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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport-Gelllpolla, OH Point Pleeunt, wv

Page 08 Sunday llmei Sentinel

June 13,1993

u~ s~

Area 5 Envirothon proves to be success
By CONNIE WHITE,
GalUa County
ASCS Staff
GALLIPOLIS · Recently, the
Raccoon Creel:: County Puk was
the site for the major high school
environmental event of the year for
· our uea. Two hundred students
mal::ing up 41 teams from 12 counties in southeastern and central
Ohio competed for top hOnors.

.
GALLIA ACADEMY FFA TEAM . Gallia
Academy FF A participated In the recent Area 5
Envlrothon competition. Representin1 Gallia

Farm Flashes

County,' Jell to rJabt are Jason Snyder, Floyd
Evaos, R. J. Calboua, aod Scott Lear.

Active Blue Mold is
confirmed in Kentucky

By EDWARD VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS • Active Blue
Mold was confumed on May 26 in
Hart County, Ky . The tobacco
plants involved were greenhouse
. produced "float" plants. The spore
prpduction from the infected ti$$Ue
was very heavy. The University of
Kentucky is testing for resistance
to "Ridomil" in this case. High
humidities in greenhouse/float sys·
terns favor blue mold and
widespread movement of infected
ttansplants could occur. Sronn sys·
terns that have moved to us from
the south recendy may lead to CIIJ;·
tier than normal exposure for local
tobaa:o ftelds.
Dr. William Nesmith, Professor
of Plant Pathology at the Universi·
ty of Kentucky indiCates his depart·
ment has received several calls
indicating the presence of Blue
Mold in plant beds or newly ttans·

planted fields in west cenual Kentuclcy but those cases had. not been
confirmed as of this weel::s'
newsletter.
Dr. Lee Townsend, Extension
Entomologist, at the University of
Kenrucl::y recendy released a up-todate progress ~ for test of cut·
worm control m tobacco fields.
Several fanners have asl::ed "Is cut·
worm protection necessary?" and
"How best can they be protected?".
Damage can occur even when an
insecticide treatment is made but
an Or!hene transptant waler treatment provided adequate protection
at this point in Dr. Townsend's
study.
Virtually all of the Ohio com
crop has been planted and ninety .
plus percent of the soybean crop is
in the ground. Powdery mildew and
cereal leaf ~etle continue to
plague the Ohio winter wheat crop.

The Ohio Crop Report for Monday
(June 7) showed soil tempemtures
daily htghs only in the mid 60°F
range. The wum days this weel::
should have changed that number.
The USDA will release the
~suits of its June acreage survey
on JWIC 30. Ther will also release
the "June Grain Stocks" report and
the quarterly "Hogs and Pigs"
report on the same day. Dr. Darrel
Good, Extension Economist at the
University of lllinois su~ that
the three reports will obviously he
important for corn and soybean
price prospects. He feels that the
major focus of the market for the
. next two months will be on yield
prospe,cts. Several feel that the
market sees prospects for 1993
crops in the good to exceptional
yield range.
Ed Vollborn is Gallla Coun·
ty's exteuloa agent, a&amp;riculture.

Natural compounds found to combat whitefly
WASHINGTON (AP) - An
Agriculture Deputrnent chemist
says environmentally safe natural
compounds that l::illthe destructive
whitefly have been found on _the
leaf surface of a wild relative of

important insecticidal properties.''
Buta isolated the active compounds froiD N. gossei and identi·
fled them as a cl&lt;*ly related group
of esters made up of sucrose and
fatty acids.
"But the plant prpduces only a
tobilcco.
Whiteflies cause millions of dol· small amount of these com·
Iars in losses to fumers by sucl::ing pounds," he said. ARS scientists
the sap from more than 600 types plan to use classic genetic breeding
of plants, including fruits, vegeta· to increase the quantities of these
bles, ornamentals, alfalfa and cot· esters, he said.
The sugar estcn work as a nuu·
ton.
But J. George Buta of the Agri· raUnsecticide on the nymph stage
cultural Research Service said a of the greenhoUse whitefly, and are
group of sugu estcn found on the much more effective than bioinsecsurface of leaves of nicotiana gos· ticides now commonly used, the
sci can deal death to the crop-rav- report said.
"Related ~~ species apparent·
aging whitefly as an environmen·
ly
prpduce
stmilu groups of sugu
taltr, safe insecticide.
esters."
Buta
said. " However, not
'These esters are produced by
all
sugu
esters
were found to be
leaf hairs of the plant," Buta said
insecticidal.''
in a recent report on his findings.
ARS scientists working on the
"At fust we thought the insecticidal activity of this cOmpound must project have awlied for a palent for
·
be corning from the nicotine all::a- the compounds.
Buta worl::s at USDA's Horti·
loids present." .
However, he said, "we noticed cultural Crops Quality Laboratory
that other Nicotiana species con· at the ARS facility in Beltsville,
taining high levels of mcotine wete Md:
being attacked by the greenhouse
WASIDNGTON (AP)- U.S.
whitefly. This suggested that other
compounds present must have agricultural exports are expected to

amount to $42.5 billion for fiscal
1993, the Agriculture Deputrnent
'said in a recent forecast that has
remained unchanged since Febru·
uy.
" An improved expon outlook
for U.S. com, soybeans, soybean
meal and dairy jlmducts was offset
by reduced prospects for other
prpducts," the Economic Research
Service said.
"Since February, the outlook:
has weakened for cotton beef
' ' an d nuiS." it said.
•
•
•rutts
The export value was fOieCBSI to
remain VJrtually unchanged from
fiscal 1992. However export vol·
ume, predicted at ISO million Diet·
ric IonS, would be more than 6 million tons higher. The increase was
attributed to pins in wheat, com,
rice and soybeans.
"Lower prices, however, are
expected to more than offset these
increases, and the value of bull::
ex~rts is expected to fall slight·
ly, ' it said. "Continued increases
for high-value products are expect·
ed to more than offset the decline
in bulk exports, but with slower
growth than FY 1991 and 1992."

U.S. world's largest producer,
importer of beef ~nd veal
'

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
United States is the world's largest
producerandim~rofbeefand

veal, with most imports consisting
of frozen boneless meat from
grass·f~ animals, the International
Trade Commission says.
.
Beef from grass-fed animals, the
commissi·on said in a recent
release, has different characreristics
and uses than beef from grain-fed
cattle, much of which is used for
table beef.
Grain-fed beef is "typically
marbled with fat, is more tender
and has more flavor" than grass·
fed beef, it said.
"Trade and industry sources
report that the imported beef is
clo!!er in characleristics and uses to
beef derived from domestic cull
cows and buDs. The ·imported beef
is ofterl mixed with higher fat con·
tent trimmings from domestic
grain-fed animals,'' it said.
A study of the U.S. beef and
veal industry found that ~.S . production of f~sh. chilled or frozen
beef and veal feU from a 1987 level
of 24 billion pounds to 23.1 billion
pounds in 1990, but rebounded
slisbtly to 23.4 billion pounds by
1992.
It also found that from 1987 to
1991, U.S. consumption of beef
and veal dropped from 25 billion
pounds to 23.9 billion pounds, ris·
ing in 1992 to 24.1 billion pounds.
About 6 percent of U.S. consump·
lion was imporled annually during
the t987-1cm period studied.
" The U.S. is the world's larJest

ued at $2 billion in 1992.
Japan, Canada, the Republic of
Korea and Mexico were·the largest
U.S. expon markets.
- Exports of live cattle and
calves increased from 1987's level
of 131,000 animals valued at $105
million to 322,000 animals valued
at$193 million in 1992. ·
- U.S. imports of live cattle
increased from the 1987 level of
1.2 million animals valued at $421
million to 2.1 million animals vii·
ued at $978 million in 1990, before
declining to 1.9 million animals
valued at $952 million in 1991.
Imports of live catde were equal
to about 3 percent of the animals
slaughtered in the Uniled StaleS in
1987, increasing to 6 percent in

1990 and in 1991.
Canada and Mexico accounted
for nearly all U.S. imports of live
catdeduring 1987-1991 .
WASHINGTON (AP)- There
were 2.8 million people worting on
U.S. fums and ranches in mid·
April, an increase of about 10,000
over the number worl::inj! a yeu
ago •. according to Agnculture
Ilepartrnent statistics.
t'ield workers were paid an
average of $6.37 per hour, up 36
cents, while livestock workers
earned $5.6S an hour, up 13 cents
from a year aao.
Such benefits as housing and
meah were ~id to 44 percent of
hired worl::en, compued with 41
pen:eat in April of 1992.

The envirotbon event; is found the program to be one that
designed to challenge the l::nowl· they enjoyed, thought it was worth
edge of the team members in a theit: time and learned a lot tool
competitive test in five areas of the Benson iJ positive that this event
envtronment. Resource people has interested the students in learnfrom areas of wildlife, forestry, ing more about the environment
soils, !I'JuatiC science and environ- and they will encourage oth« stu·
mental ISSues put together a series den~ to partid~lt next yC~J;. We
of questions. These relate to the ue hoping that Gallia Academy
general knowledge students have · will have two teams to compete
on the topics and site specific ones next year in Delawue County.
that challenge their reasonine abili·
Each school can have two teams
ties. he test is held at various loca· of five students each, so 10 stu·
lions uound the uea to give the dents can participate. Alternate~
students an opportunity to experi· work with the teams which
ence different natural conditions. expands the number of students
These natural differences of the involved on the local level. Maybe
various locations ue buill' into the next year Gallia County could send
test in site specific questions.
at least one learn from each high
Four teams advanced to the stale school in the county.
·
· level of competition which will be
Our tbanl::s to the staff at the
held on June 14 at Blacklick MetrO Raccoon Ctee1c County Park, DebPuk near Columbus. The National bie Elliott-Park Manager, Brett
Event will be held at Niagra Falls, Bostic-Recreation Program Coordi· N. Y., the-first weel:: of August. nator and Josette Balcer-Director
The national event is a week long 0.0. Mcintyre Puk District for all
competition. Currently there are of there time and efforts they put
about 20 stales and two Jli:Ovinces into ~e planning and preparations
from Canada that ue parucipating. to make this such a successful day.
Gallia Academy FFA participat· · We especially want to thank
· ed in the Area s competition. Rep- Stan and oms Hurison, o( Huri·
resenting Gallia County were Jason son Fums and Bob Evans Fums,
Snyder, Floyd Evans, R. J. Cal, Inc., and Mead Corporation for
• houn, and Scott Lear.
their financi31 sponsorship of this
In speaking with Huold Ben· ' event.
son, their advisor, 'the students

By Lisa CoUios,
GaiDa ASCS
GALLIPOLIS • Your local
Agricultural Stabilization and Con·
servation Service (ASCS) Office is
j!Oing to be a very busy place dur·
tng the month of June.
Producers are. urged to ca.ll
~ fo/ ~ appouttment to a"!ltd
Wllll_llg 1n hne. Remember, a ramy
da~ IS D?t .the best day to make a
qu1ck vtsll because we always
seem to have more fumers on a
wet day.
.
. T~ere ar~ two matn program
deadliCRnesOPwhJCCh EmRustTibeFI~Collowed:ION.
AT
DEADLINE • Monday, June 21,
1993. This is the final date to report
your crops without a late fJling fee.
All fums that are signed into the
t~eir
1993 com and/or wheat program
and the Conservation Reaerve ProBy Kba Harless,
be SI!'Bnded.
gram must report in order to remain .
· Farm Bureau
What generates change? What
eligible for program benefits.
.
Organization
Director
factors
delermine which doors are
Farms that are not in the program
JACKSON
•
One
of
the
only
musrfile a report to recetve crop
~? W)len i.t ~OI!ICS ~ pe~.
history cred1l or to build base factors cons~t or permanent in family and bust ness goals, what
(Remember • crop bases are the life is change. People who rec~· factors influence your passage?
·
average of five years of reported nize change can control thetr Consider the followin11:
Economics: Shif11011 exports,
acreage. If your fum bas a base future.
Change is a process. It's.a jour· global competition, prices, taxes,
(com or wheat) a zero report will
ney down a ~I where a variety ol overhead, production costs - If
protect your existing bases.
BURLEY TOBACCO LEASE doors are temporuily open in front . the bottom line delermines the life
AND SALE DEADLINE • Thurs· of you. As you pus through a door, of the business. will enough
day, July 1, 1993. Producers who you enter .another hall with other re~ be available to guar&amp;nrce
intend to lease or pennanendy pur- doors open ahead. Passage means growth?
·
chase tobacco quota should ·note risk. Wall::ing through I!Ome doors
Technology: Buying new equipthat this is the final dale to file for generates little change while others ment. bi01echnology, shifting from
1993, ALL puties involved must gready affect your life.
food prpduction to 9,ther non·food
Moving forwud is important. products - is tlie · operation
sign by this 111!te to be effective for
Regardless of choice, all doors will equipped to tal::e advantage of new
1993.
cl_
ose as you pass through or by inventions and trends?
The Gallia ASCS Office notes
them;
there's no turning bacl:: .
that based on 1992 records, only
Consumer: Demands for new
Also,
since
doors .are open for a prpducts - can the operation J.lfOo
20% of the expected fums have
certified their crops for 1993 and limited time. staying in one place duce the raw materials that go utto
approximately 6S% of the leases . too long means you 'II eventually "value-added" products that meet
for burley tobacco quota have been
changing nted.s? .
completed. Call ahead at 446-8686
Professional: What do I want to
for an appoinbnent 'to avoid the last
do? Can the operation ~ me
minule rush!
meet my expectations and
?
Doors opening and clostng, limited time, varying amounts of risk,
NEW YORK (AP) - · The gov· thinking about.money, technology,
ernment bought $200 million worth consumers and personal goals of dollars in April in an effort to change means constant motion.
halt the dollar's rapid decline
How is chanae affectinll you?
against the Japanese' yen, the fed. What factors most strongly unpact
era! Reserve Bani:: of New Yorl:: your future? Are you charting a
said.
course through the doorways of
'
The
Fed,
in
a
qUarterly
report
life? What plans are you making to
WASHINGTON (AP) - Neu·
Thursday
on
its
activity
in
the
for·
ensure
that you won't be caught
record yields r.er acre will help
eign
exchange:
markets,
~ugbt to somewhere with all the doors
push the nation s winler wheat hu·
vest up 14 percent from last yeu, • refute economtsts' ~ns lhlll closed?
U.S . monetary policy 11 skewed
the A~culture Department says.
COLONY THEATRE
In tiS latest forecast. the depart· towud a sttonger yen u a means
of
cutting
America's
$49.4
billion
FRI. THRU THURS.
ment estimated Friday that this
yeu's harvest would reach 1.82 trade deficit with Japan.
billion bushels, up 14 percent from
KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
the 1992 crop and l percent above
the forecast of a .month ago.
FRI., SAT. lltl.
Fumers harvested 1.61 billion
THE • • u c l Lll STORY
CUNT
EASTWOOD IN
bushels in 1992.
~ ~~· ·~
Yields should average 41.2
THE UNFORGIVEN R
bushels per acre, up 0.4 bushels
AND
SHOW liMES
from the May 1 forecast and 2.9
CHUCK NORRIS IN
FRI., SAT. SUN. 7:30, 8:45
bushels from last year, USDA said.
MON. THRU THURS.
SIDEKICKS pa·
"If realized, this yield will he
ONI! EVENING SHOW 7:10
448·1088
ADMISSION tl.IO • 440-0121
second only to the 1983 record
high of 41.8 bushels per acre," the
department said in its forecast,
based on June 1 surveys.
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA -,
Hard fed wheat production is up
~46 4&gt;1~
2 percent and white winler wheat IS
"'"
up 3 percent from the May 1 forecast. Soft red winter wheat is off 3
·it:..
'
'f•'
percent from a month ago, due
largely 10 moisture-caused disease
·problems in Arl::ansas and several
1100 , , •••
1)0 DAILW.
nearby states.
M1'Inu M~ • .._
Orange production is forecast at
1100
11.1 million tons, down 1 percent
from last month but up 2S percent
from last season.
The forecast for all Florida
oranaes is ISS million boxes. up I
percl!lll from May 1 and up 33 per·
cent ·from last season. California's
all-orange forecast is 11 million
boxes, down 4 percent from last
month but up 5 percent from last
year.

Day
June 14, 1993

••••
F LAG

Winter wheat
harvest could
jump 14 percent

.

DRR6Dll

.... . . . . ., . . ,. . ..:f. . ..

. ..

t

AUI'O ENGINES • INDUS'miAL ENGINES ·AIR COOI,.ED ENGINES
+ Cylinders Bored I Sleeved I Honed
+ Blocks &amp; Heads Milled
+ Complete MHJ~aflux Inapect1on
+ Valve Guldee (Repaired or Replaced)

+ Complete 1\tne-U~
+ Crankahafta Grlndlng ·

+Oven CJeanlni ofParta
+ Computerized Eqpne Analyzer
+ Flywheela Ground
+CamatWt BearlnP Removed and Inetllled

+ Heads Rebuilt ll!:irichanpd
....,.,.. ~ and Jn.tcaUatfon s.nrice
-cotnplet•J:nffnee and
8hort Block Arnm!Jifa Allaflable
eCu8tolll.Pf,pandfnf Serufce AIHdlable

CIIBCK OUR PRICES
BEFOIUt YOU BUY
.ALLWORK

.....

'

'

.

Tbe 91st Ohio Volunteer
Infantry, Co. B, .conducted a
memorial service at the Civil
War monunieflt on the Meigs
County courthouse lawn at
noon Suaday as a part of ,
Pomero,'s Heritage Weekend
. program.
The infantrymim marched
from tbeir encampment site
near the museum on Butter·
nut Avenue to the courthouse.
There they were joined by'
· several men and women in
clothing reproductions or that
period. Sally Gloeckner gave
the memorial message, the
intantrymen bad an bonor fir.
· J.i!J!-!ad U!J. _l~ev. W,IIJI~!D
'1\UCICIIelwartb, repreaeabng
the Meigs Cbunty Pioneer and
Historical Society, gave
prayer.

From the federal government

County receives more
than $45,000 for ·arrest
Contributions 10 a federal inves·
ligation that resulted in ·forfeiture
has led to $22,706.95 t:ompensa•
· tion checks for both the Meigs
County Sheriff's Office and the
.Meigs County Prosecutor's Office,
Edmund A. Sargus Jr., United
States Attorney for the Southern
District of Ohio, announced today.

This is the first equitable shar·
ing disbursement received by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Office.
However, l.he Meigs County Prose·
cutor's Office previously received
an equitable sharing check for
$9,000 in 1988. resulting from a
forfeiture action against a piece of
real eslate located in Meigs Coun·
ty.
·
On July 22, 1992, an investigaThe remainder of the forfeited
tor for the Meigs County Prosecu· funds not shared with the Meigs
tor's offi~ received information County Offices will be retained ·by
. from a confidential informant that the Federal Government in its
muijuana was being stored and Asset Forfeiture Fund. This fund is
. distributed at the residence of John used for various purposes, includ·
DfDud. Base4 on this in,formation, ing the payment of the asset forfei·
the Prosecutor's Office, obtained a ture program management, asset
state sea,rcb warrant and, on July management, case-related expenses
22, 1992, the Meigs County Sher• such as investigation, the purchase
, iff's Office executed the warrant at of evidence (i.e., buy money in
John Dillard's residence.
dru~ cases) ; payments to ·equip
As a result of thb search, offi· veh1cles for drug law enforcement
cers discovered a total of function_s and training.
$65,019.88 in U.S. currency, along
Since 1970, the federal law bas
with drug paraphernalia. John Oil- authorized the forfeiture of all
laid was placed under arrest and moneys and other items of value
was later indicted for violation of furnished in exchanged for a conOhio Revised Code Section trolled substance as well as all pro2925.03 (F),.trafficl::ing in marijua- ceeds traceable to such an
na; Section 2913.5 I, receiving exchange. However, until late
stolen ·property; and SectiOn 1984, even if a 1ocallaw eoforce·
2923.32, engaging in a pattern of ment agency contributed substan·
CCJ111Pl activity.
.
,tially to. an inves~igation which
·. At the request of t~e Metgs resulted.~~~ a forf~1ture, there was
County Offices, the Untied States nq_prov1S10n· wh1ch allowed the
~
Jin{OII:olfletll "Aillftlliliiralloo • 'FIIlWif.GOYtm!lleni ro ~ die
the federal forfeiture taw to forfeited assets with the local agen·
gain control of the $65,019.88 cy.
found in Dillard's residence. The
When Congress enacted the
money was th.ereafter forfeited in Compre~nsive C!ime Co~trol Act
Federal Distrtct Court through a of 1984, '·'extensively revised fed·
civil forfeiture proceeding filed by em! ~orfellure law. ~d procedure.
the United States Attorney's One tmportant revtston authonzed
Office.
the transferred of forfeited assets to

:1

ment by of
Fannie
memory
Meigs~:~~~~~~i~~·
C
•

~

wbo served in the Civil War.
(Photos by Charlene Hoeflich) ·

r

,...-----

In the past, crowds· of i,OOO or
more have not been unusual. .
Riffe, w~o will be 68 on June
26, tall::e4 wtth candor Fnday about
the la[ge amount of money that he
said 1s needed to protect H?use
Democrats in the 1994 el~c~ons.
He ~~d he is glad he can nuse ~t:
' I m not ashamed of a smgle
doUar," he said..
. . ,
. A few ye~s ago, h•s btrthday
event also r11sed eyebrows. Com·

Local brl"ef:S

Deputies stop juvenile after c!ufse .
Charges of fleeing an offica: and a number of od)er liaffJC VIOla· .
tions have been filed' against a Pomeroy .area youth as a ~ult of a
high-speed chase occuring about midnight Saturday, accrortling 10
Meigs County Prosecutor John LenleS.
.
·
Meigs County Sheriff Department deputies were on pa~l when
they encounlered a juvenile spinning the ~ on his 'yehtcle near
the inlersection of Spring Avenue and East Main Street tn Pomeroy.
The deputies turned !lfOUn«&lt;,. antici~tirig being ab~e to stop the
vehicle and warn the driver of h1s activity. But the driver tool:: off,
and the chase began.
· A roadblocl:: set up the State Highway patrol failed to s.top the
vehicle, which at times was reported to have traveled 98 miles per
hour Qll ·bacl:: roads. The vehicle was fmally stopped by deputies in
the Bashan area.
·During most of the chase, the juvenile' was driving without head·
lights. There were two others in the car.
.

.

Three men were cited between Sunday and this morning for driv·
ing under the influence, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol reported.
David C. Phillips, 41, 1394 ~alnut Street, Ade!pha, ~a_s cited
early this morning for O.U.I., driVIng under suspensiOn, drivmg left
of center failure to drive within mul::ed lanes and no seat belt;
Charles K. Gard, 63, 38471 Leading Creel:: ROad. Middleport, was
cited euly this morning for D.U.I. and driving left of center, and ·
Shawn P. Price, 19, was cited early ~Dilday morning for D.U.I. and •
driving left of center.

Patrol probes accident

.

A Reedsville man's vehicle sustained moderate damage C~U;Iy .
.saturday morning when his vehicle overturned and strucl:: a tree, the ·
Oallia-Meigs Post m the State Highway PalrOI tePQrled.
•
Tony L. Buringer, 30, was southbound on Olfve TOWIIIhip Road
26S when he !ott conttol, went off the right side of the road and
overturned, striking a tree.
No injuries wcre•epotred and no dtations were illued. The vehi·
cle wai towed from tbe ICCIIC.
Edlllir'a aote: N1111111, ·qa aad a~ are printed II they
appear 011 oll1cilll reports.

mon CauseOhio an~ other groups .
demanded campatgn refo,rms,
e~tpres~mg outral!e that a.s!ngle ,
flind-rBJser could y1eld $1 m~lion.
But Gov. George Vomov1ch has
taken some of the foc:us off Riffe.
He ge~ $25,00~ a ucl::et. Wht!e
~epubhcan contnbu~rs can pay ut
mstallmeniS and thetr numbers are
fewer, the results ue about the
same.
The speaker said h_e was not
concerned about how much money
lobbyists and other contributors
give to atrend events for Voinovich
or other Republicans.
"That's fine. I just hope they
contribute to mine,' he said.
He said, "As long as the rules
are the way they are today, I'm
goinf! to participate to raise money
for my caucus.'
The Legislature has been in a
partisan deodlocl:: for years over
how to enact limits on campaign
spending and contributions .. The
impasse is due mainly to efforts of
each party to limit sources of
money to the other.
''
BiUs ue pending in both houses
again' this yeu, and the speaker
listed teform legislation as one of
· his priorities. although 110 break 'in
the 1m~ is in sighL
Vomovich has said he would
vetO any bill that did not prohibit
contributions of union dues, a
major source of Democratic contri·
butions.
Democrats have insisted on
· what-they describe as a need for
safe~ against illegal C9'JIOfllC
contribUtions. which they cl11m ue
possible under existing .loOpholes. 1

Clinton confirms
Ginsburg nomination
WASHINGTON (AP) - Prtsident Clinton today offered the
Supreme Court nomination to
Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a
moderate who slls on the federal
appeals court in Washington,'
aOCOidina to White Houle sources
who uld she had accOjlltd.
An announcement wu planned
thia afternoon, lllid the aources,
speal::ing on condition manonymi·
ty!
.

a local law entorcement agency
that directly participated in the case
which led 10 the forfeirure.
The amoum shared with the
local agency generally reflects the ·
relative contribution of that agency
to the case which led to the forfei·
tore, including the amount of hours
and manpower expended by the
. local agency in pursuing the case.
The shared funds must be used
by the local agency in a manner
that would result in an increase of
law enforcement resources for that
agency. The shared assets cannot
be used to supplant previously budgeled items of the agency, such as
police salaries.
In addition to the benefit of the
increased local law enforcement
resources that are gained through
these equitable sharing proceeds,
when a local agency l::nows tliat it
has the op~unity to share in forfeited assets~ this knowledge promotes the joint investiga~ve efforts
and cooperation of federal. and
local agencies in fighting crime. As
a result. the true beneficiary of this
asset sharing program is the public
who received better equipped and
more vigorous law enforcement
protection.
·
. . Sargus was espeeially appreciauve of the coopemtion afforded 10
th~ Fe.detal GoveJnmeot)•u the
- Mela Cci.iaiY S,_,....1~ llld
the Meigs ~ounty Prosecutor's Office. Sargus emphasized that the
sharing checks are not gifts, but
recompense for ~n important job
well done - an tmportant ~ontri·
bution to bringing crljninals to jus· uce.

