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•

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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'!~=-

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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
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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...
.

..

25mtg···mMMc·'br_

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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Friday, May 14.• 1993

-Commentary

Paga 2-The Dally 8entlnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, May 14, 1993 .

Pomeroy-=...lddleeert. Ohio

Ohio temperatures will remain cool over weekend

OHIO Weather

"

The Daily Sentmel '
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTBD TO THB INTERESTS OP 11IB MB108-IIASOI'f AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publhher
CIIARLENE HOEFLICH
General M81111ger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leaa than 300
words. AU !ellen are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
oddrets and telepbolle number. No unsigned letters will be published. Le!len
should be iD.&amp;OOd lute, addressing issues, not personalities.

Gays in military, abortion
aid vex Congres·s

'

'

'

'

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASlllNGTON - So far, all Congress has done on the question of
homosexuals in the miliiary is talk a~x?.ut it- and tha~·s been enough to
start the shouting. II is a dispute cenam to escalate, w1th Prestdent Clm- .
ton's deadline for an order rescinding the ban o~ gays two months a:ov~Y·
So, too, is the congressional struggle over h1s effort to end restncnons
on the use of federal funds for abortions.
. .
Difficult, divisive and often intensely personal, the soctal1ssues ~e the
kind most resistant to compromise, the congressiOnal way out wnn no
hard feelings. These are the questions !hat guarantee hard feelmgs . .
Clinton is confronting two at the same time as he ~ks to dehyer on
his campaign promises to end the 48-_year bar on m1htary serv1c~ by
homosexuals, and to rescind the law agamst federal ~pendmg on aborttons
for needy women receiving government medical asststance.
· The abortion dispute is complicating Clinton's budget program, and
could put an extra burden on his coming he~lh car~ proposal, whtch l'resumably will offer coverage for aborllons. I don I want to do anythmg
thai would upset the present pattern of health care coverage, that's for
sure," he said.
.
.
.
.
.
The first votes on abortion spendmg wtll come up later thts spnng as
the House begins acting on the appropriations bills that will im~lllment
the budget There's some doubt among top Democrats that they w1ll have
the votes to rescind the spending restriction in the House.
..
Abortion is an issue Congress has been debating for two decades, wtth
no settlement in view. While there arc shadings of opinion am.ong both
· advocates and opponents of abortion rights, when it comes to a vote the
argument is among absolutists.
·
. .
While the debate over gays in the military is new to the legislative
.
. agenda, the lines are as sharply drawn , and compromise as elusive.
To advocates of repeal, the terms that have been advanced as a posst·
blc sculcmcnt-lctting homosexuals serve so long as they didn't declare
their sexual preference- is no compromise. Gay activists protested when
·Clinton agreed to essentially that formula temporarily, for the SIX months
he gave the Pcnt:agon to prepare an executive order.
The talk: of making that the permanent arrangement has been among
opponents of eliminating the ban, not between the two sides . Still,
·· Congress has the power to keep the ban in place, so advocates of the poli- .
' .· cy that Sen. Sam Nunn has described as \'don't ask, don't tell" could vote
it into effect
Clinton settled for thai holding action, pending congressional hearings
and the Pentagon study, rather than risk being overruled on an immediatr
order to rescind the ban.
.
·
.
·
'
11 is a high·tension issue; even witness lists and proced~res have ~tirred ·
·· angry disputes in both the Senate and House At:med SeTVI_ces committees.
~ Those same, divided panels wtll have to deal wuh Jegtslauon on the tssue.
Nunn D-Ga.. the Senate chairman, opposes outright repeal of the ban.
' Rep. Ronald bcllums, D-Calif., the House chainnan, wants it lifted as the
: mark of "a mature, intelligent, egalitarian society."
That broader social point adds to the political strain. The change Clin.· ton seeks is not, after all, a politically popular cause. The president has
said so himself. He also said it is right.
.
·
· "We arc not arguing any kind of conduct, but about whether people
can acknowledge ... being a homosexual," he said Monday in Cleveland.
. " It is not asking the American people to approve a lifestyle, to embrace It, .
to 'elevate it, anything else."
.
·
At House hearings on May 4, Republican Rep. Floyd D. Spence of
South Carolina argued that gay activists are using lhe 1ssuc to promote
their agenda. "Whether or not individual honmsexuals want nothing mo~~
than to serve with honor, homosexual actiVISm wtll demand more,
Spence said, "turning the military into a legal, social and cultural battleground for ye:rrs to c_omc:"
. .
.
.
Clinton satd the 10tenm pohcy 10 whtch recrutts no longer are questioned about hamosexuality solves most of the problem. Perhaps tl does,
but lhc next step will be more difficult, and he is committed to take it so
that declared homosexuals can serve in the military.
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columfor politics
The Associated
Press,
reported on Washington and
nisi
national
for more than
30 has
years.

RTC contracting practices in. need of reform
WASHINGTON When
doing business with the Resolution
Trust Corp., sometimes who you
know is better,than what you know.
Since its creation in 1989 10
clean up the savings and loan crisis, the RTC has suffered a string
of embarrassing revelations about
·its contracting practices. As the
largest consumer of private legal
·services in the federal government,
. the RTC has been criticized for
awarding bids non,competitively
and stacking the deck against
smaller firms. Agency officials
recently set out to reform the system by opening up the process and
paying more attention to small and
minority-owned fli'IIIS.
As the RTC undergoes internal
reforms. the agency's inspector
general is in the midst of its second
probe into whether one of its most
senior lawyers supervised agency
work perforilled by her former law
firm. Internal RTC documents
show that Sheila M. Cahill, the vice
president andassociate general
counsel for lhe RTC's deparunent
of asset disposition, is being probed
for possible ethics violations in

connection with her dealings with and a second investigation has whether Jungman is under investithe New York law firm of Cad- . begun.
gation.
waladeJ, Wickersham &amp; Taft.
The problems began in early
Once Cahill was hired, docuCahiU declined to comment on. ..1hc 1992 when Michael Jungman, who ments suggest she began managing
was then the vice president 3nd a number of RTC projects with
associate general counsel of the help from her former law fll'lll, In a
RTC's department of asset dis~si­ Dec. 12, 1992, billing document
tion, transferred to another divtsion obtained by our associate Dean
within the RTC. According to RTC • Boyd, Caltill is listed as the "RTC
documents, Jungman and-Other oversight attorney" for a budget
senior offic~ls wanted to hire . approved for Cadwalader in con·
Cahill, a lawy~l Cadwalaqer, to nection with tax advice it provided.
probe, citing rules prohibiting her fill the job and to oversee a major lit addition, a July 7, 1992, memo
from talking to the press. ·
agency project
written by Cahill shows that she
After the inspector general fiJIAt the same time, the RTC also used her former law partners in
ished its first investigation of wanted to contract with Cahill's briefings with senior Treasury
Cahill, no decision was made to firm to work on the project. Such Department officials.
either punish her or clear her name. an arrangement, however, would
"I was told by Cahill that .. .
. A number of lawyers in the RTC present a clear ethical conflict if Cadwalader was ner tax lawyer .. .
believe their a_gency dropped the Cahill, as an employee of the RTC, and she had no intention of dealing
ball by declinmg to act, and are signed the contract with her old with the RTC in-house ta,r; law
determined to see that history firm. According to a Jan. 28, 1993, staff," reads the Jan. 28 memo.
doesn't repeat itself. In repeated . memo to ethics officials by an RTC RTC legal division rules prohibit
memos to RTC ethics offtcials, associate general counsel, Jungman · employees from involvement "in
they complain that lowe\' pay-grade and .others allegedly arrange!f for any contract or .other particular
employees get the book thrown at the contract to . be signed before matter related to th.eir previous
them for ethics violations, while Cahill came aboard, in order to find elliployer fot:two years." ,
Cahill's alleged problem has been "a way around the ethical probAfter RTC lawyers complained
deliberately minimized on account lem." Jungman declined to com- that Cahill was relying e,r;clusively
of her senior status. Now, a new ment on the affair, citing internal on her old fll'lll for paid advice, the
agent has been assip:ned to the case agency rules. There is no indication inspector general began investigating and ethics officials advised her
to recuse herself. j::ahill complied,
but her July 23 leiter of recusal
raised more eyebrows because it
RI~N ClA~S
listed a new.ova-sight attorney who
Mf
reported directly back til her in the
chain of command. RTC ethics
rules forbid ·emplOyees fro.m dele·
gating to subordinates as a means·
of recusing themselves from potential conflicts of int=st
RTC documents· show the Cad;
walader rmn billed the RTC $1.9
million for work on the "commercial securitization" !iect through
1992, and as of~.... the total
estimated budget was $3.S miUion.
In all the invoices, Caltill's subor·
dinate is listed as the "RTC oversight·attorney." ·
1 , Cadwalader is accused of no
.Wrongdoing in the affair, and
Cahill's RTC contact at the fi~m ­
dec1ined comment. An RTC
spokeswoman also declined to
comment on lhe probe.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, IPc.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

I KNOW TtiS
.
QIIT IT MATcHES

WITH MY OUTAT,

CAUSE·

;Balkan intervention not in our interest
As President Qinton seeks popular support for U.S. military intervention in Bosnia, the division of
opinion would be comical if the
subject weren't so serious.
On one side, favoring intervention, are such unlikely bedfellows
as Margaret Thatcher, liberal New
York Times columnist Anthony
Lewis, National Review, The New
Republic, and Holocaust memorialist Elie Wiesel. On the other are
former New York Times editor
Abe Rosenthal, Pal Buchanan, a
healthy majority of the American
people, the Kissinger-,Eagleburger- ·
Scowcroft axis, the Joint Chiefs of
Staff and me.
'
For most of my life 1 have been .
what used to be called an ','interventionisl." In 1940 I was rooting
for the United States to get into
World War n. For 45 years after it
ended I was a stout believer in the
need for America to figl!t and win
the Cold War. And in 1990 I
agreed with President Bush that
Saddam Hussein's threat to the
Middle East warranted elimination
by whatever means was necessary.
.

But in each of these cases I sincerely J&gt;clievcd that a vital - I
repeat, vitlll - American interest
was involved, justifying. the loss of

William A. Rusher
American Jives, if necessary. Now,
however, American military intervention in Bosnia is being urged by
a weird coalition of people who ·
have never subjected the Bosnian
controversy to that essential test.
Some of them are tough old veterans of the Cold War, whose
dream of a Pax Americana entails
b-loOdying the nose of any foreign
despot who behaves in· ways we
dislike. Others opposed the Cold
War and the Gulf war prec1scly
because·it was so clearly in America's interest to win them; but now,
repelled by CNN photographs of
Serbian atrocities, they regard the
Pentagon a5 a son of m&amp;S.$,ivdwat
team, and the lives of an unknown
number of this country's professional soldiers as a small price to
pay to soothe their inflamed sensi-

bilitics.

. ' "

sanctity of all iqternatiol)al bordqs,
or in those of Bosnia"in particular.. ·
Poppycock! England will be lucky
if it is still hanging on to Scotland
when the current worldwide nation·
alist fever has run its course.
It is equally absurd to say that
"evety situation must be jildged on
its own merits." 'That sounds suitably judicious, but what it really
means is that American foreign
policy will be dete~J~~ined by how
upset our opinion-making elite gets
over each new set of atrocities. The
American people arc made of
sterner stuff than that. Humanitarianism is 11 noble sentiment. but it is
not to be served at 'the price of ·
American soldiers in body-bags.
I have immeasurable regard for
·Mrs. Thatcher and for the many
colleagues of mine who have
ranged themselves on the side of
American military involvement in
the Balkans. But I believe from the
bottom of my heart that they are
wrong.
.
William Rusher Is a syndlcat·
ed writer ror Newspaper Enter·
prise Association.
·

'

N'eeil 1· tell y6u which of these

various caiegories President Clinton and his advisers fall in? Twen·
ty-five years ago our commander in
chief wrote a letter declaring that
he "loathed" the American military, and to this day be has never
retracted the statement. In the
White House he is surrounded by a
gaggle of ex-flower childr_cn who
loathe it as much as he did - and
much more recently, if one junior
staffer's deliberate insult to a gcn·
eral is typical.
Small wonder, then, that their
notion of how to use it is to send it
- · without a ·defined mission, without serious allies, without the
slightest notion of how to extract it
if things go wrong - on an ·openended expedition into the Balkans
·· to make their hyperactive consciences lee! beucr.
Let ·me say it again: American
forces should be put·in harm's way
when, and only when, some vital
interest of the United States is at
stake. It is simply absurd to say that
we have such an interest
• in the

What gr.OWl. ng old' bri·_ngs to 'mtnd
_

It was front-page flews: "A · dently said it was.
· st.udy shows ~~~ men who conThinking about that news item
sume 3()().to-400 grams of Vitamin that made the first page ilf the
C every day live si,r; years longer morning newspaper, I wondered:
than men who don't."
The day that appeared in the
paper ·I attended a seminar. on
aging.
One of the things our leader "With nursing homes, disability,
asked us to do was write down Medicaid and strokes just over the
three things that come to mind horizon for many of us, who would
when we think of aging. I wrote want to add six years to their life?"
nursing home, disability and Medi- Better to exit thi$ "vale of tears"
caid.
·
before things gcf worse than they
Next to each of the items we had arc..
written down we were to puta plus
This feeling is growing. A
sign, a'minus sign or both. I put a Parade magazine poll found that49
minus sign next to nursing homes percent believe that a doctor should
and disability and both a plus and be allowed to help a person with a
minus sign after Medicaid. The fatal disease to end his or her life.
good part about Medicaid is that it Another 39.5 percent said that a
provides medical care for those person with a fatal illness should be
umible to afford to pay it for them- allowed to tate his or her life. .
selves. .
But the classical position of
The next assignment, for those both Judaism and Christianity has
of us who were right-handed, was been that the voluntary taking of a
to write our name, address and life is murder.
·
phone number with our left hand.
Because ordinarily tho .person
(Left-banders were to do the same committing suicide cannot (almost
with their right hand.) It wasn't by the nature of the act) repent
el)Sy.
.
afterward, he goes to hell.
·.
This was done to raise our level
(It is possible, of course, that a
of sensitivity toward people who person takinf sleeP-ing pills in
have had a stroke. They may be order to commit suicide could have
standing ahead of us in the super- time to repent before he dies. If he
market checkout line while we wait does repent, he could go to heavimpatiently for them to take out' en.)
their money, or laboriously write a
This hardened tnldltlonal view
check. , toward the person commluina suiAnd so it went. Before the day clde has been modified Jre&amp;ily by
was over, I gcit to wonderina man)' churchpeople today.
whether old age ·was really "the
Pallors who once 'would-nQt
last for whii:h the firSt was made" · give a Cluiltllin burial til.a ~
- as th,e ~ Browning so confi· who took his own life now contitlcr

Georg" R. Plagenz

.•SOMETHING FOA NOTHING

.·

each case in its own !letting 1 the own lives were officially recog·
circumstances, the person's mental nized by the church as martyrs.
state, etc.
.
This would indicate that at tift:
The suicide most familiar to bejlinning of the Christian church
Bible readerS is that of Judas who sutcide was not forbidden.
hanged himself after betraying
There are three.'suicides in the
Jesus.
Old Testament, the most .famous of
While there is nothjng in the which is Saul's. When he was
Bible. that expressly condemns sui- wounded in liaule,.Saul asked his
cide, Judaism in later times strong- armor-bearer to kill him before the
ly denounces self-destruction.
Philistines could capture and tor·
Opposition to suicide can be turc him. When the armor-bearer
found from earliest times in the · refused, Saul fell on · his own
ChriStian church. '
sword ..
St. Augustine, however, had to
Geor11e Plan11enz Ia a syadlcat~
admit exceptions to his view ed writer for Newspaper Enter·
against suic1de, since in his day prise Association.
several people who had taken their

.

Today _in h_istory ·
Today iJ Friday, May 14, the 134th day of 1993. 1'llere 11'0 231 days'
]eft in the year,v '
·
Today' s Highlight in Hillllry:
On May 14, 1948, die il'ldcpe11tlcnt 1111e of lsnlel - procllimed in Tel.
Aviv as Brltilh mie in Pllcstlne IWIICIO 111 end. l'IIID·United Stateslmme-..
. dialely ftiCCIIIIized the new Jewilhlllle.
·
On this d8tc:
· In 1643, Louis XIV became King of France at aae 4 upon the death of
his Cather Louil xm.
·.
·
·
·In
tlelepiiCS beJIII pdlciring in PbilltleJpbia for a CODventioa 111.
!~raw up the u.s. CClllldtutioD.
'
.
.
. "
'
In 1796, EnaJUb ph)'lk:IID Btlward ]CIIIIIIrlldminl&amp;tetetl the fiflt Y8CCi-.
nation aaainst smallpox to an 11-~;,p)tl boy.
.
In llb4, !be Lcwil and Cllrt expec!ltloa to explore the I'olim- Ter-:
riUiry left SL Loall.
.
In 1904, tho lint Olympic aamett Ill be held in the Unlled States;
OJiiiited in Si. UluiJ.
·
·
•
In 1942, tho Women's AtWiiarY
"hblllhotl
;
In 1942, AWOl! Oij1Mnt1'1 ''Llilcoln
" pelfuime.l by .
the Cinc:innatl Sympbony Orelleltra, c:ontlucled by Andre Xoltellneti,
who had oommililonotl the wort.
·

1787,

Arm=-

l&gt; ·

'

'

nr.

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag..-3

• r-~1-...;.....:,---:!-.......

IToledo I 71" I

•

PA.

. By The Associated Press
A cold front will cross Ohio Saturday. The best chance for shower
or thunderstorm activity will be
over the eastern half of the state.
Highs will range from 70 degrees
in the northwest to near 80 degrees

•!coJumbusl73• I ,

· The front will c,r;it the state Saturday evening. Cool Canadian air
will then pour into the Great Lakes
and Ohio. Temperatures will
remain on the cool side throu~h the
beginning of the week . A few

--------Hospital news-----Veterans Memorial
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS None.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES None.

IND.

far south.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
. May 13 discharges - Catherine Marks, Terry Payton, Emily
flunt, Mrs. Steven Hornsby and
daught'er, Gari Worley, Mary

Jones, Jeremy Manering; Garnett
Wallace, Hester Lock, William
McDonald, Donald Woody, Betty
Dewitt, Betty Dovenbarger, Rebecca Benfi, Mar'ha Hulbert, ~awn
Taylor, Mary Belles, Cleve Thtven·
er, Dustin Caudill, April Knapp,
James Casto, Bobbi ·Stranahan and
Tammy Vance.
·
May 13 birthS- Mr. and Mrs.
Brian Taylor, daughter, Pomeroy.

----:-Court news---

showers .may develop in the .cool
flow in the northeast on Sunday.
Highs will range from the mid-50s
to lhc lower 60s.
The ~ high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 91 detn'ees in 1991. The
record low was 34 in 1920.
Sunrise this morning was at6: 17
a.m. Sunset will be at 8:39 p.m.

Meigs...

Around the nation .
It was sunny and fair across
much of the nation today, with dry
. wea!her prevailing from coast to
coas~
.
. A jet stream moving rapidly
across the country was bringing
cooler weather to the northern
Plains and Northeast, where temperatures were generally in the 80s
earlier in the week.

