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                  <text>Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Beekeeper with diabetes
stung 'from head to toe'

t

HERITAGE COSTUME CONTESTANTS· The Heritaae Cos·
lume Contest, SJIOIIIOred by Baak One in Pomeroy, reaturecl several coatestaats with beautiful custumes. Pictured are all the contes-

Monday, June 10,1991

taats wllo pll'tidpated iD the cateaorles ol best authealic md best
reproduc:tloa.
.
:

JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (AP)
- A beekcc~ was 11una from
head to toe by more lhan 1,000
honeybees lifter be had a diabetic
seizure and kicked a hive.
The Illllian honeybees atlleked
John Ree.vea, 66, in his yard Saturday after he had Ill iasulin reaction.
He was not wearing protective
clothing.
"He started kicking around,
throwing his arms around and he
ticked the beehive, slined up the
bees," said his wife, Elise.
·
He· was lisled In fair condition
Sunday night
Emergency room nurse Brenda
Egan at North Side Hospilal said
viltuallr every pan of his body was
stung, mcluding the inside of his
mouth and throat, his eyes, his ears
and his nose.
"At least SO~~ of his body
~as covered w1th stingers, espeCliUy the upper part," Ms. Eglin
said. "I don't know how bad he
was stung inlem8lly, but he vomit-

ed up quite a few bees, and one
came out of bis ear when they
brought him in.
"We picked some live ones off
of him and out of the bed afler we
got him in here... sbe said.
Paramedics had found Reeves
on the ground and lried to get to
him, but the bees attackrd, holding
them off for balf an hour.
Firefighlei'S then put on reflec•
live aluminum suits and pulled
Reeves to safety.

Ohio Lottery

Reds close
home stand
with win

Pick 3:677
Pick 4: 2183
Cards : 10-H, SC
10-D; 6..S

Page4

•

•

a1

"They looked lite honeybees IQ

me, but they were aggressive,' ' .
said Gordon Lane, an assiSllnt city
fue chief. "When the paramedics
tried to get near him, they would.
aaackthem."
Lane said , tbat Reeves had
moved to a tree near his house and
was trying to shake the bees off.
"His face was white with
stingers. He was covered from head
to toe. I've never seen that many
bee slings on anybody, •' Lane said. ·

VOl. 42, No. 26

Copyrtghled 1991

1 Section, 10 PtgM 25 a.~to
A llutumedlo Inc. NewopaD6f

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, June 11, 1991

Proposed park bas price tag of $1,016,400
not a ~blem, it was noled.
Msyor Hpffman said that he foresees building the
complex ov!lf a ~riod of several years. '
As for the financing, he, proposed an additional
one-half percent income tax and suggested that it go
on the baUot in November. He said the new one-half
percent tax would generate about $90,000 a year and
that the proceeds would be "lied to the complex."
The mayor proposed that as an incenuve to get
support for the addilioilal tax, council might want to
offer free swimming season passes to each resident
who paid $100 in additional income taxes each year.
Council Member Judy Croolcs aslced about the
possibility of a real estate tax levy Instead of an
income tax, but it was generally agreed that an
income tax would be the best route, particularly in
view of the senior citizen population. Currently the
village has in effect a one percent income taX.
Council took no action last night on the mayor's
proposal for putting the additional income taX on the
faU ballot.
ORDINANCES PASSED ,
An ordinance providing for a 25 cent an hour pay

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
•.
•
Sentinel News Starr
· A $1,016,400 cost proposal for the Leading Creek
:Recreation Park development in the area of the Page
Street marina was presenled to Middlepon Vill~e
Council by Mayor Fred Hoffman at Monday night s
meeting of Council in village hall.
The park as proposed would include a complete
:recreational complex including a swimming pool,
:according 10 site plans developed by an Athens urchi·tectural flllll.
.Besides a SO meter swimming pool, exercise station, exercise course, canoe livery, launch, boat
· docks, fiShing docks, playin~ field, and picnic areas
with shelter houses are all mcluded in the plan, as
well as e~ttensive landscaping and a caretaker's
· house.
While the marina area is now owned by the U. S.
Corps of Engineers, that agency has already taken
• steps to have it transferred 10 the viHage. The mayor
, reponed that he expeciS lhat transfer to be comp1eled .
· in 1992. Last fall ad~t acreage :was purchased by
the vill~e so secunng land for the develooment is

increase was given a thirtf reading and adopted at the
meeting. The salary increase will go into effect on
July l.
· Council also g11ve a second reading to the ordinance on mandatory uash pickup in the village.
Mandatory pickup by Manley's Trasti Service, whose
bid was accepled several weeks ago, is scheduled 10
go into effect on Aug. 1. Residents will be billed by
the village's BOIIM of Public Affairs on a monthly
basis. The charge will be $10 with a $2 reduction for
senior citizens and handicapped individuals.
It was agreed during the meeting to enter into an
engineering conbllct with the Corps of Engineers for
the Middleport levee projecL Cost will be $7 .SOO for
the engineering work.
Mayor Hoffman noled that there needs to be some
refmancing on one of the fue trucks. The total cost.
was $145,000 with $11 S;OOO having now been paid.
The village will finance through Central Trust
$30,000 for one year.
Arrangements were made to advertise for bids on
excess equipment and the 1979 rescue vehicle no
longer needed by the department once the new ladder

. truck arrives.
OTHER BUSINESS
The possibility of applying for a tree planting
grant through the Natural Resources Development
Progmm of the Small Business Adminisblltion was
discussed.
·
Crooks who is active with the Community Beautification Commiuee will review the fonns in preparation for applying for a grant before the July 1 deadline.
Plans for Diles Park were discussed by Crooks
who noted that the depot will be painted in four
shades of gray with ·deep red accents after some
repair work has been completed. She also said that
the concrete slab will be poured this month and that
the project is expected to be completed before the
July 4 celebration. Cost of materials for work at the
. part is estimated at $800. Most of the labor will .,e
donated. she said.
Concern about downtown vandalism was
expressed by Crooks who noted that the Middlepon
Arts Council has had flower boxes damaged and a
Continued on page 3

Ohio Lottery may buy up to
$1.5 million .in cars for prizes

I

I

Chance of rain 70 percent. Wednesday, high
. · near 80. Low tonight in
mid-60s . .

CLOGGERS PERFORM· Tbe Raiabow
Clooers perf'ormed ror a large crowd on Saturday-dtlrlDg Heritaae Weekend. Saturday'sactiv-

ides were spoasorid by the Pomeroy Men:bants
Association.

.

TliE DANCE COMPANY· Shirley Quickel's
Dmce Company performed ror Heritage Week·
end on Sat11rday ia Pomeroy. Featured from

Tbe Daac:e Company were se\'eral younger
members or the dance team.'

WRECK SCENt: • RODDie DonatdloD who

Roate l:U.In PortlDd. DoaaldiOII was treated
by tbe Raciae Emergency Sqaad before llelng
moved to tbe Portlaad Grade School where Lire
Fll&amp;bt lauded. Sevea squad members and 16
liremea responded to the scene with three vebi·
des. (Pboto by Dennis Wolte)

was tr811111011ed by Lite F!Jabt lO Grmt H01Pi·

tal early· Suaday mo~alag after he nipped bls
car over on its top remaiDs in serious condldon
in the tra11ma unit, a b01pltal spokesman reWI- ·
eel TtleSday momin11. Tbe aeekteat oecurrectoa

Activit~es co~ti~ue
KINGS MD...LS, Oh10 (~)Fourteen-year-old Jeff Putman
ted at an

LADIES GROUP • Tbls aroup or ladies
dlen Aid Society, Ulists the group 111 cooltlDg
acrompaules their busbaads, wllo ll'e members
aad other matters. Tbe reeaactmeat group at
of the 9lst Ohio Volaateer lafantry Group
. up a camp beblad tbe Melas Couaty Court
Company B, a Civil War reenaclmeat group. .
House where a rew or the members camped over
The ladles group, known as tbe Iron Hills Sol-'
tbe weekead.

at amusement park

m~oned,toa fri~nd.
~. s the nde ~t somebody
Pittman S81d.

•
ror Heritaae Weekend. Tbe restivitles iu
Pomeroy were sponsored by tbe Pomeroy Mertbaats AssoclatloD.

'

BUSINESS AS USUAL • Plb-. It tile K........... IIDDR·

'•

mea=KI.,. Mllll, Oblo, ride die ............ ca.aen put
tbe
t
tlder ride (lui.a&amp;d) ... - chud to the
aftet
M rr. tile ride tD her death
. public
SIIIHIIIy DIPt. Two Diller IDO died tile ..e tdpt tram m eltctrleal Kddent. (AP)

c-..

Herli.lt Parade apouored by tbe PoiDeroy
Merauts A-mttoa. Not pictured ts Marc,
HDI, third ruaaer-ap.
'i

Moments la1er, Pittman and
other members of his church group
from Atwater were off in search of
thrills at Kings Island Amusement
Part. Three fatalities - one on the
Flight Commander riqe that drew
curious looks - made the crowd a
litde more cautious Monday but no
less enthusiastic.
"You double-check the handlebars," Pittman·said.
A normal-sized crowd jammed
the southwest Ohio amusemen.t
park Monday while swe and federa! inspectors tried to figure out

what Caused the two separate acci·
dents lhat left three dead and one
injured in less than an hour Sunday
nighL
Park officials said it would be a
couple of days before they get
some answers. In the meantime, the
Flight Commander remains shut
down and a beer garden where two
men were elecuucuted in a pond is
vacant.
A woman died after falling off
the Flight Commander ride. and
two men, including a part employContin11ed on page 3

Prosecution rests in case
offormer HUD director

Slandard Time was adopled in
1884 throughout the Uniled States.
. Susan B. Anthony, one of the
pioneers of the Arnencan suffragist
movement, died. in 1906 in
Rochesler, N.Y.
·
More than 400 people died in
1928 when the San Francisquito
Valley in California was inlllldated
with water after the St. Francis
Dam burst.

HERITAGE QUEI£N AND COURT • Holly
WIIHams, 1991 Herltqe Qa. ., ceater, Love
Batey, nrst raaaer-up, aad uber Cumlnp,
secoad ntnner-up, were feahlred ill Saturday'•

COLl,JMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Ohio Lottery has won approval
to spend up to $ t.S million to buy
more Ohlo·bllilt cais as prizes on
its "Cash Explosion" TV show.
b11t officials think they won't need
all the money.
Purchase of the vehicles was
authorized by one of four contracts
wonh $33 million for which the
lottery sought and received a waiver of COIII~tilive bidding requirements from the State Controlling
BOard on Monday. •
The $ t.S million is enough to
cover tb,e cost of giving away as
many as two automobiles a week
on the program from July I through
June 30, 1992. ·
Although the amount is the
same as the lottery set aside for car
prizes this year. TV contestants
through May 11 had accepted 18
Ohio-made vehicles worth
.$284,306.
John Forristal, the lottery's
· deputy director for adminisblltion,
Sl!id bypassing normal state purchasing rules for the vehicles gives
the lottery a chance to obtain a
more marketable product for th.e
program.

'·

'.

-·A,...

•'f)

'

Federal prosecutors resled their
case in the bribery trial of former
housing official Carl Smith Monday in U.S. District Coun.
us:District Judge John Capenbaver turned down a motion by
Dina Mohler, Smith's attorney, to
dismiss the five charges lodged
against Smith, after the government
finished its case. according to the
Charleston Gazette.
Prosecutors attempled to show
Smith, former state director of the
U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development, accepted
SSO,OOO in cash and goods in 1987
and 1988 from devefoper Maurice
Toler, who was involved in building a Nitro housing projecL Smith,
a resident of Winfield, also owns a
farm on U.S. 35 in Southside. Toler
resides in Gallipolis.
The last government witness,
Darrell Haney, testified that the
FBI had him set up a recording
device on his telephone to record
conversations with Smith.
The Charleston newspaper
re~ned Haney said he acled as the
middleman in the ll'ansfer of the
title of a truck Toler was giving to

Smith. Prosecutors allege the truck
was pan of the bribe paymenL
Earlier Monday, prosecutors
·called Smith's taX adviser, Lewis
Martin of Legal Loopholes, Inc. He
said Smith depreciated more than
$60,000 ller year in farm property
he allegedly received from Toler in
1987 and 1988 so he would not
have to pay income tax, the Gazette
reponed. That propeny included a
$23,500 truck, a $1,200 bull and
several cows he received at no cost
from Toler.

TM returns show Smith paid no
federal tax in 1987 and paid $264
in 1988, when he made $64,383
and $66,387 as state director of

HUD.

Smith told Martin he had paid
$8,000 for the truck, and Martin
calculated the depreciation based
on his statement. Martin did not
ask for sales receipts for any of the
assets, he testified.
Smith claimed a $200 depreciation on the truck in 1988. He also
took deprecialions ot $5,992 on
farm buildings, $3,121 on farm
equipment, $727 on a farmhouse,
$1,969 on 21 cows and SISO on the
bull.

II!