Pioneer costume contest winnerr----.

Riffe. defends big fund-raiser
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) House Speaker Vern Riffe likely
will ta1::e in at teast.$1 million this
month at his traditional birthday
fund-raiser, where lobbyists pay
bi.g bucks to rub elbows with
Ohio's top Democrat.
Riffe, 0 -Wheelersburg, has
raised the ticket price this year
from $400 to $500 per person;.cil·
ing inflated costs, and said sales
have gone "very, very, very well."
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1 Section. 10 Poges 25 cenll
AMultimodlalnc. Newspaper

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A wreath, provided by the
Iron HiUs.Solders Aide S~~~:lety
and the Historical Society, was
laid at the root of the monu·

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 14, 1993

..---Heritage Day Memorial- service---J

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Low toalabtiD 60s. Rain.
Tueldly,partly cloudy, bJ&amp;b lo

902023

Vol. 44, NO. 32
' Multlmedio Inc.

Business
briefs

•COJIPLB7B AuroJIO'Jn'll: .IIACJIIJVB SllOP SERWCB•

NEW EMPLOYEES • Anile Tackett, aarllduale or River Val· .
ley Hlgb Scbool aod Buckeye Hills ud Sabrina Tilley, a CJ'IIduate
of Wellston HJall School aod Bwekeye Hllb, are new empiOJfll at
Personal Touch, GaiUpolis. TilleJ specialized In color, perms, biJb·
lighll and precillloa catting willie Tackett spedaliud ID artllldal
nails, maaicurn aad per~~~~~.

DAY

Individuals who recognize
change can control
future

AUTO BNGNB RBBUJLDING (ALL IIAKBS • ALL MODELS)

ANGIE TACKETT

Pick 3:
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Pick 4:
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Super Lotto:
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Flag

Three cited for D.U.I.

prod~randim~rmbeefand

veal; it is also a major exporter of
those commodities," the release
said.
Ausualia, New Zealand, Canada
and Central America accounted for
nearly all of the U.S. imports during the period.
Other findings included:
- U.S. exports of beef and veal
increased from the 1987 level of
441 miUion pounds valued at $729
million to $962 million pounds val·

USDA program
deadlines are
announced

Ohio Lottery

Commemorative&amp;
of
Pom,eroy were awarded in
tbree places to tile winners In
the pfoneer costume contest
held Silturday as a. part of tbe
Hetlta&amp;e Day activities.
··
In the youtb category the
nrst place winners, pictured
left, were David Gloeckner of
Raclae and Cbannina Marie ,
Burge of Middleport.
1
Other winners In the youth
division were Rebecca HoUSer
of Pomeroy, second place, abel
Misty Clay of Middleport,
third place. Tbey are pictured
above with the willllll'l In cal·
egorill or the ac!ult Cllvirioa of
the coatnt, frolll tbe ten, Tom
Metcalf and Fannie Metcalf of
Vinton, secoad place willllers;
Lloyd Blackwood, ftnt place
wlaaer; Sallt Gloeckner,
Racine, nut place wlnaer;
aod llk:k Harris, Albvllle, HC·
ond plaee willner.
Clady' Oliveri emceed the
(oalelt. Judai;J...the Cllltumes
.were RadiMI
rflld Down·
le, a mllllber or a pioneer l'lm·
lly, Maraareti'arker, president ql the.Melp County Pioneer au HIHorieal Soelety,
and Hal Knua, OSU lllten- f.
alon aaeat and acUve Ia area •
~
blatorlcal wedvldel.

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel ·
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Ill COurt Street
PolllUOJ, Ohio
DEVOTED TO T111t lln'ERDTS 91' 1'BB IIBIOIJ-IIASON AllBA

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET I.FBEW
Controller

General Manager

LETil!RS OP OPINION are welcome. They should be leu t1w1 300
worda. All le11en are oubject 1o ediliD&amp; oild mullt be signed witll nune,
lddreoa ond telephone number. No unsigned lelt«a will be publilhed. Lelt«a
should ~ in. good taste, oddreuing isiues, not penonalitll!a.

Supreme Court confirmation
process is still evolving · ·

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By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Spedal Correspondent
. WASHINGTON -By now, as !he Senale "pt""epat"""es"" to judge a nominee to the Supreme Court for the 133rd time, the practices and precedents
of confumalion ought to be settled. But uaditioo doesn't always rule.
Not with a lifetime in judicial sanctuary at Sll!ke.
.
Not with politics at work, and parusan roles on a coun nomtnee
reveiSed for the first time in a generation.
The ~nts don't senle whethec court confinnations should deal
only With fitness and competence or should delve into plillosopby and
therefore into politics as leSIS for support of a nominee.
For 2S years, Democrars ~rally have argued the IaUer case, since it
was the only way they could mfliJence the course of the court, or try to.
Thirteen consecutive nominees, eight of them now justices, were
named by Republican presidents. So the IUJUIIItlllt' on that side was that
the con(umabon process should deal with ability, not broader political
issues.
· Now that President Clinton chooses nominees, that is a Democratic
theme.
.
"We can only hope that the Senate confll'lllllion process will be based
on merit and not on politics,'' said Dee Dee Myecs, his press secretary.
Both sides know there's really no divon:ing the two. Both sides have
'
made the case both ways.
·
·
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, for example, argued that ideology was a
ptoper concern in Republican confumations, but had held that ability and
judicial qualifications should be the only leSIS in the confumation of the
late Tl!urgood Msnhall in 1967. Marshall was the last justice chosen by a
Democratic president..
.
Con~ly, Republiqms filibustered in 1968 to prevent the promotion
of I ustice Abe Fortas to be chief justice and prevent a vacancy that would
have been filled by the nominee of a depaning Democratic president. A
year Iacer, they had the While House and wanted political considerations
put &amp;&gt;~ide on court confmnations.
But Robert Bark, the conservative jurist turned down for the court by
Senate vote in 1987, says the whole process has become highly politiciZed, a win-lose competition rather than a search for truth about nominees.
There's often been talk of reforming the coon confumation system, but
nobody has fJgllllld out how. The Constitution says only that the president
sllall.norninale justices "by and with the ildvite and couent ol the Senate."
.
.
· A think tank panel looked at the process five years ago and said COIJ!"l
conflflll8tions had come dangerously close to looki.ng like election campaigns. That bipartisan reform panel suggested that potential justices
shouldn't have to leSiify at Senate hearings; none did until 1925, and it
was the exception, not the rule, until the 1950s.
Confinnalion testimony and questioning, now televised, is built in to
the process now. It can get ugly, as when !he 1991 hearings on Clarence
Thomas, now on the court, dealt inconclusively with a .former aide's accusations of sexual harassment.
And there's no foretelling the chemi$1()' of a process in which Republicans are sure to cite their spurned nomi~s as grounds for intensive leSt. ing.of Clinton's. "You remember Roben Bode," remarked Sen. Bob
Dole, the GOP leader.
Richard Nixon had two nominees blocked. Ronald Reagan lost Bort
and a second nominee for that vacancy had to withdraw. And George
Bush suffered through the Thomas confinnation. ·
·
The laSt Democratic president, Jimmy Carter, went four years without
a Supreme .Court vacancy to nn. Ointon got his fust atmost immediately,
the retirement Justice Byron R. While announced in. advance, on Mllrl:h
19 so thece would be plenty of time to name and confirm a successor.
'clinton lOOk three months, his press secretary saying he wanted ample
time to reflect on his choice. "You never know how many bites at that
apple you'll have during a presidency," she said.

•

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice president and columnist ror The Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
national politics ror more than 30 years.

We see a president in mid-plum· dencr.
· with New Populist rhetoric, then
met. Even his still-faithful wonder
It s ·happened because Clinton. look away when his crew gave us
where he really stands and whether ' i$, at bean, more like Bush than Old Politics abuses. His Democrathe cares as deeply about any policy either l"ill ever understand. Clin- ic National Committee hit up ~­
as he does about every poll. And
cial interests to rmance the selling
his party just lost a Senate seat that
11,...-;n
of Clin,ton's unwritten health plan
should have been a keeper, a spelP'~CM u
, ..,,.
- hoptng to keep secret the concial election in a key state where - - - - - - - - - - - , _
. - tributors. His White House willinghis name did more harm than help.
ton,like Bush, is a consensus-seelc- ly smeared career travel staff We. are looking at George Bush er, not a crusader. Clinton, like · pushing the FBI to label it a crimi' 91, stunned at Pennsylvania's . Bush, rose to fame largely by nal probe-. so Clinton's pals
rejection of his pal, ex-Gov. Dick guessing what party elders and 50. could run the office and bid for iiS
Thornburgh, a harbinger that Bush percent-plus-one of the rest of us business.
was trapped in a one-term presi- wanted - then getting himself
And the spirit of "Please like
dency. We are looking, 100, at Bill there, just in time. Clinton, like me"· led him to duck and dawdle
Clinton '93, shaken by Texas' van- Bush, marches to just one fervent ·until a minor appoinbllent became
quishing of Sen. Bob Krueger at rally cry: •'Please like mel"
a major furor. He picked a friend of
the hands of many who, just seven
That motto made Clinton a most his and Hillary's, Lani Guinier, to
months ago. were Clinton voterS.
pro !I! ising can.didate he ~ead the Justice Department's civil
. Perhaps this warning salvo came promtsed everythtng from tax cuts nghts branch - but ignored warn;
loud enough and early enough to for middle. 'Classes. to sweeping ings from liberals that s)le 'd
jar Clinton into saving himself deficit cuts for our children's authored extra-cOnstitutional profrom his predecessor's fate. But so . to~~rrow, to !)pen arms for posa1s even they couldn't defend.
far, Clinton has given us - how to Halll.ans and mli~tary ar"!s for He could have ·quietly made her a
· say? - a very Bush League Presi- Bos01ans. It
htm to enuce us While House adviser, utilized her

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talents and avoided a fuestonn. But
no; Clinton delayed, then dumped
her, insisting he'd not read her
writings until that day, despite a
month of warnings (a shocking
abdication of responsibility, if
true); he said he couldn't defend
them. Finally, he insisted politics
had nothing to do with it.· No one
believes that.
Now the gnod news: There is
plenty of time for Clinton to ri$ht
his presidency. If he has the wtll, ·
here's the way;
1. Resign - as your own do-it. all chief of staff. You are the president, be presidential. You're
immersed so deeply in detail,
you've buried yolir own political
antennae. Lead. Command. Delegate.
2. Adopt the Satchmo Rule: Tell
vour
titular chief of staff, Thomas
1
, 'Mack" McLarty, "Mack, the
knife! Seize it. Use it. Also the
whip - crack it!" Don't tolerate ·
staff fltilures to warn you against
matins decisions that can cause
dire' consequences. Tell McLarty
he's failed you by not cracking
down on the staff. Also by not
standing up to you. (See: Lani
Guinier.)
·
·
3. Adapt the Dole Dictum: Start ·
each day by looking in the minor
lll1d telling yowself what Bob Dole
once told George Bush: "Stop
lying about my record!" Yoq must
·never again be caught telling us
things we an know cannot be true.
· (See: Lani Ouinier.)
4. Brandish the MeeSe Measuring Stick: Every timb an adviser
proposes another secret, too-cute,
money-raising scheme (See:
DNC's Secret Health Kitty for FatCats) or a pal Pllshes his influence
(Sec: Travel Office Cronyism), ask
yourself: "If the media cauglll Ed
Meese doing that, what would BiD
Clinton teH the press?" If it~s any. thing short of "Swell fellow, that
Ed" - justsay no. .•
It's that simple.
Martia Schram Is a syndicated
wrl~r ror NeWllpaper Enlerprise
ABsc:oatlo.n.
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The real war
. .in Baltimore
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The trouble with Washington is
that famous people are alwl!)'s
behaving like little children,
intense, P.etulant, stomping this
way and ·that, arguing, $Citing
nasty. A local folk axiom mforms
political practitioners: "Don 'I get
mad, get even."
. We hate it: we love it; we watch
it. But who needs it? It's unreal.
Forget about it, at least for a while.
When the news on television
isn't about politicians bickering,
it's about bloodshed, in Bosnia or
downtown, which often drives my ·
9-year-old daughter from the room
in fear. You have to forget about it,
for a while. It's not real.
This year it's all compounded
by the weather. Washed by early
rains and cool breezes, the June
scenery is greener and lusher than
ever. So who wants to go snip,
snip, snipping at the president all
the time? Or taxes, or budgets. Get
away from it; let's go where it isn't
so intense.
·
And so, last Sunday, along with
46,296 others, I was in Baltimore, a
more real city than Washington,
watching the Orioles play baseball
against t~e Seattle Mariners. The
June 6 weather was the best in his-

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tory, bright and crisp. Camden · ground momentarily, then ducked
Yards, the Orioles' new stadium, is beneath Haselman's flailing fiSts.
the best ball palt ·ever, ariywhere
In a moment both men were on the
With wife, daughter and friends -· ground, pummeling each other. The
Orioles on the field raced to protect·
their m$n. The players on the
bench stormed out to Join the slugging . ·The young bulls of the
all the best in
world- we set- bullpen roared in to join wage comtied in to watch the giiJlle.
bat.
The somnole&lt;nt beauty of the
In a minute, 50 strong men were
place hung in the air. The innings pounding on each other, at war,
r.eeled off inexorably, t~e action swirling on the ground, wringing
dreamy, almost slow mobon, punc- necks, wrestling on the turf. The
tualed by. the crack of ~e ·bat. and ori,inal CQmbatants were soon
the OCCasiOnal murmun.ng thunder 1 buried on the mound benesth tons .
of the cr~wd. The Onoles w~re .of writhing muscle. After a while,
ahead 5-~ m the seventh.
.
the players were separated, but
Our little group ~ relax~ m only for a momenL Then they went
the real world: Pohbcal Wash~ng-. at it ajlain, and again, punching and
ton and the vtolence o~ our It me straining, neck veins bulging.
was so .very. far away, m anQ~er
It was 20 minutes before peace
·lJlace wtth alten. ways, always 6tck- broke out. When the umpires ejectenng and hattenng;
.
ed seven players, Seattle's managAnd then Marmer Btll Hase!- er; Lou PinieUa, blazed forth from
man,moved .to the pl~le. The Ori- the dugout. He screamed at the
oles star pttcher Mtk~ Mussma umpire, he yelled, he kicked the
threw a fastball - whtch, clunk, plate, he stomped the plate, he
h!t Haselman on the meaty part of JUmped up and down on the plate,
hts left shoulder.
.
he screeched, he shrieked. Later,
Haselman dropped hts bat and Piniella explained his nuanced
charg~ to the m~nd to take o~t position: "They kicked out my
Mussma. The. pttcher stood hts starting pitcher, but their pitcher

Ben Watte,.perg
me

startediL"

(Was there something familiilr
about Piniella 's ritual behavior?
Cenainly .nothing related to c:on- ,
duc:t ever displayed by me, or by
my wife, or daughter. We always
hold our temper, never stomping
around; we never grouse about
whose pitcher got thrown out of the
game.)
The mayhem at Camden Yards
wasn't political fulminating; it
wasn't murder in Bosnia. Not
exactly.
The reactions were interesting:
"ThiH.ias the longest flllht I ever
saw." "Wasn't it great!,.' "We'll
never forget this game." "They
ought to do it every game!" My .
daughter, who cannot stomach the
pictures of violence on television,
was enthralled by the real thing.
So, as the day dims, back we go
1o Washington. It is cool and green,
more real than wben we left iL
Ben Wattenberg, 1 senior fel·
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, Ia author of "The First
· Unl\ltrlll Nation," published by
The Free Press and a writer ror
Newspaper Enterprise Association.

~

A number of people have told and the office is open.
me they still don't know what to . Either of the files listed above
make of the Lani Guinier incident would work, but the best would ·
and thps have been unable to clear probably be "Growing Pains.'' A
their minds of iL
· Was Bill Clinton right in withdrawing his nomination of Guinier
to head the Justice Depanment's
civil-rights division? Should he young president is leamin$ that he
have permined her a public hearing cannot stuff his novel nouons and
before the Senate Judiciary Com- zealous pals down everyc,me.'s
mittee? Should the me be labeled throat wuhout consultation and
"Clinton Screw-ups"? Or does it compromise. He is learning that the
go in "Clinton: Growing Pains"?
is a moderate institution
AM how should they feel about Congress
with little tolerance for the outit? Sad? Plensed? Angry? Disgust- landish. He is learning that, when it ·
ed, jaded, indifferent? How about comes to picking his people he has ·
j~"jjlain numb?
to do his homeworlc.
. The disconcerted have come to
All the emotions and attitudes
the right place. The freat Sorter listed above are suitable as well,
Outer
. has. this thing igured out, but the most ,!ipProp~ is proba·

Joseph Spear

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Today In history
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"Ricky has agreed to stay on as Senior
Foreign Pol1cy Adv..&gt;er. "

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By The Alloc:lated rn. ,
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Today is Monday, June 14, the 16Sth day of 1993. There 1R 200 cllys
left in the year. This is Flag Day.
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Today's Highlight in Hfstory:
On June 14, 1777, !he Ccntincptal Ccngress in Philadelphia adopted
the Slln and Stripes as !he national flag.
On this dale:
In 177S, the U.S. Army- founded.
· In 1801, former American Revolutionary War General Benedict
Arnold died in London.
.
In 1841, the fnt Canadian parliameilt OflClpeii i•ICiedd in Kin&amp;llon.
In 1846,11ettlcn proc:lllmed the free republic Of'Calltilmla It Sonoma.
In 1922, Warren 0. Harding bec:ime die Out preaident M.d onlldlo,
as Baltimore Slllion WBAR broldcMt hiJ l(leec:h dedlolt'na the Fnncil
Scott Key memorial at Port McHelwy.
.
In 1940, German troops enrered Paris durinJ World W• D.

Rain forecast for western Ohio tonight

OHIO Weather
Tuesday, June 15
Accu-Weather• forecast for

Bill Clinton's plea: 'Please like me!'

bly sadneSs. Sadness because such who get elected are "politically,
an intelligent person as Lani psychologically and culturally
Guinier has such wacky ideas black.''
about the democratic process. Sad- . BiD Clinton coocluded, sorrowness because the president's staff is fully, that some of Guinier's views
so confounded inept that It failed to are "anti-democratic" and "very
see that hu radical views would be difficult to defend" and yanked the
controversial. Sadness because ~ nomination. Personal friend or no,
president had to give the boot to a he did not want her jn his Justice
personal friend It was, he reported- Department. And if he didn't
ly told aides, ·the worst day of his bounce her, the Senate sure Jr.
presidency.
would have - with, much turmoil
As painful as it was, he did the and further polarization ·of the
right thing. I realize that's not what races.
yo~ !U"e heari~g from civil-rights
You might a)so want to stick
acuvtsts and liberal pundits, many some of this information in a geilof whom ~ave b~en downright , era! file called '·'Democracy,''
c:ruel and sptleful ih their denuncia- because this incident doca have
tiona. But once the president iot broader meaning. It is that ideoaround to reading what Guinier had logues of all stripes don't like
written in her disputatious law · democracy. It frustrates their
revi~w articles, he just could not cffons to effect their fanatical
conbnue to supPort her.
. aJendaa, and they will stay up ·
She advocates ideas that are the mghta thinkins up ways to evade
antithesis of del!tocracy. Not satis- thwart or dellroy it.
·'
~~ w!th !aws that protect every
Right-wlnaer Pilrick Buchanan,
cllizen s nghtto vole and run for for example, cloeln'tlllte democ:raofftce, she wants laws that guaranHo uys It may be the "Golden
tee results. "The tarm 'anti-disrllbil geneqdon.'' Left-wing
'crimination' refers to more than the ~ta of politicll correc:tnea
, basic process of decision-m~." don t like clemocncy. They believe
she wrota in a 1989 article. 'It speech should be ceuorecL
incorporites a reault·oriented
And uyone, however learned
inquirf, in whic:h rouahly equal who write~ that "we oqhtiO que~~
outcome~, not merely an ~tly don the inhenntlegltimilcy ol WinCair proc:eu, are the aoaJ, •
ner-taliwllllllijority nde" doll not
She would stacli; elections in IPJ]niCill.e the clemocJatk: proceu '
favor of minority candidates. She . el!Mr.
would endow llllllorlty leaislators
Bill Clinton did the only thlna .
with veto power. S.he cilstruats . he could do.
· black legiJlators "who must appeal · J-.p• ~Jill' II I IYDdlclted
to white votcn in order to aet elect- .writer for Nrnplper Ellterprlle
ed" and wants to enime that blacks AtlodatloL

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Mansfield 81°

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South-Central Ohio
Tonight, showers and thunderstorms likely. Low in the mid-60s,
• Chance of rain is 60 percent. Tuesday, partly sunny. High near 80.
Chance
of rain is 20 percent.
, Extended
forecast
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Wednesday through Friday:
Fair on Wednesday. Highs in
the 70s. Lows in !he 50s. Fair again
on Thursday. Highs in the 80s.
Lows from the mid- 50s to mid60s.
Ch ance 0 f th un derstorms Friday·
Highs jn the 80s. Lows in the 60s.

Area deaths
· James Anderson

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the dau$hter of the late Orville A.
and
Sadie McDowell Rush. PrecedJames Arnold Anderson, 68,
ing
her
in death was her husband,
·. Racine, died Saturd!!-Y.,.June 12,
Gordon
C.
Jackson.
· 1993 at Veterans Memorial HospiSurviving
are her sisteflin-law,
tal following an extended iDness.
Mrs.
R.
Vernon
Roush, Boynton
He was the son of the !ale Owen
' and Mjlrtha Rhodes Anderson: He Beach, Florida and three nephews,
·. was a retired rivetboat captain and David K. Rush, Delray Beach,
~ was employed by·Pfaff and Smith. Aorida, Lonnie G. Watson, Champion, Pennsylvaliia and Roben
' He was a protestant..
·
Mr. Anderson is survived by Ri~sh ; Altamonte Springs, Florida.
four daughters, Connie Morris, . Services will be held at 11 a.m.,
Lori Anderson and Brenda Ander- Tuesday, June 1S at the Main Street
son all of Racine, and Bonnie Baptist Church with. tlie Rev.
' Brewer, Ponland; three grandchil- Donald W. Johnson, Jr. officiating.
Burial will follow in Kiltland
, dren and four great-grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was pre- Memorial Gardens.
Friends and family may call
ceded in death by his wife, Wilma
Teaford Anderson, in I986.
tonight at the Crow-Hussell Funeral
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday Home from 7 tO 9 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, friends may
at , Casto Funeral Home in
Ravenswood W. Va., with Rev. contribt!te in memcxy of Gordon C.
Roger Grace and Rev. David Dai- and Mildred A. Jackson, to the
ley officiating. Burial will be in Pleasant Valley Hospital - Health
~ Letart Falls Cemetery.
Foundation Scholarship Trust at
' Friends Ill&amp;)' ~ at the funeral 2S20 Valley Drive, Point Pleasant,
..'hbirie ~y (Moiiday) after 2'p:m.
West '(l!'giilia 2SS50. ' ' " ' ·
•

:," Jack Carder ·

;,. Jack Carder, 31, of Seattle,
; ..Wash., died Friday June 11, 1993.
He was a U.S. Navy Veteran.
, Born on Feb. 11, 1962, he was
, . the son of Doris Carder and the !ale
: Edward Carder.
He is survived by sisters Cindy
.,McKimm and Debbie and Mandy
,.. Carder.
.
··
" The funeral will be held at But:: terworth Manning Ashmore Funer~ al Directors in Seattle. Graveside
·; serVice will be held Tuesday, at 2
.. p.m. at Mt. Pleasant Cemetery,
Scaltle.
".