Coalinued fl'om page 1

menls. These reduced-rate invest- . reverts back to its normal structure.
ments are then linked to reduced;
Anyone intereste4 in the prorale loans. "
.
gram s~~&lt;?W~ contact a state depo_si·
· In order to qualify, smail busi- tory insutuuon or MtcheUe Jenkms
nesses must document that the pro- at 446-9580.
ceeds or the loan will help to create
Other matten
orretainjobs.
·
In other matters, a group of
Eligibility requirements include county employees and office holdthat the business be organized for ers attended the meetin~ to discuss
profit, maintain offices and operat- their dissatisfaction Willi a recent
ing facilities in Ohio, employ fewer pay raise increase to two fellow .
than 150 people at the ume of employees. The disgruntled
appliCation, and complete a three- employees expressed their ~ncern
page application form on which lhe that the 18 percent pay ra1se was
number of jobs treated or retained far too e,r;cessive and unjustifiable
be documented.
when their raises amounted to only
If all requirements are met, the . three and one-half 10 faur percenL
small business goes to a bank
The upset employees stated they
.which is a state depository and only wanted to be treated fairly and
applies for a reduced-rate loan. that they felt pay raises should be
Bank One is the only state deposi- equal and,across the board for all
tory in .this area, according to Jenk- employees giving consideration to .
ins."lf the business is eligible the seniority.
bank then reviews the loan based
Commissioner Janet Howard
on its own criteria. The bank then was the only commissioner to vote
applies to the state treasurer for against the pay raise initially .
participation in the program. The Roush and Commissioner Bob
treaSurer evaluates the applications
Hartenbach voted for the increase.
on a first-come, first-se~ed basis
No action· was taken on the matand detetmines eligibility.
ter but Commissioner Manning
Once the loan package is · Roush assured the employees that
approved, the treasurer buys a cer- the pay raise was justified and that
titicate of deposit from the eligible money for the raises was in the
lending institution. The bank pays budget. Roush also stated that
l)te state less interest on the cenifi- requests for pay raises for county
cate of deposit than it would nor- employees had to come from the
mally pay. In tum, the bank makes office holders and ·that he (Roush)
the loan to the small business.
would consider any such request if
The reduced-rate is fixed for up submitted.
to one or two years. At the end of
Meigs County Auditor Nancy
the two year period, the lending Campbell was appointed to fill the
institution can reapply for an addi- ]JO$ilion on the local revolving l!la,ll_ ...
tional two year package. Once fund committee left vacant after the
linked deposit funds have fully death of William R. Wickline.
matured, the borrower's rate

Actloas tor dlssoiutioas flied
Athens, against Southern Ohio
Actions for dissolution have Coal Company, Lancastec, Wesley
been filed in lhe Meigs County Trimble, administrator of the
. Bureau of Worten CompenSation,
Court of Common Pleas by:
Sheila A. Long, Portland, and ' and Industrial Comm1ssion of
..a Dennis E. Long, Chester; John Ohio.
.
dllllll. , .Holman, Racine, and Alana L. Hoi·
·
man; David Q. Williams, Albany,
Dlvon:es ~Died
·
and Deborah A. Williams, Albany:
Divorces ' have been granted in
~:?'ce A. Bissell, Tuppers ruains,
the Meigs County Coon of ComAmy Jo Bissell, Reedsville.
man Pleas to Bratda K. Darst from
Ru Allen Darst; and Tina M.
ActioDa fc.- divorce filed
Butcher irom Dennis C. Butcher.
Fair
and
cool
Sunday
and
Mon'
Four
actions
for
divorce
have
S.outh-Cenlral Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low 50- dar.. Lows in upper 30 to ll)id-40s. been· filed in .the Mr:igs County
DlssolutioD grutetl
. 55. Saturd~y. partly cloudy. High Highs in upp~r 50s and 60s. A Court of Common Pleas.
A dissolution bas been granted
chance of showers Tuesday. Lows
F'liing the actions were Deborah to Rex Allen Hoover and Robin
75-80. c,Juince of rain 20 percent.
in the mid-40s to low 50s. Highs Ann Downie Beegle, Portland, Lynn Hoover by the Meigs County
· Extended rorecast:
65-75.
Sunday through Tuesday:
from Rodney Lee Beegle, Portland; Court of Common Pleas.
,.
Ernestine Withrow. Pomeroy, from
Gary Lee Withrow, Libanon;
DlD1rd, Hu1ter sentenced
Willadean Dailey, Albany, from
Jon Dil4u:d ai1d Bernard Eugene
Kurtis Jtliries Dailey, Albany; Den- Hunter have both been sentenced to
'
.
M
"
ver R.' ·Persons, West Columbia, serve two yean in a proper penal
D orma orr1son
Grace Taylor
W.Va,
from Mary K. Young Per· institution on charges of trafficking
Dorma Velva Morrison. 91,
Grace E.' Taylor, 98, of sons, Long
Bottom.
in marijuana by the Meigs Countv
Long Bottom, died Thursday, May Pomeroy, 4ied Thursday, May. 13,
COurt
of Common~13, 1993. in the Pomeroy Nursing 1993 .a.t ~omeroy ~ursing and
. JDdameats aoupt
and Rehabilitation Center follow- Rehabihtauon Center m Po~eroy.
Actions for~~ have been
MIIrrltlge lcellleS issued
ing an e,r;tended illness.
Born on Dec. 15, 1894 10 U~ca, flied in the MeJgs County Court of
Marriage
licenses have been
Born Aug. 10, 1901, at Given, Mo.. she was the daughter of the Common Pleas by: ...._
.
by
Meigs
County Probate
issued
W.Va., ·she waS a daughter of the late Charles and Rae~! Cleveland. ·
Michael Chutes, Hockingport, Court to:
late James and Mary Casto Hoi· She was employ~ w1th the F. _w.
ainst H.D. Brown, D.D.S.• Mid·
James Michael Hill, 22; Syraland. She was a member of Rock- Woolworth Co. m Kansa$ C1ty. 8~epon; Joshui D ·Lanza Chagtin
cuse,
and Dawn Michelle Gheen,
castle EUB Church and she was a Kansas. She. moved. to Pomeroy m Falls, 8J ainst Chides N. Curfman,
homemaker. .
1980. She IS sumved by a son, Racine~and Hubert E. Mattm, Yin- 22, Syracuse; Robert Lee Kuhn, 36,
Mrs . .Morrison is surviv_ed by James Everett _Taylor,l_'omeroy, ton, Va.; Oxford Ca ito] Corpora- Dexter, and Amy Beth Haning, 29,
two sons, Wesley Morrison, Win- three g~andcbtldren, Silt gre.at- tion Columbia, ~{!nat Mi!Ziann . De,r;ter: Paul Lynn Rowe, 37,
Coatinued from page 1
. Racine,andRose.MaryYocwn,45,
field, W.Va., and Ralph Ballard, grandchildren.
Kl -'ber R · .
- · Bank Racine:; Jllines Edward Crank, 56,
Besides her parents, she was
B1
• acme, omm-- .
Long Bottom; one daughter, Macel
Derease closin11
McLane asked.
preceded
in
death
by
her
husband;
·
of
Parkersbuq1.
W.Va.; agams! Pomeroy, and Chirlotte Ann Hess,
Rowley, Dunbar, W.Va.; step·
Defense attorney Bill McLane
Fred Drenn11n lied because he
daughters, Flossie Stover,' Glen- James w. taylor, 11 brothers and Roger W. DaVIS, Pomeroy, et al, 4 7, Pomeroy; Ronnie Eugene said the case deals with two con- hated Lemasters, McLane said.
Farmers I~ ~· C:Ol!B"- Burlt:hamer, 23, Gallipolis, and cepts - credibility of witnesses
.ford, Velma Barr, Englewood, Fla.. sisters.
"Michelle Drennen has told so
Private
services
were
held
at
bus, agamsl Vtckte Ph1lhps, Candy Kay Capehart. 35, Pomeroy; and reasonable doubL
Aulene Parish, Sandyville, W.Va.;
many
lies, so many times, to so
one· sister, Martha E. Clonch, Riverview Cemetery. Arrange- ~orneroy: Farmers Bank and ~av- Tony Ray Chapell, 29, Racine, and
McLane pointed out inconsis- many people in so many places,
Pomeroy; seven grandchildren, 13 ments were by ·Fisher Funeral mgs CompaDy, Pomeroy, aguns! Kimberly Lorenc Hoskins, 27. tencies between whal he ~ailed that she may not know what the
ErneS1 L. Rainsey, ~y. et al, Racine; Vaughan Kelly Mitchell, actual facts and the Drennens' tes· truth is anymore," he said.
great-grandchildren and several Home in Middleport.
·
and Lyman Stanley apmst WCIW 22, Middleport, and, Marybeth timony.
step-grandchildt:en.
.
Phillips.
.
'The physical evidence denies
Hazel Brewer, 23, Middleport;
She was ~reced"" m d~ath by
Fred, Drennen said five shots
,
what
Fred and Michelle Drennen
,-,, IJ_'
'
'II
"~
,.,
'
.
0''
m"
"
II'"
tl
.
d
Joseph Richard Roush, 23. Racine, were fired, but only three shotgun
!!(0 1 ,USQI\n S, · mar DB ar an
;
Noilce
of
appeal
:
·
have
said,"
he iJdded. "Agent Lindand Jennifer Lynn Couch, 24, wads were fopnd at the scene,
J11sse l-AOrrison; two ))njthers, one
sey's
story
was
every bit as believA
notice
of
appeal
has
been
Pomeroy;·and Peter Harold Rehn, McLane said:
: sis\('l' and B.Step-dl!ughter. .
able
as
(the
Drennens')
story."
filed in the Meigs Co11111J Court of 22, Middleport, and Christina .
S#rvices will be 11 a.m. SatllfThey had to dispose of Fred
Rebuttal
'l.Tnits
of
the
Meigs
County
.
Common Pleas by John . Dailiels, Marie Peters, 20, Middleport.
' Drennen's bloody coveralls, but
. day at Casto Funeral Home in
' "We're not interested in a Ban
, Evans, W. \;'a. with minister Denver Emergency Medical Service
neither Michelle nor Fred Drennen
r
.
Simpson
defense," Assistant Proseto
nine
calls
for
assisresponded
· HiU:,'officiating. Burial will follow
mentioned if Lemas~ had bloody
Meigs
announcements
cutor
Charles
Knight said during
tance
on
Thursday
and
early
Friday
' in F~irview Cemetery at Given,
coveralls, McLane said. That is
wv
,,
"
the
prosecution's
rebuttal.
morning.
.
because Lemasters did not have
• a.
'
FOE
Auxiliary
to
meet
Revival
On Thursday at 8:25 a.m. the
Knight quoted the mischievous
' Fri~nds lllaY, call at the funeral
The F.O.E. No. 2171 Ladies
Revival at the Shade United lilood on his clothing, he added.
cartoon
character's defense as "I
Rutland
unit
went
te
Nelson
Road
' hom~ ilfter 2 P·!ll· today.
·
Rely on the physical evidence,
Au,r;iliary
will
meet
Tuesday
at
Methodist
Church
will
be
May
2~didn'-t do it. Nobody saw me do it."
for Belvie McDonald who was 7:30p.m. ·
26 at 6:45p.m. nightly. There will McLane told 1hc jury, not solely on
This morning, Crow is to ·
dead on arrival,
be special music. Chet Lemley will the testimony of witnesses that
At 11:46 a.m. the Pomeroy unit .
instruct
the jurors on the law prior .
AA group to meel
. be the evangelist. Everyone wel- have something to gain, or have
to
their
deliberation.
If deliberation
Charges of possession of mari- went to Maplewood Road for TheIgained already, by lying.
The Pomeroy Group of AA will come.
•
lasts
past
this
afternoon,
jury mem. juana are pending against . a ' rna Chase 'Yho was_taken to Veter- meet
"Would you buy a used car from
Thursday at 7 p.m. 11 Sacred
bers
will
be
sequestered
in an area
. Pom~roy m\m 'who allegedly had ans Memorial HOSJII~. ,
Fred or Michelle Drennen?"
Heart Cathohc Church. Call 992·
VFD Co111mlttee to meet
hotel until they reach a verdict.
· lhe drUg in his car and at his resiThe Po~eroy_ umt at 3.10 p.m. 5763 for information .
• The BedfOrd Township Volqn. dence w~e~~ they were seafl:lted by went to Vtllage Green Apartments
teer Fire Department Committee
_ _ _ _ _-:police Thursday afternoon.
. for Todd Ackerman. He was. taken
'
SkiD testlna clinic
l'o'ill
meel
Tuesday
at
7:30
p.m.
at
· Pomeroy' Chief of.Police Gerald to Yete~.
.
A skin testing clinic will be
made. Thacker and Commission1~ his l~tter, ~offman proposed
Rouihl,said one of hiS officers was
At 5.40 p.m. the Syracuse una offered at lite Rutland Fire Station the Burlingham Modern Woodman er
Howard said they had checked an atrport m Metgs County along
·malcmg 11 routine check on a car went to Route 124 for Sarah -on Monday from S. 7 p.m. All per- Hall ..
lhe distance from Meigs County to with' improvements at the Gallia
·parke(!_on Martin Street when he McDowell. She was taken to Veter- sons handling food are ~uired to
CitiSSeS available
the Watson site and that it is 22 County aif]XIl! rather than the prodiscovere'd marijuana, seeds and ansThe Columbia Fire Station was have yearly tuberculin skm tests.
Openings for some of the class- miles from the intersection of posed larger auporl on the outskirts
cultivating tools inside the vehicle: called at 8:SS p.m. 10 Ca~enter Funds 'for these clinics are provided es in the Eastern Community Edu- Route · 7 and Union Avenue, of Gallia County. He said that way
The car · belonged to Jackie
through the tuberculosis levy· and
McD.$-ni.el, 31, of Pomeroy who Hill Road on a structure ire at tliere is no ·charge for anr of the cation Program are still available. Pomeroy, a total of five miles far- both counties would benefiL ·
Hoffman said that for too many
was nearby the parked car.
· property owned by Tony Osborne. services. Further informauon may There are openings for the line lher than to where the Gallia Meigs
dance
class
and
the
basic
fmt
aid
Airport
is
now
located.
years
Meigs County has taken what
After being apprehended The Rutland uriit was called and , be obtained by contacting the
and
CPR
class.
Fees
for
these
Also
present
to
answer
queswas
"left
over" because residents
McDaniel was taken 10 his apart- transported Jennifer VanDyke, Meigs County Tuberculosis Offi~ classes are $6; There also openings lions from those attending the hearfelt
there
was
no other choice. He
ment on Union Avenue where Lindsay Lyons and Brian VanDylce at 992·3722.
for
lhe
.walkercise
class,
flower
ing
was
Pamela
S.
Keidel
of
~ir­
spoke
of
the
exodus
of agencies
more marijuana was found. The to Veterans. Aaron Smothers was
arranging class and bjlsic volleyball _ port Technology and Planntng . mentioning the Bureau of Employ:
investigation is .continuing, Rought treated but not transported. The
class. The walkercise class is Man- · Group, Inc.
.
ment Services, Farmer's Home
said_; , ;
Scipio Township Fire Deparunent
day
from
7-10
p.m.
The
line
dance
Lettei_'S
Presented
Admi.nistration offices, Columbia
was ·called to assist at 9;06 p.m.
·
class
is
Tuesday
from
6-8
p.m.
and
At
the
he_anng
letters
of
support
National
Gas
and
oii
CorpbraGas,
and Columbus Southern
Units were on the scene untilll:31
the
volleyball
and
basic
first
aid
for
the
!~non
were
read
br
Molly
tion
will
build
a
two
mile
pipeline
Power.
p.m.
.
..
.
and CPR class is Thursday from Varner, f1cld represent~ttve for
A divorce has heen granted by
"I'm not trying to put the blame
This morning (Friday) at 1:09 from a point 'whicll will intercon- 7·30-9·30
pm
Congressman Ted Smckland, on·anyone for this mass exodus ·of
the Meigs County Court of Com- a.m ..the Racine ·units were called nect with several interstate
·
·
· ·
Commissioner Howard, and Wayne
mon Pleas to Edward Earl Sellers Mile Hill Road. Twila Clark was 'pipelines, including Tennessee Gas
servicing agencies from Meigs
Auxiliary to meet
King of the Gallia County Strategic County,
from Angela Sue Sellers.
transported to Veterans. ·
· Pipeline Oo .• GNG Transmission
but I am saying that here
The' Rutland Fire Department Plan Infrastructure Committee. In once again, Meigs County is getAt 2:37 a.m. the Pomeroy unit Corporatron and Columbia Gas
went to · Mulberry J\ venue for Transmission Corporation to· Ladies Auxiliary wiU meet in spe- his letter King said that he felt the ting the shaft as we have many
The .Daily Sentinel
·
Charles Carson who was· taken to Columbus Southern Power's .ciltl session Monday at 7:30p.m. at proposed location for the new air- other limes,'' Hoffman said.
·I•. ' (USPS ltl-9101
€:onesville electric generating the Rutland Fire Station wllh the port would provide good access to
Holzer Medical Center.
"I
would
like
to
state
again
that
Pia ~ th 811
both counties and that without its
PubUsh'ed·! 8very ·iiafternCJOn, Monday
The Rutland unit, at 5 a.m., plant.
our objections are based on the
thr&lt;&gt;U41h Friday, ll1 Court SL, Pomeroy,
~~~wm\e
c:;:,rdfnat!s.
~
construction
there will be less additional
Columbus
Southern
Power
is
a
responded
to
Meigs
Mine
No.
2
for
distance from Meigs
Ohio b)i tho Ohio Valley Publi&gt;hing
monthly meeting will be opportunities for development.
Company/Multimedia Inc., PomoJvy,
Bob Donally who was taken to . subsidiary of American Electric · group's
County.
If
the
airport is to be relo-• 11 · th · ·
ti
Middleport Mayor Hoffman
Ohio)l6789, Ph. lllr.l-2166. Second ctuo
Power ·company, Inc: one of the held
Holzer.
cated,
it
is
Meigs
County's tum. I
.
•0 owmg e JOtnl mee ng. read a letter of opposition to the
1100~ Ifid at Pomeroy, Ol&gt;to. .
nation;s largest electric utility sys- The, traveling prize will be fur·
would
also
ask
that
you consider
tems. This project is part of AEP's nished by Juanita Harmon. All proposed airport location stressing the possibility of two airports, one
Member: Tho AIIIOO!aied Pnoa, and the
the distance &amp;om Meigs County. In
Ohio Ntw.,..per AIIOdation, Nadon.al
plan io meet Phase I requirements members urged 111 attend..
in Galli a and one in Meigs."
'
Board appointed for
Advertbina RePffllentative, Bnflh&amp;m
April
Middleport Village Council
of the Clean Air Act Amendments
NewiiJ&gt;Ilper Sal•, 733 Thin! AVen.oe,
Cornell
said
that
comments
at.
had passed a resolution opposing
· Meigs l)nited Appeal of 1990. II is apticiP.Bied that the
LCCDtomeet
New York, New York 10()17,
the hearing would be put into the
location of a new airport in
the
The
Leading
Creek
ConservanConesville plant wtll bum up to
record.
POSTMASTERo Send acld..O. •ha"'ea to
,
A board of lrustees for the 117 million cubic feet per day of cy District wUf meel Thursday at 5 GalliaCounty.
The Dally Santino!, 111 Coun St.,
Meigs
County
United
~
"!as
natural
gas
during
the
summer
Pomeroy, OHiD 46769.
p.m. at the office. Public invillld.
1
appointed at Wednesday s meeung months.
&amp;i:JB&amp;CBIPI'ION RAtJ:s
By Carrlor or Motor Houle
of the organizers held at the Meigs .
National is a national ps public
Fishln&amp; derby slated
SPHING VAltl I CiNfMA -,
One Weok..........................................St.80
County
Chamber
of
Commerce
utility
engaged
directly
in
the'
purThe
Racine
,Gun
Oub
will
have
·
n~ 4 1) '4
··=~=~~:'"'·
One Month..:......................................l6.96
Cll,. c.tiPICA!'II .VA.I,._.I
office.
chase, storage, distribution, sale its annual fishing derby Sunday.
en.. ~·--·"iiDioi.B'ooP:Y _____ :,$83.20
Named to thai board were and tn~nsportation of naturll ps in Members may bring one guest.
PlliCI:
·
.·
.
Chlorus Gaul, Gary Evans, Frink Eastern Center and Southelatem Olily nipt craw~. chicken liz·
Dat!y. ........................,...................2ti Centa
Smilh,'Tom Dooley, Ernie_ Sisson, Ohio. National provides natural ps · Zll'ds, liver and artificial biat may
llubocri.-, na14aaltlng .. ...,. tho~
C!ndY Oliveri, lim Tompkins, and, service 10 22. 76' rettidential, com· be uaed. The club will provide
.,.
,;,; nnut th allvanc&gt;t t.o Tho
Dally Sanlinel 'o n a th-, otl1 ar t2 . Ytcky Morrow.
mercia! and industrial cu1tomers night crawlers. Prizes wilf be pemanili - - Cradll wtn bo lion -or ·
Pfans are movina forward to and haS a total annual throuabput sented It the eat1 of the day. Call
'
forrninl a United ~ corpora· ·or approximately 10 billion cubic · James ,Jierrell at 949-2684 for
No ~ptiMa by INIII ,..,.._ In
lion and developing t ·!awl for the feet. The AEP transaction should information.
.
ana wlion bOme aanler ta
oraanization, Frank mlth, chair· increase National's BMual lhrouih·
.
·
••allable.
man, reportod. · ·
put by at least sixth ~L Ser- To IDeet May 25
.
' ' Matlhlooot!Dtlo•
. ........... c.-_.
It was clecidecl to beain allOOdl vice 'to the Conesvtllc plant is
The next 1'Ciullr ineetln.l of the
II W•too ·•·-... •·- -.......;,...-~LM
useument through contacta with scheduled 10 commenco on Jan. I, Easlern Locallklard of BciUcatioa
21WIIIra............._,,_,...............:....
18
aaencles about !heir needs u ~ · 1995.
·
, wiD be held at 7 p.m. on May 2S at
11
71
o•w.....,c;.-tr
bulafordullRappeel.
National
is
a
subsidiary
of
.
tho hiab sc:hooi. -The board will
~. ~----=
· Nexnneellna wu Mt for June National Oas and Oil Company,_a mcctln ~d¥0 lletlli~ . •t 5:30
tetlliiltL ............. _ ........- .............
~ :... .............·,.. .... ".......
22 at 7:30a.m. at lhe chamber publicly traded company on the p.m. thatDI&amp;ht 111 handluome per•
off'ICO.
· .
American Stock lixchange.
$QnneJ matters.·
W.VA.

-,...
_, ----"--Weather-----

----. ·, -Area deaths--

JUry. ••

EMS t:~sponds
to nine calls

--"":""'1--

,·ChargeS· pen d'zng

Airport... _..;::C;;::on::::ll::::nu:::ed=rru.::;:!D~PciiR:!!.:e:...:l;__

To Build Pipeline

Div()rce gtanted

-.....

.

w-......-.. . . . .-.... . .. . .-....

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

..,

�~

..

.

.

.

"•

.

•.

I

.

Sports

.

B.ulls roar to 104-85 romp over Cavs;
rassing for the Cavaliers. ·

CHICAGO (AP) - It isn't
"It was a terrible game and I
often that MiChael Jordan asks for
told
the team we have 10 put it out
help. When he did against Cleveof
our
mind," said coach Lenny
' land, his supponing cast responded
Wilk;ens.
"We have to go home,
with a bravura pelformance.
Horace G.rant, shaking off an regroup and hope the homecoun
ankle injury, hit all eight of his will be kind to us."
If it isn't, the Bulls, who have
shots, $COring 20 points, and Scot·
tie Pippen added .19 in a 104-8~ yet to lose a playoff game after
romp ThUrsday night over the Cav- · sweeping Atlanta in three games,
alieni. The two-time champion could end it by Monday. .
If not, the series returns to
· Chicago Bulls hold a 2-0 lead in
Chicago
Sladium for Game S next
their best-of-seven Eastern ConferWednesday.
ence series.
Grant's pelfonnaitce was upliftJordan managed only 18 points,
ing,
because he didn't know he
breaking a string of 59 playoff
would
be able 10 play untiJ he testgames in which he had scored at
least 20 points. He had a valid ed his ankle before the game.
excuse, not playin$ the last quaner · ".I wanted to give the team
because of a spramed right wrist. inspiration," said Grant, who
The fact the Bulls had blown the scored 10 p()iniS in the first quarter
game apart with a 30-point lead and the other 10 in the lhird, when
be led a 16-3 tll'l that opened an
also helped.
82-52
lead. He also was perfect
Precautionary X-rays taken after
with
4
for 4 from the free-throw
the game were negative and Jordan
line.
should be ready for Game 3 at lhe
"Horace is a warrior, he carne
Richfield Coliseum on Saturday.
"Michael told me before the through for all the rest of us,'' said
ga!De that they probably were B.J. Armstrong, who helped with
going 1!1 go at him, so he told me 10 14 points. "It's that time of the
get going early," said Pippen, who year where we're excited and we
scored only nine points in Game I. know what 10 do."
Jackson said he was pleased
"I knew I was going 10 come out
and be aggressive on offense, but it with the scoring balance that was
was our defense that shut them missing in the opening 91-84 victory, when Jordan scored 43 point
down."
•
Something tha~ was not missed and Armsttong was next with I 0.
"Their foeus was Oft Michael,
by·coach Phil Jackson.
"A great ¥arne ~me to an &lt;:00 because of all the points be sc&lt;ml
about six mmutcs 1nt0 the thtrd the other night," said Jackson,
quarter," Jackson said. "Y~u sa~ ''and everyone knew they had to
some great Bulls defensive mtens1· step up. Jordan didn't grab the
ty in the last seven minutes of the spotliRht and let everyone particisecond quarter and the fust seven pate.'r
minutes of the third quarter. The
For the Cavaliers, Larry Nimce
:30~point lead was an awesome
was the top scorer wilh 16 points,
·
onslaught"
Craig Ehlo had 15 and Mark Price
Awesome for the Bulls, embar- 13.

Score J)oa •·d
•'
••

- • Baseball • -

nia(Lon&amp;...,J.I),l0:05p.m .
Seollle (H•mon 5.0) at Olklond
(HilleJU 1-3), 10:35 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

-DIYitioa

L I'd
8 .750
15 .545
16 .515
16 .500
16 .500
19 .441
New Yorll .......... l2 20 .375

Teom
W
PhiladeiJihiL .......l4
lol-..1 ..............11
SLL.ouil .......... .... l7
Olicqo .,.,......... l6
P-rJh ........... l6
f'lorid&gt; ,............... l5

'•
••
!.

Saturday's games

GB

Boal&lt;ln (Dopoon 2·11 11 Minneaolo
(Delhoieo 4-2), 1:05 p.m.

6.5
7.5
· I
8
10

Baltimore (Rhodes

12

w..um DIYiti..

s.. )i,.,.;..., ......ll

13 .629
H.............. :....... l9 14 .576
Ad1n11 ................2o 16

CJNCINNATI ..... I6
. Lol An&amp;•ieJ ...•.•.. 14
~"' Qfeao ............ IJ
Coloiodo.............. ll

II
19
20
23

.ss6

at Detroit

top ·spurs 109-103

2.s

5.5
.7
8,
I 0.5 ~

(Leobrand14-1), 1,35 f·'"·
KaniU City {OubJOZo 0-3)
lomio (F.,.II :;_-4), IO:OS p.m.

a1

ATTEMPT STEAL -:- Chicag_o Bul!s. B.J.
Armstrong and Michael Jordan try to steal the
ball from a fast-moving Mark Price of the
Cleveland Cavaliers. during Thursday ' night's

NBA Eastern Conference ·semifinal contest In
Chicago, where the Bulls won 104-85 to lead
their best-of-seven series l-0. (AP)

Cali-

a»caao 11. T~ns. 3:0:5 p.m.
x.a.- City "Calilomia, 4:1l5 p.m.

- • NBA playoffs • Chicoao 104, CLEVELAND 15,
Olicagoloodl •ioo 2-0
Phoenix 109. S.n Antonio 103,
Ph:Jcna. Ucls seria Z.O

Philadelphia (MYlhoUand 4-3) at
Los An&amp;c:Jcl (Candioui 1· 3) at
Hou-{Homit&lt;h J.l),l:ll5 p.m.
Florido {llommond 2-3) M SL LouiJ

(Tewbllory 2·3), 1:35 p.ID.
· s~ 1'1-i- (s-ley 2-2&gt; •
D;eao (G.-.1·1.-riJ 2-S), I0:05·p.m.

Saturday's games

90 S10 Pickup .......................... •4995
91 Pontiac Grand Am ..............:~990
84 Mercury Wagon .................~.•t995
89 Chevy Caprice ..........
*6999
90. Ford Escort.......:.............·.... *5990

Phoeniic MSan A.Nonio, 1 P•·
Chicaao a1 CLEVELAND, 3:30

Saturday's games

p.m.

New York (Saberhaacn 1· 3) at
Monueol {Show 0-0), 1:05 p.m.
.

CARS

Tonight's game
NewYori&lt;OIO..loat,lp.m.

s.n

,.

Seolde ot HouAm, 9 p.m.

1

Los An&amp;elcl (Hcnhiscr 4-3) at
HouSUllj(P-&amp;ol 3-2),1:05p.m.

Sunday's games

2-l) at
CINCINNATI (B•owni"' 3-2), 7:05

New York atOw)oUe, 1 p.m.
Phoenia aL S1n AJW.onio. 3:30p.m.
Seaule 01 HouAm, 9 p.m.

p.mPhiladelphia (SdlillinJ 4-1) MAll..u{G. Mocldux21J, 7:10p.m.
p;IIJbu'Jh (Wikefield 3-3) "QUeo.
ao {Ouzm• 3-l), UJS p.m.

- • NHL playoffs • -

Colorado (Reynoso

i .........

Thursday's -!!COres.

Florida (Bowen 2-4) at St. Louia

St. Lauia 2, Toronto I, ~es tied 3-

()lac,....2·3f, a,o5 p.m.
San Francisco (Wilson 0..3) • S•
Die&amp;o (Taylor 0-2), 10:05 p.m.

3

Loo An••,.. 5,

.

v........ 3, Loo

. Only 37,000 miles.

Aa&amp;eka 'WII ...ia 4-2

Sunday's games

90 Olds Cutlass
Ciera ............. *5990
\
91 Bui~k Century ................~ .... ~495
91 Toyota Camry ......................sgaes
87 Old$ Ciera ~ ..........,...........·.... •4495
90 Geo .Prlzm ............................*4995
91 Dodge
·Monaco •• ~ .................
•7990
.
.
91 Cadillac SedaR DeVille

Tonight's game

Philodelphio•AU..... I:IOp.m.

N.Y. IIIIOidon u Piusbwah, 7,30

· New Yart • M..,....;, 1:35 p.m.

P·• ·

Florida ILSL Louis. 2: IS p.m.
Colondo "CINCINNATI, 2:15
p.m.
Pilllbw&amp;h al O.icago, HO p.m.
·
1..o1 Ancclct a HouSIOn, 2:3S p.m.
San Francisco at San Dieao, 1 :0~
p.m.

Saturday's pme

s.. Lou I• • r ....... 7:l0 p.m.

- • Transactions • Baseball

-

=
Teom

EutemDI•blon
. · wLP&lt;I-GB

:::::::::::::f, 15:~

:m

17
17
19
21

.500
.452

N...- Yart .......... l9
Toronl0 ............. 17
l!fllw ................. l4
Bollimore....... ,.... l3
CL£VELAND ..... I3

TORONTO BWE JAYS' Aetivlled

Doves-.._ pilcher, &amp;om lho IS-dey

1..'1
1.5
3.5
5
6.5
· 7.5

.559

.406

.312

di11bled lilt Placed Diet Schofield,
....,._, ... tile 60-day di!ll&gt;led 1111.
Sat 0oo1 u-., pitehet, to Syneutc
ollho ~onal Leaaue. R""olled
Clrq WiltiOIIII, pildl&lt;r, !lOIII s,...,....

Olicqo ... ........ ..lO 12 .625
c:o~;r.,.,;. .......- 11 13 .511
Texu .................ll 14 .563
l7 17 .500
Minnc..,.. ............ l4 II .431
)Canial City ......... l4 II .431

COLORADO ROCKIES: Ploeed
~~~o

