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                  <text>14--The

26,1993

Ohio

Sentinel

10 youths
participate
in institute
One-hundred percent natural no drugs added.
That was the theme of this
year's Middle School Teen Institute held April 23-25 at Canter's
Cave 4-H Camp in Jackson where
10 students from Meigs County
joined approximate! y 65 students
from six .other southeastern Ohio
counties.
Teen Institute is a program,
sponsored by Health Recovery Services, geared toward youth in
grades six through 12 that promotes leadership and the prevention of alcohol and other drug
abuse. It also encourages participants to help other students make
healthy lifestyle choices through
positive peer role modeling.
The weekend featured basic
education, in-depth substance
abuse prevention strategies, team
building, organizing .and lcadmhip
skills training. Students also participated in skits, group games and a
druf,-free dance.
• These students hsve leadership
potential to teach lheir peers about
drug and alcohol abuse, and spread
information they've learned at TI
back to their communities." said

Reedsville UMW takes vote
The
Reedsville ' United
Methodist Women met recently
with Mrs. Emma Dunl. oor-n.
The n.eeting ope11ed with prayer
by Mrs. Frances Reed. Readings
wete given by Mrs. Gnce Weber,
"Five Stars For Mother,M"Only
One Mother, Mand "Bumps and
Bruises Doc:un."
Mrs. Nina Bo.ston presided at
the meeting during whiCh 32 shutin calls wete reported.
The group voted to seU llll*ins.
Trays are to be purchased for the

church basemenL
A game was played with prizes
given.
Refreshments were served to ·
those named and Mrs. Mamie :
Buckley, Mrs. Diane Jones, Mrs. :
NeD WiiJon, Mrs. Gladys Thomas, ·
Mrs. Nancy Buckley. Mrs. Pearl
Osborne and Mrs. Lillian Pic~ns.
The next meeting will be with ·
Mrs. JQI)CS.
'
Mrs. Nancy Buckley won the

Belcher
blanks

Pick 3:

Braves

Pick 4: .

615
7630

Super Lotto:
1-10-14·15-17-36
454578

PageS

Enrollment deadlines for some
All of die progi-ams .e free and
or the Easter Seal Society of the ate open to children and youths
River Cities' lhe\'llpelltic recteation with physical disabilities from
programs for children and youths Athens, Meigs, Morpn, Washingwid! disabilities are appiOLhing.
ton,llld Wood countJes. •
The deadlines are as follows:
Residents may call Easta' Seals
Washington County horseback at 374-8876 or 1-800-93-EASTER
riding, May 28 for the four-week for llclditional serv~.
sessions June IS and July 13.
Washington County swimming,
ATTEND TEEN INSTITUTE - Meip
s.idl; entllr, T-7 Ottau, Je~~~lca Counls
31 for the six week session ·
County students atUadecl doe rtft. . Middle
... THJ MOler of HRS, Misay Coppltk ud
beginning June 14.
·School Teen Iastit•k spoaserall • ., Heal ..
Skn P!ltter-; aad batk, Sommer Groves,
Wood County horseback riding,
·
Recovery Services {HRS).I'idaiall an, rn.
Raqwel M'MI • ._, Lyt~ Hofflllan, Jason Counts,
June
18 for the four week session )O:'K:ar winner AleC Guinness met his1
lert, Aimee Lealey, Curie ....... ad ...Bili Jo Ottala alld Sna Cline.
· beginning July 6.
lwife. Mcrulah , in a 19~ R production!
Later deadlines exist for the lui" "Noah." He played a wolf, she al
Kim Mastrangelo. Titv~Mii • • .
O.io. HRS is lltaedited by the and Menial Health Services Boards overnight camp/bus trip · and ·
ti gress .._Th~Y.~ ~!'fj_e~ -~al~-~ ~~~-~ear._ .
Health Recovery Services .JcDt 0
- . • - Acaedilllian of Athens/Hockinatvinton and · wheelchair tennis programs.
(HRS) is a non-profit ..p•••im of Beallkare Organization GaUii/J.:kloi!/Mei&amp;J counties.
·
which delivers sul!dww: allose :a- QCAHO} _ , is 1*1ially fuaded
vices throughout southeasu:n by die AkoW, brae Addiction
Real Estate General

Mar

TRIVIA

1

Bl I.LETI\ BO \RD

.,,,
II

SERVICE PLATEAU- Holzer Clinit
employees wbo have reathed their service
plateaus were honored at a recent cerem011y. In
the front row, from left, are Evelyn Swain,
Randy Filkins, Shirley Engle, Gladys Eisnaugle,
Roy Kincaid and Karen McCall; second row,
Pat Woolum, Charlotte Thompson, Coaaie
Drummond, Jackie Wallen, Lori Burdette,
Nancy Dowell, June Stout, Phyllis Pope, fiarla

Alzheirners &amp; Related
Disorders Support Group
monthly meeting
Thurs., May 27, 1:00 P.M.
Pleasant Valley Nursing
Care Center

OFFICE 992·2886

Eml!r,l
..... - Ad....
... V"ICti
Wilcox; t•irtl r-. Dne a2,'!..11, Carel
Mclbaiel, J••iD Nor, Jan~
••
Etllla
Huu, D..-.. r..r-. Jan~ HilT" ' Ji'a,e
Dow ••ter,N.rJM
,,_A '
' Au
Wickli!le u4 NUCJ Dye. Net Jiehred ~re
Frums M•llim, LJIIW R•a, Sn!ly SIHdapr

205 North S I CI ncl Ave.
~,OIL -- ·
IIOIIILE HOME ONLY- a 12d6 Bonan~a mollie home
with 2 bodn&gt;Omo, undorpiMing, new braal!or box .nd tho
lot ..,. be ranled for $50 a monlh.
ONLY $3,500
MINERSVILLE -One olory horne will 2 bed!DCIIIiO, 1'/•
bdio, FMIG ~-. TPC wator, li\lalod on -wm.
1.16 ac..a. Aloo included is a ornall older horne at Ilia
...,... location.
All lor sza,oao

POMEROY - LINCOLN HEIGHTS - Need a large yard

or ganlan • - · then thio io tho p-. for you. Aloa hao a
one iiiDfy horne with moot of baa•"""" · · - · T...... 3

Representative for
Atzheimers from Charleston
wil be attending.
304-675-5236
PIJllic Invited

T

alldRassSianr.

bedroomo, lo111 of large
alorage room.

MIDDLEPORT - A largo lot ,.,., lots of flowrs and
•-•· A 2 otory olona horne .,;111 2 bedlocma, clnlng
. room, 1112 Iidia, and a W ~- Has nice c.liiftell
in ~. and kitchen is ""'ipped. Lot. ol ln. .tion.
front and ..., pon:h.
Culli - only au,oao

"Your Hometown ea.pel &amp;
Upholstery Cleaning

••••Oil

DOTTE ~A,
······~···········-········~-BRENDA
JEFFERS&amp;r-.
...........................................
-3011
DARLINE STEWART.............................................

FO~~a~~

CALL
TODAY
And Remewber When We

Noe, David Reymond, Evelyn · PaWonhm.
Swain , Jackie Wallen; IS Years:
In Iris remarls, DI. Strafford
Nancy Dye, Gladys Eisnaogle,
the pc:wle for their years
Shirley Engle, Karen McCall, of dar •m He said. "It is gteat
Dawna Parsons, Lynn Rutt;
to be bete ., honor you who have
10 Years - Shel Dawson,Coo- servaiiiUm OiJK far so long\...
nie Drummond, Ann Wickline;
5 Years -Joan Anderson, make
it is d!d;
1 people
like you who ·.
the Clinic
sDCcessful,
Laura Bobbins, Faye Bonecutter, make the medical profession
Lori Burdeue, HOOa E.utslet, Randy ~n~adin&amp; 11111 filll.
Filkins, Etha Hanna, Jean Harrison,
...lolza Oinic .lSI dynam'
.
1C and·
Nancy Mullins, Phyllis Pope, Jean popessive CllplliDtim.~ he said.
Sammons, Russ S haw , Sandy -u is IDIIIc ._ way lhrough your
Snedegar, June Stout, Cbarlot- dedicari(,o Wid bard work teThompson, Vicki Wilcox, and are the .,.,..a- behind lhe orgaruz.a-

do-. largo ONLY
idllty a-. and
$211,100.

RUTLANO - lllln Stnet- AVac80JI lol with city N 111g1
and watar available. Nice lor a mabN hllma, ale. $5,0110

QUALilY CARE
CLEANING

Holzer Clinic employees are honored ··
upon reaching.number of years served

Vol. oM, NO. 21
llultlmacla Inc.

As part of 'Buy Recycled' program
"

ByJIMJilm~

~

Sentinel News Stall'
Trash can be transformed into
useful items.
State officials cle:!nonsttlrcd dill
point Wednesday aftemooa w1icw
It llb:s 42a•w of came w
they ptesentcd the Meigs Couaay
Board of Commissioners with a IQ . . . 2 1/1. ..... a { - oil,
park bench made entirely .of n:cy- be Slid. ~.... RC)dill&amp; 2 1/]:
. qaii1S a{ wa ail Will yidd 2 If]:
~led plastic.
'
.
Officials of the Obio Depart- qaldSof-ail.. .
Silla: ili:Ma leu nng and
ment of Natural Resources • Diwiraw
•atnials 10 -wflltlme
sion of Liller Prevention lid Rrccy-·
n:qdal pr•...,s. R!:JCh&amp; also
cling made lhe presentlllion ill
Meigs County Common Pleas .... " - . . liilily ... tulll_
Courtroom as part of l!be lq1llar iuats - J be nl I -1 iii!O !lie g!3111S.
"By using recycled products,
eawin
S.lle Slid.
weelly commisslmcrs' mMiat&amp;
like
lhe park bench, Meigs County
Darill&amp;
Ill!:
m
1
.
ODNR
Paul R. ·Baldridge, acti!l&amp; dlicf
is.
encouraging
its citizens to close
••
1
d
lllf
its
....,
Itcc.ydcd"
of the DLPR, explained se'Vellll
die
recycling
loop,"
he added.
•
I
-,.
wl!idt
-.=s
)llllllic
lplt~ns why recycling is........_
The
five-foot,
gray,
wood-like
Recycling is impcrtant from c:ics - 10 pudasc.
-.le
rw)dalbcnclt
given
to
lhe
county
was
perspective or enc;rgy COilSCIVIIioa.
lills.
_
.
.
}IIIIa
.......
,
ofi:e
made from I 00 percent tecycled
Baldridge said. Using paper as •
plastic - the equivalent of 1,050
example, he explained it !tak;es 65

...,.._IS

Road,, Beech Gr_ove Road, Happy
lkllklw Road, Kingsbury Road and
Pomeroy Pike. A total of 18.92
miles lR scheduled for paving.
Eigllty-nine percent, approximately $500,000, of the original
estimated project cost would be
paid foc from Issue n funds. The
remainiug $61,995.99 would be
pllid with local funds.
lf IK lliglier b!~ is accepted,

By JIM FREEMAN
eaclt . . of mpMh bul:d • an
Senti!lel News Stldf
•q ·
'20JIP :48- • k d
Meigs County Commissioaen
Die bid Ill!: . ..,. o~~e
tabled a bid proposal Weduesdly •a "ud.
from Tom Mayle and Sons OoaDe Mcip eo.ty JliP1118J
strt,1ction Company, ·B·artlett, 10 llqJa
. . - . - I A a JMDcompleie five Issue n pavillg pm- jccl c r'ct:i• cast of
jects.
· $561,.991.99 m 44 • •
'J $28
.
.
al
I
•
. f or the five ID..._ad!
T_ota I b1.d ~nee
-5 •
. PIIVtng prOJeCtS ~me to
nc fiwe 181ds, 01' poniows
· '$618,927.85 ot $31.07 w]llace 0
1. -..bF•iic-l'l:.us

CALL 441 -0755
675-6610

Howie Caldwell was hired as

adiietic director and coaching positiuns at Southern Junior High and
Higli Schools wete filled at Mon-

~

day night's meeting of the South-

em local Board of Education.

EXTRA! EXTRA

-.~•" s.l?~~
.
....._~
~~~~
1

Friday,
June 4, 1993

~~

.)&lt;.'

., ...;%11&gt;~,·.,,.;;,
" . ;J;;.

. ·,:it

f~- -~

,

I

Hurry, Picture Deadline is Thursday, May 27.
The Baby Sentinel is a Special Section filled with photographs of
local kids, ages newborn t9 4 years old.
The Baby Sentinel will appear in the June 4th issue in celebration
of National Baby Week.
Be sure your child, grandchild or relative is included. Complete
the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet size picture plus a
$5.00 charge for each photograph, (encJose payment with picture)
'•

P•••••••••••••••••••~•••••••••••-~•••••

RESOLUTION- Gov. George Voinovich
presents a copy or a resolution celebrating the
25th anniversary of legislation that created local
mental heallb boardl to Ronald F. Adkins, center, director rA the Gallia-JacU..-Meigs Board
or Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health
Services, and Barbara F. Woltord, _tbe board' ~

dcpotJ director. nc .... lloud lias t't'oh&gt;td
into lk pi • L u I !" . . prilurJ l'ndin&amp;eatiiJfor•
ceaJ.c
sa wica ill tk trkc . , - ' h e ,.
11111oa
was ~ !l!tril!cof" ~':. I th • I ••, tk Olilo
AssoetatiH A
Ill, Dn:1 Alhllictlo• 11d
Meatalllealtl! Sa vite ••• IPL

Church slates ice cream social
Ali ice cream social will be held
at Trinity Church on Heritage
Weekend, June 10-12.
In addition to ice cream, san(lwiches, cakes, pies, and other irems
wiU be sold for dining-in or carryout between the hours of I I a.m.
and6p.m.
Meanwhile, orders for homemade ice cream are being taken and

may be placed by calling 992-3222,
992-3777 or ~-5480 bcfole J 1. Flavors of ice cream available
are chocolate, vanilla, peach,
lemon, banana, pineapple, strawberry, butter pecan, and bJai ""'''·
The price is $2 .50 a quart. Ice
cream will be availlble for pid:ap
on June 3 between noon and 6 p.m.
or at the social.

PARENTSNAME,_~----------------------------

:
1

1111............

I
I
I

CITY" S1ATE.______________-:--------------CHD.D'S NAME(S) II&lt; A G E - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - ·
\

••••cltlls

TO PERPORM • Bpilrel.,flle ., ·' ' 7 1·....,
- rn.
N_.-.
._, SII rr1pIa•Ill pat w
u6hap ~
• ....
actlotltll let lite tilDe for lk I' a a'
1 • 1 - . -n
7

alld "'11e Plrl,.en."

s.tmoluet~ar -------~~---__.___

IISIIWICE

--····------------·-----~-----·········

111 Seu Ut. Ps•er•y

SEND TO:

TOIL IIDEPIIDEIT
AIEIIS Sllllll

Dally Sentl.nel
P.O. Box 729 • Ponieroy, Ohio 45769
. BABY SENTINEL
Pictures Mut Be I• By May 27, 1993

81CE 1161

Pictures can be picked up after J\lne 7th.

... c01m

-

•.as·
•

·

'

Delayn.added to opening
acts for Cartwright concert
Country music's new up-'
caning female country .mst.
Sheela Dela}11 ~ l.)e 'V"illl
,for Lionel cartwrigllt 011 May
29, 1993 at 7:10 p.m. :at die
Mason County Failp:amds.
Backed by,the group, Sedma,
directly from Nltllbville. Shed•
plans 10 put her CDeiiY ·llll'ival
perfonnance ido acta Ill die tone for lbc Co11awiJt1 ow-ina 8CII, ."'dletymea" and "The
Pia
•
Cia was bam and niiCd in
Lanpvi1le. ObiO, lnd ... liwce

---··awy
~e-Jocared 10

-lUIIIUSSII

Nltllbville. 10 . --

~

**

die 5f ) ......
I al4iffl
dt+ J * llerc:W-1'..
As •lllill. llie is ul autedillpiitlao..a•a,..•willl
I aiD, •ire

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f!
...,.. ....... .
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till' 5. . . . ....., . . . . .
I*' he,_. I I
b a
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aniiL Her pro'- a, 96FM ... IIa•*-*h
Clyde BlacD, wiU be .,., in
. . . ae WGL
from NltllbYille ro - 1111' pc~r­ USS96il'
zan 7
fOI'IIIIIICe. .. well .. . . . . . . il
lire. .,
.... , . .. . . p
' ...
llll!lllfl, Laulll 'llldllc. DUIIIIIOUI bootinl 4 ( CI Sll:lre HP
5 _. Jtict
from lbo Nalhville area.
a -'
Sheela's 1'0011 l!ld betkI
...
caawa·a,
- •.
potlld . . " the ..... 011111 u..t
llliDiirl, lrUekaa and ..,...,... PI
• , , I)
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Lj
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: ... - dlmulb bclr!IIUiic, Sl !aD*JL

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will . . 10 -

patllil: a{

•
I

-..- · ·
_.

Issue II will still pay about
$500,000 leaving $118,927.85 to
be paid by local funds.
According to a highway depart·
ment spokesman, the options are to
rebid the projects or to complete
them in-house. The highway
department plans to contact its
Ohio Public Works teptesentative
to examine its,options, be said.
Contfiwed on page 3 .

RECYCLED BENCH· Provlag that one man's trash li IIIICJth.,
er man's treasure, Paul Baldridge, actinc chief or the Ohio Depart·•
meat or Naturjll Resources' Division of Litter Prevl!ntlow
Recycling, presented Meigs County with a park be•tb ma&lt;ter
entirely or rec:A!Ied plastic - the equivalent or 1,050 plastic
bottles. Here,
drldge displays the new bench. (Sen~l photo
.•
Jim Freeman)

Southern-board names
Caldwell athletic director

JERRY SPRADLifQ ···-···········-·..·-···(*) 112-M•
OFFICE ..................................................... ;............. .

Is Coming
Soon!

plastic milk jugs.
"Not only does the recycled
plastic originate in Ohio, but it was
manufactllted by an Ohio company'
as weU," Baldridge said.
Baldridge presented several
other recycled items to the commis. sion including thtee steel uays and
lunch boxes, paper, post-it notes,
plastic clips and containers for aluminum cans ancj used office paper.
"Recyclin~ is becoming very
~Jar in Ohto," he said. "Look at
labels and increase the demand for
products made with recycled materials," he urged.
~ximarely 30 tesidents and
officials aucndcd the presentation
cetemony.
Following the presentation, the
commission discussed placing the
bench in the yard behind die courthouse along with a plaque.

Meigs Commissioners table Issue II bid

.

..

,

supplies and plastic lumber products.
"Recycle, Ohio! focuses on the
dlrce Rs - reducing, teusing and
recycling, and we are honoring
Meigs County for its·commianent
to dlcse important aspects of the
Recycle, Ohio! program,"
Baldridge said.
Baldridge explained that the
RecyCle, Ohio! program, targeted
at Ohio's public agencies, also
focuses on the imponance of developing new markets for materials
tollected by local recycling pro-

r------....---~---------...;.-----------.

rou

A Muldlliecla Inc. Newspaper

County presented recycled park bench

SANDY IUTCHER ... - ............................,..._ • •-6171

Sa~unts, C,OUnt
When Oualily,
on Oualily care Cleanmg

2 llectlona. 12 -Pagea 25 cont.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, May 27, 1993

*

.

blahln80s.

•

Easter Seal recreation activity

WANTED: At least 3 bed·
roorn house with some
acreage to buy on land
contract or rent In Meigs
Co. Call614·669-3051

Low loaf&amp;htln 60s. Partly
cloudy. Friday, partly cloudy,,

door prize.

BUwnll BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUIUCADOII

At a recent ceremony, Dr. J.
Craig Strafford, president of Holzer
Clinic and Robert E. Daniel, clinic
administrator, honored 34 Holzer
Clinic employees who reached
employment milestones. The luncheon meeting was at the Holiday
Inn.'
Each year Hotztr Clinic honors
those employees who have teached
a five-year plateau in their career.
Honoted this year wete:
25 Years- Nancy Dowell;
20 Years - Roy Kincaid, Carol
McDaniel, Frances Mullins, Juanita

Ohio Lottery

Caldwell besides being named
adlletic director, was hired as head
W':etball coach and head softball
ciJICII 81 Southern High with David
Gaul being ·employed as head football coacb and Michael Winebrenner 11 Jlead,baseball coach •
Assistant coaches hired were
Scou Wickline, basketball; James
A. l.aWtence, softball; and William
Hemler, blsebaD.
Junior bi$11 coaches hired were
Soott Wicklme, football; Michael
Winebrenner . and James A.
lawmiCe, basketball.
Sandra Baer and Romaine Fredericl were named bead cheerleader
IIMsors with Barbara Lawrence to
be die juni~ 1\igh cheerleader advisu.
Oilier supplemental contracts
wete awarded to J0111 Hudak, yearllooi; Kim Phillips, Tide 9 c&lt;impliance officer; Donald Dudding,
DDPF (disadvana,ect and disabled
JiUI1il fund), coordinator with Dennie. Hill as DDPF treasurer; Jan

Hill, Cllapter coordinator, with Hill
tteasUter and Grace Griffin, secretary.

.

.

'

Joyce Thoren, food servtce
supervisor and handicapped coordinator; Daniel Riffle, transportation
superv.isor; Leah Ord, guidance
counselor, 10 day extension; Dan
Smith, vocational bus route; Larry
Smith, special education route;
Thomas Hill, handicapped route.
Aaron Sayre was given . an
extended service contract for 60
days for vocational programs, with
a 10 day extended service program
JEREMY BUCKLEY
for Diane Rice, home economics
VALEDICTORIAN
teacher.
In other action, die hoard
- approved Leah Ord for a
rempotary position of coordinator
for high school scheduling and
EMIS teporting;
- awarded acontmct from the
district to ETSEO (Ed,ucational
· The Eastern High School Class
Television) for $728.10 for lhe dis- of 1993 will receive diplomas in
trict;
combined baccalaureate and com-approved a contraCt for driver mencement exercises on Sunday at
educauon with AAA for $105 per 6:30p.m. iri the school auditorium.
student with the student to pay $55 Rev. Bob Sanders wiU give the
and die school, SSO;
invocation and benediction.
-accerted Brogan-Warner
Jeremy William Buckley, son of
Insurance s proposal for student Bill and Twila Buckley, Lover's
Continued on page 3
Lane, Pomeroy, has been named

K~ERLY NHCHAEL
S~Ltrr ATORIAN

:

Eastern commencement •
services scheduled Sunday~
class valedictorian, and Kimberfy
Anne Michael, daughter of Gai_y;.
and Sharon Michael, Pomeroy
Pike, Pomeroy, has been nameg,
salutatorian. They will addres·~
their classmates and the community
at the graduation ceremony.
.
The top I0 scholars of the senior
class will be named following the
Continued on page 3
•

•

..-----~---Local briefs------....:.;;~

Prisoners transported to ORC

Deputies ot the Meigs County Sherirr s Department uansported '
dltec prisoners to die Orient Reception Center Tuesday.
Transported weie W'tlliam D. Lemasters ll, 26, of Racine. Douglas E. Freeman. 25, o( Pomeroy, and Ronald L. Newland, 26, of
W8sbington Court House.
Lemastm is to begin serving two life sentences, dlrce to-year
SCDII:Dtes and two three-year gun charges for aggravated murder,
robbery and kidnapping.
Freanan was sentenced to 12 months for fDrJery and Newland
received a two-year sentence for gross sexual impOsitio!i.

Man cited in accident
A Pomeroy man was cited early tbii morning foUowing a onevehicle accidellt in Salem Township, the Gallia-Meip Post of lhe
Stale HiabwaY Palrol IqJOrted.
l'emiice 1'&gt;. Conlin, 62, 32709 Hyaell RIDI Road, was cited for
fail'ft to conl!ol after he went off lbo !Old in a curve. Conlin told
aoopus we was eastbound on Stale Route 124 when he fell asleep
and' na off lhe !Old.
_
No injuries wete teportcd. The vehicle sustained heavy disllllinlllanl&amp;e and was towed from lhe aceno.
' .

Anon suspected in blaze~
Anon is suspected ill a blaze which deatrOycd 111 unoccupied
._on Dater Road Sunday.
David Wrllht of Southern Oblo Coal Como.ny reponed the
blaze at lbo ofd Earl MeiCJiiglu residence, which is owned by lhe

~I· Tuelday.

noe~~~ ~.,.~ respo!lded to lbo acene. 'J'brg was

,.

'

An investigation into the blaze is continuing, according to asher.
iffs department teport.

Articles of incorporation filed
Secretary of State Bob Taft le.Jl!&gt;rtcd recentlf that articles of '
incorporation have been filed wtth his office m Columbus by
Michael D. Davenport and Gary E. Grueser for Riverfront I;!arbell
Inc.

Man escapes injury in accident
An 18-year-old Portland man escaped serious injury Monday
afternoon in a one-vehicle accident on State Roure 124 near Great
Bend.
According to a report from Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, Milford Bowens Jr. was eastbound when the right-front
tire blew out on his 1973 Ford pickup auck.
The pickup auck went off the left side or the roadway, sauck an
embankment and flipped over onto its top, the teport stated. Bowens
was helped out of his seatbelt by a passing motorist.
Bowens was cited on a charge of falling to display a license
plate.

·

Van fire investigated
A Pomeroy man 's 1989 Dodge van was destroyed in a blaze
Tuesday evening on Sta'te Route 143.
.
.
Denver Cotterill reported he was southbound when die engine
started sputtering. He pulled off the road near Zion Chun:h Road,
checked the wiring under die hood, restarted die mota and noticed ·
the flickering of flames when be pulled out onto the roadway.
·
The Rutland Fire Departlllent responded to lhe blaze. No injuries
Co•ti•ued 011 pqe l
.
,J

~

�.. "'... .

....'

.-..

Thursday, May 27, 1993

OHIO Weather

ROBERI' L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
Genenl M1111111er

MARGARET LEHEW
COntroller

LEIIEKS OF OPINION are welcome. ·They sbould be less than 300
WO!da. All lenen ue subject to edilina and mwt be signed with name,
lddnu llld telepbooe number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
•boldd be in plOd lUte, ocldl&lt;ssing iss1101, not pmonalities.

In defense of a
younger generation
••••

By JOHN CUNNIFF
APBulnasADilyst
'
;. NEW YORK - Ate Americans between the ages of 25 and 34 insenSilive, UDCbaritable ingrates who aa:ep1 financial and other help from their
but offer lillie in return?
You mi&amp;ht lhink 110 after reviewing results of a univenity study showPig~ memben of lhat ~c group av~ SSOO a year ~ parents. while
thoSe 6S llr older recetve DO net fiilancial suppM from children. .
But if ~ reach that conclusion, you may do so in def1811ce of evillcnc:c sugcsling America's young have given so l!enerously to their
elders lhat they are bowed and burdened by the obligalions. and small
\lllnb for iL
.
. But f111t. the university study. Beginning at age 65, says Martha Hill, a
lelelrdler at the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Research,
'lhe- allefl&amp;e money received each year rrom family members hovers close
,to zerO.
'
'
Bee•\"' of alaclt of histcrical dala, Hill can't say why this is so, but
-she spcculales it might be that parents are reluclant to accept help, not
innting to burden kids and not wishing to give up independence.
~ She llso suggests children might feel public programs provide their
~~~ with whatever help they require. "Or it may be," she suggests,
.:lhat adultchildn:n are selfiSh and just don't want to help their pereniS."
•.• SelfiSh? Wby it is only sensible. Why offer more money to those who
llave already taken rrom you, and without even asking.
· How did they do this?
You sec, these are the folks who gave u~ the great inflation of the
l97Ck and the hormldous budget deficits of the past three decacles, both
of which contributed to parelltal weD-being at the expense of future generAtions.
.
.
· • It is oot youth, which must pay, but parents and other gray-guanl recijlients woo receive. This allowed the Social Security tax rate to rise s1x
limes since 1981 unlil it DOW takes more than $4,000 from the typical
family.
·
• It is oldtz rather than younger people who allowed the national debt to
grow to nearly 70 per=~! of gross domeatic product compared with about
40 pe!UIIt in the fii'St half of the 197Ck.
.
During this lime, you might add, the Pl!litical, social and other
demands of the older Jeneralion also allowed discretionary or private-sector spendins to declme, replacing it with mandatory, or government,

