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..

TUesday, May 18, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Three Meigs seniors earn AEP awards
LANCAS1ER • It's always an
honor for a student to receive an
American Eleciric Power System
Educational Award. It' san outstanding honor for one high school
' . .•.
to produce three winners in the
r
same rear.
'
Thts year, Allison Gannaway,
.•
Kevin Lambert and Michelle
Young-all seniors at Meigs High
School, were named winners of
1993 AEP ·system Educational
Awards. Each will receive $6,000
spread over a three-year period:
$2,500 for the fresltman year in
college, $2,000 for the sophomore
year, and $1,500 for the junior
year.
,
"I think it (three winners from
Meigs High) says a lot for our
school," says Gannaway, who is
the daughter or Thomas and Judith
Gannaway of Vinton, Ohio.
Thomas Gannaway is a stores
attendant at Southern Ohio Coal
Com~ny's Meigs No. 2 mine, a
subsidiary of AEP. "We have a
really
good staff and teacbers who
AWAD WINNERS - Witb tbe announce·
tric Power System's 1993 Educational Award
care
about
the students."
-.rille Uf3 rK"IitniS, AEP bas,now given
winnerS (from left ot right) AIUson Gannaway,
Allison
plans to aitend Ohio
8WWds worth 'Dearly $3 mil•
Ke.vln Lambert and Michelle Young-are seniors
University
and
pursue a five-year
._liilce die
becaia "'lth one award
at Meigs High School.
physical
therapy
degree. Her long·
U5S. ~ortbe American Elec·
term goal is to put her education to
work in the pediatric ward at a
large medical center such as Chil·
dren's Hospital in Columbus.
"As a sopho01ore, I tore a muscle running cross country," she
explains. "I had to go to physical
The Carleton Church held a 1herapy every other day, and I
mother-daughter banquet recently knew that was the field I wanted to
at Dales Smorgasbord. The theme get into. And, I like kids. I work in
was "Flowers for Mothers and the nursery at church on Sunday
Daughters."
mornings, I've been a counselor at
A welcome was .given by Mar· 4H camp and I've tutored children
garet Henderson followed by the
invocation. Poems, readings alid
door prizes were given, Each moth· •
er was given a heart shaped wall
hanging.
.
Dear Ana Lucien: Millions of
Special entertainment was pre·
Americans
are bombarcbl every day
sented by Scotl and Patti Anderson
with
junk
mail. Especially
singing "Thank You." Devotions
were read .frcm the book of Ruth. vulnerable are senior citizens. They
The group presented Mrs. Hender· are also the ories Who can least
son with a bone china cup and afford to spend money on nonAWAD l'mlSDITED ·Pictured are Linda Briggle, admlnis·
.
essentials.
......-.roou"-* Cnotn, pnsenting an award to Dorothy Long saucer
Attending
were Marjorie Smidt, • The latest gimmick . is an
lillie
dia~~« banquet held in April.
.
Mary Shepherd, Karen Bates, envelope with your name pnnted on
Donria Hatfield, Angie Edwards, it as if you were the only person
Brenda Roach, Michelle.and Stevie they are writing 10. The letter goes
Bunce, Rev. and Mrs. Henderson, something like this: "Deat John (or
Joyce and Bridget Jacks, Alta Fer· Jane) Doe: What a lucky day for
rei, April 8lankenship, Ola St. you! Our computcn have selectecl
Clair, Virginia Dean, Mrs. Ellen
Anderson and Scott, Patti Louise your name. You are the winner of
Harrison, Marlene and Melissa one million dollan, IIIOTanlttd, but
Harrison, Jodi Glass, Sadie Carl, you must respond quickly to claim
Eva King, I aneth Beal, Yvonne your prize. SCIId your application
Young, Jodi Tillis, Sandra Beal, and $5.95 for judging and handling
Mary Haley, Lisa Perdas, Ruby fees, and do il rightoow.•
Burnside, Mary and Betsy · ·Just imqine, Ann, if I million
Houdashelt, Pat Thoma, Marcia people send in $5.95, that is almost
King, Kay Kohler and Audra Harri· S6 million, just becanse people are
son.
dumb enough to think someone is
·going to give them something for
nothing.
Here is a simple suggestion that
could tbrow a monkey wreach into
Middleport Elementary school the machinery. I hope your teadcrs
has recently formed a Daisy Girl will follow these instructions: Take
l'lllli'OitMANC fttESEitn'ED • Pictnred above is Kris Tri·
Troop 1303 for girls five to the application. Do 1101 sign iL Just
.rille Middleport Presbyterian Church as sbe did a Scout
write theac words IICtOSS the offer.
six years of age.
par.• e .r IW nai miiSic and dance for the residents of
The Daisy Girl Scout members "If I win, please deduct my fee, and
Ouu"' C 1 •
are MicheUe Neece, Amber Fisher, send tbe rest of my money.' Then
Caitlyn Garziano, Runyon. The put the offer in tbe company's
Daisy leader is Rhonda Neece. If return envelope and do not divul~
there is anyone interested in
becoming a troop leader for the
school year of 1993-94, please call
614-992-2438 for more informa.
7 p.m., RejoiCing Life Church in tion ..
nJI!SDALY
POMEltOY - F.O.E. No, 2171 Middleport. Lawrence Foreman
Ladies Aaxiliary meets Tues- inviles lhe public.

.

•

1

,.Ofii_
1

....

,.

_. s-•

Mother-daughter
banquet held
recently

in algebra."
Gannaway is co-valedictorian at
Meigs High along widl Lamben. A
•4.0 student, slle recently received
the Franklin B. Walter All·Scholas·
tic Award, whicll is presented to
the top student in Meigs County,
and the 1993 Holzer Clinic Science
Award for outstanding achieve·
ment in science.
"Engineering require.s lots of
math and science, and those are my
favorite subjects," says Lambert,
who is the son of James Lamben of
Pomeroy and Linda Lam bert of
Pomeroy. James Lambert. is ~
mechanic at Meigs No. 2. Kevin
Lambert plans to attend Marietta
College and pursue a degree in the
field of petroleum engineering.
Also a 4.0 sludent throughout
his high school career, Lambert is a
two-year member of the National
Honor Society and recently earned
the Trustee Scholarship from Marletta College. He is a past Gover·
nor's Scholar and Reg10nal Scholar. .
Lam ben earned three varsity letters during his high school career,
two in football and one in baseball.
Lasi fall, he was named co-captain
of the M;Jrauders' football squad.
"It (colle~e) will be a different
· experience,' he admits, "but I am
looking forward to the challenge."
A member of the National
Honor Society (two years), French
Honor Society and French Club,
Michelle Young plans to attend
The Ohio State Umversity and pur·
sue a degree in . veterinary
medicine. She is the 'daughter of
Ron Young of Paducah, Ky., and
Diane Young of Pomeroy. R:on is
manager of AEP's Cook Coal Ter-

minal in Metropolis, m.
"I 've spent a lot oftime on my'
grandfatller' s farm, and we 've·
always had lots of •pets." says.
MicheUe, who carries a 3.97 grade
point average, has been a member
of 4H for five years and was a tWO·
year member of the Meigs County
4H Fashion Board. "I love animals
and I 've never been one to sit
inside watching TV."
Young has played both trumpet
and tuba as a member of Me1gs
High's marching, concen, jazz and
pep bands, and was named to the
all-county band.
She's also been a member of
Meigs High'.s cheerte8ding squad
since her freshml!n year. She
served two years as captain and
was named best all-around cheerleader her sOphomore and junior
years.
In addition, she received the Tri·
Valley Conference's All·Academic
award by maintaining llbove a 3.5
eradc point average while leaering
tn a varsity sport (cheerleadin~.
She, too, IS anxioos to begm the
colle~e experience.
"I m a little bit apprehensive,"
she admits, ''but I ain IQOking forward to iL"
A total of 311 students from
throughout the AEP System
applied for the 34 availab.lc schol·
arships in the 1993 competition.,
Winners were selected by two
independent scholastic judges,
based on each Slildent's class rank
andlor grade point average, recommenda!ions, SAT scores, autobiographical presentation, special
qlllllities or'talents;-leadership abili·
ues, extracurriculilr activities and
citizenship.

Ohio Lottery

NBA
playoffs
continue

Pick ·3:
3'78
Pick4:

3826 .
BuckeyeS:
17-19-22-27-33

Page4

Vol. 44, Na. 11
' Copyrlghlld 1183

Daisy Girl Scout
troop is formed

I

Community Calendar

daJ~7:30pJD.

THURSDAY
POMEROY • Pomeroy Group
POMEROY - Pomeroy Merof AA, Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred
~ • g• •W:- meets Tuesday,
5 p.a. 10plllll 0nwas in business Heart Catholic Church. Call 992·
5763 for information.
di511itL
RUTLAND ·Leading Creek
BlJRI.INGHAM - Bedford
Conservancy
District, Thursday, 5
Towadlip VnlpMrrr rue Departp.m.,
at
!he
office.
Public welcome.
, . _iua DKds Tuesday,
7:30 P.•-~ Bnilin&amp;bam Modem
W•wwl •HaiL
ROCK SPRINGS • Middleport:'.
Chiid Conservation League, ThursPOMEJtOY- ~Legion day, 7 p:m., Rock Springs United
Drew Webster Post No. 39, Methodist Church. Ellen Rought,
~oy, Tuesday. Dinner at 7
program on M.A.D.D.
p.a.
. . . . p.IIL
SYRACUSE • Free· immuniza·
POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu tioos for children ages two months
Olpa", BeD SiBJU Phi Sorority, through kindergarten age and frce
medS Tuesday, 6:30p.m., Char·
lead screening for children ages six
1oac n
""&amp;'s. JJmu:s b7 losing months through six years, Thurs., I c - . BriDg chait.
day, Syracuse Fire Depanment, 9·
II a.m. Bring child's immunization
CHESTER - Chester Council record.
No. 323, D:aqluers of America,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m~ 591b. anniverRACINE · Free immunizations
swy 01 die Jod&amp;e- Charter members for childrejl ages two .months
aw:ad. Cakcwalt
through kindergarten age and free
. by home and lead
.... ,..
oz
screening for children ages six
months 1hrough six years, Thurs·
day, Racine Fire Department, 1-3
p.m . Bring child's immunization
record. ·

.

RACINE • Racine American
Legion Post 002, Thursday. Supper
at 6:30p.m. followed by meeting.
.~ I

WI!IINI!SDAY

I'OKll.AND - R.emalll free·
.,_ Goipel lolissiOJI, J&gt;Onland,
w ' 'AJ dlruqll Suacla)« 1:30 ·
p..a .....,. lew. ,. win Welsh,
~:~

I

~-, SprcPI ~"'iwclli&amp;JIIIY ·

POMEROY - Alzl!aimers and

Rei • d DiHile Swpporl. Group

1M1C11 11'• I ..,, l-3 p.WI., Meip
0
t,?"zjiO&amp;C'C!.Rtv.
ltcidt lb!llm wiD Jill ! I! .. MDeatb
wi6 o·s . j .."E
_ ,.,._,..
~JU&amp;·
Nile.
MIDDLEPORT - New· Life

on-T- ,..••• Wed relay

•

Sorority meets
The XI Gamma Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority. met recently at
the horne of. envoy, A.R. .Knighl.
Barbara Black and Sharon Prau
were hauesses.
Everyone stated they enjoyed
Founder's D!ly.
The next meeting wll be a picnic
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. 81 the home
of Charl01te..Hanning. Members are
to bring chain. The picnic is hosted
by the losing attendance team.

'

Church women
have fellowship
meeting forM ay

The May meeting of the Brad·
ford Church of Christ Lydea Coun·
cit was hosted by Madeline Painter
and Becky Amberger.
_
The meeting was opened by
vice 'president Carolyn Nicholson
with prayer requests and prayer.
Devotions titled "A Little Parable
For Mothers" and "In Mother's
Heart" was read by Madeline
Painter.
The new missionary for the fall
will be Ms. Catherine Russell who .
will be going to Mexico for mission work.
Holiness will be the theme in
September for each Wednesday
night service with a special speaker
each week. There will be a fellowship dinner be(ore each service,
Special guidelines were set up
by the council to be followed for
the ·sunshine baskets. The sunshine
basket for May will be given to
Charlie Murray. who is a patient a1
a hospital in Columbus.
Jane Hysell had closing prayer.
Those present were Karlita and
Hanriah Stump, Becky Amberger,
Carolyn Nicholson, Charlotrc Han·
ning, Suzie Will, Jackie Reed, Jane
Hysell, Madeline Painter, Paula
Pickens, Gerry Lightfoot, Cherie
Williamson, Diane Bing, Sherry
and Elizabeth Smith and Nancy
Morris.

Ann
LandefS
ANN LANDERS
"1993, Los Angel..
Tim&lt;~ Syndical&lt;
Creators Syndiuk"

your return address. ·: NO LONGER
GULLIBLE IN DALLAS
DEAR DALLAS: Thanks for the
shon course.
It is a fact that tbose huge
"giveaways" are cruelly .exploitive,
and a greaa many people who can
least afford 10 send in their money.
But they are legal There is no way
the government can protect people
apinsttheirownVI!InaabiUty.IIITI
no gambler, but I would sooner buy
a lottery ticket tbM go for ~
mail-order get·ricb schemes. B'euer
yet, rd put that $5.95 in a piggy
bank.

.

. · Dear Ann Landers: ·Please
· infonn your readers thai it iS rude
and totally inappropriate to ask a
woman if she is pregnant or when
her baby is due. These questions
could prove to be very embarrusing to both people, cspecially if the
· woman is not Jlregnant but has
simply put on some wcipt.
Why do people think Just bec~use

a woman is pregnant it is OK to ask
pcnona1 qi!C8tioas, suc:h ... "When
!R you due?" rm sure they wouldn't
dRam of asking, "How kq have
you had lhat limp?" or "Have you
eVet tllought or having thal wart
removed?"
There are ways to be friendly
without crossing the Jille ~ good
taste. Tell your readers that a smUe
and a "hello' will do just as well. WINDSOR, CONN.
DEAR WINDSOR: You told
them; with aome exc:ellent examples
that made )'OUT point beautifully. and
I thank you.

Service Friday
The Faithful Gospel Church at
Long Bottom will have a preaching

-and singing service ,at 7 p.m. Fri·
day. Pastor Steve Reed inVites ~
public. Fellowship will follow.
HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
I• Naw Op•n Eor
The S•01on.
a.a.g Plilds (flew•.. &amp;

Vept.W.), "--Il W111, Ptnttl
Plillh, c....... fl. .. • lhry
Plus Azllt• &amp; ..••••••"-·

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

SPECIAL OF THE MONnl
(

Clllilltw• '1.15 4tL

HUBBAID'S GREEIIIIOUSE
STIMUli
CPEN DAILY N, SUNDAY 12-5

992:5776

Still·Renting?
We offer a dream
home loan while most
b
· tell you to...
dream on.
So if you're just starting out, stilr renting, or on a ftxed income,

and you dream of owning your own home, check out our
Residential Loan Program.
. For instance, a family of three with an income of $24,550 may
qualifY for a Residential Loan. Isn't it nice to have someone on ·
your side for a change?
And.it doesn't end with manageable income requirements.
·
Residential Loans also feature ...
• Low down payment
• No minimum loan amount
• Actual closing costs (no points)
• 'No private mongage insurance
• All verifiable types of income, including
pensions, social. security, public assistance
• Credi,t history by verifying rent receipts, ·
utility receipts, etc ..

DAV electsofficers
The Meigs County Chapter 53
of Disabled American Veterans
held its monthly meeting recently
with II members prcsenL
.
Election of officers was held
with the posts filled of commander, '
Nathan Biggs; vice commander,
Charles Lewis; junior vice com·
mander, James Gilmore; sargeant
of arms, Lloyd Johnson; service ·
officer, Kenny Cundiff; and trca- ·
surer,James Holman.

Come in and talk to .u s. ·Remember· we're the Peoples Bank. ·

DRIVER HURT IN ACCIDENT • A trac·
tor-trailer toppled aad skidded on its side tbis
morRIDa oa the Hndenon side olr-ramp of tbe
Silver Metnorlal Brldse. Driver or the truck Willi

:Ravenswood man killed in Rt~ 2 accident
. A Ravenswood man · was ldlled
;in a~ vehicle accident Thesday
.monung on S.R. 2. near Rol·
: linsville,aa:ordinJ!toaspokesman
:for the Mason County Sheriff's

when the aa:ident occurred. Hi's
wife and one child were in
Washinglal. D.C. on the eighlh
arade trip '1\'ith the Ravenswood
Middle School.
.
·[lcptnmcnL
The sberilfs spokesman reported
·. 1bmmy B. Vanacoy, 3S, was Vanlcoy .IIlilS tza¥ellna SOuth lin
..--1 dead Ill Pleasant Valley S.R. 2 when he llpJlllfently went
Ha.piilli8fll:r the 9 a.m. accident.
over the center line and hit a trac·
·
The Jackson Star News ~ '· tor·trailer travelint! lionh head-On.
Vanscoy, tbe father of four children, The force of the impact totaled
was enroute tb the . funeral of a VIIIISCQy~s 1987 Buick and the 1991
friend in Point Pleasant Thesday Ftcightliner, tegi~teted to North
·

./

American Van Unes.
The driver of the tractor·trailer,
Robertu!~· 29, of D!lvisville,
was
to PVH by ML
Flower EMS. The SllOkcsman said
he was treated and released for
minor i!ljuries:
.
Deputy Gene Benson said the
wet, Slick hishway contributed fo
the accidenL
The accident is still under investigadoo.
·

. to fight
N
. ew .group
.
. . II~or open records

incidenL
A former co.defendant, Fred
Drennen of Ravenswood, W.Va.,
pleaded guilty on March I to three
. counts of aggravated murder in the
incident and is currently serving
three concurrent life sentences with
the possibility of parole in 20
years.
·
According to Judge Fred W.
Crow, the penalty phase of the. trial.
also called a mitigation hearing, is
to weigh the aggravating circum·
stances in the case against mitigat·
ing factors.
·
Crow said the hearing will be
similar to the trial which preceded
it. Defense attorneys and prosecu·
tors will make opening statements
and introduce evidence. Then both

~~s:~~.he~=::~: =:i~~~~e=i~n~=

Advance season tickets for
Middleport pool are on sale

sides will then have the opponunity
to introduce witnesses prior to
making closing argwnents.
Although Lemasters did not tes·
tify during the trial, he will have
three options at the hearing. He
may make a swoni statement sub·
ject to cross-examination , an
unsworn statement not subject to
cross-,examination or he may
remain silent. .
.
Meigs County Prosecuting .
Attorney John R. Lentes said Tues. day he wiU seek the death penalty
for Lemasters. "I don't see any
other penalty a~ appropriate," he
said.
Pre-hearing motions were
scheduled for 9 a.m. with the hearing slated for I0 a.m:

Attorney General Fisher may
have trou·ble expand'ing powers
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Ar,torney Genelll Lee Fisber wants
the authority to investigate criminal
·complaints against state and local
government off'JCials and employees, including members of the Leg·
islarure.
However, the bill that he
endorsed Tuesday before !he House
Ethics and Standards Committee
·has been bnwhed aside in the Jllllll.
One reason has been the reluctance of the Legislature to ~~wer the attorney general to 1mt1ate
investigations of its members. The
Legislature has always had the
authOrity to police its own ranks.
Fisher conceded that the Jll~·
al is not new. He fought for a suni·
Jar bill when he was a Stale senator,
he said.
,
But he insisted it has merit now
as it did then. "It is a step which
.

this state should take to wipe out
wrongdoing by state officials and
employees," he told the committee.
Fisher added that the actions of
corrupt officials "can overshadow
the hard work and dedication of the
Jargemajorityofpublicservants."
Under present law, the attorney
~eneral may enter into criminal
mvesligationl only-auhe reqoest of
the governor or th~ Legislature.
Undel' the proposal, the attorney
general could initiate investigations
or act at the request of the governor, auditor, secretary of state or

tteasurer.