,. Alva Newell
.:

Alva M. Newell, 93, of Mid:• · dleport, Ohio, died Saturday, June
•·· 12, 1993, in the Pomeroy Nursing
, and
Rdlabilitation
Center,
c. Pomeroy, Ohio.
A homemaker, she atteDded the
Clifton United Methodist Church in
her younger ~·
Born July 18, 1899, in Mason
County, she was a daughter of the
!ale Andrew R. Stewart and
Elizabeth (Ferguson) Stewart. She
was also oreeeded in death' by her
.,, huiband, t1arence 0. Newell, who
v died in 1965; son, Clarence "Bock"
Newell; J(andson. Marvin Newell;
, brothec, 8ob Stewart; and three sis~ . terS, Mary Stewart, Katie Stewart
~- and Hazel Hoschar.
.~
Surviving are ihree daughters,
.. ~ina Dailey of Ocala, Fla., Wilma
~ · Scarbeny of Vinton Ohio Sharon
• JIIIC Newell of Ches~. Ohio;
' ihree lOllS, Dean Newell of Mason,
: Donald Newell of .Clifton Roben
t , Michael NeweD otl'omerliy, Ohio;
two siSiers, Thelma HenlY of
·' ~~Bffii~teW~ ~~~~~~
· ~~dren, 18 great: ...,..,_-A...n.hildren. three great-

.,.- &amp;'•"""

Joseph Thompson

Joaeph
Donald . · · "Joey"
Thompson, 14, of RL 2, Pomt
l'leasant. died Saturday, June 12,
1993, at Cabell Huntington
Hospital.
Born Man:h 31, 1979, in Point
Pleasant, . he was a son of Joey
Thompson and Vickie (Casey)
Johnson.
·
A student at Point Pleasant
Jlinior High School, he was a
member of the track, football and
wresding teams.
Survi~s ' are hjs parenrs, Joey
and Lori (Darst) Thompson . of
Point Pleasant, Raymond and Vteki
(Casey) Johnson of Gallipolis;
paternal grandparents, Donald and
Gloria Thompson of Point Pleasant;
paterna1 great"grandparents: Hershey and Vtrginia While of West
Hamlin, W.Va., Garnet Thotilpson
of West Hamlin; maternal
grandparents, James and Connie
Casey of Middleport, Ohio, David
and Judy Darst of POint P!easant,
Linda Saxton of Point Pleasant;
materJ1411 great-grandparents, Frank
and Oma Darst of Point Pleasant
and Donna Wedge of Point
Pleasant;
brother,
Mat !hew
Thompson of Point Pleasant; step
brother, Mitchell Smith of Point
Pl~t; ~ step sister, Jessica
Smith of Point PleassnL
··
He was preceded in death by
. great-grandparents, · Asbury and
Ruby See aile! Jol!n Casey.
·
The funeral w•ll. be Wednesday,
11 a.m., at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with Minister Junior Hughes
.officiating. Burial will be in
Kirldand Memorial Gardens.
FOends may call Tuesday at the ·
funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m.

Paul Zerkle
Paul E. Zedcle, 49, of Letart,
died Sunday, June 13, 1993, in the

Charleston Ares Medical Center.

• The funeral will be Tuesday, I
Born May 17, 1944, in New
-. p.m., It ~ Foglesong Funeral Haven, he was a son of !he late
' • Home with Rev: r...,...,e Hoschar Otmer L and Neva I (R~··•)
r officiatilll: Buriai~Tu be in Zettle. ·
·
·
"""''
· Graham cerneeery.
• He was a maintenance supervisor
Friends may call this evening It the Ravenswood Aluminum Cor,· (Monday), 6 to 8 p.m.
·
ponlion.

:·Mildred Rush

".
'
·· Millnc1 A. Rush JI!Cbon, 91,
• ol Point PI nt, died Sunday,
June 13, 1993 M P'css"'l Vl11ey
. . Holpllll

She wu

1918 &amp;nlllata of
and auen
Unlvcnlty. liCk·

-ICinpood=Schoci
. '·ded West
1

1

The Dally Sentinel Pllge 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MICH.

....------------,.Ciinton·'s Guinier decision correct
·Berry~s World

.'. '

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 14, 1993

Sch•n- _.-

ROBERT L WlNGETr
Publisher

Monday, June 14, 1993

taught
In ~t J'icalnt
from 1~19 ID 1921. She WU alto a
~ member ol tile Mala $net Bl!plist
' 1011

r

· Chwdl.
' Born December 25, 1901 in
"'Scotk'lle, PalnsyiVIIIIII, she · wu

~~==cia!=
In-law, Robert Lewi11114 Kimberly

Zettle ol Lewt; daulltler, Carrie
Ann Zerlcle, at home; tlitee brothers
and lislerl-in•laW, Raymond L. and
Doris Zatle ol Chesliire, Harold L.
lild BariJara Zerkle of New Haven,
Charles N. and lona Zerkle of New
Haven; and two grandchildren,
K•ltlyn. and Roberi f&gt;aul Sheraton

Zerlcle.
The funcnl will be \Vclclne.say, 1
p.m., at the Foglesong Funcni
Home wltb the Rev. Eldon
Shlnglelon and Rev. Blldley Shaf-

By The Associated Press
A cold front will bring a chance
of rain to western Ohio tonight and ·
move out of the Stale by late Tuesday morning, the National Weather
Servi&lt;:e said .
Highs Tuesday and Wednesday
will be in !he 70s.
Dry weather and highs in the
80s are expected to return by
Thursday.
The record hip;h temperature for
this dale at the Columbus wealher ·
station was 93 in 1988. The record
low was 44 in 1959.
Sunset today will be at 9:01
p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at .
6:02am.
..
Around the natioa
Heat in the Southwest today
threatened to set more tempecsture
records, with the mercmy expected
to climb well into the lOOs in some

ed in northwest Kansas. Golf-ballsized hail pelted areas .in Missouri,
N~ 1!14lowa..
High wmds dui'mg a thunderstorm near Corning, Iowa, dam-

aged a trailer and blew a ~K&gt;Iice car
off the road. No injunes were
reported~ Nearly 2 1/2 inches of
ram fell tn one hour south of Des

Moines.

·

Scattered thunderstorms also
stretched from the south Atlantic
Coast states into the lower Ohio
Valley

·

areas.

In the Northeast, partly cloudy
sties were expected to give way to
sunshine today Slrelching from Virginia to New England with temperatures in the 80s.
A weakening cold front moving
through the Great Lake states and
Ohio River Valley was expected to
spread showers from Michigan to
Kentucky. Humid air was forecast
to produce thunderstorms from
northern Aorida into the Tennessee
Valley .
The Plains, norihem Rockies,
s
th
. ou west and West were expected
10 be mostly clear and sunny.
Extreme hot weather hung over
the Southwest and WesL on Sunday. with temperatures well into
the IOOs in the southwestern
deserts. A new record of I 08
degrees was set in Tucson, Ariz.,
beating 107 degrees set in 1987.
Also Sunday, severe !hunderstonns barreled across parts of the
Midwest and Plains. Two tornadoes
and baseball-sized hail were report-

SHIOW-MIODIIFUW • Randy
Shamblin's 1972
the best or show
modirted trophy at Saturday's car show on the

Pomeroy parking lot. Shamblia is from SlssonviUe, W.Va.

Woman
reported killed
in U.N. attack
MOGADISHU, Somali;t (AP)
-U.S. helicopter.gunships ftred at
least three missiles onto
Mogadishu's teeming slreets today
to destroy a mobile rocket launcher, but one missed its target and
reportedly killed a woman selling
tea.
Cobra helicopters thundered
overhead and the sounds of the
missiles exploding boomed across
the city as U.N. troops made their
fust daytill)e raid against targets of
militia' leader Mohamed Fatrah
Aidid. During the auaclc, hundreds
of Sqmalis gathered in a city square
to protest !he killing Sunday of 14
anti-U.N. protesters by Pakistani
troops.
Military officials have waged
war on Aidid targets for three
sllllight nights 'and say the attacks
~ere timed to prevent civilian
casualties. But Lt. Col. Kevin
McGovern said there was no policy
against daytime·auacks such as that
on the BM21 q2mm multiplerocketlaunchec.
"It indiscriminately kills everyone in the area, so it's a high-prior·
ity target," he told reponers. The
missiles were launched at about
10:45 a.m. ·
·one missile failed to explode,
and hours later was nose-down in
the dirt on one of Mogadishu's narrow, unpaved alleys.

.

,,

~·.·

~

.

1:

.

• ?-, .,

BEST OF s·H.OW ORIGINAL • With tbls
sleek red Pontiac Bonneville convertible which ·
he purchased from the showroom noor in 1968,
Lee Archer or Vincent look the best of show

Archer, Shamblin share
top .h onors in car show
'
Lee
Archer of Vincent and
Randy Shamblin of Sissonville, W.
Va. shared top honors in the Heritage Weekend show of the.Oldies··
but Goodies Car Club held Saturday on the Pomeroy parking lot.
Trophies were awarded in three
place m 16 classes and six other
categories with Archer winning the
best of show original for his 1960
Pontiac convenible, and Shamblin
taking best of show modified for
his 1972 Chevelle.
Other "best" awards went to
Amy Bernard, with her 1978
Dodge Red Express, the best
Mopar1 Benny and Judy Thivener
Wllh a I 934 Model A., the best
Ford; and Mark and Becky Robinette with their 1972 Chevy Chevelle SS, the best Chevy.
The trophy for best paint went

EMS units respond to 8 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
responded to eight calls for ~sis­
tance on Saturday and Sunday .
Saturday .
·5:04 p.m., Pomeroy unit to Mulberry Avenue for Mahlon Eblin to
Pleasant Valley HoSJlital; 6:44
'p.m., Middleport unu to Grant
Street, Lola Bradshaw to Holzer

Stocks
Am E!e Power ................... .36 5/8
Ashland Oi1........................ 26
AT&amp;T................................621/4
Bank One.................... .......52 1/4
Bob Evans ........................ .17 3!8
Charming Shop... ............... 15 3/8
Chmp Industries................ .14
City Holding .................... ~.2S .
Federal Mogul.. ..................20 3!8
Goodyear T&amp;R .........:........ 39 5/8
Lands End.........................29 718
Limited Inc....................... 24 1/8
Multimedia Inc ........... .......36 1/2
Point Bancorp .................... 14
Rax RestauranL .................. 3/16
Reliance Electric.......... ......21
Robbins&amp;Myers .... ,........... 17
Shoney's Inc...................... 17
S!ar Bank ...........................35 3/4
Wendy Int'l... .....................14 3/4
.Worthington Ind ......... ;......30 ··
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m • . quotes · pro¥ided by
Kemper Securities, Inc.,
GaUl polls.

of

fer officiating. Burial will be in the
Sunrise Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday, 6to 9 p.m.
Pallbearers will include Richard
~lor, Dlnny Belcher, Ralph T.
Roush, Bobby Joe Roush, Sam
Hoffman and Phil Hoffman.

original trophy at the Goodies But Oldies Car
Club show held as part ol Heritage Weekend
activities in Pomeroy.

Medical Center; 10:21 p.m., Middlepon unit to Mill Street, Linda
Boyler, Holzer; ll :22 p.m. ,
Pomeroy unit to Route 681 West,
Rose Flores to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Sunday
1:39 p.m .. Rutland unit to
Happy Hollow Road, Joshua Hawk
to Pleasant Valley; 5:47 p.m., Rutland unit to Salem Street for Merle
Davis lo Veterans; 7:28 p.m., Rutland unit to Route 684 for Donald
Deskins to Veterans; 11:58 p.m.", .
Rutland unit to Meigs Mine No. 3 I
for Jerry Keys to Holzec.

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
June 11 discbarns - Tina
Russell, Basil Whittington, E.
Harold Poff, Geraldine Molihan,
Harley
Dallas . Albright,
McWilliams, Dale Riffle, Mattie
Perry, Marjorie Lambert, Phyllis
Bennett, Thelma Vineyard, Colin
Hill, Wesley Larkins, lonnie Meadows, Diana Forshey, Freddie
Swindler and Cory Perroud.
June 11 birth - Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Parlcer, son, Oak Hill.
June U dlicharaes - Debra
Nibert, Margeree Law!J9n, Virginia
Swisher, Debbie McKinniss, Ondy
Swann, Anna Bond, Mrs. (lregory
Roberts and daughter. Bonita
Stumbo, Edgar Foster, Alice
Thacker and Rolfe Lee.
June 1l birth - Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Bosworth, daughter, Gallipolis.
.
June 13 discharges - Mavis
Bunon, Walter Williams: Bruce
Gillman, Mary Mullins, Mrs .
Ronald Parker and son, Tony
Smith, Eva Allen and Donna
Schwartz. ·

to Kim Neal, a 1973 Corvette, ·the
best interior to Vaughan Panner, a
1985 Monte Carlo SS; and the best
engine to Mark and Becky Robinette, a 1972 Chevelle SS.
First place ·trophy winners in the
production classes were as follows:
Benny and Judy Thivener, 19'30
Model A; Marilyn Mier, I947 Ford
coupe; Tom Smith, 1947 Chevy;
Jim Witney, 1966 Mustang; John
Horva~h. 1978 Olds Cutlass; and
Jerry and Dee Franz, 1992 Chevy
Cameco.
Other ftrst place
trophy winners
,.
.

in classes were Carroll Johnson,
1974 Chevy, all convertibles; Kim
Neal, 1973 Corvette, all Corvenes;
Ken Fleming, 1957 Chevy Belair,
special interest; Chris Burkhart,
1968 Ford Shelby, muscle cars;
Mike and Marie Johnston, 1931
Ford Roadster, street rods; Pave
Clatworthy, 1955 Che'ly .tudor,
street machine; Glenn and Ann
Goines, 1987 Nissan, mini-truck;
Rick Holly, 1969 Chevy, truck 2
wheel drive; and Brian Hill, 1979
Ford, truck four wheel drive.

Meigs announcements
Swimming lessons
Swimming lessons will begin at
London Pool in Syracuse Tuesday
at 9 a.m. Cost is $20 and Dave
Deem is instructor. Call 992-9909
for information.
Ni~ht swimming
Night,sw•mming will be offered
at London Pool. on Wednesday

Lottery results
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming all six
numbers selected in Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing so Wednesday's jackpot will be $34 million,
the Ohio Lottery said.
·
Pick 3 Numbers
6-7-5
(six, seven, ftve)
Pick 4 Numbers
9-8-8-S
(nine, eight, eight, five)
Super Lotto
3-7-15-33-44-46
· (three, seven, fifteen, thirty·
three, forty-four, forty-six)·
Kicker
.
9-0-2-0-2-3
(nine, zero, two, zero, two,
three)

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

. :

7

from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Admission is
$1.
Party planned
Pomeroy Safety Patrol will have
a picnic Satarday from 7-9 p.m. 11
London Pool. Family and oae
friend of safety patrol members
permitted. Bring a covered dish,
except meat Call Becky Triplett It
992-5485, or Jennifer Lambert or
Jennifer Heck by We4nelday if
attending.
DorA meeta
The Chester Council No. 323
Daughters of America will meet
Tuesday at 7:30J:. Quarte~~
binhdays will be
vecL Pot!
refreshments. Silent auction.
... .

,..

..

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The DJy Sentiael
&lt;V8PIUI.IM) .
Publ;ohed ....,. Mooolo7
th""''h ~ 111 c-t sL "'-.;

ow. \\!lor ..:iii;..;

Ohio bJ ....
ComponyiMat.._

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Ohio 41'71101 I'll. ln-2116. S.....,.
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POSTMASTER: 11onot- ~ ..
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IRIIIIICaiP'nON L\11111
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Monday, June 14, 1993

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
•

Monday, June 14, 1993
P,.ge 4

•·

In Game 3 (}j NBA Finals,

Suns defeat Bulls 129-121 in triple OT
By HOWARD ULMAN
inches on Johnson.
CHICAGO (AP) The
Barkier fought through a
Phoenix Suns - down but deter- painful nght elbow that was ·
mined - made sure the NBA drained a half hour before the
finals didn't end in the shortest ~e. But he played 53 minutes,
possible time by winning one of the m~ ~~~~:!al9an~~~.=!
longest playoff games in history.
It was, Charles Barkley said, in the third overtime.
"the greatest basketball game I
Dan Majerle had a miserable
ever played in."
•
shooting night in Game 2, but hit
"We were so focused on sweep, six of eight shots from three-point
that we really didn't put the work range and finished with 28 points
into a sweep," Michaeliordan Sunday. Majerle guarded Scottie
said. •'It was a great game, but 1 f!ppen, not Jordan, for much of the
can't say it was the best game I've . rughL
played in, because it was a loss."
The Suns scored 'just IWO.Jloints
No adversity was 100 great for in the last6:20 of the fourth quarter
the Suns as they beat Chicago 129- and only 11 in the firSt two over121 in triple overtime Sunday night times. But they kept scrapping until
to cut the Bulls lead to 2-1 in the everything clic~ed in the third .
best·Of-seven series.
overtime, when they made three
The Suns had become the first steals in the last three minutes.
team 10 lose the firSt two games of
"The Bulls are a very good
a final series at ho111e, then faced team. They played a tough game
the next 'three on the road. Sweep against us,' : Phoenix forward Tom
talk was sweeping Chicago. A third Chambers said. "But it was nice to
straight title seemed certain.
come back and show them we
could win."
Point guard Kevin Johnson, the
"These are two great teams
key to the Suns offense, was com·
h Pa 1
ing off two bad performances. So playing,'' said Phoenix coac
u
he played all but the last 27 sec- Westphal, who played for the Suns
onds of the 63-minute game and in thatl976 game. "I don't think it
scored 25 points with nine assists particularly matters where the
and seven rebounds. He also made games are."
some strong defensive plays while
The road team has won the firSt
guarding Jordan, who has five three games and the next two are in

Chicago on Wednesday and Friday
night. Phoenix had the NBA's best
road recOrd. A sixth game, if necessary, would be in Phoenix next
Sunday.
Chicago, which had a six·game
winning streak broken, was led by
Jordan with 44 points. But he made
only 19 of 43 shots.
~cottie Pippen added 26 ~~Dints
and BJ. Armstron~ 21 for Chicago,
which shot just mne free throws,
making six. Phoenix made 22 of 31
from the line.
"I don't want to talk about it,"
Chicago coach Phil Jackson said
when asked about the discrepancy.
"Don't'bring it up."
The Suns seemed secure when
they opened the fourth quarter with
a 1S-S run to take a 101-90 lead
with 6:20 to go. Chicago cut that to
103-100, then sent the game into
overtime tied at 103 on Horace
Grant's three-point play with 1:33
left.
.
With the score tied at 107,
Phoenix missed three shots in the
last five seconds of the first overtime. Then, with Chicago ahead
114-110, Barkley scored with 32
seconds left in the second overtime
and Majerle forced another period
by connecting from the right comer
with 3.2 seconds to go.
Scott Williams and Johnson

traded layups and Jordan hit a 14footer that gave the Bulls their last
lead, 118·116 with 3:42 to go.
Majerle then hit a three-pointer
with 3:04 left. He tied a championship series record for threepointers shared by Michael Cooper,
BiU Laimbeel' and Jordan.
Then Majerle stole the ball from
Pippen on the next possession, and
Barkley dunked.
Pippen '·s jumper was shon and
Danny Ainge rebounded for
Phoenix.
·
With 1:58 left, Grant fouled out,
a call that soon would ~urt the
Bulls.
Chicago got a defensive
rebound. But Stacey King, who had
replaced Grant, passed under the
Phoenix basket toward Jordan.
Barldey in~ereepled and dunked for
a 123-118 lead.
The Bulls couldn't score on
their next possessi9n, and Majerle
then hit two foul shots. Jordan's
jumper made the score 125-120
with one minule lefL
Ainge followed with two free
throws, then Chambers stole the
ball from Trent Tucker, who fouled
him. Chambers hit two free throws
with 34 seconds remaining and Jordan finished the scoring with a foul
shot with 27 seconds to go.

Sullivan captures flag in Detroit Grand Prix
' By HARRY ATKINS
DE1ROIT (AP) - Rick Galles
had just one thought as he watched
Danny Sullivan and AI Unser Jr.
trying to run one another into the
Detroit River.
"'I want IllY ~ommy' is what
was going through my mind,"
Galles said.
He had reason to be nervous.
Galles employs Sullivan and Unser
and owns the cars they were using
against each other. But he was able
to smile after the Detroit Grand
Prix.

Unser's aggressive driving cost
him a penalty, and Sullivan outlasted the rest of a banged-up field
Sunday for his firSt Indy-car victo-

ry in more than a year.
With three laps to go, Unser was
running third, JUSt behind Robby
Gordon. But while trying to overtake the leader, Unser incurred a
penalty for running over some
cones used to mark the edge of the
racing suiface through tum 7.
"He carne up alongside me but
wasn't through, and I wasn't about
to hand him the lead at that stage of
the race," said Sullivan, who
hadn't won since 1992 at Long
Beach. "I even moved to give AI a
little more room than you give
someone whO isn't your teammate.
"I never saw the cone deal, but
it obviously hun him in terms of
having another shot at the end."

Rangers top Tribe 5-1

Sco t'"e l1oa t'"d
- • Baseball*-

Tonii!ht'~":es
' CLI!VEI.ANb
(B'
. 4-4) lit Doa(WIIlo7-1~ ?:OS p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eutem Dl~illon
W L Pd.

Twn

Pbiloddphil ..........44
SL Louio ...............32
... ...,......... 33
Florida ................... 30
Chiooao. .................ll
PitUbwJh ..............21
NewYc* .............. l9

17
21
29 .
31 .
31
32
41

.721

.SJJ
.S32
.492
.475
.467
.317

08

U.S
11.5
14
,J~

l4.S

Tuu (Bum1 0·2) at California

Wetltrn Dlvllion

San:Frmcilco ........41
AtW&gt;to ...................3S
llouo... ................. 32
LooAnaeleo ........... 32
CINClilNATI ........ 29
s.n Qieao .............. 2l
Cclondo ................:W

22
29
28
34

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.547
.l33
,S33
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41

.403
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28

37

Botton (Darwin S-5) 11 New York
(Kunieniodti 0.2), 7:30p.m.
Toronto (Stewart 2-2) at MinneaOll
(B..U S·2), 8:0l p.m.
. Bakimore (SuiCU.tfo 6-2) n Mllwautcc
(Weamon 4-9~ 8:0S p.m.
IC.anau City (Gardner 4-l) at Seattle
(loh111on 7·3), IO:Ol p.m.
Chicaao (McCalkW 2-6) at Oakland
(Youns 0.0), IO:Ol p.m.
~ 7-l),!O:OS p.m.

6.S
7.5

Tuesday's games

7.S

12
1S.l
21&gt;

CLEVEUND (Meta S-4) at Detroit
(Doheny 6-2), 7;0!5 p.m.
Bouon (Viola 4-6) at New Yotk
(Wickman 7-0}, 7:30p.m.
Toronto (Ouzman 5·1) at Minnuota

CC•poni 3·6J,I:Ol p.m.

Saturday's scores

Baldmon (Moye:r 1-3) 11 MUwaultoa

Son Fnnciooo S, OU..p&gt;4
Flozida S, PituburJh 2

(l!m" l ·l),I:OS p.m.

Kmul City (Pichardo 4-2) at Seattle
(Coo...,. 0.2),10:0! p.m.

PhilHelPhia 3, New York 0
A!Unt.o 7, CNCINNATI 2

Chieiao (Alva{'Cz 5-2) at Oakland
(Wcldt4-5), IO:O:S pm.
Tuu (l.cibrandt 6-3) at California

SL Loui113, MONICI13
Co!&lt;ndo 14, Houo.., II
1.o1 Anael. 6, S•n Dieao 4

(Futdl2·7),10:3l p.m.

Sunday's stores

National League leaden

Atlonu 9, CINCINNA 112
Philadelphia 5, New York 3
Mcmbell 3, St. l..ouil 1
Col01114o 9, Houcon 1
2. S..lliqO I

BATIING: Bonda, San Francisco,
.36S; Merced, Pitt.aburp, .3$5; Kruk,

Phlladclpkia, .3,53; 'Vizcaino•. Chicago,

Loo...,....
San Franciloo s, Otic.ao 3

.l-40; Grace, Chiclao, .336; Piu::r.a, Los
An&amp;eltt, .33S; BlllliCr, Allanta, .333.

RUNS : Dykltra, Philadelphia, S3;

Aoridol,PiaoburJh 2 .

Banda. San FnniOilco. Sl; Kruk, Philadol·
phil, 47; n.wtan, PhibdcJphif.; 47; Dis·
aio, J;louston, 46; M•!t Will!•ms , S~n

ToniRht'sgames

Fnncu;eo, 44; D. Hollins, Ph.illdclphia,

Phllodolphio (Muu.,iiond 7·S) ot - ·
trca1 (Shaw 1 ~2), 7:3S p.m. ·
New York (Tanana 3-5) at Albnta
(Smith :1-SJ, 7:40p.m.
.

4!.
RBI: Min Willianu, San Fnncilca.
53; Daulton, Ailladelphia, 52; Bmd1, San ,
Fnncisc:o, 49; Oa.lura1•• Colondo, 49;
D. Hollin1, Philadelphia, 47; Grace,
Ch.ica-o, 41; Griuom, Montreal, 43;

florida (AnnltfOII.J •6) at Ch.icaao

(Gu27ftln !1-S). 1:05 p.m.
,
Pitubu~ (Nea&amp;Ic 2-1) at SL Louu
(O.bome J.)), 8:35p.m.
1..a1 Anaclea (Aaacio 4-4) at Calot1d.O
(Blair 2-3), 9:0S p.m.

Cami.ruti, Howtm, 43.