""*"Oollnqa.-r--... ...

!.5

2

·-to.. . . . . . . .

~•lled ~ike

-

nuraday's KOI'es

od "Ralo Arnehl, pil&lt;h«, , _ tht ISdo)- di10bled llol. -~ T- Ur·
bini, pitcher, 10 l,.oui~Yille of lhe

·
New YOI\4, M i l - l ·
1...,... 6, Delloil5

.

T - (OozoiM J.O) """"

w;........

.

Football

Deuoil ·
Yart .

·

t-4&gt;.
~
a.BVBLAND (C.Yovna 0.1) ot
on 1 (lo'dlct«:Z..l), 1:~ p.m.
.,...C»ooo (M&lt;Dowo116-l)_a___.!!'xu
CJiooolli "1), I:»PJa. .
~ City (OJno 0-5) a CollfOI•

Noilonolr..a~

CLBVELAND

-

lltOWfiS:

An·

... - - I l l Vlli&gt;o N-

-,..roty.

N _Hockey
_, . . , _
NHL: N'lmfld Willi• P. Short in_ . _ . " ' - " - t1inletol lor NIIL

· IWaplwa,Jnc.

-

-

By BEN WALKER
elbow," Leyritz said. "I wanted to for the Blue Jays. He gave up three
AP Baseball Writer
know why he hit me. Basically, I hits with two walks and three
When the temperatures start to think it was a frustration type strikeouts in 3 2/3 innings. He left
· · nse, so dO tempers at .tiallparli:s. • tliing.''
·
after 65 pitehes, five more than his
· A day after B~ Bon~ and his
The benches emptied and lhere pre~stablished limit.
Royals 7, •ndians 3
father were ejected following a was a lot ofpushing, but no punch·
George Brett hit (lis 300th home
bench-clearing fight, ther.e w~re ing.
two niore basebrawls Thursday.
"I was kind of on the outer edge · r11n and also singled twice as
At Yailkee Stadium, Jim Leyritz being held by a lot of people. I Kansas City won in Cleveland.
Brett joined Hank Aaron, Stan
of New York and Kevin Reimer of couldn't even tell ·.you what was
Milwa~I,ee- squared off in an said, who said it or anything,'' Musial, Carl Yastrzemski, Willie
episode that almost spilled into the Leyritz said.
Mays aqd AI Kaline with at least
stands
·
It took about five minutes to 3,000 ~IS and 300 homers.
"I didn't imow wh4t was going clear the field. As the &gt;Brewers left
Mike Mal;farlane also homered
ori either, but everzbody's out on the field, however, abounOO. fans for lhe Roy~~- !"il:hm:&lt;!o (3-1) got
tit: fielllhnd I don t diink i t - a leaning on the third-base dugout the victory and Mau Young (0-1)
scMiil &amp;WIIII'-Bti\"L'II mariag- .got into ,shol,ltin&amp;-111811:hes with the took "tlte-toss. The Indians lost for
~Phnllilina- said. · _
· p~yers, apd security guards had to . the sixth time in seven games.
' At qteveland Stadium, Albert break up the argumen!J.·
Rangers 9, AthleticS 5
. B~lle .charged lt~tnslis &lt;;ity's
"I'n:tnotevenin~restedinwhat . Butch Da~is, a minor leaguer
. Hipolito Picl!ariiO. \¥hen he was bit star!ed II," Gamer wd. "It was the for most of bts 13 y~ u a pro,
by a pill:h.' Belle WQU!ld up pqrich- f~s, you don't. know if someone hom_erC!I and drove 10 three runs,
- ing at catcher ¥ike· Macfarlane sw10gs a ~e out of the _stands or leadmg_ Te~ ~ver Oakland . .
a(.ler being dragged down from wbaL I_ don t know B!'ylhmg about
~av1~ hit h1s first homer m the.
behind:
· '
·
provolcing the fans, I JUSt wanted to maJors smce 1984. He also had two
. "He~s a cr'azy 'guy," Pichardo get my players off the field."
doubles, _ highlig~ling the Rangers'
said, '. ,
'
"":
~lue Jays6, Tillers 5
season-h1gh l8l11ts.
.
.
··The Yantces beat Milwaukee 4Paul Molitor lined a two-out,
Texas rook a 6-5 I~ m the -sev21,Kansas City defeated Cleveland two-nm double in the botiDII! of the en_th when Ivan Rodriguez reached
1/}, Toronto downed Detroit 6-S ninth, iallying TorontO past Dettoit. third on a fly ball1hat cc:nter frelder
·!!ild Texas ropped Oakland 9-S.
Molitor, who earlier hit a two- Dave Henderson lost 10 the .su~,
-: Leyritz did not start the game, run homer, doubled off Bob Mac- and. scored on Rafael Palme1ro s
b!l' was in the middle of lhings by Donald (3-1) after a walk and a hit sacnfice fly... .
., .
tlii: end. He entered in the fourth baw;r.
.
.
. Mall Wb1tes_1de (1-0) was the
id!Un&amp; when Don Mauingly appal-The Blue Jays ended their four- wmner and -Edwm Nunez (0-2) was
_ ~J\tly pulled a muSc:le !n h1s JOwer game losing streak and ·stopped the loser. T~e ~angers split the .
· left rib cage, an injury that might Detroit's three-game winning four-game senes m Oakland.
p~ him on the disabled list.
string. The Tigers have nDt swept
:•LeyriiZ· hit a two-run single. Toronto since OcL 2-4, 1987.
k~)oing a four-run rally in the fifth
Joe Carter also liomered for Sports deadlines posted
inlling off Cal Eldred (4-4). nose Toronto. Rob Deer, Travis Fryman
~~e CJI(Jugh runs for Jim Abbott and Lou Whitaker homered for
ne Gai/IJH!/11 Dally Trlbullt,
Sports briefs
(2,5).
Dettoit, which outscored the Blue Th" Daily Stlllillel, the Pol111
Golf
;•In the ninth, Rcimer#lrounded Jays 25-15 in the fllSt two games of ~:~~~~!f!!f:at:ct~c~~
WILMINGTON,
Del. (AP) b,Ck to•p,ilch~r Steve arr, who the series. Tony Castillo (1-0) was 11.ons their readers make to the Laura Davies ani! Gail
Graham
. thtew to Leyritz at fust base for the the winner.
. fihal out I!Dd his sev~nth· save. But
Dave Stewart,· who missed the sports·sections of these papers, and shot 5-undei'-par 66s to share the
_. · Rpime~ grazql Leyritz O!! his way first five weeks ,of the season thbeeseu.bc-;:nshedtri~tions wiU contio1ue _to. first-round lead in the LPGA
l)icD.onald's Champipnsbip.
. ~~ the bag, and troubl\1 followed.
because of a rom flexor muscle in
P1
. e l'u., st "h,it me ·w
. ith_· an his ri,ght fo.rearm, made hi_s debut
However, certain dead!ines for Davies bad a tournament-recordS. . - ~"H
submissions will be observed. The under Jron the back nine at the.Du
Pont Country Club. Pauy Sheehan ·
0'/:F,S.
(Continued'f~omRage4)
'JJ • • .·.____
..:.__...:.....:.______ . deadlineforphotosand,eiatedanicles for basketball and other winter and Lauri Merten opened with 68s.
MADRID, Spain (AP) - Ian
P 0'
·
·
·
sports is the last day of the. NBA
t~
' Los Angeles Lakers in the he produced. bitting big shots,"
Finals. ·
Woosnam of Wales shot a S-under!
o nlng r.ound, said be wa~ con- Reid said.
. Likewise, the deadline for sub- par 67 to take a one-stroke lead
c · ned a~out Spurs who hadn't
Kevin Johnson broke· the spell mjssions of local basebt ,). and over Nick Faldo of England and
~uced going into Game 3 Satur- with 2:03 remaining, driving for a softball-related photos and related
Ronan Rafferty of Nonhero Ireland
diV in S{lll Antonio.
· layup that made it 98-89, and the articles, from T-ball 10 the majors, in the rain-suspended ftrst round of
992·3785
iT"Thoy're outs!Bnding players, .Suns weathered San Antonio's last as well as other spring and summer the Spanish Open.
'- just like; with Barkley, every- rally at. the free-throw line.
sports, is the day of the last game
o e sayi'il~, 'What's wrong w.ith
David Robinson led, the Spurs of the World Series. The deadline.;
rkley? They'll be all right, with 27 points and Del Negro, for photos and relr.ted articles for
," W~ said!
.
scorelc~ at h~fti~e. fini_shed with
footbaU and otbu fall sports is the
. Barkley, the only Sun wuh a 19 and s1x asstsiS m 17 mmutes.
Saturday before the Super Bowl. .
..
!
..
Majerle had 18 points for the
,These deadlines have been instis • , gQI all seven in the fu'st three
1
. q~rs, when the Suns opened a. Suns...d Johnson added 15 points tuted to give readers plenty or time
·~ '
7~5 lead.
·
.and II' assists. Johnson scored II to get their photos ba~k from the
.
·~-·
f Westphal · said his team's points in lhe founh quarter.
. photography studio of choice and
'
defense in the third quarter\vas·the
Robinson had ·to rebounds in to give the staffs the opportunity to'
,~
~
tty to victory.
the s·pun· 44-32 edge, their second publish these sports photos and
I:''We're making them work for straight lopsided margin. Phoenix's articles during the appropriate seair shots. I'm real proud of the 36 rebounds in the fllSt game had son for that sport..
Y we played defense, .. Westphal beefl a 1993 team playoff low.
Sports brt'efs
d.
But the Su111 seemed 10 have a
[ ''I think all five guys on the charmed lifeagainsttheSpurs, who
Baseball
fl(IOf' and the guys on the bench got only 42 points fr!lm starters
CLEVELAND (AP) - George
ua'd~d what we want to do besides Robinson and ~tone from
Brett hit his 300th career home run
;, ,, d4tensJYery, and -tltat llelp1 ·.·· Willie An~n, a key perfprmer . in the sixth inning .of Kansas City's
. ··' *IIIIIQ you:can lajle more
when tlte-Spurs defeated Portland 7-3 victory over Cleveland. Brett
. .· . · .(CLOSED SUNDAYJ.:
;.
· · - . ~ftl.ll'haYe cqJfi · 3-1 iri-dle·fntiou!lli
·
· join$ Hank Aaron, Stan Musi~l.
'. ~::-~
· IIU!O!It !J~ ~· thOr!' !O ~obi.• 1 "We. ar-e ~~ggllng o(!'e.nsive· Carl '(asn.emski, Willie Mays a~d ·
.....
·
"Dii\:J.(aJerleuid. • ·
ly,'·' Anderson said. '.'We're not AI Klihne as the only play~ wtth
'
.
· ·-.:.... lfldn ••. out the fint 8 112 111iddng any excuses. We need 10 at least 3,00Q hits and 3(J()h~ers.
SINCE 1974
l!'l!lllllll-fl tile f'ourth qlllfler, and focus and keep oW- concenttation;· . ,
·· · Tennis
tllf Suna !iPoned a 94-78 lead ~th- We'll be back strong; .I can guaranl.OND9N (AP) - .The l!nited
~him. titit Spars reserve y1nny tee thaL" ·
States, whtch played wuhout 1ts top
D6J NeJrO'aceolPlted for .the _first
If thC Spurs win at home, it will players in a 4-lloss. ui A~stralia in
nile po1111f Of lill 11·2 run With a be the firat blemish for Phoenix the nrst r~und of the Dav1s Cup !n
· thfe·~ lilly, a layup and two aaainat San Antonio in the play- March, W.ll.l fac~ ~be Bahamas m
9•5
,~~·!l::.:,lloen1x mlased oftl. ~Suu JWilpt ~Spurs~ .. the quah.fy.mg sen~ fo_r .the 1994 _
•.
.- -:-- ::---:-,. C".U:blle. Robiniofl 1\'ai -out · W.orl~ 9-rJJup ·coropeWIO!l. :r~e
.... ...-.
·•··~- L. 'He,p~ylcl
biadme
for and
ua. . $-0 aplnit•
ol tltumbinsurier-Y
·and are States
mateh on
wtllSept
be played
. . . ~ 10
with him,
the posiseaaon.
24-26..In the Onlied· •._~------------·-------~---~~~~~--llllll~ii.

FOR THAT
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01o111 ...

Only 5,000 miles. Loaded!

PHILADELPHIA PH!LLIBS' Ro-

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AMERICAN LEAGUE

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IUN.,::;

errors,

Thursday's !!COres

AU.,.. {GI..ine 4.0), HO P·• ·

·

I

SeoaJe .. Olkllnd, 4:05p.m.

Colorodo (Ashby 0-2) Ol CINCIN·

A~CF

BE REMEMBERED

p.m.

NATI O'IIJhl-3), '1:35 p.m.

.

C .O P

In lite eighth inning or Thursday's American
League game in Cleveland, where the Royals
emerged from tbe fra)', with a 7·3 victory. Belle
. was ejected from the game. (AP)

Brewers-Yanks
g·ames stages for.late brawls

llooUwlotMinnelola,2:0Sp.m.
CLEVBLAND at Milwaukee, l:OS

Pilllbwah (Cooke 1-1) •• auc...
(tUrkey 3- f~ 3:20 p:m.
New Yodc (T...,. 2-2) "Mllriii'OOI
(Marti""' 2-4), 7:35 p.m.