. There is a provision that allows
the Ohio Supreme Coun to appoint
a special prosecutor to investigate
the attorney general or anyooe on
llis staff. Fisher said this provision
gives balance to the bill.
The hearings will continue.

·
.
.
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A mation.
Joseph W. Hoebler, SO, of Colum·
. new organization plans to raise
Deaner, eJtccutive director of the bus were arrested in the area about
:money to eclucarc the public about Ohio Newspaper Association, said a half·hQur af~tr the body was
·open records laws and challenge
;1
(
:government officials who don't · the coelltion filed articles of incor· found. Autllorities said they had
:C9fllply with them.
· The Ohio Coalition for Open eral's off'~ce.
·
to dispose of the body. .
·
·
·
:Government filed articles of incor· ·
That make!! it eligible to receive
A gag order issued by Log•n ,
Two accidents involving one still under investigation are several
':poratioD' Tuesday with Attorney contribuiions. from anyone _ County Common Pleas Judge Mark injury and light vehicle damage reports of property damage over
.·General Lee Fisher.
media-or otherwise- w1shing to s. O'Connor covers the cases along with several incfdents of · 1he weekend. Limestone was
property damage and theft are thrown against windshields, win: Coalition Chairman Harold support q~en government and free. against both men.
The coalition believes the order being in~ated by the Meigs dows and vehicles in the Pagetown
:Doutblt of Sandusky and President dom of infonnation.
··Frank·Deaner of Columbus said at
Deaner said the coalition is violates First Amendments rights County S ' s DepartmenL
area. Anyone with information
· the BeUefootainc Exam;nAr
Monday evening about 6 p.m. r~ardin~the incidents is asked to
·a news conference thal their work belpmg
·
~~ because it prohibits the j!Bthering on Stare RoUte 124 near the Church
riff' de
:altcady is under way.
in 1ts effort to overturn a pretrial of timely news from police, coun
c the s
s partlllenL
d h
of God, Martha S. Bias, Langsville,
Over the weekend a window
They said the tax-exempt gag order. ThO order, isaued April pe so 1 tt
r nne ' a orneys an ot ers traveli111 east, slowed her vehicle was broken out at tile Letan Falls
group's first ai:t is to join a chal· 13, covered those involved in the
mvolved
in the case,
Deaner
said.
so ·~car in front of her could turn El ementary School an d amailbox
;lenge of a gag order issued ~n a aggravated murder trial or Stephen
The coalition's
board
or trustees
u10
P. Brown, 32;o'Columbus. .
includes
. four trustees of the Ohio into the church parking lot. The af Tuppers Plains Elementary ·
·Logan Coooty murder trial.
· r,
: · The coellt10n is a spinoff group . Brown IS
one or two men Newspaper Foundation and three Bias car
· was ,SitiJCk from behind by school was smashed·
:of the-Ohio Newspaper Founda· acciiSCii in the s~n sla~ing of who represent inurnaJist organiza- a motorcycle o~ Tby Charles
Th~ department is also in. vesti·
rSickles, ·Jr .. Jackson. he report
· tion, bu~ Douthit said the new Ronald Andre~.ko, 8• or 0 1um· ,lions, journalism
schools and citi· showed that Sickles's 1987 Suzuki
.group will have a different fOC\lS.
bus. Andrejko was shot ·in early zens inlerested in freedom of infor- motorcycle skidded about 48 feet
:. "We don't want it to be just a FebruarY near U.S. 33. His body mation.
before striJcina Bias' car.
.
.
....
·newspaper organization. We want was round March 21. Bro.wn and
,il to be mll(:b wider," he said.
· : He said the coalition is starlin
·
.
·
·
the Pomeroy unit of the Meigs
:With a first-year budget of S10,{XXf.
:provided by the foundation, but
~~~t~~~~m~~~
·bopes to raise about $50,000.
Advance season tickets ror the to needy children, or for other uses Court for no motorcycle license
: "If we are going to pt in a real·
Middleport
M11nicipal Pool lire as the pUrchasers decide. .
. and failing to main !lin assured
:Jy big case, that's the amount it
10
now
available,
Middleport
Mayor
This
peally
helps
the
vm-.e
cte.=dlstance.
afternoon ,_,.;es tOOk
·would take," Doutbit said
Fred
Hoflinan
III!IOUIICed
today.
financing
tbe
pool
operation,
-r: He said tbll .. plrt cl the COlli·
He
said
that
the
season
tickets
Mayor
Hoffman
said,
in
~a
report
an
.:cidcnt
on the East·
'lion's effort to educate the public,
are
aYIIilable
at
the
mJKmr's
office
ing
businesses
and~
to
parnc-.
ern
Hish
School
,Parking
lot;
:it will J!lll!lish a newsletier that will
._,_
·
bto h
t
ck:et
pur
Andrea
Dillard,
Flaiwoocls
Road;
1
:be m111ed to about 4,000 people, in Middleport Yillage hall or at the •pate t ug season
·• backed her 1983 Cbevtolet into tile
mini-golf course at Hartinger Park chases.
. ·
1 dri
:inCI~ state and local governfor $25 each,.
1
He said that plans are bemg left side or a 1988 CheVro ct ven
:ment
ials.
· ·
ade
·
1zo thole who con by Christopher R. Rood, Tuppers
· Douthit said he hopes it will
Tbe mayor said that ~everal m to rec:ogn . the tlcke
• Plains, wbo was pulli~ out of a
'reach a broader audience, including bnsincsses and. orpnizations In the triburc by purchuing b · ts.
parking space, accordmg to tbe
anyone w)lo has been refused community have been purcllaaing
He ei)COur&amp;gt~ ~ repon. There was U""t damage to
!!ICC~ to records lind other infor·
tickets to use in promotioos, gifts :'to':::tw.:: onke I)Utchue both YChicles, but no'!;;jUries.
~·
of the tickels before M!tY 29.
Sberilf liiTICS. M. Soulsby said

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In other business Tuesday, lhe
Senate Agriculture Committee recommended fassage of a House ·
approved bil permitting the hunting of mourning doves in Ohio.
Sen. Ben Gaeth, R-Defi8DCe, the
Senate sponsor, s&amp;d he was not
sure when the dove bill would be
brought to a floor vote.
Tlie legislation has stirred con·
troversy ·in' the Legislature for
years, pi'tting hunters and gun
enthusiasts against animal rights
activists who portray the dove as a
symbol of peac,e.
.
, The Senate.commtttee vote was
6·2.
The House, in floor action Tuesday, approved 94-0 and sent the
Senate a blll designed to protect .
Ohio businesses that enga~e in
international trade from the pllfalls
of changes in the value of foreign
currencies.
,

b db d

n]ury acczuen pro e

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gating a tuesday evening report
from Debra McCann, Tuppers
Plains. She reported that sometime
between 10 p.m. Monday night and
5 a.m. Tuesday four patio chairs
and cushions were stolen from her
front porch. The chairs, she said,
were the metal rocking type.
Naomi Low, .State Route 143, ·
reported Tuesday evening thai
sometime between Saturday morning and Tuesday evening a red tool
box and tools were stolen from her
residence.

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--Local briefs'

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Man ·cited in accident
A Pomeroy man wu cited for faillire to maintain an assured
clelr dlltance Tueeday aft.emoon foiJowina a two-velticle accident
in Sutton TOWDJhip, the Gallia·Meigs Poll of the Slate Highway

Patrol reponed.

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Chriltopher A. Spaulding, 21. wu eudlound on State Route 124
when be llnx:k from bebinll a vehicle driven by ~ B. Wolfe,

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18,47808 State Route 124, Racine, who had JIIOPPedll make a left
. bud turn.
No injuries were reported. Spaulding's vehicle sustained Uaht
dama&amp;e IDd Wolfe' a lutlined moderate damage. Both vehicles
· were ilriven from tbe ICCDD.
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The patrol aiiO '::f;:ted a one-vehicle accident Monday
. afleaiiOOII'In Scipio 'II
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Acc:ordina to tile repatt, a 1m Ford LID was 1011thbound on
· S.R. 684 wbell it ran oil the left lide of the !Old and struck a diu:h.
The dri- cl die vellicle II unknown.
1'1le vehicle IIIIIIUied modenle damap and waa towed from ~

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transported by the Point Pleasant Emergency
Squad to Pleasant Vllley, Hospital's Emergency
Care Center. At presatline, tbe Mison CoUIIty
Sheritrs Departmewt luld no furtber details.

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Penalty phase·starts·today
in Lemasters murder trial
By JII\f FREEMAN
SentiDel Nem Staff
A s.econd, penalty phase of the
William D. Lemasters II trial is
schedQied to begin today in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Coon as jurors meet to decide if
Lemasters will fac.e the death
penalty..
Lemasters, 26, of Racine was.
found guilty Saturd!ly of thret
charges of aggravated murder with
death penalty specifications in the
Feb. 8, 1991, shotgun slayings of
JeffreY. L. Halley, 36, and 12-year·
old Jiffrey S. Halley, both of Gal·
lipolis. In addition, he was found
guilty of aggravated robbery and
two counts of kidnapping m the

'Giveaways' are cruelly exploitive

bighill 60s.

2 Sectlone, 12 P~ 25 Centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio, Wednesday, May 19, 1993
•

Low tolllgblln 40s. Partly
cloudy, Tbunday, partly cloudy,

Middleport man beaten, robbed
A Middlepon man was treated
earl this morning at HoJr.er Medi·
.cal ~ter after two mill reponedly
beat l!ld robbed him ncar a Cllllla
County rest 110p on State Route 7

v!lhicle and ran toward him, Car·
pentcr reported. One grabbOd his
hair while the ocher hii hlm in tbe
face two ~~mea · and then took
wallet 111d a bottle of preacri
~eenKIIIaupntAMim.
medicltion,
.
~ It CGpeaterJ 25, 98I
The fuat man dico ~Y
Hyaell Rold, wu1111tecl ror coniU· lcicbd Carpenter in the nbs ,three
·.sions. and released, a ho1pitll or tour tlnlea. Clrpcoter was then
IJIO'Mwclnan said lhla IIIIJIDina.
duown cmr a pa1l IIIII a iato a
Acccrd.inlto 1.report froni the ditch belen die •uel...ta left the
BOARD MEMBERS DANCE • Two board m-bers from tbe
Oallia Coonty Sheriff' a Depart· scene.
.
Melp
CO!IIIIJ COIIIIdl A&amp;lalo J - W-'ton, left, and Velma Rue
mem. Cnealer wu Wllkina north
Cllpenler's wallet wu found on
on S.R. 1 at approximately 2:30 the other llide ~ the IOid witll S2!l . clanced to "AdiJ Breaty Heart" u ~~-tbe otcrtalmeat at
Seaior Cltlwe111 {)a=1'welday at tile~ CODIJ Seldor CJtl..
a.m. wileD two men In a Chevy m~.
Hill Celltel'• .ba
IIIIo IDOto part In
1'11e·catir 11
Cilldon palled him, turned lnlllnd
Tile victim wu able to &amp;ive
la ,20tb -~ad Tal ..., teatared. 'fll'lety of
and stopped the vebicie bebind clepuriel· a lllonluP clelcrlpdon of eelellndzlt
CO!Ilmlet!Iaad
mukal ,ewtertalaJaent ror I" crowd of -.ion allll
him.
•
. ----.&amp;M ..Uk:le ud the lwo mea:. The visitors.
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The two men sot ~ut .or ~he incident Is under inw'liprion,

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Ohio

Commentary

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Accu-Weather• foreca.t for daytime conditions and high

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

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DEVOTED TO niB INTERESTS OF niB IIEIGS-IIASON AREA

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ROIJERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

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MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

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LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he less !han 300
words. All leiters are subject to editing and must .he. sig~ with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publtsbed. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, rot personalities.
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.; Public still reminding
· Clinton where focus should be
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By WALTER R. MEARS
AJ&gt; Special Correspondent
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wASHINGTON - Maybe the focus got fuzzy a~ the ~tte House,
but it hasn' t wavered among the people who ask Prestden_t Clinton que~­
lions at his town meetings: They want answer.; on taxes, jobs and defictt
spending.
.
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No fine tuning needed. "In the vernacular of my old campatgn stgn,
it's the economy, stupid,:' Clin~n remar~ed the othet _day.
.
That was chief concern at hts first nauonally teleVIsed town meetmgs,
and it was again as he dealt with an hour of quesbons m San Dtego on
Monday night. Many of the points raised in February were echoed m

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WASHINGTON Every
Tuesday, Democratic and Republi·
can senators go their separate ways
for two hours to eat lunch and plot
strategy in a secret session that's
known as' "ea'!CUS."
At one recent Democratic session, Sen. Paul Wellstone, DMinn., committed an act or virtual
henesy: He rose to pitch 8!1 amendment that would finally force· all
members of Congress to' reveal aU
of the gifts, free meals and assorted
perks that lobbyists shower on .
them every year.
Wellstone's colleagues spent
nearly 20 minutes getting over their
heartbum.
·
" Why do this?" asked one
incredulous senator.
"It's just not necessary ,"
groused another.
"When I go into ClllJI=USCS thet'e
are thi11gs I say that are not well
received," said Wellstone with
considerable understatement. "It's
happened more than once." To
Wellstone, his colleagues were
simply trying to stall.
"It was like. 'We'll get to it

sometime ill the fublre ... maybe .•.
hopefully!" he recalled. "I don' t
think my (caucus) speech received
a good reception.''

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein
But within 24 hours, Wellstone
- a wrestlet in college - pulled a
reversal on the Senate. When they
left their behind-closed-doors caucus and debated the amendment
publicly, it passed without opposition as part of a broader bill that
regulates lobbyists.
.
And they were allowed 10 vote
for it in the most politically pain~
free method known - by simply
passing it " without objection."
This protects senators from having
to vo(ll yes or no - a "yes" vote
would have offended lobbyists,
while a "no" vote would have
offended voters back home.
Passage of the amendment also

a

marked pei'SQIIal pa•sae;e of sorts
for Wellstone: the sealing of his
new esteemed status within the
Senate. It's been one of the more
intriguing political odysseys in
Washington.
Just two years ago, one major
new~ reported that Wellstone
was 'on the cutting edge of irrelevancy ... and plummeting in popu,
larity back hotne" - · a senb~nt
shared by. many and backed up by
abysmal approval ratings. ·
But after his le$!slative victory,
Wellstone was hailed by the The
New York Times for his "adherence to principle" which "shamed
the Senate into doing the right
thing." In a fitting postscript that
dramatized his emergence as a
playet, Wellstone .was holed up in
his office for a couple of hours
witho Hillary Rodham Clinton plottin' health-care strategy.
'These last couple of weeks
have kind of been a dream come
hUe for me," he told our associate
Ed Henry. "All of the issues that I
campaigned on (in 1990) are now
commg to the forefront''
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EWLUTiON OF ACAREER ..•

:: MaX malaise is beginning to set in ... l~e the ~r ~~"Lome Flem:; .. ing, a businessman, told ~linton. He srud San Dtego ts m an economtc
•;·, slump too deep to afford htgher federal taxes.
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He wanted to know what nation ever taxed and spent.tts way out of
-· economic trouble. None, was the answer. ~ut Cltnton srud the q~esb~n
:Z was not a fair characterization of his econotntc program. He.called It a btg
·: myth to say that he isn't dealing with spending cuts along wtth tax,hike~.
~
" I don't like this but we' ve got to get ahold of this deficit. Its gomg
;: to kill us if we don ·~" the president said. "Give me four years to try to
. : deliver on the middle-class tax cut."
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With his new round of traveling salesmanship, Clmton stillts trytng to
:, convince people - voters - that he can be busted for .answers that w1ll
•: worlc to get deficits down aJid the economy up. ·
The polls indicate that they doubt it, with Clinton:s jo,b .approval ra~·:
1
ings in the mid-4&lt;1 percent range, lower than any smce·Gerald Ford s
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. • appointed presidency 19 y~ ago.
As Clinton i'Oints out, ratsmg taxes and reducmg SJ)!'ndmg ts pohtteal;·
. : ly bitter mcdicme. But the message of the pubhc opmtOf! surveys an~ of
•• the Ross Perot movement seems to be that the voters wtll swallow n as
'i long as they are convinced the proceeds really wtll be used to cut defictts,
:, not 10 fmance new federal programs.
,
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:! Clinton critics Republicans and Perot all argue that he s tummg out to
:! be an old-fashio~ed Democrat bent on raisin~ tax~s to spc:nd more _on
• government. He says not, vows deficit reducbon ftrst and is proi'Osmg
: ~ that increased taX revenues be put into a trust fund as a gnarantee of tt.. .
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The bust fund idea hasn't caught on f~ Clinton any more, than a Slmt~ lar proposition did for George Bush dunng the 1992 campaign. The real
When 1 heard that Dick Schultz
~ ' goal is in the ftrst word: bus~. .
.
,
had
resig11ed, my mind surged ~ith
:,
The buzz word at this wmt tS focus. Clmton conceded ~at he s so~e- ·
cliches
people who nde
' times lacked it, and the campaign-style travels that toOk htm to tl_1C Mid- tigers andabout
people
who get hoisted
. ; west last week, to California today and to New England !ater th1s week
by
their
own
petards.
~~ . are designed to zero in on the economtc c~~ms that got ~1m el!lCted.
Schulti, (or those who do not
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He has always said that was the top pnonty, butthe dtstracuons came follow
is the executive
:: quickly 100. At his town meeting in suburban ~trmt on F~b. 10, Chnton · director sports,
of
the
National
:: was asked why he'd given so much early attenbon to endmg th_e ban on Athletic Association, the Collegiate
confederhomosexuals in the military. He said Republicans had forced the ~S;Sue.
ation
that
regulates
the
U.S. policy toward the warring factions in the fo~er Yugoslav13 ":as a played ·by institutions of games
higher
• concern then, as now, although it carne up &lt;?nly penp~eraUy tn San Otego learning. Before he toOk the NCAA
: as CUnton listed the kind of threats and cnses he srud should bar deeper job in 1987, he ~as t~e athletic
: cuts in the military budget.
.
at the l:Jmverstty of Vtr•,
At the ftrst town meeting, a woman who said sJ:le'd voted for ,Clmton director
ginia. During his tenure there, it
:. in part on his commibnent against middle-class tax 1ncn:ases worned ovet now turns out, a booster club
:; re rts that he was considering such taxes as part of his econonuc plan. improperly loaned money to stu·• Hrwas. " I wish I could promise you that I wouldn't ask you to pay any . dent athletes. Schultz claims he
:"'.., mor
· e"
, he ··'d
• · Republican critics have made mtddle-class taxes a target evet smce, at knew nothing of the loans, but will
: · one point staging 19 rown meetings of theirown to ~gue. that the ~rest­ resign to protect the NCAA's credibility' .
'
:~ dent wants to tax in order to spend. Along wtth Perot s clatm that Cli_nton
It
befits
Schultz's
image
to abdi;• is constantly proposing new social spending programs, the opposlhon
cate
as
act
of
principle.
He
is a lay
appears to have taken its toll in the polls. ·
.
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preacher
and
a
deeply
religious
..