HITS: Kelly, CINCINNATI. 71;
Bonda, San Franciaco, 77; VtnSlyke,
Pitttbu.ralt, 17: Gwynn, San Die1o, 17;

Baawetf. H01.11ton, 76; Grace, Chic•ao,

Tuesday's games · .
Florida (Hough 3· 6) It ChiCISO
(C...Wlo 1-4).3:20 p.m.
Philadelphia (Grccnc 1.0) at Monual
{Bamer:l -1), 7:35p.m.
·
San Fnncilco (Brandey 3· 4) at

CINCINNATI (B&lt;Ioha4-4), 7:3l p.m.
. New Yotk (Sabcrhagat 3-5) 11 Allan&amp;a

(Glavinc1-3), 7:40p.m.
Sa~ Diego (WhitehUl'lt VI) at HouROn
'"""'"h 6-3), H S p.m.
Pi~taburah (Cooke 4-2) at St. Louia:
(Towlubury 5·6), 1:35 p.m.
Lot Anaele&amp; (R. Martint:r. S-4} at Colondo (Henry 2-6), 9:05 p.m.

76; Bl1UJ«, Al,)anta, 76; l•y Bell, Pius·

butoh.76.
,

DOtJBLBS : Grace, Chie&amp;JO• 20;

Cotdc::ro, Mantrcal, t 9; Caminiu, HOI.ll-

lon,l9; Olinr,CINClNNATI.I'7;1Uy~.

Col,ondo, 17; Bonda, San Fmad.lco. 17;
Dykllll, Ptsiladtlj!hla, 17; Gwynn, San
Di•o,l7.
TRJPI..ES: Ol..ewit;, San Fn.nciiCO, 6;
E. Youn1, Colorado, !I; Martin, Pitts •
- . 5; Caotillo. Colondo. l; 7 .......
witli4.

HOME RUNS: Mau Williams, San

F""cioco, II; Bondo, Son Fnncioeo, 17;

Bonlllo, Now Yadt,!6; Dottllon, Philodll·
phil, l5; J...Uco, Alia~. 14; O.nl. A\·
l.nto, ..,
Diep. ll.
STOLE~ BASES: ,Coleman 1 New
Yoct. %7; Ci.lr, Rodda, 26; Dl.ewia, San
FrlnCitoo, 23; B. Youn~ Colorado, 21:
R-.., CIN&lt;lNNATI. 21&gt;: E. O.vi&lt;, Loo

-·Son

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eutem Dl¥lllon

Ttarll

DeuviL ...... ............ JI 23
Toronto .................. 36 'r1
New Ycd .............. 3S 28

W

L

.623
.!171
.556

PeL

GB

B•ltinuwe ............... 31

31

.500

Bc.CGn .................... 29

32

.415

3
4
1.5
9
10.5
13

Milwaukcc ............. Z7 33

.450
cu;VELAND ....... 2l 36. .&lt;10

Wttttrn DI¥1Jion
Kanlll City .......... .33 11 .550
Chlo.oao. ................. JI 211 .s25
Califonti, ...............JO 29 .lOI
Mii!Noot.o ............. .28 30 .413
Te.• .....................29 31 .413
S..ulo ....................29 n .46S
OUlond .................22 3l .386

Satufctay's KOI'tS

BaltimOfc 5 ~ lbtDn 1
Dcavitll, TOI'Otlto 1
Otico .. 2,it..... City I (ll inn .)
~1.0Ubnd2

Mil••'*• I). New YcBI
Cl.l!VEL\ND 10, T..u 9
~ ~ Cillfomi.i

0

Suaday'• !lCores
.Bolton 4, BaltirnoRil
Tcnn10 13, Detroit 4
o.Jtlut4 7. )linnooooo 6
J(MouCity s.
4(10 im~

ou..o•

_..12.Colilcmi7
T.... S, aJ!VELAND I

N.,..Yodt9,Milw.-5

u
2.S
4

4
5
9.5

An1el01, 20; A. Cole, Color~do, 19;
Ni"""'A-~,19.
·
Pri'CHINO (1 deciliaaa): T. Gr.ne,
Pbilatklphja, 1-0, J ,000, :1.27; ~CilillinJ,
l·i, .119, 3.03; Hill, Moo·
uw1, 6-l, .n7, 2.S2; B"*•~ s.. F•on-

Philo-.

.J·-

. cioco, 9·2. .Ill. !.26; A-,, Atluu,l-2.

.100, 2.79; Domy,
l!tlildelphi•.
6-2, .?5:!!. 3.21 ; llijo, CNCNNATI, 6-2,
.7l0, ,.,,
STRJKIIOUTI: RIJo, CINCINNATI,
13; 0 . - · Atlomo, ~ Smoi1Z, At- •
l•nt• 71· lenu, San DieJO, 74; T,
Orce;,. , ftUidelpllia, 72; l~hillina,
Pltil·•~

'JO:Kiatlodt.-69.
SA~;
In Pruciaco, 19:
s.._ A-.11: a.-,,-.. 19:
Mhclt Willi... ,~ 19; Myon,
Otieo10', II; LeSmllit, Ill. J.aoil, II; fto.
linda, Piusbw).h, 13; D. Jon~~, HGUIWIII,
13.

a.:.t,

Amerkan LaaM leaden
BA.niNO: Olerud, Toronto, .400;

Lofton, CLEVELAND, .U2; Molltoo,
~~to, .3~1 ; M. v•.,....... .
~· C•lilomia, .321; While.. T~.
· , O'Nall,N.., Yotlt, .319.
RUNS: Whha, ToronlO, off; R. A~

m.

mar, Toronto, 41; Jt4olhor, Tann10, 41;
~Tomato, 46; G. va...m. WUWI•

-. • Lorton, WVEI..I.RD, 45; a.....

12: ~.!r fiold«,-.
;

I

Singh wins Buick Classic title

\

'

,.

Southern High SchQol hosting series
of foo.tball camps for area players
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Southern High School football
coach David Gaul has announced
his coaching staff will feature a
series of football camps, which
began Monday, and mini-camps
throughout the summer for all
youngsters iri the tri-county area.
Southern's football program is
up-and-coming and promises to
have one of its brightest seasons
this fall. Gaul said, "We ' ve got a
staff that now has worked together
for a couple of years and gives
some stability to our program. Out
staff .is very knowle~eable and
brings a lot of positive to this
year's camp, especially in the fun. damentals of winning football."
Gaul emphasizes, "This camp is
not just for Southern players. It is
open to anyone 'o/hO WIShes W Jearn
more about the game of footbalL
We welcome all players. Proper
instruction, especially at a young
age, is very important and may
help youngsters avoid injury as
well as in~rest them in a prosper·
ous high school career."
If Gaul's camp brochure is any
indication of what quality of camp
he is running, the operation will be
ttltally fust class. In all, nine camps
will be featured at the Southern
facilities. Camp brochures have
been distributed among busi'ncsses
~nd schools across the Ohio Valley.
Camp 113 is the "High School
Offense Camp,'' which will run

.

given to piayers. This camp will
stress the introduction to techniques and responsibilities for
younger players. Camp includes Tshirt. Dates of camp for grades 4-56 are July 12-13 from 6· 9 p.m ..
while grades 7-8 are July 14-15 .
Cost is $10.
Camp 119 highlights the physical
and mental preparation for the ·
upcoming football season. Cost ,is
$10.
' .
Campers are urged to wear tennis shoos or turf shoes with SOcks.
Comfortable shorts or sweatpants
aJld a T-shirt would be appropriate.
If a players has DOl mailed in a registration, -registration and money .
may be brought t~e first night of
camp.
· The objective of the football
camp is to not only teach the players about football and the techniques involved, but much more.
Academics, self-discipline, sportsmanship, stretching, conditioning.
and self-improvement will be top·
ics covered.
Gaul said, "A large part tlf the
camp is trying to assist young
adults inW being and doing the. best
that they can achieve."
For further information, contact
Gaul at 985-3957, assistant coach
Tom Smith at 949-2955 or call
Southern High School at 949-2611.
Mail all entries to Gaul at
Southern High School, S.R. 124,
Racine, Ohio 45771.

from Tuesday io Thursday from 69 p.m. daily at SHS. Skills and
technique will be stressed in this
camp with specialized skills such
as stance, steps and blocking techniques. Cost of this camp is $10,
Camp #4 is the. "H1gh School
Defensive Camp," June 22-24 from
6-9 p.m. Students g111des 9-12 are
eligible to attend these two camps.
Camp #5 is the "Offensive Line
Camp" which will eltclusively deal
with the techniques utilized by the
offensive tackles, offensive guards,
centers and the run·blocking
aspects of the tight end position.
Technique, position and theories
will be emphasized. Players ·7-l2
are eligible for this camp and the
cost is $30.
.
• Camp #6 is the "Southern Passing Camp" which will exclusively
highlight the defensive and offensive aspects of'ihe passing game.
Students can choose to work both
on offense or defense exclusively
or work in both areas. Alignment ,
stance, steps, keys, breaking the
ball and other fundamental concepts will be emphasized. Position
pl~yers, such as quarterback, will
work on those skills relevant to his
position. This camp is $30 and will
be held July 6,7,8 from 6-9 p.m.
Players grades 7, 12 are eligible to
attend.
.
Camps #7 and #8 are "Position
Emphasis Camp" where additional
.individualized instruction will be

1993 SOUTHERN FOOTBALL CAMPS

.

Nef111:
.
Gr11de: (fill '83'
T..hln elze (circle) S M L XL
Check camp(a) regllterlng for:

HI.

Age

01 02 03 04 Os

Wt.

os

07

oa oa

FEE: •
Olfenalve Lilli C.mp-Giovealze: (circle M· L ' XL
Southern Pa..lng Camp- Slip-on kn11 pada ,
Circle Color: White Blick Gold - 'Circle Size: M L XL
WAIVER FORM: I will not hold the Soulh•n Loat Schoollloerd, Admlnlatr.Uon or c.mp Co~~ehlng stan
I'Mponelblelor lillY lnjuriM lhiii IIUIY OCCI!r to
·
ring lhe1183 Southern FooiiMill
Cllltpt. By lllgnlng IIIII w~ I wNI ••umelull r•~IIIUty for aU open'" ahoulcl en InJury ooaur.
Inc- ol-gency (ph- no.

DeL

·Signetur
ALL REGISTRATIONS a.n bltlllrned In 1M wen!:\of the - p or oan be l'NIIIecl to:
Coeoh David Clltul, Southern H1fDElahool, BR 124, iclne, Ohio 45771
ALL CHECKS SHOULD BE M
PAYABLE TO '80UlliERN FOOTBALL PROGRAM"

•

'

1993 EASTERN EAGLES FOOTBALL CAMP REGISTRATION FORM

Addr.ss:

I

ing critics for the time being.
Avery (8-2) won his career·high
seventh consecutive game on Sun-

homer or the season In the rourih inning ot Sun•
day's National League game against tbe visiting
Cincinnati Reds, who fell9-2. (AP)

GOOD POKE, MARK! - Atlanta's Mark
Lemke (center) Is congratulated by teammate
Sid Bream (second rrom left) as teammate Greg
Olson passes him by rollowlnll Lemke's sixth

. INSUU'NCE

'

•

By TOM SALADINO
only clubhouse 111eeting _was a win'ATLANTA (AP)- The pitch- ning combination for the Atlll!lta
ing of Steve Avery and a players- Braves during the weekend, qmet·

Nil! me:

JDIIWIDE, .D., liCe

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

Atlanta pounds Cincinnati 9-2; C.olorado, Florida post sweeps

D_,WNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

SINCE 1161

tho--

In NL affairs,

DRIVE-BY BASKETBALL is what Phoenix guard Dan. Majerle
(right) executes against Chicago guard Michael Jordan on the
three-point line in the third quarter or Game 3 or the NBA Finals
Sunday night in Chicago, where tbe Suns won 129-121 in triple
overtime in part because otMajerle's 28 points. (AP)

Gordon's challenge ended when
"This was a very tough, hardhe blew a tire with one lap remain- fought111ce and a great win,'' SuUiing.
van said. "We blistered our firSt
"I told myself before the race to set of tires and were probably for''I was throwing sliders away
ARUNGTON, Texas (AP) sit back and drive for awhile and I lunate to caiCh the firSt ye!low flag The Texas Rangers' pitching staff, and wa's able to get the ground
was right there,;• said Gordon, who wh7~ we did (on the 21st lap).
stiU reeling from a 15-hit battering ball," said Pavlik, who had a streak
had to settle for ei$hth place. "I
The rest of the way seemed by the Cleveland Indians, got a of 13 consecutive scoreless innin$S
thought we could get at least sec- like an eternity. I was able to pull well-timed lift from righthand.er until he was charged with a run m
ond. I didn't hit anything, but for away to nearly a five-second lead, Roger Pavlik.
the ninth.
·
some reason.the tire went down. ••
ihen I ,lost ll!Y boost pressu~e and
When Pavlik gave up a leadoff
Pavlik threw eight innings of
While Gordon's Lola-Ford wob· couldn t get 11 back over 40 mches four-hit shutout ball and ]van double to Carlos Baerga in the
bled around the 77th and filial lap, of boost. We were getting through _ Rodriguez backed .him with a two- . ninth, Kennedy brought in Tom
Sullivan's Lola·Chevy got home !(le comers really well, b~t we were run homer and three RBis as the Henke from the bullpen .. Henke
· 12.21 seconds ahead of the Lola- JUSt dead on the two straJghlaways Rangers beat the Indians 5-l Sun- gave up an infield single to Belle
Ford of Brazilian RauJ.Boesel.
. and AI was killing us there.''
day nighL
.·
.and a lWO·OUt RBI single to Jeff
Mario Andretti was third in a
. Nothing was easy on a day of
"For the past two weeks, he's Treadway before retiring pinch hit·
Lola:Ford, followed by Italian h1gh drama on Belle Isle.
.
been as encouraFing as anything · ter Thomas Howard on a groundout
Andrea Montermini in a LolaThere was controversy nght that's happened,' Rangers manag- to end the game.
·
Chevy.
from the beginning when Emerson er Kevin Kennedy said. "He's had
In his previous start, Pavlik
Fittipaldi stepped hard on the gas two good outings on this homes- threw his first major league compedal of his Penske-CIIevrolet and tand and that really picked us up. plete game with a seven-hit 8-2 ·
hit the starting line almost two car He's got four quality pitches and victory over the' MinQesota Twins. .
lengths ahead of pole-sitter Nigel he's learning to make adjust"For the past two weeks, he's .
Mansell.
ments."
been as encourafing as anything
RBI: Bolle. &lt;l.BVELI,ND, 54; c.-,
Fittipaldi got the green flag anyPavlik (3-2) allowed only three that's happened, ' Kennedy said.
Tormt.o, Sl.; Fielder, Dcimi1. SO; 8!""1•·
way.
Wilen
Penslce
teammate.;Paul
runners
.to reach second, striking "He's had two .good outings on !
a.JlVEIAND, 49;.T - Doo.il, 49;
Olenld, Toronto. &lt;48; G. Vaup, Milwau·
Tracy
also
got
past
Mansell,
the
walking two as Texas this homestand and that really
out
six
and
k.oe, 47.
'
two
kept
the
Indy-car
points
leader
snallPed
a
four-game
losing s~. picked us up. He's got four quality .
HITS: Olenad, Tomnta. 86; Molitor,
Tmonto, 83; McR•c, Kan .. a City, 75;
back in third in the early laps.
''l!very time you lose four in a pitches and he's learning to make
Lofton, CLEVELAND, 74; Bnr1••
When Mansell's team complain~ row, it's good 10 get a win," Pavlik adjustments."
CI...EVEI..AND, 73: R. Alcmu, T«onto,
73; While, T.....,, 12.
about the start, Fittipaldi was said. "It's been a bad druught for
.Pavlik is 3-0 with a 1.14 ERA in .
DOUBLES: Olerud, Toronto, 21;
USoU
assessed
a
swp-and-go
penalty
by
three starts this season at Arlington ·
White, Toront.o, 20; Caner. Toronw, 11:
race officials.
The Rangers' starters had posted Stadium.
Thomas, 0\icaao. 17; Palmer, Te..u, 17:
"I carne out from the kink just victories in only six of their last 31
-Andenon,s..Baltimore.
.... 16; """""·
Dcani~ 16;
The Rangers jumped on staiter
16; JOJDer, Kanau
before
the line with my nose ahead starts. Their combined ERA went Jose Mesa (5-4) for a 3-0 firstCity, 16.
TR~PLES: Hul~e, Teua, l; Cuyler,
of Nigel,'' Fittipaldi said. "If I am from 3.33 to 4.45 over that StreiCh.
inning lead. David Hulse led off
Dcuou, 7; Lof1on, CLEVELAND, S;
accelerating
better
than
Nigel,
I
am
In
the
early
innings,
Pavlik
was
with a single· and scored on Butch .
McRae, K&amp;nlu City, 5; Baerp,'CLEVE·
not going to back off. They throw able io establiSh his breaking pitch Davis' triple. Jose Canseco drove
LAND, S; L Jolvi""" OU..go, S; llutlto,
Chicaao, 4: Cora, Chicaio, 4; Fdder,
the green flag to start the 111Ce. It's as he got all six strikeouts in the in Davis with a double and scored
S..llle, 4; l'laliorulo. ~ ...
not my fault if Nigel backed off or first three innings.
on Rodriguez's grounder.
HOME RUNS: Bdle, Cl.l!VELI,ND,
18; Oc.w.lez, Texu, 16; Palmer, Tuu,
missed a gear."
"I'd
have·
like
to
have
finished
Rodriguez pushed Texas' lead
IS; 0. Voollul. Milwallltoc, ll; 01CNd,
Team
owner
Roger
Penslce
said
it
but
I'd
thrown
too
many
piiChes
5-0 in the sixth, hitting a 3-l
to
Torcruo, 14; Tettlc:tt:wl, Detrcit, 14; Culer,
Toroo!b, 14.
the starter shouldn't have waved (125)," Pavljk said. "'I threw some pitch over the wall with Canseco
STOLEN BASES: Conio, California,
the green flag if he was unhappy br~akinf. balls over early and it on base for his second hom·er of the
28; Ld1on. CLI!VELAND, 28; RJlendeJ.
with the way the cars· were coming )18ld off.
.
.·
season. .
10ft. OUJ.~nd, 21; R. Alomu, Toromo, 20;
L Johnlm, Chicqo, I?: Mclbe. Kanou
to
lhe
line.
Pavlik
w&lt;irked
out
of
a
jam
in
"Mesa's location in the first
~ City, 14; Polonl,, Californlo, 14; White,
Wally
·Dallenbach,
director
of
was
poor,'' Cleveland manager
the
sixth
after
he
issued
a
one·out
Tomuo, 14.,
PITCIUNO f7 deciliona): Wh:kman,
competition and chief steward for walk to Wayne Kirby and hit Car- Mike Hargrove said. "He threw
Ne., Yod&lt;, 7-0, 1.000, 3.76; Wollo, De·
the Indy-car series, said the drivers los Baerga with a pitch. Pavlik got fastballs down the middle and the
tz:oit.7·1, .175, 2.46; Lan~, C~ar­
had been warned during a meeting Albert Belle to ground into a dou- Rangers did wbat they're were supNI, 7-1, .875, 2.26; Mu.a.Uia, Balumore..
9-2, .818, 3.0S; Hentacn, Toronto, 1·2,
before
the 111ce.
posed to do."
ble play to end the threat
.800, 3.36; Key, New York,7·2, .778,
"Why
should
I
risk
27
other
2.30; Oohony, Detroit, 6-2, .7SO, 3.01;
Leilel', Decroit, 6-2, .1SO. 3.64; Sutcliffe,
drivers to do it all over again, all
Ball.imare, 6-2, .7SO, 4.72.
for the sake of one?" Dallenbach
STlUKEOlJI'S: R.. Johru:on, Seattle,
108; c""""· n...... 96; Lu!ptan, c.Jsaid. "This isn't Michigan (Interond round, and I'm in a playoff.
By JOHN NELSON
ifamia, I~; Hanaan, Seattle, II; Appiet,
national Speedway) here. We got it
HARRISON, N.Y. (AP) -It's The course played like a bear all
Kanau Clt)', 10; Perez, New YOlk, 10;
Cone. Kan1u City, '75; Key, Now Yali,
righL Some other person violated. a long way from the poverty of week. It's a great tuneup for the
7l.
.
We
got it right."
no,nhem Borneo's rain forest to the U.S. Open."
SA~S : Mon.taomcry, · K~nau City,
The flap became moot when Fit· wooded, wealthy suburbs of
19: ApUcn, Mirincsot.l, 19; D. Ward,
The 0\'Cn begins Thursday at
Tomnto, 17; OIJon, Bahimcn, 16; Fur,
tipaldi and, later, Mansell crashed Westchester County, but Vijay Baltusrbl m neighboring New JerNe., :t'Ott. ll; Ru..u, Baotan, 14; llatto finish out of the points. Tracy Singh has arrived.
ntmin, Dcuat, 12.
sey.
later was hit with a penalty for .
Of East Indian ancestry and a
Defending champion David
- • Transactions • exceeding the &amp;0 mpb speed limit native of Fiji, Singh literally has Frost of South Mrica also shot 66 ·
through the pits. Later still, he blew golfed his way around the world for 281, tied with Lee Janzen, the
Baseball
a
tire and was unable to finish.
and, on Sunday, captured his frrst third-round co-leader who shot 1·
American l,.eaaue
·
It was that kind of race. Only tournament on the PGA Tour at age over 72. Mike Smith (68) and Tom
BOSTON RED SOX: Placed Scou
Fleuia, inl'ICldw, an 1he 15-dly dilablod
eight of the 28 starters compleled 30, beating Mark Wiebe in a play-. Lehman (69) were tied at 2&amp;2.
.
lilt, IIIIIOIWvo lO June 10. ACiivaiOd Jatr
the race over the 2.1-mile, 14-tum off in the Buick Classic.
Richardton, infielder, from tho IS·da)'
Duffy
Waldorf,
who
shared
the
·
·
dUabJod lilt.
course.
"Every
win
is
a
great
win,
and
lead
at
the
beginning
of
the
day
·
MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Aalpod
"Man, it was mayhem out there, winning in the United States will with Janzen, shot 75 and finished at
W•yno Hou1ie, oullielder, lO Now Or-lcana ~the American Aaoeiali.Dil.
especially at the end,'' Andreui give me a lot more status next 284.
NEW YORK Y ANK.EES : Sent Jeff
said.
year," said Singh, who has won on
JoiuuGn, pitdler, lo Col&amp;unbuo of tho lntemational Leape. JlecaUod ~ Kam.i•
Mansell, the defending Formula the European, African and Asian
nicck_i. pi1Cher, from Colum~
One champion from England who wurs.
·
TEXAS RANOERS: Placed Robb
won the pole at 106.&lt;\27 mpb, spun
N:;,C.,Idtet, an the 15-da)' diubled Ji4
Singh
and
Wiebe
both
shot
SR
Jetr Brookcy, pitchc, han Olt·
and hit the wall on the ninth tum of under-par 66s, equaling the low
lahoma City oflhe Amaioan Auociation.
lap (IJ , As &amp;·result, his point lead in round of the tournament, for fourTORONTO BLUE lAVS: Op&lt;ioned
Dominao Cedeno. ~. to S"yracu,e,
the series driver standings slipped round totals of 4-under 280 as
of the lntcmational Leaau.. Ac:tin~ed
to 71-68 over Boesel.
Westchester Country Club's West
Todd StoUJ.em,n.. pitcher, from lhc ISdoy dlooblod 1ioL
111 Second St., Pomeroy
Course yielded low scoies grudgSports
briefs
• ingly.
..
YOUR INDEPEIDEIIT
N-'loo&amp;!:Mr
COUJRAOO
R
: Slpod J...
, Singh won with a birdie on the
Tennis
.
my H~NJC, f.ntielder, John M~w. outAGENTS SERVING
FLORENCE, haly (AP) - · third playoff hole, the 444-yard,
fi&lt;ldor, ut4 MOIJIO Bltldlot, pitdtor. A•·
par-4
11th,
toughest
hole
on
the
. Top-seeded Thomas Muster of
tivatecl Maik Oranl, pitdw, fran the 1!1MEIGS COUNIY
da)' ditabled U.t. ODtionGd Net.M UriAustria defeated Jordi Burillo of course.
ana. in6ddar, to Colorado Spdnp of the
Despite losing, Wiebe said,
Spain 6-1, 7-5 in Sunday's fmal of
l'lcif&gt;C Cout!Mpo.
NEW YORK 'METS: Plo...t llowud
"I'm
ticlded. I shot 75 in the secthe City of Florence tournament for
Jotuuon, third --.an, on the U·da)'
his third straight victory in the
diaahled U.. ~ve to JW'I&amp; 11 . Putclay-court event.
dtuod
o1 Doua S.Oooden. ill·
lioiAior, han Norfolk ol tliio I n - !
.
Auto racln1
Leape. At1aired lo1t11 Mananillo,
piw:t., hem lhe Mil•-..k• Browt~~ for
DE1ROIT (AP)- Danny Sulli·
Wayne HOUII., outfieUer, and auipod
van, taking advantage of Robby ·
•Ear, Nose &amp; Throat •Allergy
Manz.aniUo to Nodotk. Siped Joe AtWI•
t«, piiChtr: ~ Lewil, c:a1ehcr; Mike
Gordon's blown tire on the last !Jip.
Jaluuan, Wielder; aDd Rodney Mazian,
•Hearing Aids •Head &amp; Neck Surgery
won Sunday's Detroit Grand Prix
outlloldor.
•
for his first Indy-car victory in
Quality Care for Your Family
PIIILADl!LPIIIA PllllLIES: 1't&amp;cod
DIVe Hollillo, t1Uid bootnwt. "' the 15·
more
than
a
year.
•'
day diaabled lilt, nltrOICiivc 10 Juno 11 .
While Gordon's Lola-Ford wobPluduMd tho ol hll - · illbled to an eighth-place fmish, Sui· from Scmttm-Wilkoo 81n0ol tho
lnten11ionaJ Lupc. Aequlred Kevin
.
Iivan
crossed the finish line in a
F-. pitdtor, from tho s.illll Marinon
Lola-Chevrolet
12.21 seconds
Medicare &amp; UMWA Assignments Accepted
tor Bob Aynuh, pitct.", and aaaiped
,__10 knn\al• WiJka Banw.
ahead of the Raul Boesel's LolaSuite 112 Valley Drive, Pt. Pleuant, WV.
Ford. Mario Andretti finished third.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Emergency Ph:

Home Ph:
'

Shirt Size

1hearby authorize the Eastern ugl• football camp to act according to his best Judgement In
any emergency requiring attention. I haa medical coventund give my permission to attend.
Parents Signature:
APPLICAnON DEADLINE: JUNE 11,1993
Mali Application with full pt'lmant of $15.00 to
Eastern Athletic Boaatar Club
C/O Head Football eo.ch Dave Barr
Eastern High School
381011 St. Rt. 7, Raadavllla, Ohio 46772
MAKE CHECKS PAYA,SLE TO EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
Jl

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day and Mark Lemke and Jeff gave the Braves a 6-2 1ead. Blauser
Blauser each hit home runs to I~ added his fourth homer in the sixth.
a 12-hit attack as the Braves routed
In addition, Sid Bream, who had
the Cincinnati Reds 9-2.
been in a 3-for-34 slump, had three
It was Atlanta's third win in a hiu and Deion Sanders, who was
row over the Red~ following a hitless in 29 at-bats before getting
clubhouse meeting after Cincinnati two hits on Friday night, also had
won the opener 3-l on Thursday two hits. Terry Pendleton also had
night, the Braves lOth loss in 15 a pair of hits and drove in two runs.
games.
Rookie John Roper (1-l) took
Earlier in the week, there were most of the punishment for the
reports in Atlanta newspapers that Reds, giving up eight hits and
. the team was divided by dissen- seven runs in 4 l/3 innings.
sion. It blamed the recent signing
"It was kind of over before it
of Deion Sanders to a $10.7~ ~il- starled," said Roper. "I couldn't
lion, thrtlll-year contract, giVIng get my breaking ;stuff to work a,r)d
him the center field job and sitting . had to come in w•th my fast ball.
down Otis Nixon, whom the
. Cincinnati ·manager Davey
Braves are trying to trade.
Johnson wasn't discouraged by
In addition, after Thursday Roper's outing.
night's loss, pitcher Tom Glavine
"Even though he gave up a few
said, " II was another brilliantly nins, I was really proud of the way
lackluster performance by the he threw the ball.
Braves," and wucritical of his
"The only thing I didn't like
club's enlhusiasm.
was his pitching defensively when
Since the meeting, the Braves, he got behind...lt wa8n't as bad as
who had scored only 45 runs in the 9-2 score shows," he said.
their previous 15 games, pounded
The Reds runs came early, scorout 22 runs in their last three wins ing one in.the second inning on an
RBI si!lglC;d by Joe Oliver and
over Cincinnati.
''It might just be a coinci- · another in the third on Randy Milli·
dence," said Avery. "It always gan's run-scoring double.
seems to help for a few days {ol- Elsewhere in the NL, it was C11l"
Iowing a meeting. We 'II just have orado 9, Houston I; Florida 5,
toseeifwecankeepgoing."
Pittsburgh 2; Philadelphia 5, New
"Lately there had been too York 3; Montreal, 3, St. Louis 1;
much in the papers and we were Los Angeles 2. San Diego 1; and
concentrating too much on other San Francisco 5, Chicago 3. .
thin~s," said David Justice.
Rockies 9, 1Astros 1
' I think we're just focused
It was a Rocky weekend in Col·
now," he sai~. "We _just !Biked orado for the Houston Astros.
And when it was over, the first
about notlettmg outside d1stractions effect the way we play.
sweep of a series ever by the
It certainly hasn't affected expansionists appeared to leave
A, very.
.
• . .
some of the losers shellshocked.
The left-hander hasn'tlost smce
"They have a decent pitching
April22, the Braves haven'tlost in staff," Ken Caminiti said after lhe
his last nine starts and arc 11-3 RoclciesbeattheAstros9-1 Sunday
when Avery is on the mound.
to complete the three-game sweep.
. ·c;&gt;n Sunday,_ Avery we~t seven
Infact,Colorado'spitchingslaff
mnmgs, allowmg mne hils, both has an earned run average of 5.91,
runs, didn't walk a batter and by far the worst in the majors.
SI!Vck out six, lowering his ERA to
•'Colorado is not a bad team,''
2.7?,. ,
. . .. .
Caminiti continued.
·
. It s a matter of 11mmg, said
At 20-41 that's hardly true. But
Avery. "I've been fonunate. T~e at least it isn't the worst in baseguys have scored a lot of runs 10 ball. The New York Mets are 19my s~. When you sc~ a l.~t of 41.
runs 11 makes for a lot ofwms.
"We didn't play that poorly,"
In his 14 starts, the Brav_es have Houston manager Art Howe said.
scored 67 runs, nearly f1ve per
No? The Rockies outscored· the
game. ,
.
. Astros 28-16 in the series.
Lemke s three-run homer m the
Only losing pitcher Greg
fourth inn::!fi - ~is sixth of the Swindell seemed to bave it figured
year - eq eel his career-best of correctly.
last season in his 62nd game. It
"These guys kicked our butt,"

Hansel ~a11_1ily Endowment
quarterback-only scholarship
AKRON, Ohio (AP)'- When il
comes to innoVative financial ways
to support athletics at the University of Aleron, a local doctor .wants to
be the quarterback.
Dr. John R. Hansel wants to be
the 9uarterback.
• The quarterback position in
football is where everything starts,
supposedly," said Dr. John Hansel,
an Aleron alumnus who is a surgeon at Aleron City Hospital.
Hansel and his wife, Sapdy, are
the fust Akron benefactors to target
an athletic scholarShip endowment
for a specific position in a specific
spon.
The Hansel Family Endowment
will provide a scholarship for
futlll'e Akron quarterbacks.
"My wife and I thought the
quarterback ~osition was a nice
place to start,' Hansel said.
This is not the first time that
Hansel has let his money do the
talking in terms of supporting
Akron athletics. He was part of a
group of supporters who donated
new men's and women's basketball
locker rooms at Rhodes Arena,
dedicaled last fall.
·"I was just one of a number of
people who were the prime movers
in that situation," said Hansel, who
graduated in 1959. .
The endowmentlprovides for
scholarships only from the annual
imerest earned from the donated
money.

"There is built-in growth. It's
always going to be,'' Han~! sa!d.
"The more money the umversuy
has to supP&lt;&gt;n scbolarships, (athletic director) Jim Dennison can use
money allocated to the athletic
department.''
Dennison said other universities
have used the concept of endowing
a position for several years.
Greg Burke, associate director
of development for athletics and
the primary fund raiser for the Zip
Athletic Club, said money for
scholarships is the backbone of the
athletic program.
"You can raise money fpr
everything else, but if you don't
have the scholarships, it doesn't
matter," he said.
Burke and Hansel would not
reveal the exact amount of the
Hansel's endowment, but Burke
said .the interest should provide
most of the money annually for a
$7,000 scholarship for an Akron
quarterback recruit.
. ·
"I think it's a neat thing
because it allows a benefactor to
make sure they are personally satisfied with the commitment they've
made,' • Burke said.

he said.
The sweep also gave the Rockies a franchise-recofd three snight
victories.
·
Andres Galarraga hit a two-run
homer and drove in three runs,
Dan1e Bichelle had four more hits
and Bruce Ruffin (3-2) held Hous· ton to five hits through 6 2/3
innings after opening with five
straight strikeouts. The victory was
the fifth for Colorado this season·in
six games against HOUSI(ln.
Colo111do got to Swindell (5-6)
for four straight hits in the first
inning, including Galamga's ninth
homer.
The Rockies weren't the only
expansion team to sweep. The
Florida Marlins made 11 four
straight over the Pittsburgh Pirates
with a 5-2 victory.
Marlins 5·, Pirates~
Pinch-hitter Rich . Renteria's
two-run triple in the seventh inning
led stunnmg Florida to its first
sweep at home.
Mter his triple broke a 2-2 tie,
Renteria scored on Chuck Carr's
sacrifice fly to support Ryan
Bowen (4-6). Bryan Harvey struck
out lhe last two batters for his 19th
save, sending Pittsburgh to its seventh loss in eight games.
Reliever Bias Minor (4-3)
walked Junior Felix with one out in
the seventh, and Walt Weiss singled. Renteria got his decisive hit
off John Candelaria.
Pbillies S, Mets 3
Anthony Young (0-7) lost his
21st straight decision as Philadelphia swept a four-game series at
Shea Stadium.
· The all-time record for conseculive losses is 23 by Cliff Curtis of
the Boston Braves m 1910-11.
Ricky Jordan and Pete
Incagviglia hit consecutive solo
homers 10 the eighth off Jeff Innis
to support Ben Rivera (5·3) ..Mitch
WiUiams gOt his 19th save.
Expos 3, Cardinals 1
Dennis Martinez pitched well,
and visiting Montreal handed Rene ·
Arocha his fust major-league loss.
The win was the 199th for Martinez (6·5). ~ha. (5: 1). gave up
two runs on s1x hits m s•x mnings.
Marquis Grissom )ed MoQtreal
with two hits.
Dodgers 2, Padres 1
Ore! Hershiser pitched well for
Los Angeles, perhaps hel~d by
exotic dancer Topsy-Curvy s visn
with San Diego pitcher Greg Harris.
Rpokie Mike Piazza had a dou·
· ble and single tc. help the Dodgen
split the four-gam~ series. Included
was an RBI hit in the first inning
after Harris got consultation from
the buxom jllonde.
Harris (6-7) sustained his sec:ond loss in seven decisions, both to
Los Angeles. Hershiser (6-4)
allowed eight hits in 8 2/3 innings.
Giants 5, Cubs 3
John Burkett became the NL's
first nine-game winner and Barry
Bonds hit his 17th home run.
Burkett (9-2) allowed three runs
in the founh, but blanked the Cubs
over the ~ext four innings. He
allowed seven hits in eight innings,
struck out s1x and walked none.
Rod Beck pitched the ninth for his
19th save.
Bonds connected in the seventh
inning for a towering drive off
Mike Morgan (4-8).
Down 3-1, the Giants moved in
front with a three·run fifth. Darren
Lewis had an RBI single and Todd
Benzinger a two-run bloop single.

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Sports brief
Tennis
BIRMINGHAM, England (AP)
- Fifth-seeded Lori McNeil beat
founh-seeded Zina Garrison-Jackson 6-4, 2-6, 6-3 in the final of the
Edgbaston grass-court tournament
Sunday.

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Eastern football camp
set to begin today ·
Eastern head football coach
David Bart and the rest of the
Eagle football coaching staff are
announcing the firSt "Eagle Pride"
.football camp at Eastern High
School.
.
The camp, open to all area seventh- and eighth-graders who will
receive a camp T-shirt, will Start
today and end Thursday from 5-6
p.m. dail)'.
Desplle an off year in 19~2
against the toughest sechedule In
school history, Barr promises a
much better season this year.
This year's camp will be a non·
contact camp, featuring form run. ning and flexibility, stance and
start, technique and instruction in
passing, kicking and receiving. The
camp will stress the imponance of
fundamentals; the importance of
proper technique as well as mental
and physical aspects of the game.
All camp applications should be
sent with complete $1S payment
(checks pal:,ble to Eastern High
School) to
1em Athletic Booster
Club, c/o head football coach Dave
Barr, Easlem High School, 38900
S.R. 7, ReedSville, Ohio 45772.
For further information, caU the
high sehool at 985·3329.
·

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U.S. SAVIM6S BONDS fOR EDUCATION
GROW ALMOST AS fAST AS KIDS DO.
I

For current rate information,. call

1-I00-4US IOND I

..

uoo 4V..MQ

~r~~nca S~.

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By The Bend_

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, June 14, 1991
pag--e
'

Baby boomers swell disability rolls
IJ Ed Pete• "*•
Sodlll Seta Jt,,
•• r• Iii AtlleM
Baby
. boomers-that
pouilllswell of the popdttioo born
duriiiS the postwar period (I946·
1964)-whose numbers bave
stressed public facilities from
schools to housi111-are expecled
to sweD Soci11 Security's disability
Rllls 100. Tlleir ..
10e is expect·
eel to be reflecled in a sisnificant
increase in dislbility applications
ia comias years, Social Security
SQidies show.
The oldest or the boomers ~
- over 45, the age poup where
disability is most likely to occur.
Thus, the number or persons
expected 111 become disabled
should increase as the poparliun of
the disability-age population
illa~ues The numbel' of disability
awards is protected to increase
fiQIII 4.08 per 100,000 pc:osociS for
a total of 471,16S, to 4.76 per
100,000 for a IOta! of 666,250 by

:zoos.

Social Security disability bene·
fits arc paid to people who are
Ulllble to WOit bee- of a physical or meaUII impairment which
1aat laslcd or is eXpected to last one
year or to result in death. More
than 4.3 million penons ~ ·cur·
rentlr, receiving Social Security
diability beiiCfits and another 1.3
million II'C receiving Supplemental

Security Income (SSI) ·disability
payments, which ~ also adminis·
tered by the Social Security
Administration.
And, like the baby boomers,
Social Security's disability pi'ogram has also come of age. For
example, today people can get
accurate estimates of any benefits
they might be due. With this information, they can plan ahead ,
adding anticipaled savings, invest·
ments, private iiiSWliiiCC, company
pensions, and other sources of
mcome to come· up with a good
idea of what their income mi$ht be
if they become disabled. Individu·
als can now request an application
for a "Personal Earnings and Benefit Estimate Statemen.t" from any
Social Security office and =eive a
response within 2 weelts.
Another indication that Social
. Security's disability program has
come of age is the extent to which
beneficiaries can work while
receiving disability payments. In
fact, for more and more people, the
disability program becomes a
bridge to the Wllfkplace mlhcr than
the end of the road. To help those .
beneficiaries who want work but
~ afraid or losing necessary bene·
fit income and health care protec·
lion, a number of special provisions
~now part of the law. The pmvi·
sions, called "work incenuves",
permit cash benefits 10 continue

until the beneficiary is worting on
a ~.w. basis, Medicare or Mcdi·
caicf to continue until they can
afford other health insurance, and
""In with WOlle expenses caused by
ij;L. disability.
· An addilionll important element
of Social Security's disability program is that balefits inciUSC annually to reflect the cost of living
once a penon startS ~iving them.
For example, benefits have
increased 20 perceitt over the past
five years for those now on the
rolls. However, there is a rule that
~vents individuals from rcceiving
m01e in combined public disability
benefits (Social Security and worker's Gompensation among others)
than lie or she made while worldng.
Disability benefits provide a
safety net for people to use in planning financial security for themselves and their families. But like
any other safety net, it works best
wllen individuals know it's the~ as
something they can count on.
For more information on this

MONDAY
RACINE · The Racine Board of
Public Affairs will meet Monday at
10 a.m. at Star Mill Park.
MIDDLEPORT· Heath United
Melhodisl Church, Middleport, will
have vacation bible school Monday
throlllh Friday from 9:30 a.m. to
noon. "Celebration Park" is the
theme.
POMEROY • The DA V and
Ladies Auxiliary will meet Monday
at 7:10p.m. at the hall on Butternut
AYCIIUC.

BRADFORD· Bradford Church
of Christ, Vacation Bible School.
Monday through Friday, 9-11:30
.Lm. All ages welcome.
CHESTER • Vacation Bible
School, Chester Uniled Methodist
Church, Monday through Friday,
9:15-11:30 a.m. for ages two
. through 1eens. Theme: ''Celebmtion
Park."
SYRACUSE • Swimming
lessons will be offered at London
Pool Monday through June 25. The
fee is $20 IUid ~gistration will be
Monday at 9 a.m. Call 992-9909
for furlher information.
MIDDLEPORT • Swimming
lesiOIIS will be offered at Middle·
port Pool Monday through June 25.
The fee is $15 IUid to ~gister call
Ryan Cowan at the pool, 992-7999
between 11:30 a.m.lllld 6 p.m.
POMEROY. "Amazing Journey to Bible Times" is the theme of
Vacation Bible School 81 the Zion
Cburch of Christ Monday through
June25 from 9-11:30a.m. daily for
ages nursery through high school.
Program is June 27 at 7 p.m.
Kathryn Johnson, 992-5195, is
diceciOr.
RACINE • Big Bend F.arm
Antique Club meets Monday at

--Names in the news---~~
DALLAS (AP) - Kenneth
Branagh says the monster in his .
v~rsion of "Frankenstein" will be
different from previous movie
incarnations. .
"We're going for a look very
far removed from the Boris
Karloff•. bolts,in-the-neck, squ~­
. head thing," the irish-born actor·
director-producer told The Dallas
Morning News.
Branagh is ~ling and acting
in the rccently announced movie,
and Robert De Niro will play the
monster. Frallcis Ford Coppola will
produce the film.
, Mary Shelley's classic horror ·

novel has been made in to more
than two dozen films. "We're lry·
ing tO slick as closely as we can to
the book," Branagh said.
And how has life been since
wife Emma Thompson won the
best actress Oscar for ·'Howards
End" in March?
"She's been completely impos·
sible," joked Branagh. "I have to
book &amp;JliiOintments to see her. She
goes to bed with the Oscar. I have
to call her 'madam.' I do all the
housework now. She's become a
complere tyrant Impossible."
'

BELLA VISTA, Ark. (AP) The hair has some gray in it and the
important protection, individuals face has a few lines, but Fess Park·
should call Social Security's toll· er can still pass for the ldng of the
free number, 1·800-772-1213
wild frontier- even without the
business days between 7:00A.M: coonskin hat.
and 7:00 P.M. IIIId ask for a copy of
And if that's how people think
the leaflet, "Worldng While Dis· of him, it's just fine with the· 66abled-How Social Security can . year-old actor, who built a career
Help.~ The Athens office is localed
playing frontiersmen: Davy Crock·
at 221 1/2 N Columbus Rd and the et in the 1954-55 series on ABC,
phone number is 592-4448.
and Daniel Boone in the 1964-1970

7:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park in
Racine.
MIDDLEPORT • International
Order of Job's Daughters, Bethel
No. 62, MiddlepM. will hold semi·
amual installBilon of officers Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. A dinnu will be
served at 6 p.m. Everyone wei·
come.

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YOUR PRIICRIPIION IS
RI•DYWHINWI
PROMIII OR IT'S
FRII*
,

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

POMEROY · F.O.E. Ladies .
Auxiliary No. 2171 will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m.

,,._ ~

WI HONOR ALL COMPI'IIIOR'I COUPONS

r

, r-Mt;J.,

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$5 OFF

CHESHIRE • The Gallia Mei~
Community Action Agency Will
have a free clothing day Wednesday from 9 a.m. to noon at the old
high school building in Cheshire.

•

YOUR NIW PIII.I CRIPTION

FREE with thiJ coupon. Subsequent reftlls at
our everyday low prices. l'revloully nDed pr&lt;·
ocriptl0115 from another Kman not valid. One
Rx per coupon, one coupon per customer.
Not valid in combination with any other otrer

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FREE With thll coupon. Subllequenl rdllls at
our everyday low pri«s. Previoully l1lled P"'·
ocrlpllont from .-bet Kttwt no1 valid. One

Kttwt not valid. One
one coupon per customer.

