susan Oliver,
executive duector of the Meigs
County . Council • on Aging
(MCCoA). the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners voted
unanimously Wednesday · to
endorse and support a resolution
callins for a one mill levy to be
placed on the November ballot
The five year levy is .necessary,
stated Oliver, fo.r maintaining and
increasing senior citizen services
and maintaining the Multipurpose
Senior Citizens facility for the
elderly citizens of Meigs County:
Oliver stated the MCCoA is a
non-profit, multi-service agency
which works. to secure public and
private funding in order to identify
and meet the basic human needs of
the 60 pius population of Meigs
County. The agency serves approximately 4,500 people in the county.
She said the agency plans, coordinates and implements all Senior

drill results

The disaster drill held Thursday feedin~ the workers and evacuees.
by emergency medical services, .
Taking part in the exercise l"ere
fire and police officials, and the lhe fire departments and emergency
Emergency Management Agency squads ot Middleport Pomeroy,
demonstrated to state off'teials that Syracuse; Racine, along with VetMeigs County can handle 8 large erans Memorial Hospital, the
scale disaster, Bob Bycr, Meigs Meigs County Sheriff's Departdisaster chairman and director of ·ment and the Meigs'County Radio
the Meigs EMS, said.
· Amateur Civil Emergency services.
The disaster was a simulated
The Meigs County Emergency
train;truck accident at the .ailroad Operations Center was activatt;d
crossing on State Route 7 near with representatives from the
Cheshire. A leaking chlorine tanka' health department , hospital,
car was involved forcing evacua- RACES, Meigs County EMS,
tion of residents, uansporting of Commissioner Manning Roush,
!hose needing medical treatment to transportation coordinator; Bob
lhe hospital, setting up sheltars and Ord, Red Cross; the sheriff's

department, a field coordinator
from the State Emergency Medical
Association, lind Bud Marshall
Ohio EMA exercise office serving
as faciliuuors.
Byer said that the state officials
were pleased wilh the overall ope...
atio~ of the county's emer11ency
serv1CCS.
Posing as victims of the accident were. members. of the Meigs
H1gh School nursmg assistant
class. Twelve victims were transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital for treatment in the simulated
disaster.

.

: Arson is the suSpec:ted cause for
fire that caused an estimated
$20,000 worth of damage 10 farm
equipment in a storage barn on

$7.99 Ale 11r1ct

359
11'11:11'1
tST-t025

I,

~

Cornell said that four -sites in port users and businesses to assist
Meigs County had been evaluated m making projections of aircraft
but that none met the criteria.
Meigs County Commissioner Janet
Howard and Economic Develop· upgrading and expanding the existment Director Paula Thacker satd . in~ Gallia-~gs Airport, Cornell
that they had also searched wilhout S8ld that is not an option for several
success to come up·wilh an accept· reasons. It is located in the flood
able site in Meigs County for lhe plain and lacks the aeronautical
proDO$ed new airport. They agreed clutmcter for expansion, he said,
with Cornell that a satisfactory which means that it would not
location was not found in Meigs qualify for FAA fupding,
As for funds through the Ohio
County. It takes about4SO acres on
which 10, build Ill!, ah]l9rt of a sizp Department of Transportation,
able to handle sm'illl c&amp;pcrate Jets, David L. Dennis, aviation planner,
told the group that money is just
according 10 Cornell.
In Oallia County five sites were not available.
Cornell displayed maps and
considered before the fmal recommendatioo was made for the Rod- charts showing various locations
ney location, called the Watson and explained' how the final recomsite. In a&lt;ldition to studies of the mendation for lhe Watson site was
Continued oa paae 3
locations, surveys were sent to air-

B &amp; E under investigation

......

attorneys for Lemasters declined to
place him on the stand.
"This is a case about money and
Bill Lemasters' willingness to get
money," Proseeuting Attorney John
R. Lentes said at lhe beginning of
the state's closing arguments. He
addesd thai Lemasters was willing
to make sure no 12-year-old boy
would get in his way.
Lentes referred to testimony
from Fred and Michelle Drennen in
which they stated Lemasters
planned 10 set up a fake drug deal
with Halley so Mr. Drennen would
reb Halley while pretending to rob
Lemasters as well.
"The Drennens didn't take into
account Bill Lemasters' mwderoua
nature," Lentes said.
Lentes, explaining the different
charges against Lemasters, said lhe
questioo is "whodunit?"
"I ask you 'to retum a guilty verdict," Lentes said.
Continued on paae ~

'Arson suspected cause· o.f blaze

441"~=;.