J-en11

.

~.

•• And, DO, while the younger folks got the bill, they weren't uked if it

was OK by them.

The c:onsequences of this profligacy now confront younser generations
in the form of stagnaied growth, reduced productivity (compaml with 30
years ago) hard-ro-win pay raises, slow job growth and great job insecurity. The houses that pan:nts oceiii'Y may have jumped in market value several, limes in the past 25 yem, m ~ because of that generalion's infla.
lion - easy money when you consider it took so little effort.
Still, that doesn't tell the real housing story. In 1967,according to the
Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard, a first-time homebuyer's
cost as a percent of income was 17.3 percent In 1991, it was 31.3 percent.
Toda)"s COliS, taxing problems, employment, productivity and various
other prol}lems which must be paid by the younga generations tan be
ttaced direcdy to whal 10111e miJPII. call a self-indulgent older generation.
The Tax Foundation pins tl down to hard figures: The "typical"
American family -two earners employed full time and two dependent
children - has lost purchasing power every year since 1989, for a fouryear loss of $1,444.
.
lt wasn't the Michigan study's purpose ID dig into such things- its
aim was to study private, intergenerational transfers of time and money but just in case someone sets the wrong idea:
•:. The younger generation has paid iiS dues.

Letters to the editor
...

Setting record straight

J)ear Editor.

.

• I, Betty Mercer, owner of tl!c
Riverview Personal Care Home tn
.West COlumbia, W.Va., would like
IP set the rccllrd straight
· Rumor has it that I 8!11 being
forced to close. This is untrue, the
fllct is I am closina down on my
own free will. In fact, the state
wishes lhat we would retnmn open.
1 have never failed a Slate m11octo·
rill inspection m any othe~ kind. I
have· received letters. gtfls and
plaques of appreciation from nty
~ts and their families.

"

The,rumors being circulated are

vicious, slanderous, scandalous lies .
and defamalion of my character.
People who spread these lies
should be prosecuted. I know who
they are and so do they. If your
gonna leU lies and criticize others,
make sure your own doorstep is
clean fust.
l have nothing 10 hide. !love my
patients and they love me. I chose
10 close for my own ,persOnal reasons only.
Yours truly,
Betty L. Mercer

'

'foday in history
.
, By The Associated Press
· Today isThunday. May 27, the 1471hday of 1993. Thcreare218 days
leflin~y~..
. .
"Today s Hiahlight m History:
On May 27,1937, the newly completed Golden Gate Bridge connecling
San Francisco and Marin County. Calif. was opened to the public.
• On this date:
In 1647, the first recorded American execution of a·!'witch" took
juce in Massachuseus.
·
In 1818, American reformer Amelia Jenks Bloomer, who popularized
lite pnnc:nt that bears her name - "bloomers" - was born in Homer,
~.Y.

• . In 1837, American gunfighter and frontiel'SI)lan Wild Bill Hickok was
born in Troy Grove, Ill.
·
.
• lJi 1933, 60 years ago, Walt Disney's Academy Award-winning animilled shorl"The Three Lillie Pigs" was fust released
·
In 193S, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the Nationlllndustrial
Recovery Act
.
• In 1936, the Cunard liner Queen Mary left England on its maiden voy-

~in 1941, amid rising world tensions, President Fl'llllklin D. RQOICvelt

~!aimed 111

"unlimited national em~ncy:"
··
; lA 1941, the German ba~ship Bismarck sank off France, with a loss

r

condilions

B.Y Tile Auocl•&gt;td Press
O~~~ can expect genera!IY a
dry. w_.~.J?IIIern ~gh Fnday,
'f:th posstbility of widely scattered
~wers or thunderstorms through
{fghrthwest.
.
a temperatures wtll ~ n~
~ormal wath the men;ury cl~bmg
mto the lower. to mtd-70s m ~e
northern counttes ~ aroun~ 80 tn
the ~ar J?Uih· Cloudiness .will keep
lo ntght s low.s 5 to 10 degrees
a00ve normll;lm the northern and
central portto~ of the state and
aroun~ norm~ m ~e south. Lows
tomght will drop 10 near
grees.
· .
f A weak cold front extendang
rom the . St. La~rence Valley
across northern Ohto then west to

MICH.

way over to the liberal side. Clin- · where a single DeiiiOCfl!tiC "nay" rect that petroleum is the mother's
ton's plan yields more taxes, more vote can derail the Clinton pro- milk of Oklahoma. But it is also a
.
. fact that Clinii?"'S Btu tax hilS the
spending, more government and, gram.
The geniuses from Clintonland poor and senaors, and under the
consequently, not much deficit
responded to Boren through a Boren proposal they may gel as
spokesman who said: "While we good a~ deal,,or ~r. . . .
understand his search for alterna·
The ClmtoDOids can t amagme
lives, we know that, in the end, that a~yonc would oppose their
reduclion. It echoes Clinton's oft- Sen. Boren is a good Democrat. splendid plan unless they were seDslated high regard for the.big-tax, who understands the importance of ing out to .vested plutocrats. (Do 83
big-spend European social democ· reducing the deficit" How smart! percent Wlllltcn have to sell out to
racies, now staBgering under the The genius administration says anyone?)
mlliority.
Hey Clintonoidsl It's not oil!
· Bill Clinton, the 43 percent oppressive weaghl of encrusted Boren will put party over principle,
. and over the voters of Oklahoma. (The Btu tax may be the best part
man, is now president. It is said governmenL
Here's what Boren has be,en Sure he will. Senators enjoy say- of the plan.) Othec Democratic senthat if Congress does not pass his
economic program, his presidency saying to the press: "If this pres;. ins. "I am a rubber slamp for a ators have already announced
dent were to ¥et his wish of passing failed president"
against Clintonomics, and unlike
will be broken.
II gets worse. Clinton publicly Boren and Louisiana's J. Bennett
The 83 percent fellow, Sen. this budget, u would be the surest
David Boren, D-Okla., has formula for the destruction of the implied that Boren was a meanie Johnston,.they do not hail from the
announced against the Cllnllin plan Democratic Party ... " And: "Those whose plan, which includes "c:nti- oil patch. Bob Kerrey and Jiin
and come up with an altemalive. whom the gods would destroy tlement caps," would purposefully Exon are from Nebraska. Richard
He belipves that if Clinton prevails sometimes get their fii'St wishes ... short-change 'the elderly and the Sbelby is fiom Alabama.
in Congress. it will be the Demo- if the president gets ibis budget working poor in order to se..Ve bild
Otlters are apparently poised 10
cralic Pany that will be broken.
passed it will not only hurt the people· ''the big oil lobby.''
~I off unle!'s given IIOmC salisfacBoren is right
country, but it will destroy him
True, Boren's plan eliminates bon. These IIICiude &lt;;h•.les Robb,
.
Clinton's Btu energy tax, and Herb Kohl, Russ Femgold, Kent
What's wrong with Clinton's politically."
budget is whal's wrong with.most
Boren is imporlant. He sits on inflicts minimal pain at the upper · Conrad, Sam Nunn, John Breaux,
everything he's touched: It tilts the Senate Finance Committee, levels of Social Security. 11 is cor- Joe Liebef!llan, and the list can go
on, well beyond the seven needed
10 halt Clinton in the Senate~
, What .do they want? Mostly
UOMOP~OBIA
what their voters want:· less taxes,
more spendins cuts, less government, more deficit reduclion. Vot·
ers have come to believe that the
'
government is out of control and
what they are gelling from it is DOt
worth what they are paying for it
Clinton's plan was designed
from the liberal sector. Now we see
the long-simmering revenge of the
unheard. If the moderate
Democrats can turn Clinton around
- they have already made some
headway - they believe they can
save their party from humiliation at
- the polls.
,
How will this battle for the soul
of' the Democratic Pany play out7
If you were an elected olrtcial, who
would you trust with your political
future- the 43 percent man or the
83 percent man?
Ben Wattenberg, .a seDior fel·
low at the Amerkan E•terprlse
Institute, Is autltor ol''TIIe Flnt
UDlvenal Natloa," publlsbed by
The Free Presa and a wrltel' for
~bAR N06AY~
Newspaper Enterprise Assoc:la·
tloa.

. Consider the struggle for the
soul of their party now being
waged between two apparently
similar politicians. Both are
Democrats, relatively young, from
the Southwest, former gt)vernors,
married tO lawyers, attended Yale
and are Rhodes Scblilars. Then: is a
difference: One of them won his
last eleclion with a 43 percent plu·
rality, the oth« with an 83 percent

Ben Wattenberg

.MILITARY

£PEAK OF 00 GAYS

SEE NO GAYS

On the Memorial Days of our .lives
I'm not sure to what I should yC8lll in Vietnam, has believed this men and women who fought. We
attribute th~ growjng feelings of for over 23 years. She is not sure wondered how we would teach our
gratitude and loss I feel' each when this conviclion crystallized children 'to honor these heroes
Memorial Day. Perhaps hitting during the lOIII' of duty sbe remem- without glorifying war, without
middle age, when we 11e1 some of
crealing an unquestioning trust in
the greatest opportunaties of our
leaders who may\.someday mislives, makes us understand what it
spend their lives for a polilical puris to lose it all before you even get
pose, as if they were no more than
slarted. .
bers as "12 hours of death, seven toy soldiers in a game of egos.
,
The rows and rows of while days a week," but there was one ·
This Memorial Day we s1and
gravestones in the nalional ceme- eptsode that stands out in her mem- again at the precipice of a conflict
tery where I visit my friend's grave ory.
, that the majority of American peobother me more each year. Ditto
"I·worted shifrs from 7 p.m. to ple don't understand any better
for the old film clips of men dying 7 a.m., and one night I was talking than we undentood Vietnam. The
on battlefields. So much promise, to this young man who Was really stories of atrocities in Bosniaso little time and such awfulleave- mesaed up," she told me. "He was Herzegovina horrify us. Strategists
talting.
tallting. about growing up in a reli· alternately warn us of wlw isolaMy generalion was the ftrst in gious family where they told him it tionism brought us in the past, of
this country to protest modem w,. was against GOd's will to kill, and the similarities of-Hitler's "fmal
in the numbers and on the scale we then we sent him there to kill. I was solution' • and of the ages-old, hate·
did. We objected on the grounds trying to help him through some of fueled suckhole that was once
that our government was making this, and slarted to ask myself, 'For Yugoslavia. Other commentators
political decisions that were good what purpose is this 18-year-old remind us o( the mistakes we made
for neither the people of Vietnam boy going home a cripple?' You in getting mired in Vietnam withn~r America, that our leaders were
get to where you can't bear it any out understanding its conflicts or
lying to us and squandering the D)ore - all these young men being its people.
hves of our young men. Some blown to birs - and you begin to
We look a~ two prospects, with;
Americans ultimately came 10 the know
there can't be anything worth out knowing the probability of
...
decision that war is almost never lb IS.
Once again, more of our
the answer to disputes either within
I think for yC8lll after the Viet~ either:
own
die
about a reasonably
or between nations.
nam War many of us struggled swift endtotobring
the suffering of others;
My friend Linda lfl!lford, a for- with our dual feelings of hating war or we become
en1angled in another
mer Arm~ nurse who served two itself while being grateful to the

Sarah Overstreet

Ions. l'rmnting period of nationll
immolalion.
Recently, on National Pbblic
Radio, I listened to an impassioned
~ rrom a woman who llad lived
an Yugoslavia. She used the phrase
"I DEMAND" over and over,
insisting that the leaders of the
world and everyone within the
sound of her votce go to Bosnia
and rescue her friends.
Two decades ago, l heard
women whose voices sounded just
like hers use the same verb,
demandinJ that we stop sending
their sons to be maimed and killed
in Vietnam.
I respect what Linda Halford
believes bec:ause she has wallted
the walk before talkin$ the talk.
She supports exhausting every
negoliating and sanctioning ploy
before sending troops: "Except in
a case like Pearl Harbor.where we
have no choice, I just don't believe
that
killing answers any. more
..
lb mg.
Someday, l hope to be as
re110lved. This Memorial Day, I am
stiU tom.
Sarah Overstreet Is a syndicated writer· for Newspaper
Enterprise Assot:latioil.

Reform the reforms?
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
just-unveiled Clinton campaignfinance package appears to be in
deep trouble on Capitol Hill, and
not just because of partisan Republican opposition. As interest groups
read the fine print. core Democratic
conslitucncies have slarted bitterly
complaining about one facet of the
proposal or another.
·
According to a number of Capitol Hill sources, Southern and
Western Dernocralic conservalives,
liberal activists, groups representing minorities and women's organizations have all found something in
the bill they think challenges their
political power. These 'disparate
groups have sent the same message
to the While House and the Democralic leadership: Fix the biiiiO our
liking or we will fight to kill iL The
problem is that many of the fixes
would be completely contradictory.
Southern Democrati,c conserva•
lives, like Rep. Glen Browder, D·
Ala., oppose the provision for limited public funding of congression-

IMansfield Iso- I•

al c8mpaigns fllr those Senate and
House candidates who are willing
to accept spendins limits. These
Democratic members believe their

Robert]. Wagman
opponents will charlie they are try·
ing to "Sieal" t1J1 dollan for their
own ~paigns IIJid that they could
be defeated at the poDs in 1994 on
the issue.
Browder recently brought a pig
to a Capitol Hill news conference
to .make the point that public funding is seen as a "pork" issue by
many vorm and that it will not fly.
The Congreuional Black Caucus is very unhappy lbout the provision of the proposed legislalion
that would limit contribnlions to
individual Cllllpaians from political
aclion comnliaecs. PAC. are D!. .
contributors to black incumbents,
many of whom live in di.stricts
where COI!Ithuenll are too poor to
give much. In 1992, at least six

of2,300 lives.
diC:.~ 1964, independent India's ftrSt prime minister, 1awaharlal Nellru,

black incumbents received more
than b•lf their campaign funds
from PACs. They want to keep
PAC contribulion limiiS at the current SS,OOO.per-campaign l~el.
Liberal morrners have just the
opposite problem. They believe a
number of refCJrmS in the I*~
bill do n.o t go far enough: acy
would like 10 eliminate PAC funding ·entirely, or at least further
lower the limits.
But the liberals, led by 'Reps.
Mike Synar, D-Okla., and Anthony
Beilcnson, D-Cilif., go a lot further. They are unhappy with the
high proposed spending limits for
campaigns ($600,000 for House
races, ap to $1.5 million for Senate
runs) IS well IS various loopholes
that will allow for larfe contribu·
lions of "soft money' directly to
P!llitical pWes.
Finally, women's groups arc
opposed to the provision in the new
lews, that would prohibit
"bundlins,' • the praclice of an
organization collecting donations
from many indlvidulls and fOr·
Wllldinjl them in a sinaJc check to a
campaign. A number of women's

omnlzationJ-fintandforemost

oppose the biD.
The legislalion has also received
another jolt The Wbire House says
that it plans on partially financina
House and Senate campaigns by
increasing the checkoff on tax
returns from the current Sl to $S.
But the bulk of the money - 10111t
$105 m~~ in ftscal ~ '94, and
$800 mdhon over five yeirs will ~.e. rrom eliminating the tax
deducubihty of.lobbyins expenses.
That was a lrcy 10 the ~·
that it be "revenue neutral thai
is, not take any money rnim the
general tax revenue fund It is
being highly touted IS su¢h. The
only problem is 'that the Clinton
budget already assumes the lobbying deduclion will be eliminated
and has alreldy ICCOunted for ~
money.
The House Ways and M~ns
Committee, in its tax "reeoncilialion" bill, has already accounted
for the $800 million. That means
in the wordJ of a Ways and Meani
slaffer, "It's sone, spent" So if
the campaign-fundlnJ bill Is to
pass, the admln!Jtration will have
to come up with IIIOther $800 million If It wlahel to narolally fund
conc
'onal campaipls.
r-.
. on~ will not begin debatang campaacn reform unlil 1uly.
However, 11 things now ltand,
prospects do not look good for
much of the Clinton plan unless
major compromises are worked
OUt

E"IL Y's List - apeclalize in
bundling efforts; and tile new law
could threaten to put them out of
business.
The women•s organizations led by Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D. Conn., herlclf a former EMILY's
ProTen .Years ago: A federal ~ jury indicted former Environmental List director - aay they will proRobert Wapta• 11 a~Jl!C~Icat· · ·
Lav~:~~N~Y of~icial R11a M. Lavelle fllr contempt of Congress. pole an amendment to 'he bill
eel
writer for Newlpaper E•terseparate tn'al af ac:qmtted of the conrempc chlqe, but was convicted In a · specifically exempting the orpni·
prile
Ateoelatloll.
..
o Jler1urv.
zatiQII. If It Is defeated,
they will
. "
.'
'

$l i~ 1977, the City of New York fined "h11111111 fly" Oecqe H. WiDig
he;d scal:Cthpedanny for each of the 110 IIIOries of the World 'trade Center
. e y before.
. In l985 • m Be!jing, represenlalives of Britain and China exchlnsed
~:':J'~M~.raufication oplhe pact returning Hong Kong to Chinese

'

'

.

'

'''
•lcotumbuslao• I

:CC:ide

the northern plains will sag· south

Showers and thunderstorms
were forecast for south Texas and
and bec?me nearly stationary. The parts of Kansas and Nebraska, as
front wall meander slowly north well as Iowa and southern Wisconan_d south ac:ross the I10f!hem two· sin by this evening. Isolated thunthirds of Oh10 through Fnday.
de!liiOrms also were forecast for the
. The reconl-high_lemperature for . Rockies.
this .date at the Columbus weather
Clear, warm weather was foresta~ton was 94 degrees in 1911 cast across the South and the midwhale t.he record low was 34 Atlantic states.
degrees m 1961.
.
Southern California looked for·
Sunset tonight will be at 8:50 ward to .sunny skies, but clouds
p.m. Sunrise Friday at 6:07 a.m. were expected to move into northand sunset will be at8:51 p.m.
em Califomia. Showers and !hunArouDd the natkia
dentorms were expected to penist
Scattered showers stretched over the Pacific Northwest.
from the northern Great Lakes,
Summer showen were scattered
across the nonhem Plains and into over much of the nation Wednestile Rockies early today. Rain also day. Heavy rain;. up 10 3 inches in
feU alons the Gulf CoasL
' ·

across !he Ohio's northern counties

Continued from page 1
were reported.

.Theft, vandalism reported
S'-

' R8/n
T._

FI!Hrl..

Swmy

~.c~

Debbie Weber, pincipal at Riverview Elemenlary School near
Reedsville, reported Monday that flagpole hooks and two letters off
the building wen stolen over the weekend.
Robin Rife of Painter Ridge Road near Salem Cenler reported
Sunday that someone spray 'painted the side of a house owned by
Southern O!tio Coli Caltpany.
·
It was reported Monday that two windows were shot with BBs
over the weekend. Residents are requested to be alert and report
anyone they see with BB guns near the school.

c~

0163Accu--...... lnc.