•

R~yals-Indians,

··· Sunday's games

Today's games

surrendering .six runs on nine hits Frane&lt;o. in his first appearance
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
over six innings. It was his worst since April I6, worked the ninth.
AP Sports Writer
Kevin Mitebell and Larry Walk- perfonnance of the season. Bruce . The news wasn't aU good for
er didn't just hit home runs, they Ruffm (1-2) was l)1e loser.
the Mets. Eddie Murray left )be
Mets 4, Cardinals 0
hit shots that pei:Jple will tallc about
game .with a sprained right knee
for a long time.
At SL Louis, the Mets salvaged and anltle that he hun sliding inro
.Mitehell, who BCtually bit two the last game of a three-game third base. X-rays were negative
homers Thursday, put one into the series, but woo for only the fourth and Murray's status was listed as
upper deck at Riverfront Stadium time in 17 games.
day-to-day. .
.
Pete Schourek (2-3) allowed
- ' a blast estimated 10 have travRhea! Co'rmier (l-3), who
eled 458 feet -. in Cincilmati's 7-1 five hits in eight innings and allowed all four runs in ·five
victory over San Diego.
.
squeezed home a run befOI'fl John innings, toOk the loss;
Walker depQsited one into the .
back row of the right-center field
bleachers at Olympic Stadium,
some 450 feet from home plate, in
Montreal's come-from-behind 5-'1
Billy Glaze .&lt;lelivered a pair of Gotden Rockets' hits, all singles.
win over 11ie Florida Marlins.
run scoring singles and sophomore
The Marauders (8-9 overall and
In the only other National Brett Newsome fired a three hit ·S-4 in the TVC) picked up their
League games Thursday, New shutout as Meigs surprised Well- founh snilight win. Wellston drops
York beat St. Louis 4-0 and San ston 2-0 in TVC baseball action to 17-8 overall and 7·3 in the 1VC.
Francisco defeated Colorado 13-8.
T!tursday evening at Meigs High
Mei,es will close out regular seaMitehell's home run brought a School.
son aeuon today at Federal Hockknowing nod of approval from
It was a piteher's battle from ~ . ing. The Marauders will travel to
Cincinnati manager Tony Perez, start, as Newsome and JlryBI) Molt- Unioto Saturday at noon to angle
himself one of only nine players to · han ba!!led it o~t.. Newsom~ fired a with_the Greenfield ~lain Tigers
put one in lhe red seats. Perez hit three hnter, stnking out etgbt and in the fii'St round ofdistnct play.
the frrst, in August 1970,pnd did it . walking only two. Molihan scat- Inning totals
ap~n in 1975. N.o one had done it tered six hits while striking out.five Wellston: 000-()()().0 = 0-3-?
smce Darryl Strawberry five years and walking two..
.
.
Meigs:.OOO-iQ1-x = 2-6-?
ago. ·
..
It was a scoreless bat~ IDltillbe ...... -"WP - ·Newsome
"I came in and he said that's fifth irl'il'ing wlien 'Jim Ptllllns sinLP- Molihan
where he used to hit them," said gled and stole second. Glaze then
Mitehel~ who also put one into the broke the scoreless tie with a base
COLONY THeATRE
yellow seats in lhe second tier of hit
FFL lHFIU THURS.
the outfield.
The Marauders scored their fmal
BURT
REYN!)LDIIN
"I've never seen a yellow and a run in the sixlh inning when Keilh
red in two at-bats," Perez said.
Jones, reached on an error and
. Walker's high, arching blast moved up on a passed ba.ll and a
landed in the last row of the IS,row pinch single by Nathan Brown: On
bleachers that were installed at a~ain Glaze came up with the big
Olympic Stadium ~ se&amp;$011, The hit 10 give them the 2·0 win.
last iow rises about 75 feet directly
Hitters for Meigs included
~.- IIMitttf'
.!el'-•
'
··- .....
behind the 375-foot sign on the .Glaze. wit~ his two singles, while
IHOW '1111111
FRI., lAT.
1:10
outfield wall, ~!id · Walker was the · Brown, Pullins, Gary Stanley and
.
MON.
THAll
a.
fllSt player 10 h1t one there.
Gary Adams all added singles.
ONIIVIINNCIIHOW7:aD
The longest homer ever hit at · Steve Hendershou. Danny Hender·
ADIIIIIICN 11.10- t• Dllt
Olympic Sladium came off the bat shott alid Steve Rader had the
of Willie Stargell. It was estimated
to have traveled 535 feet and was
commemorated by the placing of a
gold seat in the spot where the hall
land~.
·
Barry Larkin also homered for
Cincinnati., and John Smiley (1,5)
won for the first time since last
October,' when he played for Minnesota. The win was Cincinnati's
..
fourth straight and its seventh in
lhe last nine games.
Dave Eiland '(0-2), who hasn't ·
posted a win since April 23 of last
year, was the loser. Bobby Kelly's
14-game hit streak came to an end.
He went 0 for 4.
Expos 5, Mar lias 4
Montreal won when Lansing
scored from seco·n.l! on Marquis
Grissom's single off Jlm' Corsi (0- -'
I) with one out in the bottom of the
ninth. It made a winner' of John
Wetteland (2-0), who b.lew Jiis ihird
~save in sill opportunities by giving
.
.
.
up a triple io Jeff Conine and a
double to Greg Briley in the ninth.
Giants 13, Rocltles 8
•.
At Denver, the Roc:ldts' propensity for committing ,errors and
What better tribUte to
allowing roo many late-inning runs
accomplishment than a
was evident once again.
The Giants scored four limes in
gift that makes an · ·
the ninth on one hit and three
educated statement
wrapping up John BUrkett's
Uke fine jewelry.
NL-~nj! sixth win. ne loss'was
the Rock1es' eighth _in their last
nine ·games. They went 1'7 during
a just-completed homestand.
·.
Darren Lewis bad three hits and
three RBis, and Barry Bonds ani!
Kirt Manwarinf! each had a pair of
·'
RBis as lhe G1ants hammered out
13 hits.
.
Burkett (6-0) got the win despite

•••

In AL ·affairs,

· Ballllllcn allelroi~ 1:35 p.m.

Thursday's scores

•••
••

A ROUGH-AND-TUMBLE experience is
what Kansas City catcher Mike McFarlane is
trying(to help pitcher Hipolito Pichardo (35)
avoid _by chasing doWn CleYeland's Albert Belle
(betweeJJ them) after Belle charged the mound

T...-o•New Yoril, l :lOp.m.

CINCINNATI 7, S..Die&amp;o I
N''w Yort 4, St. LouisO
s.. Fnnc:iJCO 13, Coloro&lt;lol
M - 5, Plarida 4

Mitchell hits first.HR since 1988
to reach Riverfront's ted seats

Meigs blanks Wellston 2-0

Chioqo {McCall:lll 2-4) • Tm1

2

.471
.424
J94
.324

1~2)

(Weill 4-I),I:IS p.m.
Toronto (A. Leiter 1·2) at New
Yorll(Pacz l·l~ 1'30p.m.
CLEVBLAND (Naay 2-5) " Milwlllll:ec (lionel I-I), 2:05 p.m.
Seoale (Leary 2-l)a Ooklond CD-Iiil&amp; 0-2), 4:05p.m.
·
'

_ " They beat us in -every phase of
the game, but you have to give
their defense credit,'' Price said.
"We knew they would be ttapping lhe ball Oft us, but we didn't
know how inleDse il was going 10
be," said John Williams.
"They're a great teal)l, they .·
took away our half-court game,"
added Brad Daugherty. who was
expected to be the focus of the
offense, but managed only nine
points.
Su111 109, Spurs 103
When Charles Barkley got his
shot back, everything came togeth·
er.
Barkley's worst phiyoff ever
culminated Tuesday with a S-for·
21 performance in Game I of the
Western Conference semifinal
between San Antonio and Phoenix.
But he made 12 of 18 shots two
nights later in a 109-103 victory
that put the Suns up 2-0 in the bestof-seven series.
·
He also had seven steals (one
shy of the NBA playoff record), 10
rebounds, three blocks and 35
poinis.
"There is not much you ean do
when he's that hot, except keep a
body on him. He dido 't get much
inside - most of his ~ints were
jumpers," the Spurs J.R. Reid
said.
Barkley, who·had "been shooting
32 percent from the line, also made
10 of 14 free throws. He said he ·
logged hours of extra practice
between. Game I and Thursday
night.
·
"Obviously, it was very frusttating, because if you're not used
to something, you have to experience it," said Barkley, who had
shot 56.9 percent in his playoff
careu before this season. "It definitely weighs on your 111ind."
Coach John Lucas of the Spurs
said nobod~ his team expected
Barkley to
sttuggling.
"He's a great player, but we
·shut off a lot of ottier. guys, and
we've got to continue that," Lucas
said.
.
Phoenix· coach Paul Westphal,
whose team haS won a franchiserecord five straight playoff games
after 18king the last three against
(See PLAYOFFS on Page 5)

Sun~

In Reds' 7-1 win over Padres,

Friday, May 14,1993 :
•
. Page 4 ~

•

The Dally SenUnel Paqe 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sen~inel.~

The ·naily

In the NBA playoffs,

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Saluntay - 7:30p.m.
Sunday S&lt;hool · PO a.in.
WoniUp - II a.m.,
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Wcdneoday Service-7:30p.m.

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Sunday Scllool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 a.m.
Po INJ Flnt 1lapiPII
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Sunday Scllool - 9-.30 a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m.
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41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pulor. li. Lamar O'Bry..l
Suliday Scllool- 9-.30 a.m.
Wonhip -10:4! a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodnaday SeM&lt;ea -Ulop.m.
Flnt ..,., Cb&amp;aoocl Pa1mor SL
PallOr. Jley, ,_"-Seddon.
Sandi)' Sdoool· 9:U a.m.
Wonbip • IO:U a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.-S:30p.m.
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Weolaaday Serrico-7:00 p.m.

MLVII•~

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Wednelday Semceo - 7 p.m.

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Foollh A: Main SL, Middtq1011
PuiDr: ReY. Gilbe1l t:ra11o )r. •
Sunday S&lt;hool- 9:30 a.m.
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Wonhip - 10:45 l.m.
AollqiiiiJ Bapdol
Pulor. KaiDdb Smilb
Suaday Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.
Thunday Sc:rvioes- 7:30p.m.

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Frto w•llapllol
SL
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P-= Rev. Paul TaylotSunday S&lt;hool - to a.m.
. ........, • 7 p.m.
Wednaday Semceo- 7 p.m.

Cathol1c

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...... BanCo' I•CIIorcll

161 Mal&gt;ony Ave., Paneooy, 992·5898
P.-: Rev. Waller I!. Heinz
SM. C... 4:4$-S:IS,.m.; Ma11- 5:30p.m.
S.... C... -i :45-9:15 a.m.,
Son. Maao - 9:30 a.m.
Doi1ey Mao - 8:30 a.m.

Cl1urch of Chr:st
p

.., Cloowdo ol Cbrlll
222 W. Main SL
Pulor: Aacl~w Mllcl
Sunday Scbool • 9:30 a.m.

Hartford Churdl of Christ In
Cbrlallan Vnton
Hartford, W.Va.
PallOr: ReY. David McManio
. S101day School - II a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
' iWedneaday SmOceo ·7:30p.m.

Church o! God

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ML Morlalo Cb- ol God

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Pa-= MY. Bladtwood

s..,- Scbool · 9:30a.m.

Wonbip 10:30LIII-,700p.m.
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Savico: Frida)'. 7 p.111.

s..y Scboo19:30M.
Wanldp- II a.m., 700 p.m.
Wedntoday Senice -7:30p.m.

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Sunday Scbool·lOua.
Wonbip-9a.m.
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FIVE YEA.R HONOREES , These employ.
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erans Memorial Hospital Administrator Scott

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Un:ted Mett10d1st

l!ut~Atul

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Gnu.UaW MfOt'W
Wonhip ·9:30a.m. (Ill A 2nd S...),
7:)0 p.m. (3nl A 4th San)
Wednesday Senice -7:30p.m.

Sunday Scbool· JO . ..

RETIREES • Three retirees of Veterans
Memorial Hospital were present Wednesday to
receive nowers and gifiS when they were honored during National Hospital Week cere-

Wonhip·IIIUII.
LMniCIIrFrtort r =t·a ..dl

,._,,_li nJl..
Wonbip - ID-.30 aa., 1,._
Sunday Scbool· !".30

Wet f yS.ria:a·7f'&amp;

Alfnol'
....lOr: SbUon.l:laoumau

Sunday Scbool· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip · II a.iu.,.6:30 p.m.

-

a.Putor. Shanm l:laoumau

jjr,~t:~~i.;
..,.._....
-=s::::"'_
..
....,-=:;_

Creative writing
contest slated

s..doJ Scliaol • a.m.Wonhip . tO a.m., 4 p.111. (2Dd A 4th Sua.)

2·--

-·....._,_-_

A creative writing contest has
been announced by the Meigs
County Library Youth Council.

SJ..-JIInl VIIIW .....Jiorlu
Sotoday Sdlool · 10 .....
Wonllip-llua.,4p.DL (I•A 3nt Som.)

nun ..

..... 57•7-ldl ....
•

7 ,, _

,..

,~

...... :w..i-1;!1...

r

'!.z'i ; ;-:~:~
r-

- ..........

LaalaPaooor: ReY. Seldon rom""'
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 L11L
Wedncaday Scrri&lt;;u -7:30p.m.

....c..oz~7
DIII
. . . . =7~7=:.
5

'
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••

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:
• 'J--.]1
-.~-·--a .-.

leedmtle
PasiOr: ReY. Seldon lomiOft
Wonbip ' 9:30 IJD.
hi A: 3rd Sunday· 7:30p.m.
Sunday ~-. 10:30 a.JII.
Wedncaday Serviceo - 7:30p.m.

.......,.,,

..._

•',

a ..
7

•
'

,•

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.,
Singing by the Lalce, Krodel P!IJ'k,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., T p·.m.
nightly, through Sunday. Ed Craw,
ford, Conrad Coot and Calvary
Echoes. Paul Chapman will emcee. '
Ca11304-67S; 1383 for infonnation.

c.naa....

Aallu&amp;!~)
p_,
N!""'ftftO
Sunday Scbool "9:45 a.m.

W'onhip • II a.m.
Wednelday Services • 7:30p.m. ·

'.\

Pa,!"'~lileRader

Cbon:ll of God oll'rophtq'
OJ. While Rd. ~f SL RL 160 ·

p_, P11 H0111011

NIW Lire Cburch ol God
Oester :

'•

'

SYRACUSE • Revival at Syra·
cuse Mission Church with Saul
McGuire, evangelist. Services 7
p.m. nightly, 6 p.m. Sunday. Rev.
Mike Thompson invites evetyone.

s,......~tflboN

...., .... rna. MrWII•-

Flatwooda
Pallor. Keith Rader
Sunday Sc:ilool- 10 a.m.
Wanhjp - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Thunday Servicea • T p.m.

Sunday Sc:bool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.
wedneaday Sema:a • 7 p.m.:

.'
•'

..

Sunday Schooi - IO,a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tueoday Serviceo • T p.m.

Sunday Schaol- 9-.lllua.
Wonbip ·10:30a.ao..6,_...
Wadi 1'Y Serric:a -7 ,p.m.

Po•••.,a-dtti ... N

MIDDLEPO.RT • American
Legion Fe11ney Benneu Post 128
Ladies . Auxiliary-, Middleport,
annual poppy sale Friday and·S.at-.
urday.
.,
·

· we

PallOr: ll£y, 'l1lc:iuJ McOoooc
Sunday Sdloal - 9:30:aa

'

~~

(B.,.,r,l

()\\;(( 5trltl
93 MIPI lt1 ..t

MidollfiDrl, Ohio 41710
11141992-le&amp;l-1918 -00ICSl
CHURCH IUPPLIEI • BIBLES

-"' ..MEIGS TIRE
' .\ CENTER, INC.

8~_'(1. · ~ullz
\i.IJ

. . WTIUIII

..,.2259

PUSCIIPTION SHOP

992·""
1711Wttt
-·
t

.....
•.. •·"·

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SEIVICE

...

992-7075

J72 llerlh - - ....
."....... Clhie

'

.....

"

SWISHER &amp; UIISE
~. -d

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, 011,

Pr..cripli..,,

992-.2975

tn· 2f55

PC

ltl.

e

I

IIZ-6677

'
FIJRNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Hcnnftite S.w'

.ru

PIMIU . . .. ...

·.=....-

fiWCf' ' '
DIW, . . It,P
..

tft-5432

, . -' . .. RHIIS
Ill .

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141

Mld.tpert

I'

,

ELl&amp; J&amp;

~.

-

214 E . Main •
·;,
"2·5131 Po.mere~y' ·

6hl

H ••••

l)f eMhp AJID

p I

\2:;7" Veterans

J

liS 1."

r.
•

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Memorial Hotpital

ftJ-2111

.

.. TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
• , :Plains VFW'Post No. 9053, Ladies
' ,Auxiliary, roond and square dance,
,F.riday, 8·11:30 p.m. Music _by C1
)tnd Counuy Gentlemen. Red Carr
and Melvip Cross, callers. Public
in~ led.

.;

"'Dipia_.·.., ~ ......~.~

'

.

.

MIDDLEPORT · American
Legion Fenney Benneu Post 128
Ladies Auxmary, Middleport. bake
aole Friday. Rummage sale Friday
:and Saturday, 9 a.m . to ·4 p.m.
-Handmade cemetery arrangements
:available both days. All donatiOns
apprecialed- These events will take
place in. the park across from thl.\
.annex on Mill StreeL

c.-..
.,
..

-·10
-- .........

UWUNcfS.C:OATS

2.. Sotlth 21141

Na;:~~;t~, ~~

SUPPLY

ZU.OUICilB.

GRAVELY TRACTOR SAlES

J.
Ph.llt2·2101
Pomei'VY

RIIUOOR

Co.

.

'

P. J. PAULEY, .AGEIT

.....

. Mountaineers, Saturday, Cin-Sai:
Theatre, Nitro, W.Va.
POMEROY • Meigs Counly
Retired Teachers, Saturday, Trinity
Church, Pomeroy, noon. Call 9923887 for reservation.

' FRIDAY
RACINE • Southern J-unior
ANTIQUITY • Tent revival, 7
p.m.; Faith Fellowship Crusade ror High Booslers, western round-up,
Christ, Antiquity. Brother Hurest· ·Saturday, 6 p.m .. fot sixth, seventh
and eighl graders.
Pra.ter. E;veryone welcome.

•

-'

Tu_. Platal SL PoMP
Puoor: st.a.... Haurman
Sunday Scbool· 9 Lm.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Tueaday - - - 7:30p.m.

SJraa.Chur&lt;hofGool
Apple ond Sealnd Sis.
PallOr. ReY. David Ruaaell
Sunday Schaol ... Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
E..... Servioeo· 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Sema:a • 7 p.m.

Community Calendar

Community Calendar Items
appe11r two days before an event
and the da,; or that event. Items
· must be received well In advance
to assure pl:blic:atioo in the c~tl"
endar.

7 J - Hlp&amp;

........ , . - :2:11

)

•

Jrl:tecJ D1r•!IHP1 l

• . . . .,

tft-111:'

" I
I

BURLINGHAM· Burlingham
Modern Woodmen of America,
S;uurday, 7 p.m. Potlucl!; dinner.
Recognilion of mothers. Plan ror
matching fund dinner on Memorial
Day. ·
·
·
POMEROY . Royal Oat Dance
Club, dance, Saturday, 8-11 p.m.,
Royal Oak Resort. Music by Montage.

'.

'·

....;;:..\

461 F&amp;AM, special meeting, Saturday, 10 a.m. Work in master
mason degree.
·

POMEROY ·Marsha Reilly, ·
Ohio University School of Music
15 YEAR HONOREE • Mrs. IS~~belle Couch, Home Health
Affiliate, will jlrcscnt an organ consecretary, was preSented her pin ror 15 years continuous full-time
employment by Hospital Administrator Scott Lucas Wednesday
cert at Grace Episcopal Church in
afternoon. ·
Pomeroy, Sunday, 3:30 p. m.
Everyone welcome.

Prizes are $25 for first place,
$15 for second place and $10 for
third place.
Further information may be
obtained by calling the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy at992,5813.

Applications
available .

MOND.-\Y
RACINE · Racine Village
Council meets Monday 7 p.m.,
recessed session, Star Mill Park.

Applications are now available
for Carleton Memorial Scholar, ·
ships for the 1993-94 school year.
The scholarship program is administered by the Carleton College
Board of Trustees:
The ~cation forms may be
secured
John Usle, secretary
of the board, at his residence,
Maple Street.-Syn:cusc.
June 19 is the deadline for mating apPlication for a scholarship.
Applicants musl be residents of
Syracuse and enrolled in a college
or lel:hnical school.

Bahr reunion held

A reunion of the late Ernest and
Bertha Betzing Bahr was held
Mother's Day (Sunday) at the
Ches!er Fire House.
All nine children were present
SALEM CENTER • Star for the event with binhdates rangOrange ~d Star Junior Grange, fun ing from 1912 to 1932, a IQtal of
night and potluck supper Saturday, 654 years, with 72 being the aver6:30p.m.
.·
· · age age. This was the fust time in
2S years that all ·the Bahr children
RUTLAND • Dance, Rulland had been together.
GRAVELY TRACTOR
Children of Erneat and Bertha
·American Legion Hall, Saturday, 9
. SALES &amp; SERVICE
p.m. to I a.m. Music by Pure Betzing Bahr are: Kyle Bahr, Beck·
204
Conllar St.
OH.
ley,
W.Va,;.
Clatyon
Bahr,
Fort
Country Band. Public invited.
Lauderdale , Fla.; Norman Bahr,
MIDDLEPORT • Bethel No. 62, Pomeroy; Mildred Lipsey, East
'.
Middlepon, International Order of Carbo~, l!tah; yictor Bahr, Long
Mon.-Fri. 9:00-5:00
Bouom; Uta W:n1a1, Paltelsburg,
s.t. 1:00.12:00
~ob,' s _Daughters, semi-annual
'IRspecUOD, Salurday, 6 p.m.,-Mid- W.Va.; Henry Bahr, Long Bottom;
dleport Masonic Temple. Recep- Evelyn Well, Pomeroy; and Ver·
tion ifterwards honoring Dorset ·non Bahr, Ashland.
There were 94 people in atten.·
Thomas, grand junior custodian,
dalice.
·
and Beth Clark, grand bethel
recorder. Queen Kim Mattox will
preside.
SUNDAY
.
MIDDLEPORT : American
Legion ·Fenney Bennett Ladies
. Ill W.IAIII SIIEET...UOY
Auxiliary, District Girls State Tea
and orientation, .Sunday, 2 p.m., ,
legion annex. All delegates and
alternates must atiCild.