''What (manufacturers) essen- would be able to meet the louery's
tially offer to us is a promotional needs for several years.
''When the contract comes closcost of their vehicles which is less
than ·the rellil price of the car," er to its expiration we intend to do
something similar to study the viaForristal said.
Also approved by controllers bility of the· system that we own,
was a $25 million unbid contract can it carry us further, can we
with GTech Corp. of West Green- maintain and utilize the investment
wich, R.I., the compaoy that man- that we have made in this system
ages the gaming system and keeps and carry it into the future,"
Smolinski said.
track of instant ticket sales.
''Certainly, when we come to
Dennis Smolinski, deputy direclhat.PQio.t.w.e.
then have to .makc .a
tor of lottery operation», .said the
decision
liil'
is&lt;i
t a bid or ... aqy
contract covered GTech's continother
action
that
we need to take, ••
ued programming and operation of
he
said.
the computerized gaming and
Conll'Ollers approved a $4 milinslant ticket accounting systems,
lion
contract with Contronics Sys~ep. Robert Netzley, R-Laura,
asked whether the facilities man- tems Inc. of Blacklick for tenninal
service repair of clerk-operated lota~nt conll'act would ever be
p
for com~titive bidding.
·tery machines, and a $2.2 million
Smolinski said the contract was pact with Hoover-Dayton Inc .renewed through February 1993 Dayton, for printing ticket stock
after a study by Battelle Memorial and bet slips.
Institute determined the system

Proposed Bill targets .
negative campaign ads.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)State Rep. Marc Guthrie said he
would introduce a bill today
intended to reduce negative campaign advertising by more clearly
associating candidates with the ads
they sponsor.
Gt1thrie, D·Newark, outlined a
proposal under which candidates
who accepled a new, reduced filing
fee to enter elections would be
required to take credit for advertising that referred to their opj1911ents.
Under the bill, candidates for
the Legislature or Slltewide office
would have the option of paying
higher filing fees and not following
provisions of the measure, or paymg lower fees and abiding by the

'ad requirements.
Advertising provisions would
apply to those who accepted the '
lower filing fees.
"Candidates would file an affidavit of agreement staling they will
appear in their radio and TV ads
and will place a stalement in prini
ads saying that they •authorized •
the contents of t~e message. The
agreement would apply only when
the candidate references an opponent," Guthrie said at a news conference .
The agreement would extend to
all ads authorized by a candidate
including those paid for by a politi:
cal party or a political action committee.

Federal funding for coal to
oil tech program canceled ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

Ms. Bird said.
"We're still interested in
has canceled a commitment to' seeing coal developed as a transhelp build a plant demonsbllting portation fuel. That would open
the feasibility of coal-to ,oil uP a new market for Ohio coal,"
technology. which was expected she said.
to heip Ohio's flagging coal
Ms. Bird said the U.S.
industry.
Department of Energy invested
Jackie Bird, the head of the $5.4 million in the project, and
state's clean coal technology Ohio put up $3 .2 million to
program, said she remained develop the technology and
optimistic that the technology show that it worked in smalldemonstrated by Ohio Clean scale pilot plants.
Fuels in two pilot plants would
Ohio had promised another
eventually be shown in a larger $6 million to fund a demonsblldemonsblllion project.
tion plant proposed for Warren,
"We're not giving up the Ohio.
idea of coal-to-liquid fuels,"
. ·However, the company was
Ms. Bird said . ''We've hit a unable to obtain tho more than
bump in the road,,and we 're $250 million needed to build a
going to come back.
fuU-scale demonstration plant at
The federal fOVemment can- Warren because many compaceled its commaunc:nt Friday to nies and investon were pinched
spend up to $39.6 million afl« by the n:cession.
Ohio Clean Fuels, a company
The process, which combines
based in Toronto, Canada, failed coal with heavy oil to l,'foduce
. to obtain privale fmaneing for ~trolcum, sulfur and mtrogen.
theprojecl
removes two components of
'the most promising use of acid rain. The ~trolcum meets
the technology Is to tum Ohio all requirements of the federal
coal into fuel for automobiles. Clean Air Act.
The U.S. Department of Energy

'II

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Commentary

'

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Ohio

. · r=====:==:::::::::::::::~::~~~::::::~~~~~~~~--:---~--:-~----------------~----~----~~~-----~~u~l~l~di~~~·~J~u~ne~1~1!•!119~1~~~

The Daily Sentinel
1ll Couri street
Pomero;r, Ollie ·
DEVOTED TO TilE INTUBBTI OF TQ MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROISERT L WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Ptlbllsber

.

G~aeral

Maaqer

PAT WJIITEBEAD
Aula&amp;ul Publlaller/C011troller
'

.

.

A MEMBER of The Auoclated Press, Inland Daily Press AssoctaUon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association .
'

'

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
worda long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be s igned with ·

name, address and telepboae aumber. No unsigned letters will be pub-

lished. Letters should be lD good taste, addresslDg Issues, not personali-

ties.

:Letters to the.editor.
If you really care
Dear Editor:
•

couldn't afford medication? Do
you realize people are actually
turned away and denied life-saving
tmiiDient if they don't bsve money
up front?
Suppose you are a single parent
and.must decide wbelher to buy
ne«Ssary medicine (such as insulin
or hypertension ~ine) for yourself - or food for your children,
because you can ' I afford both.
Have you ever had a hospital
harass and threaten to sue you for
non-payment of a bill, while you
stru,gle to mate ends meel and
~vide for tbe needs of your fami-

Animal rights group uses violence as tactic ;·
WASHiNG'ION - In tba United Sta~. a~ wbo weirS I
fur coat m public tlltes the r.Mof having aomeoae duow jllillt or
blood on tba !:OIL But in England.
lhe animal lovers have raised lhe
stak~. Scotland Yard calls some
animal-rights advocates "terrorists," wbo may be liking lessons
from tbe Irish Republican Army. ·
Britain is tbe home or tbe most
lethal animal-riabiS activism in the
world. So ~vileut are the BSSIUIIS
by an underground movement
known as lhe Animal Liberation
Front, tbal New SmcJent! Yard has
a unit devoted suictly to investigat'ing animal-rights VJOieuce. Some
authorities in lhe Uni!M States and
Britain fe~r that American snimal·
rights groups may be tempted to
take some cues from lhe ALF.
Officials wilh lhe New Scotland
Yard Animal Rigbts National Index
optzale UDder such secrecy that !he
only public information !hey provide is limited to tips that will help
potential targets of violence protl'iCt
themselves from the ALF. Our

I wonder how many people out
!here have ever had to live wilh
I*n m- a dysfunction ci !heir body
because they had insufficient, or no
beallh care insurance to cover lhe
cost of treatment How many know
how it feels to be a young, expec:,tan~ modier and worry about ~cry
twmge or strange occurrence of
: feeling in her changing body
beciluse she can'i afford prenatal
care and education.
'
Imagine if you will, lhc feeling
• when a doctor tells a woman, "I'm
' sorry. your unborn child has died."
Tbere is a grass rooiS movement
· How much better her chances
going
on 10\PiW creating a quality
:· would bsve been if she had proper
bealth
care sysJem for everyone. If
beallh care.
you
care
ror your fellow man - read
:· The parents of a healthy new·the
pamphleiS,
sign lhe petitions,
; born are well blessed if !hey can
even afford well-baby check-ups, tel~ your legislators you support
_ immwtizations, and viiiDlins. But !heir efforts to create quality bealth
what if your infant is not quite so care for all.
Jesus once ssid, "In as much as
',physically perfect? What are their
chances of quality care if they ye have done it unto one of lhe
.don't have sufficient heallh care least of lhese ... ye have done it
unto me." Support National Heallh
. coverage.
Care
- if you n:ally care.
- Have you ever had a loved one
Kamin Lambelt
wilh a debilitating or lerminal ill1199 - SEIU
. ness? Have you ever w~ them
Laldn
Chap!er
writhe with pain because they
New Haven, W.Va 2526S
pear Editor:

Check your contract expiration
dale!l
' '
.
.
The·ctlrrenf'Piight of the' SJeelworkers at Ravenswood is just
another attempt of Corporate ·
America 10 revert back to pre-union

_ It's time, no ~ lime to wake
up and see what tS happening. Corporate America is slowly eroding
, our unity, and thus, our strenglh.
We have been forced 10 accept as a times.
way of life: decreuing wages,
Wbst I;m trying to ssy is walie
decreasing benefits, decreasing
up! Union leaders, union memben,
. safety Slllldanls, deacaslnf quality
wake up! Push your people to stand
-of healtb care, and dec:leasinlllllntogetber. Let your employer know
dards of living. At the SIIIIC time . your union is SD'OIIg and organized.
we' ve been sJW'! in lhe face by
Call your "1"'escnlatives, bolh state
-Corpcnte America's ever-incteas- and national and encourage - no ing greedy profits.
insist on legislation to protect our
Ha.oe we forgotten the lessons union workers jobs.
learned and handed down from
. Then call r.our neighbors, .
such people as Uriah S. Stephens, friends, and family. whelher across
Samual Gompers, Terence Powder- lhe street or acmss' the country. Get
ly, Mohere Mary Jones, John L.
!hem involved with their union.
"Le~. and otbers. It 8CCDIS we are
Encourage unions to join in support
. ~band to the "swestlhop" of each other.
,
daysoflhe30's.
Its time to remember- We
'· Did you not witness lhe Air Move Anieiica. And if we all stand
'Traffic Coatrollers' plight? Did in suppon of each other, America
you not bear about the Massey C8lliiOI move without us.
Strite? lhe Pittson sirilte? Red Wake up Working America!!
' Cross? Kinp Daughters Hospital?
Kaaon Lambert
RAC'I This is not early American
1199 - SEIU
'History I'm talking about. It's
. Latin O!aoter
iodayl Nowl Who will be next?
New Haven, W.Va. 2S'265

;:ohio housing bill
~· nears

Senate vote

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Alloc:lated Prell Writer
: COLUMBUS - State lawmaten are still trying to implement an
i amendment IbM Ohio's '¥Oiell iJIIPIOved Nov. 6 to let tbe Stile and its sub·
' divisions isaue bonds to finlnce low-and llllldcrate-income housing.
: The implemelllalion bill, approved by the House, has beeu snarled in
: lhe Senile F111811Cial Institutions and Insurance Committee but Chairman
• Robert Ney, R-Bamesvillc, reports progress and hopes for a VOle Wednes: day.
:
He said lhe Senale sponsor, Sen. Roy Ray, R-Aiumi, has been working
· wilh labor unions, the govanor's otrlce and otbeis on the biggest issue : wage provisions for public housing Jll'!)jects.
· The debate involves lhe lulste!Q of unions that builders be required
: to pay lhe pmoailing '"" ..:.. the 1111ount set by lhe state and based on
;. WIJ8CI paid OD private pro.JCCU in the ll!1lC legion.
: Ney said lhe ~ are e~ and believes an agreement is near.
.' He said lhat otherwiiC, be tbinks lhe bill Ia ready.
:
"I'D def~ to Sen. Ray, of CXlUIIO, but I'm really going to try to get it
'
Wcdnllday," be said.
: outNey
lhe bill ....... aitlcisms from groups that lhe bill is not
: adcqUifely fuaded and tbll it dmld conwin affllllllllve action Jll'!)visions
: to 8SIIft tbll mmoritiel pt aiiiiRI of tbe PUblic hooslng
· Bill Jltidl. dinldor at tbe Ollio Collitfon ror the Homeless, criticized
J, the Sea• Willian for DOl f'undiDI an Ohio Housing Trust Fund tbll be
~ said could qaalif)' t11e 1111e ror sao million in fedcnl JIIIIChing funds.
. Under a aew federal piOJIIIII, stale and localgov~euts can get
: abolll S31n &amp;I RJI ftiiCia far ..:11 $1 the)' put up. The House version set
u1c1e $9 e•• far llle tnJil fund but tbe SenaJe, citing lhe state's tigbtcst
budlel ill ,.w. md IL
.
Ney till the ,.._ CJeated a mechanism under which lhe federal
...,_, Cll be llltlllll·lllier,.but !hat "a new ~lure at lhls time is
;~-_.~"He alia di!IP'Jied Faith's SBO million estimale,
asl«&lt;iiiJ dial "S9 lrilllon would not generate anywhere near !hat

dOICIIIIId

- - ; : weet, a.a. Bromley, clinlctor of lhe Mt:bopolitan Strategy
· Group in Cletll_., llid the. bill needa. ~ve. action lan11J18e to
IJIIn fair llol. . . llr tUaltiea and fannlies with cbildren.
Ney 1114 111M 1111 ~ believe cum~~tlaws, such as lhe E9ual
OoaQ~
cW ~ )aws and odlor JI'OYide ~ polecllons
· f«·mkw
Jaydd-illuellftlbeatlradtkmedbylocailofficials.
• ''llhilt k'l 1 b:ll ._. IIMllviD&amp; local laws,•• Ray said.