_,_,..,;-.;...___ Weather----South-Central Ohio
Saturday through Moaday:
partly cloudy . Low
Fair on Saturday. Lows in the
near 60. Friday, partly cloudy. 50s. Highs in the 70s. Chance of
High in the low 80s.
·
showers and thunderst&lt;ltms Sunday
and Mon~ay. Lows in the 50s.
Extended forecast:
Highs mostly in the 70s.
To~ight,

Deer-vehicle accidentreported
A van belongins to the American Red Cross received moderale
damage after collidins with a deer on Slale Route 7 near Hobson
Wednesday a\:ound 8 p.m.
. .
• , ··
~g to a feP!&gt;r1 from the Me1gs County Sheriffs Depart.
men~ Tamothy MulnetX slhlclc a deer that ran into the path ot the
1989 Dod~ van he was driving. The deer had to be destroyed.

--Area·deaths - Evelyn Gilmore

Linna Sayre

Evelyn E. Gilmore, 69, of LinLinna v. Sayre, 98, of New
coin Heights, Pomeroy, died Haven, died Thesday, May 25,
Wednesday. May 26, 1993, at Vet- 1993, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
erans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy.
She was a housewife and a
She was taken to the hospital at member of the New Haven United
8:43 p.m. by the Pomeroy Emer- Methodist Church and the
gency Squad.
Rhododendron Farm's Women
Born on Oct. 25, 1923 in Meigs Club.
Co,unty, she was the daughter of
BornAugust5,1894 in Hartford,
the late Albert Mayer and Rosa she was ·the daughter of the late J.
Scholl. She was a housewife and Robert Zerkle and Melinda MeAvon represenlativc for 32 yC8lll, a Mill' Zerld Precedi ·
member of Trinity Church, Friendm
e.
118 her in
death were her husband; Olson 0.
Iy Circle of Trinity, and the Meigs Sayre; one son, Phillip Henry
County S~nior Citizens.
s
She is survived by her husband, .: , : ~ brothers and three sisEiza Gilmore, Pomeroy; four sons
Surviving are four daughrm,
and daughter8-in-law, Joe and Gemldine McCov, Winifred HiD
Linda Gilmore of Walwonh. Wise.,
&lt;
Rick and Debbie Gilmore of and Agnes Meredith, all of ColumReedsville, Roger and Mary bus, Ohio and Maa:iorie Swigert,
Gilmore of Pomeroy • and Mike and Lehigh Acres, Florida; three sons,
De b1· 0 'I
Ben Sayre
Dale Sayre,
t more o f Rut 1and; eight Ohio
an4andDanny
Savre,Hillard,
New
grandchildren, and four sisters, Hava~; fifteen grandchlleken and
Leota Norris of Akron; Martha ten great·"':'"""hildren. "
Anderson of Pomeroy, Louise
6'"'Morris of Phoenix, Ariz.; and
Seivices wi!l be at 3 p.m.,
Kat!uyn •Spencer of Anna Marla, Frid~y. N!ay 28 at the Foglesong
Fla.
. Funeral Home with the Rev. Eldon
· Besides her parents, she was Shingleton''offlcialing. Burial will
preceded in death by two sisters, .foUow at·the Graham Cemerery.
Frances Hudson and Freda Cole,
Friends•)nay call on Friday, May
and a brother, Charles Lesar.
28 from I to 3 p.m. at the funeral
Funeral services will be held home.
Saturday at I p.m. at Trinity
In lieu of llowers, family reChurch. The Rev. Roland Wildman quests that conlributions be made
will officiate and burial will be in to the ' New Haven United
Beech Grove. Cemetery. Friends MethodistChurch.
may call at the E~ing Funeral • WiUia~ Lipscomb
Home, Pomeroy, Fnday from 2 to
William Price Lipscomb, 22,
4 and 7 10 9 p.m., or atd!e church Durbin, W.Va., formerly of Mason
~awrday fo~ one hour pnor to the County, W.Va., died Tuesday, May
tune of servtces.
25. 1993 as a result of a gun acctdent at home.
Born Feb. 2, 1971, he was the
son of Robert P. and Elsie M. LipContinued from page I
scomb, also of Durbin, W.Va. He
accident insurance next year was a graduate of PocahonlaS High
through Trust Life Insurance Co.;
School anj:l was employed at the
-approved purchasing janitori- Cass Scenic Railroad and also at
al supplies from Hutchinson of the Snowshoe Sid RCSCJrt.
Ripley, W.Va.
· Besides, his parents, he is sur-approved high school gradua- vived by a daughter, Alshia
tion diploma for Boyd Bailey.
LeeAnn, and ~o brothers, Robert
Attending the meeting were P. ppscom,b and Daniel Lipscomb,
Treasurer Hill and board members, also of DUrbin, W.Va.; two broth·
Sue Grueser, Joseph Thorell. Scon ers and sisters-in-law, Charles and
Wolfe, Tom Roseberry, and Denny Faye Pennington, Middleport, and
Evans.
Larry and Sandy Pennington, Hen.
driclcs, W.Va.; a sister and brotherBible school set
in-law, E. Louise and Wayne R.
Vacation Bible School will be · Staats, ·Middleport; and many
held at the ·Racine United nieccsandnephews.
Melhodist Church Tuesday through
Services' will be Friilay at 2 p.m.
June 4 from 9-11 a.m. daily. All at Wall;~ce' and Wallace Funeral
children are welcoine
· Home an Green Banks, W.Va.
_;______· __;___, Burial will be at the cemetery on
r
Back Mounlain Road.
·

Southern ...

The Daily Sentinel.

EMS responds
to eight calls

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Publiahed every

afternoon, Monday

throuah Friday, 111 Court St., Pom.eioy,

Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiahina
CQmpanyiMultlmedia Joe., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. S.rond c1...
po1tqe paid a&amp; Pomeroy, Ohio.·

Member: The Aaaoctat.ed Preas, ancl &amp;he
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Daily Sentinel em a three, lis ar 12
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No suMcrlptiona by· mail permitted in
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Pa91 !

~"

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded t6 eight calls for assislance overnight. Units responding
were:
WEDNESDAY-8:50a.m.
Rutland lo Hysell Run Road for
Mildred Hysell Who WBI transport·
ed to Holzer ,Medical Center; 9:18
a.m. Rutland transported Margaret
Parsons to HMC; 3:43 p.m.
Pomeroy to Lakewood Road fo~
Anthony Perry who was transport·
ed to HMC; 4:SS p.m. Pomeroy to
Pomeroy Nw:s~·
and .Rehabilita·
tion Cenlllr fat
Hoffman wbo
was ~ Ill e1erana Memorial Hospital; 7:30 p.m. Rutland to
Dexter koad for Wayne Cleland
who refused treatmut; 8:43 p.m.
Pomeroy to Lincoln Heights for
EV~:lyn Gilmore woo was transport·
edto VMH;
.
THURSDAY- 12:02 a.m.
Syracuse to HanlOn Holter Road .
for Brlaany Melday who was transponed 10 VMH; 3:29 a.m. Pomeroy .
to Pomeroy Police Department for
Ladonna Mintz who WIS transport·
edtoVMH.

.•

.,

two hou!ll caused flooding in New
Orleans, ~here it sliD WIS rainina
eariy today.
The high temperature for tho
Lower 48 states 011 Wcmesday was
110 degrees at Coolidge Ariz ·
Highs today were f~·to be :
in the 50s and 60s in the northem .
Great Lakes and northern New :
England, and in the 7Ck throughou('
southern New England Ptnnsyln- ·
nia, the southern Greai Lakes and
much of the WesL
Highs in the 8Ck were forecast :
elsewhere, with parts of Kansas •
Texas and the Southwest reachini :
the 90s. Hishs in southwest Ari· .
zona could again rise over 100 ·
·
·

..-....;.·--Local briefs....--..., 28fined in Meigs Court

W. VA.

,

Deputies probe accident
Minor daniage was reponed following a two-vehicle &amp;ccident on
the Big Wbeel parking lot Wednesday around 8:10p.m.
According a to. sheriffs department repon, Jeffrey Ohlint~er,
Pomeroy, was parking a 1979 Chevrolet and struck a parked vehicle
owned by Bonnie Gilbert, New Hluren, W.Va.
Gilbert's vehicle susrained !i§ht to moderate damage while no
damage was reported 10 Ohlinger s velticle.

.

.

-----Meigs announcements--..,..-Revival slated
Revival .. ML OliVl: Community Church will be 1une 2-6 at 7
p.m. nightly with David Crowell,
Ravenna, Mich., evangelist P!!Stor
Lawrence Bush invites the public.

"' Keller
lions contact Rosemary
348S6 SR 7, Pomeroy, 45769, 0 ;
call985-4434.

· Garden club to meet
Rutland Garden Club ·wiU meet
Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the home
Baby sllower P.iaDDed
of Kathy Da110n in Harrisonville.
A baby shower will be given roc
, Barbecue planned
Debbie Haptonstall on 1une 6 at 3
The Chester Volunteer Fire
p.m. The shower will be held at the ~tment will hold a chicken
Trinity ~gational Church and ,
ue Memorial Day .(Monday)
is
being
g1ven
by
the
Trinity
.
be"1'nn1'ng
atll am
Church Choir..,
.
"
. · · There w'tll
..
..
also be bar-becue spare ribs and
homemade ice cream. A parade
Special services
will begin at 1 p.m. at Chester EleSpecial services will be held at menwy .and end at Chester Cemethe Red Brush Church of Christ, tery.
Bashan Road, Saturday at 7 p.m..
and Sunday at 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Spencer reunion
Denver Hill of Foster, W. Va. will
. The 62nd annlial Spencer family
be the speaker and the public is reunion will he Sunday at noon at
invited to attend.
the home of Harry Spencer,
Basban. All family 8J!d friends are
Card shower planned
invited.
A card shower will be held for
Preaching and singing
Mill. Mildred Hauber who will celFaith Full Gospel Church, Long
ebrate a birthday Saturday. Mrs. Bouom, will have prea.ching and
Hauber is bedfast. Cards may be singing, Friday at 7 p.m. with
sent to her at P.O. Box 7, Long David Dailey and the Dailey,FamiBo110m, Ohio 45743.
· ly as well as other local singers.
Pasw Steve Reed inviles the pubAlum•l banquet set
. lic. FeUowship will follow.
Chester High School alumni and
Lodge to meet
dance June s. not Saturday as statPomeroy
Masonic Lodge No.
· ed in yesterday's edition of The
Daily Sentinel. Banquet starts 6:30 164, F&amp;AM will meet Wednesday
p.m. with dance following at 8:30 at 7:30p.m. at the Middleport
p.m. with George Hall. For reserva- Masonic Hall.

H OSpl•ta J neWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions -·
None.
.
Wednesday discharges •Richard Finlaw, Pomeroy; Virgil
Carl, Pomeroy; Mildred Hubbard;
Syracuse, and Nell Graves,
Pomeroy.
'
HOLZER
MEDICAL CENTER
May 26 dllcbarle• - Melissa
Thompson, Mrs. William Atwood
and son, Thelma Kinnison, Marie
McCormick, Stephanie Smith,
Ernest Vaninw•cen, Avalon
Roush, Anna Flaker, Sabrina
Pendleton, Opal Hull, freda Cavey,
Hilda Wilson, Iamie Goble, Glenn
Plumrner, Andy Akers, Martha
Chambers, Shawn Barnett, Mrs.
Scott Davis and son, Mrs. Rocke
Ross and son, Guy Dunn, Goldie
Province, Evelyn Stapleton, Carolyn Elltins, Ruth Anderson, Terry
Ottman, Carolyn Snod~t:ass and
James Gilliam:
May ~ blrtbl- Mr. and Mill.
Steve Baird, daughter, Thurman.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark 1ackson,
daughter, Bidwell, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Ohlinger, son, Lons Bot·
tom. Mr. and Mn. Matt Perry, son,
McArthur.
PAl. lAT. IUN.

The commission aceepted a recommendalion by Engineer Robert
Eason to purchase asphalt for June
from Asphalt Materials Inc . of

Marieua.

The commission accepted the
resignation Ernie Sisson from the
l.pcal Revolving Loan Fund COmmittee effective June 1. In addition,
the commission discussed potential
repla~ements to fill the position
vacated by Sisson.
Responding to a resolution
passed Monday night by the Middleport Villafe Council requesling
the county wtthdraw from the Gallia-Meigs Airport Commission ;
Commissioner Manning Roush
commented, "This commissioner
will never commit the escalated
funds that appeared in (The Daily
Sentinel) to·6tiild an airpon in Rodney." .
"We're trying 10 put an industrial park in the Great Bend area,"
Roush said. "We need to look there
for an airport. •
In other action, the commission

·H~MEWARD

w.na...,
A FAA OFF PLACE PG
~l'f. l 'l'll'tl ~~
1'1"•"'11'

BOUND

vA~fn

THE INCREDIBLE JOURN£V

~'lit

-._

.........._,M__

......

,,

Twenty~ight people were fmed
plus costs;
recently in the Meigs County Court
Diana Imboden, Rutland. theft,
of 1udge Patrick O'Brien while two 10 days jail suspended, ·$200 and
other forfeited bond.
cos_ts, one yeA! probalion; Marty,
Fined were: Franklin Y. Polmg, Laitrcville, DUI, $450 pluS.
Howard, Pomeroy, speed, $23 plus COSIS, 30 days jail suspended to 10.
cosiS; Robert G. Swick, Middle- OL suspended for one year, one
port, speed. $20 plus costs; Robert year probation; no OL, S 100 plua
E. Church, WiUiamstown, W.Va., COStS, 30 days jail suspended to 10,
speed, $25 plus costs; Gerald one year probation; failure to conMatthews. Cheshire, seat belt vio- · trol, costs onl:y;
lation, .$25 plus costs; Lois B.
Colin Ma1dens, Racine, conMcEihinny, Middleport, speed, $22 sumption in a motor vehicle, five
plus costs; Christo])l)er R. Taylor, days jail suspended, $40 plus COilS;
Athens, speed, $27 plus costs; two years probation; Rusty
Brian J. Frazier, Cincinnati, speed, Buskirk, Circleville, conaumplion
$30 plus costs;
in a motor vehicle, five days jail
Judy A. Brooks, Albany, speed, suspended, $40 plus costs, 1ix
$23 plus cosiS; Mary E. Taylor, . months probation; Richard . S;
Cincmnati, speed, $20 plus costs; Davis, Bridgeport, W.Va., speed,
Lori F. Carper, Jackson, speed, $22 $23 plus costs; Boyd BrowniiiJr
plus costs; lames Games, Pomeroy, Pomeroy. DUI, SSOO plus COIIIi six
assault, $200 plus costs, six months months jail, OL suspeodcd indefi.
jail suspended to 90 days. two nilely, plates and registrationiO lie
yean probation; Richard E. Romi- delivered to the court; driviiiJ
nos, Stoutsville, speed, $20 plus under suspension, six months jail
costs; Paul D. Pelphrey, Minford, concurrent with DUI charge, $500
speed, $24 plus costs; William F. plus costs; left of center, cos&amp;s
Shipman, Delbarton, W.Va., speed, · only;
.
$24 plus cosiS;
Lisa Dunlap, Parkersbtiri-,:
Kevin R. Wolfe, Racine, speed, W.Va., duty to repOFI escape. Of"
$22 plus cosiS; Freddy E. Cru"'. animal, $200 plus costs, $100 of
Southshore, Ky., speed, $29 plus fine suSPended, 10 days of jail-costs; Craig D. Williams, GaJiipo- pended, !'estitution, two 'years prolis, seat. belt violation, $2S plus bation; Norman Kekic Parma
costs; Pamela lC. Hoffman, hunting in a negligent 'manner:
Pomeroy, failure to yield, $10 plus $250 plus cosrs, all hunling priv~
cosrs; Terry L. Bell, Racine, speed, leges suspended for three years,
$21 plus costs; Timothy Hemphill, must auend a hunter's safety
Daytona Beach, Fla., driving under COU!liC before the end of the ye&amp;l'
the inOuence, $350 plus costs, 10 10 da~ jail su~ded. three y~.
days jail stiSpencled to three, opera· probauon; Ph1hp V. Hovatten
tor's license suspended for 90 days. Middleport. speed, $21 plus coSts '
one year probation, $150 of fine
Forfeiting bonds were Te.ry
and Jail suspended upon comple- Yeauger, Pomeroy, seat belt violiition of residential treatment pro- ~on, $60, and Bryan Ingels, Cov-·
gram school; left of center, S2S mgton, Ky .. speed, $85.
.

E astern

. t'anuedfrom page 1
·
• • • Con
·
school's awards ceremony on Fri- Rae Morrissey, Tracy Ann Murday afternoon.
·
llhy, Nancy Anne Rainbow Nally
Members of the senicr class are }anelle Neutzlin$• Misty Dawn:
WiUiam Ray Adams, Sharon Dale Newell, Stephame Renee Ono
. Baker, William Eugene Baker, Carl James Edward Parker, Eric Edward
Patrick Barringer, Benny Ray P!Jwell, Breit E~gene Price, lenBryant, Charles William Bryant, m.fer Rae Proffm, Kellie Anne·
Jeremy William Buckley, Christo- Rtdenour, Wayne Earl Ritchie
pher Michael Carleton, Jeremy Shawn Paul Rollins, Tony Iones
David Cline, Michael Eric Crites, Rood, Michael Wayne Roush
Charles Alan Cunningham, Jonathan Dean Sanders, Ch'ad
Michelle Renee Donovan, Maranda Andrew Savoy, Mandi Lr.nn
Irene Drake.
Sheets, Sherri Jeannine Smith Lisa
Heather Nicole Farley, Charles Beth Snyder, Vicki Ann wr:mer :
Dallas Francis, Susan Lynn Fran- Bobb' Ji Wh · D 'd
•
cis, Nancy Nichelle Gaddis, Rhon- Wool~ ~~~
lte, avt Wa\'DC
da Lee Gibbs, Deborah Rae Gray,
'
Chad EriC Griffith, Sarah Jane Har·
Procnm slated
·
ris, Lisa Lynn Hoffman, Letitia
Dr.
Mike
Murdock
will
present
Anne Hols1nger, Shane Michael
James, Kel(in Andrew Klein, Brian a program 1une 10 and II at 7 p m
Jay Long, Joseph Daniel Man:inlco, at.the Spirit of Victory Church, ~ ·
Kimberly Anne Michael, Matthew mile south of alternate JWute 10 on
Wayne Michael, Edward Dale Slate Route 10 in Barboursville
W.Va. Everyone is welcome. Cali ·
MiUer, Chastidy Dawn Milhone.
304-736-6345
fer information.
Karen Elizabeth Morris, Carrie

.

Meigs ... ' Continued. from page I

KI\NAUCI\ Df11VE-IN

~

111 Coart Stftet
Pomei'OJ, Ohio
·. ~OT&amp;D TO 'I'D JNTBUSTS or 'I'D IIBIQS.IINJON AREA

CBARLENE HOEFLICH

Accu-Weathtr• forecast for

•Rev·enge of the unheard

'

The Dally Sentinel

Dry weather will continue through Friday ·

Friday, May 28

Pag._2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiQ
Thursday, May 27, 1993

-

.;Commentary
.The Daily Sentinel

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.•

approved of the Meigs County
Human Services Department reentering contracts with the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services
J~ Club and Health Recovery SerVIces.
Present were Commission President Robert Hartenbach, Vice-president Janet Howard, Roush and
Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

PROPANE
Your Bar•ecue Gril~
RV, and Motor Fuel
I

J&amp;T GAS ,SERVICE
Cylindtrs &amp; Service

949·2072
Located 2 Miles last of
Radle H Sl 124

Lottery numbers·

CLEVELAND (AP) _ There
two tickets sold naming all
s1.x numbers drawn in Wednesday
mght's $8 million
Lotto
the Ohio
~ere

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

.

;

7

�- . . ........

The Daily ~~~~~

Sports

----~~---..----~· ------~--~--------------------~----------------------------~----------~~------------·-· ----~P~·~·a~·~4~,~
On FridiJy's agenda,
•

Southern to .f~ce ~rontier in Division IV baseball regionals

B:J scon· WOLFE
~ tiMI Cw sa~nt
. Mick Winebrenner. s Southcm
Tomadoea wlll .mect the Ne!"
MaJamOrU Prollaer Co~~ Fri· . day 11 1:30 p.m. in the Di~ IY
regional tournament at OhiO Un1versity's'I'nutMin Pield.
. SouJhe:m (15-7) was a con~
tn thc Tri-Valle)! Confm;ence·this
~ season. wbile F'roai!U (17-1)
claimed the confmnce atle m the
Pioneer YalleyConf~.
.
Fronner is led bY: lead-off hitter
Cam West, a..360 ~Ita' an~ ex~le~t def.e.n~tve .P ayer.. est ts
quick, utilizing his speed m centerfreld and on the base paths where
he is always a tiu:eat 10 Sleal. ,
Brad Berga ts ~he team s top
pileher and someumes shortS lOp.
He is a ri~ht·handed, two-year letraman wtth a good faslball, good
conttOI and a hard curve. He mixes
his pitches up wen and is a smart
player. When not starting on the
inound,Bergaoftenpilehesinshort
relief.

Besides bem~ a sensatiOn on~
moun~. Berg~ t.s also the team s
best hitter, h11ung near the .400
miUit. . .
.
.
, Fronacr u ~ good f~tball htt·
Ul1J ~· a PQtnt ~t Winebmlncr
was qutck to pom~ out to his
hurlers .. Also, Prontter.has good
punch bitten t!t•t m~ plenty of
contact. They like to hit and, SCOff)
early. '!he ~·after g~g on
base, like 10 get big leads, will use
their speed 10 stea11117011d. but very
seldom try IO.s~ .~-

Berga, but has a beUer breaking
ball and.likel to Jet hillalto 10 f~
a bad ptf!:h l1'f thc plate. Amos 11
allo uolid hitler. .
.
Another West,· Billy West, 11 a
threc-~ear catcher, an all-league
selection ll!d a great all-around
a!hlcto. ~· II a potent home !'On
hiua-, bat -.IIY weN 0-4 agunst
an off-l!leecl ptleher; also a good
f• ball hiuer.
Jeromy Martin, another threeyear11111er•.plays ~base. Martin
ts a good hiua- wtth decent power
B:i1d was also an all-league selec-

malehcs the scoutin1 report very
well.
Winebrenner said, "We may uli·
liJ.e a combination of the two, m
of a slow stuff-fast stuff combina, lion. J~my has a knuckle, a good
curve and some good off speed
motion that has given Frontier
problems in die past"
Southern has one plus in its
favor; it has ~Y besteo one of
thc best high school pitchers in tbe
. ~~-~-~~~ng, but~state in Trimble'&amp;Justin Day. Day
nous ~wu""•· ,.. a team, Y lion. •
.
, .
has signed with Ohio Univenity
se~ hit and run, but have shown , Setltor V.~. Dye IS a ut.l hty and has had several pro scouts
lhtS wtth the lOp of the order, w~ Infielder. whtle V .J. Dve etther wa1eh him play.
the top ~ve b!ltters are all sohd cale.hes or is a dc.signated hitter. ·
Southern is also a good c:ontact
contact hitlen.
. ,
Chns Annattong ts. another two- team, especially in the top of thc
O!tc, key !0 Fronqer s su~ year letterman and IS perhaps lhe order. Billy Jones, a versatile
record IS lheu ~penence. The line- team 'a jJest base stealer. Yet anothup is lac~ wtth several two and er Weat, Jini West, is thc number
time year players.
three pilehcr and left hinder outJ~n Amos. anoJher right-han· field«.
der, ts lhe sec.ond baseman and
Defensively, Frontier has some
:
number two hu~er. A. three-year weaknesses and they wilt make
I
starter, Amos ts not as fast as !DisLikes. Winebrenner says it is
unponant that his team put lhe ball
in play and put it in play early.
'!be 'Veteran memor said, "Practices have gone pretty good.
They've been better than what I
had expected they misht. We've
gnta lot done. The 11:1111 is feeling
confident and maybe even a little
'

nervous.• .