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or where prohlbl!ed by law. tA stale law prohJbits Ule of coupons for controU~ subslance
preocrtptions. Coupon not honored on every

~~~.~:.1993&amp;

Kmait Phumacl&gt;t for ol&lt;taiiJ.
&amp;
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Thoouflb Aupol U, 1993

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~llcluial

...,.21, 1113
No. 83-t12

. .

• UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
1 S.alad propoeala wiN be
recelvld at the olllca of the

Kin, Devla11a, Lega!Ma,
Admlniatratora, Exooutore
and Aaaigna of. Guy E.
Hunll!', Thoma• Bailey
Hunter, Sr., lAIIIe Jane Reed
Hunter, M•raaret lamo
Garren and L8bbu1 Grabal
Garrell, Addr••••• un·
known.
1111 further the ORDER of
lhla Court that pr~l ol
publication be lurnlohld to
Douglu W. UtUe, Attomer
lor the Eallle of Guy E,
Hunt.-, deoMold, 211·213
E•t Sacond SlrMI, P. 0.
Box IU, Ponieroy, Ohio

)

AdmlniMatrll:
oflhe E..... of
Guv E. H...".!, Dec-..1,

,._
VS

THE ESTATE OF
DAVII G. HUNTER,
D II Iii, el 11.
A•pondlnlll
CASE NO. 21,1103
Doobt 11 hge 215
ORDER
Upon rw8 of the file, II
Ia henby the ORDER of lh11
Court that ..rvlce loy
publication be made upon

IN THE
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
~ENNIFER L. SHEETS.
ADMIIHTRATRIX
oltheEa'-ol
Guy E. Hunter, Dec~

Reasonable Rates
Dependable
' Service

l

••
•
,I

-v..
THE ESTATE OF
DAVID G. HUNTER,
DECEASED, ET AL.,

N~Ae&lt;T""..,C~tnci~~-la

BISSELL a·BURII
COIISIRUCTIOI
.

Dovld G. Hunter, o.c..ld,
11 al. Thlo action h• biMI
uolgned Ca11 No. 26,103
and Ia ponding In tha
Common Plaaa Court of
Mala• County, Ohio,
Probata Dlvlalon, Sacond
::.,:~t, Pomeroy, Ohio

.e..JI'oG•r•s:•le
eiOW

i

;

•

JUNE 16-19, 7PM,AGES4-12

'

••,, &amp;..• OWpo
'

1...1

'"" ~

c:·"

PUIIII

II

915-4473
667•6179

the--

Ia to determine the helre,
next of· kin and peroon1
•llllld to
of Guy
E. Hu.,ter, o.o...ld, In
order that a dlalrlbullon of
Nkl•-oan be mille.
- ~~ere~~y
toYou
anawer
the nqulrld
Petition
within twenty-eight (21)
daya alter the laat
publication of lhla nollcle
whloh will be publlahld
onoe a WMk lor ehr (I)

',i '
•

l

I

6:45p.m.
Speclai ,E!nly Bird
•100 Payoff
Thio ad good for 1
FREE card•.
[..ic. No. 0051·32

I

u-,1il83.
_,,
Robert E. Buolc,

24 IR. EMERGENCY SEIYICE
WdlooHavo
7112

,...,...v.no

Authorized: Brlgge I.
Stranan MTD, Ryan,
I.D.C. Repair Center
PICKI,IP and DEUVERY
HoW'I II- M·F H Sat.
Cloold Sunday
. 949·2104

LAna K. ~cold, Clerk

.
·

Place your

II::~;;;::~

I·;

HAULING
LI.STONI,
IUVIL &amp; COAL

tloma with 4 bedrooma, '-ue liont
poteh, 75 r100 lollacin~ Ohio rMir. Nloa and roomy.

Mlddl•part- 1112 1tcry

,

NEW UfliNG- Juet oft Bald Knob Rd.· 7+ ICNa wi.. 11186
Radman 211 e5 NCtional will ldditional room of 15 I 35.
3 ~ 1 d 001n1, 2 balha, hutch. lw, H.P.IC.A. firapllae, coiling
.......... llorllge, garden, exlrlllllltai un~. fencing. AU

BULLDOZiiiA. BACKHOE
and TRACIOIOE WORK
AVAILAIII.E.
BEPTIC IYSTEMS,
HOME liTIS and
TAAILI!A IllES,
LANDCLEARING,
DfiVEWAYS INITAU.ED
I,IIIE8TONE-TRUCKING
FIIU: III~TES

992·3131

'

W1211

.

Mlildlaporl- IIIMI!DIATE POISESSION I 2 a10ry

nme

, _ with 2 bldrcomo, bath, firap~. bl~emenL $21,500

·

SYIIACUSE• 'TWo 110ty frame , _ with 2.:! bedrOOO)I,
utlity, ..IJ)OII. 2 pon:he1 on two loll with ailed I gardan
tna. ASKING 121,000
.
STOP 1Y AND lEE OUR SELCT10N
011 AVMAILE HOIIEII

COIIPUTI AUTO

IPIOUTIIY
9Uitom8elt

Coven, Clrpat,
HeldHIIIfl, ·

ConvaiiLII Tops
10 YNo wp~~lettoe.

IU Ill ItA
11011. lnillk
llddl1part, 0111o

New Wiring, Rewiring, ·
Troubi..Shootlng

Auto-RentGis
Sprf... Tfme
'

COMIICW &amp; IESIDEIInAL

s..efal

llcensetiL lasured &amp; loaded
FR~:E

RODGERS 1-1 RIDE

ESTIMATES

(614)
742·2345
.
.

.....

614·446·0736

Steel Sales
No order
too small or too large
Orders welcomed
(614) 992-7878
FAX (614). 992· ~053
l

Steel Fabrication
and Welding

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

!

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

2 Fro•t Struts e Labor
• 4 Wk"l AliJ•••t
Prices Startsag at
1129.95 +Tax

.j
t!~~.tplng

31904 LHdl•t
"· creek Roell

MitldlofOrl, Oklo

J&amp;T HOME

IMPROVEMENTS

(former Mason Lanu)
3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets

Annour1c r mP'1 h

(304) 773·5585

• SUMMER HOURS"
Sun.·Thur 5-1 o pm
Fri-Sat 5·11 pm
ICLOSEoD WEDNESDAY

CUSTOM SADDLES, , .
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

Roof

lnsiH aaiiOut

36358 SR 7

F- E•lirnatea,
Loyv Coat•.
Work Guaranteed

614·949·2911 or
614•592-5010

5-2._1 mo.

Stone

SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call 614-992· ·
6637

•FIREWOOD

BILL SlACK
' 992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
'

- o d lid liaoloo: '1111
WOOl Vlrginlll Doport. . lll ot
Aaric1ollurewlloocopl MOied

blilo com
an/Uplocalod
1o 1IGO
of
Nr
o1 tho ·
Loldn
Slllla Farm ond John
llcCIUIIond Mo"*"" Farin.
Com ..., be

'

FNI Estllllldn
Raplacement
Wlndowa
VInyl Siding

Roofing
Call ua tor
Special PrieM on
Siding •nd WindoM

992·2772
James K-, ow...-

SEWER PROBLEMS
CALL 614-992·7178

Tanks, Leach Lines
Repair &amp; Installation
Llco•std, l•suretl ••tllo•dod

c.n 614-992·7171

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
\VAYW
DAL TUf&lt;

DO

n YOUISILF

i COIITUaOI

VIAn'L
DALTON

Steel Wood Grained Textured Ralsad
Panel Garage Doors Complete With
Track, Lock, Spring and Hardware.
.
WHILE THEY LASTI

· MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

Tltese Sl1e1 O•trl

(614) 992·7878
5-10.11:1

~ HOUR EMEROEI'fCY IEIMCE

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING
24 Hour Portable Weldin. Service

COMPLOE MACHINE SHOP SDVICES

by .......

•ppaiiWd fanM to Aoolll200 of
tho Adminitlrolion Building of
tho WOOl YlrJinlo Doportmelll of

HOURS:
7:30am. 5:00pm
MOI1 • fri
7:30am · 12:00pm Sat

•

be oblo- llycotting .

BEAUTIFUL GIRLS! ExcKingl
Po-ol Tllk To 'Em U..ll1·
- - E x t. 1424
Min. M... Be 11 y,., Prvcoll Co.

*'·"Per

IO:I.elt-GIIS.

Entrln Being Accepted For
11113 .11 HUbberd . . . , _

Lntii t.ooaue

Tou~

At

a,,..._, ~~- Juty ""· eon.

loci
EllerloK
-~
DtrKtor,
411,
- . OR

4Sl711 · Phone:

Entry ...... 130,1111on ......
EXOTlC LADIES Lift 1 - -

7IICI $3.111Hftln. IIC-'111.\ , _
llil-1115 $2-mln. 11+•

-

SPECIAL

Backhoe
and small
Dozer Work

.._tod

toeting -~ Muncy 11 1111'o087S.
Ali biCia mUll be fU-od on

. Aarlcuttu,.
1ft3. lid ohOolo
-.;
by 1:00ond
omlnJufJ
1,

-

J&amp;L INSU[lTION
'

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406
318/tfn

3 Announcement•

1-w------------iiiiiiia
..--------------. =r.

St.lt. 7
Ckeskire,

•UGHT nM'UI..ilrt\l!

Shop

Shade River

Mason, WV

Fro• Foun.atloa to

Wltileottrs

Probete Judge

Cluoifled today
and hold out
yourhand...

2112JV2Jtfn

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

ENTERPRISES

181

t'IIIIOIY hOme with 3 bldnloml, on two lolo ol 50 • 100
each. o.- would IIIIAIIO have ·SOLD" ond may a&lt;:eepl
-10111ble otlerl ASKING $18,900

makundolw...movelnl

. IN POMEROY

. 4/29/93

'Re110•altle
Ratti

FOR $52,500

EAGLES·
CLUB

614-992•7144

Services
Interior &amp; Exterior
Paint Mobile io&lt;Moool
and Aluminum Siding
1 ?cower
IUOOilllve 81 Ia The,_. ••
Washin·g
flEE ESTIMATES
publlnllon wHI be m... on
the 22nd ,., of J-,
50714 .....,
ld.
IIIII the twenty·elallt
lett
AL
dliyo lor anewerfng
••• ....
comm-on lhatdlill.
••• of your !allure
enawer or olherwl••
reepond • requlrld by the
Ohio Aut•• of Civil
UCINE
Procedure, Judgment loy
MOWER CLINIC
default will be rendered
Wlllll ALLEY
agalnat you lor the re•r
ct.n.dad In the,.......
Parts alii S.vkt
Deled thle 11111 dliy of
Mow.. • CHII S.ws

(5111, 21;
. '
(I 1, I, 15, 22, ltio

Clio Sanclay Calls)

EVERY THURSDAY

lo•tl•li•l
Slot.&amp;

. The ~~~~~t of the Patlllon

.

INSURED

614·992·7643 .

••fu' Tree S..llf•
FlEE

EBLIN'S ELECTRIC

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Daa1and, n. The E.aate of

'

For•••~ of

511

TO: The Unknown Hen,
INTERIOR
Next ot Kin, Devlaeea,
Legoteea, AdmlnlatroliDnl,
FREE ESTIMATES
I Ex&lt;iicultori ond Aaalgno ot
Take lha pain out ol
HunJer, Thom•
painting. Let me do ~
Sr., L8nle
for you.
·
Jone
Mllrgant
VERY REASONABLE
loma Gorren
Lebbua
HAVE REFERENCES
Grobe! Garren.
You ar1 hereby noUIIId
614·915·4110
!hot you hiiYe bHn nlllled
R•pondenla In · a legal "===61:1:0ft3/:;:1::;m:o.=pd~
ootlon entlllld J•nlfer L. . .,.
Sh11ta, Aclmlnlatratrlx ot
the Eollte of Guy E. Hunllr,

We would like. to
expreis a sincere
Thank You to all the
singers and groups
who participated In ·
the Hymn Sing to
help raise funds
toward our new
church roof. We
would also llka to
thank those who
made financial
donations, and to
those who donated
and prepared food
for the worklra.
A very Special
Thank You to the
men who graciously gave their time,
labor and axpertlsa
to add the IIIW roof,
also to the community of Clifton
for their continued
support.
God Bleas You All,
Pastor M. E.
McDaniel and thl
membera of Clifton
Tabernacle Church

~view! ASKING $32,

POMEIOY~OI.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

TRIMMING and
TREE· &amp; STUMP REMOVAL

Pallllonar

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

=

I

CALL 992·6123
'

l
I
•
•
l

I

"VICTORY STATION"

Middleport,
Po~Mroy, lad••·
Rutlaad,' Mason
Areas

w.

NOTICE BY

992·7553

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing · ·

LAWN CARE

Douglae
LAn.... .
Allorney lor Eetata

'

REASONABLE RATES

....11-113-11

3-4-83-1

l

VACATION
BIBLE SCHOOL

$30 HOUR

l

..:

I .

E.ICAVAnNG
(614)
667·6628

cllreotor of the Ohio
Department of T,..•
portellon, Columbo11, Ohio,
until '10:00 a.m. Tueaday,
June 22, 1113, lor
lf11provam•ta in:
· llelga County, Ohio lor
Hnprovlng Structure No.
MEG-33-1571 on United
Stalll Route 33, Sactlon 45710.
Robert E. Buck, Judge
1i.71, (In the village of
Pomeroy) by overii!Ying the APPROVED:

••

185 Upper River Road • Gallipolis, Ohio
446·8366

D. A. BOSTON

•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

ltSSELL BUILDERS, INC.

CHARLIE'S

SMALL DOZER WORI,.
DRIVEWAY WORK
GICIUMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE

•BACKHOE

the unluloWtl Helra, Next of

Conlraal . . . Lapl Copy

•'

•DOZE.RS

JOE I.SAYII
SAYRI TRUCKING
614·742·2131

l•

\

Notice

.J

llfiit

f

TO

I

L.

'

(614) 992-7878

-~

NURSERY:

AVAILABLE EACH NIGHT

.

Real Ell8te Gtnetal

%Mile from Big Whiel Depl. Slort. CeU H2·5326 for llifo.

EVANGELIST:
REV. DAVE CANFIELD
GOSPEL MUSI(:
JIM &amp; KATHY SISSON

NOTICE

CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Colutnbue, Ohio

...

b: per coupon, one coupon ptt CUICOIIK'r.

prescripdoru. COupon not honored on every
lhlr&lt;l1'lrtY plan. See your local
·

.

' I

Brtng In your presctlp!ion or "'fllla P"""rll" ·
lion from anodler pharmacy and get $10 OFF
With tiW coupon. (Phannactst Will call ·doctor
for au&lt;horlzation where required by law.) If
your preacription Is less than $10 you gellt

or wbem prohibited by law. tA St.1telaw prohJbJU uae of coupons for controlled substancr

.J

'

YOUR NIW PIIIICIUPTION I

Not valid ln combination with any other offt:r

i!xplfto July 1!1. 1993

L.

YOUR NIW NIICRIPTION

scriptloiiJ from -

9r where prohibited by law. 1A sute law prohibiu usc of coupons for controlled substance
pre5Criptk&gt;ns. Coupon not honorer on cvcrv
thltd-part)' plan. See your local
Kman PharmaclJI for details.

rRniiAL

$70FF
Brtng In your prcscrtpllon or odlll a pmcril"
lion from another pharmacy and g&lt;t $7 OFF
With tiW coupon. (Pharmacilt Will call doctor
for authOrization where mjUlml Ly law.) If
your preocrlp!lOn Is less than $7 you get it
FREE With thlt coupon. Suboequcnt n:ftlls a1
our everyday low prices. Prewiously lllled pre-

Bring In your preocrlption or refllla prcscrll"
tion from anothc:t pharmacy and act $5 OFF
with this coupon. (Phannactst will call doctor
for authortzauon w~ requlrcd by ~w.) It
your P"""ription io lcte than $5 you get II

· POMEROY • Alzheimers and
Related Diseases Supp_ort Group
will meet Wednesday at 1:30 p.m.
at the senior citizens cenrer. Peg~y
Codding, music department, Ob1o
University, will speak on music
therapy. Everyone welcome.

r

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
lox 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

·~~

•

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

Public Notice

II THE PROBATE COURT
OF MEIQB COUNTY, OHIO
JENIIFEA L.IHEETI,
11,

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE anti
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

Plumbing lnstaUation
and
Repairs.

Public Nollce

I

BURLINGHAM · Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Department Committee will meet Tuesday
. at 7:30 p.m. at the Burlingha!"
Modern Woodmen Hall. Pubhc
invital.

NOTICE OF APPOtNTUENT
•
OF FIDUCIARY
"On June 2, 1tt3, In the
Malga County Probate
Court, Caae No. 27171,
Dlrle Kola Rouah, 21217
Apple Grove-Dorc•• Rd.,
'Raoln•. Ohio 45771, woa
appolnlld Extcutor of the
eatale of Orion Rouah,
decNIId, lola of 28217
A'pple Grov•Dorcao Ad.,
Raolne, Ohio 45771.
•.
Robert E. Buell.
· ,1
Probata Judge
(~) 7, 14, 21, 31p

"The dele ael lor
completion of thla wqrk
lhall be ae Ill lorlll In the
bidding propoall."
' Plana and Spoolftcallona
ore on file In the
D.i"Parlmtlnt ol Tr...,..rtation and the oftlce of the
Dlatrlcl Deputy Dlraetor.
I
JERRY WRAY
j
DIRECTOR OF
•
TAANBPORTA110N
!&lt;17, 14, 21c

Professional Personalized Service · '£
Everyday Competitive Prices .
,
Quality Generics To Save You More g
Most Third-party Carriers Accepted ·
Computerized Prescription Service
Convenient One-stop Shopping
~
Separate Register In Every
Pharmacy For Speedy Service · t.
...
• Free Use Of Our Blood Pressul'e·
l
Monitoring Equipment
•

RUTLAND • Rutland Village
Council wlll meet in special ses·
sion Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the civic
ceqter.
•

Public NOCic:e

""'k will MphaiL

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

POMEROY • American Legion
Drew Webster Post 39, Tuesday.
Dinner at 7. Meeting at 8 p.m.
Election of officers.

JUNE 16·20, 7 p• Nightly
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST CHURCH

STANFORD, Calif. (AP)U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinsrein urged .
graduates of Stanford University
not to accept the notion that Amenca is in decline.
&gt;
"The prediction that the next
generation will live a lesser life
than their parents is a .threat but no1
a destiny unless we by ow' inactiqd
mate it so," Feinstein said duriria
commencement exercises Sunday,~
"You we~ not educated and WI'
were nor elected in onler to presill,ii
over the. downsizing of the Ameri'·
can ~." the fu:st·term senal9'\'
told about 3,000 graduates.
, .~

WE' OFFER:

TUESDAY
POMEROY • Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, ~fezen­
tial tea, Tuesday, 7 p.m., home of
Susan Clarlc.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • All-family revival
and vacation bible school, Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church,
Wednesday through Saturday and
Sunday with evangelist, Rev. Dave
Canfield and gospel music by Jim
and Kathy Sisson. Bible school
theme is "Victory Station" for ages
4-12.

seriesonNBC.
;•
"It's kinda nic.e to have od€
genre to bani your hat on, even if jl
was a eoons'kin hat," said Partet:
who was among the celebrities who
showed up to play golf Saturday at
the Plrillips Charity Classic to beii'J
efit cancer research.
.
After the "Daniel Boone"
series folded, Parker prospered in
. the California real estate market.

HAVE YOUR NEXT
PRESCRIPTION FILLED
WITH US AND SEE HOW
WE'VE CHANGED

Community .Calendar
C01amunlty Clllend•r items
appear two days !Iefort aa event
aiMlllie ...y at tllat eveat; Items
must lie receind well in ldvance
to ..-e palllkatioD In the c•J.
endar.

..

\

.. eo..- .....

' 1liiii: iiiiii;
Stoto~
R - .._ ~ AI

VInton,

On
Nigilt F~ I

I

a,'e.

k!:., ~~-.'t.":
.....

A.M.CiooiCIOnTii
ltooklng ~

311-1'1"M. No •·: 1 hoi laue

114- •
111

~l'l'llltl A Kltii'IINrltln

Hetn A Dn!H Till 'ttl
-.rlfUI
GlrlaiU 1 - - • •
Ext. 1371, • • ,., .... . .
U.. 24

::,.~ y... , _

IIIII II

I

c.. ... III-

MIIDOIINA Lift ,..

IIO'Itll-11
......
-.c.'I!IA~~o.

~-··

�•

The Dally Sentinel

--......--· ............

41 Ho~JM~ for Rent
2-3 llodr- In P-..y,
PJO.-. pluo dlpoelt, no .,....

......... lor ....- ....rt ....
~

r·

Ohio

Pomeroy-MJ

SNAFU® by Bruce Beatlie ·

~lveaWay

4

•..___

June 14r 1 QCI..:t

Lolt &amp; Fciund

: , _, male 00rm.n Shoi&gt;Mtd,
~!!At, ...,...,. Run Rd., 114-.
-3123. '
.

71

5I

Household .

"""''~

S•Mf' . I'E

"fl. I' ~"''"'"'

OWN , C HINA L·•·'l·o\IILN

&amp; .·' ·.

diJ)Oaft

lncl

NftNncet

1'1•"""''

A.'f A C"T ' owNef'.'&gt;

p-.sc,li H .. a.o~ 1'l1e&amp;e ·~
,.ot'7 oF b«••t&gt; ..OtJ F'o1)b
~N 1'~1~ DO/f,

GaHipolls ·

1-::========:rp:;::;;::;====;;;;;iiz
~·I•
Wanted

done

47 Flm tlroclor

Help

2 bedroom natural

2

"

n.
o
a.
n
.
oa•,

Pleco "' comptato

~~~.colt

OobJ Martin,

Docarelod 11......,., alllompo,

:::.:.

antiquo lwnltun, mall pouch

thMmOIMI. .,

~=-

AI..~

.,.......

•nil-

Aittlq
R
wo"":;, ~:

m-.

CaiiiM-441-MH.

Tap Paid: AN· Old U.S• .
eotno, Clold Rlnp, su- Colno,
Gold Co1n1. II.T.S. Coin Shop,

151 Socond A....,.., Qotllpolla.

rnobllo

Emplo1·ment

Serv1ces

bedroom,

untumlahed, 12 x

~nowi"!)oy accept

Very Nice:" Z Bedroom•, ·Unfur..

a&lt;Nenisements lor real estate ,
wh~h I• In violation olthe

nllhtpd, Cabla, Air, Overlooking
Ohio Rlvor . In Kanavgo,
Ratarance &amp; Dopoob Raq\ilrid,
.fostaf'a Mobile Hom• Park, &amp;14-

taw. our readers are hereby
lnlormed lhaf.all dwellings

~1602.

adVGrtlsed In ll'tls newspaper
are available on an equal

44

oppo•uony basl5.

l=.lf:I.:-:::~".J.lll~"-:.:i ~~~~~;.~~E=
routrn.

Apartment
for Rent

t Bedroom, Quill a Prlvoto, Air
Condhlonlng $250/lla. • 0811, 304-671-1160.
1 Room Elllcloncy Aportrnont
For Aont $151!1111', $155 Depoorh,
Utllhlw Paid Exoopt Eloa~~~l·
2bdrm. luH buomont, clooo to Rolor..... Raqulrwd, 11
town, llorgo
$15,000 or !71:.;30=..-..,.--..,.._,.....,..,....~
maM Gtter, M-l82a7181. 114- 2bdrm. apia., total elec::trlc, aP..
882-3327.
plloncOo fumlehod, loundrJ
room lacHbloo, to oalooOI
In tawn. At&gt;Dtlcotlona avolt,b141
at: VUI4tgo 'Clnon AIIIL 141 .or
cotll14.et2-371t. EDH.

Vart--

'

Wit!!'!! TO Work

-Con
lo PlcltH Up~1111'1
AI lloCorthur
•AVOIH' ALL AREA&amp;Im..ra your ...... Dtparta""rt, 124 W. lllln

.11

Help Wanted

time with

w. You"l

love the

. , . ..

compa.,. 1--.nst~.
Wontod- - · • • in tho RoaJno 32 Mobile Homes
AVON 1 AI ArMa I .Shlrloy lnt-od In lolling l•no
IQr Sale
···-1428
11-plooooi•-MJn.
Spoan, ~··
liooum·-olaolli,..nd.
'73 FOITall Plrk, 2 bedroom,
DoalorlhiPo
Wanted:
homo
~-~~lor~
....
~~;•=lew=:~P.O=·:..;Bo::::• JIOOd candHion,l14-llt2-e&amp;lll.
hoatlng
-lion.
Ill.- Stllo
Pal- 728.1,
p.....,.,,
loll 81-lor
- loll aauon.
I""' Wontod: Roll Eotato
.
madlol.._
H~h
lalla Per· 14XML Eotato 1V711 3 Bodrooma,
-•
lCIII For A Wott · Elllbt- 'I'Oial ~loctrlc Now Through Out
sa,uo, &amp;14-448a0'17s, F,.e-setaUp
prolbo, Phono:
taw '"-'"'""'·-'
.. ·
-IJ.nd
All Roau-........
112:J..316&amp; or Balldantlal,
To: Con,CLA 11111 Ll~!1, 1411110 3 Bodroomo,
3241.
2lll. c/o OalNpotlo. &amp;:\IT, Tn~ 1 Total Elictrlc, Underpinning!
01-ar ol Edco:atlan to Dllln, 121Thtnl Avonuo,
polio,"" Mull Soo Ap-lata, Roducod ·
dlnct, .nd -lnoll all oduca- 41131.
. lntorM!od Colts Onl,. 614-4461340:
tlon-rolatod
and
.,._
HMM echool ltlift of an 17 Miscellaneous
1183 llobllo homo w/doc:k a
IIRIDD ll"lllnow pnM:IIng
. Eorly
lnt-nttori, -lioal, ond Commallar ~r. model outbuilding, v~ niC8, appro1.
School •ge . ~,...
tor
vldoo monitor, 114 acrw lafJd. VInton, Ohlcl .....
chlldrwn In llltgl .Cou!IIY. ll!lnter. For mara lnf9rlrUIIIQn: $1\000. IIOW75-5778 or &amp;MOuolltlcollono lnc!Udo _ ..... 304.f7U218.
388-11312.
Qogno In Spoclot Education or
1885 Sk,llno Jolrl Mobl141 H-a,
11' Jo.;!:~o.1 $20,
st~ On
rololod llaklcit:por- -'Ill- Good
Aontod Lat, 3 Bodroomo, AI!
cat• from
Depart"*" of vtlf10nl rdo, 2
llllllde potty chair, ••. 304o Etaetrlc1• Naw Corpat, &amp; Paint,
Education 0&lt; otlglllto tor - · 17&amp;41113.
Extra Nlccil $13,000. 614-446tlllcatlon. 'nirw ,..,..l-Ing
1800,
614-w&amp;-1168.
exptlrlonct and ano ,... oupor·
vlsory e1per*18e lor ~ 18. · Wanted to Do
1tH Skyll~ Holly Rldga 14x70,
all alec, 2 ·beclroome, AJC,
for chlk;ltwt wllh •• al........dal
WUI cowred porch, kltc~n laland,
dlaablllttH p.wloi old. Compotl- Cartlflod Nf!llng
Homo, 11ongo - . _ undlrponnlng,
llvo ulory anol ........... /tf&gt;- Do -·~~~In
ptlcotlon doaciiM: Foldlr. .lunli 11 v.... ~nco, Exoollont lllle now, 304-llm-2484.
·
.Raflrat
' 14-211-10'11.
18, 1883. tr.
LARGE
DISCOUNT
ON
ALL
Stntn E. ..... 11:1 c
EaR TREE IERVICE. l~, DISPLAY MODE!!. MOUNTAIN
Dlr-,U..~- ol Trlmrrt!nfl, T- Rornovll,
STATE HOliES,"'· PLEASANT,
MRIDD, CorM!on ..-_ 13MI Trlnontlnii. e.tlmatoal I
wv, 30f..171.'MOO:
· Cartelon SUMI, S~..e, 0H. 317-7tl'f"AW 4p.m.

Fuml- AJi1: 1Br, tzao
Utllbl11 Paid, Bhara Both, 701
Fourth, Galllpollo, 814 us 1118
Alter 71&gt;.M.
,
.
Fuml- Ell: 7 1/2 Nell, Qal.
llpolll, .$165, Utltbloo Pd, '1144441-4418 After 7P.M.

-rot
,_

*"

45Tni. EOE.

313.

--1.._

p-··

to.

-,,,.11.,. •

o.-

=

Pta-··
·olean-

O::.'"'li...!:~'t..~tl

·I _

·-·...

illlh a-

parlenoo _..... . •
PDP I lion ot . , _ . l!lluU. .i
le "' • ....._ ....... - ;
. . . . . . - - Mt ,.. .....

--·-

~~-'t=F~-

tolo.,

--7111

.~Ail'"~

ga--..

k.,.

:::..-;!:'::.::::.e
tho_.. ' ' .

::...~In
· - e o - ·..._11 .
,_
Noaltjt .........

PICKENS FUANrTuRE
· Naw/Uood.

~~d~~~~.:?, ~

:

' •l ot

WlfL,f,.,t"'T

Miscellaneous

Wett

Pus
Pus

·. Merchandise

·PUS

Pus

DAfJBIJRN THIJNDER
Ai'l' LltSHTNI~. r !!."

1N1

Hondo ·- • •

AUC110N • FURNITURL

:::=-...:.-::: 41 Houlll fOr Rent
.

.

potlng, rangoL rolrlaorator,
family ltmoepnerw,
111ft•
managor. EOH: 304 182 3711 cor

nooo

llllol, $2,200, 1114-441-0201.

Ita Nlatil Hawk 1150,
Pia, pon, otrot
. 'tor, ~ chair, .....
lntornatlonol
brand-....
-opoi.., pototo I l l - - •
wdtlr, oar IMt, bl
bed, Porttoitd;
.
81U43
5211,
Con
1HIKE
100
e4G0,.114-441-0201.
!IWing, drMIIng llblo, ; ·cono deliver.
·
back chain, antlqiHl lumburo,
304-67JHI48.
Now Holllond ll!opor M ha~•,
Pocket oandwlch maker, $7; hOI
oondblon, - ·
of.

p;"'

54

Ml~llaneous

""'=•

~.:.:..&lt;41~37.~
. .....,.,.--,.,----

Soo.. Lawn-., ~.~vlor
Vaecum C l - wm AI·
totchrnonto, f30 Ploone 114-2418581 Aak For Mark. ,
.
·
Sornf.wavll- au- Size
w...- . Llko' Now, ""'"• 6ok
With Bootu:... a HNdbaonl,
$250 OBQ, 114-4411-71160. ·
Sot ol 4 ·aluminum 11n whoelo,
tbo !lug Choo' jolcl(-up, •70,
114 ~3.
·
~ nlrlglrator, poll- dfotnnahor ~llrtalot ptono,
$110/oo.;. 1114-114Wofi loon
·
&amp;moll Trollor For Qa- T-410
Factor, Bull Aaklng 811, Qo
Ollor, 114
~7153.
. 441 80211 Or 114-

. MatchaJICIIH

2 Yoar Old Llvl!'l

SOMETIMES, CI-IUCK,l
WONDER u: 'f'OU EVER
REALIZE JUST HOW
EMBARRA5SIN6 Ti-115
CAN 8E ..