:._Ad,

~

usociate Scott Sleet invesliJIII:d
•dmel-rights taroriJis in Loudon
and found lbat tbey are not above
planlin&amp; bombs in fur suns, blowmg up lhe cars of scieutiSIS who
use ani mel• for medical research
and ,.,Wbiing butcher shops.
Receat li~eta~UJe put out by the
animal righls netwodt describes lhe
violent acts carried out by ALF
throughout Enalllld and elsewhere.
They in.clude an anon attack on
two vans belonging to a food coinpany, a s40.000Vandalism spree in
a S""IF faclaly, a raid on a poultry fiam to liberate 82 be.- and the
fudlombing of a peyhound racing
track in Norlhem Ireland. The
zealots often leave their mart by
painting ALF or "Meat is Murder"
atlhe sceue of lhe crime.
If ALF's own boasting can be
believed, lhe group is branching
out to the Uni!M Stites. ALF has
claimed responsibility for more
!han 7S 11118Ck• in the Uni!M StiteS
since 1979 including arson and
theft. The llrgCIS have beeu scicntific research labs. Tp date, no
Americans have died in those

allal:ks, but Glello Scbocn. a monitor of animal-rights viole~e. has
warned Congress that the VIOlence
is gelling more personal.
For example, in 1988, the head
of a U.S. canpany that did ICSIS of
Slll'lical s:rs:c:~s was tbe target or an
assassination
auempt. And last year a univcnity
Jll'!)fessor's house was burned down
hy unidentified animal-rights
activists.
New Seotland Yard has blamed
animal-righiS advocates for attacks
on research labs, fast-food restaurants and livestock llllliSJUteiS. In
one case, a bomb was planted
UDder lhe car of a man who man~ a construction company. His
' crime" was that be built ~h
facilities for pbannaceutical CillOpanics.
Some Britons who ' work for
research Jabs live in fear !hat they
will be targeted too. A 1988 burglary at one company led to at least
2S auacks on employees. The burglars stole personnel records and
terrorized the employees, their
families and even suppliers. Manv

.

•

..

• c:&gt;o

-

...

~--

.

.

By Jack Anderson:
and Dale VanAtta •~

of the workers resigned and some:
suppliers stopped doing business:
with the lab.
.
!
The police at New Scotland ,
Yard do !heir best to track down
and bring tbc Jen'Orists to justice,
but they are privately frustrated
about some oflhe lenient sentences :
lhe couriS band down. ,
:
While New Scotlapd Yani sus- •
pects lhe terrorists are imitating tbe
IRA. not all or lhe activists Wlllll to ,
go !hat far. One issue of a mags- :
zinc printed by animal rights ,
activists sussested tbal "we could ~
actually learn from the IRA," but a
follow-up issue included a guest
editorial complaining about that
notion. That differelice of opinion
doesn't help British police to rest
any easier at night because !hey
know that ALF has already proved
itself to be capable of IRA-style
violence.
·
LIMITED WARNING _
Whispers teep circulating in Washington that President Bush was
forewarned of the Iraqi invasion of
Kuwait last summer. But intelligence sources tell us !hat Bush
never got a full warning. He
received top-secret intelligence
briefings that Iraq miJI}t seize r.wo
islands off the Kuw81ti coast But
most intelligence experts ·lhought
Saddam Hussein was bluffing
when he moved his troops to the
Kuwaiti border. Four days before
the Aug. 2 invasion, the ClA
detected that lhe Iraqis had turned
, on !heir huge Soviet-built radar
system that could warn !hem of
approaching enemy aircraft. That
should have told the CIA that
somelhing more serjous !han lhe
takeover of the islands was afoot.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Medical
technology lias advanced to the
point that couples can have a baby
merely to farm lhe child's felal tissue and organs for compatible
transplant with an ailing parent. ,
And m China; authorities are taking
lhe organs of ~deumed criminals
for transplant too. We despair that
lhe etbics of humanlrind always lag
behind the technology.
Copyright, 199t;tJnited Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

--

Wake up, working America!

.

Voters rights.may .be jeopardized
There is a move growing afoot
in lhe halls of lhe Slllehouse !hat
may very well place lhe rights and
expectations of Ohio voters in
jeOpatdy. This move comes in tbe
form of two separate pieces of legislatinn blown u, Senate Bill 63
and Senate Bill 162. In my view,
bolh or these bills place at risk the
rights or Ohio voters.
Senate Bill 162 is Governor
Voinovich's Jll'!)posal to eliminm
lhe elected Stile Board of Education and MPiace it with a nino-per~ Board of Education appointed
by whomever is lhe Governor.
Governor Voinovich has said that
he dcsiles !his lqislatioo so that be
has a board of ·education that is
accountable to him. Our current
law provides that the State Board
of Education be elec!M by lhe votm of Ohio. Our curmat structure
also allowa for gcographical ~
sentation lhrougbout lhe Siate of
Ohio. Consequently, Ohio residents, regardless of where they

may live, are represented on lhe
State Board of Education. Under
the Governor's proposal, this
would not be the caae. Under Governor Voinovich's proposal, he
may appoint nine people from any
pan of lhe State of Ohio. In the
most extreme instance, tbose individual's could be appointed from
one or two of the lll9ll' mctiopolitan areas of the State.
Min dangauusly though, those
appointments could be based upon
political support and fmancial con.lributions rather !han dedication to
the education of young pupil in lhe
Stile of Ohio. Moreover, under !his
executive proposal, the newly
appointed Board of Education
would tate office beginning 1993.
Thus, tbosc OhiOIII!S wbo voted for
a Stile Board of Education Member whose term sbould expire in
1996 would have their vote nullified, if this legislation became
effective.

·

Sen. Jan Michael Long

Another bill being bandied
about in lhc Legislature is S.B. 63.
This bill would allow county governments to privatize the operation·
of jails. Essentiall , tbe iegisJation
would authorize
Commissioners to conrzaa-~lor jail service operations. Cowtty Sheriffs
would be removed from the
~nsibility of operating jails in
!heir own counties under lhesc circumstances. Consequently, voJers
who elected a Sheriff to arrest
criminals and bouse them properly
in jails located in that county would
now be losing lbat e~pectation.
These are two legislative proI)Oaa]s tbal I believe eudanger bssic
rundamental, democratic principles
of $Ovenlment As a citizen of the
Un1ted States of America, one
holds sacred his or her right to
vote. American citizens also hold
high expectations and goals for
individuals .who are chosen for

:l:..!!!.

elected positions at lhe poDs.
In 1991, some 200 plus years
afJer the. American Revolution and
lhe adoption of lhi: United States
Constitution, we, in Stile Governmeat should be doing everything
necessary to secure, rrotect and
enhance lhe rights o voter~ and
their expeclllions of elected officials. Any effort to detract from
lhese noble goals sbould be soundly defeated. I bope !hat my colleagues in ~e General Assembly
~grec and qwctly reject lhesc legtSiabve ~ !hat in my view
undermme lhe basic concepts of
democracy. ·
If you have comments on lhese
t~o legislative proposals or if you
w1sh to contact me otherwise
please feel free as ilways to
to me, State Senator Jan Michael
Long, c/o Ohio Senate - Statehouse, Columbus, OH 4321S or
call me at (614) 466-B!S6.

wrire

Yellowstone fires still spark debate
WEST · YELLOWSTONE,
Mont. (NEA) - Throe winters
have come and gone since ~ire
raged through :Y~Uow~ National Palk.. Now, Wllh lhe lhird l'!'fl·
mer ~liS way,lhe P'!"aF or tune
provtdes an opporUmny to Jeflect
upon what occ~ here i!' 1~88. .
A re~uve examiJU!UOn IS
of special value becanse,, bte too
~uch else that oc~urs 10 these
limeS, lhe ~ tbree ~~
ag'! ~,e ~ media event m
wh1ch .emfrmg sh~!S of flame
engulfed e~ televiSion screens

reported, basically, that Yellowstone had burned to lhe ground,"
ssys Joan Anzelmo, the NPS information officer at YelloWBIOIIC wbo
is openly critical of "sensstional,
simplisuc" journalism during and
after the fue.
lnlerior Secretary Manuel Lujan
Jr. toured lhe park last summer,
then proclaimed that lhe 1988 conflagration . "deVISIIIed a lot of iL"
NPS officials- canmiaed to !heir
own eampaign empbasizinJ regeneration, recovery and renewal were also UJIICl by that blunt char~~l acterization from their boss.
In fact, the three-monlh -long
larl1y ravaged.
series of fires was of epic;;)
State agencies promoting tlons, affectinor (to v~·g
tourism in lhe region then sought to al
1 illi;;&lt;p of
neutralize that deceptive imagery
most m on
pazt s 2·2
with their own misleadin" ublic million acres. Those cataclysmic
relatlons ~- ...;.... _It was "mPotJ.vat- events occur only once every 200
-~~..-.ID 300 years.
·
ed more by concerns about lhe
But !hat much time had elapsed
profits of lhe COIIIJJien:ial enterpris- since lhe last such blaze and lhe

beli:!:: d!P:

es IUIIOUlllling lhe )lilt tbln by the confluence of particular wealher
condition of Yel1oWstone illelf.
conditions - including 1111tlined
Citing the flllt wildflowers to drought, high heat and stron•
bloom mlhe ICOid1ed carib iD lhe winds ,_, ICed wllat
•
spring of 1989, they advanced beenan-..:;;;i'lw;le~~ve
overbfown claims of a part healing
In addition, decacJes of NPS fire
Itself II a phenomenaf llle. ''The suppression efforts left lhe forest
park's maJor attractions," they floor choked wilh as much u 10
dead
added, "were · left largely tons per acre of....__.... -

lJI'IICMhcd "

Exaggerated

Much-needed rain will taper off Wednesday

Pagi a The o.Jiy Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio •

UU'WIIIilll .. _...

news

media

l'"'llllllllbning Yellowstone to a

bnncbes, dry brnsh
:'graasea,
otherfallen
hiJidy fbmmable martri-

blackenecl moonscape were cspeUncouniOd lhousands of lodaecially distuJtJing 10 the )lilt's con- pole p1ae, Yellowstone's c!omiJIII!t
scieJUic!us stewmda, employCC!I of ~n~e, -lai•ICed 10 ICalred lllcb,
the ~ Plut ServicC. I UDJI of bilctenecl trunb or wlncl-blown
the,~tt.nor ~L
cinden. Bu1 the fire's elimination
The (televiSion) networks . of the heavy undergrowth now

Robert Walters

' allows more sunlight,and nutrients
· to JeaCh lhe soil, eucouraging new
Indeed NPS Director William
growlh of multiple species of trees · ~enn Moti, a higbly regarded puband planiS. ·
he servant, was su6sequently
But the new trees will not forced to resip because of ~s­
mature for approximately a half- sure from strident critics of the
century. Moreover, many of the agency's Jet-it-bum poUcy
fue's scars remain throughout lhe
But attempta to halt ·Yellowpart. Indeed, invocation of the stone's raging wildfues probably
tmage of lhe Jll'!)verbial half-full
would have been futile. Moreover,
~-empty ~ ~f wmr is ~: knowledgeable experts generally
cially 8IJIII'OPil8IC 111 characterizing agree that inflexible Uclcs uirconditions in post-fire Yellow- , ing suppression of ~r-JCS..!!Iuce
stone.
unmanageable buildups ;;rr;l in
Although the NPS 8$11!'CSsively lhe forest and increase lhe lil:eliattempted .to suppress eagbt of the llooc! of future ~ic blazes.
13 Yellowstone fires lbat erupted
F1nally, some very good news:
in lhe summer and autumn of 1988 Both th
k "·
d h ·
the """""'Y was barshly critk:izcd .i
e par VISitors an t eu
.~. "?'--:by iiJ.,infi
NPS ~ have takea advantage of
""' ume
inled POliticians t!Je Situation by tran~orming secand others for allowinf. live blazes !Jons of Yel!o~ 111~ fasclnatsrarted by lightnina strites or olher •bong and enhghtenmg displays of
natural canes to bum lhemsclves
w an
from
ouL
· fi ecosystem recovers
a

m~

By Tbe Associated Preu
The National Weulher Sei'Vice
' '
said lhe much-needed rain will
taper off on Wednesday and will be
followed by cooler and less humid
conditions m Ohio.
· · Some thundetstonn activity will
linger tonight before lhe rain starts
ending from the west on Wednesday.
Then, Thursday will see cooler
temperatures with highs in the 70s.
HQwever, temperatures will edge
back into lhe 80s by tbe weekend.
The JeCOrd high temperature for
lhis dale lit tbe Columbus wealher
station was 95 degrees in 1933.
The record low was 35 in.1972.
. Sunrise th is morning was at
• •
•
6:02 a.m. Sunset will be at 9:00
p.m.
Around the nation
•
c:::] fi2 c::g (t
'Rain fell in parts of lhe Nonh..!-!!..!:!!:!!!!!.!.
a twtr ,,
east, lhe Midwest and lhe Soulh....;;;;;;.;;.....;;;:...:=.;...;.~=;...;;=~ west early today . Areas of
'
WEATHER MAP- Tbe Accu wealiler forecJIIII for Wednesday
Louisiana and eastern Texas,
: calls for llbowers and lilunclenhowen in lbe East, IISSOCiated with
already soaked from earlier tOII'Cnts
.: two approach~;!: tr011ts. Thnndershowers are expecaed In
of rain, braced for more lhunder.· Loulslllna and
ppl. Tllunclerstorms are also expeded In the
stunns.
' Southwest. Showers are lile rule In lile norlheJ11 Rockies. (AP)
Scattered showers were 'reporled
1
!his morning in Washington state,
New Mexico and Illinois.
predicted pali:hes of
' rainForecasters
today in Idaho, Montana ,
Norlh Dakota and New Mexico;
The policy committee of lhe Athens-Gallia-Hocking-Jactsonand a curving band of thunderMeigs-Vinton solid waste district will meet Monday, Jone 17 at 7
stonns winding lhrough New Engp.m. atlhe Vinton County Community in Building in McArthur.
land, New York state, PennsylvaThe executive committee of the AGAJMV dislric will meet one
nia, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Mishour before lhe policy committee meeting at6 p.m.
souri, Arkansas, · Texa s and
Louisiana

-,A_
••

Proposed...
: Three treated for minor
~ ·zn]uries after Sunday wreck. wi~:n=~;:~.