•

cu;her and 1e1m SjMkplos. bepl
up are Eric Jones, Andy Fields, . ,
the 11:1111 1oo1c and plays by cum- Andy Gnleler, Robert Kimes, who -;_
pie. Jooea is ba1ti1Ja .444 with 37 delivered a key pinch-hit sinale " •'
hilS.
aaaiast Tri111blc; Joey Hensler, ·:·
Robert Reiber is battina .417 Jeremy Hill, Casa Clel111d, John u
wilh a 16-38 clip and tame .., wilh Chaney and DIIVid S111idl. Tre111011 .Jl:;
tluee tey RBIJ ill ~~. wit~
Oe1and, a tram member, was criliover Tnmble. Jeremy Northup is caDy injultd lftc:Jdle lint week of r f
hiUif!4 .36411111 is aooc1 for at 1cu1 the IICUOII and has been unable 10 '"
one hit per pnse. while Willlams . play.
.J',
his hlaiilg .362 wilh 111rec singles
Southern is battinc .30 I as a ·' ·•
in the win~ Trimble.
team hammering 174 hits in 578 at · •&lt;\
Kyle Wtckline is bettina .344 hats j,nor to thc Trimble game. The . •&lt;
andiiiCbondown third buc fmlhe Tomadoes have acored 144 runs, .~ ·
Tornadoes, while Jeremy Dill is • avaage of 6.S per giiiiiC, while
hitting .290. Dill was recently allowing only 84 runs, or 4 per ·-,:
named 1 Dislrict 13' AU-Star aad pme. Southern has averqed 8.3 '"'
fust tram Division IV 1111 the all- hits per game and had seven "•
district team. The honors arc for apilllt 1 touah Trimble team.
.;;
seniors only. ·
Wine~ner is assiaed by Mike "'
Rounding out thc Soutllem line· Kloea llld Billl:lensler.
·
·
·
•'

wide variety of the off-speed llllff,

a trait that Winebrenner says

..
~·

':.:-~.

'

'
I

....,
'' "
'
.~

...
..

.

''Tbe team doesn't know exactly
what to QP«t. If we get off 10 a
good start, thcy'll be O.K."
. ·
The last time Southern had gone
10 the regional was in 1988, when
David Ambw'ley bad .his great season. Previoasly, Soulhern went 10
the regional in 1983, with lefty
Kent Wolfe on thc !liOWid and Jay
Reea behind the plate.
Southern will either 11ta1t eilher •
Andy Orueaer or Jeremy Dill on
tho mound, while Ryan Williams
GROOMING HIS BAT- Alldy Graeser,
will be anll•ble for Jelicf. Qrueser · one of Soatllera's key pildlen, hal allo beeB a
is most likely the ~ of ~ staff,
key player at' the plate tbll aeasoa. Graeser ·
·however, versatile Dill offers a
grooms his battinc sklllsla preparatloa for Ws

~··

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Friday's n,.a-rwlld rfllaMI tollna.ot a- .~j
at Oldo Uamralty. Catdlilla II Soat!Hn'• Cau
Clela~. .
.
.

""',•,'

..•...

FAMILY AFF~- F•mDiu oltbe late Bob LoUks coatblue to

ue the field aamed Ia Ills h011or. 1'111111 tor • plctve foQirwltlg a
p•e tltll weell are Jeanie Arm~ (troat left), LouU' great·lfaDd·

dJ!Utbttr, aad Mrs. Elma Louks. Bebiad tllelil are Rudy Armes
(fadier of Jeanie ud lfllldloa .or Bob.Louks) aDd Maty Armes,
daqllter of, Mr. Louu. (Photo by Katllrya Crow)

Louks Field remembered
There has been a Louks baseball
field in Syracose for many years.
In 19S7 the late Bob Louks provided a baseball diamond (where
the trailer pait is now located) fer
area youth.
. He not only provided the ~
along with li,hts, but. maintamed
the field at hi$ own expense. For
many years, every Labor Day a celebration was held with a variety of
events. and he gave silver doUars 10
thcwinnen.
This too, was personally
flnanCed by Mr. Louks, }VhO died
on Nov. 28, 1991.
The Village of Syracuse
acquired a 10-ac~.: tract in the late
1960s which bclong.ed to Dode
King. On Feb. 1, 1973. lhe Syracuse Council passed a resolution
nantinl the smallrr ball rreld Louks
Field in honor of the late Mr.

Louks.

Jane {Louks) Annes, played
on tile field named for their grand·
falhrr.
·
Today Louks' great-grand·
daughter, six-year-old Jennie,
daugi)Jer of Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Armes, Texas Road, Pomeroy, is
playing on lhc field. She is a mem ~
ber of lhc Chester Raiders T·ball

Mary

-...
'
We remember those who ·have paSsed away
and are especially dear to us.
'I

.

~"'

'

Louks' grandsons, Randy and
B.K. Armes, sons of Butch and

61 The Su1111

If you wish. •d•ct- of ... ,....,,.;11111 FREE ,...,..

ILL FLITS.......................•5
ALL .HAIGIIG BASKETS.;.•s
ILL 4• POTS.................. 50'

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.

CLOSED .SUNDAY

7.
8.

992•5776

to

of your smile: fill s us with joy &lt;.~ nd lwughte1.
Though out nf 'ii~hl, you' ll forever be in my heart and mind.
The days may ~oml! and g:o. hu! t~ ti i11L"S ..;...~ ~ h¥~rcd will
alwa)'s rtm:~in .
~b y the light of peace ~hi nl! tm your fai!L' Iiw eternity.
May Gocfs &lt;lnp:el!" (::uilk you and pr•Jtecl ynu thmughnut lim..!' .
You ..-:ere a Iicht in cMJr li t'~ thou bums forcw r in nur ~om:-. .
'
May God 's. gr.tees shine ov t:r you fnr &lt;~II time.

9.
10.
II .
ll.
IJ. You arc in our thooghr~ ;uwJ pra,..cno from mominp tn

HUBBARD$ GREENHOUSE
lyriCIH •

-w

-

Always In our hearts,
.John and Mona Andrews
and Family

·

ni~ht

and from yc~r to year.

14. We ~ nd this message wilh a hwing

ki~!t&lt;

felt' etcrna,l rc~t and

IS. May tht• I..Nd hies!&lt;. you with

ILL DRESS SHOES

25o/o

g;ill.:es and warm.

l(win~t heilrt .

To remember your loved one in this special way, send $10.00 per listing. Picture optional.
Your special tribute will become a permanent memorial record in our paper.

COOiil111111fG lAGS AND
lOWS

Iii~

FUI out the form

OFF

-nt

•Futchlt
-llilok

.Pink
..,_.
o~~~..

HOSPITALITY TABLE'

...........

miP II t • l l f - l l l n All .CIIIlll
'*"•~e••• unau All

CHAPMAN SHOES

........

,....Y'IOUIIniiiOima

.............. Ill • .,

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Date or passing - - - - - - - - - -

Additional Information ·- -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "
Veteran - - - - - - -- - Rank _ _ ___;_..,;..._ _ _ _ Branch of service - - - - - Print your name here-----'------~--------------­
Add r e s s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - Phone number - - - - - - - - - Cit} _ _;__~_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ State - ' - - - - - - - - - Zip - - - - - -

.

L-----------•------•-------------------~
,,

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I

•

••
•~
~

·Name of deceased --'-""--- - - - - -- - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - ' Relalionship to me-----~------'------ Number of selected verse _ __

payable to THE DAILY SENTINEl.. .

j
Il

l•

.Please publish my tribute in the special Memorial Day Sedloit on May 30.

Ma~.e check

!

NATIONAL LEAGUE

l

·--------------------------------------,
Date of birth

-

=r•-~~~......
W

L
JI 14
..... ..........26 20
a.;....,..................22 21

sct.aui&lt; ................23

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FIRING TO FIRST - Atlanta backstop
Damoa Berryblll (rl&amp;ht) prepares lo fire to first
after taglag tle plate lo force oat Cludaaati's
Tim Belcher Ia the fourth lanll1 of Wedaesday

ni1hl's National League game in Ciacinaati,
where the Reds woo 4-0 primarily because of
Belcher's oae-bit shutout. (AP)

.m

,&gt;Ill
...................20 2l ,&gt;144
NowYGdt ............. ll 29, .341

'

II

ll.S

w.....,Divllloo
San'FAnciteo ........ 31 16 .660
Allanla ..................21 20 .s:l4
H....., .................23 21 .523
Loo An..... c......... 23 22 · .lll
CINCINNATI ........ 21 2l .457
S..Diop ..............l9 'rl .413
c....... ................ 14 32 .304

4

6.5
7
9.5
II.S
16.5

OU...,4.Sml'lollcilco2
Ma&gt;IIOOl 6, SL Looll 0
New YOlk 5, Phil l ' ·, 4

s-::'IIIIDO
3 :~ p.m.

.

'CINCNNATI4, A...... 0
Cakndo3.-l
Lao Anplool. s.. DicF 3 ·.

Ohio H.S. baseball

regional schedule

ToaJcbt'o pmn
Florida (Bowen 3·4) at Pitttb1lf&amp;h
(Wilt 5·3). 7::15 p.m.
Adoi1U (!mala &gt;1-4) ot ClNONNATI
0Uio6-Jq 7:35p.m.

- lut

IIICiloD (Black J..O) It Chi.&lt;:IJO
· (lllbbonl4-3~ I :OS p.m.

cu~aao

CINCINNATI (Smiley l..fi) at New •
Yod:(Good•S-4). 7:40p.m.
S.. p-... (8 .... 7-0) a Alluu
(A..,. 4-2), 7:'10 ,..,.
San Dieao (1 . . . 1-3) at St. LoWa '
(Oobamo:Z.l),l::!il ,..,,
l'bilade1pllia (Ri_. 2-2) ot Colooado
(Honry 2-5),9:05 p.m.

-lil-

AMERICAN LEAGUE
)

WLMOI
..................29 16 .64&gt;4
T -.. c........ -. .. 26 20 .56!
3.5
NewVc1111. ..............25 21 .543
4.5
-Mll-...........
--.. -· ~--..24
2Z .522
l.S
19 :14 .+12
9
· - -.... - ......19 26
CUM!LAND ...... .I 9 21

.422
.404

10
II

w-.DI-

Chlaop....... .........:M 19
c.ur.inia.,..... ,....... 23 20
r ... .................... 24 21
- a . , .........n 21
loioale ................... 23 :14
Ooldaod ................. ll :14
- . . .............1'1 :16

Wednad•t•

.»1
.535
.s33

I
1

.429

s.s

.m
.~
M9
.39J

7

IeONI

a• 6. NewYodl: 2

Nll-.a,r_..t

'!.......

...... CIIJ (IIIMI 1·0) • ChiCIJO
&lt;Bj;~. ·: (l;kb. U) .. Oildond

.. 2-l) II N. ,,
1""

Y~.f..='(l•rf
I~ 7:!0p&amp;
. . 6-2) It Sttule
awO.!~IO:CISpa

(Kar4-J), 7:30-

ea.- OlcoOU

'~I p.na. • (SIIurllay) : s.miliMI

wtnna~,

Allllllll•l.-kt

S..l'l-•k (Prldtr)' Tolodo Stort (24-

t) va. Dt"= (22-2). 1:30pm.; Doblin

(22-4) ... Nnuk (15-0), 4:30p.m.

for about a monlh. Anybody got a
Band-Aid?"
"That's thc most amazing lhing
I've ever seen," Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove said. "I've seen
it happen ofl thc glove, but never
off tlie head. At first I ihought it
might have hit his shoulder, but:l
lmew it wouldn't have gone that

AI Wrtsj~tlllll
S..i!iu!1 (Fi;dar): sutnat (16-11) ...
Mi&amp;UMon (16-ll). 1:30 p.m.; Ciacin·
"'ti Moollar (23-4) ¥1. Hurilon (26-1),
4:!()p.m.
. Clwnr,'OIIbip (Saturllay) : Somifiaal
Wlii'M8, pa.

Dt.W.D

t.!l-4=:8! :'4p(21.

2) va. w.. Ouaa• (ll·'n. 1:30 p.m.:
AbGII HaMa (17·1) ... VOonJI'Own,
" ' - (16-1). 4:!0p.m.
(S1tarolay)' SoaWinal

.o....r,-.

- ·"r~ ..... "".

(FIWay)' llodly Ill- (171) "'· E!Wa (2l· 3), 1:!0 p.m.: MantUa
Cmotwaoli (19-4) ... l1llal1o7 (19·6), 4:!0
p.m.
, Clwnpi-lp (Satllldly): Somifiaal
wama~,l

p.m.

tory.

·.

'

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..,.
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&lt;;;.

....
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"He (the umpire) said it was - ·
fair because it hit my glove . It
didn't hit my glove, but even i( it
did, I was. in. foul territory,' l
Canseco s111d. 'I've never had a ·
night like that defensively."
4'
1bc Rangers lOOk a 3.0 lead in
the first on a solo home run by ~
Julio Franco, his fiflh, and a two- '""
run shot by Rafael Palmciro, his ••seventh.
~
Jose Mesa

rar.••

The bizam: home run seemed 10
rattle KeMy Rogers (3-4), who hit
lhe next batter, walked two more 10
load thc bases and yielded a tworun sinpe by Felix Fennin that put
lhe Indians ahead for good, 4-3.
"I hadn't seen that before,"
Rogen said. "lbcre's not much I
can say, It's just a bad break. I
make mistakes myself, so how can
I
to him when he

=

(See IJ"'UIIAI'Ii!i

Acad&lt;my (17-1), 4:30p.m.
. Chompioaa!Up (S&amp;turday): Sanilinal
Wlmal. J p.m.
AI Lhfta a.. h
s.muona~a (Prldtr):

r .......,. Ouep

(16-9) v1. Co!dwa"' Q&gt;l-4). I '!Op.m.;
WYitfcnd (17-l) .._National Trail (16-2),

. ,lop.m.

. Champilwlahip (~aturday): S.ru&amp;a.l
......... I p.m.
.
AIIDIIallora Sh•llor Park

\

Scmirmal• (Friday): CHILUCO'fHE

.UNIOTO (19 · 1) VI, hmutown
Oreeneview (14-3), 1:30 p.m.;
CROOKSVILLE (17-6) va. CiacWiiti ln·
dian Hill (22-6). 4,30 pm. '
Chamr,·oruhip (Suurday): Stmitiaal
wimen, p.m.

Division IV
AIA1WI.ake

Scmilina!J (friol1y)' Flitport Rubor
(2l·3) VI. McDonald (19·2). 1:30 p.m.;
Cradine (11· 9) VI, Sycarnon Mofatwt
(20-2). 4,30 pm. .
Ch.,...on11Up (Sam,..r): Sanilin•l
- ... I p.m.

9

1
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I .

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9
&lt;

3
I

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At Flndlar Mllllcrial Field

. Semifinal• (Frid1y) : Convoy
CRstview (1'·6) VI. Edaerton (15·-4),
1,30 p.m.; Ml11or City (16-6) va. CoryRaW101t(l4-1),4:30p•.
. Chamr,·onlhi.p (Stturdly): Semifinll

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

AI A - Tr-ol'ltkl
SCOiiroaala (Friday) ' RACINE
sotrnii!RN (15-7)"' Now Matamona

PJODtior (17•1). 1:!0 ~.m.; PRAN1WN
FURNACE GREEN (15·4) va. Minaa
- ( 1 9·5),4:30p.m,
&lt;s-...,..,,, s.,ifinll

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

-m'·

AI
M 1
- Catholic
s.m;t;nala (fd4ay),
(15-9) YL a.dnnati c.....,. Day (17-S),
1'30 p.at; T;pp City Bethel (22-4) va.
MiddlotownPioiwick (IO.IS). 4:!0pm.
anlbip (Saturday): Semitintl

;!:=ul&lt;

.....
'

'.
,,.''

.o.-r,·p.m.

'

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Wlllftal,

Clwnr,'oouhlp (Saturot.y) : s..w..al

..u.... , ....

·,..;

Cleveland scored three more
runs in the sixth, getting an RBI
single b~rrmin, an RBI triple bx
Clrlos
ga and an RBI double
by Alben BeUc, who has driven iri
a league.lcadiDB 43 runs.
Baerga's triple sailed into the
right field comer over Canseco,
who thought it landed in foul terri-

*Comfort/Convenience Group
*UghtGroup
Elec. R• Wladow Defroster
Decklld Lllg1age Rack
Elec.AM/FM Stereo Cass.
7 Spokt At.lmn Wheels
2.3L HSC 14 Entlne
Aut011atlc Transaxle
Clearcoat Paint
*Air Condition ·.

*
**
*
*
*
*

\

STOCK#30408

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS

_J l2(802.00
.YOUR PRICE ONLY
'

$9,651.10*
'REBATE INClUDED, TA~. Tm.E AND FEE$ El!TRA

••

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: •,

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Todai:'sl.
Mll••U• on• t-2) at Toronto

JlrldaJ'~ .....
au.,. (lo!oColldU2-4) .. -

u-..