.....

B,.ll
IUIILY

.I

mturing 0ve kinds or~ 1.
~

Fried Shrimp
• Bite-Size Sluimp
• Sbrtmp Stir Fry • Boiled Shrimp
• Sbrbnp &amp;: Ric:r • Clam Chowda:• Clams·

• Crab&amp;fish

lnd"'lcs the AJ..Yoa-&lt;:aft-To-Eat

Rftlll

_Soup, Salad IIIII FrUit Bar.

DOMINO'S

H2·2124

LONG BOTIOM • Faith Full
POMEROY • Rev Eddie Buff·
Gospel ~hurch, Lona Bottom, .
~y:n~ sing, Friday, 7 P:m., Dailey"' inatOO. Gallipolis, guCs. mlniSICr at
FamiJl' 10d other local s:ngers. Fel- . Naomi Bapust Church, Pomeroy,
~p )'ollowa.
Sunday, 10:45 Lm,Publlc invi!Cd.
f.
SATURDAY
RACINE • Racin11 Lodae No.
· • NITRO, W.VA. , Libert~

'· u

The contest is open to anyone
ages 13-19. The short stories are to
be typed or word-processed and
double spaced and should submit,
ted to the Meigs County Public
Library by June 12. Entries wiU be
judged on content, grammar, origi,
nality and correct number of words.
Points
will be deducted for every
1
word over 2,000 -or under 750.

tor Scott Lucas, lert, included from the
Linda Hudson, BeiSy Weaver and Don L. Bee·
gle.
·

·
10 YEAR HONOREES • Ten year employ·
' ees at Veterans Memorial Hospital rece1ving
!heir service pins
Wednesday from Administra·
•'

_, ....

-..--.a
.,
...
.......
----·Soilt,.S..

Joppo

Po..,.:B....S.Webor
Wontlip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday ~ • 10:30 a.m.
Wcdneoday Servicea - 7:30 p.III-

monies. The lhree included trom the left Betty
Curfman, Bobbie Hobstetter and Lorna Selh
with Hospital Administrator Scoll Lucas, right,
.
presenting the gifts.

B''P I rt ......~

At - IMiaa.Hipa
. , 7 ------

.....a

Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
· Thursday Servioe&amp; - 1 p.m.

Wedneoday .Semceo • 7 p.m.

I;

M ..... -• .._
r....x

,._, lopr'Guoo
S,woday Scbool· I O·u n.
' Wunhip ·9 un. '

SW!clay School- 10 a.m.

' '.

Suadoy Scbool· !I:JD'I.Oa. .
Wonbip • !11:45 L1L (21M2 A 4ill:5uo)

Sunday School- 9:45 a.m.
Wonllip - II a.m.

Wonh1p - 11 1.m., 7 p.m.

;

(

~

'-:K
,...,.
Suodoy School ''9:'!0,a.oa.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m. (l11il'WSooj)

R.utlanciChurdl or God
Pao10r: lam F, Con&gt;oran

Lucas Wednesday. From the left are Lucas,
Kimberly Shamblin, Kelly Shears, Terry
Phillips, Ralph Fisher and Cr.aig Darst.

,_,, ,...,.

SL Paul Lu-.. Cbwa
Comer S)'CIIIIGnl A: s-Ill SL, l'aDeiO)'
Putilr: Oooqe Weirick ·

J_, S.U.lfield
Sunday Sc:ilool- 9:45 a.m.
s-a.c-7p.m.
.wedneaday Semca • 7 p.m.

Putor:

C"'-fMioCII.a
p
'2' Pib, Co. Rd.

lllnlDMio Rood

W'onbip • II a.m. ·

~

Putor : Ariuo Hull
Sunday Sdloql- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 1la.m.

.:..,_w-

5 7

ored during the afternoon with
Lucas presenting each of the boll,
orees with a corsage. The F.OUP
included Libby Fisher, pres:dcnt;
Jeanette Lawrence, vice president;
Abbie Stralton , treasurer; Louise
Bearhs, volunteer chairman, and
Joan McLain, gift shop. Auxiliary
members not PJ'*nt included Mildred Wells , secretary; Carrie
Kennedy, a volunteer chairman,
and Jessie While, gift shop.
Refreshments were served by
the nutrition department under the
supervision of Jackie Starcher.
retary, was presented her pin for 15
years continuous full-time employmen t by Hospilal Administrator
Scott Lucas Wednesday afternoon.

Pa-=ReY. Vi&lt;:lorRoaall

Wonhip • III:30&amp;11L
Thundoys.m- - 100,._

M,.pC.ap.-ad........
. N..-tiMut a.t.r

PalltOi: Theron Durham
Sunday Scbool· 9:30a.m.
E...una-7y.m.
Wedneoday Semca - 7 p.m.

F-1•1lapiPII

- - '-

Phillips.
Ten year pins went to Jane
Hess, Martha Meadows, Ginger
Six, Betsy Weaver, Linda Hudson,
Ellajane McDaniel, Karen Clark,
Pamela Ables and Don L. Beegle.
Awards for IS years employment wenl to Lois Clelland and
Isabelle Couch.
Employees who have retired
during the Jl8SI year were also bon·
ored during Wednesday's cere,
monies held in the hospilal cafete·
ria. The group included Bobbie
Hobstetter, Betty Curfman, Lorna
Seth and Erma Smith. Each bon·
oree received a corsage and a wrist,
watch.
_
Members of the hospital ' s
Women's Auxiliary also were Jton,

f

c.tr., ...... a.,.l

Sunday Scbool • 9-.30 a.m.

HtiooloctG,....CbPaiiOr. Charlet Domigan
Sundaf ldlool- 10:30 a.m.
Wonllip · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

H..,_ Cbon:ll
or Cbrllllol
.. v.,..

Wunhip - II a.m., 6p.111Woclneldioy Semoeo - 7 p.m.

-

1

Sunday Scbool· 9!4S'UL

ML 012.-e Vllted M Off 124 behind Wi1lruville
,._, Cllarloa , _
Sunday Scbool· 9:30 • .m.
Wonhip -10:30 LID., 7 p.ni.
Thunday Scnioa -7 p.m.

Chnstian Union

Flllllllapllot CbRoilrood SL, Ma1a1
~ Sdloal - 10 a.m.

-

.,.----

Oar So....,_ LUIIoona CbWa!nlll and !leary Sll., .._....,..,,W.Va.
~: R.cvo. Ridwd A

LupYIIeCbrtlll• c.Sunday Sc:bool · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdncoday SoMa: 7:30p.m.

Reednttlt Churdl ol Christ
Putor.PbilipSiurm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m . .
Wonhjp Sema:: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Sludy, Weolaaday, 6:30p.m.

525 N. 2ad SL MiMI&lt;pnrt
Pulor.lamea E. K -

..

-·---'D)
.

-

~ 7!t:JS&amp;a.

'Patricia llonda·Knlt

Dcoucr
PallOr. Woody Call
Sunday E...una ·6:30p.m.
Tlao~y Servilllo. 6:30p.m.

Frto Wtllllapltll Cb28601 SL IlL 7, MiMirfx"'.
Sunday Sdloal : 10 a.m.
........ 7:30p.m.
Thunday Semool- 7:30

.. -

s-l.yS.... - ll .a.m.
w onlip • 9-.30 LID-, 7:30 p.lllw.......,. Senice -7:30'p.III-

......,, •.e...-'E

Wonbip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

LIINriJ Cbrllllu Cbordl

Old -

-

.....

P.....-: Oooqe Wllirick

Puloi-: looeph B. H-•
Sunday Sdlool · 9 a.m.
w.::s,.·IOo.m. 7p.m.
w
ySerlkea-7p.m.

!'.-: ReY. l!ad Shuler
Sunday Sdloal- 10:30 a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m.
'llumday _semca- 7:30p.m.

,_,._Lcwil

_,!:-

v z z: ...:.-eo-r'niii!Jc
a 50 ..

Luth e ran
SL Jolla Lutllwao CbMrcll
Pioie a-.

''.

Gto,ol M I .

F......... ~
....... W.VLIILI

.....:w..l-ldlaa.
, - ·lelaa.l
7 :, . . .--

-.
. ..

-Jerry ColliDo
Sundoy School-9:30a.m.
WoniUp • ID-.30 a.m.
Wedneoday Service~· 7:30p.m.

Paa1«: Eu~:J· Underwood
Sunday
• 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • ID-.30 a.m., 7 p.m.

I

Wonllip • ID-.30._.:
Wet olay SeMee •7- p.III-

-

Cboldl of J-CIIrllt
.. Lollar DaJ Salalo
POII!anci-Racine Rd.

s..... Rood Cburdl orCbrllt

. .h'fll- Bapdll

........_.
. . . .

• . . . .-

.

Bn«anl c•n:11 orc.r111
SL IlL 124 A: Co. Rd. 5
_.
P-= Derdt Slump
Sunday. Sc:bool · 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip ·!0:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodneiday Savic:co. 7:30p.m.

Putor:looN.
Suaday Scbool-9:4 a.m.
EY&lt;IIin&amp; - 6:30p.m.
Wcdneoday SCMcco- 6:30p.m-

Wedaeod'ay Sonioa • 7:30pa.

R~-Cb-orCbrlll

s.... l•llaplllt

•

7

Latter-Da y Sa111t s

Sundar

Wonbip - lla.m.,7:30p.m.
Wedncodioy Semool-7:30p.m.

a...)

Puaoi-: F: I
1:.oo
Sunday Schaol- 9:1Sua.
Wonbip • ID-.30 a.a., 6-.

P.....-: Robed Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhjp • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Servilllo. 7:30p.m.

PUler. CuiJ Su:wa11
Sunday Sc:ilool- 9:30a.m.
Wonllip • 10:30 a.m.
W.,...y SeMceo - 7. p.m.

M-. c.- or Cbrlll
MillorSt., Muaa, W.Va.
Scbool-to a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedaudioy Services • 7 p.on.

....,a

_._a a.rtaRn

H,..ti •• H.un.-c:.....,

DntwCb-oiCW

In observance of National Hos·
pital Week, May 9- IS, service
awards were presented at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy
Wednesday afternoon.
Scott Lucas, hospilal adminis·
trator, presented the continuous
service pins to employees who
have chalked up five, 10 and IS
years of continuous employment at
the hospital. Employees with five
years serVice received gold pins;
· those with 10 years received gold
pins set with a ruby, and IS years
employees received gold pins set
with a!liamond.
Five ye_ar pins went to Linda
Cozart, K1mberl_y Rous~. Kelly
Sheara, Ralph F1sher, K1mberly
Shamblin, Craig Darst, and Terry

PIIUir. Rev. PhiDiPR'dm 111w
Sunday Sdlaol .'9:3Ch.m.

s..... '--

Sollldoy
Wanlip-IOaa.

•

....._.- Cb- fiCiorllt
Pulor. Bill Wines
Sunday School • 9 LIIIWonhip ·9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.

Service awards presented at VMH

IGid

Wllltl'l CIIOtNI w.z.,.
Coohillo IGid

I'Wta.,.l
Pa-=H
.....
I

ReY. ~Kina

75 Pearl SL, Middlep&gt;rt.
PallOr. .... 1oM Neville
· Sunday '!&lt;~tool· 9:30a.m.
.. WoniUp • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Semce. 7:30p.m.

Puoor: Tom Runyc&gt;a
Sunday Scbool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Radllt Flnt Baplllt
YOIIIo Paa« Ridt Hanio
Suaday Sc:llool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wodnaday Servi&lt;a · 7:00p.m.
Pulor. Bill Liale .
Sunday Sc:llool- IOa.m.

Wanlip-IOua.

w.., •• Billie Hot- Cbun:ll

BradborJ Cti~n:ll or Cllrlot

I-. •·

.

.

efa..-c~~

' - ' ..... loprWillfonl
~ ...... ·9:30LIIIWonllip-10:4S ..... 7 p.IIIW t I ySemee-7p.m.

s....ys....-··-- .

Pille Gnt¥e Blblt HoU- Cbl!l'dt
Ill milo «&lt; R.1. 32S
...-. ReY. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30 LID.
Wonbip -10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servilllo · 7:30p.m.

Pulor:RoaetWIW&lt;lD

Page-7

Bolli bib, .. Co. Rd. 31

Sunday oc:bool- 9:10 •...._
Sunday WU1bip ·7 p.m. .
Wedneaday prayer meedn1· 7 p.m.

Sunday Scbool· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·I0:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdncoday Serviceo. 7 p.m.

· Ru- Fll'llllopllst CburQ

FI

New Uma Rood, Rutlalld

Zl• Cb- fiCbrlll
Pomeroy, llllrilonville Rd. (RLI43)

Friday, May 14,1993

~·

~~::

•-or~Hoi-Cburdl

Pulor.ladt ~
Sunday Sc:bool -9-30 a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wodneiday Savic:co ·6:30p.m.

The Daily Sentinel

W~co - 7p.~~~-

, _ , .... ,Me

.

, r

,._,~~- "

Hol:ness
-

,

r• I

Colfeo , _ fct1awiDI

. _ _ Rklle Cllorcll It Cbrlll

""' Sind,

car~etee•,

,
ltoolor: Pr. BiU Lyle .
Holy EucbariA ... Sunday School I I a.m.

KOBO Cbun:ll fiCbrlol
Wonhip • 9-.30 a.m.
Sunday Scbool - I0:30 Lm.

Free Wilt·~,,~

s.me. .

G.-~z:"l
Cbordl
326E.~
,r--oy

,

By The Bend

W..-.;p - IOLIIL, j 'p.m.
w.-....y
7 p.m.

Ep1scopal

Midd:.poot Q- II Cblilt
5ohmdMaia
Pulor. Alllaruoo
Youth Miaiaor: BiU Frazier
Sunday Sdloal · 9:30 1.111Wonbip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m.•1 p.m:
Wcdncoday SeMces • 7 p.m.

ldloo1 - 9:45 a.m.
Wonbip - II a.m. md 7 p.m.
Wcdneoday Service - 7 p.m.

.

-

Plftor: Gary HiDoo
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 6 p.m.
Wedlteaday Seovia:a • 7 p.m.

Wonllip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneiday SeMoeo .- 7 ,...,_

Apos t olic

•

7

Frtday, .-.y 14, 11183

Pomeroy •ddleJIOit, Ohio

The Dal!y Sfltlnel

v...z

~.
•

·r.'

2

DIIM PAN PIZZAS

-,,,.,..• $·10'' .. .

321 ¥11111 HIIIT
n. PUISIIT, WY.

PIClUP • DaiVEIY

'

\i

.,,

.

.

'

�..... _...9_., ,. ,.... - · .... ·· --·-·

~

'

.... .... ,,-

-~-

' ....

'

-~-­

·

· "-'· ·~·

.......

-~

... ·- . . .. . ..

..... ....

-- . .• . - .... .... . -- . ... ...
• I

•

May is national blood pressure month

student

The informal dance will be from
9 p.m. 10 I a.m. with music beinfi
provided by "Pany Factory.

per-

.

./.

Public Notice

Bl Ll LTI\ BO \1{1&gt;

AaH No. 1), whloll 11M

heratalara loaan clavlaad
(laa dead raeordad In
illolu•• 214, Paga 117,
llalga County o.. d
Ruarda.)
IW-ce Daad: VolwM

4:30 P. &amp; DIY IEFORE ·
"IUCAnOI

~~.,".= R~~:rda~alga

TURKEY SHOOT
G I C
alia 0. Gun Club
May 16 1993
'

The real aatata above
clncrlbad ·In aubJact 1o al
laaau, ••••menta and
llghlaofwayof-.1.
(Nalaon property) P-ol
No. 1: Tl!a following
daaarlbad rnl ••tate,
altut1ad In lila Townahlp of
Colultlllla, 1n tile County of
llalgllndiMataoiOhlo,towit
Tha
. aauth. t oomar of
tha aou~••• quarter of
lacUon Nilmllar ThJrtr·l'wo
!12) In Townall~Nine

Stationaty Shoot1 0:00a.m.
· Trap Shoot Afternoon
BEHIND SPRING VALLEY
OFF OW AT. 35

Call 446·62C9
For More lnfonnatlon

Better yet, usc spices and hcibs to 1 &amp;'*o '-•ret S.U.tay wi11t 51
cn;oy natural flavors offood.
iD •u•he-:e
' "And read the labels on preA short sp"m....,.
·-·• sctYICe
· was
held with T&lt;
pared and pactaged goods".
· c:n:5ll .,.,..., ~g
Dr. Mansfield suggests that ()()It· from Provubs oa the virtuous
sumers should look for the word . - .
"sodium·: and the symbol "Na" 011
Spccill '' a.inp of~ aiotblabels .IOidentifyproduCIS()()Iltain. asoflltebible ... specialmotlleos
..,_...waw:n:ad._..,..;_
ing sodium compounds.
..-uz e o · For more information on high
Soacs we~e 51181 by Brenda
blood pressure and sodium, resi- !~s
~ aad lite
. chiJ.
dents may contact the American "'""
,
Refreshments o[ saadwiches,

T.·-·

,;.:-r_

~~sandpiatlrmm-

-

Public Nollc:e

..._....... ~
the ...,.., •d tha

,. . .-

FY'II Walar and

lanlliirJ

..._ c::lf"lluva Prop-

Oil..,

Du an&amp;&lt;hn.
.
17, 1•, al 7:110

JUL, the lnl·afiWO pulilla
1 It ga . . lla llald al tile

. llaiP.C:O.ty c-thouM
1o prowlda altl-• with
· pwkanllniDiva1 a!l.......