,. •

•

Continued from page 1

: Hea~ ~age was incurred to
• the vehicles involved and three
: occupants were treated for minor
. 'injunes in an accident at the intersection of Soulh Second and Lin: .coin · in Middleport Sunday
evening.
According to a repon from Mid, dleport Police, Timothy W. Wright,
, l.allgsvi!le, trav~ling east on Lin, ~oln St. pulled mto lhe palh of a.
. pickup truck pplling a tniiler loaded Wllh a boat driven by George
·,Hawley, Middleport. Hawley was
, traveling north on Soulh Second.
: Wrigh( was cited for running a
: stop sign. Both Hawley and his
. wife, Sharon, a passenger, were
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospi' tal where !hey were treated and
released. Anolher passenger in the
truck, Mil:e Ralston, was treated at
the scene.
There was heavy damage to the
Hawley truck, trailer and boat as
~.
•

On this dale:
In 1S09,1lngland'.s Kina Henry vm married Calherine of Aragon.
II! 1n6, lhe Coalinenlil ~ formed a committee 10 chft a Dec~
lnlion of lr..,.."""nt'e from Britain.
. In 11159, a
laid clllim to 1 silver deposit in Six Mile Canyon
=a
dw later turned 0111 to be the multimillion-doUar Com-

J:.::*llli

Gerard said
weD as' the Wright vehicle.
. illegal open burning is continuing
On Soulh Second Ave. late Sat- in the village. I' was ~uggcsted by
urday afternoon, a parked car lhe mayor that lhe police be called
owned by William A. Swisher., by those who see lhe illegal burnMiddlcpon, was sideswiped by a ing. Gerard also ralked about comvehicle owned by Claude B. Eblin, , munity pride and suggested lhe
Pomeroy. Police reportcd.that there . possible sale of Middleport Block
was moderate damage to lhe rear Co: bricks. He said tbi~ w~~ give
left of lhe Swisher vehicle, and lhe · residents
~ty to · buy a
right front of the Eblin car. Eblin , p1ece ~f history .•
was c~ with failure
. eJ,D conttol ; Tlie mayor s report .showed
and leavmg lite scene an acci- receipts or $7,040. Allending were
dent.
'
' l Mayor Hoffman, Cle~k-Treasurer
There wer.e no citations in an -Jon Buck, and Council members,
accident atlhe intersection of Pearl J~ Clatworthy • Crooks, Gerard,
and Hartinger Monday evening. Wilham Walters, and Jack SauerPolice reported !bat James W. Har- field.
ris, Middleport, was making a left
tum onto Pearl St. when his car
was struck by a vehicle driven by
Je~ S. Duncan, Gallipolis, as he
turned on the light. The right rear Revival planned
fender of lhe Harris car had light
Revival sei'Viccs will be held at
damage, as did tbe ri~t front fend- the Stiversville World of Faith
er of ihe ..~l!ncan veh1cle.
Church, Portland, Thursday
·
"'·
''
-··· thrb ugh-r Saturday; 7:3'0 eacli
evening. Alton Dozer of Florida
will be tbe speaker. There will be
and an active member of tbe United Bspelootlcialm~o·nbJIIIIe. gtoeacvislhteveuin!;..
•lie
Faith Church, Pomeroy. a member
, the American Red Cross bloodof the Holzer Diabetic Support mobile unit will be at the Meigs
. Group. and a past member of lhe County Senior Citizens Center,
Hockin~ Valley Sweet Adelines.
Mulberry Height.s , Pomeroy,
· She tS ·survived by ber husband, Wednesda from 1 to 5 30
the Rev .. Robert E. Smith, Sr.,
Y ,
: p.m.
Pomeroy, ·a daughler, Roberta Ann Weigbtllfting
· Meyer, Middletown, two sons and
All people interested in playing
daughters-in-law , Ernest and football at Soulhem High School
Shirley Smjth, Middleport, and should report for weigllt lifting for
Robert E., Jr. and Paula Smith, the remainder of the monlh of June
Shelbyville, Ky.; two sisters, on Tpesday and Thursday from 6-9
Clarice Callicoat, Gallipolis, and p.m.
Mrs. Raymond (Lydia) Smith, Vaeation Bible School
Pomeroy; two brothers and sisters·
The Racine Baptist Church will
in-laws, Donald and Ruth Tate, have Vacation Bible School June
Cleveland, and Charles and Vir- 24-28 from 9:30a.m. to noon. Preginia Tate, Cheshire; and a sister- registration will be held at Star Mill
· in-law,lris.TaJe,Gallipolis.
Park on June 22 from 6-9 p.m.
Also surviving are six grand· Bible school director is Wanda
children including David P. Smith Shuler. Ap adult class will be
who made his home with Mr. and offered.
Mrs. Robert E. Smilh, Sr., Jason L. Father's Day breakfast
and Brandon S. and Erin L. Smilh,
A Father's Day breakfast will be
Middleport, and Devin M. Meyer held at the Wilkesville Pylhian Hall
and l&gt;ndrek P. Meyer, bolh of Mid- on Saturday fr.om 8-11 a.m. The
dletown; and one great-grandson.
cost is S3 per person and lhe menu
Funeral services will be held includes sausa$e and pancakes .
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the United The publi~ is inVIted to atteud.
Faith Church with the Rev. Cecil Grange to meet
Wise officiating. Burial will be in·
.The Rock Springs Grange will
Miles Cemetery, Rutland.
meet Thursday at8 p.m. at tbe hall.
Friends may call at lhe Fisher
Class offered
Funeral Home on Wednesday after.
The Middleport Arts Council
9 a.m. The family will be present
will
offer a five-week course in
fr.om 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. The
body will lie in state at lhe church basic sign hinguage on Mondays at
7 p.m. beginning July I. The cost
for one hour prior to lhe services. ·
for the class is $25. The course will
be taught by Debra Walker of
Thurman, who is a kindergarten
teacher. at Cheshire-Kyget' Elementary School and is now doing graduate wuk·in deaf education at Ohio
State University. Call Susan Baker
ARCANUM, Ohio (AP) - .The al 992· 7733 or Mary Wise at 992couple who won Ohio's $16 mil- 2675 as soon as possible w regislion Super Louo drawing ssy tbeir ter. Class size is limited to 12 peoonly plan for their fortune so far is ple. The course is open to everyone
a tnp to Disney World.
Richard Palivec, 38, and his
wife, Denise, 36, of Arcanum, had Hospital news
. VETERANS MEMORIAL
tbe lottery •s Auto Lotto com puler.
MONDAY ADMISSIONS pick what turned out 10 be the winning numbers in Saturday's draw- Margaret Elias, Racine; Keith Day,
Pomeroy; Tracy Simpkins,
ing.
Palivec, a factory worker, said Pomeroy; Elhel Grucscr, Rutland:
he heard the firSt three numben on and Henry Beaver, Middleport.
MONDAY DISCHAltGES the radio while driving to work SatGeorge
Genbeimer.
IJl!iaY, then the rest when be got to
wort.
"I really don't believe it, I HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, June 10 - Joshua
couldn't believe it," he said .
Benneu,
Judy Davis, James Fel"Maybe I'm still in shock."
lure,
Gena
German, Bobbie HamThe Palivecs' winning ticket
mond,
f'amll
Houck, Jacob JarreD,
was purchased at Angler's Bait &amp;
George
K•Jana,
Anna Laudermilt,
Tackle in Englewood and was valiTammy
Petitt,
Shane
Plantz, Mabel
dated Monday morning.
Porter,
Tammy
Sa_yre,
Vicki Smilh
The Palivecs will receive 26
and
Debra
Tbevenm.
8Mual peymeniS ci S4 70,768 after
Births, June 10 - Mr. and Mrs.
taxes. '
Larry
Leonard, a daughter, Point
The ' ticket seller receives
Pleasant,
W.Va.
$10,000.

!Jie

or

. M. Eloi~e Smith
Maxine Eloise Smith, 65,
Pomeroy, died Monday, June 10,
1991, at Pleasant Valley Howital,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
'
Born on June II, 1925 in Gallia
"
' County, she was the daugllter. of
' the late Worthy and Evelyn M.
Darst Tale. She wa~ A homenlalcer

The Daily Sentinel
tUSPS 14HIO)
A Dl\ltllea of M•lttmedla, Inc.
Publis hed f'very aft£&gt;rnoon. Monday

throu¢1 Friday, Ill Coort St .. Po·
mf"roy. Ohio. by the Oh io Vall ey Pub·

lish inJt Cof1':'p anyt MuJtlmedla . Inc ..
Pomoroy, Ohio 45769. Ph. 992·2156, S..
cond class postaJtt' paid a t Pomt-roy.
Ohio.

·

MrnibPr: ThP, Assodatfd Press, In·

l and Dall y Prf'Ss As~O('i a !l on and fh«"
Ohio Nt'WspaPE'f Association . Na tiona l
AdvPr11slnlil Rt&gt;presentatlvf', Branham
NPWspaper Sail'S, 733 Third Avenur.
N ~· YOrk. New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send addrE"Ss chanjZl'IS
fo Thf' Dally Sftltlnel. lll COurt St ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

'

8 VJI8()RIPTJON RATES

By Carrier er M~or Roatt'

OnE' Month ............................... .. 16.95
Onp Ytar ................................. $83.20
SJNGU:COPY
I'RICE
Dally .... ............................... 21 Cent•