(20.4) ...
(12-15). 2 p.m.; ....
Q&gt;l-4) ... A---Piidl (21 ·5~
4

~~~tl.

.....

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makes one?''

said. "I was twisting like this. It
grazed my glove, hil me in the head
and bounced over. rn be on ESPN

-.lpm.

=PMa.::-r 3

(C'

SenOfinala (friday):

•

~boo

Alo.wl•
llntillnak il'dday): c - (16-12)
.,., ~ t...b awd (24-4). t:SO p.m.;
MuiOft .,.,., V•U•r (14·5) vs.
POITSM011111 (IJ.'). 4:!0 P""
o...._.up (Sa-y): s..;r,..;

~OIMNII
7,T-6

Jal.._.

4:30p.m.
, Clwnpioou!Up (Saturot.y) : SeeUfiaal

Alo.- Cllf Pert

......., CTomlin 2-4). as p.m.

(I. Wla4-2). s~
·t$

.

..,..,., I p.m. -

Houtton (Swindell 5.-4$) u Florida
(AQuino 2-2). 7:35p.m.
. l.ol Aft&amp;elel (Aittc:lo 2·3) ll PiUI·

~ 1-J), 1:1:

D!olllolll

H~uttan

(Cu1illo 1-2). 3~p.m.

8 71

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ll.p.na!
Hmifinal plilinp fc.- thCI boyJ Illite bu&amp;blll UJWnamlnb:
, loJ , . _ Cllf Parlt
' Semillnala (fridty): Aatbant (17-4)
... Montor (22-3), 1:!0 pa: O......,d
StfFitNI (24-3) w. SaanpYIIIa (19-6),

(llnohok &gt;4-.1), I :CIS pa.

T-

Slllrday's pme
J'lhoenU It

I

MaeUCil (Handia 1· 1) ,,

Phoenix at Seattle, 9 p.m.

:,;,.
.....
. "'

'"

SLIUbenYille CatboUc Centnl (21· 2) vt.

Weclnadlly's.IICore

Frlday•aaame

,.,

I p.m.
At Z...tllle ~I Sladlllftl
S..WDU!J (fd4ay): Utica (24-3) "'·
Wut Muallinaum (11·7}, 1:30 p.m.:

- • NBA playoffs *S..alel03,1'11oaols99.nli•ti0d 1-1

·

It was Matrti111~z·s fourth home
run of the ~~-.

.. ...

WDIMII,

Ballimara (V•'·""'· 1-4) It California (Valan 2-3~ IO:CISrm.
Oeu.it (Moaro 3-1 at Soaalo (Fl.,.
ins o.4). 10:3S p.m.

New Yod.: atOUcaao. 3:30p.m.

Weclnadlly'sscores

FrldaJ'IIIIDU

'

fence.

... !:.

~. :;

• . ~mapjouhip (SatutdaJ): Sflllifinal

(Woldl4-3). ,.,,....

l.S
I
I

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (kP) - One
lhing you can count on from Jose
Canseco: He's never boring.
"I've had it all happen 10 me
now," Canseco said Wednesday
night after Carlos Manincz' s fly
ball bounced off his head and over
lhe fence for a home run, helping
the Cleveland Indians beat the
Texas RangciS 7-6.
The Indians trailed 3-1 when
Martinez led off the fourth inning
wilh a fly balliO the warning track
in right
C111seco chased it dowp but
turned his head 10 loolc for the wall
just as lhe ball arrived. The ball
glanced off his jlove, ricocheted
off his head an landed over the

.....

•

a - &lt;Com-

&lt;-

.619
.56:1
.512

Colorado (Nied 3-6) at

indecent.
Bowden held a clubhouse meeting that went much shoner than
anticipated. About two minules
after it started, he walked out with
a stern look on his face and a "no
comment" issued lhrough the publicit~ department
According to several players,
Bowden gave his cxplanalion ror
lhe rtring, admitted wrong O!llY in
lhe way he rtred Perez - by phone
-and said it was in the best interest of the 11:1111 •
He then opened lhe floor 10 discussion, and got only stares.
' ' I guess nobody had anything
to say," said shortstop Barry
Larkin. the team's acknowledll:ed

CLEVELAND (M. Youaa 0·3) II
(8"*" 3-l~ I 'OSf.m.
twns en~
·
s.3 " Mll•a•kce (RidmlS. I:M p.m.
. Tonmto ealpa 6-l) al Oakland

01

I'd.

FlociAI&lt;S.~~

highest level of cmbarrassivity,"
pileher Jose Rijo said.
And !hat ~ment was before
the latest round of off-rreld ocldilies
Wednesday: general manager Jim
Bowden got snubbed by the ·players; owner Mlqe Schott got caught
in the act of skiniriJ! her suspension; and die team sun was rtnding
. it hard to get beyond its week of
woe.
No wonder. The goofiness just
doesn't seem 10 end.
It started again Wednesday
when Bowden, the rookie OM
being castigated for firin1 local
hero Tony Perez, decided 10 make
peace with his unhappy players.
This came one day afler dley called
.
. JUIII
d

.r ... (1'nlli t-0) a
5-4), 7:3l p.aiL

• Baseball • -

T-

•

With Fondest Memories
111 CourtSL
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

AVAILABLE IN:
•Whtte
.....

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)- The vilified general manager tries 10 make
peace, and gets lhe silent treatmeilt
from his players.
·
The supposedly exiled owner
lOsses a note iniO lhe dugout during
lhe game, asking her new manager
fora win.
'
And the players take the field
once again with lhe number of their
beloved Conner manager on their
unifonns, a show of contempt for
lhe front office.
Just another routine day for
Cincinnati's Ridiculous Reds, thc
baseball team that needs new
words to describe its daily adventures iniO lhe absurd.
' 'W ' defi .

:

I

-~

Martinez's unusual home run
helps
Indians
top
Rangers
7-6
Bowden's peaceiJlaking mission
.with Reds unqualified failure

:

below and mtdl to:

THE DAILY SENTINEL

DIUSIIOU ..
-------

By JOE KAY
my sabbatical, I might keep the the Reds loaded the bases an inning
CINCINNATI (AP) - Davey lineup card."
later on singles by Belcher and
Johnson didn't keep a ball from his
He could keep one unusual Bobby Kelly and a bunt 'single by
first win as the Cincinnati Reds memen10 - the note !hat Schott Bip Robem that no one fielded.
After Barry Larkin forced
manager. He might want 10 keep tossed into thc dugout during the
11\e note he got from his ·new boss game, skirting her suspension for Belcher at home, Kevin Milehell
during thc game.
using racial slurs.
.
hit a potential inl1ing-cnding dou·
Johnson made suspended owner
In the middle of the fourtll ble-play groundc'Z 10 shoostop Jeff
Marge Schott~ Wednesday by inning, Schott stood up from her Blauser. Second baseman Mark
delivering his fust win since seat behind the diJIOUI, leaned over Lemke had to hurry his relay
replacing Tony Perez. Cincinnati's and lossed a folded piccc of paper throw, and it wound up bouncing
4.0 viciOry over. Atlanta on a one- 10 the bat boy, wbo took it 10 John· away from first baseman Sid
hitter by Tim Belcher provided a son. He reid it, folded it again and Bream, letting two runs score.
light moment in an otherwise put it in his back pocket.
" I don't know how I missed
wacky and woeful wedc.
Schott wouldn't talk about it as it," Bream said. "It slayed down.
"Something like lhis shows the · she left the bllllpark, saying only, It should have been an easy play. It
reason we're called professionals." ''No comment." But Johnson ron· was a big play."
said Belcher (2-4), who allowed rmned he got a note from ller.
Sabo had an RBI infield single
just a first-inning double by Deion
"She wanted me 10 win this one in the sixth, and Belcher took it
Sanders. "We should be able 10 put for her,'' 1oh11$011 said. "I hope we from there.
stuff behind us.
win a lot more for her."
"It was a rocking chair managThey will if they get pitching ing job,'' Johnson said of the Reds'
"But there are some guys who
have heavy hearts ir, here. Maybe a like they did Wednesday from .second win in nine gamei.
Tbe Braves had one mystery
few games like tllis will help as Belcher, who sttuck out a seasonturn the page, but it's an awfully , high 10, walked . two and hit after the game: third baseman
heavy page."
Sanders in the back. It•was appro- "!eery Pendleton's allrupt departure
It was an awfully big lift for priatc that Sanders had the only hit tn the seventh.
Pcndle10n s10nned off the field
Johnson, who's held two team - his double made him 10 for 20
after
reliever-Marvin Freeman
meetings wilhin 24 hours 10 ask his lifetime against Bclcher.
ptayen to move beyond their bit"He hit a pretty good pitch, threw a rarst-pitch strike 10 Belcher
terness over Pacz's fuing.
right on the. knacldes,'' Belcher in the sevenlh. Belcher had drilled
Afterwards, the~.: was no game said. "He hits me like he knows Sanden in the back in the lOp of
the inning,
'ball or other commemorative item what's conling."
Bill Pccota replaced Pendlelon,
on his desk &amp;om his rarst viciOry in
Belcher's split-finger fastball
tJuec yean - his last was as man· kept the rest of them guessing, and who wouldn't lalk about it after the
agerofthe New YO!kMcts. .
a couple of poor defensive plays in game . Neither would manager
Bobbrcox.
·
"I'm not a big one on memen- lhe'thlfd left the Bmves losers.
''I d rather leave that alone right
10s and lhe:::fs like !hat. There's 100
Chris SabO homered off Greg
much ah ," he said. "But after Maddux (4-4) in tbe second, and now,". cox 51\id.

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Belcher's one-hitter pushes
Reds to 4-0 win over Braves

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h appines.~ .

SUPER ALUMNI DAYS

..,;j·-·

I

1c&lt;omp11ny your trl"'-k·
I. We hold you in our lhoughl:o. omd mcmCJric!&lt;. forever.
l . May Gud 'rou.lle you in His anns. now and fun:~&lt;'r.
3. Furcvcr n1isS\.'tl. never rtlf'J!CiflCn . Mt~y God hold )OU in th~
~hn or His hoand.
:t. Thank you fnr the wonderful day!~ w~ shar-:d together. My
prayers will he wilh ynu un11l we mccl again.
5. The day10 we "hiitcd were swcc1 . llong 10 ~c you agilin in
C'trM.I"s heavenly ~lory.
6. Yqur courAge and hravcry :o.till in~ire u~ all. and the mc•nury

Andrews, David C

Clm-Out Sala

Open Mon.·Sal. 9-5

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forgotten. The names wilt be placed In alphabetical order and will be similar to the sample
below:

July 10, I %1-May S, 19.80

ALL TREES .............20% OFF

J

On Sunday, May 30, we will publish a special section devoted to those who are gone but not

team.

End

·

-....

Al..,..l., rwi'IIW
St-ol""ah
HUla- (IHl
w. o I "*
IIOCIII (ll.f), 1:30
pJtL; lloalltoa a4lJt (19-9) w. r..tiao

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Lab (17- 11~ 4,...
CYmpl...up (SaturdaJ): S..mt't.nal

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DMIIoaiD
AI-C..!3 wle (Niar): C., heel c.nt
c.... (12· 11) w . Aktoll ... ;t
!:SO p.m.; Cunpboll M•arial
(19-4 .... """" i[onnOcly (16-7), 4:!0

..... l
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1

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(22·11··

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6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday,

With Perkins' clutch three-pointer,

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103-99 'win. That evened the best- to 10, and we kept pecking away/'
of-seven Western Conference Johnson said.
finals 1-1 heading to Seattle for the
Gary Payton, Kemp and Derrick
next two games.
McKey all figured in the Sanies'
"I kept telling our guys, ' I fourth-quarter rally from Ill 82-72
know we can fmd a way to win. I deficit with 9:58 to play. But the
know we can,' " Karl said.
scoring was uncharacteristically
Eddie Johnson, who played for lopsided for a rcam with six players
the Suns until traded to Seattle in averaging betwceu 15.8 and 10.7
1990, said Karl's insistence sank points per playoff game. ·
in.
·
.
Pierce hal\ 34 points and Sam
"In the frrSt game, t!tey got a Perkins 19, including a pair of
. 10-point lead, and we couldn't lluee-pointers in the fmal1:58. His
overcome it. Tonight, they got it up 24-footer with 9.8 seconds left was

points aDd three blocks, said poor
free throw shooling burt the Suns.
Phoenix made 26·oi 41 free throws
to Seattle's 25 of 32.
After Perkins' clutch shot,
Danny Ainac of the Suns auempted
a floating one-luinder from the
thcfuurthquarter.He~jmt
nine points in Game· 1, a 105-91 baseline. Charles Barkley who
Phoenix vic:tory, -..d _. 3 for 16 . received bis league MVP ttophy
before the game, elbowed Kemp
in Game 2 until his last twO sbots.
· Pim:e had only six points ill rhe ~and was caughL Kemp
h1t bolh foul sbots with 1.7 seconds
rust game.
·
Dan Majetle of Phoenix, who left, finishing with 16 poin!ll.
had career playoff highs of 29
the backbreaker that lifted Seattle
to a 101-991ead.
"I didn't feel any pressure. The
last twO shots were ~ O!,ir team
helped each other,' said Perkins,
who was in a woeful slump until

Skyline Speedway to feature Earl Hill Memorial Saturday
Skyline Speedway in Stewart
will host the Earl HiD Memorial for
Late Models Friday at 6:30 p.m.

The race, held in honor of the
late Earl Hill, who won over 300
victories and countless track cham-

JohnSOn gets win at Newark
. By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspoadent
Jeff Johnson of Reedsville, won
the first annual "Chrysler Classic
Super Cash Bracket Bonanza" at
National Trail Raceway near
Newark on May 16.
Johnson competed in the meet
against nearly 800 entries nationwide. li1 the weekend event, Johnson qualified to run in the quickest
32 cars at the event. His 1991
Dodge Ram pick-up ran four nearperfect runs to reach the final
round.
. In the fifth and final ~ound,
Johnson had a .009 reaction time
and ran a 10.46 on a 10.46 dial-in.
With a speed of 124 miles per hour,
Johnson defeated Robert Statts of
Marietta in his own 1970 Roadrunner for the $1,000 pay-off.
The winning truck was built by
Johnson Racing team, a father-son
team of Claytori and Jeff Johnson.
Other team members are Shirley
and Deanna Johnson. The team is
sponsored by Baum 's True Value
and Hot Spring Portable Spa's of
Chester.

The racing transmission was
built by Swain's Transmission .of
Tuppers Plains. The Mopar heads
were built and ported by Fred
Chapman of Belpre, and the multicolor paint job was done by Steve
Millbone of ReedsviUe.
Johnson's racing machine
weighs in at 2,950 pounds, has a ·
440 cubic inch motor, aspirated by
a 1150 HoDey carburator and driven by 456 Dana 60 Gears . The
driveline contains a 4000 Slall converter, 727 Torque Flight Transmission.
Johnson's best times include a
best E.T. on the quarter mile at
10:42 seconds or 124 miles per
hour and'E.T. on the eighth-mile at
6:51, or 103 miles per bour.
Johnson races at several different tracks weekly, including KID
Dragway in South Webster; River
Cities in Ashland, Ky.; National
Trails at Newark, and in Fainnont,
W.Va.
Johnson and his father had successfully participated as truck
pullers pnor to moving to the
asphalt.

pionships in a 20-year span, will eight miles south of Parkersburg
pay $2,000 10 win.
offi-77 at the Mineral Wells exiL
A regular show will be held in
Sunday, Portsmouth Raceway
each of the other four divisions.
Park on U.S. 52 west of ·
-Some of the best names in dirt Portsmouth, will hold ita Memorial
track stock car lliCing are slated to Day Championship for Late Modbe on hand for this prestigous · els, Street Stocks and Bombers,
evenL
while hosting the All-Star Circuit
Nearly a guarantee that_several of Champions Sprints Saturday
cars will be in the Ohio Valley this evening.
weekend is the fact that West VirOwner Boone Coleman and proginia Motor Speedway in Mineral moter Max Warnock have widened .
Wells, W.Va.,will host the second the track and made many improveannual Late Model Speclacular, ments at the facility.
paying $3,000 to win and a
K-C Raceway in Chillicothe
$13,000 purse.
will run winged outlaw Super
The Parkersburg Pure Stock Sprints, Late Models, Econo-ModiRacing Association holds their fieds and Super Street Stocks in its
biggest race of the year Saturday, Memorial Day Championships Satalong with the open wheel modi- urday. Warm-ups are at 5:30, and
fieds.
lliCing will start at 7 p.m.
Gates open at 4 p.m. for this
K-C is located on Blaine Highevent, and racing· will slart at 7 way, six miles south of Chillicothe
p.m. Overnight camping is ptnnit- on U.S. 23.
ted at the track, -Yhich is located

leader.
.
Bowden paced the clubhouse
uneasily as he talked, according to
the players. He realized those

wcren 't friendly stares.

"He didn't look real comfortable," Larkin said. "! think he had
everybody's attention aimed at
. "
hIDl.
Making up can be hard to do.
The Reds took the field again
with -Perez's No. 24 adorning their commenL"
. caps and shoes, and managed to
It wasn't her first conlact with
pull off a win for No. 15, new man- Johnson. Before the game, the new
ager Davey Johnson. He got a taste manager said he'd spoken to Schott
of what's ahead with a surprise once since being named manager.
from his new boss.
.
Oh, as a footnote: The win gave
Schott, who has distanced her- . the ·new manager something to
self from Perez's fning, didn't sit smile about after spending two
in her front-row seat behind the days trying to get his players
Reds' dugout for Johnson's debut, calmed down.
a 5-0 loss Tuesday.
"I've told them to get it out 81)d
She showed up in the third let everybody hear about it and get
inning Wednesday, and displayed on with business," Johnson said.
how desperately she wants her "There comes a time when you
$42.8 million payroll - the can't best a dead horse. I only hope
· National League's biggest - to I'm here long enough for the.m to
produce. Schott riSked further sanc- badmouth the guy who fues me."
tion from baseball's executive
In Cincinnati, that doesn't ·have
council by sen.ding a note to John- to be very long.
son in the m1ddle of the fourth
inning.
She stood up, got the batboy's
attention in the dugout, then tossed
•
•
him a folded piece of paper. The
batboy csught it and delivered it to
Johnson, who unfolded it, read it,
folded it up and slipped it in his
back pocket.
~The Bailey brothers, Bob and
"That was nice," Johnson said.
Brian, of Reedsville have enjoyed a
"To me,.she's a great lady who has good season in the pure stock and
accomplished a great deal and is four
cylinder pure stock divisions
going through tough times.
race tlllcks.
"She wanted me to win this one at local
Bob
has woil several features at
for her. I hope) we win a lot more."
Skyline
and Brian and
But isn't passmg notes into the Bob haveSpeedway,
won
at
Vinton
Raceway,
dugout a violation of her suspen- where the two set fast times
and
sion agreement, which says she were honored by carrying the flags
for the national anthem.
PoiniS are cum:ntly being kept
at Vinton Raceway with Ben Flora
(Continued from Page 5)
on one hit over the next four of Southside, W.Va. leading in the
cylinders, Bob Bailey second,
innings before giving_ way to the four
and
Brian
Bailey third.
bullpen. He was working on three
The
Bailey
brothers are spondays' rest so teammate Mike
sored
by
Junior
Barber of Barber's
Bielecki could rest his sore elbow a
Auto
Parts,
Reeds
Country Store
few more days.
.
and Dale BIIT's FiUmg Sralion, all
The Rangers scored single runs in Reedsville.
·
in the seventh on a single by Gary
Recently,
Delbert
Roush,
also
of
Redus, in the eighth on Butch Reedsville, won the foU.-cy Iinder
Davis' home run and in the ninth main over Bert Flora and John
on a pinch single by Juan Gonza- Flora.
lez.
In the Pure Stock eight-cylinGonzalez did net start because ders, Donnie Kinnison of Radcliff
he is nursing a pulled hamstring, was the winner over Todd Smith of
and the Rangers lost Franco to a Pomeroy and George Adkins of
pulled quadriceps muscle that Middlepon.
might force him onto the disabled
list
Gonzalez pulled his hamstring
WE~OMEAREA
running out a grounder Tuesday,
· ALUMNI
and Franco· was hun running out a
grounder in the third inning
Wednesday. Franco was to be
01 Coratr of
examined in Cleveland today
Mul..rry &amp; lasley
before rejoining the Rangers in
Boston tonighL
·
Sts. Ia Po...roy
"Nobody said this business was
UNDER NEW
easy," said Texas manager Kevin
Kennedy, wbo turned 39 WednesMANAGEMENT
day. "It hasn't been a happy three
days here iii Cleveland. You hate to
All your carry•out
lose two guys like that when you're
nHds.
trying to get to first place at this
point in the season. Some of the
Hunting &amp; Fishing
other guys will just have to suck it
up and go after it.''
Licenses,
Eric Plunk pitched the last two
innings for Cleveland, getting his
Live Ball and
Ice
'
third save.

Bailey brothers
. enJOJing success
on race track

.

I

"You just have to get the balh
way ~ can, and I fOl iL The!
is out of my hands, ' Barkley:
said.
·~
Barkley scored 24 points for tlie•
Suns. He and Majerle had ~~
rebounds each, but the Sonics wod:l
the team battle for rebounds 41-39
dr~pping the Suns to 2-.5 whe'!:
their opponent controls the glass. •;.
Seattle outscored the Suns 33-0:
after offensive iebounds.
·1::

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Meigs County
Special to The Dally sentinel

- - -. i

Jbe. MeW County Park District
was originally formed in July, 1980
to provide increased recreational
- opportunities for the local citizens.
The primary intent and responsibilitr ot: the Meigs County Park DistriCt IS to rescue remnants of our
rapidly vanishing natural environment and through wise managem¢nt, development and use, preserve and protect these areas for the
edificatiOn and inspiration of Meigs
Countains.
. While endeavoring to meet the
mtent of the Park District Law,
facililies and programs provided by
the Meigs County Park District are
designed so as not to destroy or
threaten natural and historical phenomena. Additionally, these pro¥rams and facilities provide
mcreascd recreational opportunilies
within Meigs County, develop and
promote local economic stimulation through increased tourism,
increase education and employment opportunities, broaden the tax
·and privat.e economic baae of
Meigs County, and promdte a
greater understanding and enjoyment of our natural environment.
These objectives do not interfere
with the functions of other city,
_towns_hip, county, state or federal
agencies.
The Meigs County Park District
was created and oper8tes under the
Revised Code of Ohio Chapter
1545 - "Park DisDict" and includes
all of Meigs County outside incorporated municipalities. .
The Park District operates as a
governmental agency through a

Youth golf league slated
The Meigs COWlty Oolf Course will be having a youth league for
children ages 8-14, both boys and girls, with an organizational
meeting set for Friday, June 4 at 6 p.m. at the golf course.
There will be a fun scramble to follow. John Teaford will be on
hand to help throughout the season. The league will meet every
Tuesday at I p.m. beginning June 8. For more information, call ·
Carol McCullough at m-5322 or Cheryll Thomas at m-6763. .
.

Diamondfest set for June 5
The Tuppers Plains hasehall/softhall association will have an 11- ·
12 year old baseball tournament at the 'J'uppcrs Plains field on June ·
5 and 6.
·
The tournament will he a single~limination affair with an entry fee of $25 and twO balls. Team trophies will be presented for fli'SI, · ·
second and third place. Individual trophies will be presented to the
championship rcam.
For more infmnation call Willy Holbert at 989-2937 or Roger
Willford at 667-3653.
'·

Golf scramble setforJune 17

}

American Heart Association chairman Dan Morris has selec;ted · •
June 17 for the association scramble, while Jim Thomas has :
announced July 15 ast he date for the Cancer Society Bash.
·:
Mter for weeks of play in the Tuesday and Wednesday men's
league, O'Brien and Tbompson are in first place in both lequcs a
club spokesmpn annOWICed. In the senior league, sixty-five or older, :
Bob Hysell and Jim Thomas are leading the pack with Hub Hub- ·
bard close behind
Some of the improvements made in the Meigs club house are the ·
addilion of a big screen television set, complete line of golf asses· · ·
sories, and much other merchandise.
·

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BAILEY BROTHERS HONORED - The Bailey brothers, Bob
in tbe B-land Brian in tbe B-3, were receatly boaored by carrylag
the Americaa aDd Obio state Rap for postiag fast times in the parestock and four·cyliader Pure Stock divisions at Viatoa Raceway
recently.
·

...o.KI/Fianders
:r
All-Weather Wicker

GET A LOW
PRICE TAG ON
AMAYTAG!

THURSDAYefRIDAYeSATURDAY

I

~ [)[F[J
STOREWIDE!

_

doe-.....,.
...,. .... __
......................
SUMMER FURNITURE

I

*Save OD everything In our store•.

';e

c..root ...

_PLU$

•••• 1301
....

~~

321 f·Stlil ••••,

FRIDAY
MILLFIELD - Oldies but good·
ies dance 8-11 p.m. at Russell
Building. Music by Off'Season.

The Christian Fd1ratlon Staff of Holter, Par Hol.Cr, Jim Huff, ConTrinity Church was recognized dur- nie Marcum, Beth Mayer, Linda
ing a recent morning worship ser- Mayer, Mike Mayer, Pauline
vice.
Mayer, Amy Perrin, Gay Perrin,
The staff was thsnked for giving Noelle Pickens, Barbara Riggs,
their.time and talents and regularly Dixie Sayre, Debbie SchmoU, Janis
providing dedicated leadership in Schmoll, Jim Schmoll, Carolyn
the Christian education program of Thomas, Cheryl Thomas, Susan
the church. Sunday scbqol. junior Well, Ralph W,erry, JoAnn Wildchurch and ~th groups.
man, Roland Wildman and Malea
Those presented certificates and . Young.
flowers were ~bie Cooke, MarY
Making the presenlat!ons were
Crow, Becky Depoy, Sally Erwin, Jim Huff, director of youth, and
Tara Erwin, Debbie· Evans, Shari Alic!l Globokar, superintendent of
Games, Alice Globokar, Angela · the Sunday school.
Goody, Debbie Haptonstall. WhitA fellowship dinner followed
ney Haptonstall, Mary Harris, . the worship service to honor of the
Dianne Hawley, Jan Holter, Kaye Christian education staff.

IWIY 11011

nms II

FREE

ROCK Ill 01 IIU

Delvtry

I.tl'AF.tr .tND .Ul'lll

ANDERSON'S .:::a

...

FURIIITUif, IPPUAIKE5, tv'S. ROOII COVII-.c;
ft2·3171

·90hps.. . . c.••
AnhW•

f71fe

I .RUTLAND FURNITURE :11:
7

Showroo.ma

1

1

17

•

PHARMACY
TOPICS
BY YOUR
.SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

Interferon alpha 2A, an anti-cancer drug, s..ms to be
efl,ctlve In slowing the courH of macular degeneration, or
even reversing lt. Report to the American Academy of
Ophthel~logy was pl'llllltld by a California doctOr.

•••

Tl.mlng of breast cancer aurgary within the menstrual cycle
-m• to have Important etrecta on Ita aucc-, Medical
World News reporta. Suc0111 waa hlghHt when surgery
waa done during the aecond half of the menstrual cycle
when progesterone Ia produced.

•••

How much aapirln or acetaminophen for your child? Study
st Childran'a Hospital In Philadelphia n100mmends 6.8 mg.
per pound every four to alx hours, but no mora than 650
mg. percto.e.

The Following
Institutions Will Be Closed On
Monday, May 31, 1993 In
Observance of

MEMORIAL -DAY
MIDDLEPORT
992•6661

--ONE.
BANKS

219 N.SKOND

•

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-·.'

992·5627

POMEROY
992·2133
IUTUND
742•2888

Whatevedt takeS.
Bank One. Alhen• NA
MemberPDIC

Farmers Bank

'

SHOE PLACE
•

11

School class of 1988 will have 1
reunion at the Syracuse Park by the
tennis courts Sarurday from 1 to 3
p.m. Those attending .are to take a
covered dish. For more informalion
class members may call 949-2046
or 992-3038.
~
•
SRYACUSE , Tom LowerY,
manager of London Pool in Syracuse, has announced the pool wilj
open Saturday. There will be freci
swimming all day. Pool hours are
noon to 7 p.m.
:

PRESENTF;D RETIREMENT GIFT - Larry Rupe, president •
of the Meip Lucal Board of Education, rlgbt, preseated retiring
Meigs Local Superintendent James Carpenter with a clock plaque ·:,
at a recent dlnaer held at Meigs High School in bis honor .

&amp; Sovings Compony

_ . . ''"

•

Thursday at 6 p.m. at the Meigs
County Fair Grounds.

.................,.................. 1179

1

STOll HOUIIS

POMEROY - Free clothing day
at The Salvation Army from 10
a.m. to noon. All area residents in
need of clothing are welcome to
participate.

Your chlldren'a health Ia our concern. That'a why you'll
find ao many quality baby naacla at.. ...

OUR.,SALE ROOM

••ell
.....
Gllr.........Ssle '79
leg. '151 II •••k Sitrfl!i lllle c•••, , . We 'M
Reg.'l36lo

The Daily ·sentinel
Thursday, May 27, 1993

•••

tewer

• No. 1preferred. brana·

ror

•

A high-fat diet can raiH heart llttllck risk within w..ka, an
Oregon Health Sciences University study found. Mexican
Indians used to a hlllthful, low-fat diet ran Into trouble
with cake, ch ...., egge and other high-fat fooda but
r.tumed to normal quickly on their own dl.t.

tC;)IJrS inC COSIS less to

rel'liilllr'e Oil the -ut.." 0. ••

•

{:oanauaity Caleadar llems
appear two day1 before an event
and the day ol that event. Items
must ~ received weD Ia adVIIIIce
to assure publication in tile cal·
endar.
THURSDAY
.
RACINE - The Racine American Legion Auxiliary will meet
Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. at
the PQSI.

forming. That group plays music of
the 30's, 40's and SO's. Making up
the group are Bill Ward, sax, Junior
white, bass, Rita White, piano, and
AI Windon, drUms.
Dave Ashlel, 1966 w.aduate,
now manager o the Hobday Inn,
Parkersburg, and a promoter of
country-western musicians, wiD be
the banquet emcee.

· Serv1ce

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

~

Community Calendar

two dances

I"'~~

WASHERS

I

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Trinity staff wins recognition

71111 WIIKIID•••
-~~

DEPENDABLE MAYTAG

WJl.c·DlOIJt cO.COI'IIIIIIe .....

__ ..,.

~inner ho_nors retiring superintendent Carpenter ~

•

ation will have two dances Saturday night following the banquet at
Meigs Junior High School from 9
p.m. to 1 am. Sunday.
In the gym wiD.he Jack O'Shea,
60's di~c j~;~ck_ey, formerly of
WKEE m Huntington, now with
WAE:t; Huntin~~:.· while in the
cafetena, .The C ·cs will be per-

C. .aal OutdoOr FllllliboN

"Pe...... WieiLer"" paot'

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

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Thursday at ·
board of three Park Commissioners
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
LONG BO'ITOM - Faith Full
serving on rotating three year
Church. Call 992·5763 for infor- Gospel Church, Long Bottom, will
terms. While adhering to the park
mation.
have preachmg and singing, Friday
law, it is an independent, self-supat
7 p.m. with David Dailey and the
poring organization, adding to the
MIDDLEPORT - Preceptor
MIDDLEPORT - The Mei¥,s Dailey Family as well as other
economic development of Meigs Beta Beta Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi County Women's Fellowship will
local singers. Pastor Steve Reed
County.
Sorority, will hold its annual meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the invites the public. Fellowship wiD
The Park Board may acquire, pcduck picnic at the home of Joann · Bradbury Church of Christ.
follow.
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.develop and manage_Park District Corder at 6 p.m. Thursday.
The
Liberty Moun~ will peL:'
lands. Mter the completion of an
TUPPERS PLAINS - The TupSATURDAY
form Saturday at the Senior Citiassessment ·of the county's assetS,
PORTLAND - Lebanon Town- pers Plains VFW Post No·. 9053
MIDDLEPORT
The
Meigs
zens
Center iri Point Pleasan t:
potential projects have been target- · ship trustees will meet at 8 p.m. at will hold a special meeting ThursW.Va.
.
.
,
High
School
Class
of
'
78
will
hold
ed and are ,being researched, and the township building.
day at 7 p.m. to present a plaque to a 15-year reunion at the Middleport
SUNDAY
,
potential funding sources are being
the bugler and to give away a pic- Arts Council from 2-4 p.m. Satur·
RACINE - The Racine Volu&amp;.
reviewed.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview Gar- nic table. All members urged to day. The alumni dance wiD be held
't~r Fire Department will hold a
If the Park District is to fulfill den Club will tour the Glass House auend.
Saturday evenmg at the high school ch1~ken barb~que Sunday wit!\
your ne!lds, a dollar commitment Works at Stewart Thursday at 6
from 9 p.m. 10 I a.m.
servmg to begtn at 11 a.m. Homemust be made for development to p.m. A meeting will follow at the
ROCK SPRINGS - Dog training
made
ice cream will be available
talce place. Money makes money. home of Delores Frank.
classes for 4-H members will be
RACINE c The Southern High from the Ladies Auxiliary.
A base can he established to match
~ts. maintain projects and create ·
JObs. Land gifts and donations are a
welcome addition and provide for
. special projects designated by the
J~ Carpenter, who wil_l rellre as Carpenter explaining how to sur·
donor.
of
the
_Me1gs
Local
vive
after
your
husband
retires,
by
·
supcnnten_
d
e'lt
To this ·point the Park DisDict is
Scl!ool
D1stnctm
m1d-J~ne,
was
Hood;
a
two
by
six
plank
with
a
opcraling on funds appropriated by
the Meigs County commissioners ho~ore~ recently at a dmner at segment of Jog chain and a plaque
.
quoting one of Jim's famous saywhich permit the operation of a Me1gs High School..
Speakers
at
the
dinner
organized
ings when staff members compart-time office, director and secreby
Jane
Fry,
Karen
~loan,
a~d
plained,
by Humphreys; and a
tary. The development of the
Joyce
Vance
were
Me1gs
SuJX:nnunique
aluminum
cane witlj a rear
tourism industry will help support
tendcnt
.of
Schools
John
R1ebel,
view
minor
and
a
horn mounted to
the needs of the area. Statistics
and
board
members,
Bob
Barton,
the
handle
by
Linda
relating to tourism and economic Roger Abbott, John Hood, and county board office. Haley of the
development reflect such interest in
.
Carpenter has been superintenrural areas. City residents are desir- Randy Hun:'p~ys.
A special blbute w~ liVen by dent of the district for five years
ing places to get away from it all
the fury of city life and jobs. Now Larry RuJIC. board IJ!'CSldent, w_h_o and served as assistant supenntenis the time for Meigs County to credited.~ter with the stabili- dent for six years before thaL Prior
'r of the_ ~blct !Did the coo~- to that he was a teacher in the disbecome alive!
tlve spmt wh~c~ n'?w exists trict for several years and later
Submitted by Mary Powell, ~
the adrmmstraU!)n and the principal at Federal Hocking High ·
park director.
unions. Rupe on behalf o~ the School.
·
board presented C~~te~ With a
He graduated from Pomeroy
~IC?Ck _plaque. The tn~ption ~ High School in 1959 and then comJIDl carpcnrer, you did two m':'l s pleted work at Rio Grande and
work for one man's psy and did a X ·
·
·
h
av_1er l!n1vers1tl w ere ~e
very fine job. Meigs Local will
always be grateful".
~~~ed h1s master s degree w1th
· Othe~ presentations made a~1tional gradua.te w~rk a_t both
included a wooden device with a Oluo S~ ~Ohio l!n~vers~ty. He
handle that when turned accom- and h1~ w1f~. Patr~c1a, hve at
plished absolutely nothing, by Reedsville With th.elr S!ln, Alex.
Abbott; several magazines relative Another son, Jay, bves m Columto retirement and a book .for Mrs. bus.