...
=_

·

ohald .,
aald ; j
(ZJ; • 1
o.vlil 1
I.Mndw '
llarll, I
(70) I

or I•L
{
Alii Thirty (30) - - oif .
the north •d of tha eat I
hall of tile aou.,_t quarlar ;
ot Section Tw~ (2), •
Townalllp Nlnlo (t), Aanp :
Slxt- j111 In tha Ohio •
Comp!IR)" • PVrolulaa.
:.
Alaoa-al .tractotland •
altualad In tile llbova named ,
Town a hlp ••" . Couaty,,.,
-talnlng a epdng olalook.
• - claacrlload.aa lolowa,
baing a1 tile '*"'and ollie 1

~~~ah-a
.. ma!!'..talornl:'/ortr

PubliC Notice

_,
-·
Alao, the following
d..orlltad real ••tate,
commencing at till
n..,u1waaJ corner of loaUon
No. Thlrty-ona (31) of
ToWllalllp No.' Nina (t)l
Ranp ~- · Ftttaan (15) o
tha Olllo Company'a

I·~~~~~~~~
a ata~t

-·
llalgt County

Dapartaoent, granting a
tattoo arUal.!IA'mlllllon to
plaoa • tatloO Ill tile aldn of
a minor by maana ollnk
- ' JMMirdon ollie aldn
with nndla, or.,., other
llltlruiirant dulgnad to
toueli or )!mctura the Kin.
Thla aactlon dowa not
Include tamporary tattooa

!,,......
~!~~!tNio:J:O&gt;·ofla.,&gt;:! i
ll ·-

Slxtaan
eo...,..,'I'11)
PurchIn the Ohio
•
•a.
Tlta altova dalcrll"o" ru1
•tala baing tile aciutll-t
'IUartar of the aorlthuat
'IUarlar of ~n ~ (2);
andtllenortllaaat...,...ol
the aouth413at Cll!•rtar of

Pure'-; tllancaaaat Forty Sactlon Two (2),

--------1

•

=:":

=.,i ::;:.,
• a a=.:
..._,....:II.,.
1 1
• ••

M
.
an_d "Jhe Wind Beneath
Y
Wmgs · . ,
·
Rounding oul the ~· the
Eastern Concert Band wrll pedorm ·
,. two selections from their
and state contest program: "J)ean
Do--:dy C&lt;m:ert M!"ch"-b&gt;:_Kentuc kran, Cec
· 1I Karrick and •-sym •
h
'
F
. l"b Y Ro ber tW •
p omc csuva
Smit~. St~dent teacher, ~~vid
Colvm, wtll also conduct. The
Case o~ the Mysicrious ~.lran_ger:
by Davtd Holsmger and -InVJCta
by Ohioan, James Swearin"""'. The
..-·
program will close with "Mancini
Magic", ''Baby Elephant Walk",
"Pink Panther" and "Peter GtDUt".
Follo~ing the con~rt relieshments wt!l'?C serv~ m .th~ gym.
Th(l pub_ltc ts cordtally mvtted 10
~
auend thIS ree concert

· - .......... -

•onal

1

.
1

1.

a-. ..

ar_,-.,!,•,•.-..,

Adiiiln.

(S) 7• 14• 2111

Public Nollc:e
LEGAL NOnCE
Dwltordol~"-....,..._

·· c-tr .,;;;~r'it..llh,
""'*~ Olilo, Utlit lila

I

•

7

·-·

-..

OR. .

949-2168

,

I• .._ A . . .

...,.

, •

..
. 5...-•,
a.
•
.....

Eastern alumni
plans announced

IE 11"'1

..,....
OI'EII DM.Y -.5o •IIIMY 1M
- _ . . _1
.,..6 7, ' '

00

2

In Memory

Memory of

Pete Wheeler
pasedcway4
y.arsagotoday

May15,1989

I watch you dey
dlly Until at last
with a ·broken

nean,

I

stHI
I saw

lip ..., UCMII
•lltch you· while
suHeJWCI
·

• • you luld vourl

Chace,.He tenCI•rtYI

cloled your we11rv1
,. ,.., E1d took
lnhlacant.

'·

$41,000.

........................
:..cc:~•rr::._;
.............. II'Oia

.

319041.Hdlag

CretlcRoad

llhhlleport, o•io

614·992·7144

tP'ainting Services
lnlerior &amp; Exterior
Pain!
Homes and
Aluminum,Siding
1*'&lt;1wer Wa~hing

FlEE Esr•ns

~11-13-tln

.

.

1

•-

• '

a

•

•

•

AUto-Batals

,_..,_
WoAioollaw
7&amp; 12

Sprfn1Tiaee
Speefal

RODGERS E-Z RIDE
614·446·0736

1419 State RL 7

&amp;Ill TRACIQtOE WORK

AVAILABLE.·

ftowara? Acceeaoriu?
Check out my prlcao firat.

"Inspirations"
Flower Shop ·

UNDCLEAIUNG, ·

DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED

985-4178

LIMESTONE·TRUCKING
FREE F.S11MATES

EVERY THURSDAY

.

EAGLES
CLUB

'
IN POMEROY
"
6:46p.m.
Speellll Earl¥ Bini .
'10!1 Payoff
Thla IIC! good for 1
;
FREE card.
· Lie. No. 0051·32

SHRUI TREE
TRIM and '
REMOVAL

ea·ckhoe and
small Dozer
Work

·

(614)992w7878

lndepll idtnl Beauty
c-Manla
Carolyn McCciy
(614) 182-5012
sandra llendtraon
(81 4) 892-3647
Productoln Stack

....,

..... 12&amp;11 ..

!Fa11111zlng, WMdlng,
;

and Swadlng.

•

Shrub 11nd Tree

.......

~rlinmlng &amp; Rwmoval

Call 614-992· ·
llatldanlol.
6637
' FREEE/·:~==aWl
.

.

MORR.IS
EQUIPMENT ·

.

Side IIH.. ICo.

·NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR
TRAINING
LOOKING FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.
61.4•992w7698

s:

HappyAds

eOOZERS ,
•BACKHOE
•TRACK L,OADER
•TRUCKING

...

. •
'

Steel Sales
No order
too small or too large
Orders welcomed

3 HP • '11 HP

IIIWICIIG AVAIWII

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

(614) 992-7878
FAX (614) 992- 3b53

Slda Ill 1.. (Co. 7)
lun&amp;II,OI.
742-2455

8
r

l '

Coli Owner, 803 ..11-31157.

Wanl To Contt~ct Dncendanta

15Yoo,.

"-rlonce

tory.

He

Marrl«&lt;

Re01caa

6·1 4·992·7643

wo.uc,loi'Noney
.1oon
Moortod Karl
Of O.yton·

llooy JMnno Howoll, iiini.id
Jamee Davldeon W.ll•. H.d

Son Jomoo - . . Wolkor Born

1&amp;31. Contocl l.owooil HoWOII,
21204 E. Alh-on-Sibloy Rd.,
Slbloy, MO 14088•

4

Giveaway

112 Col/It Pupa, 614-388-11033 AI·
lor 8 P.M.
112 Ro~l~ 112 S~rd
Pupa, 14·
26.

(Na S1nday Calls!

.........
...,...
ae.~

2 llon!h Olc1 Smlil Doa To
Gl...woy, Block &amp; Brown, flole,
Vooy F~ondly. 614-446-11710.

2 Front Struts • Laltor
• 4 WhHI Alijl•ment
Prices Starttlll at
1

2 Porl Colllo Pupa To Glvoowoy,
Coli Bol-n II-A 114-;2!16-1584,
2 pupploo t.molo 1 blk 7 h!~2·
Mother Non;~:: •nd
y

Elvlo. 304-17

129.95 +Tax

.

2 YHr Okt Femal• S..gle 1:
Pupa, Vooy Good Wllh Chlldron,

614-3'19-2114.

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
ASK FOR CHRIS

3 KHiono, 2 Oroy &amp; Whil!,. 1
Cnom &amp; W~l!o, I -luo uod,
C.II614-25B-1114 Before 8 P.M.
50 Gallon 1\GI 'Wollll' Tonk, 614-

BISSELL &amp; lURlE
CONRRUmON

Shade River Saddle Shop

COII!RUCYIOI

Re•lde•tlal Rotill11g II our

..

leilotleli•g

Sto~t&amp;C=re
fill En
I

915-4473
667·6179

I Wook Old Wolkor Pup, 114381-411110.
FrM HorH Menure. Harmon
Flekf Stablee, You haUl.

CUSTOM SADDLES, .
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

387-7224.

Ployiul

8 WMk KlttiM, 1

Block

Lona Hair, 1 Whfto And Block,

To Good Homo Only. 114-446-

0317.

PuppiM lo glvNWiy, 614-IMO..
2461.

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

Roglotorod femolo Chow,

3Q4.

175-e675.

3/8/lln

Steel Fabrication
and Welding

PubliC Sail

'

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

lAuctlon

(614) 992·7878
FAX (614) 992-7878

LARGE 2-DAY .
AN'f,QUE GLASSWARE &amp;
COLLEaABLE AUaiON

6

SUNDAY, MAY 16, 12 NOON
GLASSWARE &amp; TOOLS

Lost &amp; Found

FOUND Iorge ion &amp; c-m clog,
vicinity ol lAkin Hoo!l, laolio
1\ko Sl. llomold, 304-m.l14al.

Found: a....,.a Shot&gt;honl Doa.
Vlclnhr: Choohl,. "'•· Colt II(;
:JeJ-11127.
.

COIIPUTE
WILDIIII AID
UDIITOI
SEIYICE

'

. ALSO HI Till

91312th Ave. In VIenna, W.Va.
' Central Ave. onto
Turn off Grand
12th Street to 12th Ave.

IEPIII

IWOIIIU PIICU

1

CAll IIC

992·7·204 or ·
742-2223

Will have· old Carnival &amp; Fenton, Heisey &amp;
Nor1hwood. Adams, Phoenix, Rint, Cryslal,
Gooful, FOIIoria, Cambridge, Dapresalon &amp;

Yard sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

lois and lots ol other glassware &amp; china, Jewel

,_In

ALL Yon! - l l u t l •

Tea, lncian lema &amp; lots &amp; lots ol tools, and
many boxes stiU packed and have been
paCked for 30 yeertl.
Hard to ten wha? will be found each ,day ol
aale . .

.IMEIICIN G.NEUL LIFE a11ll
ACCIIINT IISU~NCE COMPIIY
life • Medisare • Cancer •·Fire • HeaHh
• Accident • Annuity, IRA • MQrtgage

Tenna: Calh or Check

. . OWNER, MR•.• MRS. BEAVER
PATRICK BLOSSER AUCTION

.

Llo.No.RCI
42t-7241- .QS,.2114 •
Both cS.y~ wiD be wry Jona, run days.
•
FOod Avallllble
t

c . . . . ., _

,.

Of Elllah Howoll Eorly Soltlor 01
Go\llo County, ~or Fom\~ HJ.-

Ro.darmour In 1825. 0 :Indante lncludl&lt;f Dr. WURam E.
Howell, Died A1 GatHpollo 1113&amp;
W- Chtld,.n Woro Judg~
John W. Howoll Who ·Died ln
1m'; Wllllom Harry .Howoll

(304) 773·5533

4-1113 tin

.

'

MYRTLE BEACH RAMADA:
Ocain Front U.xury Condo 110
Pool, Sloopo 4 To 8. S5711 WMk,

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

. (614)
667·6621

May 1·9th

10 mllaa aouth of Gallipolla ·
on BIIIC!wn RoiiC!
PH. 614-256-6160

..

614·742·2138

MINI KARS

EICIYAniG

Down.To

J. ·s. MARINE

3-4-93· 1

D. I. IOSIOI

It's Count

MEET NEW PEOPLE, THE FUN
WAY TODAYI 1-211-0320
Exl. 31114, U.M !Min. M_, Be 11
Yro. Unlotor Co.I02-431-11815.

Save Big on Voyage...
PoMrld by Mercury Outltoarde

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

SAYRE

01.

D61S.

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

u•SIONE,
&amp;UVEl &amp; COAL
Rea101a•1e
Rates
JOE N.SAYRE

-.-.~

IIIWICIIG AYWill

SIZED UMESTOHE
FORWE

HAULING

oEOIO liiMMERS
..IIISIICUTTIIS . '

· Quality
Sto11eCo•

:1·....117·1460
! Llwn Mowing,

loryaur ...n
MARY KAY

992w2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

HEY GUYS!It Th- Gl~a Wont
To Talk To You! 1-lll0-33te
Exl. 5758 $3.M Por Mln.Muot Be
18 Yoo. Unlotor Co. (602) 631LONELY? NMd To HNr A Soti,
Smiling_ Voice? 1·~
bt. 8021, Sdt ··Por Min. Mutl
Be 18 Yoo. Unlotor Co. 1102-431·

MIIY Kly haa a proefllctive .... care progr1111

BIU SLACK ·

3 Announcements

0615.

COMPUMEITARY
FACIAL

•LIGHT ""''"""'
•FIREWOOD

MARITECH
INDUSTRIES

•!' 949•2391 or

4130

992w3838

5-5-91·1-

•

Announcements

Galling mwrriad? Naad

SEPTIC SYSTEMS;
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITE$,

I

_...._-.an

(614).742·2345

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE

r

'
CHESTER- Tab ovar an ongoing ,....uranl buoinwilh P*ftlillllor axpanllon. SNII3&amp; paopla, and com..
fuly aqulppad. G- loeabl, at Sflilw RoUia 248 llrid
"
Route 7. Large paved e« palldng lot plua ~ra jlll1dng
~
lor INCka. Fun hook'Up lor mobile homw ~ ~ ralldanci
1
or axtia income •• r.n,tal. eonc.... block,bullcling fOr . ~ ·.
oloragtl.
PRICED AT S71,opo
~f
RUTlAND -llaln Str•t-- H.,.•• • good alor111r heme .
that ha Iota of potential. Thia I 'lo elory home h.. 2 or
pot~ibly 4 badroorna. '/, baMment. wo41d ma\w a good , t
ranlll property. Wil accep&amp;land contract with $2,500 '•
down lor 10 yaa11al10% inleraat and 'I'OnthiY payment
~. ··
of $204.84.
$18,000
i

(614) 992-7878

FREE ESTIMATES

EXCAVAnNG ..

c•euire, OH.

$21,100

MARTECH .INDUSTRIES

COMMERCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL
Liceased, l•surad &amp; lo•ded

HOWARD .

7

I

New Wiring, Rewiring;
Trouble-Shooting

915·4111

ASIQNO le,ooo

1

___ .._

:;;a

7

I

II••••

:;}14.

St. II. 7

=A"':~s~:::::::::::::::::::·= ,
DARLINE STEWAM.........._. __ ,____ ;...... -.a-a•
SANDY BUTCHEA ...............................
JERRY SPAADUNG ............................... (304) lft.M•
ta:::~arty daa~rlbad 01
OFFICE.-........... ;.......-.............- ......... --.112·
:
Beginning II • point ona '------~-:----.,.'....;'~-..1
11._ ...... _ ...... _ 11 ......
..... of--····
varnorth
tha South
aaat -----~:=-=:=:-::=-:=::_.,;~t--,..;
- o f 8aa. 38; th-In
Real Eatllte General
•m·aouth-llm
lo. r;r=======~===:=;;;;;;;;;:;:;;::;J
..... ad atone onoouraa
....
.,R
.... public
highway; thence along allld
road 1o tile uat llna of Star
IIIII lot at the covered
bridge; th-• north to the
.centerline of aald Sacaoil;
thence waat to lha
northwaatoorn•otlha-t
hall of the aouthwaat
quertar of allld aeotion;
lllanca aouth lo the aoutll
llna of 8aalon; " ' - - •
lo tha aaaUina
thanoa •ortll
• - - • lo tha cent\W
Raoooon Creak; th,::_~
down tile ..... IIi tile_
992·2259
\
of the Drat ravine olng
front of tile -t; thanoaln
· POMEROY· Older home with 3 Iota. 3 bedoooms' bath ·
HOI)le Is in naad of repair..ASKING $0,500. • ~ L :
north-larty aourati 10 io
'J
alone; thence - • 1o - •
Ina or MOtloa; thance north
RACINEr Bullan Rd.· 8.5 acrea ·with ·1878 12 x65
mobile home and older hoUoa. TPC walar, 2 oaplic; lllnkl
Graataile lor"- buldng location. ASKING $23,000 '
'
forty - .. mora or laM.
VACANT GROUNDI 28.2811 aeres IQc.oled on fit. 684
EQapU, from aald laat
above aaorlbad tract
near Hll'l'iaonvile. lola of pollnlol. ASKING $16,000 •
'
'
I
IINETY ACRES, -•• or
llta following ltact
CHESHIRE· Rouall u- NiCe lint8 renlll invetmenll
......., In Sac. H, Town 1
lncludaa 1970 2 bedroom mobile hCIIIe, t ~
..... 111 baing all tile ,;;.;~
eHiciency apallmant addlllonallrailer hook upI 1+ acrw
OW....: .fw J. A. Rutlialord ·
Bxtlt*'g unlll currently rwnllld. ASKING $24,900
and Melfa v. Aull.ato..l,
RUTLANO. Brie• St.· t floor frame 11om. wt~ '2
. . . . 01' R II Gail CJwall .nd
badroolno, Jill• heat, one car 8•1111!: ganlan opaca, 111111
an lla ilorth lty
•
,..
'"" ., ow....: .., "· traat, epplianclla, 118 x 180 Ia&amp;. ASI&lt;lhG $t9,000
H.IUIIINnJ.il;onllawwat
DEXTER· 1 112 alory hont!l7raomo, 4 bedrooms, cellar,
WC. A.l«tturk and Gaoraa
garden space, added lnoulallon, larp lronl pot:c:h.
I. Paok :.nd .nd 011 Ilia
ASKING $18,000
_ \
aaat lir lltt aa DDR CJwall .nd
WI! NEED LISTINGS I
. ·
on the flnaa of pmant
I .
analoaura, lialng ·ninety

t....

n~~!~ng .

POIIERDY PIKE - 1 mila from State Route 7 A 2
ac,. homa or mobile home lila wilh '(Iter and electric
IIVIilabla. A great location and a grMI building lila.
IIIODLEPOPT Thla opacioua 3 btdl:oom home is jual
WI the family llllada. It 0110 baa a 1rt1ga livina 100m,
nice lizad kitchen with a cuta lillie~ Hat niw roof,
new wiring, large dac:lc out back. and ..ctnty utenalwly
r.modolad lnt.rior. 11 avon ha a new he&amp;l pump.

24 HR. EMERGENCY ftRYICE

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

I

an

:=:

:..':::':.::~="!:::

44-f-.

!.

WIUS HILL RD. A laoga ........., •
· h...,, Haa 0 _ , 4 loa~o, and ,2 balla. Hu.,• ,
heat pump, 2 •crao of nice laying land, and
~~
ga111g11. Hao • opilr:lllalllu view of tha golf COUI'M.
7

!::::!':1'.:J

To-.dlula!!~:
• .,......
..
_ , -... lllllawlul 1o
tallol-lndlvldlalundar
lila
IniiU'enea 01 tloohol
....,., *'lllw. and 0 ahallloa
,. .. ••tt
• "'-'
. : u.,._, "' _..__ ·•IIJ
....
'
....,. u........ ~•
kl IIIII -.lt'ane:
L
Tlia ·•lnor, and
or legal
minor allall
..
offtoa 01 lila
County Board of
and algn In tile
of a Notary Publlo,

POMIIOY, OH.

GUtters
· ·, Downapouts
G~er Cleaning
P11lntlng

•,

I
.,-.on .

Middleport, OH

f

1111111WW'S AlliUUIOf1SB

992·7553

614•949•2335.,
614-593·50 I 0

· NEW.:. REPAIR

1

..
1

205 Norlh S.cond Ave.

....:.,r-'

.,.

'25 HOUR

ROOFING

FREE ESTIMATES

c

...,......lllddar\
~ Tha two proparaulo loa

I

. REASONAILE RATES

How.d,LWritesel

l

••

Cc!Uit=

:".::::i:.tant':.gil,

F,_ Eatlmatew, '
LowCowta.
Work Gu•"'ntawd

w.-..•••

· Aulhorlacl: B'l\':.a &amp;
st,.non MTD, an,
I.D.C. Repair Cailtar
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Houra 96· M-F 8-3 Sal.
Cloaad Sunday
949·2104

EBLIN'S ELECTRIC ·

Plumbing lnstallatiQn
and
•
Repairs.

.&amp; •

:

ld

7

......, ;

~10.'93

1

,.
t

Individual J. lilclclng 011 lila
.......... praporty,andtlll
dalotllelilcllabllngllllllad.
Tha rNI property wiA loa
aold to the hlgllaat

-•dail

-

JwffWicbr....

1

:::=t:.;-...,.....wl
......
to
on, the prlaa tha

aold
..!!!; ,.---1 oo.;.•ntall_..• Rat. . • 111cf. nlng
· 1~-·•
_,_... · - · •
8· t a point · In tha
Rt "i'riutlng,
dld:•w.•pwtlalna
·
..
cenlarllna of Rutherford
11
1., Uta Publlo Health . Road (T-1) whara It
DlalriCt, 11a1ga
lnlltWMta tile Eaatarly Ina
J RiaJ .. ·lnllon ar 01 of 8aot1on II of Columlila
o1 ... Clloia Aarltad
T-all!ll ancfproutdlng Ill
aad the •ndl linta allall a munllirlngllnllllong Ita
raac1 1 1
cantarlln• of Rutherford
To • .;::;ntl ·~lion (E) Road 1o tha ,cantarlna of
Pao•wii(IJ:
RHooon Cralli, loll-,!":
11o akl• Mn ahall be th• ceniMiina otaold C
paMtralad, altra!lacf, or In • South and Eaatarly
lor
trul d With ellalnl!=aia tor cliracUon lo tha Norlhw•t
'11
1 .lar C:.fl
71o pu!JIOM of removing, comer of tile EMzallath - '
,_
-lflglllg. or altl!'lng Mandel Jordan property;
11 r s .....,Corpaol
•Ill' bta.lah, birthmark, thanoa In a Northaatarly
r
;
i
.
-.ortalloloxoapllortlle cllraciiOII along allld .Jordan
A P • OIL
talawkQ~ty lo the E•lllty Ina
...!!.
'"'
. -. I
Farl I
L Tll. .l I ...... lilrthmarll, Of Sactlon . . ...._North
,_
er 1a111a loa alhlllilva 1o Ita plaa of baglnnlng.
Ia 4DI c:.m
or
~ lla lnllntloli of the
Nlc ......, . . . .
... A - ........
I
o'::.:::"b;yu:..th.:
14111
0
"(5)
tM.or'i:HD..'"h;'~oa ••ctloro II Soutli of
_....._*Ilk •
Rutli
lord Road 1111n 45.5
181
~ ---r ad er ooraad lla ltbn
II
aac1 ..,..
of the mora or laN.
J!'IC'IICEIEI!JFRift
·
,.!~•rly deaarlltad ••
1 • , 11111
P'L
c. The llalga County
-·•
.
"!"': ., 1_7 , 1 tola
Hnllll Daparlmant .Ita
Sltua!ad In the County of
•
aotlllad, In •ltlng, (SO) llolga, In the s - o1 Ohio,
11 the aMI
'!.Jrty1"::~:.: auoh =~:.'::d
4 Aclaar pllotogrllflh loa ciaacrlllaf•lollou
..,_...: ....ntalnad In tile
llel~n T-11 t," Aanp
l-~~~~~~~~:__~ tattooing r-rd of tha 1S at
Olllo Company'•
1n1a• 1J aiiOia•an o r - Puroliau and mora

A molher-daughcer banquet was Helen Darnell, Jenny Ditty, ~Y
Lieving, Julia Boyles, Sara
he ld recently by Hope Baptist Sue
•
Church o{ Mi'!l~leportal, b ·
. h 0 wen, RRheb~cca MOwCen. JeaMnnie
The pot UCL me
C'gall w11. 0 wen, . OJean c lure, · ary
prayer by Mary Bryan. Judy Riley Lou Hawkins, Regina Simpson,
acted as moderator and conducted Tiffany Simpson. Emma Ashley,
i:es. Winners were Emma and Emily Ashley, Whitne.y Ashley,
heb~ley, Tracy Grueser and ~~ch~1. Ashle)', Mary Bryan and
Jenny lily.
Y t ey.
Jenny Ditty presented special
music for the evning.
.
Attending were Peggy Lewis, ' Alumni plans announced
sue Imboden, Catherine WiUiams, ' PI
·
R~~'.liCe
·
a ns for t he I 993
.......
.
Don na Grueser, Tracy Grueser,
............
Bron Williams, Chrissy Williams. S.outhem aIumm"banquet sc........
.,..
for May 29 at 6 pJITI. al the high
school gymnasium have been
announced. A dance w1·n be ..'"'_Jd
(rom 9 p.m. to midnight widt music
by Crossover Band. Tickets are
available for the dinner and dance
The 1993 Eastern High School for $10 per person frollf'Racine
Alumni Banque1 and Dance will be Home National Bant and Cross
held Saturday, June 12, at. the high Grocery and should be purchued
schoOl.
·
before May 22. Further information
Dinner will begin a1 6:30 p.m. is available from Shirley S~
with a meal served by the Eastern 949-2617 or Lauia Hart, 949-2656.
Band Booslers. A dance will .gel
underway at 9 p.m. with music provided by Crossover.
..
·..... .
Advance tickeiS; ·for lhe dinner
only, may be purchased for $8 per
person: advance tickets for the dinncr and dance are $12 per person.
TicketS, for the dance only, may be
purchased at lhe door for $S per
person.
Tickets are required for lite dinber and may be purchased until
June 6 at Hawt's 76 Station in
Tuppers PlainS, Keebaugh's Shate
Shoppcs, Reed's Store, Baum
Lumber, Wesam ConsllliCtion and
The Daily Senlinel.
· Y011 may also purchase advance
rleteu by mail from 1ulie Elberfeld
Dillon, 12 Lincoln Terrace,
PomeroY. Ohio 45769.
·
.TIIiJ year's honored classes are
JJ58, . 1963, 1966, 1973, 1978, .
1983, 1988 and 1993. '
.
Officers for the I 993 event .are
Brian Collins, president; Leonard
J(Dolli~, vi~-prcsiden~ Julie Elber·
feld Dillon, secretary; Brenda Cun,
aliiJllam Venoy, assis13nt secre-·
..,: 1ft( Lisa P&gt;llins, treasurer.

1

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992·3470

lnsi.. ...tOwt

Wlllll lUll
Parts alii Swrvkw
Mowars • CHill Saws

wlla.

llo......,

7

SIZm. UMESTONE

(40) rode,- thana• aoutfr
Balli Real Eatata hnlng •
Forty (40) rOcla; u.-a -• parG!II number 11-00314.· . I
Forty (4o) rode; thane•
Dead Ralaranoa: Vol- 1
north Party (40) rode 1o tile 111, Page 10$ Md Vol•• ,

coe.:.~::..~~:; ~0,·;..~.:. :~·~.~~ :!::nln;'T.:if~i~~:.; ~~~nt:·t·•• :"R.!~d~~

SMALL DOZER
DIIVlWAT WORI
llil UMESTONE
'DWYERY SERVICE

Roof

· Potriroy, OhiO

. UCIIIE
MOWER CLINIC

CHARLIE'S

F...,.F......... te

36970 ld R• Road

!

-fUnd•

-.:iii

WICK'S HAUUNG
J &amp; THOME
IMPIOVEME
SERVIa

-

aciiYitiM •d colora, . which may Ita mora or.....
Volume II, Page 574 and
Alumni dreq~esiS hno alcoholic ~- . - - - - - - - - - - - ;
ri-llht .,..., Tha -w o11 or ll•aolvad 1ry
Excepting lfo• Ilia Forty Volume 111, P•g• 11t,
eragcs urmg l e banquet wath
-raaon of body llulda or (40) acre tract above VInton tount' Dead
absolutely no underclassmen pel'·
PtMc lllllke
•·
daaorlltad, one (1) rod, raconla.
'
miued in the dance.
(5) 7, 14, 2tc
Sbrtun (11) 1aa1 wlda on tlia
No warr•nUH ara made
Due to ftre marsl)al's code, the
--:""".
••I aida, baing • rlaht of •• lo any· IIana, morlgiigtla •
' Public Notice
wa, now owned by l.oula or ancumbrilnoaa on the I
Moose Lod~e has limited seating
-----:--~.,... CottriU and
Real EalaiL
!
1 Said Real Eatata having abOve
so early ttckel purchases arc
·•
The Board o( . Com- ;
requested. Ticke&amp;s are on safe now
Clloia
PlaiC NOnCE
P•col nliilibar IJ5.00517.
miaolonan 'm.,. ,eject My :
al Peoples Bank in Point Pleasant,·
.._ 1!1!'
t . lng _, Mlglllliorllood otThac!'.::i.'!i:~~.:'i:
Plircal No. 2: Tha ltlda •nd nadvartlH IIIIa l·
New Haven and Mason, W.Va.;
wtaL
laallltl•. The acUviUaa ac-pU"" written, aaalad following daacrlbad real propwrtyiMitllauchproparty c
Fruth Pharmacy in Middlepon;
a1
•
_. .
•u•t Ita daalgnad to bJda 1~·tha purch- of •tata.altualalntlleColl!lty Juolclorlodod.
...t
Farmers Bant in Pomeroy; and
...._at r-:!'
I
prl-'ly loanaftt low •d certain rHI property 11 of VInton, In tha Townalllp
Tarma or piymant an •
Heallh Aid Pharmacy ,·a New
_. at ,..,
.IIOdarata - - • , . . . _ dn arlli r d ltalow.
of Vlnlon _,In Ita Stata of followa: to percent ol ·i
- . , ,._.
.., ..
or aid In tile prwvanllon at
Ohio, ta-wtt
r,urcha.. price paid •
Haven. W.Va. Ticteu for the
"'!'~I•• Ia 5
,....
............. of .a-a Md
Willlai~ aaalad blda muat
Baing
.
the
Ollio
mmadlataly by caall or :
dance only will be sold a1 lite door
1},1_,. ~ ~,..:., ....
.ltlgliL
·
loa raellvacl 111 tile llalga Company'• Puroltaaa, and oartlllad bank cllack. •
for $7 single and $12 couple. Trek....., ..... &amp;ak
11
In . . Formula &amp;:,~:: :.~:··~===~; baing thuouth hall of till Awmtlnlng blllanca due !
·et prices for the banquet and 11ncc
.._.at A c1 4 - . - .
. !!~ur::t 'N.td•.tlll'lltad• CourthouM, Pom•oy, 0111o !~utllaaNoat ~ua r tar -~dl ·~~In thirty (30) clay• ol :
1
are$35percoupleand$17.50sinZIIE. . . . a.c I I ,
-457.. , no later than T:..n~lpN;,0 12
Nln~
lhlaaCoUntyBoard
OIL GZ'I5.
at _,
O:;:•:~: lUnd.,., Jlllla 1, 1tn, at rtng• Shlt..n (1l),
ofConirrrltlaiollllra
gle. Classes of 19.33, 1943 and
10
4
11
1993 pay a $2 membership fee, bul
:::"...
~=~~
aalda tor llllw ·purpoaa ' p.m. No lilda will • axcapUng Forty (40) acr• (5) 7 14 21 21,4111
lickets are given 10 them free of
....,..... _....
IVa 1g1t b IIIIMIMnl Thr.t accepted 1poatdatad later - - - - - - - - - - - - · - · - · -·- . - - - - ·
charge . However, if these class
....
• _..
Gnltll'rop•"·
' ·
:'.an0::C. ·.!~~=~~
R•l Estate Gene(al
,
•
members bring a guest. they must
1111 1
1 loili
Cl' na .,. -ragacl June 2, 11n a1 10:00 a.m,
pay $17.50. Tickets must be-pur1
I Ia I r IIIMtlrt
:_
at tile ofllca of lila llalga r
.,
.:
chased by May 20. Chccts may be
· · . , . at . .
. 11a1r ~ 011
c-mlaalonart.
·,
OFFICE 992·28Bb · · ~
made payable to Wahama Alumni
~ 0Wita;
,....-.
·
•:'-.:'~··
•·
1
Association.
·
•
- , ,., ••1 ..,
nemw.
•

•••11

.-·

.-

14,19113

so~';':~bfti~~gf~•;::n~: Po~rci'i!.~'::T.r~~:'c~ ~~~#=~~=~F-=;=:::=;~=~ o'~~~:o-c-,.J~~ :::~h:a~rh~!~~~.
~~~ :
10