--

~~~ 8!f~ ~~~:o:~vf.~':r 1~~c:nt1~

basls . Crt'dlt will be gt vfn carrier each

No sublcrlptiOna by mall permlttfd tn
areas where homf' carrier w rvlcfl Is
avallablf'.

llall S.boerlolloao

loold~lll&lt;lpC..II)'

13 WHit! ,.. .................... " ..... .... 121.84
26 Weeki ............ .. ............... ..... UJ.l6
12 WHits .......... ............... .. ....... 184.76

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

- · lllelp Clllll)' 123.40
ll
26 WHito .................................. US.lO
52 WHito .......... ... ..................... S88.fO

'\
-·~

- . .

BEST YOUTH GROUP • The Ruffles and
Flourishes lwlrUIJIIJ"'OIp, under lile direction or
April Hudson, partlclpaled in Saturday's Her·

Arcanum couple
win Super Lotto

..

~~.

...

ltage Parade Ia Pomeroy. Tbe group reeelved a
trophy for llell Youth Group.

Activities continue...__c_on_tln_~~ec~_rro_m_·p_ag_e_•_ _ _ _ __
ee, were electrocuted in the pond ..
Another man shocked in lhe pond
remained hospiralized.
.
The accidents occurred 37 minutes apart at the part, about 20
miles northeast of Cincinnati. Palk
spokeswoman Carolyn Boos ssid
wiiJ!esses have given conflicting
accouniS, and part officials were
waiting for technical experts to
look at the ride and the garden
today and Wednesday.
"At Ibis point in time tbere are
so manY different variations in tbe
stories that we don't want to speculate," Ms. I;loos said Monday.
Flight Commander rides were
shut down Monday at two sister
parks, Kings Dominion in RichmOnd, Va.,and Great American in

M eigs
• announcement s

------Area deaths

'
'•
.
Margaret Bachman
,.
' . .
.: Funeral servic.es', for. Margaret
'Bachman, 94, who died June 3,
· 1991 in D1ayton, wer.e held in
~ Columbus on Thursday.
; ' Mrs. Bachman was the former
· Margaret Scholl of Pomeroy. She is
·s urvived by a daughter, Betty
1
Wilkenson of Dayton.
Preceding her .in destb were her
husband, John Bachman, formerly
' of MiddlepOrt, her parents, Barbara
· and ]llcob· Scholl, and several
, bmthets and sisters including
Leonard, Adam, Albert, William
Herman and Oscar Scholl, 1&lt;Jither.. ine Caner, Anna Ohlinger., Rose
' Mayer, and Ellen Wilson.
· Going to Columbus for the ser, vices from Here were John and Bar. bars Weeks and Evelyn Gilmore.

Subsc ribers not dt'llrlnft: to pa y the ca r.

Today's Highliabts in Hiltoly:
.
On June ~~~1770, Captain James Coole, commancleroftbaBritiah shijl
:::_vour. diJcovered the Great Ba'rier Reef off Australia by rutming

2l

Solid waste district to meet

By Tile AIIOdated Pras
:
leftT~ ~~Y· June ll,lhc 162nd day of 1991. There are 203 days
. .

the Midwest; lhe 90s in the Plains,
along lhe East Coast and in lhe
Soulheast; and in lhe 90s and IOOs
in the Soulhwest and in part of cal·
tral California
The high temperature for the
nation Monday was 109 degrees at
Havasu City, Ariz.

i·

Today
I·n ht•story
I.
~

snarling traftic.
·
In nonbeast Texas, 4 inches of

and

r11in in four hours caused flash
flooding that closed two main highways, stranding 801De residents.
High temperatures today were
forecast for lhe 70s in tbe Norlhwest, lhe 80s in lhe Great Lakes
region, New England and most of

«-

OnP We('k.... ........... ~................... ll.60

Jre.

On Monday, thunderstorms
dumped 5 inches of rain in two
houn in New Orleans, swelling a
canal lbat swept away a 10-yearold suburban boy, flooding streets

i2and over.
AuxiUary reminder
The F.O.E. Ladies Au~iliary
JRem bers are remi,nded !hat dues
should 'be paid on or before June
30, 1991.
Guest preacher
,
Rev. Eddie Buffington, Gallipolis, will be the JIICSI preacher at lhe
Naomi Baptist Church in Pomeroy·
on Sunday at II am. Rev. Samuel
Jackson invites lhe public.
Toumameat scheduled
The 1991 William "Bill" Hubbard Memorial Little League Baseball Tournament, sponsored by lhc
Syracuse Fire and Emergency
Department, will be held July 8.
Entry deadline is June 30. Call
992-7777 or 992-2181 for mor.e
information.
GiiUlan reunion
A family reunion or Eiben and
Dena Gillilan will be held Sunday
at the Kyger Creek Plant Club
House. Friends and relatives are
invited. Those attending bring a
covered dish.
Vacation Billie Scbool
Vacation Bible School classes
for. preschoolers lhrough Jeens will
be held at the Mt Herman Church
June 17-21 from 9:30-11:30 a.m.
daily. To register, call Julia Will at
985-4344.
Life~uard tralnin~

Lifeguard traming will be
offered atlhe London Pool in Syracuse June 18 -July 3 from 6-9 p.m.
nightly. The fee for lhc class is $45
and participants must be at least 15
· years of age. To register call the
pool at 992-9909.
Weekend serYices
Weekend services at the
Danville Church of Christ will be
held Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and
Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Denver Hill of Foster, W.Va. wiD
be the speaker. The public is invited ID attend.

Santa Clara. Calif., until die investigation is complete.
·Ms. Boos said Lhere were no
previous problems wilh lhe rides,
which have been operating atlhe
other two parks for two years and
at Kings Island since last year.
The Kings Island ride passed an
ins\)Cttion two. monlhs ago by lhe
Oh10 Department of Agriculture,
which annually looks at amusements across the state, and routine
daily inspections by park personnel, Ms. Boos said.
·
Representatives of the ride's
desiJl!ICl, Intamin, Inc., of' Zurich,
Switzerland, were expecled to
arrive late today. Electric experts
planned to be at the park today to
look for the source of the pond
problem.
Inspectors from lhe Occupational Safety and Health Administration and tbe state Department of
Agriculture were at the part Monday.

The accident involving the
Flight Commander was. the first
fataliJy from a ride in lhe pazt's 20

years.

Four olher people have died at
the part. In 1976, a ~ employee
was altiCked by a lton in the animal habiiBt area; in 19g3, a ~n
was killed trying to ride on the 10p
or an elevator on the pllk's replica
of lhe Eiffel Tower; in 1986 a man
dove 13 feet into a 2-foot-deep
fountain; and in 1989 a park
employee wz struck by lighmmg.
Sunday's accidents didn't det.er
visitors. Ms. Boos said lhe crowd
was average for a Monday, when
the par~ . usually draws about
20.000vcutors.
,
The fllSt fatal accident occurred ·
at 8:48 p.m. Sunday, when a man
L~:nto a pond !hat surrounds lhe
~n and received a jolt of
electricity.
"We don 'tlcnOw if he fell in or
slipped or was pushed," park
spokesman S!CVC Edwards said.
Two olher men went into lhe
pond, evidently trying to rescue
him, Edwards said. They, too, were
jolted by electricity.
William Haitbcoat of Cincinnati
and park security officer Darrell
RobertsOn of Hamilton, both 20,
were pronounced dead at University of Cincinnati Medical Cenlet'.
Timothy Benning, 22, of
Cincinnati, was taken to Bethesda
North Hospital in Cincinnati,
where he was listed in good condition. Benning was identified as die
ftrSt man in the pond.

Lottery .numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
lhe selections Monday night in lhe
Ohio Lottery:
Pick 3 Numbers
6-7-7
(six, seven, seven)
Pick 4 Numbers
2-1-8-3
(two, one, eight, three)

Cards

10 (len) of Hearts
S (five) of Clubs
10 (len) of Diamonds
6 (six) of Spades
. The Super Lotto Jackpot is $4
million.

Weather

SoutiJ Central Oblo:
Tonight, showers and lhunder. storms fitely. Low 60-65. Chance
r.==========~ of rain 70 percent. Wednesday,
mostly cloudy with a chance of
showers. Becoming p8!11Y SUMy in
the afternoon. H1gh near 80.
Chance
or rain 40 percent.
Am Ele Power ..................28 1/4
Extended forecut:
.
Ashland Oil ..................... .3 I 3/4
·Thunday lllrotllh Saturday:
AT&amp;T......... ....................... 36 318
Fair and cool Thursday. Higlis
Bob Evans ....................... .17 3/4
in the 70s and lows in the SOs. F.U
Charming Shop .................21 7/8
on Friday. Highs 7S-8S and lows
City Holding ..................... 14 1/2
mid-SOs to around 60. A chance or
Federal Mogul... ........ ........18 7/8
showers and lhunderstonns SaturGoodyearT&amp;R ................ .33 1/4
day. Highs in the 80s and lows ln
Key Centurion ..................13 1/4
!he 60s.
Lands' End ....................... 20

Stocks

....,...,.. ,.• ,....

Limiled Inc ....................... 28 S/8

Multimedia Int .................28 1/4
Rax Restawant ..................21{32
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... 29
Shoncy's Inc............ ......... l7 1/8
Star Bank .......................... 21 1/4
Wendy lnt'l.. ............... .......9 3/4
Wonhington Ind...............25 1/4

Preferre• 4rlftrt

TheN should be opeclol carlnour•
ence for more m1ture ut.r drlv••·
Now there ie:

lt'oltate Auto Componlas' Madll·
lot Auto policy.

Stock rtports are tht 10:30 a.m.
IJIIOitS providtd by B/11111, Ellis
ar~d Lotwi of Gallipolis.

If vo11 have had no violations or at· '
fault accl...,tl fot th- ,_. ond.

are at le11t Zl ,.atloid, voucould
be qual- to become • Macllllat

policy holder, onjovlng - l a l. N ·
duced r1tH.

And If you are mlddle·- d 141·
141. you'll gat the blgiMt r111
break of •".
Whal's more, es 1 M..Wiot

COUPON

po~­

cvtro- vou are not cllaiged for
vour first aecldont. that' 1 .ftwtlve'

FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING ..l!r••r

i'!'mediatoly. too. Th.,.'s no thr"
,.ar welting parlod lo quellfy.you- o M_.lst policy•

will bt giv111 in Mllgs/GaiHa (oainty by

In_.,..,.

BELTONE HEARING AID CENTER

Call Ul allout lhll cer
breakthrough for state • - •·

HOME CAll MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
2241alt . . . St., Po•rey, Ohio
THUISDAY, JUNE 13 - 9:00-12:00
IlLTONI HEAliNG AID CENTEI
1312 ladM'ft AY1., (lt. 7), GAWPOUS
CAlL 614-446·1744
WEDNUDAY,
12- 9:00·4:00

-....----

•r

Call Jol Fl'll 1-100·614·5265 fer inttlll•l•tt -"'tllllllt.
TMl Tan IIIII IE IMI n AUCIIIIED 11U1118 All sHI:tAUST

AnyGMwlloiiMtiOU... IIIIrtngerund&amp;JI&amp; .... _ . . . . . . . IJ-al

toh-afrw'-lng-to-MthiUI'O...III-IIehalp&amp;JIIrlntthll
coupoof With ,... fDr ,..., Pllll HEMING TUT ef 171 vatlue.
UMWA • UAW • OTHIII INIUIIANCI I'IIOYIDIII
WAllti·INI
IN HOMI TilTING
.,

I

~St.teltlh
........ c......
II)

�-

~--

- .. -·-

~

.....

--- ·---

-...-··-

.. -·-·----

-

-..

. ( ..

I

Tu11J1y, June 11, 1891

The D.aily Sentinel

Sports

. MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Waiting had become a big pan of Paul

4'
r

On-track Reds find
:. groove, hand Phils
~ 9-3 loss Monday

II

: Rood Slllrt.''

Legion standings
Tam

Gallipolis
Welllton
Llncaster
Pidlerington
McArthur

=Adieu

(OveraU)

w
5
5

7
4
2

2
1

0

L
J
l
3
2
7
8

5
0
L
0
0
I
I
I

3
2
0

~.

"l'w been just waiting for my

major league victory and extend
the Minnesota Twins • winning
streak ID nine pmes wilh an 8-5
victory over the Cleveland Indians.
After going 0-S as a Slllter with
the Twins during the latter pan of
the 1990 season, Abbott bad ID

Scoreboard

•

'

•

\

Padres' Gwynn keeping
paceJIM with hittjng legends

BJ
DONAGHY
AP a-111111 Writer
It's thai time in the season when
the Top 10 swu tD mean somemmg.
Tony Gwynn, for example,
leads the Nanonal League with a
• . 373 balling average and has 85
. hill in S.a Diego's rust 57 games
- a pace that gives him a shot at
the lllllior-league record for hits in
uea~on.
·
Gwynn is no pretender, either.
, His career average of .329 ranks
' 12th in NL history, .0002 ahead of
Honus Wagner and two points
behind Sian Musial. Gwynn
already has four baiting titles in
eighiiiCIISOIIS.
Now the interesting part.
Gwynn is on a pace for 241 hits
this season. It' s not a clip that
would brealt: George Sisler's record
of 257 bits set in 1920, but it's in
the ballplrt.
In the last 50 years, only five
major leasuers, including Wade
Bogp wilh 2AO in 1985, have had
. more than 23Q hits in a season.
"I'm not thinking of numbers
· like thai," Gwynn said. "I was dis·
appointed in the way things went
· lllll 1081011 and it was imponant for
:me and the team to get off to a

~

:· . time,'' Abbott said after pitching
three ICO~Jeas innings of relief
Monday ntght to earn his first

, CINCINNATI (AP) - If the guy."
· - Cinciruwi Reds' recent success at
Cincin~ati ..scored four runs in
- the plale Clll be auributed to any- the third. Billy Hatcher doubled
: thing, it probably bas 10111ething ID and scored on Bill Doran's single
.• . do with the stale of mind baseball off.the glove of second baseman
~like ID call" a groove."
Mickey Morandini. Barry Larkin
'I'm in a groove now and so i$ walked before O'Neill homered.
the ltJIIII," Jeff Reed said. "We're
Philadelphia got two unearned
fiully pulling some runs on the runs in the founh when left f.elder
board. And with Paul (O'NeiU) and Glenn Braggs dropped Dale Mur• Bwry (Lartin) aeuing on !niCk, it's phy's routine fly ball and John
the way we want it. ru tate aU we Morris and Darrin Fletcher hit runCIIi act Ibis way."
scoring groundouts.
Backed by multi-hit games frQffi
Reed, who drove in three runs,
four players, inc!~ a three-run hit an RBI double in the fourth for
homer and four RBis by O'Neill, a 5-2 lead.
Jose Rijo threw a four-hitter in
O'Neill hit a run-scorin~ single
Cincinnati's 9-3 victory over the in -the Reds' three-run ftfth off
Plliladelphia Pbillies on Monday.
Bruce Ruffin. Chris Sabo hit an
"You can't drive every pitch RBI double and Reed added a runyou see well out of the p•rk," scoring single.
_
O'Neill said. "I did this time.
The Pbillies' John Kruk hit his
(Andy) Ashby Died to jam me, but eighth home run in the sixth inning.
he go1 it out on the plate just a biL I Doran bit an RBI double in the
was able ID drive iL And I've bad a eighth off Darrel Akerfelds.
. lot of opportunities lately with
Elsewhere in the NL, it was Los
. Doran and Larkin back in the Angeles 13, Chicago 5; Pittsburgh
groove."
5, San Diego 3; Montreal 7, Atlanta
With his 13th homer of the year, I; Houston 6, New York 4; and SL
O'Neill tied San Diego's Fred Louis 3, San Francisco 2.
' McGriff for the National League
• Dodgers 13, Cubs 5
lead.
There are signs that the pennant
,
"It makes a pitcher's job easi- races misht be over early in the
. er,'' Rijo said. "When Billy Doran National League this season.
gets on base a lot and Barry Larkin
The Pittsburgh Pirates have a
gets a couple of hits, and then, with comfortable six-game lead over
ihe!n on bale and O'Neill driving New York in the East, and firstin the runs, we are on a roD."
place Los Angeles has moved I 0
•
Mana.er Lou Piniella was games over .50t'J in the West to
• happy wnh O'Neill's shot and open a 2 l(l-game margin over sur• hippy with bis ream's hiuing.
prising Atlanta. ;
' 'That is the kind of hit we've
Certainly there's a long way to
• been missing. It's a good game to go, but the signs are there.
: take on the road with us," he said.
The Dodgers, for instance, are
•
The Reds go on a nine-game winning without much offense
• road trip against Montreal, · from Darryl Suawberry. When he
Philadelpl!ia and New York begin- gets hot, they just may run away
ning ton1ghL
and hide.
Reed says good outings do wonPittsburgh's 35-19 record is the
den tD a player's mental outlook best in baseball, and the Mets keep
and help the "groove" even more.
tripping over themselves and giv.. When you're hiuing well and ing games away with shoddY.
catching well, you don't have to defense and poor relief pitching.
look over your shoulder to see
'Back to the Dodgers. They have
who's coming up to take your Ore! Hershiser again liiiCi he's lookpilce." he said. "As long as I play ing suong. On Monday, Sttawberry
weU, I know that l'm in the lineup, returned, but Los Angeles really
. : aqd thai means a lot."
didn't need him as it turned ouL
~l;r.;,• 23-year-old right-han·
Lenny Harris ~lighted a !ixder
his major~ debut, run fourth inning wtth a grand_slam
retired the lint ~~:ven Reels in order as the Dodgers routed the Chicago
but wound up allowin~ five runs Cubs 13-5 at Wrigley Field. Los
and four bits in four inrungs.
Angeles took three of four games
"I was nervous 11 the start, but in the series and have won 17 of 22
then tbe adrenaline started to at Wrigley Field since 1986.
Dow,'' Ashby said. "I made a mis·
"We've been winnint~ without
tate of giving up a two-out walk Darryl Sttawberry,'' Harris said. "I
and then I hung the fastball out think he shocked everybody by
over the plale to O'Neill. You can't coming bllck so soon. But that's the
do that tD the leading home run type of guy he is. He wanted to

Gwynn hit a cm.er-low .309 in
1990, and missed the last 19 games
of the season with a fractured right
indCJt rmger. There was also a rift
with some teammates who thought
he was selfish, most notably the
now departed Jack Qark.
."I'm the same person now as I
was last year and the year before,"
Gwynn said. "l can't worry abnut
what others think or say."
Gwynn en!e~M Monday night's
game at Pittsburgh with a 15-game
hitting sueak, going 25-for-57
(.439) in that span. He also leads
the league with eight triples and is
among the leaders with 14 doubles.
When Sisler set his record for
the SL Louis Browns, he had a .407
batting average. He had a pretty
good month of June. too, with ~I
hits in 29 games.
Sisler finished with a career
average of .340 and it could have
been even higher. He hit .420 in
1922 but mi'ssed the next season
following surgery for sinus blockages that affected his eyesight .
After the surgery, Sisler was never
the same hitter.
Since 1901, the highest average
belongs tD Rogers Hornsby with a
.424 mark in 1924 when he had
227 hits.
.
The six players who had 250 or
more hits in a season are all former
batting champions. In addition to
Sisler, they are Lefty O'Doul or the
Philadelphia Phillies, who set the
NL record of 254 hits in 1929; Bill
Terry of the New YOllt Giants, who
tied O'Doul's record in 1930; AI
Simmons of the Philadelphia A's,
· with 253 in 1925; Hornsby of the
St. Louis Cardinals, '!l'ith 250 in
1922, and Chuck Klein of the
Pbilliea with 250 in 1930.
Gwynn's best hit total is 218
when he led the 1eque with a .370
average in in 1987. It was the highest in the NL since 1948, when
Milsial hlt .376.
"To some degree, when they
say I'm 1 naiUral hitter, they're correct," Gwynn said. "I've never
had trouble hi11in1 a baseball .
When I was a kid, we Uled to roll
up socks in tape and bil them. I
colild hit them, too, and if you can
do that. you Clll a IJudlall. ••

"t

-'

••

ThampHn, S1. Louia, 4; T. Fernanda,

In tbe majors.•.

''

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eut Division

..••

W L Pd.
-""1

T-.

......... 31 26
a - .......... ~ 26
DoonO!
........... 27 ~
NoW Yodl
....... 2! 27
Mllw.- .. ...: :14 3t
Clowolood ........ 21 33
a-.. ........ 21l -w

•
!. ·
'

GB

.l27
·I
.412 31/%
.411 11/%
.4M
6
.319 11/l

.m ' ta
West Dlvtilon

..
;.
~ 4 .•

Pd.

W L

GB

......... Jl 22 .614
....... ~ 32 24 .S71 llfl
....... 32 2S .561
3
!too... .......... :!0 26 .5M 4 1/%
Chlcoao
........ 21 26 .519 s ta
T....
.. .... :.... 26 2S .510
6
tta.u CltJ ...... :14 30 .444 9 1/%
OUload
Call' ;'+
K
t

·

Reds' Barry Larkin st1n up a
tittle dust IS be aUdes Into third base for tbe steal ahead of the tllg or
Philadelphia third baseman Wally Backman in the llftb lnnlog or
.

'

come back. That's the kind of baHclub we have. Everybody wants to
participate."
·
Suawberry had been sidelined
with a sore shoulder as a result of
running into the right-field fence at
Dodger Stadium last month.
"My shoulder feels pretty
~,'.' said Sttawberry, who went
~-for-4. "The time I've had an
opportunity to rest has really
helped me, especially the tn8tment
I've received. It's nice to be back
in the lineup though and it feels
real ood.''
Cf.'icago was picked by many to
win &lt;the NL East, but now trails the
Pirates by eight games.
Things got so bad for_th~ Cubs'

beleaguered pitching statt that out·
John Franco in the eighth inning
fielder Doug Dascenzo relieved in
rallied Hooston.
the eighth against Los Angeles. He
Dwight Gooden gave up two
was the best the Cubs had, too,
runs and seven hits in seven
tossing two hitleas innings.
innings before Franco (1-5)
Pirates 5, Padres 3
relieved.
Jeff King hit a two-run homer in
Curt Schilling (3-4) pitched one
Piusburgh's four-run first inning,
inning for the victA&gt;ry.
and the Pirates bullpen shut down
Expos 7, BraYeS 1
San Diego with six scoreless
Dennis Martinez gave up one
innings.
run in seven innings and Dave
Relievers Bob Patterson, Maninez hit a homer.
Vicente Palacios (4-2) and Bill
Ron Gant led off the game for
Landrum Umited the Padres to four
Atlanta and hit his lith homer on
hits over the rtnaJ siX innings.
the first pitch from .Dennis MarAstros 6, Mets 4
tinez (8-4). The right-hander then
Jeff Bafwell's two-run double settled,.down and allowed only six
and Rafae Ramirez's game-win- · hits. '!Tm Burke pitched !Wo-"thirds
niog, two-run sin1le off reliever of an inning and Scou Ruskin got

the last four outs for his fourth
save.
John Smaltz fell lA&gt; 2-7.
. CardiDals 3, GlaDis l
Milt Thompson's two-run triple
tied the score in the seventh inning,
and Pedro Guerrero won the game
with a sacrirtee fly.
.
Tom Pagmzzi and Jose Oquendo started ihe sevenlh with singles
off Jose Segura (0-J). Thompson
then hit a line drive to cenrcr fidd
that got by Willie McGee and to
the waU for a aiple. .
.
Scott Terry (1-0) worked twothirds of an inning, and Lee Smith,
the fourth St. Louis pitcher, got
three ouiS for his 14th.save.

~ H~

t0:35 p.m.
Botlon (Darwin 2· 3) ll Seattle
(liWlleocl2-4). 10:35 p.O..
.

Wedneat.J'I pmes

loo~!ng to either move and-or

-1tS..alo.3:35p.m.
M i l - o1 Calilomio, 4:05pm.
tc-. Cloy 1t Boltim-, 7:35 P·"'

Chk:laoat Toau, 1:35 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

East Division
W L I'd.
GB
311 19 .641
Now Yodl
....... 29 2S .537
6
St.l.clllit .......... 29 26 :527 61/%

Plusburab """'"

Chico.&amp;•
......... 21 21 500
l'hU.cf-. ....... 2S 31 -~
t.lanuul ;....... :14 32 .429

sell..
.
.
. ~tch also t;nen~oned the pass•btltty _o f buyn~g mto an extstmg
franchiSe ID pm .:cess ID the fra.
temity of majOr league owners._
/!.member of the bollrd of directors of the Buffalo Sabres, Rich
recalled how the o~ners ·of that
team, the Knox family, followed
that route~ a means of getting an
NHL team m Buffalo. ,
:
""-The Sabres bought the (Cahfomia Golden) Seals, and it gave
them access ID the NHL forum. I

.

'

•

..
•'

cent said.

Rich said it was "pretty common knowledge that there are
going to be teams for sale. And
they're going to be teams that .-e
goitJt! to have some difficulty. And
they re going to be teams that , ·

2 MEDIUM
PIZZAS
2mMS

$999

LAIGE
PEPPERONI
PIZZA

.,......,.~v

SYUCiiit 0110
" ·5776

'

.

Hrn-Molilor, Milwaukee, 16; C.

~lldtimoro,75; l'lx:ltCIII,-­
La, 12; ldll, Tau, 71; D. ~cnon.

Ooldlnd, 10.

.
DOVBLBS--It. Alomar, TOIGIIto, 17~
P........ T..... 16; Whioo. T......, 15:
Carter. ToroaiO, IS; Gc=a~ T~ 14;
u-. • - t4; c. c.....
t•;». H~.s..on. Oakland, 1•: Tram·
m.U. Dlfnil. 14.
T&amp;IPLBS-Molhor, MilwauJu:~c, 6 ;
Clliltmil. 5; •
5:
11 . . bed with 1
HOMil RUNS- D. lloU,_, Ou·

Minn-.

.-.CUcap.

....... 15; fiold•. Doool~ 12;

o-,Do-

..... 12; c.Dorio. ,..,.,_,12; c. Riptal, Blltim..., 12; WlnlloW, CdiComia.
l1.STOLEN BASI!S Paloai .. Calitomia,.
22; R. ...,.non, Odllftd, 21: R. Alomar, Toronw, II; lbU., Cbioaao. II:
eu1...
12: a. KdlJ, Now v-.
12; Coao, S....._ I :Z.
PII'CIIINO (5 Dodli....}-l'laloy. Cal·
ilomia. •~2. .133, l.t2: e.;.._; Min·
- , 9-~ .Ill, 1·.53; ~toy, T--. 9·2.
.111,:&lt;.63;-. New v......... .100,
1.71&lt; 0ottaot. tu-. 4-1, .ICIO, 3.33.
s11UlEOU'I1-caem..a. BCIIIOft, II;
FWoy, Ctlil..ua, 13; R. 1......,, Soa&lt;·
~~~~an, Tcua, 76; M~Dowell,