That's what Clinton is trying to reverse - attempung to boost h1s rat.. ing$ and at the same time convince Congress the voters want thmgs done man. He touts standards, reform
and purity in athletic programs. He
: his way.
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berieves in stern retribution for
1 .e s reoocust_ng on.
"He's going out there to the American poop~·
offenders.
When he left the Univer• : economy," political counselor James Carville srud 1~ an .ABC m.'fmew.
sity
of
Virginia,
Business Week
.~ " He understands that he's got to be a lot sharper. He s domg that.
.
magazine
headlined
its story, " Mr.
'
Clean
Comes
to
the
NCAA ."
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president !lnd columnist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washmgton and When he quit the NCAA, The
Washington Post described him as
national politics for mo~e ~han 30 years.
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Wellstone was elected three
years ago as a pioneer to lite " outsiders" who eventually gave
incumbents fits in the 1992 election. Outspent by his opponent six
to one, he campaigned on tssues
that are on the cutting edge now,
but were just blips on the screen
then - health care, the economy
·and government reform. He was
crisscrossing Minneso~ in the fall
of 1990 in an old green bus - long
before the Clinton/Gore ticket
made that mode of transportation
fashionable.
But this young senator in a
hurry hit plenty of ~blocks early
on, which forced htm to temper
some of his more infiamm11tory
rhetoric. It's a lesson that should
serve as a beacoo for aU 12 of the
freshman senators who were swept
iQto office last November. "We
have a most unusual mandate ,
which is to be 'outsider.; (who are)
·effective on the inside,"' Wellstone told us. "If that's not a' contradiction. then it's a very interesting challenge."
Life in the Senate is not as easy
as it seems on the campaign trail .
"The high flyers on the campaign
usually get shot down early when
the rhetoric meets the reality," one
veteran Senate staffer explains.
''Their wings get clipped right
· away. You have to earn your
stripes around here and that usually
takes two to thre¢ terms." ·
It's. a lesson· not lost on freshman Sen. Russ Feingold; D-Wis.
"It's a- balancing... act between representing your coostituents and getting along with your colleagues,"
1 · he said. "You have to bridge the
two worlds."
"The 'outsider' part means ·
keeping that edge. It means staying
rooted in the people wlio elected
you," Wellstone said. "But by the
same token, you do have to be
effective on the inside. Nobody
wants to Iie called an 'insidet.' But
we all work very hard to be on the
inside (and) be a part of this process. You're nQt JUSt here to give ·
speeches."

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Berry's World

As I sat in a blirber's chair in the
heart of downtown San Diego, the
man clipping my hair nonchalantly
noted a drug deal in progress. I was
taken aback. I had seen at least two
police cars cruise .down the street
only minutes before.
This is the current status of the
war on drugs in· the nation's cities.
The buying and selling of. illegal
narcotics continues to flourish,
even though ttie last .decade has
seen almost a ten-fold increase in .
the amount of federal dollars spent
to staunch the drug trade.
There are some who believe that
the drug war simply cannot be
won; that America should throw in
the towel. At a recent "drug summit" in Washington, D.C.1 Ballimore Mayor Kurt Scnmoke
renewed his call for decriminalization of drugs. In a recent opinion
piece in The New York Times,
U,S. District Judge Whitman
Knapp argued that the gove.mment
should "get out of drug enforce-

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"We are ·going to EMPOWER you - em- .·
power you to make larger contributions ·to
and investments in the federal government. "

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·Joseph Spear
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shared pethaps, by ooe person in a
thousa'nd. I think the NCAA is a
capricious, imperious. heanless,
obtuse organization dedicated to
the promulgation of arcane, complicated and ~rbitr~rily enfor~ed
rules. And I think DiCk Schultz IS a
wowser, a Lord Protector bent on
rooting out 1/lC wicked. He has not
been regulating college sports so
much as he has been on a moral
·
crusade.
That's what I think.
Before I go on, I wish the.record
to show that I believe college
sports ar~ in .&lt;fire n~d of regul~­
uon. I beheve that umvers1ty presidents should control athletic
departments. I believe the money
they generate should be used to
support the institutions at large. I
belieV'e that athletes should be held
to the same academic standards as
the general student population. And

I believe that corruption should be
punished.
I speak of real corruption cash payoffs, free cars, changing
grades, cheating on exams. But too
many times, the infractions are
minor, yet they are probed - and
sometimes punished - as if they
were tantamount to felony. To wic
- When two basketball players
at the University of Nevada-Las
Vegas posed in expensive suits for
a Sports Illustrated spread, the
NCAA investigated to see if they
were participating in an advenisement. Why? Because the magazine
identified the manufacturer of their
· suits in the photo credits.
- When Duke University basketball player Christian Laettner
agreed to keep a diary or his senior
year for possible publication in GQ
magazine - after his graduation
- the NCAA swooped down to
check whether he ha.d signed a contract "I don't think we would distinguish between an oral or written
agreement, '~ solemnly intoned one
NCAA official.
- When the University of
Maryland investigated itself and
found that its basketball team had
.violated some rules, the coach

under whose tutelage the wrongs
occurred was flfed and the file was
turned over to the NCAA with a
plea for mercy . The NCAA
responded by pummeling the
schqol with three years of pr,obation, loss of two scholarships and
banishment rrom post-season play
for two years and frotn television
for one - · as a result of which the
team was exiled from its own conference tournament
And what heinous crimes had
been committed? Some players had
sold free game tickets. A player
who had left school for academic
reasons and who hoped to return
was given rides to a community
college. Some visiting recruits
were given souvenirs and apparel
by a local sports store.
··
Under the truth-in-packaging
laws, I am compelled to disclose
that I have been a Maryland basketball fan for 35 years. I do not gloat,
however, over Dick Schultz's resignation.
I merely point out that there is a
cenain poetry to it.
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
writer for NeWSJ!llper Entergrise
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Time to rethink the war on drugs

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a man "who built a reputation
based on integrity during a 40-year
career in college sports.''
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I h;lve a different opinion - one

Washington should continue to
wage the war against drugs, but the
battle plan needs to be changed to
emphasize demand. Tile 20vern-

Josenh Perkins
1'

It is profit that drives the drug
trade. And the way to reduce the
profitability or drugs is not by
stemming supply .(the more scarce
a desired commodity. the more
valuable), but by dampening
demand.
If the government deprived drug
dealers of. enough of their custamers- say 7.s ·percent of the
12.5 million Americans who use an
illegal drug at least once a month·
- the profit margins for drugs
1J¥Ould decline signifiCantly, With
' lower' profit margins, drug merchaniS' might fmd it worthwhile to
pursue.other lines of business.
Attorney General Reno is on the
right track when she advocates a
"carrot-and-stick approach" to
staunching illegal drug use. The
carrot should be treatment on
demand for those who .need help to
beat their self-destructive habit.
The stick should be swift and sure
punishment for those who refuse
treabnent and get C81J8ht buying pr
doing drugs.
That is not to say that drua
·abusers should be hanged, although
hanging hu poved quite 1 deterrent 10 drug 111e in auch nations ~
Malaysia. Or even that the)' be hit
with· harsh mandatory mmimum
priJon lmlll, aucbu thole called
tor under feclaal-llllll:ing laws.

accountable for their actions , A ·
first arrest on drug charges should
be a warning. Get treatment. Get
clean. Subsequent drug arrests
should be pumshed with increasingly stiffet time behind bars.
Those whO say drug abuse is a
health problem rather than a law
enforcement problem miss the
point. It's not one or the othet.lt's
both. If a person is a chroniC drug
abuser.• chances are he or she will
not voluntarily eiuoll in a treabnent
progr8m. It is almost inevitable that
at some point the user will eotne in
contact with the justice system.
The courts could turn drug
abusers out hoping that they will
get treabnent, but it actually is better to incarcerate them. In prison,
users Will not fmd drugs as accessible as on the outside. Treatment is
compulsory in many cues. As a
result, many chronic abusers often
leave prisOn having oveteome their
addiction.
.
.The war on drugs is to be won
by focusing more·on demand .00
less ~ supply. Drug peddlers will
only pve ground when the market
for their illicit prodlict starts to
dwindle.
J01epll Perkins It 1 columnist
for Tile San Dleao Ulltlon·TrJ.
bune and a writer for Newspaper
Enterprise Asloclatloll.

ment no longer should squandet t!S
percent of its drug control war
chest trying to stem the now of
illegal narcotics into the country.
Such a strategy is almost dOotned
to failure.
Burn down one Peruvian poppy
field and anothei' gro~s in its place.
Arrest one Colombian dru1 lord
and a successor picks up where he
left off. Head off a cache of drugs
in south Florida 1111d a shipment
makes it over the U.S. border in
Southern California.
Attorney General Janet Reno
noted recently that lhe drug Interdiction effort m&lt;iunted by ihe federa! government over the last four
years had stopped only 2S percent
of the drugs larJieted for the United
ment.' ~
States. To have more lhan a negJi.
But the surrender to drugs that gible effect on drug age in this
Schmoke and Knapp advocate country, the government would
would quicken America's social have to interdict 75 percent of
decay. It would result in more, not incoming drugs.
less drug abuse. Emetgency roOms
This will never happen, As long
would treat an increasing number as·cocaine is valued on the street
· of overdose victims. Hospital level at rou11hly $1,500 an ounce
~atemity wards would have to pro- compared to only $350 an ounce
v1de care for even more crack . for gold there will be druB mer- _.:B.:ut:..dru=.:g:..:•.:.:•:.•:..:.:•houl.:.:.:.:.;d~bo~h-e_ld~----------babies. ~S clinics would be con- chants prepared to use anr. and
for T,..O-: "'J'herc c:ou1d be
honor in. .,_ ,,;,.__ , but
110
1 - . . 1- - ·
fronted With an even larger popula-. every means to get their tllicit
"""7 ..__
tion of HIV-infected intravenous . product.in.to the hands of'interested much m t be ~ '""" I lillie defCIIl" T.B. Lawrence, English 101·
drug users.
customers.
dier and 111thor (1888·1935).
· .

Thou=
,,~

J

IMansfield 160" I·

,•.

'

By The Alloclated Press
high temperaiurea were to be 10 to
Cool weather will continue for I5 ~below normaiiOdlly.
'
the next few days in Ohio.
Showers atretelled from New
Skies will be partly ·cloudy Eng)anclto'pans ~ F1aridL
Rain aiJo fell today 'in
of
tonight and Thursday. Lows
tonight will be about 40, and highs the Plains and the Rocky ~tain
Thursday will be in the upper .50s region.
and lower 60s.
·
On Tuesday, a
of thunderThe record high temperature for storms with 55 mph winds downed
this date at the Columbus weather trees and )lOWer lines in West Vir·
statiO!! was 92 in 1964. The reco¢ ginia.
High temperatures today were
low Was 37 in 1894.
,
.
ArOIIIId the nation ·
expected in the SOs and 60s a1onB
Sunset today will be at $:43 the coast of the l'lcific: Northwest,
p.m. Sunrise Thursday will be at in the nothern Plains, the Great
Lakes regjon, the Midest lnd the
6:12a.m.'
Rain fell along the East Coast Northeast;' in the 901 and over 100
early today as cooler air pressed in the Dear.rt South'WfJII; and in the
into the region. It was unseason- 70s and 1101 elsewhere in the Lower
•ably cool in the nonhem Plains and 48 states•
the Great Lates region.
The bit.:.the nation Tuesday
in Coolidge, Ariz.
In. Michigan and Wisconsin, was 103 _

STORE HOURS . .
.Mon4ay lin Sunday
8AM-10 PM

'*"'

IND.

W. VA.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
WI RUIIVI TIE RIGHt TO UMIT QUANnnES
,.ICIS 100D IHIU SUIIAY, lilY 22, IH3 ·

---Livestock report.-coLl:JMBus. Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Wednesday by the Ohio Department of
01883Accu--lhet, !nc.
Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts : steady;
detnand moderate.
U.S. 1-3, 230·260 lbs., country
Extended forecast:
points, 46.50-47.50; plants 47.25Friday through Sunday:
48.25, a few 49.00.
A chance or showers each day.
Sorted U.S. I-2, 230-260 lbs.,
Lows near 40. Highs in the upper country points, 47.75-48.25.
50s and 60s.
Rece1pts Tuesday 8,000. Estimated receiptS Wednesday 7,500.
.·Prices fmm The Producers Livestock Associatioo:
. Cattle: 1.00 to 2.00 hi$1Jer.
.
High School bandroom . Roger • Slaughter steers: chotec 76.00Williams, director, urges all band
members to attend this meeting to
determine if there is adequale participation for an alumni band.
Music and information may be
obtained by contacting Williams at
992-5389 or Mick Childs at 992·
WASHINGTON (~ -Web6188.
ster Hubbell, President Clinton's
choice for the No. 3 job at the JusGroup to JDeet
tice Department, told the Senate
The Stroke Support Group will Judiciary Cotnmittee today he. has
meet Thursdar, -from 3-S p.m. resigned from a virtually aD·white
Topic will be 'Moving Toward country club in Arkansas.
.
Acceptance." Call Lia Tipton ,
Hubbell, whose membershi{' in
group coordinator. 446.·5070, for the club had clouded his nornmainformation.
tion as ·associate attorney general,
told .lite p1111el that he didn't want
VSCtomeet
perceptions about "some lack of
The Meigs County Veterans ·sensiuvity" to hampet his worlc at
Service Commission will meet the department.
.
Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the VetetSenate Judiciary Committee
ans Service Office in Pomeroy.
Chairman Joseph Biden told
Hubbell that he respected his deciPlantllla mdaedalecl
sion but said he hoped that others
Flower pJantina by the Pomeroy in the Little Rock club would conMerchants Association has tieen tiriue to won: against any lingering
changed to Thursday at 5 p.m.
discrimi~ practices.
Hubbell, m 'his opening stateSpecial meetillg
ment at a confirmation hearing,
There will be a spcclal meeting told senators that for years he had
of Shad~ River Lodge No. 4~3 "worked wilhin the club.and with
F&amp;:AM Friday at 7:30 p.m. w1th the African-Americans in our comwork in the entered apprentice munity to bring about divenity in
degree. Refreshments will be • the club."
served.
1 " ... I believe we have made

------Weather----Solltb·Ceatral Oblo
.
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in
the low 40s. Thursday, partly
cloudj . High in the low 60s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.

Meigs ann.ouncements
Ftmdralser pla!'D~
will be a fundraising dinner at the Burlingham Modern
Woodmen Hall .on Memorial DIIY
from 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. The
menu includes barbecue ribs,
chicken noodle dinners, sandwiches, pies, bread and other baked
goods, Cost is $4. Carry-out available. All funds wiD go to the Bed• ' ford VoliDiteer Fire Department
·

'

resigns .
from Little Rock Club

· Hospital news
VET.ERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday's admissions - Donald Hoyd, Rutland; David Mann,
Pomeroy; Emma Searles, Middleport; Paul c.d, Racine.
· Tuesday's diaclwges -.- Monte
Rime,Pomaoy.
. HOLZER MEDICAL CENTf;R
May 18 dlscbaraes - Randy
Roach, Richard Patterson, Paul
Cherrington, Henry Hill, Mrs.
James Black and daughter, Harold
Howell, Mildred Hill, Mary Roush,
Carrie Rice, Kenneth Biggs, Termalee Layton, Olga Stiltner, Patti·
cia Long. Lucy Biggs, Loren
Moore, Joann Scanlon, Sandra
Thacker, Editb Earls, Lindsay
Teaford, Ida Malone, Opal
Woolum, Nora ~ar and Betty
Doerfet.
• . .May 18 birth - Mr. and Mrs.
. Richard 'Hill, daughter, Leon,

·w.va

EMS responds
to four .;ails

The following marriage licenseS
were issued recently in the Meigs
County Probate Court. Receiving
licenties wtze:
Friday -,.·Michael Shawn Jacks,
20, and Usa Marie Jones, 19, both
of S)'racuse;
•
Monday - William David Zei·
' gler, 39, and N~cy. Lee Zeigler,
28, both of Pomeroy, Robert Walter Vaughn, 73, Pomeroy, and
Joanne T. LaWJeii(C, 59, Long BotlOin; GC!OIIe BDiott•Sc:arberry, 21,
and Angela Lynn Rowland, 19,
both of Rutland; Kevin Craig
Knapp, 32, .and Teresa Landell
Willi*ns, 38, both of Syracliae.
'

The Daily SentiD.el
lb..... Friday, Ill Coan SL,_ ~ 111,
Ohio by lhe Oblo V.Dey ruollolllna
Ccmpany1Mu1tfrnedil

Jne..

-led

PoritetO).

Oblo 46?8111 Pb. 1102·211M1. Sooond al. . . . pola at Pomeroy, Oblo.
Member: The

Pna, ani! the

NIWlpi(IOI' Sal•, 733 Third A..nue,
Now York, New 'lllrt 10017.

POSTNAIITER: Selld- ..........
'"'" Dally llonllnal, lt1 Coan St.,

I .........,., Ollla 411'188.

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n.·vorces and
di•ssoluti•ons

Number Nine Road for Robert
Baker who Wll lri!DI~.rted tO
Pleasant Valle=tal; 9.4~i
b'ansp::/: PVH; · , The following
for
9:43 p.m. Pomeroy to Second dtv~ were recently filed m the
Street for Qouglaa Freeman who Metgs C~unty Court of. Common
was II'IIISpCll1ed to VMH.
Pleas. Filmg were M. Jil\ Barrett
•
from Shannon L. Barrett..bOth of
Long Bottom, and Howard E.
Miriird, Middleport, from Kathetr
ine A. Minard, Kolromo, Ind.
CLEVELAND(AP)-Three
In addition, a dissolution was
Ohio Loaery tickels show the right granted Monday to Dallas Arthuf
five-number combination in Book- HiD and Deln Rae Hill.
eye 5,1it111d each entitles the ownet
, · to clafin a $100,000 prize, the lottery announced today.
.
The winning tickets were sold in
Samuel Gibson, Regional Dircc·
Wamn, T9ledo and'Faidield
tor of the International Education
Forum (IEF), an international stu·
dent exchangeJll'OIIlll'!• announced
••
Tuesday that Shirley Coleman has
'Buy One, Get One Free' been appointed as a local commusale enda Thunday
nity coordinator for Rutland and
$~'1 "Bu~ One, .......
One tile ltlri'OIIIIdina 11'01. In tbia DOli•
~
tlon abe wW be leCking holt flini. Free . llle on 199 HUon (IISiel
for
the
villue
London
Pool
encb lles who wou111 be willing to share
Thurlday, t.]a~ 20, ICeOrdlng to their borne wblla llludent from one
Ma Jlili ...._
of the 25 countries sendinl Stu·
lyot • • dents
for all or pan of.lhe 1993-94
Colt of IUIOII tickets, fC811)1rly
.
$25 eaeh, Jiavo been reduced to IChool~.
Dr. Oib8on Slid this - often
half lhlt amount if two are pur•
ltudenll
.. OJII'Alllent tMXJilllllity to
chuecl by Hethe 111unclay d;'be, ·experience Amerlclll Ufe - ' culPaDe 1114.
IIQIPhuized
ape.
c:lil prico oll'cr will not be alrDDd- ture at ita finett and to promote
Jact md inlemlllarll and '!'ISDI·
eel
.
.
Passes can be bouaht this tlonalllllderltlllding. IliF mvitea
W.~DCI .........._ fro 2 fanti1lea Wid individuals lntmiiCd
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y ID
10 6 ,...
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to
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-'1 ......,.,_ A SIIPP1Y
742.2125.
'
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..