11 fl. lollll!ltlht Trailer,
1t7t, a Wlll1- 1178 .lohnoon
Evanlngo.
MOlar, M ... 114-44f.1881.
2yr. old ..., lilY, - . , 11114 ow- 21'
Crulwr.
leaolo weU. 1100. :104468 1818• With Ti'o!!!!r 1tlll Clirlo Craft V-II
m-ago 304-41140011 oftor Enalno, ... NP, lloarlnl eo-,
7pm.
·
' SWTm
u.n, OUoor MCott141
H.ut11111:
Anyttrno, -""'!111 se,lo'O, 111 tts 0898
Anywltore.
Ohio,
7112 Or · Ev_, llondn. Chuck Willi-; 1133 ,.vanlngo And Wookondo. \ .
~ Cnok Trucking, f14.24a- 1NI 11 1'1. ._. l'lboralooo1
With 71 Hp .lohnaon Boatllator
Hereford Alglllorod Bloclc 2 And 'l'rollor $11M, 1114-446-4514.
Y - Coin, With CoJ.. IIY 1tlll. .loll""- ~- BOll,
Sldl
lnd lack, Boa! Olllr, 1M- 10 HP Malar J~ a Eatra ,
441-l1t.2.
Goao! Condition, "'600, 814Mt- &lt;'
For lalo: Nlco AQHA 2 10211.
·l
y..,. Old FIIWJ.30 DIJII Trllii- 21 Ft. Campor, Qood Condblon, ,
1878 · - Aoooo Hitch ,
Con lo leon BR 584, I
Raglatoroci~U.upon
llu~
!
moillho.
. Bldwoll, 0H
. By""" MIU.
tlon. .....
.
- - · ,.,. ...... 24 Fl. With •
TraU., No llalor, $1,500. 114- '

CObin

Hit........

t:;...

o.,.._ .,.....

2435.

-~~~-. rw!ftgonotor
~·. ' Ironing
lllto ......
old
!'ICiaCion
board,~
.oou; 114-

441-2372.'

.

=
--

IT, ·
fG.ONOM"
'~IS'\$ IS A WAICf·VP C.ALl-, ANI&gt;
~
IT'$ !JP TO US TO
....,, .....
ltriST A~L A
.

$triOO:Z:t

:

•

I_;______.;....,..

221:1.

~~..,~=. l1

For - : roB boor llir LWB Ford
~ ......... t:Je. CoH 304-

·-.

BORN LOSER
r

~ !'ro:U:

/1()/f. ,I

~----~

H.,.-,

~R. u~ t.IIIEN
TilE.'( I1.EAD ·:

~~~~~=

Ai,A~M.

,_,4

!7760.~iid~;:!?;j;;_iii~i;;;~· ,;..,..-,..,.......;.;;,.;.;.......;,_
__a I'
T...........lono, UMd

::.:.":.: =.::;':J.: I

Couch, 2 End Rocl'- Chair, 1 Ugly dock or ,._, IINianr
RacllnO&lt; 1 ColiN T-. a End
Tab!M, ~'1110, Call 11H4f 4111.. blna wbh En- Doell CU..
eon.
2:1,000 I1U Window Air eon. Avellololo Hor-n dblonor, 1271Lt ' ~ 2 112 Ton tor, Rt. 2 B,.P- Pt. PH. ,
Cantr.! Air· .............. 8110, Woddl1111 1121. Motchlng
114-245'
111 ue aoa
· Yell 8tio e-10, With
11221.
.
.
•
8 pc: ook d•
. . - 011, - ·
pt~kl aaklna 12110. Whirtpoot Woo'-!, -~•Good
Dthorlwnltunr-. . . . . . . Condition loth ...
114-

__..,.T_tt.E w.AY l.

=u...::::k=
l:: n:'·

saoo. 1m

-Sullo, 1

FRANK AND ERNEST

r'

..

'

f'IJT .f!lij)T(Y.) .
~

...

THAvE$'
..,.~

....

· liE (t(JVf:J ~~~~UPS WllW

...

HE U5m6 TQ,fl &amp;OK "~""''

&lt;»&gt; kJOIO ,

A!lOOK •.

12·2513.

Bayo Clothoo 24 M - Ta I,
Pr- $2.60 A Bog Ta $12 A
.
log, 114 ~416890.

atrt'!.,._t&amp;O· Ba- crib w/

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Supplies

·,

Block, lorlclt, -

.............
llntlll, .... Cloildetara, llta Granda, OH Colt 114241-1112\

'

REMeMeeR,a-&amp;
MAN'erOEoeEPT

-

ISLAND••.

t,

StOOping , _ . w~h _.,ng,
Ahaci traitor - · All hook-11po.
Cal
obr 2:00 p.m., 304·77:11151, llooon WV. ·
t

46 Space for Rent j
Moblto Homo LOI For Ront,
WAter a Sovoogo Fuml-! IM38JI.lll38.
Ollloo
-·to CourlhCMMI,
-niawn
PornllrOY. ·
ciOia

-and lloor, about 1100 aq. ft.,
814-77.
'

Cou=
.

47 WantacltORtnti

.

WAnt to nnt or p o 1Rf) I r.u,

.-· ~7::'·..:=
••7U-4111.

lingle ptlront •""-".•
llew ..,..

8":..._ ·_· - - - - ="":!::

,
.
W.ntlng to ront• 2 or s ~2 I f •• .._. ,.. Aont In . houoo, In olean ond good....,.._
~ •::111 ~o: tt.200 A Glllp all, llont: ...._, t235 tlon; pntor private Httlng, 114~ llwl11ot1.1._ DaoOolt._llola a11 Raqulnd, 882-2428, If no . , _ ploaM
IIJ.VtM.
l ........niO.
IMve T i l l • • ~ne.
·

Serv1ces

AITAO·ORAPB

Hptol~

OUR LANGUAGE

'

l.eaee, 1355 Month To Uqnth,
,
, .~

RoarM for rent .. ••k or month. ·

'~!:~~' .S©\\.(llA-&lt;Zt.~s·
O

A. I collect old Americanisms, terms
that $re falling out of use. "To wake
up the wrong passenger" means "to
have the wrong person" o~ "to make
a mistake." The phnise comes from
steambo&amp;ting wben passengers were
awakened at their slops during the ·
night; often the wrong passenger '
would be awakened. In the 19th cen·
. tury, the lexicographer John Russell
Bartlett wrote that this phrase has
even older version: "to get the·---- -·
sow by the ear." .

614-387·7150.

Rooms

..

•ndltlt
.
11 Compottr -:Rorem
:
18 Vehlcleo ;
18 TV actor K111

I

wake up the wrong passenger." What
do you know about that .term?

)

Furnished

brand
2 - Amln
~ Prickly lhrUb
4 .Small wind
lnotrument

I Artlet'a !leg•.
1D Conl111r111¥~

I

Q, I came across an old phrase: "to
Building

5Dr.(movt.l .
6 Author Um·
berto1 Electrified
parllclea
8 Rich and
powerful
paraon

DOWN
1 Ballpoint

Graham Wallace, in ' The Art of
Thought," wrote, "The little
lite making of a poet in her
told to be s'ure of her meaning bef11re I
she spoke, said: ' How can I know what
I tbink till lsee what I say?' • ·
· I have often said that you cannot 1-ll.r+-f--+--f..
find the ript play "- or .bid - unless
you think of it. Today's deal Is an I!I·
cellent eiample. It is culled from the
Marcb/April issue of Bridge Today
magazine .(call 216-371·~849 for, subscription details). It. was reported
English t!Ipert Martin Hoffman.
. In five diamonds, declarer won the
spade lead with dummy's ace, ruffed
the spade two in hand and drew
..
trumps. He cashed dummy's club ace, ,
CELEBRITY CIPHER .
Clilebrll)l Clflt*' U)pl . . . . . . . . . . . IJram ql
• br.fiMoul peof,t., peM ..:1 ~.
played a club to his king and led a
:
~lttWiflbc:lpMrlllndiJor~. T. . .•cW.· W~S.
.,'
third club toward.dummy's jack. How·
ever, East won the'trick and plaYed his
'
·' C D R E
N Z F I
s· 8 X K A 0 D R· M D 0 K
remaining top club. Dedarer ruffed
but couldn't avoid la,ing .two heart
RE
CDK
KVWZKV
JN
tricks. Was South unlucky or did he . EKAGK
misplay?
JSA
BS .RCL,
JSA
UJOK. A,
JSA
NQrth, · not having an
forcing diamond raise available,
!;:DJBI .D C
FSX
USAUJEK · FE
F
porized with two clubs. After.
North·South might have rea,cc~h~:ed~~~::
BFCRJS.'
OJJ .X AJO
ORZEJI.
:
no-.trump, but without .t he a·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ... When I """"""· I have to PIYdt mYMif up for I :
of South's
seeing all
it lsnrc!'at.son,iblE!,
~ before I put on this public dlvo J)111'110na." - Actor/ptljiwrlght H., :
linethe
of cards,
play was
but there is a much better one.
first trick with the spade ace,
..
two rounds of trumps, cash the
.
king and play a club to dummy's
- - - - - - - lolltod loy CLAY L POllANWhen the queen ,doesn't drop,
Rearrange letters of
dulllf!ly's spade two and discard
four
scrambled words
·,•
last club. Whatever happens now,
law to form lOUr lllmple
will lose only two tricks.
Congratulations if you spotted
T UCHA G
be&amp;utlfulloser.:O.loser play.

McQuain
The instrument known as the
·TABOR is a small drum. Any p~o·
h1~nciati1ln of the nouri TABOR other
than "TAY·bor" should be drummed
out 0f your speech.

CX:f£1lE!

llr

55

c.....

Pus
Pus
Pus ·
Pus

J~flrey

Tara Townhowo Aportrnonta,
c1l6t ~1. Lo~BoclnoOnoi,
A, 2
. '
Dllp.
No Palo, Eloctrlc Nat lnatu,_..,
$320 1 Y•r Louo. $330 8 MOnth

Tr-Ial•
torIron!
ront.Phil!
•..... 2 ml14ta
Plont,- Havon. 304'

61 Comedlln

.Eul

(f&gt;--., . . . .ANIIaiCUJUMAIM

.

come ~ bv today, Laurland Apta,

eon,

eo Wipe out

~

Plat"'""

Twin Bod Box SDrlngo a M...
441 IBtB.
•-liD; Porch Gtlclii' MO. 114- 64
Hay &amp; Grain
'
Shaat 13ft oampor, 8100. 1112 44111118.
tta. I. p•-·.u
1n 76
Auto Parts'4o
Qaocl II·-·
OAOU
....-up ..
Honda
4- · IIQW75. 'fWD r.nd .... -=~tJpa
2851
. .4.• 1:00
....
..1• ., JZM211, • Field, St.oo Par 111e, 114-387Acces10rtes ·

1m • x 35, trdot',

--

PEANUTS

on

=

ftower holdor
58 Dloc.a

Can you see
the play?

a ~--~
.-533-3-l&amp;lanJ!IMo.
IFiuanMono-T:l•'=I;
B-·•
•·
aanntng
jon,
Hldol.,
114,....,
.......
11115

Olive St., Oalllpolll. Now • . _
fumbcn. ~"';';. :""""' a
Work - o . I
18.
Uoad Kit- Wall Coblnot, Vol)' Good CondlIIIC Ul t'D3

stOrn~mtntal

Opening lead: • 10

=~· .f~:
-D338. C:u ~~:'1

.

·

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

P.M. 11

114 ~ ... 8510.

(ntlr.)

+K74

Nlca 0no BR Unlumtohod
Apartment. . Ranao,
Rolrlg.
Pravldod. Wator, Ciliroaga Palcl.
Air Condblonlng, DopoaH R•
qulnd. 114-441-134.1 After lp.m.
Complllt, Fumlohod Bmlll

Startlnaot $120/-. Gallll

se korun city

• AJ 3
· +AJ9765

coii:JD4.-6711-1460.
:~&lt;rr:~~; l~~":;.' 63 Uvestock
R. a S. Furnlura. Now, uood, an- Portabll
aloonallbto ..._ .:;,.,..,....;::.:.:::.::,:::.::_,..,_,....,.
tlq,.o.
HoulllmlaHiogo.
tar
1~
tot
••·•
18 H911toln.cowo,
will lOll J"'"1.
Maaon, wv. 3Q4.773-134t.
·~--~
""'
....8.
- a n d dol
• 304 -·~··~
SWAIN
Olllr oiDina .J ... 1ah. Phatio 2 y- O l d - · llluri-

matnao, oou. 304-67s.tt31.

45

+AJ3Z
.Q98

,,..,.,."'

•ID

lion,

llh St, New Haven, W'l.

55 liNt unit

•••

H,drolillc a11t1uo louakal
r:...=;,
~~,;r'·

C""- - . , . . .... c ....
,..... S85. Chontlo ............

Spacloue 2 bedroom 1pt1, lear..·

273-40tt.

·~~54
tKQID8

EAST

Cit-

one
bedroom apertmenta,
$225/mo. lncludM utllbln, $100
-urb' dapoalt, no palo; ,114l'll Acre Or&gt;orlllng Morino, 112--2211.
f.
Locotod In Mllhoood W.Va. 304-

Front Countor ...._, Ex· Q o goa Pao1 tit
dan, Building Leta For Solo Or Will
partonce llotpful Apply In p.,. ~ - -1oa1
tho ..,.. )uti lkilld To Sub ~nanclng Aval~
oon. Caldlnll DIY' c:toar.o, · ~1tl7.
able, 114-3811-0 .
·
Ohio ill.. Pt...;-iiouiJiafla. No
Phono Colle.
Mloo
Dov Con Contor 1 For SaJe..4 112 acr•, high Md
81oa1t Wool Of HIIC Oil....,_, dl)', In Vlllago ol Mid·
MuHI-Arto Fociii!J S..kl Part- Pllto IW' 1 A.M. .f:30 P.M. tr dtoport, prlcod tor lmmodlat,o
nmo Socrotary. Muot Bo Por· Oulllty Arid ~- 1e Tho Nlo, 304-77W881.
sonoblo l Hoivo Baalc Offlco , eon.m FOr v- Cltltd'o
Sklllo. Sond.R-mo To: s.cr. Cora. Col Lie l'or A '11oM. lnlont Loto 6 ita-go tor homo 000•
t;uy, P.O. 801 4~, GalllpoU.. !Todd.... 114 44- 122'1 . p,.. llructiOft Oft Rayburn Rd,
Ohlo.
· choolen 'Aicllool ,loo 1 - reuonabll rM'Irlcttonl, county
w.-er, Information melled on ,.
NMd blf&gt;yoMter tor tho. ~:~1:78c:;22:.:4·:.......,-:-:-"""::-:::=:::- quell, 3CJ4.8'75.6253, pfeaH no
hollll 2:115 ·11:30, call I
5u- liilllrlntt. .. oulolaeto, olnglo -trallorl.
.
8752 II no ....,.. loovo .,... K-1, l'or ....._... ~lor
comugo.
304..,._,
,.,.. CoUntr Wlter, roed _&amp;
Olan MMio Ha• Sovoral lm- TUiilllna ... .,...,._
K· otoctrlc. from $2,550. 301-5'11modlato .Oponlngs For T..._ 1, .... ,... JO .... .......... 2814 • .
phono Saloo Paoplo. Ho Ex· 11t ••• W?
I ::Nico::..::_lot_IO_I_121_,.,.Co-rnp-.,..Con-to-y,
Mrlence NICIIII'J.L. W1 Tr•ln.
l!omlng I Evon!"J •hlfts Avll~ Wanlld to c1o ~ Dill,_.. Tllvtor Rd. City water &amp; aewage.
able. Al• Need MIMOM Fot Loll: 114-211-'ttll or Nancy: Cal&gt;Jo avol14tbto. No IAinlng
rwllrlctlano, $12,1100. Doyo 304Light Dotl.. ry WaR. AtiPIY To: 1-8413
171-liiOO; ovwnlngo 304-171-1217.
Oartono SmMh, Econa LOdge,
:ii llanth Old
QaiHpollo, Ohio starting Moo- Will Bobyllt, dilY J~o~ne 'M • I • P.M. -. Tuee 6on Who W- En!of A SEVERAL 7· ACR~ PARCELS:
1
· ·Tfiru Frl 8 A.M. •1 P.M. &amp; II- 8
·MI7.
.
P.M. "Manag1ment ODDofa
-.111-1484 lind; 1 c ::arllurw and hlllo.
tunbloo Avottobto Far Ttiooo WIN
.... 7:3Dfl"'.
.
Clll lor
inop. 1-114-1113F- To Trnolll" E.O.E. MIF
11645, AthOna,OH.
,
•
ON-CALL
Fmanc1~ 1
MENTAL.-dod
HEALTH_
AIDE
36
_..
rwtlll IIlii In 11 IJMillal
fii'OtiMW llir - l l y .... 21
Bualnaaa
Wtintaoi: 30 a- Mora Acroe 01
ilbll"-"*~
...........
odutto and •lolldn!l· Opportunity
tNOIICit
.. Wit
.11 llllw 1&amp;&lt;1.
..-..... liP to 11 .._. ""'
OHIOVALLITPIIIIIIIIIIGCO. -l!fllo, Colt 114-441'
·-Con
........
echool ....... or alhlr n .,..,..,. !hot ,... oto buoJ. 1111. a...- .
with PIIOtolo,...
and
omp!O!"*" ratiGWirtf Initial -

,_

f.l4-t1

•~~:J743

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Exoy Work! Eloollont Poyl oornblo Pioducto At Homo. Col
TOit Frwo, 1-800-487-61111, IlL

t..rnlng. Pnlor -

EEK.AND MEEK

F.,. Dotlvol)'.

Brand Now
Gubar,
Elolphono Eloctrlc GuMot; 1 Piold flOG eon. Negatlato; no
Paawr AnoptHtor · 1110D; Pair
Parokoalo W/Coao t30, - .
14330rl14.........
.

-. '7." .....

-. .,.,

M,IIOO.

HouN: liOn-Sat, N. 1'14-4460322, s mllw out Bullovllo Rd.

lard,

=·=:.=t:

llcColthur -

1-===== ~====~r-===::§~

Ha.-

:
·
a =

Flrot Holur Apanmanto, Flrot .
And Cadlr st, Qlllpollo.
So-. Dloa-, a HandiCIJ&gt;'
oocl, I'IIHA Income Rollr.lct"!!,
Ronta B - On 30'1. ur
anlolie ....... EnduiiiMintl
.Houllloold lncamo. Appllloncoo,
01 Thru
1 A.ll.
a 5 Hou..:. LAarandll Blvd, · Gr... Corpo~ On.Sho · Loundl)', AJC,
P.M.
Onfy,14.111onday
Frldlr.
~
SchoOl, 3 ~R, Uti Am, Chorry ' Rooldlnt Pa,a Elictrlc Lbllly
Cob, 1 1/2 Bath, Garogo, /tf&gt;- Only. Juno Occuponcy. RU
~ 01 lloCirtlnlr Wll ' Bo polnt"*lt .. .114-441-4827. .
. Ma•o-mant, Inc., 814-337-m&amp;,
Equot
Muot ooll ,Ia -141 lltato: nloo 4
......saslk Are: YoU 111111 Hlw ~- ' both, urtllniMod
room upMalrt, patio, po~.
Ohio Ofllwoo
goragoL r-d oftlt. eon BomoCartlllaote
And
Hlah
!!fplama, ..,... lo lViltng TO rvltto ....K, 30M71&gt;-3030 or
8111-343\
R 1: ta 1n11c1e vm.ae · a

==:·:s

..

., ,

K o -Oold,
110"~4411-11102.
'Etocirlc Ringo I"
King iilzl watorlood, -board, 54
WI 2 lhlilnll wlmlrrill'. ,I *-r
t&gt;odootot; padded nllo, ahaci
bench. 304-t7~1...
• '
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comptilto homo lumlodolngs.

Poine,oy, $8&amp;/mon., 114-VOW16l
Small Mobllo Home In Coontrj,
Near - N.G.H.S. Partially , Fur·
nl1hed, Water, Traah Pa14. $200,
DopoaM. 614-388-8666.

purchuoi ordlr . , . _ _ ; ... 31
f Sale
porlonoo
with
uolng
or
epreedThMia; abllttr to wrhe 2
_
, _ Sldln~ Houao,
81
4
buol..a 1111.,. - -·• -..
~otandanl j&gt;rocoduna; aklll lledroo,.. 2 Bat On U
ng;·dlta - , ; 10 ~ cot. Acrwa, 114-3711-11390, t114-3ti7·
ar · and word 7734.

Etc.IM-ZH-1231.
·
p:ting vloltONI' lllletlng
J a D'o Ai.to Porta and Solvogo, ~ _,...., n 'lll:J:.u':
aloo bu,tng lunk con a true~.. quallllcatlono: oom. .lon or tha
304-773-8343.
12th grodl or aqi.rlvllont aup.
• Locll T10chor Will Babyolt, ..,._.., ·Ill' rur Q!
Tutor Or Clean - . Duma baaklr.-plng lind - t i l l
Tho k,;m-, Aoto,_, IM' - Including
N•
~1Vst.
·
porlonoo ..,ng !IPrHdohooto
lind word I!,FOO!IIIfng computer
Wontod to buy. 'M-"115 Ford/ ........,.. 1YP1160 wpm.
c....,. 11\1-1102-25211, . ..... Taklna -....... For Loool
SomllJrtoiOn ·llllll Have Good
W.,.od . To BUJ: 10 Fl. Stock Drtlllng Aeaoid. T...,_ a Haz-

Wo- to ....,, -

I'll .......

v•

16180 homH betwMn·Athen• &amp;

This newspaper wlfl nol

Annual ulary $M,680
Raqulrwo knowledge of account-

~zm, ~~'0, R~~==: r.:;""i~w~ ==~
Air Condblonoro, GuRar Ampa, • - n g tha tol4tphano ionl

h - . lt4 t11 OIJI

AIC&gt;"· ....

Good oond, tow71-ittl. . .
1111 Fanl Rongor, XLT. Suporo .
ao1t. 414.
o~.to;, N:. t-.
-~,

Mobile Homo Park, 814'882-2111.
Nlco mabl141 homo - tor up to

sex familial status or naUon'al
origin, or any lntenuon to
make any such preJerence,
limnauon or discrimination.·

IOWI:Bookke~edretary

Pralaalo, 114-882-2521.
Don' Junk HI Sol Ua Your ilon- ,..-ling. DOlly dutlw lnclucla
Working llojor Aptit141-o, pooling ta a ,cornputorlzod , oc-

Tn~ller,

1114 It c.tno Conqulala 305,

3 bedroom llllller for rent, 1$2601
mo., piUI dtpot;lt, COuntry

based on race, color, religion,

Sautlllutorn Probotlo.n T-t·
Rick ....,,..,., Auction Company, mont AHomaUv.o ISollla Cantor),
full time au'ctlonMr, compt.le 7 W. l'wonty.fllna Drlvo, Naloonauction oorvlco.
Uconold
vlllil, Dh. 46764
161,Dhlo &amp; Wool Vlrglnlo, 304Boo-par/Socnlol)'
773-5785.
.
Apptlcotlono moy only Iii obtoliMid from onif rotumad to
your 10c81 Ohio BtKMu of
9 Wanted to Buy
Employ"*ll s.r.~ aftloe. A
W1nted ·To Buy: Above Ground complete Job . dMcrtptlon II
Paal, 11' Wldl Or Blggor And 4' avall4tblolar ravlow at tho OBES
Doop, Mull Bo In GOitd Condl- aHico. Doodllno tor application
::.l·lon.z::
. :!.:;:114::.·.:21:.:1:.:1::111:.:3.:.,..,--,
· ~- IS Juno 23, 1883. Pooling
·~
·
dncrlptlon
to
•
lot'
AntiqUH and u.d furniture, no
Item too '-'Ill or loo •m.JI, will

City

60; 112 mh put H.M.C., d.,_b
I ,........,. nqulrod. 614-4464358 or 304-17a-2330.
2 BR un
. lumlahod. No pato. $1.89
mo. Watar lnctudod. $100
dlpOeft. 8-3817.

All real est.lle acr\.Jertlstng In
lhis newspaper is su.bjed·to
the Federal Fair HousJng ·Acl
of 1968 wnicn makes It Illegal
to aclveniSe ~ any preference,
Pm~atlon or discriinlnallon

551-4801.

&amp;Auction

bUJ -

NORTH

•Az

. +Q 10 96 .
SOUTH

water, pt~rti;:L fl!mlaho!l; In
.:ountry, 6143813.

No Expart.nc.t $50!1 To JtoO
WMkiY
./Polontlll Proc-lng
\·
Pt. Pleasant
FHA Mortgogo Rotundo. OWn
Hourw. 1·50HI4&amp;-0503 Ext.213.
&amp; VIcinity
24 HoUro.
2 for!lllr ,.nl - . ol ill ~N~T::-=:-.-· :--:,.,.,.--'-::-:-111 lit- a Wlhlf, 14th-18th, 01 o Loto To Mako Eatra
·
llono,t Salt Avonl Muat Live Ut
10:~?.
Golllciplla City Limbo Or SoUih
Of R\ 35 Gaida County. St.rt
8
PubliC Sale
FM For ALlmbod limo, 1 -

.

1m
~ ~.:a7111,
ton. 381
•MIIW.....

Jacquet48 llott
luKurllnt
52 Flor1 1nd

H

turnlahod
home, 304-675-e512.

11

-·

menlo
45-wHibe .

.

42 Mobile Homes '
for Rent

"Sorry, the early bird 's already been by ... "

...... to,....... .,....

.42 Heron
44 PUIIIIc:

PHILLIP
ALDER

.....

qulrwc( no polo, 114-lii2-2H\

NEA Crossword Puzzle

"fct D•NN

ThfM bodr-n hbuoe, 2 c:u
garwge, htiSimo., 114-1182.f723.
Two Mdroom hoUM ·tor aale or
rent, n:o lind contriCt•, ~
• ..,.,.ncee r.qulrwd _on r.nt,
no IMido palo, 1-'3090.
Two bedroom houM, A~l1nd,

Yard Sale •·

Autos for Sale

-r..Eitt.. .

IN Vt.,.EP .

~211.

If · .

The

,

4 R - I !i'oth, $275/Uo. IMGoodS
~~.
1 · ---~~~;;~---For Ront: Fumlolled, 1
112 lllln Dul Of Rio Granda,
call (114) 245.1227.
.
Nice 2 Bedroom Trallar. For
Ronl, 8 Mllw Dul 218, RalorwnI J)opMit Roqulradi IM-

'

ALLEY

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

r.1 t'l Cll d: lUI :o e

Ohio

• Graph
wlllch SAGmARHIS (Nov.
signa are romantically
lor )'011: Mail · to ·worry today aboul things lhal may never
'$2 a~· a long, selt-addrassad, slamped , haJ)R8n. Actually, lhe aspects are trending
envelope to Matchmakltr, eto tt\ie newspa· in your lavor whare conclusive end. resul!s
per, P.O. Box 4465, New York, N..Y. 10183. are concerned. Be optimislic.
BERNICE
CANCER (Juno 21.:.1uly 22) Your potential CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) Do some·
BEDEOSOL tor achieving your Objectives is vtry good lhing tun !aday that permita )'011 an oppor-·
foday. becausa you'D be a rtiaHstlc ,vision· tunity to exercise both your mental and ,
ary. Your l'raclical ·conceptlons will be physlcaltacumaa. A social, compalitiva
reacttable.
ieam apon would be perfect.
·
LEO (July 23-Aug: 22) 'l'ou could be '1\Jite AQUARIUS (Jon. ;20·Fab. 19) Your
lucky today In competitive arrangements1 chances tor adding to your resouoces look
especially II the s._kll are substantial. rather good today il you have continuity or
MOtivation Is tha thing that will give you purpoee and stlck·lo·lllvariess. You muat
flnleh whit you 11an.
.
. , )'OUr plus power.
VIIIOO IAt!l- 23 SopL 221 Your epllere ol PIICIS (feb. 211-Mircll 20) lady Luck1
lnlluenCe It quia a bH largilr than you may tends to Iaveli you today II you do that'
reallZtlt lhll tl!ne.· Today lhere'a a ctoance whiCh you'rt cApa!lle ol doing II!Bt-.d ol
someone m1y play btlct&lt; an Idea you orlgi- depending upon olharl. Be Hll· rtliant.l nd .
In lha. year ahaad you Could be quite lucky naly conceived ond told anothar.
• ycju lttould bo tuocisalul.
In arrangemento whlrt you usa Pllrtrlerl to U8RA (Sopt. n-oct. 231 Don't be reluc- AIIIIS CMinh 21·Aprll 111 TW9 unrelatoq1
a limited dtlgrto. You might sat up 118'1111111 · rant to lind 1 helping hind to olhert thty clrcumalancea might develop today th-''
sltuanona where you'ra till principle and raqunt jour aullilnco today. Vou'l8 In a ) coukl enhlnce your flnanclat well being.(
..&gt;
.
cycle whare the good you do w.iil bei Don1- 111111 k you aee or_.. some·:
they poovlde minor IIIPPQI1.
1 thing prolllablo i!UIIdlng up.
GEMINI (May 21-.lune lOt Accopt tavors returned to you In greater meaauro.
·.. ·~
from Dlheto laday II gracloualy II you I .COAI'IO (Oat. 14-Nov. Ill Today you 1 TAURUS (April .,_..., 10) l~meittal
granted. 111em In the Pill• ~ · you know · .,_. 1 Way ol.,...llt)IIIIW gtltUtJII to j With lrtendl could f1aW
fNim your- hpotleUat, thaoUt JoV lind pa- wllh llhanl you dtll'on 1 one-to- , today, but this ohouldn't Uplltyou. When
'Ut8llllaltllon In gMrig. ~ whn 10 loojc ant bull that they will not readily ~ · It; COIIIfl to pol~lcizlng you'll be eqUivllent I
. tor romanae lnd you'll iind H. The AtlrO- WIN make them &lt;eellndtbteilto you.
thl beat
.
.
,
!

n

politloi .OIIe3

"

II I
I NIRAY
all"ll

., , 'B 0 .. y H B

::::

I.

..

I

"Fifty dollars for a small bag
of Q[pceries is outragaousl"
the man bellowed to the
L-..1-.L-..11.;.
· .;...
· .L·__.~
cashier. Smilinq the cashier
. - - - - - - - - - , asked sweetly, Do you want
0 EPL EG
'them in a ----- bag?"

·,

~--.Y.I;_;.T.Is;-'--T-1:...:T.I,,;;;..TI.....-1

e

Compleie the chuckle quoled

by filling in the missing words
1.--l..~L.-L.--L._J._.....J you. develop
from step No. 3 below.

f9 PRINT

''

::

I I I I .

I

.,
..

NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

t

6 UNSCRAAIBlf
ABOVE lETTERS I I I I
TO GEl ANSWER
,
•
•
.
•
SCilAM-lETS ANSWERS

"

.,-

.•

•·•I•
~

�Pomeroy ..dclllpcJI\ Ohio

Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Monda~June14,1993

Pictured here: Heritage Weekend activities

t

Ohio Lottery

Indians
drop 7-3
decision

•
•

~

Pick 3:

620
Pick 4:

2767

PageS

VIII. 44, 110. 3S

LEGION LEADS PARADE -Members or
American Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39,
Pomeroy, lead tbe procession or the p11rade in

. ..

Pomeror held In conjunction with Heritage ,
Weekend ror Meigs County.
•
•

Nelsonville .firm awarded contract for tree project

"

received a planting grant of · 1be money would be used as a por· By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
$13,400 from the .'National Small tion of the local share on the MidSeatlnel News Starr·
A conuact for planting 65 orna- Business Administration. Funding dleport levee projecL Deadline for
mental trees llong Hobson Drive, from that agency is on a matching applying for some of the $144,000
near the Middleport levee and at basis from the village. Numerous CDBG formula funds is Monday,
Dave Diles Park was awarded at in-kind services and materials on the mayor said.
Mayor Hoffman was also authoMonday night's meeting of Mid- hand will mak;e up most of the
match;
with
the
viUage
to
asswne
rized
to advertise for bids on ~e
dleport Village Council.
·
the
monthly
mainte11ance
charie
paving
of the North Second
Ed's of Nelsonville with a bid of
and
purchase
four
trees
to
be
tn
Avenue from the corporation limit
S9,72S with a one year guitrantee
on the trees was the bid accepted compliance wiih the grant regula- to Mill Street. That project is being
funded with Issue 2 monies.
from the four received. The con , tions.
Councilman Paul Gerard asked
Fire Chfer Resigns
· ttact is for 42 ornamental pears, 13
Jeff Darst, ·chief of the Middlepin oaks, and 10 service berry where the local money for the protrees. Council ·also approved a ject will come from and then voted port Fire Department since 1980
"no" to awarding the contraciS.
resigned from the position effective
mun~rumce~ttactfur~ett~s
Council passed a resolution immediately. He cited the time and
with Hanis Farms at $110 a month
for three years, coming to a 10ta1 or· authorizing Mayor Fred Hoffman effort required for the job as his
to apply for $25,000 in Community
$3,960. .
Development
Block Grant monies.
Earlier this

Pomeroy on Saturday ror Heritage Weekead.
Several entries were reatured in the aaaall
event.

CIVIL WAR REENACTORS- Appearing

in Sahlnllly's Heritage Parade in Pomeroy, was
the Cl¥11 War Reenadlllent Group, Company B,

1 Section. 10 Pagn 25 -.ta
A MuiUmedlalnc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 15, 1993

lluii!Mdla.lno.

PARADE FLOAT- Overbrook Center In
Middleport showed Its community spirit with
this Roat Ia Saturday's Heritage Pat-ade In

reason for resigning. He said that
Kenny .Byer, who has been in the
capacity of assistant fire chief, is
the new chief.
·
The mayor and Councll commended Oars! noting the departmen!' s development under Darst's
lea~hi!l, and gave him a vote of
apprec18l1011.
"He's put a lot of time and
effort in keeping the fire department one of ~e best in the area,"
commented Mayor Hoffman.
Other Business
A letter from Pomeroy Mayor
Bruce Reed announced a meeting
to be held 10night at which time the
proposed water tteatment system to

· serve both Pomeroy ud Middleport will .be discussed. It was noted
that a representative of Burgess
and Nipple Engineering will be
there.
Installation of two new street
lights, one on Ash, and the other
between Headley and Russell were
approved by Council.
.
Mayor Hoffman repor~d that
the village's savings this year due
to the ~p rating on Workmen's
Compensation will be about
$18,000. He also noted that a representative of CableVision will be at
the next meeting to discuss ownership changes and rates.
Cemetery workers were com-

Meigs County will have
250 in river sweep.project

complete with authenllc period style outfits. The
1!1'0110 Dl,rlCilmiM a variety or, demonstrations at:::
Meigs County Museum.

.
Meigs County's 51 miles of river. in Pomeroy at the mini-park, for
Volunteers wiD be working only on those in Racine at the shelter
public owned areas . Those who house, and for those at RcedsviUe
own land along the river are being at Forked Run.
asked to participate by cleaning up
The Ohio River Sweep is contheir own banks. ·
dueled in Ohio, West Virginia,
.
Volunteers wilI gather Ill begu'l
Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Illinois
the bank cleanup at Dave Diles and Indiana It was started in 1989
Park in Middleport, at the Pomeroy in partnership with Ashland Oil,
stage in Pomeroy, at the old ferry Inc., and nearly 50,000 volunteers
Iandini! shelter house near the boat from six states have collected more
ramp m Racine, and a1 the Forked · than 30,000 Ions of trash.
Run River access area in
Ashland on · contributed
Reedsville.
$50,000 10 the project again this
Re~hments will be served to year. That company works in c6opall-lhe volanriCri onc:e the cleitnup enuloil )!illi the Olilo River \Iailey
is completed. For the volunreen in Water Sanitation Commission
Middleport, refreshments will be (ORSANCO) which organizes ~e
served at Hartinger Parle, for those · project.
·
··
.

About250 Meigs Countians will
be among the nearty ·SO,OOO volunteers in six stares expected 10 participale in the Fifth Annual Ohip
River Sweep scheduled for Satur·
day.
·
Joining the local volunteers will
be a group from the Ohio EPA
offices in Logan along with fonr
employees from the Belleville
Locks and Dam and fout from the
Racine Locks and Dam who wiD be
bringing in barges to handle the
bags of debris collected.
. The emphasis will be. on enyi- .
ronmentally acCeptable dispoal of
the anticipated 20 tons of trash
which will be pic~ed up along .

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Lyle Sinclair, Shade.
SATURDAY DISCHARGESJoy Cundiff.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Merle Davis, Rutland.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES •
Lyle Sinclair.

~~
HERITAGE FLOAT- Trinity Church of
Pomeroy participated in Saturday's Heritage
Parade with the fioat "This Is Our Heritage."

MEIGS BAND - The Meigs Band, under
the direction of Toney Dingess, marched In
Pomeroy's Heritage Parade on Satprda)', The

· Several groups displayed their community pride
by participating in the parade.
•

.
group stopped and perlo111)ed ror the apprecillllve crowd along the streeL

';

Cincinnati area hit hard by storm

992-2156
UP GOES THE SIGN - In preparation for tbe Ohio River
Sweep to take place Saturday, Kenny Wiggins, litter control direc·
·· tor for Meigs County pats up the slan.at tbe Pomeroy stage. Abo11t
SO volunteers are expected to work in the Pomeroy group. Nearly a
hundred have signed up ror tbe ReedsviUe project, another .641 at
Mlddleport,.and about Jlht Racine.

'Livestock
report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Monday
by the Ohio Department of Agriculll.Jie:
Barrows and gilts: mostly
steady; demand moderate.
.u.s. 1-3, 230-260 lbs.. counuy
pomts, 46.50-47.50; plants 47.5048.50, a few 49.00.
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
COIDIUJ points, 47.7!1-48.50.
.
Receipts Friday 6,700. Estimated receipts Mooday 4,500.
Prices from ne Producen Live- .
stock A!!!O!'jation:
Clale: steady to 2.00 higher.
Slaughter steett: choice 74.0081.!10: select 1101 available.
Slaaghtez heifen: cboice 71.0082.50; select 1101 available.
Cows: Sleady to 1.00 higher; all
cows 66.00 and down.
Balls: steady to 1.00 higher; all
buDs 73.00 and down.
Shcql and lambs: 2.00 to 11.00
lower; choice wools 48.00-63.00;
choice clips 55.00-60.50; feeder
lambs 72.00 and down; aged sheep
40.00 and down.

..

AMITY ..·
BILLFOLDS

.

Sentinel
Classifieds

RETRIEVING WINNING DUCKS - Several boats took part
iD capturing the winning entries and retrieving the other 500 or so
ducks ia the derby staled as a part of Heritage Weekend acllvitles
Saturday afleraoon. fhe ducks were laupehed several thousand
(eet upriver aDd Ooated to the finish !iDe near the Pomeroy levee.

1/
2 PRICE

COMPLm
STOCK ,

MEN'S COLOGNE AID AFTER SHAVE

25%o~F·

BASIC
CIGAREnES

30%oFF

. Qhio·IottePy jackpot
increased to $40 )nillion
CLEVELAND (AP) - The night, 'there should be more than
Ohio Lottery bet correctly that a enough cash available. The lottery
bigger Super Lotto jackpot would would need $17,961,194 to pa~ lhe
lllltiiCt more players, although not discounted, lump-sum opt1on,
as many as was hoped for, so the which is also the sum the lottery
1ottc::ry is trying the gambit again.
would invest to pay off the $40
ne unc;lalmed $30 milli.on jack- · million over 26 years.
.
pot from Saturday's drawing norMrs. MouniS said the lottery lnlmally would igcresse $4 million ditionally has a sales slump in
for Wednesday. Instead, the lottery June, which she said may ac:eount
increased the jackpot to $40 mil- for the lower· that projected sales
lion.
for the last drawing. She also said
Last week, the prize was the June sales lull was a reason
increased from $16 million 10 $30 why the jackpot has.been boosted.
million 10 stimulate interest.
The lottery often takes money
Louery Director Virgil Brown from unclaimed prizes and uses it
said Monday that cumulative sales to increase jackpots. But the money
. through five conse.cutive Super for these twO Super Lotto inc~
Lotto drawings without a jackpot is coming from increased ticket
winner lip reached $26 million.
sales, Mrs. Mounts said Monday.
But the sales total for specificalThe lottery has a $26 mill.ion
ly Saturday night's $30 million cap on winnings from a single uckSuper· Lotto drawing came to et. A player could-~ the cap
$11 ,780,861. The sales total fell by buying two or more .uckets with
weU below the lottery's projection the same six winning numbers ·last week of sales of $14 miltion to maldnj! each ticket worth less than
$17 million.
.
· $26 million.
Louery spokeswoman Sandy
If a player with all ~ ~n~ing
Le8ko Mounll said loday that even numbers has, the only wmnmg uckthouah sales for the high jackpot et, ·the remaming S14 million goes
were less than projected, there is iniO the next drawing's jackpot.. If
enough money available to handle more than one player has ~ w•~­
the new $40 million jlctpot.
ning numbers, the prize 11 spl!t
She said considering the cumu- among the winners, up to a maxllative total plus uticipated ~ of rm1m.of $26 million per ticket
$14.5 million prior. ~ Wednesday

w._

a,_-·

. CINCINNATI (AP)- Basements were tlooded, a police communications tower was blown OV!'f
and a jet airliner became stuck m
the mud as heavy rain, hail and
hi~h winds hit the region for the
thrrd time in five days.
No injuries were reported, but
ttees were blown down, damaging
property.
Wind gusts of· 58 mph we~e
recorded at the city's Lunken Airport. Rainfall of more than 3 inches
· fell on some areas of southwestern
Ohio and northern KeniUCky, causing flash floods .
Power to about 60,000 Cincin,
nali Gas &amp; Electric Co. customers
was knocked out during rush hour
traffic Mondaf. ~ind ~· f~
tree limbs and hghtnmg stnkes
caused the power failures, mosdy
in western HamiliOn County, But-

Clinton 'not
mad at media'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer prices idpd up a tlfty 0.1
pen:em in May u lhe bliP drop
in lllllq)' CCIIII In more ib4n two
yelt'llleiJIOII o&amp;et alheip·JWI!p in
food prioea, the government said
toda
'
1111111 adVIIICe in the Labor
Depanment'a Consumer Price
Inde11 wu welcome news after a
WOiritome 0.4 perceill Airi IUIJe.
Tile Oinlon admluuGun is hoplnl thlllil euin1 of Inflationary

=

c::;e·~.:v:e.:

,i •MI'IIII.

nati Police Division's main ttansler County and northern Kentucky .
mitling tower shortly ))efore S p.m.
· flooding in some places made it
Emerson North Hospital, which
hard for CG&amp;E's more than 100
emergency crews to restore elec- · is a drug and alcohol recovery center, a Kro·ger grocery io Cold
tricity, the utitity said.
Ky., and The Cjncinnati
Spring,
Power was restored to all but
Enquirer's
printing plant were
about 15,000 customers by this
among
commercial
customers
morning. CG&amp;E expected ' to have
affected.
Power
was
restored
to
..lM rest restored by tonight,
them
in
about
three
hours,
CG&amp;E
spokesman Steve Brash said.
The storm toppled the Cincin- . said.

..
,

mended for the condition ·of the
cemeteries on Memorial Day. A
letter of appreciation will be sent to
them.
It was reponed lhat the recreation committee has an estimate of
$750 for installation of a fence at
Hartinger Park. The fence would
segregate a section of the park as a
play area for small children.
The ·mayor' s report sho.wed
receipts of ~ .661.05.
Attending were Mayor Hoff·man, Clerk-Treasurer Terri Hockman; and Council members Dewey · .
Horton, James Ciatworthy, Judy
Crooks, Gerard. and Jack Satterfield.
·

UMW officials
.
belit~le latest
coal proposal
.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A United MiRe . Workers
spokesman says coal operarors are
using "bogus" figures in their latest pitch to get the union back to
the bargaining table.
"Clearly their numbers are
bogus ... and that's just not acceiJtable," said Greg Hawlhorne in
Washington, D,C.
The chief negotiator for the
operators, CONSOL Inc. Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer B.R. Brown, detailed
the companies' latest job securi,ty
proposal :!¥J:ond.ay ud indicated~
willingness to modify the .JIIOPOIII '
further.

"We have. expressed our willingness to continue to stntcture the
proposal in a way that both sides
wiU fmd satisfactory," said Brown
from Upper St. Clair, Pa
'There have been no negotiations
since a 60-day contract extension
expired May 3. The union launched
a strike agamst selected mines May
10 and has expanded it repeatedly.
About 12,000 miners are on strike
in West Virginia, IUinois, Indiana,
Ohio, Pennsylvania and KeniUCky.
In Ohio, about 90 workers at
Maboning Valley Mine No.36 and
the GermaniOwn Prepantion Center. both near Cadiz in· eastern
Ohio, also are striking. Both facilities are owned by CONSOL.
"We can reach agreement on a
new contract," Brown said. He
said ~e proposal "demonstrates
oar willingness to address, head on,
l,he union •s most imJl0118Dt issue.' •
UMW President Richard Trumka has accused the companies of
failing to live up to the 1988 agreement. which expired Feb. I.
That contract called for the
operators to give three or every five
jobs at their new· mines, including
/lOR-anion mines operated by related companies, to laid-off members
of the union.
In Indiana, Peabody Coal Co.
strikers on Monday began picket·
ing the homes of company officials
after a state judge limited the number of piclcets at the gares of a mine
in Lynnville. Ind.
The UMW set up a picket line
outside the house of mine superintendent Kelly Vote in Boonville on
Saturday, said Russell Stilwell, a
UMW regional representative. He
said the homes of other management and contract workers who
have been ~l:'ating the strikebound mine
may be targeted.
The UMW set up a picket line
outside the house of mine superintendent Kelly Vote in Boonville on
Saturday, said Russell Stilwell, a
UMW regional representative. He
said the homes of other management and contract workers who
have been operating the strikebound mine also may be targeted

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presideht Clinton told reporters today he
is "not mad at the press" despite
cutting short a news conference
with his new Supreme Court nominee after just one question. ·
Aides 10 the president defended
Clinton's reaction to the question
about his decision-making process
that followed his announcement of
federal appeU~ Judge Ruth Bijder
RECOGNIZED - AI part of the Keep Ohio Beautiful proGinsburg as h1s Supreme Court
gram,
Vietor L. Browa, Minersville, ten. bas been awarded a cernominee.
or appreelatlop. Making tbe presentation here on behalf or
tificate
While he was joning this
the
~te
Is Meigs County Litter Control Director Kenny Wlgglas.
momirlg, a reporter asked, "Are
you still mad at the press?" Clinton
responded, "I'm not mad at the
press." The reporter said: "But
you don 'tlike our questions." The
president couluered: "Yea, l do: '
Chief of Staff Mack McLarty
. the prone Ohio ~t of Natural
Brown has been' With
said today on ABC that the .question that bothered CliDton "came Resources, Divtsion of Litter Pre- gram for II years and was a memPresident Clinton met for an right on the hee1J of Jadae Gins- vention and Recycling recently pre· ber of the fust Litter Control Advi· Board O.Ks contracts
hour last week wltb Federal burg' s commenwy, whlch was sented an award to Victor L. · sory Board in 1982.
.
Reserve Otainnan Alan Gm:nspan heat1feh and very personal, and the Brown,of MinersviUe fur his out~e ~ a1so been Ill active ie:'d'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) amid a steady drumbeat from presldenl simply didn 'I ~~ to go standing service to tho Meigs er Ill h1s church and commumty, The state Controlling Board
sch&lt;!"I board member, successful approved nearly $1SO million in
adminlatratlon offlcla1s that ~ey mto a lot of proc::ess quesuons after County LIUU Control Program.
Kenny
Wiggins,
direclor
of
bu~messman,
a. member of the contncts to provide hel)th inlllll'saw no RIIIOIIatlhe present lime to those comments."
be worried about Inflation. .
Meigs
County
Litter
Control,~·
Me•gs
County
His~l.
Society, ance for state worlt:en, lnclildiDI
The question was asked by
. So f•lhll year, cOIIJUIIIC!r prk:es ABC's Bitt H1111«
sen ted the award a• part of the and has reacarched ~ wntren ~v­ one agreement dw drew the con'are rising at an annuli I'IIIC or 3.8
''The withdnlwll of ~ Guinier Keep Ohio Beautiful statewide era! anic~ concemma early Mmgs cerns of Ohio's bigest employee
percent, compared 10 last year's 2.9 · nominatiO!I, sir, and your apparent awards pl'OII'IIII. for Brown's vol- County h1110ry.
.
.
.
union.
B.row~ wh.o r~s1des.tn ~fin·
percent rise. Many analysts believe focus on Judge Breyer,
In other business Monday, the
your unwy contribution town prorectthat the price modcntion saen in tam, !ale it seems, to 1udae Gins- log and preservin1 Ohio'• nlllll'll ersvillc With hts wife, Alice, ts the board authorimd the payment of
the May repon will continue in burg, ~ have Cftllted 111 Impres- resources. The cenmea~e· is siped father or three daughte~;~ and. one $90,483 fot material and aervicea
comina month• and .for the year sion, perlllpl unfair, of a cen,In by Governor Georae v. VoinOvich son, baa ~ever:aJ gnndcbiidlen. and dllrina lhe April riotl at the Southinfiation will be only slightly hi£b- iia-ua quality In the decision- . and Director Frances S. Buchbolz- great,grandchildren.
.em &lt;5bio Correctlonll Faellil)' in
er than 1a1t year.
LucaMlle.
er.
maldng process here.
·

Brown receives ODNR
award for outstanding service

Consumer prices up 0.1 percent

;rae

ANNOUNCING THE WINNDI -Did:
fll Kraien
and Bank One employee~ Jou Willie. left. Mtl Millie MIAil'f
IIIIDc!DDCed tbe wlllaers Ia die 4hlck ....,. .. I , , 'f •• ....
the race Saturday. Tile~~=- lr4ldle Va C111 IJ, a
SJ,OOO avlap boBd, Mtl
r ' •••,
I ......_
The derb)' WB8 a Herftltae W
..... nillr fir...
t G)'
Merebull Aslodatloll Wlai ,....,. to • .... •• 1r 1'- , .
jects, More thuSOO duck&amp; were IGid at $5 _.,
•

Low tcnlgbtln 50s. Clear . .·
Wednesday, sunny, blgll In 80s.

and

' !i

I.

'

\

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