n...a.

SAVES-Eetenley, Oakland , 17;
Aauilera, Mlnneaota, 1': Reardon,
Boa1011..1. 15; HI.I'WI~:-ni•, 14; 0 .
Wild, •-12;
Oticqo, 12;
Jei!R....U. T.... 12.

N•tlonallAaaue

~... 1\llloU,!I,

11111-J•tloa. 11...... 47: w. Cia*·
... - - 41: 0'1'11111. CUI&lt;iluu&lt;l,
40. T. Owru. !kn Diaae. •ol K.ruk,
Pb11 I '11 39; MoOiill,llao Diap.l9.
HITI-T. Owynn, Saa Dieao • .,,
Atrploo, 72; T. Fam I ,

s-.Laa

,._, ....

I•• Dlqo, 65; Jaaadc•, Allaale, 64;
~11.~17:-

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\)..~~~v.:.~ t:. l!•_
i4i- p:
llao

T.~T~Ialt

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, 14;

1:

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Y-*.i;LO '• .._4;1Nt.
rn , : "' 4:C • 1 -.~w.

, I

at Chicaao. 9 p.m., if ~·

Sunday, JuM U
, LA. Llkaa • Chiclao. 7 p.m., if na:-

A-IM1111
CALIFORNIA ANGELS - Recalled
Bobby R..., inllc!.... fnlmlldm""""' of
the Pacific Coasl Lcaaue. Optioned
Ruben Amaro, outfielder, to Edm&lt;11ton.
Sl!llrn.E MARlNERS-S;pd Cq
Grif!'ey, oudielder, and •uianM him \0
T-.CthoMzoluiM&amp;uoTEXAS RANOERS-'!iancd Terrell
Lowery, outfielder; hmes Bethke and
1IIMI Kennedy, catehen; .lamca Koehler,
fllll huc:maa·outfieldlr. Steven Bunon,
fint baltmua; Mart Rinp.amp, hma

Mialiozzi lftdiWold Vdlut. piiCbon; lftd
KeVin Silk, lhOJUtop. Aaaipcd Lowery
to Butu~~ or lhc Plena Leap
. TORONTO BLUE JAYS--;:Jfncd
WiUiiJit ~ Jr., Kci.wu Cam
and
Ryan Qriff1n, outfielden; Kurt Heblc,
Joaeph Lis, Sharnol Ad~iana, John
Taoukalu and Michael Carlacn, inf'idd·
aa: Alcno Bcluan, Ben W~. Tin\olhy
Lindaly, (]uU&lt;ophw
Albal Mon·
toya, Pllul BartM, )amca O'Connor, Darin
Nolan, Gary Miller, Alan Ford Jr. and
l!nniJ, pildlon: ems Quin·
.... fin&lt; buoman; ..... Michael M...tlftd,
and Peter Polia, catdlm.

K-

au;,.,.,...

CIIIIRL0111! HORNETS-Ntmod Bo
fiUIIO)' direaar of DYbJic 1'0111iCIU and Ja•
aon Brannan . .iAan1 media relaU.. di·

.......

Football
N•ltonal FooiiMI Luaut
DETROIT UONS~ianod Lin Dow·

110n, fiPt

md.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS- Sianed
Dwi&amp;b• Pkkenl, wide roecivcr, and O.ny

franl,pud.

Scioto Downs results

.