~~~

action~

.

CHUCK . ROAST...~.'=

"I have come to realize that
there remains in the minds of sane
P.eople" some questions about
'Sotne lac:k of I!ICilSitivity" on his
part, Hubbell said.
"I think that it's important that
that perception not dislract" from
his new job at the Jusdc:e DcDert·
ment, be said. "Therefore, I have
· resigned."
Biden had said earlier thai be
had no problems with Hubbell's
record, although he also said lite
committee has received a large
number of 1et1m about the subject.
Biden nOted that the Judiciary
Committee in 1990 pa~ed a JeSOIution that "it was inappropriate"
for nominees coming-before the
panel to have been members of
clubs that discriminat.e.

------=:-~

favor Tuesday.
"This is an electorate that does
not want to spend DIOIIC)' and does
not want iiS taxes spent frivolous·
ly," said Michael Young. a politi·
cal science llfO(esscr at Pe1111$ylvania Stale Umversity.
·
The expense would have eotne
after three dght budge! yem. The
state raised taxes .by $3 billion in
1991 to c:loee 1 delicil and pay for
new spending. Pennsylvania may
ha~,to ,:ul welfare benefits in the
canmg fiscal yea-.
Not even veterans were unanimous in support of the IIICIISUIC.
· "Hey, we gol P.•id·!'" said
Rob«i Hornyak. a 1'lllnll!1 factory
wOrker &amp;om Johnstowll and 1 for-.
mer seraeant in the Penllsylvanil
detachmena thalloat 13 soldicrn in
the deadliest Scud attack of the
war. "We're not looking for 1

FOLGER'S CUSTOM ROAST
•

Theii(XMII would haw liven
Gulf
vetenns $75 for each
month of avice, ilp to $52S. 1'lllee
prisoners ofWII' from Pennsyl¥111ia
and familiel of the 29 Pemsylvani·
ana killed in the war would have
goaen $4,000.
The !Otal works oal to about
S17.!1 1\lillion, thoush the referen·
dum w0111d bavo authorized $23
million. '
Slltea trlditionally hive given
cash " ' - - 10 - vetelllll, lnd
Pennsylvanil Wlfn did so for soldiers who fotilllt in World War I,
World W• D.lecna lnd Vietnam.
In Loulslaila, Gulf War veterans
received $2SO.

COFFEE

MUELLER'S NOODLES

handouL"

5

3/ 1

90Z.
'

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GoodGoo:~ At Puwell'a Super Valu
1111r 11tllru 1111v 22, 1113

Offer

Um1t 3 Pw CuaiDnw

'

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lj!!!II-'!!!..!P.!.!!I--stllflr-11!!.ft.I!!'-II!!.!P-W.,

CLOROX BLEACH . . ll

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•

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'

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lr-.-oiii._.ar.l;l;l'tiJ.~~-----;;;~

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progress," he said. But Hubbell
also said that "I would have
resiE irnmediwly from the club
ifl had bolieved an application
would have been rejected on the
basis of race."

;;::.,
. . .,

..

.

•

;,
••

PHILADELPHIA (AP) Breaking with a. tradition that
began with World War I, Pennsylvania voters overwhelmingly
rejected a proposal to pay cash
bonuses of up to $52S.to the state's
33,000 veterans of the Gulf War.
"This kind of stuff makes the
veterans feel like maybe he
shouldn't be going to war," said
George Mullen, state adjutant for
the Vetenns of Foreign Wars.
Wiih 96 percent of precincts
reportinf. 64 percent voted against
authorizing $25 million in bonds to
pay for the bonuses and a $1.5 million memorial to veterans or all
wars. Thirty-six percen1 were in

Named coordinator

Ohio Ne.._i;,!::"llon, Nadonal
Moerlllt.,
dvo, Branham

aaeh-. ·

, ,Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Responded to
four cai1s for 8llistance ovemighL
Units l'elpOIIdina were: 10 a.m.
Pomeroy to the Mlples ~~~
for Joseph Wolfe who wps trans-

USDA CHOICE IONELESS

Pennsylvania vetoes bonuses·
for Gulf War veterans

Lottery numbers

(U8P81lloll0)
l'llbliohed •ery allomaon, Monday

13

HIITisoli1'ille sen101" to meet

The Harrisonville Senior Citi-

zens will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the townhouse. Snacks will be
served. All members are urged to
attend.

'

.

, SUS pme rac:heduled
The S,outbcni High Scbo&lt;?' baseball game with Jackson. which was
canceled Tuesday due to rain, will
be held Thursday at 5 p.m. at Jack·
son High School.

·

Licenses issue.d
in probate court

83.3s;'&amp;dect 71.5().76.50.
Slaughter lleifers: choice 7S.OO82.75; select 71.00-77.00.
Cows: 1.00 to 1.50 higher; all
cows 64.50 and down.
Bulls: steady to 1.00 higher; all
bulls 68.00 and down.
Feedercaule: 2.00 bigber
Yearling steers 75.00-85.00;
yearling heifers 68.00-79.00
Steer calves 80.00-105.00;
heifer calves 75.00-101.00
Sheep and lambs: steady to 50
cents lowet; choice wools 60.0065.25; choice clips. no lqlOrt; feeder lambs 66.75 and down; aged
sheep 3l.OO and down.

H~bbelJ

The)'e

Band practice sclledalecl
A rehearsal for all alumni or
Middleport High School who are
planning to participate in the Middleport Alumni Band will be held
Thursday at 7 p.m. in !be Meigs

·

Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are ,writers for \)nitrJ
Feature SyndK:ate, Inc.

NCAA on the wrong kind of mission

.&gt;QI

MCH.

Ideals intact, Wellstone secures status

The Daily Sentinel

.

Tbunday, May 20

'l

.••

Cool weather
will remain
.
in Ohio next few .days

OHIO Weather

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, May 19, 1993

:~

•••
••

'

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511.

�19,1993

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

~-

•

.-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlne

Jeff Andretti's
desire no longer
•
•
m
question
·.

Rtm.AND SECOND- Tile h•'
De.,. 2la\4
«~
_._ il 1te ;,n » «
di.W. rlllle lib• ~T
\
wllldl• d dr« il lllf Mad.
..
1te
rn.t
.
.

art (L·R) J, Col~man, A. Moodispaugh, A.
T. Coleman lind J, .WIIllaDI!I. Standing
art W. McKinnty, C. VanMatre, L Phillips, J. .
Rift •d coach Dennis McKinney.

~Ier,

In the NBApliqoffi,

SHADE DIVISION CHAMPS - The Shade
Cats won the sixth'fl'ade division of the BldweU
Rlnky·Dink Tournament, which concluded In
late March. In tl!e fronl row are (L·R) S.

By M1KE HARRJS
INDIANAPOLIS . (AP)
Nobody is questioning Jeff Andretti's desire lll)'IIICn.
Where once peq~le woodered if
~ r,ounger soo or M.no AnlftUi
~ 1 y wanled 10 be a race driver,
they now just wonder at the
strength of his convictions.
Last May, in bis second lndi.
anapolis 500 start, Andretti was
badly injured when a broken rear
hub sent his Lola careening nearly
liead-on into the concrete wall.
He was carried away frOm the
battered car with foot, llilkle and
leg injuries thal made even walking
a question mart.
·
Now, -Jeff, 29, is back, joining
his falher in lhe lineup for the May
30 Indy 500. Mario, the 1969 Indy
winner. qualified in the middle or
the front row at 223.414· mph,
while Jeff, who didn't make lite
lineup until the second day of time
trials, will Jentatively slllt in the
middle or the sixth row after qualifyinll ar a rock·solid 220.572.
·
' lJ.•m doing great physically,"
the younger An4retti said. "Every
day I've been running strong, and
at the end of the day, I feel good.
"Here, I'm working with a
uainer a couple of days a week and
·just working on the basics stretching my feet and gct\ing the
.muscle tone back to where it
'should be.''
' With his sarong showing this
month, it seems like he hasn't
·missed a beat, despiiC the opera·
;lions and hospital time last year.
; "1 didn't really realize thai I'd
be back this quickly," Andretti
•said Tuesday as his crew got his
·Im Lola-Buick V6 ready 10 begin
working on a race-day setup.
Asked if being an Andretti, or
just being around the rpcing milieu
for so long. gave him any edge in
· •his comeback, Andreui said, "I
·don't think so.
. "1 don '1 know if it would be
'any different if 1 wasn 'I named
· Andretti," he said. "Having a dif~ ferent l11s1 name wouldn't mean
;that I wouldn't have tho same aui. tude .. J think that it'$ something
that's within yourself that makes
:youdoiL"
.
; In his first try at Indy, in 1990,
the yoimgesa of tho racing Af!dret·
tis failed 10 make the race, bein&amp;
:bumped by a fasta" car just 17 minutes-from the end or time lrials.
.
·, He came back to qualify 11th
•and finish 1Sth in 1991, then quali!'fied 20th•and was·running well
when he crashed just past the
!l!alfway point last year.
Rain kept the tnd closed until
the final 2 hours, 48 minutes of
practice Tuesday, with only' IS cars
getting out before the end of the
:;, day, almost all of them drivers,
: including Andretti, already quali: lied.
Teo Fabi of Italy and Scott
Goodyear of Canada, both in the
: tentative field, were faslest for the
day in their backup cars, Fahi at
223.381 and Goodyear at 222.261.
Amhng tho drivers yet 10 qualify, John Andretti was fastest at
217.019 while shaking down Him
·Matsushita's car.

Doupn, E. Gabriel and D. Guthrie. Standlllg
are coach Mike KubiCilka, L. Kubllellka, K.
Kubadlka IIIJd J. Jordan (no first names were
available for t11e1e players).

·

Knicks outlast Hornets 105-101; Suns, Sonics also win ·
.By Tile A Ill ~lwlpd 1'1111
The New York K.nicb llave
sttugkd 10 readl die NBA E
u
Confamce fiuals, ~it dor:m't
get any easi«.
''It's goiag to be lOugh. but
we're looking fO£Wud 10 it,"
Knieb ccacb Pa Riley Slid« llis
team '1 neJ:t foe: lhe two-time
ddending chimpioa a.a.,. Balls
on Sunday.
New Yort,tesled ill all fiYC:
games, oori•..., lheO••a Bnrnets 105·101 Tuelday llipl. winning !heir best«- series 4-1.
Chica&amp;O wapped up its •;tirg!
series q•ina ~ 011 Moos.
day wilhoul a loss, ~· Mire its
fli'St·illUIId a• •at
AtJwta

Wllile die Jtmrb wen: victorious,ldmuduepwaaecl them from
die lbnl:lr..
. ''TileJ kDinr' we gave them a
1011p series every minuiC of the
way,"' Slid a.toae IOQiie center
AlomoMoo•."MI&amp;

Hm!r ... h e While die JtnicJrs won Game I
by 16 poima, die teiiiiS wae tied at

80 aMJif« die f~ quarter. New
Ylllk""-a.me2illow:rlime,1ost
( &gt; - 3 ....... 01' IIIII capcured
a.me 4 ..._ Jl'c' do Blackman
Jail a j01per willl five seconds
1
T lay fli&amp;lll. a.toae trailed
by dne paiMs • lllllf,ilne despite
hiltilll,;. • r •d or its shots.

'"'wi ·

The Hornets got no closer than two
In posting their 25th consecutive
in the second half, despite blanket- victory a1 Madison SqUlllC Garden,
ing Patr:ick Ewing; who fouled out the Kniclcs advanced 10 the confer·
with 9 points, 21 under his average enee finals for the fl!St time since
for the first four games of the 1974, the year after winning their'
· second NBA tide.
·
series.
.
Jn,pthcr.pmcs
Tuesday,
Soallle
"The rest of the gulf came
through," Ewing said:t "It was defeli\ed Houston 120·95 and
everybody, the whole team. They Phoenix dofealed San AnioniO 109·
stepped !IP and got the job done, all 97. Both winncn took 3-2 leads in
the Western Conference semifmals,
of them.'
Charles Oakley led New York where every game has been won by
with 21 points a_nd 11 rebounds, the home team.
·
Suns 109, Spurs 97
assisted hy a east of role players.
Kendall Gill had 26 points and
Charles Barkley, deciding to
Mourning 22 for Charloue, which shoot the ball, broke out of his
was maki~g the first playoff playoff· long slump and scored 11
appearance in the franchise's five- points in a two-mmute span of the
year hiatDty. .
fourth quarter to rail~ the Suns
from behind in Phoemx. Barkley
scored 19 'of his 36 points in the
final period after San An10nio rook
an 85-78 lead on Sean Elliott's
dunk with 11:04 remaining.
- • NBA playoffs • In the first half, Barkley took
only,
two shots.
Tuesday's scores ·
Ne.w York lOS, Chutone 101: New
'I just decided I had to come
Yoskwintsenc.+l
· out and make something happen, •'
S.alo I:ZO, 95; S..llle locdi
Barkley said. "They were doing a
lhllicl3-l
.
l'boaUI 109, s... Aotonio 97; Phoenix
good
job of taking the ball out elf
J.d.Jtaiel3-2
my hands, so 1 decided I'd try to
TbUISdaJ'seames

Scoreboard

.
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A"""C'~NUAGU£

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.622
n 17 -'64
II -'26
II -'26
- - - 16 19 .1m
s :z:t .All!
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3

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Gil

2 •
3.5
3.5
6
I

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.541
T•
-Cir- 17
' ., .m '"'
a

2.S

4 :11

.A32
.«XX

3

Seclllo•Houiu&gt;n.9:30pm.

7

HculcxJ 11 Scaqlc, TJfA, if noccaaey
San An*lio It ·Phoenix. TBA, if nee·

I

•Weedeaters
•Lawn Mower$
•Rakes
•Hoes
•Wheelbarrows
,

\

Pickens
Hardware
MASON, WV.