MHS
alumni
slate
The Middleport Alumni Associ-

• L.iiSI·S longer. needs

-~

Page--7

TO PLAY - Tbe Classics - from left, Bill Ward, Junior
White, Rita White and AI WiDdon - wiD play at the Middleport
Alumai Association dance Saturday night at Meip Juaior High
School. ·
·

. ."~

·

\

It's your world

~

.

In a recent Pony League game at Point Pleasant, Middleport
defeated the Price Brothers Garage 12-0 on a one-hiner by Dolia1d
Goheen.
·
Ooheen had 11 strikeouts and five walks, while pitching a fine
game. Hitters for Middleport were Willie Johnson, who was twofor-two with ~ RBis; Gary Stanley, 2-for-4 with four RBis;
Travis Curtis a single and three RBis, and Paul Pullin'§. l•2.
Cochran had the lone Price Brothers hiL
..
,
Pullins was ~ted with playing a good game behind the plate,
throwin=uttwo potential base stealers •
Mi
railed its record to 2-0 with an 8-f wm ovt2- Syracuse. S
y fanned 15 batters en route to the win. Stanley walked
two and gave up two hits. Chad Burton was 2-3 and had three RBis,
Brent Hanson had a hit, and singles by Eddie Sowere, Mad: Mills
and Paul Pullins.
Middleport played a good game, giving up no runs after the rust
inninjf. Tyson Buckley had both Syracuse hits. T. Lisle was the losing pitcher for Syracuse.

@

...

;#

Middleport wins first two games

Indians win •.•

JEFF'S CARRY·OUT

i

Winners in the Tuesday Morning Women's Golf-League at the
Meigs County Golf Course· were Becky Anderson and Nellie
Brown.
Anderson won the overall low gross, low putts and chip-in-hole,
while Brown claimed overall low net. Several invilatioDs have bi:cn
~ived. by the club for teams to participate in the upcoming invitauonal toumamcnL

can't cOntact anyone in the organization on any baseball mauers?
"This is the first we've heard
about it," said Rich Levin,
spokesman for the commissioner's
office. "We'll have to find out
more about iL"
Schott didn't want to talk about
it as she left the stadium. Asked
about passing the note to Johnson,
she shook her head, then said, "No

~

•

By The Bend

••

Anderson, Brown ladies' winners

Reds' clubhouse ••.&lt;continued from Pages&gt;

-

•
'

May X7, 1993:
• •
•
•

Meigs sports briefs

.

~

~

Seattle beats Phoenix 103-99 to make 1-1 tie in playoff series
By MEL REISNER
. PHOENIX (AP) - Seattle's..
st_ar isn't Sam Perkins ot Ricky
P1erce ~ Sha;wn Kemp or Eddie
Johnson s. It s all of them. It's
everyone.
~eattl=ved
i~ balance once
agam W
rught, according
to coach George
.
:·Even though Ricky Pierce had
a b1g game, ~ still kin~ of won by
commllte_c, Karl sa1d after th!l
SuJ!C!'SOmcs snapped a four-game
skid m playoff !'llad contests with a

-

'

.

Th8 Daily Sentinel

........

MIDDLEPOIT

_..............
....
...............
-............ ,...
_,,
.

-.

-loCIIPTIONI

LM..,.

, ,...

- · · ta.R.Pll.

.........

,,._.,..,...

~-

Pit. . . 1111
Posu...,.r.Ott.

wv_.

·

POMEROY TUPPERS
992·2136 667·3161
'

UCIIIE, OHIO 45771
'"· (614) 949·2210
ONIO 45779
PH. (614) H2-6SJ3

I

�..

"'

..

..

... .

... -

~

•• -

. . . . . . . . . :.!~

•
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Sentinel

.:OVAL Board briefed on backing

YOUNG'S

~~ported that there bad been Trustees in Wellston.
tremendous su~ to leSIOre Ohio
The House version of the budgel
Valley Area Libraries fimding from restored OVAL funding to 1992
area legislators durmg the recent levels. Anderson commented thai

.

.
d
UMW
b
mem
ers
A llflt
, ,,
update d on actzvztzes
Vfl
~

.

·

Martha Poole led the ro ram
''Rivers in the Desert" w.!n ,&amp;red
· d M h d'
· Unne
et o lSI Women met
· licendy at the church
. AU members took
in read·
.
d'
.
part
l ng and •scusston. Mrs. Parker
staled that the amount of waaer pre·
sent on earth now is the same as
he the
• Yl n ..., .,..uand•~.c·~· WaJer
eonserv...on
....e wiltS supp1y
: through educaiion was em
ized
"" Th b ·
. phas ·
. . e usmess meeung opened
~th. prayer by Eleanor BOyles and
smgtng of '"nlere Shall Be Show·
ers of Blessin~· with Florence
Spencer 81 the ))WIO. A total of 41
friendship calls were reported.
. Presidenl Nellie Parker reminded
· ml\lilbers that those planning to
. atiCIId Pomeroy United Methodist
Women's August dinner meeting
should report their names at the
July meeung. Sarah Caldwell and
Nina Robinson reported on recent
. ~hun:~ meelings. Festival. of Shar·
· mg; will be at Athens F~~tgrounds
·in .ihe fall.~~ society discussecl
chihncls of giVmg and asked shepberdeSs, Faye Copen, to lead a pro-

--L

--·-•

- Mrs. Parker had the prayer cal- ·
endar and chose Jean M. Morgan,
deaconess at Brooks-Howell Home
· Ash .11 N0 rth C 1. Th
10
VI e,
aro ma. e
society signed a birthday card for
her. Mrs. Parker gave a reoort on
·"Ch 'ld W
f B ·"'I" .f
'
o~en o r~zt rom
Response telling of their wreiChed
conditions and . the help the
Methodist Church is .nvm·g
.,.
·
Mrs. Boyles reported the work
in the Belpre Calvary Community
.
Church whtch has 24 hour broad~IS .to shutms and supports much
• m•ssmnary work. Martha Elhott
read 8 let~ !'rom Lynn Fogleman,
Ke~ya m•~s•onary • who told of
their h~sf.1181 w(lrk and nee~ for
food
~lies.
d f h
s. .pence~ serve re res •
ments during soc•al hour.
·
Presenl were Charlcllte V~nMeter, Martha Elliott, Nt~ Robm·
son, Eleanor Boyles, NelliC Parker,
Martha Poole, Sarah Caldwell and
Florence Spencer..
.
~ July
20·~!a'hec~~ee~n!J':!:.
· we · .
stess
and~ Henderson will be pro·

April, and "we'll just have to wait
to see if it remains at current levels."
board also reviewed n:sults
of the OVAL Caucus held May 12
in Columbus. Th~·live stare senators, lejAesenlatlves, trusiCCS, and
librarians and staff attended the
function
held
. i~ ~junction
with
the annual
Legtslauve
Day span-

•

·

T.he Ageless Classmates of
Wahama High School gathered
once again for dinner and socializ·
ing May 4 ai McClure's Family
.Restaurant, Pomeroy. Marjorie
·Walburn offered grace before the
meal.
"' Peggy Edwards conducted a
business meeting afterward. A fun
time was had by all. Those attendinK were Betty Neal Russell, June
McMillin Anderson, Ramona

·

Emma Lee Turley Keams, Carol
Ewing Roush, Cecile Huddleston
Van·Matre, Connie Smith, Marjorie
Clarke Walburne, Peggy McDaniel
Edwanls, Sylvia Blake Sayre, Bernice Keams Smith, Patty Bennett
Allensworth and guest Amber
Eads.
The next meeting and picnicstyle dinner will be June 1 at 6 p.m.
at the Route 33 Roadside Park near
Pomeroy. All former classmates

:]i~h~~d~:~hte;b;;quetheld

The annual mother/daughter
.banquet of Pomeroy ' s Trinity
~burch was held recently at the
church.
. •· The men of the church prepared
and served the candlelight dinner to
113 mothc:n, daughters and guests.
Those attending were Edna
Slusher, Judy Jewell, Irene Bailey,
Christine Bailey, Mary Skinner,
Linda Mayer,lla Darnell, Bethany
Mayer, Donna Frazier, Angela
Goody, Carole McLaughlin,
. Bethany
Cooke.
Autumn
McLaughlin, Terri McLaughlin,
Debbie Cooke. Jeannine Offut,
~ Offut, Opal Offut Grueser,
Tanta Nesselroad, Coree Nesselroad, Lena Nesselroad, Mina
S wisher, Barbara Riggs, Becky
Trent, Marjorie Crow, Mary Crow,
:Carly Crow, Marie Hauck, Donna
·Carr, Beth Perrin Johnson, Gay
Perrin, Debbie Haptonstall and
Whitney Haptonstall.
. Lennie Haptonstall, Eve Hendricks, Mary Hendricks, Dorothy
Hendricks, Eva Dessauer, JoAnn
Wildman, Mildred Ward, Becky
Depoy, Heather Thomas, Nell
Graves,
ThQmas. Michelle
Thomas,Daniellc
Fonda Thomas,
Carolyn
Thomas, Marty Sttuble, Erin Suuble, Patti Sttuble, Mary Lou Ihle,
f:lsie Hines. Doona Hines, Brandee
Gilmore, Brianna Gilmore, Evelyn
Gilmore, Kristie Riffle, Bernice
Riffle, Ruth Riffle. Dottie Musser,
Doroth~ Sheets. Jamis Schmoll,
·Peggy chmoll, Jessica Marcum,
Connie Marcum, Susan Well and
EvelYJI Lanning.
·.. LI!Ia c·'!'C1e' Dixie' Sayre, peggy
Harris, Mildred Arnold, Lucretia
Smith, Norma L. Jewell, Mary
Chapman, Nonga Roberts, Dorothy
Woodard. Dianne Haw lev. Sandi

. . J
Begmnmg
apanese
.class starts next week
. Grande
at U ~fRI 0

Rio Grande Communily College
through the Office Qf Adult and
Contmuing Education will be offer.
ing a course in Japanese.
It will be held on Tuesdays.
· .).une I . through July 6 from 7-9
,· p.m . Cost for the course is $25.
There is an additional cost or
$.15.90 for the purchase of the
book. This book can be picked up
11 the Rio Grande Bookstore.
. , l&gt;reregistration deadline is May
28. Preregistration is required.
" .This couiSe will offer students
;rite OWOflunity ~ develop skills in
speaktng, heanng, and writing
Jipanese language. A brief intro·
.4uCli011 to aspects of Japanese cuitur11 will be discussed. Studems
Will master basic vocabulary and
enough sentence structure to
. engage msimple conversation and
be r: T · ed · h J
dl.am~ tanz wtt apanese letFor more information and to
regisler contact the OffiCe of Adull
and Cbntinuing Education, p .0.
Jox 878, University of Rio
Otande, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
. • call614-24,_5353 extension 325
' atiOII· free in Ohio at 1-800-282·
1201.
-

SERVIa

• -GuttwWork
'
-Eieclrl..lond Plumbing I

36970 Ball Run Road

Aa ce1 AdcllloM

PalnU'ItJ
(FREE
MATES)

soled by the Ohio Library Couil~il.
Roxte Un~ represenunl'
the Jackson Ctty Ltbrary and chair
of the Personnel Committee
'
·
· ·'
reported. on •ts meeung earlier tn
the evenmg. Anderson had brought .
a wide range of issues, from
chan es in the
nnel. lie to
~
perso
po Y
~es and bene~IS, to the auennon of the commlltee. No recom·
endation ill be
"ded b the
m
. s w . JlfOVI
Y
commlltee unul the regular Juntt
meetmg.
·
The Lane Public Library in
Hamilton and the Wadsworth Publie Library bolh received Board
awroval for renewal of their Books
By Mail contracts. Affiliate membership contracts were also
approved for the Jacll:son City
Schools Hocking Technical College and the Pickaway-Ross Joint
Voc~tional School. The latter, a ·
new OVAL member, increases the
number of affiliates to seven an all
time high. \
•
Steven Hedges 1ep1escnting the
Nelsonville Pubiic Library, was
selected by the bolld to represent
OVAL at the "Library Leadership

Corey Rowe, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Rowe of Rac1"ne,
was recently named winner of the
1992 DcKalb Agricultural Accom·
plishment Award.
. The award, sponsored nationw•de by DeKalb Plant Genetics, is
presented to the outstanding senior
agric~lture swdent demonstrating
supenor scholarship, leadership
and su~ervised agricultural program. resenting the award was
Aaron Sayre, agriculture mstructor.
Rowe is a recent graduate of
Southern High School where he
was involved with many agricultur·
al activities such as BOAC, safety
and greenhouse. His agricultural
program consists of tomatoes, peppers, sweet com and cabbases. He
plans to fann at his home mLetart
· Falls.
As this year's winner · he
receives a pin and certifiCate.' Fur·
thermore, his name will be
inscribed on a special plaQue displayed in the agriculture educalion
classroom.
The DeKalb award, often considered the highest honor a vo-ag
sludent can receive on 1he local
level, is jACSCnted at nearly 3,000
schools annually.
A long time supponer of youth
activities. DeKalb has presented
Ag Accomplishment awards since
1947. In addition, the company
SJ;K&gt;nSOrs the National PPA Profictency Award - Place in Ag Production- and college sc:holanhipl ·
for study in certain Ag careers
Based in DeKalb, Dl.,.DeKalb isM
international researcher, producer
and marketer of corn, sorghum,
soybeans and alfalfa seed.

PU1LJc
NOTICE glv..,
NOTICE
" hereby
tlult on s.turdey, u.y ltth,
18113, "' 10:00 Lm~ • publlo
.... wUibe hold et 211 W•t ~=~
llecond Avenue, POIIIerl!v,
Ohio, Mill Mh t1u1 '1~ Ua or a
to
1170A co Wal:
20 FOOOLTL!;,C.O~CHL
, the •llova
, "'.. "
wiN .,. eold In tlul
TRAILER 1111811212
aondiUon 11 1o kf with no
The Fwmen Bllnk •nd expre..ed or Implied
llvtnp CompenJ, Po- ......,... oJwn.

:r.;s

For 111oie lnlormetlon 2131.
Jeff Gllk'Yo el 1112· (5) 21, rt, 21, :Ito

992·3470

.RODGERS E-1 RIDE

OWNER:
JelfWkkerU.

''I

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

ao~IMI

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE ,
and TAACKHOE WORK . ,
AVAILABLE.
1
S!i:PnC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES ond
TRAILER SITES,
LAHDCLEAAHl.
DRIVEWAYS IN81'ALLED '
LJI!IEITONE·TRUCKING

Real Estate General

r-------"'!'!'!.....-~

I;;;;;.......

FREE E!I11MATES

a;

I&amp;WIMIL

term t,.CIOf, QueM .,_,.. ...

lol~

....., boii!IIIM .....

Tv- Bali I Tooklo Cwrr C!!!'·
1 milo """' Rio Cllando en a.
Ill. 114...., 21, 21, JO,.sl, . ,

-=
Sole:- , . , -

Tanks, Leach Lines
Repair &amp; Installation

Moving
Mar 21111. - .
ZS1 Ctrtnl A-uo,llloilovlng
...,., ~? 114 .... On . . . . ...
CoMII, K8lly Dr,

LlctiStd, IIIUrtd 11d lonHd

renld

·--1021.

Tuoo Juno \
AI.

180

It

a.

w..r ....,. 1- Did
EtW.Mfl Cox

Call614-992·7178

614·446·0736

Backhoe
.and small
Dozer Work

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES
(614) 992-7878

992-3838

1181'U/1 mo. ,

BULLEnN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICAftON ·

' J&amp;I.HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

-r

FLEA MARKET &amp;
GARAGE SALE

Roof

992-2259

Betty Moore's, Rt. 7 bypass.

May 26, 29, 30. 31 - 9·6
Rent spaces available.

F,_ Eatlmlllea,
Low Coats.
Work Gual'llnteed
614·949·2911 or

SA S31 - 6 room lrllrfte home wi1h 3 bedrooms 2 firw·

614·593·5010

places, belh, ~

&amp; ""'I water. Appr.&gt;X. Urn 11C18
wllh aome river lrontagil. ASKING $20,000.

11-24-1 mo.

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC

A\JTLANO- 111oor frame home wi1h 2 bedrooms, belh,

WANTED: At least 3 bed·
room house · with some
acreage to buy on land
contract or ·rent in Meigs
Co. Call 614·669·3051

lilt hea~ one car QO"''I", lruli t,..s, garden
ASKING $19,000.
.

.,.L

Parts allll Servkt
Mowers· Qall Siws
WaedHters
Authorlnd: Btlago &amp;
Stratton MTD, Ryan,

ngo, IIUII trees. $75,000.

WOLF PEN AD.- 35+1· acnoo, ·1975 2 bedroom mobile
home wi" applianou, front porch, bam, lhld, 80me
.PRICE REDUCED!

The prtc. llu bWI IOdUOO&lt;IIo $68.1100 IUid

• - lllliiiCIIig ol up to 80% u purohooa
amourt may be ~ tor quatlytng per·

Cal814-1192·710ollor Acot.

Cloaed SundllY

WE WANT YOUR UBTINGII

/

son to buy very nice hofN on 3~ IICflll ln
Racine. ~ BR, 3 blllho, .2 - · · ranted 1
BR apt. Property cnctudOa ~.100 sq. ft. torm

bldli-

I. D.C. Repair Canter

P,ICKUP and DEUVERY
Hours 86· M·F tl·3 Sal.

lonclng. $35,900.

949·2104

IENAY E. CLELAND ....._...................- ...........tt:I.C181
TRACY BAINAGEA ..........................................-2431
SliERfl HART ·········- ····-···.............................741·2:157
KATHY CLELAND .....................- .................... tt:I.C181
OFFICE......,..................- .............................;.. ,,....2251

NURSES' AIDE
WITH CPR
TRAINING
LOOKING. fOR
SOMEONE TO
TAKE CARE
. OF IN OUR

l(W'LISt7c...

...•,,.,
Cl/1111"

CI/TIIIfl'

,....,,.

All/Ill,,.,

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED ~AILROAD

...