Alao lta'*.Saola1 Oio, Wen Her 1:11.
...._ RLB Fella, lrOnly Iliad, lump Bad:
JICk, Doubi:r.Bl-. Rod Rmnan.
Tril- ( 6-5) Sl'-654.60.
Pod.... (4-6) 12.111.20.
Second 1~2.000 Condition T1'01.. ,
WUdwood Curly (Cro11) 5.00, 3.10,
3.20: Galu.ie (Dv. Mi.ll~r) 4.20, 2.10;
Tllll (Pa¥W h .) 2.60. Timo-2:03.
111ao -·TnodJ Hill, Belly'I Bell,
T-/u t..acioul,
S.0... Atndoft

s...,,

~~-.-....-.
Pod- (2.-6) $25.60.

- Minnesota's Greg Gape, lying prone,
Cleveland Indians rundown at third base in
the second innlnR of Monday nigl!l's game under the Metrodome in

becomes the

1

4.~. 2.10; Rat·

Bow Wow {Awr) 6.20.

tleaaake Pete (Mouaer) • .40, 3.20;
Kill&lt;- (Jidd•!7.40. ....... ~1 .
Also Raaed·l.illJ Brunell, ILa S~yliab,
Mcly Bob, Slyliall Sooa.y, Break AWl)',
N1aJ1t ......._Miado, Wotiii'P'Tiileo&lt;a (1·11).9) 1253.40.
Pod- (7-10) $27.00.
Raco-Sl,IOOCal"'i&lt;ioft l'l&lt;o.
SUYWI!th (Wiopftd) 9.21!, 6.60, 4.20;
Naohu (Paver Jr.) 4.00, 3.00; Halo'•

0... (Siaok)6.60. T-1 ,564-5.
lllao R....t-Svpt V.Ue7 S,..d, Cobt·

Meaat-Madline. Onndadcly 1\ich, Loan

Rmow, Mtac..t. B•y Flap.
- - (4-7) $25.:10.

Plftb llaoo-S2.000 Cal"'i&lt;ioft T,.._
c...,_
0...... (A.., 11.00, 4.80.
T.- """"'
Jo.) 3.60, 4.00:

5 .~

(Pa¥W

Li111o Hi N - (MiUO&lt;) 13.21!. ;..,..
I :.If 1-5.
Alao Jtacod.Cantinoftw Clllel, Loob
!Jko II t.a.IJ, --.~~oooy Noble.
EAPN" ltri4M, Whirlina P J, Denim
Socb.
lallalfTwin Tdfecu (5-1-4) 169.10.
--(5-1) 143.:10.

Sl&gt;ol&lt; R-$1.100Col"'lllon p,,._

S~enn·B·Styl•
3~

(Collina) 6.60, 4.20,

-Of ..... (B..........) 15.:10,

6-~ 8_.... ~) 5.60. Tima·U7

a .

Alao Ra~ed·Treaaury, Kupp Two,
'l'bMal J, 0ma R• Sam, s.u.-. Blue.

T ril'- (1 ... 10) $694.00.

--1104 ~.-:a••:uoClainWI&amp; ......
-

l,at/1

N_.. A (r.,.,.,.) 1!.10,

a.. Spid1 Cl.Mfonll 9.60.

1:.!9 I·!
Alto l•oM·Nlahtlc•, Ia Scots

- -Daw..................

Blu., Ori\ 11011, O...on Hill, I« Th•

T - . (1·$-4) fl57.18. Twio Trilca
12,72U:Z.

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!MUh!l :UO. 2.40, 2.40;

Out~1':1

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1.40; 6.00, !.:10;
a.lll , _ , (llollao!) 2'1.2!,10.00;

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Atte
lwUI ~-a_, .....

l..,..tn P..U..a, BillJ Joe Power.

a.-.lnlllodlblo

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11

r•all-1~16,119.40.

(1·1~ 1117.110.
Au.tlau• - 2.554. Handle -

-

Minneapolis, Minn., which the Twins won 8-S. !fere Indians third
baseman Brook Jacoby does the honors. (AP)

U.S. Open course gets break from monsoons
By MIKE NADEL
AP Sports Writer
CHASKA, Minn. (AP) - Less
tha~ two weeks ago, Hazeltine
Nattonal Golf Club looked more
like Atlantis than the cow pasture it
was once purported lObe.
Several successive days of
heavy rain had rendered the site of

this week's u.s. Open unplayable.
Helicopters were summoned in
a desperate attempt to dry the
greens. Some fairways were under
water. The parking lots were submer$ed· Hazeltine officials made
conbng~ncy plans ID shuttle SJlCCta·
IA&gt;rs to the course from miles away.
The 40,000 daily spectators were

ThbdRaco-SUOOCiaimin p,,._

l .40; P1oa-T........ tll•wtl 4.40. Timo-

ow._

'•

....., f..akm
.....,

· LA.

16.00, UO:

811 TTl NO- T.;5,w , So• Dieao.
.36!: ............
-!40; I - !k.
Louio,'.331; F -•. 321;
Blaio.- .321.
lliNS-T. h-ut•. S.
•3;
Bllllor, 1M~ 40; DoSblllb. lob·
uul, 31; Calomul, Now Yodl, 31; lUI·

f; C t

F'rlcbJ, June 14

T;,...t~9.

· o.a.o.
44;42:
- WinfiOlcl,
Oakllod.
43:
..........
Chl•p.
Cdifor-

,..,

OUcaao ., L.A. Lak~n, 9 p.m.

.

·

Watha clcudy. uack fut.
Fint R...SI ,400 ClaiminJ I'Kc.
Edanrood RcJal {Mc:Ouitc) 39.20,
13.40. 6.40; Bod Claim (M&lt;Nabb) 40.60,
72.20; Bad To The Bone (RuueU) 3.80.

ltJNS-0. Headenon, Oakland, 44;
Nollw, Mil-*-. 41: c....... Ou·
land, 39; Pol011ia, California, 31~
- · T1111, 31; Slem, Tuu, 31.
IBI-D. Henderaoa, Oakland, ·rU;

l'tllllr. . . r

Wecm.day, June 12

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Scioto

...... .33Cl

_..

. INdllll!t* 3-1

Downs rosuha for Monday, June 10.

Amerlcaa Leque

9 am-I Pill

HUIIAID'S
GIEIIHOUSE

s... Pnndlco (Bt.ck 6-5) ac Cbicaao
( - 6-l). 2:20,p.m.
Ciarinnlli (Charion 2·5) ll Moni:NI
(No-lo!), 7:311 pm.
l.oo Anaoloa (Ojeda 5-4)' o1 PiiUbuJ&amp;h
(S....., 1·2~ 7:311 p.lft.
AdaMi (Leibr. . . 5-4) ll Now Yolk
6-3J, 7:40p.m.
.Phllilclelphia (Combl 2-S) at HoUlton
(I'Muall S-2), 1:311 p.m.
St. raw. (Hill 5-3) .11 San Di~~to (Me- ·
-1·1~ IO:OS p.m.

BAniNG-C. R.iplum, Baltimore,
.3!2; B. Manln.._ S•ult. .342: Moliwr,
MII.....UO, .331: !fiom, To,.., .330; D.
H.-r.c., o.tland, .330; BainCII, Oak·

l:~~:SIIGIIG $300

ou..aot04, L.A ......... 96
s.My,June9
Chi~ 'fl. L.A. Liken 82, Chicaao

Alan Trammell said. ·
Oakland left-bander Johnny
Guzman ( 1-0) raced one batter,
Lou Wh itaker, in the eighth and got
cre&lt;lit fot his rust major league victory when Whitalcer grounded ouL
White Sox 3, Rangers 2
Rangers right fielder Ruben
Sierra's error with two outs in the
13th inning led to two unearned
runs. The loss was the Ranger.s '
I Oth in their last II games after
winning a club-record 14 in a row
in May.
Lance Johnson led _off the 1_3th
with a single and moved to second
on a sacrifice. One out later, reliever Gerald Alexander intentionally
walked Tim Raines. Joey Cora then
lifted a fly ball to Sierr~~, who was
baclcpedaling to the warning track.
The ball kicked off Sierra's glove
as both runners scored.
Brewers·?, Angels Z
Milwaukee was helped by poor
fielding by the usually flawless
Angels. A two-base throwing error
by Wally Joyner on Bill Spiers'
sacrifice led to Milwaukee's threerun third inning. Left fielder Luis
Polonia lost a ball in the lights that
led to another run. Angels rookie
catcher Ron Tingley dropped a
throw while trying to tag Paul
Molitor on a delayed ·double steal
in the ftfth.
Chris Bosio got his first win
since May 15.
Red Sox 6, Mariners 2
The Red Sox ~ad their longball
magic working. Carlos Quintana
hit two, Ellis Burks and Jack Clark
one .each as all three awoke from
l;&gt;atting slumps. Quintana hit two
home runs for the ftrst time in his.
career and had four RBis.
Quintana had been only 4-for-38
recenUy, while Burks was in a 4·
for-44 slide going into the game
and Clark was fighting an 0-for-19
slump.

NatkNull Bukttblll AuodaUon

Major league leaders

BEDDING PUNTS
NOw$300 ra.

$699 ,

Today'• p111011
(AIIIImeii EDT)

.,¥,AI.

ALL FLAts OF

CLOSED SUNDAYS

.

llolaD~6.Nn"YGik

nla42.

a.i&lt;aFlOl, l..A......... 86

P.rkley,J... 7

picked up his 16th save by retiring 10 within 8-5 when James·
Chris James with runners at th e grounder scored Fermin in the seventh.
_
corners and two out in the ninth.
Athletic:s 12, Tigers 6
' 'We got off to a good start but
The Oakland Athletics, Bas h
we couldn't add to our lead," Indians manal!llr John McNamara said. Brothers Inc.. aren't afmid of any"We can 1 put pitching and hitting one.
They are, however, wise enough
together in the same game.' '
·
Felix Fermin tied • career high to recognize a challenger to their
with four hits for the Indians and power structure. The Detroit Tigers
p_resent just such a threat
rookie Mike Huff led off the game
"'They can put some runs up
with his first American League there in a hurry just like we can,"
homer. Huff, who homered once Mark McGwire said Monday after
with t.he Dodgers in 1989, also the Athletics downed the Detroit
drove in a run in a three-run second Tjgers 12·6. "'They've got a good
inning.
offense."
.
Shane Mack had three of MinOn this day , Oakland had a
nesota's 14 hits and Kent Hrbek sreat offense. McGwire was a key
drove in a pair of runs with a sacri- 'figure. He drove in five runs with
fice fly and a groundout.
two homers, including a three-run
The winning streak is the shot to cap a six-run rally in the
Twins • longest since 1985, when eighth.
they won 10 straight. Minnesota
· •'Too many times you see cream
has won 12 ofits lastl3 games and come to the top,' ' said-Oakland
is 30-16 since starting the season 2- . manager Tony La Russa. "If a
9. The victory also completed a ~Uy's produced all his career, and
four' game sweep of the Indians, tf he ' s struggling right now ,
who have lost ftve straight
chances are the production will be
Guthrie, who was 4-1 in his pre- there at the end. •
vious seven starts. gave up four
Two streaks continued, as Minruns on five hits, including Huff's nesota won its ninth. straight with
homer, 'and threw two wild pitches. an 8-5 victory over Cleveland and
The Twins closed to within 4-3 Texas dropped its eighth in a row,
·in the third , scoring on Hrbek's falling 3--2 to Chicago in 13
grounder and an RBI single by innin~s . In those ~ames. the White
Brian Harper.
Sox extended their winning string
King gave up !~off singles to to five, the same numbers of conKirby Puckett and Hrbek in the secutive losses for the Indians.
fifth and one out later hit Harper
Milwaukee snapped its sevenwith a pitch to load the bases. game skid with a 7-2 decision at
Pagliarulo then cleared the bases California.
with the double, which hit high off · Also, it was Boston 6, SeatUe 2.
the wall in right-center field.
Jose Canseco's titree-run double
"Hitting Harper came at a bad off reliever Mike Henneman (5-2)
time," King said. "'It just grazed broke a 6-6 tie. McGwire homered
his arm ... and then I got behind off Jerry Don Gleaton to highlight
Pagliarulo in the count and I left a stretch of seven
A's hits.
the pitch out over the plate."
· But Canseco' s was the
The Twins added two runs in
"It was kind of a
the sixth on sacrifice flies by Puclc- eight
but ...... ~-~,
eu and Chili Davis. The Indians got

BuketbaO

l.oi~•Pin*

,.

w~,JuM5

wait through the winter for another
shot at his ftrst big league victory.
Then, when the Twins acquired
Jack Morris in the off·SCJISOn,
Abbott had to spend time with
Portland of the Pacific Coast
League, waiting for another shot
with the Twins.
After being recaUed May 26 and .
aent to the bullpen, the 23-year-old
right-hander had tD wait to pitch
while the TWins' starters carried
the ream.
Minnesota's starters had a 1.60
eained run average durin~ the ftrst
eight games of the winnmg sueak
and as a result Abbott, a middle
reliever, had not pitched since .May
27.
. "I wasjust wodcing on the side,
watching those starters do a 8feal
job,'' Abbou said. "It gives you
more peace, having that first win .
out of the way. When they told me
I was going to be in the pen, I was
just hoping for this op;l011Wlity."
Abbott relieved in.e ffective
starter Marie Guthrie to start the
third with the Twins trailing 4-1.
He allowed four hits, struck out
three and walked none.
In the meantime, the Twins
c~pt baclc intD the game and IA&gt;Ok a
6-4 lead on Mike Pagliarulo ' s
three-run, fifth-inning double.
"It looked like it was going to
be a lousy game,' • Twins man~er
Tom j(elly said. "That's what mtddle ~lief is for, to hold them down
so we can come back . It's a big
part of the game."
Pagliarulo's double. chased
Cleveland starter Eric King (4-5),
who allowed six runs on eight hits
and walked four.
"Usually he's ~uy good about
throwing strikes,' IndlliOS manager
John McNamara said. "Tonight, he
was in between. He didn't pitch
bad and he didn't pitch good.'
Terry Leach relieved Abbott to

BASKETBALL HALL OF FAMEAmouncod tho rc:tilwnenl of )~ Healy,
plblleky-.

llllmi•NowY-. 7140p.""
pt.+l-1
Haul&amp;an. 1:~ , ....
SL {.O.u at Sm DieJo, 11):05 p.m.