Plloenil. at San Antonio, 7 p.m.

:Ill

6 :11

get slimething going on the offensive boards."
Barkley grabbed six of his 12
rebounds in the fourth quarter. ·
I David Robinson and Dale Ellis
had 24 points each for the Spurs,
and Elliou added IS.
'
The series moves io San Antonio Thundly nighL
SuperSonlal UO, Rncketa !15
In Seattle, Ricky Pierce scored
24 points and Gary Payton added a
playoff career-high 23. Payton had
scored just 10 points in the two
games in Houston.
"Gary has to get aggressive,"
Pierce said. "When be does that,
he becomes a prcaence and makes
everybody'sjob easier."
·
Shawn Kemp bad 19 points and
12 rebounds for lite Sanies.
Hakeem Olajliwon had 26
points and 14 rebounds for Hous·
ton, but had no blocked sbots after
getting 22 blocks in die fust four
games of the series. Vernon
Maxwell, ~veraging 17.5 points,
was limited 10 six on 2·for-13
shooting. .
Game 6 will be Thursday at
Houston.

J'or'nae
Yard

Saturday's aames

.....,

- • NHL playoffs • Tuetday•a score .
Moo.W • . N.Y. W.ndad 3 (2 OT);

Monbulladl ...... :z.o

Wtdnetdey's aame

u. Anplcllt 'tCIOI'IIO· 7:30p.m.

Tbunday's game
Mcmu-1 .t N.Y. Wandea, 7:30p.m.

The Grandest Auto &amp; Truck
Tent Show and Sale
ot the Yeart

·'

100s of
· New Cars,
Trucks &amp;
Vans on

Display!

- • Tran11dloru • -

'

I

I

Baseball
land lftdianl: outfi..d•• for throe. a•rnes
'"' cluqjna K .... City ltoyclc pitcher
llipoliloPicltudocludo!l4 ...,.Moy 13.

1
·

MILWAUUE BRl!Wl!JtS: Nomcd .

1

.........

:a:.~ Sclia-Pri&amp;b vice praident and

~- ~glenlc

1

Farm Raised Fresh

.Picnic Shoulder Arm

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
student-athlete from Panna came 10
Ohio State just over 30 years ago 10
play football and baseball while
preparing 10 enla' medical school.
When he left Columbus, Dr.
/
Arnold
Chonko' had been an All1
~ American in both sports.
.
1
Now Chooko 's soo has come 10
~. Ohio".S~te to make a nf.me for
1 1,._ himself as a designated hiuer-flllll
1~ basenuin 011 the Buckeyes' baseball
: team . .·
"AI frrst he was very wary of
~ me anending Ohio State becaii9C he
1 ,lwas worrieil thal I would become
1 :tnown :for being his son," Mark
1 :cbonto said. "He loved this
1 ~school and thought it would be a
• •great place for me to go, but he
l :..SO did 1101 want me to laic: a little
i il!it of my identity by coming hae
playmg after all Jhat all he had
I
Jdone.''
: i Chonko quietly put his father's
I iworries 10 felt. ·
: 1 In hiJ rust colle'iale at-bat he
1 :hit a home run in Ohio State's 1993

Nollau!Lu ...

An.ANTA BRAVES: A.ctivatcxl Bri·
111 l!uo•, 11M-... ' - the 15-&lt;loy
cliiiblotlliil. Opoicaod R Kl&lt;*o. fiat
k&gt;llidtmaocl
al~

::r.:;'.-....,.

Fresh Summer Treat

Steelhead
Salmon
Por
Fillets
Roast

. Fresh

'

Fresh
Kiwi
Fruit.

.

,

'

'

•'

Lb-.
Food Club

Food Club
· From Co'ncentrate

)

'•

~

TEXAS RANGERS: AttiYaled Dan

Smidt, pitcher, , _ the U-diy di44blod
lill IIIII llliped bb lO O!rJJt I II Cily of
1M ..wartaa Allocilti-.

·

'

i Chonko steps
out offather's
shadow at OSU

Amerleln Laaaue
AL: Sl&amp;lpCilded Albert Belle, Cleve-

Q:::.,ent

Prepriced 69¢
One Roll Pkg.

15 oz. Box

., I

Fruit
'Rings

Orange

. Juice ·

Hi·Dri
Towels

';
I

SIIIWSES
COMPLETE STocK

Y2 PRICE

.

COLD POP

27c

IB:i;g1 iD~afs,: at G~amd ·Central

: :lllid

May 20-21-22
Thursday 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday 10 a.m.·9 p.m.

Saturday 10 a.m.-9 p.m.

i -~lei'.
He hll IWO home runs In one

01

I

·CANDY BARS

3/$100

snaacw••ftl
111111111 J II.

. . .3.99

PsrUolpalJng Oes.t ers.:

PARKERSBURG NIW CAR a
TRUCK DIALERS AIIOCIAnGN

1game against Youngstown State
~ 1. land has twice hit homers in Ohio
: State's last at-bat, sending the
: Buckeyes 01110 an extra-inninJ win
: against Dayton and winnrn1 a
1pme with a home nin with two out
: . .apillll Michigan.
' : Mark ChQII.ko said he doosn 't
•compare himlldf,10 his fa liter, ,a
l1easc not on tho fio1d.
1
i "1 never got the chance 10 - '
him play, so 1 Clfl''t mike COIIIJIIl'· ·
iJons beiWeetL him and m:yiO!f on
·lit field'.. ho l8id. "1 don't play
, 1 e
. I
•football so lhote'l DO ,JRLU d
1

*Aalorg Motor Company
*DIIt Ford
'DIIs Uncoln/Mercury .
'Kincheloe Chrysler/Plymouth
•MIIheny OMC Trucks
'McCUrrton Chevrolet/Imports
·
'Mullen Motors Chrysler/Dodge/Dodge T"'cks
'Pirkertburgl.fl18111
.
·
'Larry Simmon• Honda, M1zd1, vw
'Superior Toyoii/Suzukl, Inc.
'Louie Thomes Subaru .
•w.mer Pontiac
SPONIOIIED IV:

,

1

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:..:ll'Yina ui., iiiD ... ph •h•

...
. I'tali

' ' - "WIIh

taut II, I'm mille OWII

...--~try-Ill do ... belt. I

'

8atfae'l 1

l

respect my fadler for whll he hu
KCOmplilhed oft tho field, and I

··

1- ------:- -·- -, - - - - - - - - - - ' ,,- -- 1 'I'

try 10 -rrr him • much • p!l·
: sible with dto grades and work
t
.......
-·otbic...

l

.

64 oz.

Ctn.

For

Tyson Holly Farms Chicken

Bathroom Tissue

Drumsticks or Thighs

. Northern

Family

White or

Pock

...

'\.

lox

For

· Food Club ··

Corned Beef, ·Pastrami or

CoHage Cheese

Roast Beef
DEll - Qyick and
Easy Sandwiches

16 oz •

Ctn.

&gt;

•

....2 $1

'

Italian Village JUMBO
13 •••

Food Club Regular c;&gt;l" Light

Cream Cheese

.

4 Roll Pkg.
'

Cheese

Soh Prints

r

'

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'

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.,
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...... . 6 The o.lly Sentinel

PomeroY-Middleport. Ohio

1993

Wednau!y. May19, 1183

Ohio

Wahama alumni plans set
· P!w are beiDI fiMHMd for lhe Alwnni reqt•• DO ......ic bev·
Wabama Alamo( Aa~CX:iation
annual banquet kn~ce to be
bel4 May 29. tho
Lodge in

*

PointPkz D!, W.Va.

Reunion yoars are ,edaatinl
c~ 11w end wi!h 3" or "8.
Theae c'• ca will be aelielat special tablea and boncnd. ~ are
i ClaaiiiCB!ben of 1943 -.1 1993.
Tbe "Renew Acquaintance
Hour" will begin 11 5 p.m. with
dinner to begin at 6 p.m. Tbe dinner of ateak, chicken, potatoes,
vegetable, ll8lad. rolls, coffee, tea
and dessert will be provided by lhe
Moolo.
..
ACta- ibe recoanidcw! of claslea,
a ibort basinels JDOelina will be
held and door PJ!zelawaded. AU
dues collected will be_applied to
the aJnnmi ICIIollnbip fiiDd, w~
· gives $500 to a clelerving IOUior
.

• •

·'

Run.AND THIRD AND FOURTH"GRADERS • HOIIOI'Id at
die u
1 • ' it . . . . . at RatlaDd Ele•entlry were these
7llird Hd teou • pllde ~71: 1-r, front, Bndley Baylor, B.J.
Kcmdy, mr.y Pdddy, Beatrire Marpu, Elizlbetb Smltll, Dlr·

1

student

I

'·

1'icllle7:i- . . . . Bait in Poil&amp; " .

=

RUl'LAND nFI 8 AND SIXTH GRADERS • Ratlllld Ele·
watlij lleld171 Klldt•ic: ·buqnet receutly 1pon10red by the ·
PI'O. Ta
wee ,._,_ 111 ltadea71 emalq Ill A's or A'•
Mil B'L
Mdli:dll pwle llllden!s earuiDa trophies were: 1-r,

•

1e. Clasaes oll933, 1943 ud
993 pay a S2 rrb "r fee. .,..
tickets are P- to !Ilea flee of
c:llarae. However, if 7llele dus
memiJcn bril!l• pest. dleypay $17.50. ~ llll1ll be,__
chl!rd by May 70. Qocb .., be

f

I

The Pomeroy second 11rade how people Cllnkeep these parts
classes of Mrs. Joni Jeffers and working in an efficient manner.
Children were chosen from the
audience to assist Slim on stage,
Slim GoooDM•ty.
some modeling gas masks to PfO:
RecciBnized for his work on teet themselves from air pollution
-"lie and edncalion television, in his simulation. Children were
~::...., bis body mit ..... with actively involved in songs and
iotenalllody pms, Slim Good· hand activities as he expressed lhe
•»fliil '1bhhy Body, need for us to "Reduce, Reuse and
l'tiDcl"" lbow.
Recycle."
Slim ,. .. •••• d tbe function
This show also related to the
oflbe llelrl, blood IIJd IIIIISCles ad activities many classe.s carried out

::.h=..~~r:.c:=;:~s:

=

forEartb and i.rbor Day. Mrs. Carpenter's clasa packaged and delivered pine trees, courtesy of the
Meigs County Litter Control, and
environmental protection coloring
· books, courtesy of Superl Ainerica,
to all of the students.
Funds for the bus, driven by
Donna Daniels, were provi!Jed by
the grant far effective schools rural

.
;
. .
demonsJrattorl proJCCt, prOvide'! by
th state depllfl!Dent of educati~n.
Dr ..Nancy K1.me and. Pr. N1ck
Robms~n prov1ded assiStance for
. attendmg the show, as well as
nutritious snacks, fruit and juice.
Parents ~sting o_n the. trip included: Debbie Dav1s_. t:ua ~oush,
Sharon Burdette, Vx:kie Sm1th and
Suzanne Gilmore.

: .ENTRY BLANK

I

•7 Nights •Air Fare
.•Accommodations
-Rental Car

•AWwi

. oS Nights •Air Fare · . ,·
.·
•Accommodations -Rental Car
-Disney World Passes

1:

:

NAME----------------~----------~--~:I

I
II

ADDR~BS

I

TRIP FOR 4 DISNEY WORLD VACAtiON

There will be I dalice lollowD!,
the dinner wilh l!ll1lic jliOWidt:cl by
Croaoter. Tbe claa wil a.t •
approxima;dy 9 p.a. .......
JUIIil midnipt
Colt for £he..._ ... clloce is
$10 per penon. Tic:bts for die
dance only •Y be ~-d!e
door prior to 9 p.m. IIIII 7lla COil is
also$10.
.
No •blbolic bevacea • permiued in "lbe anctillwieo lteflaltIDei!IS will be IYiiJilJie. tbe daa
for a nlinimal COlt provided by a
sc'hool or~izati011 u a aoaey
llllkina BCIIWy. No CCM .. I wil be
pcrmialld.
Tic:tets are .,.UaNe • Rrioe
Home Natioaai But and Cnia

I
I
I ,

I

I

I

PHON

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

•• •

rr...

·•.

yo '
some

.'

. .
J

•

I'

new

lUl

~k your dealer about

Peoples Bank financing for a
new. or garden tractor
··· of your choice! ·
naau

IUPII

LOY ILL

593-7761

tl3·7516

..,.3369

IIIUeJY,UI

TnPLAIJU

755-1955

797·t5t7

1.19

v::..:~M'fillt;Jr-;.(i•~:,._.

.....d.,.
Cntl

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SPECIAL OF JU IMJltfll

Crlil·t,· 'b&amp;

c r ••'1.15.._

· HUIUID'S

FOOD WID

lftiCIII

Hamburger

OPEN DA!LY N,•II!DAY 1M

992·5776

Buns·

As re~uired by Section 4927.04(A) of the
the Commission files its Entry of approval
Ohio Revised Code, The Western Reserve
and acceptance of the Application.
Telephone Company (the Company) gives
notice tha.t on March 12,1993, it filed an
Any person, finrt, corporation, or associa·
Application (POCO Docket No. 93-230-TP- tion may file objections to the proposed
ALT, the Company's Alternative Regulaadjustments in rates and charges, and to
tion Plan) for an alternative form of
the proposed changes in regulations and
regulation with the Public Utilities Compractices under Section 4909.19 of the Ohio
mission of Ohio (the Commission} This
Revised Code. The objections may allege
Afplication affects telephone services of
that the proposals are unjust and discrimi·
al customers of the Company through
natory or unreasonable. Recommendations
changes in the General Exchange Tariff,.
which differ from the Application may
its Local Exchange Tariff, and certain rates. be made by the staff of the Public Utilities
Services governed by agreements with
Commission of Ohio or by intervening
other telephone companies are not affected. parties.
The forty·one telephone exchanges
affected are: Ashtabula, Aurora, Austin· ' The Company's Alternative Regulation •
burg, Bainbridge,Bloomingdale,
Plan shall be effective for three years from ·
Centerville, Chardon, Chester, Coolville,
the date that the Commission issues its
Cumberland, Dorset, East Claridon,
llpproval order. The Plan will include:
Fairview, Geneva, Hinckley, Hiram,
Hopedale, Hudson, 1-\Untsburg, Kingsville, · CLASSIFICATION OF SERVICES:
Little Hocking, Madison, Mesopotamia,
Local exchange telephone services, includ·
Middlefield, Montville, Morristown,
ing access services, are classified into
Newbury, Northfield,Old Washington,
three general categories: basic monopoly
Parkman, Peninsula, Perry, Pierpont,
services, discretionary-monopoly services,
Powhatan Point, Quaker City, Richfield,
and competitive services. ,
Rock Creek, Russell, Thompson, I rum bull, ·
and Twinsburg. The Company proposes
COMMITMENTS:' The Company will
changes to certain regulations and prac·
make an Qbligation to provide serviCes or
tices relating to its service and will file . enhance their value to customers pursuant .
appropriate tariff sheets reflecting these
to the Plan. The Company commits to ,
changes,
infrastructure improvements and addi·
tions or customer service follows:
Any interested party desiring complete
detailed il)fonnatiol'l with respect to all ·
(A) Flat rate basic local exchange service
affect(d rilles, charges, regulations and
will continue to be available during the
practices should inspect a copy.of the
three year period of the Plan.
Application and all attached Exhibits at
the office of·the Commission, 180 East
(8) Rates for basic monopoly services
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43266-0573, shall not be changed during the life of the
at any public library within the ComPlan, except terminating premium carrier
. pany's service territory, or during normal
common line charges and the access
business hours at the public business .
charges. '
offices of the Company located at 245
· North Main Street, Hudson, Ohio 44236:
(C) ·The Company will conduct periodic
4616 Park Avenue, Ashta hula, Ohio 4400+, surveys to (i) educate and inform its cus205 Hambden Stree~ Chardon, Ohio 44024; tomers of new or potential services and
and 66 North Fourth Street, Newark, Ohio
technologies; and (ii) determine and eva!·
43055. In addition, a Notice of Intent,
uate the immediate and future telecommu·
which summarizes portions of the AI tema· nicatioits service needs of its customers. \
tiveRegulation Plan (the Plan) was mailed Customer satisfaction with repairs, i~l- '
to the mayors and legislative authorities of lation, and overall services will continue to
all municipalities and all public libraries
be evaluated.
throughout the territory in which the
~mpany operates. The Application and
(D) The Company will invest a minimum
Exhibits as approved .by the Commission
of $4 million in deploym,nt of
· will be sent to the same officials and
technology and services each year
libraries as the Notice of lnient at the time
of the Plan. This investment will

as

•
j

'

IT!]

1

a.s ....

·

,,

I

2Littr

l•N-O,..F~

didates; king. - Kyle Wickline,
Michael Evans, Bracken McFann
and Mark Allen; queen • Nikki
. Beegle, Julie Hill, Nikki Ible and
Wendi Harmon,
. The Racine-Southern Scholarship will be presented at the banquet
Entertainment will be provided
at the banquet by Crystal Powell, a
member of the 1993 graduating
class.

l

•

l'nMI•cll

HUBBARD'S GBENIIOlJSE

IUXWElL HOUSE

Cartei',IIKD&amp;d pllde st.dn!s at Pomeroy Elementary, are pic·
mred wldl ....,._,,
adler schools, as they assist Slim Goodllady • s~a&amp;e ftriala ncnt presetrta!lon at the Keith Albee Tbe·
me ill H•liii&amp;D. W.VL
·

,.,.1

~--···~---------···················

.•

•

CANS

I

12 PA(I(

-·
· SUM GOODBODY • 11ft See, Charlie Gilmore and Jassillne

20·12 oz.

------------------------------11

I
I

GrocayinR'Cioe

P.o.meroy second graders· visit Huntingto.n, W.·Va.. =~~:.akin~~:~
.