6
.....·-

testified that Lemasters told him
thill Mr. Drennen left the scene
driving the pickup truck containing
the body of the younger Halley
while Lemasters am! Mrs. Drennen
returned to the Drennen residence
in Ravenswood, W.Va.
Prior to Lindsey's testimony, a
forensic pathologist for the
Franklin County Morgue testified
,as to what caused the death of lhe
two Halleys. .
'
Dr. Patrick Fardal, used slides to
show jurors bones and clolhing that
were submitted 10 the morgue for
examination.
Fardal concluded the cause of
death for Jeffrey S. Halley was a
single shotgun blast to the head
while the cause or death for Jeffrey
L. Halley was multiple shotgun
blasts to the head and torso.
Closing arguments
··
1
The prosecution rested its case
following the testimony from Dr.
Fardal and Lindsey. No witnesses
for the defense were called and .

Meigs Commissioners endorse,
support request for MCCoA levy

Airport
.details
outlined

•

Mu••

·!1

life sentence with the possibility of
By JIM FR~MAN
parole in 20 years.
Sentinel News StaiY
Testimony ends
A Meigs County jury began
Testimony
continued Thursday
deliberation today in the l$11f1V8tmorning
as
FBI
Agent Jeff Lindsey
ed murder trial of Wilham D.
presented
jurors
with a different .
Lemasters n following the end of
view
of
the
events
as related to him
t!lstimony and closing arguments
by
Lemasters
during
a telephone
Thursday.
Judge Fred W. Q'ow Ill, antici- cooversation on Nov. $, 1992.
The agent Said Lemasters called
pating a lo11g deliberation, told
JUrors Thursday to pack enough him from a hotel room in Florida
and supplied' him with his name,
clothes 10 last lhe weekend.
phone
number and hotel room
Lemasters, 2~. of Racine is
number.
After cootaeting agents in
charged with three counts or aggra·
Florida,
Lindsey
returned a call to
vated murder in the Feb. 8, 1991,
Lemasters
and
kept
him on the line
shotgun slayings of Jeffrey L. Hal·
until
officers
arrived
to arrest him.
ley,. 36, and 12-year-old Jeffrey S.
During
the
phone
conversation,
Halley, both of Gallipolis.
Lemasters
told
lhe
agent
former coIn addition, Lemasters is
defendant
Fred
Drennen
shot Jefcharged )Nith two counts of kidnapfrey
L.
Halley,
took
the
keys
from
ping and one .count of aggravated
the
car
where
Lemasters
sat
and
robberY.
lhen
shot
JeffreyS.
Halley
while
he
A (ormer co-defendant, Fred
(LellliiSiaS)
walled
in
the
car.
Drennen of Ravenswood, W.Va.,
pleaded guilty on March 1 to three · Lemasten said Michelle Drencounts of aggravated murder iD the nen arrived in a pickup truck short·
incident ~d is cwrently serving a Iy after the shooting, and Lindsey

.

lfliWliO

005&amp;50

2 s.atlona. S8 p.g. 25 oenta
A Mulllmec.. tno. Plawtpl/ll u

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 14,1903

ne mri

Limit 18
V04J// cwt afW ret~~tt·

NIWIIWIX

Low 1onJahtlll50... Pllftly
eloudy. Saturday, partly tloudy,
high Ill 70...
.