• Church h0l.ds
.Hope
. BaptlSt
mother- daughter banquet

,. .

·--~

I

Mother-daughter
b
he
anquet. l'U..1

EHS spring concert Sunday
•
Easl~m High School's Spring
Concert will be held Sunday at
3p.m. in the school's gymnasium.
Performing in the progmn will
bethefourthgraderecorderensemble, the elemenaary band, the high
·school choir, and ·the_nationally
· d Eastern Htg h sc hoo 1
ace 1atme
·
Concert Band.
Selections by lhe recorder
ensemble will include such folk
songs as "Frere Jacques", "Lotus
Flower" and "Little Robin Red
Breasl." '
The elementary band will
form "The King of Swing" by
Gerald Sebeskey and "Ro~do
Marziale" by John O'Reilly.
The high school choir will sing
everal
recent pop selections such
S
as "Save the Best For Last", Eric
Clapton's "No Tears in Heaven",

I

•

HCirl AsSociation at 1-800-2820291.
l1tc AHA is the ttaliCJn•s J3r,..SI
......_,_ ............
..· -1 ......., OJjM*i"liflll dedicalcd to reducing disability and
dcadt liun ~diseases
andSirot.ewlticblllmraltilJalmo5t
OllC million AJKricans. 1.a5t year
the AHA spent more than Sl9:i
millionflll" 1mch 51nurrpublic
....- ~
and professional education and
COIIIllltmity I*GglililS..

state contain sodium. However,
the majority of the sodium in the
America.n diet is ~dded during
commcr~ta I proccssmg an d bomc ,
prcparnuon of food. You can, and
may need to, reduce sodium in
your diel," Dr. Mansfield comt'hcnts.
"First, take the sallshakerolfof
the tabl_e. Although foods
_ ll!IY
1 tl bl d fi
13tes
taste a tt e an at trS1, tl .
only two to three weets for rotaStes to change. In time~ food will
not taste good with salt," Dr. Mansficldpointsout
Continuing, she said: ..
"Second, leave ou1 the sail Of
cut the amount you normally usc in
half when you prepare meals.

Wahama alumni plans set
Plans are being fmAalized ~or .the
Wahama A 1umnt ssoctatton
annual banquet and dance lo be
held May 29 8l the Moose Lodge in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
·
d ·
Reumon years are ·'-ra qatm~
classes that en~ with '3" or "8.'
These classes Wtll be seated 8l spe·
cial tables and honored guests are
cl;lssmembersofl943and1993.
The "Renew Acquaintance
Hour" will begin al S p.m. with
dinner to be'"n at 6 p.m. The din.,.
ner of steat, chicken, potatoes,
vegetable, salad, rolls, coffee, tea
and dessert will be provided by the
Moose.
Aftcrtherecognitionofclasses,
a short business meeting will be
held and door prizes awarded. All
does collected will be applied to
the alumni scholarship fund, which
gives SSOO 10 a deserving senior

....

.

Sentinel

May is National Blood Pressure
Month and the fll'St s1ep in lowering blood pressure is often 10 lower
salt intate, Dr~ Wilma Mansfield,
volunteer of the Mei~s Counly
, Division of the Amencan Heart
Association. reports.
"It may be as simple as tating
the salt shater off the table. Americans consume daily far more sodium than their bodies need", Dr.
Mansfte)d SlafCS.
The average Ameocan consumes about one to three teaspoons
of silt each day, although the body
only requires abi&gt;tn one-fourth of a
teaspoon daily, according to American Heart Association statistics. ·
Table salt is 40 percent sodium,
a mincrul essential for good health.
But too much sodium can lead to
high blood pressure in some pecfple, Dr. Mansfteld reports. High
blood pressure is a major rislc factor for heart and blood vessel disease, the nation's leading tiller.
So the American Heart Association. suggests sodium intake not to
exceed 3,000 milligrams per days.
One-half acaspoon of table salt contains about 1.000 milligrams of
sodium.
"Most foods in their natural

,

"""

I•

•

Rocky R. Hupp,, D.C.U. •Agent
lox 119
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 143·5264

IAIIIJ PAIIl GAUGE 1001 .
.IIISTAW• PIICES · OPI.IS IISTAWD
. tx7-$275.00
y. .,..$200.00
16x7-$450.00
Willi Uia Iuers.
ALSO- m OUR NEW
VINYL SEAL TRIM .
Sl.OOPER n.

"
" -· DEADLIHI: - ...,..
thodartoolora1hoaollato""'
~-·2:01~·
F-:
llotldai .......
p.m.Sotunloj.
'

--.-·
Frldi.J Mth1

lat...,

1llh. ..,

·

�•
Sentinel

c zr: ••
&amp;VIelllllJ

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

.

'

Ohio

42 Mobile Homll
lor Rent

1113

A Cj,.$AQ,

54 Mlecellaneous

Met'chandlse

~~~ c~~-

......
, ..... - · .
---~=
71 ........ Sill ...,

~-·~--------~~~

AMf:M

NEA Croaaword- Puzzle
ACROSS

... .

1

,.....c.

PHILLIP

Tro57or ?or ...... llutillld oiu, 24" Ool&lt; vonlty, olmond .,.,.,.
required. f14..ID, lop wn._.o, mllchlna ?lahtocf
modlc?no 11blnw 111. ~
3317.

1821.

Twa 211dl'lll. -

Y&lt;JtJ'Vf.

Wlto &lt;;f'ENI» 'foo M~4~ 1i ~E 1\LDIIIC' 1&lt;11TH

Rio Orllndl, 1Zd0 2 Bod 001111 Th'" Nghlod 1ft • - . . . .
Cloen, Control A - No Pot0: w/_,.ro, S225. llch or teoq.
llw"' w
, -J. _ror
.;.:..:o:::II·:::~:.:..:..-41711=W.,:.::III1:,:·~---

=-"'

'eN

. Condor

:'":::11-ow.
~-~
•• nopoto,• w.,pm.
"

ALDER

'

3 PT -oiJp 5' Dloc, 12"
Plowo, PTO Orooo S - ,
Utility Trait., Ali Compilll~
114--:llll--11:11.
5 HP Eloclrtc Slort Troy BulK
~· - 1-10 Houro, 1114-3417-

NORI'II

··"'
IQ

l:lf.U

'
"KJ764%

..

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IAHf

742 .

+QI091

uniMrrlecl

SHill

3'NT

_ BARNEY

,.

I FERGOT TO
SHAKE.UP HIS
MEDICINE!!

WHAT ..
ARE )'00 DOIN'
TOMY

•
·'

. . ,.... . . . . . . . 0

UTllE
TATER '~--""
7'1

I I-lAVE A
SURPRISE
•~~·,.,.,FOR '1'00 ..

-..,.,.--'-.,...-.~;~~--~

~
-~

.

:..FRANK AND ERNEST
.

M.P.
.......

~ ·

-;BORN LOSER
• 'OJil ~lie. Pt.OOTl, ,

~~:sF!'T~fl£ '«dl ~
.wtHiftETK. ror._

Merchandise

, _ OLX - - Wllh 11411uM1

ttlda 1 bed Couch, _&amp; R.o&amp;lner
Choir, Condllon. IM-14f:

-l~'l'wln IIIII Sol $18, FUll
$II
.... Sot; 4
Drlwr
M4-•i c.r llld'1,
lunk llod'o, - · FUll
Lint 07 Saut-wn Vu•
Slaltl!'.l! AI 120.00: )ndlono ?hny
lhlpt t A Sta~lng At
sa.oo. a ..__ .a.ldt
"Auto

2222.
HJ80S

MpN

lhallow

Musical

lnstNmints

a.sn·.

dw, Aut-lie,
11183 Whll•
wo~.. • -

~1111 4

C•••lntl

'\,

~~~fql~.,.~·-~·~~
•

Cwlln- 11?7 n 1 • - .._.. ....-..
...... I...-, '
good~ OJ ;... •• - .
1114 Chn'lltr
4 ""· 5
.,....,,
Ali-FI7 LIMr,
~ good 79
,..._ &amp;
o

....._=

Will

pump, _ . . , on hortzonlll
:..r'~ tank, 1121. flmo

-ion Or 4 ...... Out 111.
Open I A.M. To I P.il. :Sol.

FNitJ&amp;
Vegetables

Chino oupboonl, a gluo - 2 wood.r1 docn on DaHOM, 30"'
$100. 304-e7e.tiO:L

- -'-

l14--ltl:21'lll
1W Aull 4,000

......

cs, ~

Pl. Fool 77ldl,
II
114 •

*'

.... 7

&amp; LIVt'oluck

11W l'llwlolnl, ~~ T·T-

lad.,.,.._, I&gt;H41:1451.

--

no..

11W - " Pl..illnl aulo., AC,

~-$3,111.
114
ttlo414! ocondlllon.
ofttr I p.m.
or

1117 -

ml,_,
IIIII &amp; 2t IUIIp
- 1 . llmpo,
$350.
-1112:3431.

R. 6 8. FumiiLira. N.w, uHd, ln-

tlquaa. Ho..-d hlmlohlngo.

Maoon, wv. 304-7'13:5341.

•100 K - 4 WD 14 HP,
f"'"' End Loodor, AI·
......... ~••
-.
&amp;
Trtnchw Allaohmonl, Tlroo. $1,000, 080. 114:3711-

ANOTHER

.Ms·~~e..._

FUND DRIVE
~ll'o60N.

~·...,"

~

11Mft.-21144 """ lpln.

Fc11 rn Suppltrs

I THINK I
e.ME:L..L..

Hf6l'!EBJ
AAP!I..JC
eeRVICE

- - ..

....... """ • drlvoo, 11.$50,

='%··
-----

MOKrY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

';iiii'~-~~-~~-~~~:

lllolor I loa •• •
a0nc1, _ _.'III-DI4 ort,..1m
1114 Fonl T:"; 4 Cwl?ndw,
Aulamtlla 111. : 1111 lfon1. ·T· till WLu • r • ,_
1000, 4 Cwllndor, I Spood, 1700, llolw=W
fl4.4ti.G131.
• 0~ --11t3
•
•
Panlloa Trane Am, $5,100.
O n l y _ .... .,...._--~-.-1711'2421.
- · ....... ~ . .
11W i:)odp\ DoviOM LMdoJ, 175-DA
,
•
Low ....... -.,• .,• .ue '"2. Nloe .... 111 Trwl =.
&amp;

r-,

OUR LANGUAGE
Anything SURREAL ("sur·REE·
ul") seems unreal or like a dream:
"T!Ie. whole experience seemed surreal." For real help with spelling this
~djective, end SURREAL with REAl;.
Q. Which word is right - "onward"
or "onwards"? I'm never sure which
to use.
A. These two adverbs are both in
frequent use. ONWARD without an S
is sometimes used as an adjective
meaning "forward" (as in "the onward
rush"!, and American usage also
favors ONWARD as an adverb ("They '
moved onward") . In British usage,
however, ONWARDS is preferred, and
you shouldn't be surprised if you see
•onwards and upwards" u a variant
of "onward and upward."

3111--40 lllfon

41 Gowllllld
4111-1: noiiiiJ
4111 ..... blrrel
47 UnltOimtll

4111111111111 wtltht
41 Wide 11101
llle
50 Aut- Umto
53 Lauth IOUnd

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrtty Ciphl( c:ryplogr.,.. . . c:rllltM from QIOt ltoiw by fMIOUI peopte, PMt lnCf Pf'IIIIM.
Ech . . . In thrl ~ . . . . for matt.. TocM)"'I QW: W .,.._ M.

' ?RBG .
IMG

JMPYSF J
CMI'O

"..
111 . . , . . . . - . • alllltWrlll willl wnom
,.. _ _ ...,dt~Mrry mighl-

...... ,.. .

MIICIIIaMOUJ

--bringyou

T-""""--

a zu a ·.•....,.
..... na1 211 - - · bul

...

;:

, . . . . . . . . . be.

*••.._..., ...211•

1 milunderaanyouanda
'Ad irnmodi-

...... .... • ...... ..
....,_ Ttlere's a cl*oco you'H reed roo

....,. • • a r: • • tt.walcpment.
iltiiii-11&gt;-IDr -ICIInd you'l
I

I.

B

BIFPD

TYHW

vo·ic

YK

IRUS
GPO.

YK

JBC

MP

GRUD
YO'~

HVOU

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BPG
BJNKU.'
FUSU
KVKOUH.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "And now I'm trying to .build an empire. I want 10
bll lhe most succeaalul ex :player - · " - Pete Rote.

....
'::~;:' S@\\.tllA-/J,£tfS• ••••
l&lt;lllool 5ty CIAY L POllAN

Roorrango lotttro of the
0 fOur
scrambled -d• be:

I

low to form lour

~mplo

words.

I

HYTTRI

N E HE

s

I 1 1 1 I'
~

.

. .
-A-N-1-F

I

'·

."

Fellow to his friend, 'I hear •

you've

started~aying

goH."
-v
aa: his ~ sighed, "but
I've been digging up so many
worms I usually end up going

.-U-R_.:;.,I
e ~!:plot~
tho chuckle .quotod
ILt--,.:.l.:..:r.l6,.:..1r-..:1;.;7~1r-~
-L.-L.-·L.....-'.L........I.L......J.
by filling
you develop from stop No. 3 billow .
in · the missing words

•

PRII\jT NUMBERED lETIERS
IN THESE SQUARES

•

UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

1
I' l r r 1
I' I' I
I 1111111

SCII..~ LETS ANSWIIS

•·•l

Acumen • Biteh • Occur • Radium • MECHANIC

One housewife to another: 'My new house haS a

~autOmatic kltchen and laundry, so I did the ·
only sens;ble thing I could lhink of, I let my mnid go
and hired a MECI-lANIC."
.

. ..

© 1993 TV Dlta Techr:o!c:pi= . L.P.

four

.
,

DMN

UXUI

-''"it
20" tan and tland,
$35;1 '::j....,_

:

WBOUK

GRBG

1111 - - - . . . - . ....
oond.
~-I7J.Im,

Eaolt,l14--446:7211.

Merchandl•

wolct bol
38 Slender

21441ifttrl .....