20 PACKS

A CHANCE TO WIN A HAWAIIAN VACAtiON OR
~~~i DISNEY WORLD VACATION OR $3500 IN CASH
r • .• • • • • • • • • • • • ·• • ········-------·····•
TRIP FOR 2 HAWAIIAN VACATION

t

•

I

PEPSI COLA

ENTER ·TO WIN A 1 MINUTE 35 SECOND
.FOODLAND SHOPPING SPREE

· Alumni plans fmalized
· Plans are bein&amp; finalized b the
Racine-SOU!bem Alanmi Alaocia•
tion annual baogaet 111d daoc:e to
:be lield May 29 at 6 p.m. in the
· Charles W. Hayman Aaditorium of
· Southern HiP School.. AU alumni
and gues;s are welcome.
.
The theme for .the b111quet is
·. ''Those Were the Days." Honored
classes are 1918 and every five
fe&amp;rs through 1993. The oldest and
farlhest traveled alumni will be ~'
ognized and several door prizes
will he presented.
The banquet will be ·prepared
and served by the j!llliiJt class of
fr011t, Jamie Barrett, Tony• ttJ!Uer, Kristin BI'OWII, 4Jyson Patter·
Southern High School. Tbe menu
11111, Til'ruy HaUhiU, Allllllda Miller. Second row, Matthew Jlliincludes creamed blbd chicken,
tlce, SJephen Thornton, Clark VuMatre, Jllltln Jetren, Joshua
mashed potltoel, homemade nooSorden and BraDdy Stanley.
dles, green beans, cole slaw, and
apple crisp ·as well as #I and cof.

DIET OR REG.

'

eaud,.._,W.Va.;
Fruth Pl!-ac7 in Middleport;
Farmera Buk m ~; aad
Health Aid ~1 ia New
Haven, W.Va. Tlctets for 1M
dance only will be lllld • £Ill door
for $7 siP&amp;Ie llld SU ....... , Til:tet prices fOr £he
pUJd daaco
are $35 per COIIIIo llld $17jO lia-

Tbe informal dance will be from
9 p.m. 10 1 a.m. wi!h music ~ ~IOWd
provided by "Party Factory.

T. DEW • PEPSI FREE

••• Celebratin@ 35 Years
of Foodland in the
.Tri-State Area

eragea durin&amp; the buq!lel with
absolutely ao IJIIdeR:1
en permi!ted in tbe daa.
Due to fire .......... code.
Moose L. . . . limited IC iq
so early ucket puc.._ are

'

•

Instant
Coffee.

be in addition to the nornial investment
necessary in meeting the Commission's
Minimum Service Standards. The deployment may iriclude such items as interactive video to public schools, upgrading the
system to digital technology, and deployment of fiber optic technology.

120Z.JAI

GLENDALE

.(E) The Company Will reduce the termi·
pating premium carrier common line
charge (applicable to long distance companies interconnecting with the Company)
a total of 21/2 cents per minute oC use, to
be phased in over a three year period ·

Soft
Drinks

2 UTEI

(F) The Company will file for approval of
iate reductions through the implementa. tion of Extended Local Calling Service
(Measured Rate EAS) to the various county
' seat exchanges of its service territory
where tet;hnically feasible.

aomE

HUNTS

Spaghetti
Sauce

(G) The Company will file for approval to
·implement one·way calling [rom within
the Company's local exchanges to the public elementilry and secondary schools
within its customers' local school districts
on a "no charge• basis.
(H) The Company will reduce the rate for
residential TeFTouch service to $.75 per
month.

270L

PRICING FLEXIBILITY: For competitive services the Company may adjusr: the
rates according to Commission-determined
criteria for minimum and maximum
ranges deemed appropriaie.
'

EARNINGS: No earnings review or,adjustment proceedings related to the Company
shall be initiated or condu~ted by the
Commission during the term of the Plan as
long as the Company does not seek to
inci:ease basic service rates.
'

.

• DIET RITE

lartz·Mt. Rawhide •

I.

'

PROGRESS REPORTS: Thi:Company
will file annual progress reports with die
Commission p.roviding a progress evalua·
tion for each commitment.

s

••
••
•••
\

..

$

No Llmll Wltll CoUpon
Good !hrv III22JI3

99
24·

Conditioner

120Z.

····················'
I

AND

24 PACKS

. ~PRICE

V-05 Shampoo

PWIIC

HAITZMT•

150L

21•1
Colors

ITLE.

HAITZMT.

EASTMAN'S

2111 '
Rid Flea

n••,..
HAITZ .

FIH&amp; Dele
Powll1r

•

(

.. L11117101JM. . . . ,..._ . . . . . 'lin ....

I'

lll.l~l

Ill IEID FOODWID

�,

.•

Willing Workers of St. Paul
Church meet recently
The Willing Workers of St. Paul
United Methodist Church of Tup·
pers Plains met ~t recently at the
church.
The meeting began with quilting
and lunch was served at noon.
Glenna Sanders, president, led
the business meeting. Reports were
given by Mildred Brooks and Patri·
cia Hall.
·
The p ro ~ ram · ~as gi ~ en ~Y
Hazel Barnhill, Dons Koemg·, Mil·
dred Brooks and Glenna Sanders.

A donation of $50 will be given
to the Vacation Bible School which
will be held lhe Iauer part of July.
. The grou.P has five qu ilts to
work on beiglmting in the {all.
Birlhdays were celebrateft by
Hazel Barnhill, Evelyn Spencer
and Beulah Zumback and a 42nd
anniversary was celebrated .bY
Joanna .Weaver. Calce and tce
cream were served in their honor.
' The next regular meeting will be
June 8 at lhe church.

Bl I.LFTI'\ BO.\RD
IULuniiOAID DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
"ILICIOOII
DANCE MAY 21 , 1993

Sharon Matson
weekly TOPS winner

A creative writing con·test has
been announced by the Me igs .
County Library Youlh Council.
The contest is open to anyone
ages 13-19. The shon stories are to
be typed or word-processed and ,
double spaced and should submitted to the Meigs County Public
Library by June 12. Entries will be
judged on content, grammar, origi· ·
nality and correct number of words.
Points will be deducted for every
word over 2,000 or under 750.
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
at 992-5813.

S baron Matson was th e best
weekly loser at lhe recent meeting
of Ohio TOPS Club No. 570. Phyilis McMillan was the runner up.
Virginia Smith was the best KOPS
loser.
Amy Cleland won the.fruit bas·
ket and Donna Jacks won lhe gadget gift.
.
Final plans for, Area Recognition Day in May were d•scussed.
Leader Debbie Hill gave some
examples of things members could
do·in'Clrder to lose weight.
Amy Cleland received a chann
bracelet for being half way to goal.
Meetings are held at the Carpen- '
ters Hall in' Pomeroy every Tuesday. Weigh-in is at 5p.m. with
meeting at 6 p.m.
'

Hoyt W. Allen Jr. will present a
program at the Pomeroy Church of
Christ on Sunday a.t 7 p.m.
·
Allen is director at large on a
full tim e basis with KYOWVA
Evangelistic Association, lr&lt;?nton.
He and his wife, Shara, restde m
Franklin Furnace.
He served as pulpit minister

'

with the Pomeroy. congregation in
1969·73.
The association'S name repre- .
sents the lhree states of lhe tri-state ·
area. The association began in 1950
and has 00en able to eilher begin or
assist 35 congregations, tw6 camps
and on evangelizing fellowship. ,
At the present time KYOWVA
has over 200 people enrolled in a
bible correspondence course program. Seveml Meigs County residents are enrolled. KYOWVA has
been a helping hand to churches fa:
over 40 years.

Public Notice

.'

PUBUCNOTICE
The lotlowlnq were recolvlllllpnp..., by the Ohio
Environment.! Protecllon
Agency (OEPA) 1..1 w..k.
Effective cllltea ol final
..,llono Md t..u - clllta
ol propo"" ..,llono Md ol
droit 110\lono are otet..t.
Final actlono may ba
appealed, In wrlllng, within
30 clllyo ol the dille ol IIIII
notice, to Th• Environment•
ol Board ol F~Qiw, Rm. 300,
236 E. Town St, Columbuo,
OH., 43215. Notice ol any
appeal oholl be ftled with tha
director within 3 dayo.
Propooad actlono will
become final uniMI a written adjudication h..rlng
requMt lo oubmlll8cl within
30 dayo of the loouanc•

.

She1lbv Ohlinger

Shelby Ohlinger
. honored on birthday
A party was held recently for
Shelby Nicole Ohlinger' s fi rs t
birthday .
She is the daughter of Steve and
Amy (Satterfield) Oblinger.
The party was held at lhe home
. of Bill and Donna Oblinger with a
Barney and Baby Bop theme carried out.
. Attending were great-grandmother Olive Satterfield, grandparents Rick and Carolyn Collins and
Bill and Donna Ohlinger, Kelly
Satterf ield and Jay Reynolds,
Wayne, Debbie, Andy, Kayt ~ • .
Jaynee Davis, Jim, Kim, and Aaron
Oliphant, Eleanor Blaettnar, Jean
Seidenabel, Larry, Theresa and
Erinne Kennedy, Bridget and Jesse
Ritchie, Liz Ayers-Thoren.
Sending gifts were Jack and
Charlotte Satterfie ld, Cathy, Rick
and Eddie John son, Iris et.llins,
Terry and Colleen Ohlinger, Phil
and Carol Ohlinger, Dorothy
Davis, Jenny Swartz and Dick Graham.

-

j

COMI'II

HAULING

Will. . . .

LIME STOllE,
GUYEL &amp; COAL

11111101

AMERICAN'LEGION ANN EX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
MUSIC BY GEORGE HALL

Reasoaaltle

awrr·IU PIICIS

OCEAN FRONT CONDO,
FLORIDA

..........

.8

COWlS
E1111IPIISES
Paint

AbniJun Sicing
Washing
Fill

9.15-411.1

IIYIISON'S
PLUMIIIG

;a4 n.
••••••

· H8ppyAds

HOWARD
EICAVADNG
· BULLDOZER, 8ACICHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK

AVAILABLE
SEPTIC SVSTEIIS,

··•••••"·
o••
614-992·7144

4/7!1/U ...

~LERSITES,

lANDCLEAAitG,
DRIVEWAYS JNSfAI I B)

UMESTONE·TRUCIIING
FREE ESTIIIATES

.992-3838

"Who would have
thought that from a
blind date we would

.'

:

Thla ed good for 1
FREE card.
. Lie. No. 0051·3~
J

THE BOOK
BARN

IUY • HLL • TUDE
Jl71. 2... St.
llllldleport, OhiO
'
lOURS;
''J ......, •• 1Ch00.2100

D. A. aosroN
EXCIVAONG
(614)
667·6628

CLOSID TIUISDAY
992·3577
5-S·t*·l-

stor.&amp;c=
....
f IIIII
II

CHARLIE'S

DOZER WORIC,
DRIVEWAY WORK
aid UMESTONE
DEUVERY SERYKE
REASONABLE RATES
· '25 HOUR

992·7553
POMEIOY, OH.

614-992-7698

UCINE
MOWER ,CLIIIIC
WALKII ALLEY

WHIUY'S

PARTS

Sped .... II C.Stola

F,..R;:r
NEW &amp; USED ~ TS
AUIWES &amp; MODELS
992·7013 or
992·5553
I _;,ftLFfl
41 70

Plrls1IIIIS•nke

Mowm • Chall Saws
WM41eallfl

NEW-REPAIR

SEP11C SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING ·

WATER I. SEWER
UNES

- ::-.-.-::a:
........,...........
---·577
9

wsnt.d to Buy

~

r0o1~=
- 231 llt:l.
f

IIVIITI.E

LONG BOTTOM - Haym1111 RoM! - Thlo 7 y.r old
~lar hal 3 bechamo, 2 bathe, !Milly room garden
•thlub, fi,.l'l-, illancl bar In kitchen, new'*' pump
.and • oummar kitohan. AI In good condition. Aleo has ~
tnlller hcclwp. AI of thla on 3.31 .......
145,100

EBLIN'S ELECTRIC

....... IH8 CIW. -

I E·

" " - -Fnllh

Yip -

Doug.
RIDUCI; 11urn on ,.. Whl1o
You -I!J.TIIII OML A...loblo
AI:Fiulh...._.

4

~~~-

=-=~-

. Giveaway

~c:..o::
Wlhl'

-Ook
au
e ·d -

.-oOIO,t144W1110.

112
114

'

Elii Hound, Dog, •
To Good Homo,

·

'AVON' ALLAREAit llwelimo •· Vau'l the
j 11'1

•asaz
2Jr-:ald_ .........

-..ll04oi7NGI3.

~

..._ -m.Nif ollar

AdDI'MII

g.,., 114-31'J.7710.

-Dog. llolo, tiWIMI · -·
e-.......,...,
2 v- ot11
Dog.if4.4(1-Gitt;
.

W.AIIo7l11

A......Batall
Sp.....,Tf••
.

.......

.............
_le_
........ ,.. ,.,...__. One--...,. ,., _.. . .
CGt

ROD&amp;IIII-1

. . . lloolii!IJ p

I

I . ,.

II LIIIIII II 1rR1l ....... WY.

110

..... d . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ltD •14. I='UII

4:0IIPII, .......... lorllld ......
a.11.1nt I araa.OH
' Col ?';' lllllllln .......
Llllllllllloil. Llldn. WY.- ..
-FoniT-4~. ng'rtwt¥ vA
t 'Mhn.
•• u, lt.IDO; 1111 IJo&amp; T· lliieln to • pwlu:DWIII two

Eu

'r ·

To: DU - ·

.......,..,.,..__,

and Weld.ing
(614) 992-7878
FAX (614) 992-7878

!J

Lost &amp; Found

__
_..... ,_

• • ,..... _ - lorllld
....
Dr•• .... .,,~,~....

4-22·'113-t mo.

Shade River Saddle Shop
· ·CUSTOM SADDLES, .
LEATHER REPAIR
·and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

OlllllpoiiS

2 Front SINh • Laltor
•4fieeiAiiJ•-••
Prices St.ta-.g .t

'129.95 +Tax

JEFF WARNER .
.

BISSELL ·BUILDERS, INC•

many now ..paJra auch • bath,idtchen, wtrlng,
lllolric hMt pumplcanllal air, ftrapl-, alllc apace,
epp10x. 1 .. ,.. Reduced to $.411,800, Come
- ... mab an otlerl

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Rooting ..

I'GOIIIt,

......,..,t

•

You're .invited to an educational sc: 411jnar from Bank One,
covering two impot taut topics,tOr today's inwSors:

'

I -- -

• Unde.rstanding Estate Planning ,
.·
• Investing For Income In A Low-Interest-Rate Environment· ,-

Bank One

Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy • 7:00p.m. -9:00p.m.
.

M•"""" N~o ~• SIPC.

.

992·2259

IIOOU!PORT - Oranl lt. - 2 .-,ry home wtth 3 bed·

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
.FREE ESTIMATES

LONG~- One..,. ltver~on~ one mle nclr1h

01 Ftllllid.IU Bo.t Rlmp, GIMI oemplng alltl 112.000.

614·992·7643

liiDOLIPORT - VERY NICI! 10 room fiiiina I bact·
fDOiftl. l'lt bah, tl,.,_, •a aturner, 1. car ..,..,
llhed, patio wllumltura, 3130 oq. ft. ol Uvlng ...-•

,.......,c....,

AIICJNQ Nt,OOO.

~ns•ec~~~~~~--~~c:orpo~:m:d:on~~~-f~e~i~~~~~~~~~:i~~=rii

CORN DOG

'69.c.

I

•

·'

.

'

POIIER!)Y .. IR 7, a IIDry home wllh 3 balfooonll, ball,
paneling, -'"a, central air, b rman~ a.
larga ....... ~· .QIONQ 13$,000.

acne. ,_

'·

'

Refreshments will be served. Seating is limited, so please R.S.V.P. by Tuesday, June 1
by calling Maxine Griffith or Joan Wolfe at ~2133 or Joan May in Rutland at 742-2888.

•

WI HAVE A IIUVJA-YOU IIIAY HAVE 'ME HOllE

·

THIY WANTI

·

WE NOD 'WOUA UIJIIGI

,

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

,~.,

laalll ........

lb..........
....
, .. 5. ...,. ._IlL
.....__
~-~ · ........ ..,.. .,. ,., ...........

61~4460736

COMMERCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL
. Licensed, Insured &amp; lo•de•

PF.

&amp;YiclnHy

&gt;

..

Employment S·'l :1~rs

(614) 742·2345

&amp;nul~

u•·

(614) 992-7878

MAR1ECH INDUSTRIES

. FREE ESTIMATES

(5) 19, 1lc

.. II· ••..,

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

llew Wiring, RewlriJ~g,
rrouble.Shootlng

36358 SA 7

-

~.,.~-§'~1uu-.
~~a~2n~-~ ~1 ;. . _.;.;He. ;.lp;:;,_;,W;.; mt ed; .; . ; . ; _
-*••·

Steel Fabrication

24 HR. I•RGENCY SERVICE

.'
DOTTIE ~R, Brobr...............................IH-5ttz

BRENDA JEFFERS.--··············-·······
········-~
DAAUttE
llEWAAT- ..............._ _ ,..............
112-1311
lANDY BtJTCtEA .............................- ........... II2-IJ71
JERRY IPAADUN0 ............................... (304l •44•
OFFICE ......... - ..............................~····-........... 111-2111

IIAIIAIIA: ' =---=-=-~..,..,..,...,.~~-

I

Plumbing Installation
and
Repairs.

1411StsteRl7

LICENSED Md BONDED •

HYSELL RUN ROAD - · Nol far out ol town II a ranch·

1121,100

1IIACH

a-n
- !"" 4l..o!!uJ'
Condo, 110
Poo10:,'
Toe; 1671
W..k, !01' l'lld: AI Cld U.S.
_,
-··~- Rlftai. ..... Colnl,
'
-·
-Celni.ILT.I.c:..lnlhop,
REDUCI: IIUm off tot- you . . - - . 0 • .,

~16-93-ltn

llyle home with a large kllchen !hat .hao Iota ol nice
c.blnlto. Nica oh'!dy yard and a p8llo lor cookilg out, 3

badroomo, and d on '/• ..,.,

!!IJitlo
- Ill.-II oilll
On
lillch, 1- • 2 IIIIa,
-...... .... fJIIItlhllr. . .