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12
••••

Pick 4:

Inside today

RACINE, OliO
1s locatecl4 ...,
01t of Radle 01 St. it. 124

.7

542
7757

PENTECOSTAl .ASSEMBLY

.04 Bile price

49

•

edition

7:00 P.M. AT THE

u

NOT A TEDDY BEAR - Job11 and Jo Christopher of tbe .
Columbus Zoo spoke to students at Pomeroy Elementary on MOD·
day afternoon. They displayed a variety or species, Including this
bear cub. The Cbristophers are pictured as they feed the small bear.
Students were warned bow dangerous these cute and cuddly-look·
llllf animals can be.

Pick 3:

care

FRIDAY, MAY 14

Property transfers

WHAT IS THAT? -This unusual animal, a spring hare, whlcb
looks somewhat like a cross between a rabbit and a small kangaroo,
caught the attention of Pomeroy Elementary students on Monday
afternoon. The animal was displayed·along with several olhers ip a
learning experience with the C!Jlumbus Zoo. Jobn and Jo Christo. pher spoke to the students~~ the different species. This could be
the only time students see this ·particular animal, as it is found only
in its oririnal habitat.

Ohio Lottery

•

Russell visitors

GORDON JENSEN
Singer· Songwriter
Be In Concert

WATCH YOUR FINGERS- John Christopher holds &amp;·.twoyear-old alHgator as he walks through students at Pomeroy Elemen·
·tary on Monday. Christopher told the students the aiUgator Is so
small because alligators grow only one root per year or their lives.

Wendell G. BIIITeU, dec 'd, Cert.
of Trans., to Gelald F: Bamtt, Sr.,
Minnie V. Thompson, Patricia A.
Barrett, Larry J. Ba.rrCtt, Melissa
M. Fife, Celia F. Mulholand, Al\nie
E. Edwards, Betty P. Caldwell,

May 13, 1993

•

Deer incident reported

OPEl SEVEI DAYS A WEEK
Btorw Haon: , ,., """· 10 a p.m.I/!Ondlr -Dh Frldoy,
a:30 1.111.10 7 p.m. -..oy,- a 1.111.10 1 p.m. llundiy

_ _IAlUPIUI.

_2!18 U = Road .
1111.

I'

James Haymari, Lona Bottom, reported to the Meigs County
Sherirra DepabiMilol Thunclar atleaiiUOll,lhlt he struck and killed a
deer that juniped lnto·the llllh 911111 11193 Pontiac.
Modmte dama&amp;o ~ullllld to the front of lhe vehicle.

being rented by Eddie Smathers.
According 10 a ~sperson for
lhe Columbia Fire bej!lll'trnent, the
fire started in the storage area of
the bam and destroyed the frame
structure which housed two vehicles and two tracton.
The spokesperson stated three
people, Jennifer VanDyke, Lindsay
Lyons and Brian VanDyke, were
transported by lhe Rutland Emergency Squad to Veterans Memorial
Hospital were they were trelled for
smoke IDhalltioo and stnlln. Aaron
Smathers was ~ted but not tranS·

~e

Scipio Township Fire
~ biiCnt was called to assist at
9;p.m. and units were on the
scene until about midniabt. The
Columbia Slllion had all four of iiS
trucks ,on the acene and Scipio
assisted wllh additional trucks and
manpower. ·
There were no Injuries 10 any of
the rarellahllrl.
.
.An invatlption Ia condnuina
inte the ca111e of the flle.
•••'

DECONTAMINATED • Penonnel of Veter·
of • dlttDical leak frolll a trahl at a 11N .;..d
ans Memorial Hospital ucl die Melp Collftty
were boeed down to INcome dece.IIIDialed
Emerseney Medical Servlcea are pictured u
, before they were takta lilto tilt ............
they proc 1111 d "vlttlau" of die 21st annual TrJ.
aeacy area facllitiea. Vtterau MU..r1ai
County llmalated dl 111' aerdle at the llollli· . received 12 "wktlms" ...... die e 11
"VIc
tal Thanday afttra-. "VIctiiM", wllo-wtn
tinla" were set: ted relr lalllb Ia ...
memben of tbe nursl• aide dal of Mtlp HIP .. cafeteria followlna ... toa,..tloa or tllelr
School, ha~ become conta•lnated u .die resuh
respective roi• In tbe •oelt: 1M Itt
I

I

iiai.bi

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