Totllor Ovon, I&amp;W T.V. A·
qu.rlum ComiMII• Keytl a•':!'J
110 Elch; 10 Dlnltt1 CMira "

'

By Phillip Alder

Milot, ·~
domogO,
$2,450,
, , .-, _

4465, New Vorl&lt;, NY 1.0163.

11 01'811 . , .
18 Food IIIII
18 Btlng

(lbbr.)

a Deviled

34 Of Plil ol tho

.

GEIIIN? (Mey 21 .June 20) Things you
enjoy doing are likely 10 be dono well
today , while Iaska you dislike may be
severely botched up. Don't be ·negatively
soleclive.
CANCER (Juno 21.July 22) Today, a curious lhird party mighl lry lo make you dis·
close some conlidonlial inlormalion you
know about a mutual friel)d. Don'l betray
lite lrual.
LEO (JuiJ 23--Aug. 22) Someone who Is
nor ono o1 yo;iur laliO!ile people mlghllly 10
lrlp you · up today If he or aho knowa in
advance about your intended objecllve.
Kttp your inlantlona 10 yoursoll.
WIGO (Aug. 23--Btpt. 22) 11 you all&lt; olh-.
1!1 to give you their honell opinion•
regarding aomtlhlng aboul which you're
erilllUIId. you might getlmrlevant ..,_"'
you won1 i!wan110 ' -·
UIRA (Btpt '23--0cL. 21) Santtmle who
did you a favor ractntly might Clll In lite
merl&lt;er today. Unlorluriallly, wt.llhil per· .
son wanla lrom you COUld be lar mora lhan
you gor from him or hilr,

2 Demon

. 3 Stringed

33 Ftmtlt ' ·
rllltlvt

......... 107,000

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

.1 - Whlll

"IChool"

'Home

AS'I'aQ-ORAPB

arm
10 AuthorFIMing

2111 Ptreh
28 Archeologlll'a lind

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

find
Matchmaker
Instantly reveals ·Which signs are rornantically perfect lor you. Mall $2 plus a long,'
sell -add(essed . slamped envelope Ia '
Matchmaker. c/o this r14WSpapar, P.O. Box

11 Part or thil

5 Conce111
6 Hatchlt
7 lo1lnt bh!w

24 Stfi-IIIMm
25 Franch for

MaO, Can o.nv.r, 304-121 1110
Olld

lnttruments
4 Door hondlt

. DOWN

20Fibo
21 Olllclll
procllmltlon
22 Actor
McDow..

Rainbow lw PIF lllontM Old
U.. Wllwl AI - - . . 2171.

S.IIIIONIII

mittrial

Variety is the spice
of bridge

IFRIDAY

jj;----;;;;;:~--.:_

81

58 Lalt
57 Ptrmltlo

Eul
Pw
Pass

By Jelft-ey McQ.Wn

~.'twr":""i*l'-!!

78

114-- 1117 Allor I P.M.

-Arch w.,·. $121.00

Fan lltck ROCking Chair US;

r--.-__, ON£ io.lllO'OOGIIT If€!

~~~~~mo,&amp;
tt•
om_ _ ,... _n,.~ ;'iM~~~-~~~;;~;;~~::

VI'RA FURNITURE
114--44WI51 Or 114--141:4421
'110 DAY SAME AS CASH
OR RENT~-OWN (NO DEPOSIT)

·

23 Old term lor

women
27 Part ol Alit
211 Nerve
network
30Bul.lbbr.
31 Pilei notlcet

To what does this refer: •Age can·
not wither her, nor custom stale her
infinite variety"?
It sounds as if it could ,be ·bridge.
There is so much-variety in the game,
and although themes recur, usually
there is some small twist that makes
every contract different.
Toclay's deal contains possibilities
for both sides.
After North opened with a weak
twO:bid, South opted to take a shot at
three n0:trump rather than try for a
game in bearts.
West, hoping to find a useful honor
in his partner's hand, led the spade
five rather than the traditional 10.
After winning the first trick with
the spade !1\lVen, declarer led the heart
10: queen, king, five . This was a good
play by East, who was intent on killing
dummy's heart suit even if South had
the spade king,
Declarer led dummy's diamond
queen, EaSt correctly making a sec·
ond ducking play. Now South crossed
to his hand with a club and ran the
IT'S NY OPINION
heart eigbt. However, East won with
nine and returned a club. Tbe con· ·
Tt4AT Tt4E~t MAY If the
tract, which had been ailing from the
./ A5 MANY AS TtN
start, was finally pronounced dead.
Suppose that instead of covering the
Ttfl/11 PEOPLf IN51Pt
heart queen with the king, declarer
plays low from tbe dummy. At first
YOV .rnu6GLII'IG
· . glance, be will establish the bearts and
TO GtT OUT.
win nine tricks by way of three spades,
four hearts and two clubs. But West
hu a bri!Uant riposte. After winning
with the heart queen, be ·leads the
spade king, This IS a Merrimac Cgup,
killing dummy's entry before the
,
hearts are established.
Tbe comment at· tbe beginning? It
~CJREAT! !lHE. llll~ I Daol"r r.~
wu about Cleopatra, written by you
AAV'Illlt.I6J WELL~ NOT lll£
k.nowwho.
.
·

: PEANIJ'r$

-- .

Nor~

.2 .,
Pass

bronze

55 RICktt-ltrlng

Opening lead: +5

\,' '

MAW II

8

Well
P11111
Pass

48DHUnJ
4111 Sloped
51 unc.. .
52 MlkehlppJ
54 Roman

Uvtl (2 wdt.)

IKJ632

-&lt;

43-"'-1
44 Sing.. Item

20 Not 10 much
21 Ru•.... rl-

+AK
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West ·

•

UUt

15 Plrlol TV
Hrita
17 Blood

•as
.,A95
•to a

S1

38 Nlilheld
37Mike11MI
cleer
31111-1'1
kin (2 welt;)
42 V81'Mwrller

· let't tlltrnl'

EAST

.QJ7Z

Hld...btcl co.uch, ~ IWO gold
twlwl chalra, ISOtWt; Joanne
Wllllamo, tw:iri:34SI.

4llft
I E. oiMinn.

11 Ono ol Holll'

SOOTH

OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrouahl Iron Table W/4 Chllro;

351etweenWY
111dMII

lob (II.)

velltll

+us

10.$

=

34 SUCkJ ttuH

1 lllualciM'I

12 Large bird
13 Formtr
pralldont
14 Ethloplon

WEST

.,'

32 Ult

(Oct. 24:Nov. ~)
can be led loday , bul lhey cannot be
pushed In an arrangement where CGIIective
ellort is raqu~ed. II you attempt to ~so,
you could Produce an undesirable reaction.
SACIITI~RIUS (Nov. 23--Dtc. 211 You're
an eHechve worker today, provided you
aren 'l do.(ng something where a lol ol
details are involvl!d. Small COf!lpllcations
could sever your pelience.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jon. 11) Guard
against inclinations Ieday 10 prejudge
events lrom a negative P!lf'll*live. A poor
allilude could have a debllllallng eHecl
llpor) yo;iur ptrfomtlltiCl8.
. AQUARIUS (.Mil. 2CJ:Feb. ~I) II you com·
para wllll you have w1111 Olltera Wlto hilve
mo~. you could becoml dilconltnlld wllh
yowr lolln ,lila today. Bt ~~~~~~~ and Q18181ul
by INnklng aboul people wltO hilve loaa.
· PISCES {Fob. 211-118rch '20) Falling ·l o
weigh your words carefully could cauoe
you lo make. some commeo11 loday thai
you 'll wish you equid retract Bite your
tongue ralher than IJ)Hidng Wlllout lhlnk·
lng.
,
.
, ARII!S (..- h 21·Aprll 1g) Something
lhll yool'rt ~ w11t1 could be mto~nlng­
lullo you In maltrlal way.; end ~ C1f1 be
Improved upon 'to your blne!H, but It will
· lake 101111 ~ . . _ . .,
l.

Fl Worth. TX

...

'

MAY 141

'

�..

1

•

•

,. "·

'-

'

•

'

.

•

•

. '.

'

1
.

Pt~gi 12-The Dally SenUMl

·-.

Sunda.\

•

'

•

1993 DAYTONA ES

1993 DYNASTY LE LOADED!
WAS•18,619

NOW$15,783

3.0. v~. AUTO.

Along the river ""-""'"Bl·8
·BusiDtii!Farm. ...............D 1-8
Clalsifteci ....- -..... - ••DJ.7
Deaths. ........................... ..A·7
Editorll ......- .......- ........A6
Sports..............................Cl-8
Wtatber...........................A-2

Gallia 's first bowling alley located in
Gallia Hotel building· Sands .; A-8

B-4

N

Inside

MHS band reorganizes for 1993
class reunion - Beat of the Bend .. B-S

work

SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY
N

Praire··Bayou wins 118th Preakness - C-1

Rio
.students
display art

·. Cowhoy Sez •••
'

7::; n·nh

VQI. 28, No. 13
' Copyrlghlecl1893

PartiJ cloudJ. Ch111cw fl .....

14 Section 1ae P~gee
A Multlmedlalno. ne•IPII* .

, MiddlePort-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, May 16, 1993

$1 ,000 CASH BACK

on all counts
1993 DODGE COLT

$

Case to enter
_penalty phase
.:.on Wednesday

2DOOR

NOW

.

7,946

t •

1993 FIFTH AVENUE
WAS *23,706

-

•

•

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Starr
. POMEROY - After deliberat·
' ing more than 13 hours, the six
. men and six women serving as
jurors in the aggravated murder
trial of William D. Lemasters U
. found him guilty on all chaiges. ..
· Lemasters, 26, of Racine, sal
.expressionless and displayed no
emotion as Bailiff Teresa Tyson-

,..

#&lt;UXl2

•

NOW$19', 48 7

1993 DAKOTA 4X2 SPORT.

1993SHADOW

3.9. V~. AJJTO.. A/C . &amp; MORE

AUTO .. A/C. CASSETTE

NOW$1Q,287

.

Dnunmer read the jury's verdict ·.
Lemasters was found guilty of
. three charges of aggravaled murder
with death penalty specifications in .
the Feb. 8, 1991, shotgun slayiJigs
of Jeffrey L. Halley, 36, and 12year.old JeffreyS. Halley, both'of
Gallipolis. In addition, he was
found guilty of aggravated robbery
and IWO counts of kidnapping in
the incident
A separate, penalty phase of the ·
trial is scheduled to begin Wednesday to detennine if Lema,sters will
receive the death penalty.
Lenethy deliberation
Sarurday 's verdict was the JeSUit
ofa lengthy, tw~day jury deliberation. 1urorli reported for duly

1993 LASER RS
WAS •15,984

15Cml

NOW$12,089

NOW$13, 989 .

around 10 a.m. Fiiday and receiv¢
instructions from Meigs County
Common Pleas Judae Fred W.
Crow ill.
"Ypli have seen the evidence
and heard both sides' llfiUIIICIIts,"
Crow said. "It is your sworn duty
to apply the law as the court gives
il to you."
Crow reminded jurors that
Lemasters is presumed innocent
until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. "You muit judge
witnesses on the basis of their
believability and credibility by the
tests that )'011 use in evc:ryday life,"
he adde41.
Testimony from accomplices
must be weighed with great SUSpicion, be added. The fact (Lemas.
ters) did It!!\ testify in ' his own
behalf must not be taken into
account
Crow read each of the counts
against Lemaslers and defined the
.specificaliol!l and pbruea contained within ibe couniJ.
Aft« receivilla insttuclkii. the
jucy was fCIIIO¥IIt from tho COurtroom around 1
was
escorted
the
....__totheir

•
..~;..-

1~:~~~~~~~~~~
~ to come up

Around 1'0:15 p.Qt., the jury
. returned to the couruoom where
Crow answered questions for the

PLEASED WITH VERDICT- The prose·
slai.n Halley boy, and ller husband, Gene
cution ~. of Prolecntin1 Attorney John R.
Bureess. Prosecutors said they were ple-d
Lentes IUIII'~etaw Prolealtor Charles Kni&amp;bt
with the pllty verdict. (T-S photo by Cbarlelle
dilc1111 tllllr ~ with the verdict wllb C.r-. , "Cief!il;h)
.
.
\ . ol~ Bn~ letODd. ~:tfi-DI!Idler·tftM!· ·~:. ,~, · " , . .
.
.. '

...,.

jurod,

~

.

.

', .

.

..

'- ·

Crow~ had the Jurors lodged

in a local haiti, where tl!ey stayed
until retuming ·to the courtroom
around 10 8.111, Sauuday.

.

""~ The
' • Verdlctl'eail .·· ·•
doors at the front of the

i

.

~

\ depul:es, was brought .. intalh"e
cowtroom where CarOlyn Bwpa
Meigs County Courthouse wete mothcroflhcslain Haney boy and
unlockedSaturday.at3:12p.m.and Anna Barnes Lemasters' moihcr
Lemasters, accompanied by two
(Condn~ed on D-l)
'

City eyes phone rate resolUtion
.

-

AWAITING THE VERDICT - The defelde team of William
McLane, lett, William N. Eachus and deleadant William D.
Lemasters n awaits the jury verdict In Lemuten' trial for the
. 1991 murder of Jeffrey Halley and- bill son. Lemasters - round
guilty on aU counts Saturday. •

IMPERIAL
WA$ 619,668

NOW$16,575

CARAVAN ES

·I

t •'

91N STOCK!

I
i '

lI
i

1993 LEBARON LE

DYNASTY 1Gl139
WAS •13,285

NOW$lQ,645

LOADED WITH ALL THE EQUIPMENT

9Z's AND 93's
FACTORY SALE UNITS

WAS•15,955

II

NOW$13,899

I
I

•

I

providin¥ for the issuance of city to save up 10 $200,000 in pay$45,500 m notes by the city in ments on bonds issued in 1989 to
anticipation of issuing bonds. The help pay for the new sewage lreataction is to pay in pan for lhe pur- m::/lanl. The action was dischase lllld installation of a comput- cu . at the commission's May 4
er system in Gallipolis Municipal meeting by Dennis G. Schwallie of
Court.
Peck, Shaffer &amp; Williams, the
GALLIPOLIS - A resolution our citizens have the opponunity to
fn relaled action, an ordinance is city's Columbus-based bonding
opposing an alternate regulation speak out regarding these important also up .fiX fust reading approving ·counsel.
·
plan by Ohio Bell Telephone· Co. mauers."
.
, the bid of Henschen &amp; Associates
The commission will give first
and BDOther backing equal funding
The commission will consider a Ine., Bowling Green, for the con- reading 10 a model fair housing
for Ohio schools are among a num- resolution supporting action by the · tract to _P!:I!Yide the computers.
ordinance to provide for equal
ber of items the Gallipolis City Ohio Coalition for the Equity and
Additionally. an ordmance call- opportunity housing in the city. Up
Commission will consider w~ 1t Adequacy of School Funding, ing for the issuance and sale of for second reading is an ordinance
meets Tuesday.
which has filed suit in the state sewer system mortgae;e refunding !!Warding the bid for the city's
The meeting is scheduled for Supreme Court seelcing a declara- bonds will be considered . The active~ accounts to Ohio Valley
6:30 p.in. in the multipwpose room lion that education is a fundamental bonds are not to exceed $1.8 mil- Bank:.
on the second floor of the Gallia right in Ohio and that lhC current . lion. The action will allow the ci1y
The com mission's full a$enda
Countr, Courthouse. A wort ses- system of funding schools is to enter into the advanced bond can be reviewed in the city bwlding
sion wdl be held lit 6.
. imp;oper.
.
refunding system.
or at the Dr. Samuel L. Bossanl
The resolution supports a com"...Only through the provision
The new bonds· will allow the Memorial Library.
plaint by the Ohio Consumers' of additional revenue to enhance
.
Counsel ·that Ohio. Bell is,earning the opportunities of pupils in those
excess mono~oly profits from its schoo• diJiricts disadvantaged by ·
current rates.
the present funding system," and
Ohio Bell is asking the Public not i mludion In state in aid, is the
. Utilities Commission of Ohio 10 tey 10 fair funding of all Ohio
mairuaili these rates for a two-year school JYIICDIS, the resolution says.
period while it files an alternate
Both reeolutions are up fiX first
reg~,tion plthean with the fUCO, . readin&amp;accuuong 10
·consumers counAI10
b
d f [' 1
sel, after which it "pro~es, to ·
on t e agen a or JrS
RACINE - The lack of funds for cemetery maintenance was
reading is a resolutioo granting the
discussed lit length at last week's meeting of Racine Village Counincrease tel~hone rates
on city's approv11 to the uansfer of its
cil in chambers at Star MiD Park.
.
inflationary 1 gures which have lit- cable telov· is1'on franchise from
Council apPrQpriated another $363 into the fund to be used for
tie or nowng to do with the COlt ol Rilkin,ICCO Inc. 10 RiJkin Commu•
opening and clotjng graves. Since the cemetery fund is so low, the
providing telephone service," the l!icldona PaiWII, L.P. The resoluce!Reter:r lrUSteCS were asked to use discretion m ordering mowings
resalution says.
'
at al'· • he
'
f
The consumers' counsel has tion so C: ~ aor t creallon o
th1s spnng, .
.
·med a motion to 'consolidate its security intttests in and the encumDonations are being solicited by Greenwood Cemetery trustees,
'th th
1 ·
Jan brance ol the franchise in ordrz 10
and anyone interested in. contributing to cemetery care is asked 10
complaint WI
e .n:gu aliOII P
secure the transferee's indebtedmail·checks 10 C~~~Ulyn Powell, village clerk.
ness.
· No action was taken on a request from Cablevision for council to
To be considered as an emerapprove a n:solution authorizing the transfer of ownership of the
gency action will be an ordinance
franchise. The matter will be considered at the next session at which
time council will request a repn:sentalive of the cable system to
meet with council.
Dale Han, Yellowbush Road, reponed 10 council that he is ~v- .
ing a road built onto some property where he plans to sell lots. He
AI last 'week's meetina of the
wants to deed the road to the village. The matter was labled until the
Meigs CoUnty Board of Education,
legality of such can be checked. Council sometime earlier declined
the board approved the Meigs
to accept the strip of land because it was felt at that lime lhal it was
Heallh Clinic, Dr. Douglas Huntar ,
nOt legal for the viUage to construct the street.
·
and Dr, Thomas Spencer to aive
Council ·approved a d.onation of $250 co the Meigs County
bus driver physical examinations
Chamber of Commerce to help fund the ·office so that ecooomic
for the 199!-94 achoollear.
,
development projeciS can moYCI forward .
The resi~,:Os o Sue Grace
The application of Jane Ann Hill .for use of the annex on May 22
as an Adult
· Education (ABE)
was approv.ed. Purchase of gloves for refuse collection workers
. instruCtor, and Linda Stanley as I
wCJe IJllli'OYed, and plans were discus~ for some 100f work oo the
coordinator in the ABE program
annex.
were accepce~t
No action ~-~ on Jeff Thornton's !JIQtion to give a aoction
Robin Hawk W11 hired M I IUb. of an alley to a res dent. Several memben of council llid they
stiiiiiO IIICher and Kathy Balrea M
opposed closing 111y alley except for viUa&amp;e or public: JlW]IOiel.
.a alblt!n• teiChcr aida 111 be Iliad
Ivan Powell of the Board of Public Affl!n ~ lliout proc:e.
on aa • r 1M te4 balll. 1'111 1993-94
dure to IJllli'Ove an expendirure of $15,000 for a - 1y111a 11'0school calendar for tilt Mtiga
Ject He - asked to submit plans, specification and COliS In writCounty Board of Bducatioll
rna to council.
·
emplo)' Bel Wll adopted
.
DANA DSIINOER

·Council approves .
cemetery funding

''
I

#4036 LOADED!

Action seeks :::eotgm~ obtain a hearing with
The resolution supports the
Publl•C hean•ng · counsel's
action, urges the PUCO
to order a reduction in rates, and
in. Galli'l'nolis
requests a public hearing by the
PUCO in Gallipolis "in order that

INSTRUCTING JURY· Jud1e Fred W. Crow III gue
Instructions to jurors shortly before the Jury beeaa dtllberatln&amp;
Friday In the qgraoted murder trial of WOllam D. Lemasters n.
Here, Crow reads ud dtRnes the charges.a1alut Lemasters. (T -S
photo by J~ Freemau) ·
.
•
.

County board names veteran
MHS teacher to fill position
1993 SPIRIT.

POMEROY - Dana Kessinger rated numerous innovative proof Reedsville, a teacher in the grams induding SIUdent peer Wtor·
Mei~~ Schools since 1-964. age, profiCiency intervention, class1Jas
hired as ~dary super- room ~puler. mock trial and·Jegvisor by the Meigs County ·Board islatiYCI ICIISions. She wu a panicl·
of Education. ·
·
pant in the oarly TeiCher COI"\)S
~ · Kessinger will rtn ibc vacancy Propam, and haa been active JR
Created by the resignation of Bill pro(ouional Ollanliallons and cur·
Buckley, who has accepted the riculum commiaeea..
position, of superintenden~ of the
She
com·
Meigs Local SclloQI DisbiCL
·
mllllity
illcl~ the
; • ·For the put 12 ye... Keuinaer ·Middleport Firat Preabyterian
lias been telcbin&amp; American I(IY· Clnu~b llld the Middllpon Garden
· emment llld bealth • Meip Hilh GJub, and ia a 1*1 ~~e~~~bcr of the
School. She bold&amp; a --.In ecfu- American Allot:iation ol Uniwni·
calioo admlnlatratlon from Oliio IJ Women .a nd Alpha Della
Univenity.
08mma, ho!lliMy leachen' lmlri·
Her~- ... l!~Gorpo- ly.

t4040

NOW$11

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