Llce...4,1•...4 1IMI ......
(111614-992·7171

PH. 614-992·5591

POMEROY - V... St - Need a lot lor a mobile home •
new hou•? At the and of 1hl 11rMt i1 a large 1o1 juat
waiting lor you with all utll~ available.
a7,000

-·-rc..-•.

lotiVrw. - C a . --

v...

Tanks, Leach Lines
Repair &amp; l1stallatl011

949-2168

SI,OOO

.:::'.:.V'1ra

-Ina
LONEJ.n....
- , '~
Eat. lfZt, • • Per llln. -

Eat.-. .... .tlln.ll..... ,.

CALL 614-992·7171

FREE ESTIMATES

IIDOLEM&gt;RT- MIN Straat- A Handvm•'• SpecW2 loll and a lilt• room houu with 2-3 badroomt. Needo
quill a bll of work lnllide, but the outalde looks pNtty

Y. Fwltz
At10111ey a,.d Cowi!Sl!lor at Law
Pomeroy, Ohio

.a ':::.!

liiE£T NEW PIOPL.I. TIE FUN
WAY TOIMYI . , . . . . _

SEWER PBIBLIMI

pI . . . . .

'

•'

..,111;

An no unc eme I' t s

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
lox 119
Middleport, Ohio.45760

.BASEMENTS I.
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Ulllllt?ne,
!Hit; Grnel •nd Cui

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

WIW HILL RD: - A large mcdltar, with an llddition on 1
..r. Haall roomo, 4 badloom1, and 2 balha. Hu • hMI
pump, 2 aciao olnlcl laving land, and an '*"'r gar~~~~~ .
Hat a epee\IC4 • ., view of the golf COUrM.
, 148,000

)ok" C. Milkr
Senior Inontment CoiiS#Itont
Bane One SeCitrities Ctwpfiration

'

VlrJIM, -

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

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

PONDS

' · Gutters

205 North Seaancl Ave.
Mlddlaport, OH , ,

113W.2nd St
Pomeroy, OH. 45768
Offlca11112-54711
1-80C).742-3811

UI

949·2104

R&amp;C EICAVAnll&amp;
BULLDOZING

w...,

DAIRY VALLEY

Flo~rShop

......_

-,Gtllot
77H7It. • -

"Inspirations..

liiEIICAN GENEUL UFE and
ACCIDENT IISUUNCE COMPANY

Houro 116- M-F 1-3 Sat.
Clooed SundliY

Down1pout1

' nice.

-

Authorlad: B'IY:,• &amp;
Stratton MTD, .,.,
I. D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP ..d DEUVERY

Hown L \yrftesel

I

ohalr be oant lc: H11rlng
Clark, OEPA, P. 0 . Box tOG,
Columbui;"OH., U216-01 ..
Ph. (614) 644·2115. Conoult
ORC Chop. 3745 and OAC
Chapa. 3745-47 and 3746-5
lor roqulremanll.
Final approval of plano
and opeclflcllllonL
·
Tupp•• Plain• •
Cheater Wale! Dlotrlct
Effective Date 05106/e3
Thlo final action not preceded by propooed IICtion
and lo appMiable to EBR, ·
Bobo RV Campground 2·
Inch PVC
un...

No order
Steel Sales
too small or too large
Orders welcomed

. (614) 143-5264

NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR
TRAINING
LOOKING , FOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
OF IN OUR
HOME.

'I

actio1111, 1111 aornrnunioatione ·

..-,

CIMalc out lilY prioea . .L

F~(614)992·3053

Jif!Widt:tr-

915-4473 ·
667-6179

ROOFING

OFFICE 992·2116

•
;·'

Miwl,thdr- the propoe..t
action. Any par~on may
oubmll comments and/or a
"'"ling r.ogardlnV any draft
· action within 30 daya ol the
dale Indicated. "Action", ••
uoad above doao not
Include receipt of a varifi..t
com'ptalnt If olgnlficant pubtic lnter.. t exloto, a public
mMting may be held. M to
ony action, lnoluclng receipt
ol verlfled complolnll, any
peroon may obtain notice of
further action., and Midi·
lionel Information. UniMI
· otherwloe provided In
Noli••• of particular

nt..n.....,

(614) 992-7878

OWNER:

4-11-13-tln

Real Estate 011'181111

TENIBl CA8H OR CI£CK Will&lt; 1.0,
Nil Aw4
t' fOf _ _ . OIIM 01 pt0pWtr
. . . _ ... _lnOhlo. ~· · _'/qlnio ...

Happy Birthday
Jim, James II, SleVen

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•T-RACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

''

LUNCH
. ~SON, WV
773-5785
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
ADIIINISTRATOR: CHARLES LOVE

have all tills?"

.

, F•rtlllzlng, w..dlng,
and s-ling.
Shrub and T,..
Trimming &amp;, Rtr1101111l
Reoldentlll l Commer I I
FREE EBnMATES ·
411111113-lln

.1 00 PIIYolf

IICI PURSON AUCtiON CO.

'

Lawn Mowing;

Special Ellrly Bird

.AUCTION CONJWCftDaT

-.

.... .

I·IOG-137·1460

·6:45p.m.

'

COIISIRUCTIOII

949·2391 or

· eAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY · .

,'

BISSELL &amp; lURlE

IEYIII'S LIWI
IUIIITEIIAIICE

EVERY THURSDAY

IIoi91111H.

&amp;111'1211'

5-t~ll

...

u••

31904 ....
c...lk ....

HOlE SITES and

,.·

AMque oak rocker. old 3 pc. mahogany tables,old magazine
red&lt;,2pc.lvlng 100m suiiB, 2pc. hide-a-bed suite, 3pc.coffee
llbleandand l8ble lit recliner, platform rocl&lt;ar, 10undwalnut
, oqoaeool(table, old clock shelves, 5 pc. dirMttll litwith
pc!1C11ain tilp, flld and white. cupboard lOp, ball cabine~
molll cabine~ oquare oak table witl 4 le-. 2 oak c:haira,
s.n 14 c.l. refrigerator, Magic Ch!lf
Iange, Spoed
Queen waahtr, Whirlpool air cond .. 3 pc. watarfan ba&lt;toom
..-. 3 ,;c. t.r;e poslar bad100m suite, several quWtl. el.,..,.... CIMiri flltdler, R. S. Germany Berry se~ 8 place
llllilg Padlln City potlary china set with meat platllr and
Olhar piecH, 6 pink Depmssion plates. 4 carnival glas-.
u-nDeP,allionjulcer. VllliniaRoseplatundlltharpiecea,
2 old kilchan cabinet canisters, Philco floor model, radio,
IIICOid player, baskets. linens, 111g1, EleetrOiux sweeper. 2
hcbnaillanps, oil lamp. wooden roning board, pots, pans,
dolea. okicrricks,cruet brass wash board. swing, setoftubl,
old Cllll, gMian IDals, hand tools, and more.
11164 Ford Falcon. 21 ,325 actual miles, 6 cyt., stand., 4 dr..

992-3470

........, . -.

.....,·?"=· ...,

MIITECH INDUSTRIES

5110J93

St. 11. 7 ·
c•es.lre,

. (614) 992-7878

LOCATED AT 2618 LINCOLN AVENUE IN ·
POINT PLEASANT, WV. WATCH FOR SIGNS.
THE ESTATE OF THE LATE HARRY G. LOVE
WILL BE SOLD.

- Flullblng

5

.

SATURDAY,
MAY 22, 1993 ·1,0:00 A.M.

ununs

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR WE
Call 614-992· ·
6637 .

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

PUblic Sale

,AUCTION

·Homesalld

SIZED LIMESTONE

.USED RAILROAD TIES '

ouanz
Stone o.

and small .
' Dozer Work

ESTATE

lnlerior&amp; 'Exlerior

36970 laD R• Road
P-oy,Ohlo

992·2269

Skit Ill R4. CCo.
OH.

lj. (C.. 7)

•
..

&amp; Auction

I"Paioong ~ices

"THE FLYIN'
SAUCER" ··
is 60 Today!
Call _
949-2014
and wish him
Happy Birthday

I

jl-1

ef!REWOOD
BILL SlACK

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

Backhoe

•

p_,oy,lilo.

· •LIGHT HAULIN~

WICK'S HAUUNG
. SERVIa

Glllng.

3 Announcements

'

(.

' 41111111311 mo..

Uving area, balcony ovel1ooks
ocean. 2 br., 2 batha, pool, tannls.
Watch lhuttle ahola from beach,
close to 0111\ey Wortd.
Rent wk/mo. 614-992-7376

•

12&amp; II liP

fiiWKIIG AYAIWU

IUIWII,OH.
742•2451 5-5-83

•

•••••
JOE H. SAYRE

.992-62·15

W.liEC
H2·72Mer
742·2223

sw.···

"

SHRUB TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

o£010 JIIMMERS
oiRIISIKIITJIIS
Rlbatts • - llldels.

MORRIS
·EQUIPMENT

'

•
,.

....

· fllWICIIO AYAIIAIU

d11te; or the dir.ctor revle-

•

-----~-

Wwt

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Creative writing
contest slated

.MANCO
MINI KARS

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Allen to address church group
I

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19, 1993

Page 8 The

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ALSO...mOUINEW
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DO YOU WANT ME TO ,
BUY A CSIT -WELL CARO .
FER YORE PAW
WHILE I'M DOWN
AT TH' STORE?

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wtUIMI 80 DI'FEIIENI" ABOUT

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Wentecl

AS A WORLD FAMOUS ATTORNE'r',
WOULD VOU EVER 8E INTERESTED
IN 6ECOMIN6 A MEMBER OF
TI-lE SUPREME COURT?

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term from grammar refers to any
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lows. If you don't think a PARTICLE
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between CALL ON, which means
''visit," and CALL OFF; which means
cancel." You may want to
but not until they call

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SCRAM LETS ANSWERS
r-•'
Kettle - River - Basal - W8ddsd - LIKED
"Your cousin isn't a failure; iny dad tried to explain
to me. 'He just started at ~ bottom and decided that
he LIKED it !here."

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.._...__,_...__,__,___,. you develop from step No. 3 below.

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w•lh ~ before, don't try
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!db\ diE IIUbb'er band ma~ snap and you
maw IW9JWI! :IOU' actions.
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"Your couain Isn't a lliiture,"
my dad tried to explain to me
7 "He just started at the bottom
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Modern loYe scenes are a. big bore. In today'a
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A. Tell them it's a PARTICLE. This

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CONFRERE is a fellow member
or professional colleague. Pronounce
Ibis noun "KON-frer," although your
confrere wouldn't be wrong to use the
variant pronunciation "kon-FRER."

out"? My children asked me this.

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37 Form11

Perhaps you know the mathematical trick by which it is apparently possible to prove that one eqiUils zero.
The snag is that during the 'proof,"
you divide by zero, which is, of course,
impossible. You can take notltlng from
something an infinite number of
times.
,
But Houghton Mifflin. luts shown
that two can equal one by publishing a
book that is two-in-one. It is called
"Blocking, Unblocking and Safety
Plays in Bridge" ($10.45, The Bridge
World, 39 WeJt 94th Street, New York,
NY 10025-7124). It is a combination of
two short books, "Blockinll and Unblocking Plays in Bridge" and "Safety
Plays in Bridge," by Englishman Terence Reese and Frenchman RoRer
Trezel.
Today's deal comes from the first ·
half of the boot.
.
Playing in three no--trump, you have
eight top tricks: one spade, three
hearts and lour diamonds. The ninth
trick is available in clubs, but you
must lose the lead once, aild perhaps
when the opponents win with the club
ace, they can cash enough spade tricks
to defeat you.
The immediate reaction is to bold
up the spade ace lor one round, but you
should consider the situation analyti·
cally, not intuitively.
· U the spades are 4-3, you are in no
danger. So assume they are 5-Z. This
meai!S that East bas K-x or Q-x of
spMes. (If East has two low spades,
Welt would bave K-Q,J-x-z an&lt;! surely
would have led the king.) You can
block the sui.t by winning immediately
dummy's ace. But suppooe you
up the ace; then you will go down
the suit is ~2 and West luts the club

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Truck ....... . . • II. ltod.

3

33 Cocklall

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2 Anlltoxlne

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n o - , . . not
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on 11ft equal
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equal two?

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. DOWN

23 Fib

When·does one

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Mml&amp;alion 01 dl~ •

lnlotmed thlt 1111 -llngl
tdvll'tlstd In ll'lls MWIIH!I*

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18 Rav
.
20 Hippen lo
22 Grlvtl rldgt

Opening lead: + 5

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27 Put up wilh .

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15 Approxi-

24 DlttOrll

SOUTH
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lor

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Sou\11

··-----~--

42 Woodr

45 WHitllout·
of
41 tqwliiln
ltilnd
50 H foiiowo Fri.
52 C.prt, ••••
53 Shoem.:Ctr'i
loole
54 A leiter
55 Moliem ruitr
56 Povtrtr 1111
57 lmltele
58 Papar
· quenllty

(2 Wdl.)
18 llotOrllll'

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lbdrtd

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NORTH

fiUeusT'ERS,'lRMX·OFfS.
I'...!A::f'IJ..;), R)~ RPI'T'S •..
Qw

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5•Aifleen

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ltflrmatlvt

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....... - -·
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NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

=-."'Ci..""~·: t!,:.

•nctra McFar·
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w To:

-

71 Aulol fOr ....

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, ...... N-11 ..... Hour. -

1111

1983

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Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine

..

Pick 4:
3585
Low IOIIIpt .. 401. Clear.
Friday, partly IUDBy, IIJcb Ill 6GI.

10.26-27-37-40-44
Kicker:
994440

•
YGL&lt;M; No.1t

IJIIIJIItld1tl3

c

1 S.CUon,IO I'.- 25

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 20, 1993

&lt;:.nil

A lluiUmedla Inc.·rw.peper

Lemasters a.ddresses jury during hearing

'

.

Family.testifies in penalty phase of .trial
By JIM FREE~
.
· Sentinel News Staff
During a statement to jurors
Wednesday, William D. Lemasters
ll apologized for the deaths of the
two people the jury convicted him
of slaying.
Lemas~rs. 26, of Racine was
fQUnd gutlty Saturday of thr~e
charges of aggravated murder wtth
death penalty specif1C81ions in the
Feb. 8, 1991, shotgun slayings of
Jeffrey I,.. Halley, 36, and 12-yearold JeffreyS. ~cy. both ofGallia
County. In addinon, he was found
guilty of aggrav~led ro~bcry and
~wC? counts of kldnappmg m the
mcidenL
.
Lemast~rs was back iD court
Wednesday as the penalty phaSe of
his trial began. During this phase,
.the jury is to decide whetl!er
Lemasters will spend the rest of his
life in jail or face the death penalty.
In addition, Lemaslers apologized 10 Carolyn Burgess. mother
Of the slain boy, and to bis -own
family.
·
"If I could go back and change
it, I would. But I can't," Lemasters

'·

•

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&gt; .

.

-

· W

Zl"~y

1

. wuu... _n. J..emu&amp;VI ll.aDOiotd. .

tor Clle deatlls of JeWrey t.. J!allti, ~.

_.. ,Jea'6

S. ~. 12, durin&amp; a beJJringln tbe Melp County .
c-t tl
1'011 ·Plea. ID acldltlo., LeiWten apolOgized lo
tiJr ..... of lite 11aJn 1~year-old and IO bls 0M1 family. (SeD·

.-.. ,._,, J• Freeman)

12-Pack

lb.

.Cot.pll1unity Calendar

12-oz. cans

.

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI, MOUNTAIN oav,

U.S. GRADE A CHICKEN"

Diet Pep~; or 'Pepsi Cola

Perdue Whole Fryers
FIRST I
OF THE
SEASON

ALBANY - Phil Dirt and the
Dozers, Fourth Annual Spartan
7 p.m., Rejoicing Life Church in Spring Fling, . Alexander High
Middleport. Lawrence Foreman ·School, Friday, 5:30p.m., car show
and entertainment. Tickets, $5, at
inviteS the public.
the gale.
THURSDAY
POMEROY • Pomeroy Group
TUPPERS PLAINS - Round
of AA. Thursday. 7 p.m., Sacred and square dance Friday 8-11:30
Hean Catholic Church. Call 992- p.m. Tuppers Plains VFW Post
5763 for information.
sponsored by Ladies Auxiliary.
Music by CJ and the Country GenRUTLAND - Leading·Creek tlemen . Red Carr and Melvin
Conservancy District, Thursday, 5 Cross, callers.
p.m., a1 the office. Public welcome.
MIDDLEPORT c Dance at the
POMEROY - A rehearsal for all Middleport Legion Annex Friday
alumni of Middleport High School 7-11 p.m. with music by George
who are planning to participate in Hall.
the Middlepon Alumni Band will
be held Thursday at 7 p.m. in the
SA TURDA.Y
Meigs High School bandroom.
KANAUGA • Liberty Moun, taineers perform Saturday, D.A.V.
ROCK SPRINGS - Middleport Center, Kanauga.
.
Child Conservation League, Thursday, 7 p.m., R(JCk Springs Uniled
POMEROY - Market lamb
Methodist Church. Ellen Rought, . weigh-in for 1993 4-H and FFA
program on M.A.D.D.
market lamb exhibitors, Saturday,
9-11 a.m., Meigs County Fair- .
SYRACUSE • Free immuniza- grounds. Pay $10 Jll:f animal. Call
JUMBO 12 SIZE, TEXAS
lions for children ages two months 992-6696 for information.
through kindergarten age and free
lead screening for children ages sill
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
months through six years, Thurs- Plains baseball and softball associday, Syracuse Fire Department, 9- ation, boys 9·10 year old touma ~
11 a.m. Bring child's immunization ment, Saturday and Sunday. Eight
record.
teams, U"Ophies. $45 and two balls.
.
.
.
Call 667-3653, 667-3342 or 989·~ RACINE -.Free.immunizlUions - 2931 for.information.--........- - -...c;··si/NER P/:AITER' (10-10.5·LB. AVG.J
· . fflr children ages two months
·
I!
...
,_.
throulh kindergai"len age and .free
ROCK SPRINGS - . Rock
lead screening for chi)dreit ages six Springs Senior Youth, spaghetti
·• IJ~t•'/( 1'4
. ,. .
months through silt years, Thurs- dmner. Satur~ay, 5-7 p.m., $4
r'VI 1 \IIIV,
day Racine Fire Department, 1-3 adulls, $3 .50 children six and
p.m'. Bring child's immunization under.
•
POUnd
MIDDLEPORT • New Life

Drama Team performs Wednesday

16

SIIWS

,.:res•• Asso•..ed .