614-992-7698
mo.

''

ROOFING

Custom Sui

Gutters .
~LIShc...

Convertible Top•

Downspouts
Gutter c-.nlng
Painting

CIIT2B"

.......

~~.,.,·­

aoyn..,.,..._.
•14-112-4183.l

S10N.

FREE ESTIMATES·

949-2168

Hear every nuance

lrom your COs!
Lightweight6-oz.
design and foam ·

HALF PIICEI ....,... .

listen for hours

complete comron.
Gold-plated plug.

Clbny 1/Jtyafltl'" H FJdlll·,._®

A.g. 14 •• 133-102&amp;

Classic, ahraclive styling. Features hold button with
on-hold indicator. 1ouch-rodial, nash buhon.

SEP11C SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
. WATER &amp; SEWER

· BINGO

'

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES
CLUB

. . .. . .. H f43·388

IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Elll'ly Blid
$100 P•yoff

CUTBIJ'It

PI t OJ IIJf
4·111-1 j J. ,
No compllca1ed setup!
Just enter a one-time
1hree·dlgn code lor up
to lour of your video

UNES

'·

BUY • SELL • TUDE
S17 II. 21111 St.
......port, Ohio
lOUIS:
Mon.•frf. IOIOQ.2100
ClOSED IIIUISIAY

3-4-93· 1

.....,.,-

992-3577

....... 12 &amp;IIIII'
Milw«s
elCHO TRIMMERS
oiRUSIKUTIERS
Roblin "' •-llltlltls.

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

3 HP -II HP

FIIWKING AYAIIAill

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

985-3406

HUflh S r.mlir'"nl l'tl &amp;
Sat.
1:00.7. .... "I • Ferry

3 Announcements

oduK, bobv

BAVE'tliB

992-2156

=::---

'"II

CJ::r"1:.'::."111 liOI ,..,.

Pomeroy, ..

EXOTIC LADIES LIVE 1 - IIIII
7810 •uo....tn. UC.VISA 1.11CJ0.
1111-1111 ~...tn. 11..

Middleport .
&amp; Vlcl
nlty . ·

HEY OUYSII Your Spolcll Gl~ to
Wllftlng To_, From You,_:M
Hourw A Doyt 1.IICJO.-..tl

..

3l8llfn ·

AU Yord Sotoe So Pold in
Advonco. _ , . , 1 - t..
cloy boloro the od le to Nn,

· Ia 18 Y'"· Pnoc:oll Co. 110U31odKion . 10:qG0.111.
0611.
. .;::."':::.:'*:;;':.::
· :::-:-:::--.....:.,
1:GOplll · ::-',' :...
·.

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Add It Ions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614
. • 992 • 7643
·

'~'•

·

.

2112192/tfn

~=:::=====::c:=======~l
Steel
Fabrication
..
'
and Welding

IIIWit,OI.
742•2455

'

'

,..sooot~

Min.
A101ouron11. Nooot&gt;y,
803-231-8812.
OHIO'S CONimCDON ALTER-

-•out

o1 llldill•~·~ HI•• ...,
.-,Moyzt,_30,:11ot·Npnt.

8
•z..
II=,""'"' ""

Public Sale '

NATIVE 1·100-JIIO.Jm
&amp; AuctiOn ... .
min
11&gt;/oll
==~~~ITIIII 100"o or lingle~-- In IUoto .... ,_ Auotlon c:.m
your •- 1odoy. cctBOCA Fl auction
1u1 ,..,. - . Ua
..mo..
•

;::;?·

Copy,,.,..

Slnglo lullolln, ,,..
IIIII Olllo 1
oonole, P.O. loll 2GOa, lla- ~=;_
·
eon•l Ade
Wrtte Ta: Ohio p.,. '77'l47u
41648

w-

In Nood or B u d Wauld Lillo To Donoio Them
PI- Drop Them Oft On Mondoy Or TuMdoy At ACS Ofilce,
414 Soccnd ......... blllllpollo,

.;

Plumbing Installation
and
Repairs.

CHARLIE'S

SMAU DOZER
DRIVEWAY WORI
aacl UMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE

Quality
Stone Co.

MARTECH INDUSTRIES
. (614) 992-7878

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

.......

Employment

Call 614·992· ·
6637

992·7553

St. tt. 7
Clletlllre, 01.

P'OMEIOY,OH.

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

·E-ientGrowlt ,.....,...
•P....om II 0_,_,__
with ...... IIIMIOMN
pluaiOIIII merklilng,

. 24 Hour Portable .Welclillil Semce

J&amp;L INSULAnON
Frae htlmlttH

promaaon and

Repllldlnent
Wlndowa

AI U lYAJIAIU•
, P•WtJ,Ol.

VInyl Siding
Rooftng

~··
CtMTA..,.

••Heilllllll
41 c.t sr.
...... 011.45611
l-614-446-1171
0

IIMII 0$1 ...,.., ..... Dt.

••

91:1-$275.00
16x7-$450.00
ALSO- TRY·OUR NEW
VINYL SEAL TRIM
S1.00 PER FT.

Y. HP-$200.00

Willt 2 Tra1SIIIitterL

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING

odworliw"""' Mlpporl.lf:

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

GARAGE DOOR
RAISED
IIISIILLED PRICES OPEIIIRS IIISTALLiD

'

oUinlmum lnvee-nt
Roqulrecl ·

=

uelor

•

Prloee.on

8 end Window.

-

192-2772

Ja-Kn••·--

I

'
9 Wanted to Buy
Sponio, Poi'!'!&lt; Stnoda, And Wlllllod To • ..,., Abowo a.-jd
llorol 1.IICJ0.-1o!!l bl. 1711,
~·
a.illllln 11 • Unlolor Co. 102- Pool, 11' Wldo Dr IIJIII"r 1131-41815,
!loop.
Be
In
cendlo
1ton,l14-...r~.
.
ton, OH

24 ilot11t EIIBRGENCT IBIMCI:

tiiiJIIIICOIII Ill
FUICIISI

w... """""' -

___
_......;.._
,

Ohio.

{614) 992-7878.
FAX (614) 992-7878
'-·

11
011
•I hlch,
1
2
Am,
E
l
l
.
Wlllcend, Ill/ .711 Nlailll¥. t310
w-y. Aldli, 11- .

Rd., AI. 7 bypuo. lioy II, It,

3!1, n ......... Rolli ""
v.~
...~ - . . ~
• - __.._,
..,.

Tho A-'&lt;on C.ncor Socloly 1o

fURTECH INDUSTRIES
"

-= . . .

711t()..MC.VISA 11•.

(lo Sudoy Calls)

. EXCAVAftNG
(614)
667·6628

IIV

OPPOITUim lOW
AVAUIU

-

"*"ion.

Mowing,

Classifieds

cill

Ao of J1N 111, gro- 11 n.,. !~Bale, Fri. f:OO.?. II ,..,,. ChUioh or c:Mot - · Addn, ......_ ._
C..,...ry
bo $171- 1 •a
CfOCk pot,-· •In or
110
yearly lnllnlen~nce IM. Each ;;;;;;; ; ; ; ' - : : - - - - - -

Prices lfartilllaf

Sentinel

a

-

lng, ~r.....................

LICENSED and 1101iQ11!1

Lawn

oulle,_~

~~'\~':' :.~;: :.b1::

HAUUNG: LIIIIMtline,
Dirt, GriiVel end Cbal

PH. 614-992-501

""'" ..:.. .........

Roirigorol....
::Jl:•
IUmiiUN, -lllllquo 4 !'*
. room
.,...-,

--r
f:::;;;;:~~=====~~~=~~~Ext~.!21;·:·
~~:
·
"
:
:liln:·:~~:...
~~ -"l BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. ~~~~~~~~~ ~,:=.. t.::a:=r~

' SWe IIU ... (Co. 7)
•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER ·
•TRUCKING

Announce rnpnt s

' Chester, Oh. 45720

36358SR7

MINI KARS

FINAIKING AYAIIAill

"

Fertilizing, WHd!Ag,
•nd Seeding. ,t
Shrub end Tree~
Trlmmlng &amp;c'!:::;:!tl
1
FREE ESTIMATE.

•

4110

THE BOOK
BARN

SAYRE TRUC
614-742·2138

~i~n~~~ _-:;

949-23,91 or ·
1-100·137-1460

through phone lights up when n rings. ·A lun
addl1ionto family room or kods room . Has a lighted
keypad, touch-redial . Looks great on desk or wall .

Q

CUSTOM SADDLES, •
LEATHER REPAIR
•
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

'129.95 +Tax

Reg. JI.MIQ-311

,.

"Inspirations"
Flower Shop

FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051·32

,.,.
...
Clllft.,.,
.
.
See·

1'~·1110&lt;1

Shade River Saddle Shop

1185-4176

---

COMPlETE MACHINE SHOP SERVICES ··
IN SHOP WELDINGI ·'s~:~~~~:

HQURS:
7:30am· 5:00pm
Mon . Fri
730om • 12 ()C)pm Sat

ALL TPES OF •VELOING I

WE LEASE a.ygeo·-·'-~

• H,... • Co2 Alp • • Sl*ooiiY Closes
• Cllllode •IIIIXI ills •I'!Ci!IIM • Cjnlon

GENERAL MACHINE WORK &amp; WELDING
•......_t ·AhlftW¥" &amp; Slllnlftf ••WekMa
Spray We10ing
• M.g Wekting · Sleet I
Supplill
A~

• rebfqtlon·AI)ility to~ I lend tlet ..

~

2 _,

, _ boby - - · -

Gelling ihwrlecl?.Need .
"-a?Aco•aorlee?
Cheok out my prlaee IIRl

Thla ad good for 1

CUT BIJ'It ....,._

remotes, too.

Fill

IJ,_...;.------.

2 Fro•t Strut1 • l.t!Hr
• 4 Wlleellli,.•••

1 ·-'

Then take control ol
your TV, VCR, cable
box , stereo-all Wilh
one remolel A list o1
codes lor all popular
branqs is Included!
It's a great way to
replace broken

INSURED

..._,

traftor, ...... too nurnberoul: lo ........,..
mlltl out Redmond

.BASEMENTS &amp;
HONE SITES

111241"11211fn

or audio components.

Formnl31 of a.,.frs' I'N• $nllle•

(614) 742·2345

Sun.-Thur 5·10 pm
Fri-Sat'S-11 pm
CLOSED WEIJNESDA~I

'30 HOUR

PONDS

•'

FRt:E ESTIMATES

LicensetiL Insured &amp; Bonded

(304) n3-5585
• SUMMER HOURS'

REASONABlE RATES

S-16-93-lln

earcushions let

COMMERCW I RESIDENTW

Cowra, Ce"""Hudllnera,'

NEW -: REPAIR .

Clooroll" 1a1o, 1 u..,

·t-, booi I

TRIMMING and
TREE &amp; STUMP REMOVAL

D., A. ·BOSTON •

COIIPUD ·AUTO
UPHOU1ERY

How•d L Writesel

........ ,'12·103

Reg, Jt.l5 11•1-1073

(former Mason Lanas)·
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Maeon,WV

HAUUN~

.. !i9ME.

This lightweight and
comfon-11...0
Ia ideal for ai:ilve
people-there's no
cord 10~ in your
wayl F d·UP design
fOr convenient llor·
agoo. Bau boost lor
auperb aound.

Our lightweight
r.;:able has a
dy \Jeh clipenjOy your musk:
as you work
around the house
or just take in a
nice, relaxing
woekendl

SHRUB
TRIM
REMOVAL

&amp; VIcinity

New Wiring, Rewiring,
Trouble·Shootlng

WAlKER AllEY

lEXAS AD. - 23 ao:rw farm with 2 IIOIY home, 3-4 bedrooms, B.G. hea~ TPC &amp; - water, bema, eheds, build·

Pl. Pleasant

24 IL I.RGEIICY SERVICE

LIME STOllE,'
GUVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable
.Rates
IOE II. SAYRE

lnilide and Out

TUPPERS PLAINS - Hlillorlc 2 lllory home wllh 3 bed·
rooma, balh,
rwpalrw inlide home, very w.ll mDI·
tainad. Nice ler.docll(l"'', flonced backyatd. 1+ IICnl.
$45,000. Make an olll~
.
.

EBLIN'S. ELECTRIC

HAULING

Fr.,. Foundation ta

~-----~------;;;;;;;;;============~~~~----------------------,

..... " ·"

Special

··~o-:'

I tamlllle;

PubliC Notice

Orleans d~g July.
~VAL. •s the only s~ f~J!lded
regional li~ system •.n Ol!io. It
serves the ctttzeru: and hbranes of
Athens, Hoc~mg, . Jackson,
La_wrence, ~etgs, Ptke_. Ro~s.
Sctoto, andf Vmt_on cdountloped1eswtbth
programs o servtces eve
Y
those libraries. .
Wanda Eblin serves o!' the
OVAL board as a represenlatlve or
the Meigs County Public Library.

R'owe named
top ag student
by company

CALL 614·992·7878

Auto-Rentals
Sprfnl Tfme

'

Ponwoy, Ohio

tor and Extension Services librarian ·

Hawley, Sarah Hawley, Ingrid
Phillips, Nicole Phillips, Shannon
Phillips, Pauline Myers, Maye
Mora, Mary Virginia Kautz, Joy
Russell. Mary Russell, Malea
Young, Gerry Duncan, Stephanie
Young, Alyssa Holter, Tara Erwin,
Sally Erwin, Alice Globokar, Kaye
Holter, Sara Beth Nelson, Donna
Nelson. Aileen Wehrung, Judy
Werry, Debbie Evans, Gayle Chas·
teen. Marge Leonard, Ruth Francis,
Carol Riggs, Anna Sayre, Julia
Sayre, Norma Curtis, Kelsey
Holter, Jan Holter, Tricia Davis,
Jan Davis, Pat Holter and Wanda
Fetty·
·
Men of the church preparing and
serving the meal were George Nesselroad, John Musser, Roy Holter,
K~n Harris, Lawrence Leonard,
Mike Mayer, Don Mayer, Bill Matlack. Joe Sttuble, Bob Fetty, An
Skinner, Roland Wildman and
Ralph werry.
Following the dinner, a puppet
program was presented by a group
from the Hope Baptist Church of
Middleport inder the direction of
Mark Michael.

PLUM liNG

. SIZED LIMESTONE

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

ne

SEWER PROBLEMS

DAVIDSON'S

Pllllllfoy,Ohlo

I

-floollng
-lntMioi &amp; Ex•lor

WHS AgelessCla~smates S:~!E~':!~:;:::
slate meettng for June 1
~f:.~·::u;~~~=~gL~b~:x

: , ·

WPENTER SERVICE

•

.~~ec~r~~~?!d~soP~~n~~~~~ B!~o?~!~!~!~m

·

HAUUNG

.......... _, . . -

992-3768
17 COLE • POMEROY. OHIO

...

Serv1~es

�..

.

'

-.

. ..

.

.,

.•

.

1993

.......

.IWIOII I AI -

I .......,

~

W H A'f A !) o(a

I '7

1""' 1N 1&lt;./ N C.

FP.l "&gt; 811!E :

11' c":fc.I'II&gt;'J . A

.

.......,,... __Coo=·
!!!11-•--__ ....................
48

Sp~ee

tor Rent

.T -IolalatNIIL

~ II IJ . ...., Po11111ng,

n
•
_______. . .

----

'~

PHILLIP
.ALDER

T.t•

..,......,.. r.-z.~"' ,

' ,vw... T4'\T•a

'

ConolrUolion ... ........,_,
. _ . Ho..., . . AIIorlllll,
Or Law II
II• ~
0101.

ACIIOII

'
.,..,_,i

NOJml

.94

.KQ4

···~

---···~-~~~~· q

.7 6 3

•As

I

•s

+A'lOH53Z
SOUTH
.A 10854

~~aAo·

'