S!li~Wba.everthejurydecideswill

possibility of parole in 20 years.
ly ." Eachus asked. "Be open-mindOpenina statements
ed. Be fair. Be merciful," he conDuring the prosecution's open· cluded.
ing statements, Assislant ProsecuFamily testitles
tor Charles Knight asked the jury 10
Lemasters' family portrayed
recommend the deati!JJCnalty for him as an unselfiSh, hard-working
Lemasters.
young man growing, up in a poor
. "We walk this day on ground family with·a fondness for children
that has not been tr,ead '!}lOR for and his sister, Tina, stricken with
many years in this county, Knight Down's Syndrome.
said.
All the fall'ilY members who
' "I have been asked how 1 can testified said Lemasters was most
enter a counroom and ask for the comfonable around children and
death penalty," Knight said. "I said he had an e~tceUent relationreply, 'How can I ask for anything ship with his own siblings as well
else?"'
as their children.
. Attorney William N. Eachus,
·~when (Lemasters) is around
representing Lemasters, asked adults, he's an adult," brother Donjurors in the packed courtroom 10 ald Barnes said. "When he's ·.
Mopen their minds and hearts" and around kids, he's a kid."
lisren 10 the life of William LemasHis mother, Anna Barnes, said,
ters.
,.
"Bill (Lemasters) has always been
"We !tte here 10 decide punish- the type of person that if someone
ment," Eachus said. "We are here needed something and he had it,
·to decide if William Lemasters will they had it."
spend the rest of his life behind
In addition, family members
bars or race the electric chair."
presented dark images of Lemas"Look at how (Lemasrers) lived ters • slepfather. One described him
and the effect he had on his fami- as "vic1ous, evil, cruel and abu·

Fry's bond set at $10,000

be fine with me," Lemaslers then
_
told the jury.
Brenda Sue Fry, 43, of Middle~mas~rs w~ ~ second man port, was bound over 10 the jurisconVIcted m .the mcident. A former diction of Meigs CoiDity Common
co-defen. dant, Fred Drennen of Pleas Coun following a prelimi1{\\veJ1S"!YOOd, V'f. V~ .• ,pJ,o.adecl,~-tlatJI bearing before County Court
guilty on MarCh 1 10 three counts Judge Patrick H. O'Brien on
of aggrav_aled murcler in ~e inci- Wednesday.
dent and IS currently seMDg three
According to Prosecuting Attorconcurrent life sentences with the ncy John R. Lenles, Fry was 811'est·
ed and charged with attempted
murder following the shooting of
h~r former husband, Mike Hub-

.Meigs graduation. ceremonies
scheduled Sunday
afternoon
.

bard, on May 10 at Jefl"s Carryout
in Pomeroy.
Fry faces a muimum jail sentence of 2S years and a maximum
fine of $10,000 if convicled.
Aitempcecl murder is an aggtavaled
felony of the first degree.
Fry's bond was set at $10,000
with 10 percent cash allowed. She
has been declared indi11ent and is
represented by the Me1gs County
Public Defender's Office.

Juvenile arrested
on shoplifting charge · :
.

.

'

Scholastic Award, the Holzer Clin- · Kefiy t&gt;oidge, daughter of
ic Outstanding Achievement in Sci- Kathy Doidge, Pomeroy, ~ NorSeadltcl News Staff
ence
Award. She plans to attend man Doidge. Pinole, Cahf., who
AJiiJm N. Oannawaale~ Kevin
Ohio
University where she will . wiU attend Ohio Slate University 10
Lambert n the co-v
·ctorians
study medicine.
·
major
in
physical therapy.
Oldie Meip High School lf8tduatLoretta J. Kelly. daughter of ·
Kevin is the 11,0n of James Laming d8scll993.
Je;an
Kelly, Middleport, and Tom
bert anil June Mowery. botli or
~t of their selection
Kelly.
She plans to anend Ohio
- Jllllle 1IXIIy by Fenton Taylor, Pomeroy. He plans 10 atlend Marl·
I*;. ij•l Ilolh will give addresses eua College. A member of the Stare University 10 work toward a
• lbe 2Sdl Annnal Bac:calauteale National Honor S(JCiety, Kevin is degree in aeronautical/aerospace
ud Commencement Eltercises 10 both a Governor and Regional engineering.
Counney Midkiff, daughter of
lie lldd • 4:30 p.m. Sunday in the Scholar. He has been active in football four years, servin!! as co-cap- Cecil and Millie Midkiff, Pomeroy.
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
n..pw Of Thomas and Judith tain of the teani his ilcruor year, and who plans 10 eitter Ohio University
C
way of Vinton, Alli!JOII is a played basketball and baseball in a pre-law program.
Randall Johnston, son of Cecil
IIICIIbcr of the National Honor three years. He is a member of the
Scx:iely. and Ita been a member of French Club.
'" and Becky Johnston, Danville, and
Mrs. Joyce Elis, Columbus, who
die coac:cn, marchins and pep
Hononrlans
has an appointment 10 the U. S. Air
HonOrarians of the class are:
band. HUGS and the Quiz Team
Debbie Alkire, daughter of Mr: Force Academy in Colorado
filr an rom yean or high ac:hool.
Spings, Colo.
and
Mrs. Rflget Alkire, Pomeroy.
Sllc ltls been on the yearbook ·
LotTi
Bumem,
daughter
of
Mr.
Lorena Oil~. daughter of Keith
IIIII fur tltn:e yem, a member of
and
Gloria Oiler, Langsville, who
and
Mrs.
Lee
Burnem,
Rutland.
- Fitiiidl Cub and Prenc:h Honor
will
attend the Technology EducaLinda
'
C
hapman,
daughter
of
Joe
· Scx:iely. TEARS (Teens Educaling
and
Marjorie
Chapman,
Middletion
Cenrer
in Columbus.
Allou&amp; Rmd Safety), in the senior
·
Rusty
Triplett,
son of Gene and
who
plans
to
attend
Rio
pori,
play.ICIM in IPQIU,I Senior Spir·
Karen
Triplett,
Pomeroy, who
Grande
College
10
pursue
a
degree
ils Iader, and in the senior play..
plans
10
enroll
in
a
civil enj!ineerHer awlrds have included the
in
daughltr
mg
program
at
Ohio
University.
A....,W •• Elec:lric: Power sc:holarKatrina
Turner,
daughter
of Dotsbip. 1be Fi"anklin B. Walter All- and Jov Clark, Middleport.
Continued on page 10

sive."
When Lemasters was about 11
years old, Mrs. Barnes married
Harvey Leamond, a man she used
the word "HeU" 10 desaibe living
with. Leamond did not like Lemasters, she added.
"He was 1\ke a dictator . I
couldn 'I even come in the house
and eat," she said.
Lemasters' adopted brother,
James Leamond, said he and
Lemaslers received the bulk of the
punishment.
.
.
Leamond said punishment
included beatings "with a belt or
with anything else he could get
hold of. He hit us in the back while
we were in bed ..• hurt us anyway ·
he could."
.
One night We snuck out of the
house and were caught, Lcamond
said As punishment we were confined 10 our room for three or four
months and only allowed out 10 go
.10 school or work.
.
Leamond was at a college workshop in 1983 when his father abandoned the family.
"I came home for the weekend
and he was ~one," he said . "I
haven't seen h1m since."
Mrs. Barnes said Lemasters
took over much of the work at
home, including caring for Tina
· after Lcamond left.
'
Family friend Shirley Stephensoil commenled, "No matter what
Bill.was doing, he always had lime
io gwe her a hug or be witli her.
"He was a hard worker, constantly clearing brush around the
house because of snakes and to
prorect Tina," she added. "He was
always good 10 help me and never
Continued on page 3

B7 CHARLENE HOEFLICH

ALLISON GANNAWAY
Co-Valediclorian)

KEVIN LAMBERT
(Co-Valedictorian)

A 14-year-old was arrested ·
Wednesday aflemoon by deputies
of the, Meigs County Sheriff's
Department on shoplifting charges '
at Big Wheel.
.
.
Th.e report stated two adults '
with the juvenile, Jeff King and '
Brian Durham, have been ciled 10
Meigs County Coun for contribut· •
ing 10 the deliquency of a minor as
a result or .the incident.
... , .
According to the report, the 14- \
year-old was observed taking a
fishing reel from a fishing raod and
two packages of hooks and then
stuffing them into his pants.
The juvenile was released 10 his
parents pending a hearing in Meigs
County Juvenile Court.

of~-

Pay rai~es sought .for TB,
health clinic workers
a1 JUUE E. DILLON

==

SUGAR FREE DELUXE, FAT FREE
DELUXE OR DELUXE

IXJZ. l'lrG.
Sl.lt

Kroger Ice cream
-

-

"ipS

~

,

Wc~~iark,

cantaloupes

PO~OY

083

PageS

IF YOU USE UNCONVEN· you might ask him or her about
TIONAL MEDICAL THERA- OMT. With .OMT YI&gt;U have the
advantage of a "natural," non-invaPY, TELL YOUR DOCTOR
Oue$tion: I have been seeing my sive procedure being performed by
dociOf for several months bec•nse a d(JCtor who is also knOwledgeable
of headaches. I'm not getting any in other accepted forms of treatbeUrr. Would there be any harm in ment. OMT, by the way, is well. uying massage theraPY or viuimln acce~ withi~ os1e0patbic meditreatments? An$wer: Your question cal crrcles and ts not !In unconvenis cenainly a common one. Unfor- tional therapy. But since it can be
·tunalely, most Americans do not used for headaches, I thought I had
talk ro tbeir doctor about questions a duty to mention it 10 you.
Neither massage done by a
concerning unconventional medical
properly
trained person, nor OMT
!Mzapy. In the January 28 issue of
done
by
a physician has much
The New England Journal of
potential
for
harm. This is not the
Medicine, D. M. Eisenberg pubcase
with
vitamins.
The use of
lished a study about the use of.
large
doses
10
treat
your
headaches
unconventional medical therapies.
The researche' found about one- may tuive serious consequences. As
third of all Americans use some eltlmples, vitamin C can cause kidtype of non-standanl medical thera- ney stones, and vitamin A can
PY every year. In addition, .72 per- cause liver dis~~ when taken in
cent of those that did use uncon- · eltcess. The old adage, "if a little is
ventional treatments failed to lell good, then a lot must be better"
certainly does not· apply to vitatheir docur about it.
Unconventional medical thera- mins. I strongly caution you against
pies are those that have not been this popular unconventional theraaccepled 'into the mainstream of py. In the best case, the extra vitamedical JXBCtice. Sometimes this is mins are elirninaled by your body
because they have not been scien- without harm. It merely creates
tifically tesled, and we don't yet very expensive urine. In the worst
· know whether or not they might be situation, the vitamins can cause
useful. At other times, tliese thera- serious - even life threatening ·
pies are nof part of mainstream illness.
Some forms of unconventional
medicine precisely because they
have been thoroughly evalualed treatment, such as relaution and
. and have failed 10 pass "scientifiC massage, border on being acccpled
by traditional medicine while other
musrer."
therapies
are clearly at odds with
There are inany types (lf unconaccepted
methods.
About one-third
ventional !Mzapy. A few examples
of
the
treatments
reported
in D. M.
are unresled drugs or surgical proEisenberg's
study
are
unscientific
cedures, drugs or surgical procedures known 10 be worthless, relax- in their basic concepts, and many
ation leChniques, massage. special have failed scientific studies
designed 10 measure their efficacy.
diets and mega-vitamins.
In selected situations, unconven- Spiritual healing, energy healing
tional therapies may offer some with crystals and/or machines,
benefit. In your case, massa~e ther- herbal medicine, homeopathy and
apy - panicularly addressmg the acupuncture are among lflese.
I strongly encourage you 10 bUst
muscles of the neck and shoulders
- may reduce the amount of dis- your health 10 therapies that have
comfon you experience from your passed the test of scientific study.
headaches. However, massage is If you elect to II')' an unconventionnot likely , to eliminate your al therapy, join ·the 28 percent in ·
headaches. It will only make them the study that shared tlus decision
more tolerable and reduce the asso- with their physician. Let your docciited soreness in the neck and tor help you "tip-toe through the
shoulder muscles. So, while I'm mine f~eld" of unconventional thernot an eltpert in massage, I suspect_ apy. Perhaps :you will gain some
it might be of some porential value benefit from the unconventional
treatment and avoid the potential
to you.
As a D.O., I should point out problems.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
that ~ manipulative treatment (OMT) '- which you might column, To submit questions,
· think of as similar 10 massage - · write to John C. Woir,. D.O.,
can sometimes bring at least lem- Ohio University College or Osteoporaty relief from certain kinds of pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
headaches. If your doctor is a D.O.• Athens, Oblo 45701.

record.
- Belles and Beaus .
RACINE - Racine American Western Square Dance Club, dance
Legion Poat602,.Thursday. Supper Saturday 8-11 p.m. Meigs County
. at6:30 p.m. followed by meeting. . Senior Ci~s Cenrer. Dal\! Eddy,
Mliriclta, caller. All weslem sly le
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun· dancers inviled.

Pick 3:

Super Lotto:

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

WEDNESDAY
ty Democratic E~tecutivc CommitPORTLAND - Revival at Free- tee, Thutsday, 7:30 p.m., Carpendom Gospel Mission, Portland, ters Hall.
Wednesday through Sunday 7:30
p.m. nightly. Rev. Marvin Welsh,
RACINE - Raciiie Fire Depanevangelist. Special singing nightly. . ment, July 4 planning meeting,
Thur.sday, 7 p.m. participating
POMEROY - Alzheimers and organiZ&lt;~tions inviled.
Related Disease Support Group
meets Wedn$y, 1-3 p.m., Meigs
. FRIDAY
RIPLEY,· W.VA . - Liberty
County Multipurpose Center. Rev.
Keith Rader will present "Death Mountaineers, Friday, Skateland,
Ripley. W.Va.
with n;gnity ."Everyone welcome.

.Ohio Lottery

Reds
lose third
straight

"IN THE DAIRY CASE" CHILLE~
REGULA&amp; HOMESTYLE OR J. _:.,_
W11H CALCIUM
j

. ··Kroger '
.orange Juice
64-0z.

~~
'

.

..

•

·

•

. . "IN THE DELI~PASTRY 5HOPFr
- - - · , AMERICAN STYlE'()R

Mustard
Potato salad
POUnd

Salitwl Ne1ll Stal'l'
A request for pay raises for
emploJces of the M.eigs County
TJJIIeicukJii:s llld HcaJih Qinlc was·
w "UJ!d • Wednesday's regular
iat 01 tlte Meip County Com-

brina those employees up 10 scale
job.with employees holding the same

Roush also explained that
requests for pay raises must come
from county office holders and in
the case of the health department,
. - s.
that request would come from the
.uo,.t Blackwood, preSident of · board or appoipting authorit~.
• "-11 cllhe c:linic,.and Connie
B~kwood an~ Karschn~ stat~ XanciWt, ~uti vc director o.f_ ed their_request did not con lain any
-"---~·-~ .... diaic: lt8led the department speclf!c llnOQnlllld that they only
•
;.,.. c:aafiad • 10 how requesled what o.ther county
.., . . . . .., • •, 11 eclandlllal employccswereacttina.
a 1 ' to 11e clear Clllhal
The ~er JD:en
f
J.IWitah:e. 111e c:anf11s1aD resulted,
· .
gran I tran0 er o
funds r~quest ~rom the soil and
8 .. .r 1111 Bild:awd becin10 01
receal Jqull repdltqj pay ntiJos • water dutrict m the amount of
1o -ay employees 11 the court S\S.$49.32 to the Fncra1 fund; and
a.-.
.
·
ftDJI! th,e De_partmenl of Human
0
iW•rr Mannina Roush Scrvicea for $29,827.02 10 the genczplabcd me pay raises whlcb crall"und.
·Iaiard 1o &amp;wo coun Jiouse · · . ~lerk Mary Hobslelter stated
r were ,....uc~ 1n order 10 · notification bad been received from
,
·1 '
the Ohio Oepanment of Liquor

die._..

..
'

I~

'

Control (ODLC) re~g a permit
for Nancy C. Phillips, doing business as Pageville Grocery, which
would enable the sale of carry-out
beer. The commissioners' office
will hear commenrs on the matter
until June 9 after which the ODLC
will be nodficd.
The board granted a request ·
from Meigs County Prosecuting
Anorncy John Lenlea to appoint a
speCial rrosecutor in' the cue of
Stale o Obio versus Jamet M.
Brown. sraven Story.,... appointed at the requea of Lenlel.
In, a matter invo1vill8 a request
from Mike Wellfall for the board
. to contider approvin~ public
·~ contra:t, the
decided •to again speak with Westfall
before approval is ifUited. Com·
missioner Roush llllllecl his toncem
that lhe polition of public defender
should be fUled by aomeone from
Meigs County.

OUTSTANDING CHAPTER 1 • Meiaa

Local Sdlool Dlltrict rtcenlly received u award

from tbe Stele Deparlmeat ollduattloll for u
oulltaDcllrla ~prebelllve Clulpter l PnJil'IIID.
Receh1a&amp; itte award at tM eoatereace IDCI baa•
qaet beld In Col... bul _..: Dlredor ol Fedenl

Pror••• Wead;r Halar, ·Cilapler 1 teaclltr
Bar Ma"'". Cr-. Bacrrow, Clllapler 1
taelterw T••J C•ap•n Manila R 'II ••
and SuperlateJideat ol tile' Melp Local ld 13i
. Dillrict l•a Carpelder,
·
.·
\II·

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