•sa

.K96H

+7

•.,.,.
......
:!! """""'·
w- ..I~-------...;..,.
-..~ ~48~H;F;br;;';·~ei'il'~ir.i~
.
_
n 'Mo
w •.•.'
_..
~~
llooldlllllol, Sltvi:
Nliw I ·lod _..., 1.000 Iii. Pt.
~~~i;ii;iiiiiii,~
'":O,
UniiiUo . _... Homo, Noor
00 ' ..,. ,..,,.,, . . - • ....,, 31 Homes tor Sale
41 ~u... for Rent
•14M61
tho m II Juol I .;;;;_;,:;;;;;;:::~;;.;..;;::;;;,_....
2117.

--'a
-

' 25=1n

tliloo .., . .

2fl Actor~

' 30F.U....CS
32 Actor

Jlllnlngl
33 Youth Drll·

35Eigle'•-·
37 OrMit leHir

38 Hebrew leU.,

40Attued

DOWN
111rtkl
2 .-cleFrenee

a Rlllotoua

3 Mlllllroom
4 Eereclll

....._.

s:'1or

1&amp; Old Portu- .

ColllpH
27 Cllmrilno

dtvk:n . ,
28 Omit from
pronune~

ellon

1--+--+......:t

clue
may be misleading

YI'AA FURNITURE

114 4411111 Or 114 441 44211
'tO DAY SAllE AS CASH
OR RENT-a-owN (NO DIPOIIIT)

:r

~

for Rent

FUll

EU ,
...,.
......

PEANUTS

~

71 . Auloe for ....

12111. ... ~Jdi'OOIJlaf I .....
~ '11 C!!!.•m: .....
~DII,.

~ I-lOW COULD 't'OU miNK
: THE'I''D EVER LET 't'OU
BE A JUD6E ON TME
SUPREME COURT?

·~

- ·In

Wll ...........

OR '(OUR DRINKIN6 WATI:R I TMOSE Dl5iiE5
IN TME 6REEN DISM OR
TME SLUE Dl51-1 !

51-iOUt.D ALL
8E TME SAME
COLOR ..

Ill)'

_ot.,.._o,WV. 304111!4411.
....... Lib To Do Hilt II CIJtno

f IIIJilCI&lt;Ji

Bualrtell

(FRANK AND ERNEST

pPponunny

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

0

INO'IICEI

0

0

Ci

Q

OliO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
I
IUS&amp;. .. thlll: ~ do ......

(I

NOT
Mild . . to
unll.,.......,;-

"

........ ,...~.

/1 ..

.
'

c;

,$1,200 l

. . _ ...... -

.......101. -

lho

CJ

..... 1 -

1

PICKENI FURNITURE

Ne......
Hoi II hold -hlng. 1111 1111.
.a.rlaho Rd. Pl. Plnn:nl wv.

31 HC!IIlH for Sale '
1111 110!J llrlok - . I IM!d-

Ollfi04-IJI.'MI0.

Apanment
· for Rent

I!Mirft0!11, ·····~ kllee.rt. Mit

toil -

~--"'·

.....

I

I

!l.li.Fuml--,uoOd,on-

1

1

........ Hotarhold lurnlohlngo.
..._ Wll. 104-71M341.

,_ 0111 anytlme"l04-

OUR LANGUAGE
JJy Jefll-ey McQIIIIin
'wlrsP.Soj~m:nething thin . or delicate is
( "wispish trails of smoke").
. get stung by this adjective's
spelling; c,hange the A of WASPISH to
for WJSPISH.

r•

Q. What's the problem with
better or worst"? We were told it's
wrong.

_
............;_ -=· 2,... .......
I
r · I llonlho Cllol
111M Wllort AN Attioh!Mrlll.

Cl;n Ddvlr, . . 121 t410..
AIMIRftn JMnuel tnca: .. In

~

cirJ, - . ..o -

ol

1

I WANT 10 ~ l::X.bCTLY
L.lt&lt;E 'IOU 60.\eD.A'(,
· ' WINTHROP. .•

AI

111 '4

HAlE wrEN

IT
a:W.PI.IMENT AND
..6eA 1«X IN THe

,.-----1

'Ridlnrt Clulo Codol, 12' Ill', 114-

53 . . Antlquea

~'lfM.

Buy ar HI. .. Anllquoo,
1124 E. !1o1ft 11-. Oft AI. 114

•-r

Pomoior, -

I

.

!!tolna
- · 11. !LP..........
o,r-d**-1114-4'1-1101

: II.T.W. 10:iiil A!cllnt Sutioot For Willi llohtnd
1:00 Clnvtoy tiOO; """' All·
·
... For ... - - . , .

Lm. to 1:00 p.m.,
to 'I:OO p.m. :21111.

1100.

54 Mlacellilneoua
Mei'OIIe.lle

14" _ , - NO; -

·-11117.
K- ·

.
.UOj

ole wtl ..
4t Steel
43 Rotl!
turf~etr
•
46 .Ytrnt horo· •
46 502, Romen

41llllrfJ

51

On0 1 1 - ....... 114 4412340.

Yorillhl PortiiOno PIII-II-

ltJOctPhorio:
1 , Il14-lll-Fl. Cold...,,
.....

='.•:. ano':io. ~-;;
_...,. .

lloyw

- . ...;~0:,:::
.-elL
m.,114hp. .- · · - .

....:::·"='-~

~=---

The

seven

:....:.;...,...:;.,..:16:._;,;.....:,:,,.1'"7,.....1

f9 PRINT
NUMBERED LETIERS
IN THESE SQUARES

A-

A

V

•

lillldlng IIOiJ Allot 1:00 ......

41 HOUII!I for Rent
1 I t oom Hota:f lllween K·

:.=

!Iori I - .

1o aavt~tiM

~!wC.:.C~

.BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

=

s-,

polo.
Rolrtgor- I Air Condlllontr,

•AM ,,., t l li lt a~lirtl1~ In
1hil newspaptr ts IUbjeello
1110 F-11 Foi' HovtlngAd
. .. 1"" ""'"' rnokol • llltgol

......... 11e ue oa

~W . · 1~1 1122 AIIM
~. Or Itt ttl 1111 F.or

0no btl!f_, IPirtlllll.!!!!,
$225imo. utllhlol, ......
no polo; 114tt:l-22111.

_ ...., ...,_14,

How~ver, you mus~

-·nr prettrenc~.

a complicated sltu:~tion, today. you mighl

•• ,.,...,.....,. or Nllonlf
or1·~n. tv .,., Wtnuon 1~

''""'"
anv oum prottr~t~Ct.
Mmltation Of dl~naiiGn."

__

TNI no-If will nol
knoWinglY lccepl

,,.,'"' "'""

' WNCft lt.., villllkJn of tht
10W. Our &lt;OICIOI'IIN noroby

; ,.•...., ,,., on crwollngl

•M•-Inllill ~­
' ... ..,....,.. an 111 .,.1

-··'*~'

first ideas are not likely to be your best
ones.

•

derive from situationS where you ,ha~e

make a hasty deal thai lends 10 benefit some degree of expertise: Wandenng 1n
your adversary more, than yOu . Don'l fty off unfamiliar fields COUld prove BXpen61VO.
.\he runway without your p!Of)eller.
.
PISCES (Feb. 20.March .2G) Be careful
· VIIIOO (Aug. 23-hpl. 22) An importanl lodlly thai you do not prejudge people
objec'live can be achiiVICIIOd!IY. provided siluallons . Siluatrons that you 1n11ially
you !)lake thingt 11eppen instead o1 wailing assess opl imisllcally mighl be fUSI lhe
Take advanlage ol any opportunilles tor tor them to happen. Your euceeoa Is ielat- ' opposile.
'
ARID (March at-April 11) This Is no\ a
travel \he\ you might gee In the year ahead. ed to your initiative.
Sbme wondertulexperlences are indlclted, LIIAA (Sop!. 2~ 23) There is a pus$;. good day to auempt assignmencs with
and you might find a way lo do oomelhing biMiy that you ~ighl repeal an old mistake ' which you're unt1miliar. It could be wiser to
lh&lt;lt Will be comme&lt;ciaMv proHtablo.
loda)' instead o1 profiling from a peal expe· wall until you !1avt someone who can pro,
GEMINI (lily 21-June 20) You are likely rief1Ct. Subdue your eetlonl until you've vide you with guidlnCt lhrough lho {nazo.
lo lind ways 10 do lhings today that c:an had a cnance 1o cleatly study matters. · , TAUIIUS (April :10-ihY 20) II you feet .a
. advance your personallnltreats . ~ul 1n . SCORPIO (Oc!. ft.Nov. 22) In a silualion need for ln11,1an1 gratlf&lt;calion \oday , you
your ,rulh to tullill your own dlolro•. you -thai Involve• oU.ere ie well aa yourself may either spend more ~oney than you .
might not lreol olhorS so well. Gel • jump ' loday, you musllhlhk In letms of Ilia goner· Should or pay 100 high a pnce lor what you
on rrte by u""'rstanding the influqnce~athal ' al good . All m~st benelil ·equally o&lt; your get.

-oniiCO , CoiOI', IOiigion,

•

car~ful not lo pre-

ideas won't work ..
SAGITTA,RIUS (Nov. 23-Doe:. 21)
Developmenlslhal you consider pnonly
maHem mighl nul bo ol equal significance
lo your associa'ies today. This could create
an at.mosphere where people wilrk at cross
putpOses .
CAPRICOIIN (Dee. 22.Jen. 19) It you are
faced with .a problem loday, don'l jump lo
conclusions. There is a chance that ~ur

you'ni nul.
AQUAIIIUS (J1n. 20-Feb . 19) Your besl
LEO (July 23·AUf1. 22) In order to expedite , poss ibilities lor financial success loday,

l mlllllon or dllcltmtnllkX'I

.

bJ

tend you 're an e;.:pert .about $Omething

....

,..

. '

1

'

'

,-

A

'
'

~

0

thai I hilven'f '
· ~

."

year

,j

~

WORD
lAM I

'·
.,.,

old

1
~- .

.•'
"

"

..

:

.•
•

;

•Q-Pooii14-III-1MI.
1'1. ill 'llllund

'

-

'W

sa

&amp; I IV"' I [I, I•

AITRO-OM'PB

"

SCIAM LIT$ ANSWEIS
r·••
Vanity • Chum • Botdl • qtfir'fl· BOUGHT
"Look at lhat beautiful coat lhat gaits wearing!" sighed
one cutie .. "It's not
great." her friend shrugged. "I
• happen to know how she got It. She BOUGHT Hherself!~

f,ifl'l ';1q•pl1"

114h Whool Wlh ... 110
Allor IP.II. Or l.one II uogo
Alulillnum 11m lldlrta 4'1110'
lnoirrrlt To lulld' :M'dZ'

..

..

Hoi b:wl, rtl! • ..... -

year ahead. Send
tor
. i
predictions today
by mailing $1 ·
a long, selladdressed.
· envtlope to Astro· '
Graph, c/o this n - . P.O. Box 4465,
New York, NY 10163, Be sure lo slate your
zodiac sign.
CANCEII (June 21-Julr 22) People wilh
whom you're involved today will put cqnsid- .
eraible stoCk in your ideas and opinions . ·

"

· ·~

I

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UNSCRAMBlE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER ·
• •

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,

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Complete the chuckle quoted
• .....J.L....I.L......I
by filling in the _missing 'WOf'ds·
1,-1..-1..- L
you develop from step No. 3 below.

Vegetilblll ,
44HI57.

Olda.

57 Aiming 11

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NOw Allo Cholrw f12,10,
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~:::::::::::~..:..:..., me back. I'm in the middle of .
T H R I ME
a major --!"

lnltrumenta

poolfot

Perwglllan ~
51 Relative ;
53 Bird (comb. ~
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A. The problem is lack of para!·
ielism. As modifiers, BETTER is a
comparative &lt;used for two&gt; and
WORST iii a superlative (used for
more than two) . The comparative
form of WORST is. WORSE, as in the
proper "for better or worse." If you'd
rather use superlatives, BEST is parallel to WORST, as in "for best ot
worst." Always, avoid "for better or
wont" in your writing, for _better or

.

'•
34 Con1umt11 ~
herd eoaUnlll

Tliere is a bridge equivalent to tbls:
the revealing pre-emptive bid. Suppose you have a two-way guess for a
queen. U an opponent has opened with
a high-level pre-em(it, your natural reaction is to play his partner for the
queen. But sometimes you don't need
to
you can find out - as in todeal.
leads the heart king: four, ace,
East returns the heart five:
I eitzbt. 10, nine. Now West switches to
lth• ·~llnhjack : queen, ace, seven. Qack .•
I cornes the club six, which South careruffs high.
·
'U T
us H WE
. N UC L
J z
u
·11rawlng trumps, South has to
find the diamond queen. The computer
IDJNA:
DL
GUT HZ
knows that if he has nine cards missing the queen, the 11 priori percentage LMLEVOWAV
HW
D L
play Is to cash the ace and king. When
the queen doesn't drop, he complains JTHLELZHLA
JT
about bad luck.
The robot assumes that, because
XUZHEWJUTTJ.
West pre-empted, East must have the XUEILNiiiW
diamond queen. He cashes dummy's PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ''There Isn't an Idea l'ye ever had
ace and leads the jack, preparing to fi- put down on paper." - Isaac: Aoimov.
nesse, but East's discard puts paid to
the plan.
The bridge player tries to get
c~~i~~~e count of the band. Aftet
Roairango letlen of
di ":
,;~~~·tr!u~m~apsf~'uibe~~ ac~hes
dummy's
lour oc10mblod _,js , ·
diamond.
When
low to form four simple
••• -~··- to ·
suit, South knows
~tarted 'with one iijlade,
clubs
at least sill: hearts, probably
seven. ']'his means he must have three
four diamonds. .
South plays
I1 ~ i;=~~,:~
· inwardly,
to his king and leads tbe
diamond nine, finessing when West
FASTF
plays low.

T!{~r~~i.JL1f.t1 IJil

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311 BeneflCii(Y ,

Outside a London nightclub, there ll.....+was a poster proclaiming: "Six beauti·
ful danci!IC girls! Five beautiful il..4_;_+--

HOmtl

31

.

36 Covtr (with

By Phillip Alder

Wll Do Clrpon!IY WOI1r Of Anr
ICind, lulldll1g '"'"' Qraund Up
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owtd
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Dw eo.. Cenlor t

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woman

10 AxNkl loot
11 EdgerAIIn

costumes!"

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g,.IIJ Alld lxporto- lo Tho
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Cola. Collie For A VIol!. lnlonl
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Dealer: West

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the coin-operated kidney dialysis machine!"

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"Was he a tough bus,nas• man? He invented

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NEA Croaaword Puzzle

BRIDGE

W 1-44; IV

.,.

�.

Thursday, May '0,1993~

Pomeroy ..ddleport, Ohio

P11g1 12-The Dally Sentinel

Congratulations
To .The District Champio
Southern Tornadoes!
.

.

Ohio Lottery

Reds
slip by
Braves

Pick 3:
476
Pick 4:

9070

Page4

.

'

•n

.

'

,.
'

Vol. 44, NO. 22
. lluHimecl•lnc.

A construction worker 8l the
Gavin Power Plant died Thursday after he was backed over by
a cement truck.
Harold Z. Brown, Sl, Jackson·, was flown by LifeFiigbt
helicopter to CabeU-Huntington
Hospital in Huntington, W.VL,
where he died thai evening following emergency surgery,
Ohio Power Public Affairs
Information Manager David
Hagelin said.
Brown was em~;&gt;loyed by
Kokoslng Construcaon, a fino .
contracted to work on the
Cheshire plant's scrubber pro~ecL The worker had apparently
Just stepped down from a cnme
when lhe truck backed over him
shonly before noon. The driver,
employed by Champion, Inc.
contractors, apparently did not
see Brown, Hagelin said.
Kokosing representatives,
assisted by Ohio Power, are
investigating lhe incident, he
added.

Pictured are (front row, L·R): Jeremy Hill, Robert Kimes, Eric Jones, Billy Jones, Andy Grueser,
Joey Hensler and Andy Fields. In the back row are assistant coach Mike Kloes, David Smith, Kyle ·
Wickline, Jeremy Dill, Robert Beiber, Ryan Williams, Jeremy Northup, John Chaney and head
coach Mick Winebrenner. Absent from picture is ·assistant coach Bill Hensler.

."Sweet I6" Regional PJay
. FRIDAY, MAY 28th
••

Men granted
P!Qbati~!! .• __

Southern t•s-71 vs. Frofttier (17·Il

After paying restitution, two
Racine men who each pleaded
guilty to three counts of burglary
last September were recently gmnt·
ed super-shock probation in tbe
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
John Amos, 20, and Mark C.
Theiss, 19, were gmnled the p'Obation as part of their plea bargain
agreement, Common Pleas Judge
Fred w. Crow m said this morn-

Ohio University's Tra
Field
Ga111e Ti111e: 1.:30 p.~a•.

..

GOOD LUCK, TO
Crow's Family Restaurant
Po•eroy, Oh.

992·5432

'

~ WilliaT:s~r::::ci.ates
108 Mechanic St. 992·3985 Pomeroy

K &amp; C Jewelry_
Po•eroy, Oh.

992·3785 ·

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co•.
Middleport, Oh•.

992·6611

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry ·
Middleport, Oh.

992·2635

Baum True Value
Chester, Oh.

985·3301

Fruth 'Pharmacy
Home National Bank

Racl•e, Oh.

'

992·6333

Syracuse, Oh.

Po•eroy, Oh.

Ewing Funeral Home
992·2121

Po••roy, Oh.

Brogan Warner Insurance
992·6687

Po•eroy, Oh.

Sugar Run Mills
992·2155

949·2493

Po•eroy, Oh. ·

Raci•e, Oh.

p::~~v
867-3181

blrBank~d·

..... FDIC

· 8t S~gs Company
................I

..
..

TUPPERS PLAINS

'

,.

· Quality Print Shop
992·3345

Middleport, Oh.-

Gil THE

Gravley Tractor

SYSTEM

SALU and SERVICE
992·2975 Pomtroy, Oh.

GRAVELY

.,

,.
'

No paper Monday

992·2506

'

'

Po•eroy, Oh.

Chancey's Food
. 992·6542

Pe•eroy, Oh.

The Shoe Place/Locker 219

992·5141

·!

•

Mlddlepert, Oh._

Veterans Metilorlal ·:.

.Middleport, Oh.

The Daily Sentinel
'

992·2155

Po•eroy, Oh.
•

'
'

.

Group will co-sponsor
July Fourth celebration

Syracuse, Oh. •,

Fisher Funeral Home

.

• Tbe D.Uy Sentlael will •ot
be published Mooday 10 tllllt
its employees CIID oblerve tbe
Memorllll O.y bolldlly. RepJar publlcltlou ••d busl•ea
lloun will resume Tuelll8y.

,.

Crow
&amp;
Crow
AnORIRS IT UW
992·6057

Farmers
Bank .
.

Adolph D.airy Ya ey

Rose's Excavating ·

Middleport, Oh. 992·5627

992·6491
992•2210

Swisher·Lohse Phar111acy
992·5141

First·quarter .
growth anemic ~
0.9 perce_nt

•

•
•

PLAQUE PRESENTED • A plilqn to lie
placed 011 tile- .aero.~ ruder
and prllder dedladed to C. E. Bl•bdu, 1011&amp;·
time Library Board mealier, pftllellted to

Ilia Tlllll'lday ' ' Pat Holter, board president,
Pat MiDI, Yice preslde•t, and Mary Yost, secretary, plctund left to rlgbt.

Library's micro-film reader/printer
is dedicated to Charles Blakeslee
The new micro-film/microficbe
reader and printer at the Meigs
County Ubnlry has been dedjcam
to long-time board member,
Cbarlea Blllkalm.
~ plaque ~.be ~ 1111 the
CQUtPB*Il. . . . . . biJ ~

iion 10 the Mcip Coud1y libraries
and their devclopme•l. ID 1949
Blakeslee _,ed as a member ot
the Pomeroy . School District
Library a thcu went oo to serve
on the Melas Local School District

Ll.ln'y and now the Meigs County
At that time Blakeslee thanked
Dislril:t Library. He was president all of the uusrees wilh whom he
of the board lrom 19S9 to 1973 haS worked for their cooperation
wben the J&gt;oiJdot 81111 Mclc!Jtpnrt and SUJIIIOli. He said lhst without
Local School D1stricts libraries ·that COO(iealllon be would DO\ have
mapd.
been named Ohio Trus&amp;ee of lhe
·;...JJ~ WPJeCmtlar • ' •· " Year in 1970. He_mentionedjnnonized: as die orpnizing president, vativeness and effort of Vilma
1969· 1970, of the Ohio 'Valley Pikkoja, fonnerboolanoblle librari·
Ami Liblluies (OVAL) during the an who he said provided the
20th ...m:n.y celebnliou held 81 "spark• to get the OVAL organizaOVAL beadqlllrterS, Wellston.
tion started and funded.

ing.

. The agreement said the two
would be eligible for release in six
months if they paid restitution,
Crow said. The reason they were
not released in six months was
because lhey had not yet paid restitution, he added.
Amos and Theiss pleaded guilty
to breaking into lhe Racine·area
residences of David Diles, Daniel
Hensler and Roger Theiss for the
purpose of committing a· theft
offense. The two have been placed
on probation for five years.
A third Racine man, Shane Circle, pleaded guilty to involvement
in one of the robberies and was
later released from the SEPTA
Cen&amp;er in Nelsonville and placed
under house arrest so he could
aaend coUege.
· According to Special ProsecUUX' .
Linda Warner, one juvenile was
sentenced and motions are pending
to have another, who bas since
turned 18,1ried as an adult

The annual Founh of July celebration in Middl
this year will
be co-sponsorer:; Middleport
Village and the Middleport COOImunity Association.
Plans call for the observance to
take place on Sunday, July 4,
beginning 81 6 p.m. wilh I l)lll1ll(e
through town. There will be a
speaker at 7 p.m. and enlertainmlllt
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at which
time lhe Middleport firemen will
have a fin:WOib dUplay.
AmonJ the enteitalners will be
the Shady River Shuftlers. Others
who would like to perform are
inviled to contact Tom Dooley It
992·3148.
All acdvltlea will like pl8ce this
YC81' In Dave Diles Pult on FroGt
SlleCI. eo.-tons will a1ao be in
the pldt, Dooley aaid.

2 Secllona. 12 P8gM 25 -~~
A Mulllmecblnc. NIWIPifllr

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 28, 1993

Man dies
following
accident
at Gavin

•

• •

Low llllllcJUia 5Go. Partly
doudy. SatlirdaJ, putly cloud7,
hlgb !niiGL

WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer caution 8l home and a poor
trade perfoonance abroad combined to produce a sharp slump in
U.S. economic growih during the
fmtlhree months of the ye;u, the
government said today.
Growth, as measured by the
gross domestic produc~ the sum of
all goods and services produced
within U.S. borders, regisli:rcd an
anemic 0.9 percent seasonally
adjusted annual rate in the first
quarter, the Commerce Depaianent
said. That was less than one ftflh
the robust 4.7 percent ra&amp;e of the
fooMqwmer.
:
The first quarter was lhe weak·
est since' the final lhree monlhs of
1991, e;uly in the recovery period
following the official June 1991
end of the recession. The fourth
quarter had been the best in five

years.

Much of ·the lapse came from a
sharp reduction in lhe' growlh ra1e
of consumer spending. lt was 1.2
percent in lhe fJrSt quarter versus
5.1 percent in the fooM:
"Consumers are convalescing
from strong Christmas spendiqg.
They drew down their savings and
borrowed to finance their purtbasei
and now they're paying Jhe,bins,~ ·
said economist Mart Zandi of
Regional Financial Associates in
Wcst Chester, Pa.
·
At the same lime, two key U.S.
trading partners, Germany and
Japan, are in or near recession, further dragging down the U.S. economy.
The Commerce Department had
originally estimaled first-quarter
GOP growth at 1.8 percent but said
new data not known 8l the lime of
the original repM painled an even
grimmer picture of U.S. trade performance. In advance, economists
were expecting GDP to be revised

down,less sharply, to aboutl.2 IJCl;
cent
·•
"We're becoming more and
more internationalized," sai8 ·
economist Paul W. Boltz of r.
Rowe Price Associa&amp;es in Balli· ·
more. "Exports provide one iii
eight or nine U.S. jobs. If OUJ
exports aren't performing well~
lhen our domestic economy haS a
rough lime."
;
American exports fell at a 2.6
percent annual ra&amp;e while import&amp;
fr9m abroad increased at a 12 per:~
cent ra&amp;e.
Another big factor curbini
growlh in lhe first quar&amp;er wai a
reduction in government spending
at a 7.3 JlCJ'Cent allllual ra1e. Miii•
tary spending plun~ 25.9 (leJte11~
the biggest drop 9IJICC lhe government began tracking lhst ca&amp;egory
in 1972.
Housing was weak, roo. Resi- '
dential construction edged down·81
a 0.2 peJCellt amual ra&amp;e, compared'
with a 25.1 percent surge in tho
fourth
quarter.
However,
economists said unusually severe'
win&amp;er weather, including a bliz-·
zan! lha1 Sl!'Uek the East Coast in
mid·M~h. held down conatruc:
tion and lhey expect a reboiBIII ill
the second quarter. .
,..
. If not for 1 buildup in invenroncs of unsold goods. OCOinllic out. put in the fmt quarter wOuld ldU;·
ally have declined.
·on the bright side, busineis~
investment in new equipment and
machinery surged 81 a 16.S prrcenl .
.annual rate, even better lhan the 8.6
percent originally cstimated. That ·
follows a robust 14.$ percent'
incrcsse in the fourth quarter.
•.
Analysts say the investment•
rate, if maintained, should improve
lhe productivity of American busi- •
nesses and eventually lead to a
healthi&amp; economy.
:.

Patrolfaces busiest ·~
weekend of the yea~ -

.-

..

••1

FIREHOUSE ADDmON • A 11ew
to
acc-•odate two lnldiJ Md provide 11oo -ae
spllee !Ia lies lidded to tilt Cllatcr fire.. 1•
Tbe l8d4 tqqt lllcllllu. II belq bait Mlii'IOD

•.r

-- -----·- .

Bllildm. Tile pablit wiD llllve an opportunity to
- tilt smu:tare •t tbe Cbater Volun'- Fire
Depart.e•t'a clllclten b1rbeeue ou Memorial
Day. (Pboto .7 Dllvid Banis)

Clinton's new tax bill.will
face stiffer test in Senate
.

.

.

WASHINOTON (AP) ~ e,ve l'relidcnt ClinfOn
a badly·
lriumpb wbrn tbcy
muscled his llllllive
tion tax increase tllrouall tbe
House. But the meaaure faces a
mucb - . r llllt in the IIIIR cooservative S: te
"Toniabt. the Houle llicl no 10
gridlock, 110 to the ll8tUI quo llld
no to the apecill u---." omm
aaid Tbund8y nlab&amp;. lllortly . , .
the Hoose ~ouod the $340 billion mill o
lncreuea nd
spe....... ClliB ma • 219-213 'tOle.
"Tomorrow, we go 011 to tbe
Senalc a we go bet 10 the country, .. be llid.
Tbe blll r~ta the very
backbone of .
'1 ec:otJOIDic
pi..-: 1111 boolllllll tile_....,.
enero\Jienalllltln,a4 ....
in&amp; cuts for )fJ fl •• • •• other beaeflt "'"" 7
The lU la:a- ~exempt

ddlcll--.-

tu

'•

most low-incame peap1e, cost mid·
die-income familieS up to about
$400 I yell' 81111 fllll bcavi1y 00 the
well-10-do. ll.tso iaclndes an caerIY 1BX the While Houle llicl may
be subject to compromise in the
SenMe
'
. E veil thout the bill didD' t
lllnltt •liDalc ~k ....... ill
pasiiiC wu • croclal viclllry for
CliDton, wbo baa been doUed of
late by • aeries ol emb8rralio1
revelali0111 about bill HollYWOOd
hain:utiJid bill Cllllllly eft"ortl to
fin: the Wbile . . . . tmellllllf.
"A m WOIIId lla¥e been m-y
domllin&amp; a • vicby is c:leldy 1
f):' ~u," ~ House Budiet
"dee OejnnM Mlrtil s.lio.
D-MiDD. "ADd 11 focmr Mhtioo
blck on ••••· e "
Bl?l k' a ..,... to lib to
Jllllb the
e tltnJu&amp;b the Senlie . . . . . for pstillc IUjljlUOt
such aa C6D1011 made before the
n

HouseVOie.
·
Awaiting lhe bill were seveial
conserVIltive aellllton - chiefly
Sen. David Boren, D-Otla. - who
·would 1i1le 10 chanle or kill Clinson's~ CIICI'8Y tall, and bol· ·
111«
gialorioo with additional
spendina CUlL
..Democrats are 1oing to be
wile enDUih to see thel if we don't
want to allp blclt to lhe mode or
beiDa I IBX·Imli·I(IOSICI pa1J, that
we'lfbeiJ? sedl
this pdiiC,"
Boren sud ~ just mlnu&amp;es
after the House~.
Even Sellllle MaJority Leader .
Oeor1e Mitchell, 0-Malne, has
"'" '"'-!dill cluul8eiii'O lllrdy In
the -IY llltlmll thet extra spending cuts may be ........
Sen• ccmmiur n were expected to flnllh wrililla lheir own - sioa of the bill by lilid-June. Democntic lelllen would like the full
Senate to llJIIIOW' it before July 4. .

The Ohio Stale Highway Patrol
is buckling dnwn for wh8l usually
proves to be iheir busiest time of
the year- Memorial Day week·
end.
The holiday which signals lhe
start of summer with travel and
. g8lherings of all types also has a
down side. More people are killed
in traffic accidents on Memorial
Day weekend lhan any other week·
end ofihe year.
AU uoopers at the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol
will be working durinjl the holiday
traffic reporting penod, Lt. R.J.
Woodford advised in a press
release.
''This is in addition to troOpers
woddng extra hours making a concentrated enforcement effort on
U.S. 35 and State Route 7 ," he
said.
Troopers will be watching for

speed violations, followin" to~
closely, failing to yield and driven,
who have been drinkinjl.
~·
''Troopers are issumg citationr
for safety bell violation 81111 givini'
very few warnings, • WoodforiL.
said. "This made a pronounce:.
effect in reducing lhe numbCr o~·
people killed in Gallia and Mei$8
counties from 22 in 1989 to 10 .IJI.
1990, 10 in 1991 and eight in 1992:
This year ihere has been one death
in Meigs County.•
~
He also said anyone who secs an ·
impaired driver can report to any.: patrol post by cilling 1-800-:
GRAB·DUI.
·
••
"Don't be foolish and assume'
nothing will happen to you or a·
loved one while driving the high- ·
ways, drive defensively; Wood- .
ford said. "Don't drink and drive,.
wear your seat belts and keep your
speed in mind. Have a great holiday."
-

REMINDER FROM THE PATROL- Au 0•1o

Bilk _,· ·

PlltrGitl'lllllreurlllup.-hi~..-IMiolaDiw' t til j 1 a· Z
~e•clrtnnll*y81't-.
e ..... ll.-rtot•wwa •
•·

vuvn &amp; tbe ll8tnJI leedlliE ltlelr ~
ODe of tbe buitest ol tbe yetll':

.

•

•

tilt.M•lrlll .,.,. WI '

J1

~

-

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32479">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32478">
              <text>May 27, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="371">
      <name>gilmore</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1065">
      <name>lipscomb</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3930">
      <name>scholl</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="738">
      <name>zerkle</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