NOW T- SAT., .JUN115

Open Mon. thrv Bat.

c · r illli9,~3
St. Lao/o ~ San .......... 2
-l.SonDioJo3
l'ofcNiaoi11, Atluu I
13, Chlcor 5

c-"-·"''P-'"·
·'lh7:3Sp.m.

SALE

CUIYOUI OILY

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.... .._,IO.OODeii!Nry.,..lliii8N._
....
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,
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1101'1 Ofiii'OR Nn'el8 NOWAVMLAaft

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40' 1'111. P

DlllPEI'SI

""""' 21

San F~cilc:o .t Chi~. 2:20p.m.

AIIE...._
IITH..._

HAVE

-

WedlliiCiay's gam•

WAIT ADS

WE NOW

30

......... 21

GB

cv•

60-rear

Hours:
J1 am to Mid. Sun.-Thurs.
11 am to 1 am Fri. &amp; ~t.

........

CinoiMili

.... An.,...

'
mosl prizeci' trophy. They are the Ray Arcel,
who guided 20 world
By WILUAM KATES
Hall of Fam~:· Hagler said during champions in hi~
AP Sports Writer
career,
including J990 Hal of Farner
'CANASTOTA, N.Y. (AP)- the indliCtionS.
All eight living inductees Former two-time heavywetght
Ezzard Charles, 1991 inductee
champion Floyd Patterson was sur- champions and a trainer spanning Tony Zale, Roberto Duran and
prised ID learn he's not the forgot· more than a half century of boxing Larry Holmes.
- were on hand for the 90-minute
ten man he though! he was.
"What a thrilling moment ...
I'm at a loss for words,'' the 92His thoughu were echoed by ceremony.
Gene Fullmer and the other ~ast
Patterson, who in 1956 became year-old ttainer said.
champions inducted Sunday mto the youngest boxer at the time to
The most excited inductee was
the International Boxing Hall of win the heavyweight crown 81 age the "Mexican Flash," Carlos
Fame.
21 and later became the first fighter Ortiz, who jumped from his chair
"It's the most amazing thing," to regain the heavyweighl title, when his name was announced,
said Patterson, one of 22 past compared his indue bon lO winning pumped his fists iniD the air and
champions ensluined Sunday in the the 1952 Olympics.
shouted, •'We did it! We did it!'' to
three-year-old boxing museum. ·
"This is equal ID winning the family members in the audience.
"I retired in 1972. I've been out Olympics. Standing here now, I
"Today is a dar I thought
of the limelight for 20 yea-s. Peo- feel just like I did then. I can't would never come,' said Oniz,
pie tend to 1orget you over that express how Heel,'' he said.
who held both the junior welter·
long a time. But people here
Before the living members weight and world ligltweiaht belts
remember. It's like 1972 was yes- received their rings and were for- before retiring in 1972 with a
terday," Patterson said prior to the mally inducted, 15 other past _ record of 61-7·2.
induction ceremony, finding it dif- champions from the modem, old' The greatest fan reaction was
ficult to pull himself away from timer and pioneer eras and three saved for former middleweight
autograph-seekers.
non-boxers also were enshrined.
champion Tony Zale, who was 67·'It malccs you wonder what you
Famed international boxing his- 18-2 and best ~membered fcx his
did," said Fullmer, a middleweight torian and selection committee three title fights with Rocky
who won and !ostthe crown to ' chairman Herb Goldman read off Graziano, another 1991 inductee.
Su,gar R~y Robmson m 1957 and their names one by one, recounting
Zale, who spends muc:h of his
. retired wtth a record of 55-6-3. .
their achievements in a ring time in a wheelchair because of old
. "I don't ever ~member seemg announcer's voice as a hell tolled age and arthritis; RCeived a stand- .
thiS much enthustasm when I was for each lighter.
ing ovation.
boxing," he said.
The oldest living boxer inducted
More than 600 fight fans gath- Sunday was Jimmy McLarnin, a
ered here Sunday .ror the _museum's hanl·httting, two-time welterweight
sec~nd an~ual tnductton cere·
champion who ran up a 63-11-3
montes, whtch also featured past record in the 1930s.
inductees and special guests, such
However, the 85-year-old
as former middl~weight champion McLamin wasn't the most senior
Marvelous Marvin Hagler.
member of the class of 1991. Thai
FINAL
"The suooort of the fans is our .honor went to legendary uainer
~--...--~~----.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
CLEARANCE

992-2124

Sao Dioao

L P&lt;l.

Mandato...,...

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Pomeroy

12

23 .519
:14 .547 2 1/%
21 .ll7
4
27 .509 • 1/2
35 ' 3116 II 1/2
35 .375
12

Soo l'nodoco ...... 22

:::;:;~~~1f~·:~~ Patterson among fighters inducted
The cities need approval from •
•
B
•
H
f
F
0
~:.iri, d':na;'h'a~~~~~i~ Into st1 11 -new ox1ng a 11 o ·. ame
week's qusnerly meenngs, it could
take place in a telephone conference caU or a mail ballot.
The expansion committee's
decision leaves Buffalo, N.Y.;
Orlando, Fla.; SL Petersburg, Fla.;
and Washington, D.C., still searching for a team.
"My Qtion is we're going
to get a
team, and I think
we're going to gee a basebaU team
in the next two or three years,'' SL
Petersburg mayor David Fischer
said. "I think St. Petersburg, or
Tampa Bay, was really the logical
site. ... I think baseball recognizes
that we were a sb'Ong, suong entry
and it's just a matter of time befo~
we get an existing team."
The Florida Suncoast Dome in
downtown St. Petersburg has a
capacity of 43,200. At least $37
million in im~vements are need·
ed to equip 11 for baseball, with
about $23 million of that coming
from a r mancial package approved
by the state legislature.
"Frankly, we met the criteria
going ,away with respect to the
demographics, the TV market,
Tampa Bay unity, the state-of-theart facility, 22{1}7 preseason reservations sold in 30 days and another
3,000 sold thereafter," former St.
Peters~urg mayor Robert Ulrich
satd. ·'We met the criteria in every
way except that expansion group
-the ownership gr~ -and that
was out of our hands.'
St. Petersburg and Buffalo have
stadiums ready for baseball. Now,
they're hoping to perhaps snag a
franchise on the decline, such' as
Montreal or HouStDn.
Robert E. Rich k, the millionaire businessman who would have
owned Buffalo's expansion team,
is not P-ving up.
"'I m a free-uader and I've
always felt that the market will dictate (actions)," he said. "If a ream
is for sale ... then so be it.' •
Vinc:enl. however, doCsn 'I want
cities witbout r.eams to stan going
after the cities in trouble.
"I have been opposed, in p-!nciplc, to moving franchises,' Vin-

8
11

· West Division
.............. W
....
An.....
. .... 33
llllanto
"""""' 29

s.dey,Jue1
LA.LU.. 93, 0U..ao91

8-baO

TDIIIIIO 11 Ccveland, 7:35 p.m.
N.w Yod at Mi:aama, 1:35 p.m.

would not just summarilr rule us
"However, one strike doesn't
out of thai process,'' heS&amp;ld.
mean we are out. In the coming
Washington has already lost two months I will work with investors
baseball teams-ID Minnesota and and other baseball boosltn tD purTew - and shares a marlcet with sue teams for sale in order to bring
Baltimore.
baseball lA&gt; Washington, D.C."
"Obviously, I am disappointed
Orlando had a name, the Sunthai the nation's capital was not Rays, but didn't hav!i a S11111iwq. A
seleclcd for a major league baseball 35,000-seat park wali bi 'the worts
team," WashingtDn mayor Sharon for the 1994 season. -It would cost
Pratt Dixon said. "Everyone _ upwards of$100 million.
involved in this effon, including
"We've done everything we can
the thousands of fans who bol!'-hl do, and now we'll have tD await
season tickets, worked very. dtli- official word," said Pat Williains,
gently ID make baseball a reality m who headed up the Orlando group.
Washingtnn, D.C.
•

sAVES- Dibble, Cim::innl\i, I 5; lAD

Smith, Sl Louil, 14; Oa11o Smilh, C'hica·
~~ t•: Uff'eru, San Dieao. 13; Fl'lnca,

Transactions .

l)oonlitOIOoklond, 3:15pm.

Denver, Mif:lmi _chosen sites for new NL teams
By JIM DONAGHY
APBasebal1 Writer
Officials from the four cities
rejected by the National League
expansion committee are now scurrymg 10 come up with alternate
plaits to bring a baseball team to
their tDWn.
· Commissioner Fay Vincent cOn·
fmned Monday that the committee
has recommended Denver and
Miami for entrance into the Nation·
at League in 1993.
Approval from the major league
ownership committee is Cllpected
when it meets Wednesday in Santa

ot-

Dttroit (O.W:ckton 6-3) at Oakllnd
(llo- 1-3~ 10:05 p.m.
Mlhnuba (Aup~t4-2) at California

·'

Now Yodt, 78; C..vUto. A"71 ; Rijo, Cinc:innlli, 61; Benes, San
~64
.

(Best-&lt;Jf-seven)

Toroato jW•lll 7-4) at Cleveland .
(Swlocloll 3- ~ 1:3S p.m.
New Yodl (Stl"' .,, 7-2)
Y cr.m :1-6). 1:05 p.m.
Cbfcaao cP•maadez 2-3) l l Tuu
(R,... 3-4~ 1:311 p....

'

s'l'JUKEours--cor.. Ncw Yodl, ll; ·

Goods~,

Cblcap vs. L.A. Lctkers
(All Times EDT)

Baltim~

K.a.u City (Gubicu 1-3) at

&lt;M- 4-6), Hl P·"'

"'"¥!·

NBAFinals

Tonlaht's games
(All ilm• EDT)

MoDdaJ'I BusiHIS111811'8 Spedal (lllll_le ia Clnchmad's RIYerfrollt
Stadium, w~ic:b the Reels won 9-3. (AP)
.

Soalli..,., 4.
HOME RUNS-O 'Neill, Cincinnati,
l3; ... cOriff, San Di ..a, 13; John.•.
New Ytuil., 12: Gant, Allanta, 11; W.
Ctm. Son l'nlldoco, 11: 0 . Boll. Olica·
.... 11.
STOLEN. BASES-Coleman, New
Yark, 33; Grisaom, Moatr..l, ll: .
O.Sbioldt, .......... 26; Nix..,, A&lt;lanY,
26; 0. Smilh, Sl.l.clllit, 17.
'
PITCHING (S Dceiaioaa)-Oreene,
5-0, 1.000, 2.09; Carpootor,
SL Louia, 7·1, .87S, 2.59; R. Marduz,
1M Anpl01, 1~2, .133, 2.65; Ola.U.o,
IIU...., 1~2• .833, 2.35; Smiloy, Pi&lt;U·
......... 1 -2, .100, 3.34,

NewYo*,ll.

Monday'• scores

- I . Clovdond 5
Chlcoaol. y..., 2. t3 ituW!al
OollloOd 12, Dlonlit 6
B-6,Sooulo2
Kl..-7, Calilomi.o 2

'

-LAUlNSSTEALS TIDRD-

P~

Minnesota beats Cleveland 8-5 for Abbott's first victory
..........,.,..

TUetJI~June11,1tl1

,Page

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ex-WVU star Harris signs
with Columbus Thunderbolts
COLUMBUS; Ohio (AP) Former West Virginia quarterback
Major Harris still hopes for an NFL
career after signing a one-year contract with an Arena Football
League team, the player's agent
said.
Ed Abram of Oakland, Calif.,
said Harris signed a one-year con·
ttact with the· Columbus Thunder·
bolts Monday. Harris will receive
the basi; $500 a game each Arena
League player receives, plus $100
for each victory, Abram said.
Harris also signed a personal
services contract with the Thunderbolts, Abram sail!.
"Major chose to play for
Columbus because he wanted to
remain active in football, and he
wanted to play in the United
States," Abram said.
Harris was released two weeks
ago by the British Columbia Lions
of the Canadian Football League in
a dispute over playing time. He
was slUing on the bench behind
former Heisman 'Trophy winner
~Fiutie.
·
,
• We have had quarterback
problems. That is why we are 0-2
this year. But Maior Harris will sta·
bilize tbat problem,'' Columbus
OWDCI Joe Manalka said.
The Thunderbolts have three
other quarterflecks: Ken Lutz, formerly of San Jose State; Milton
McGriggs, formerly of Fort Hayes
State; and Bryan Brock, formerly
of TCJW Tech.
Harris will play bot not start ·

i

Thursday against Orlando, Marsal·
lea said. Harris will stan June 22
against Albany, Marsalka said.
West Virginia's starter from
1987 to 1989, Harris is the Mountaineers' career leader in ,total
offense with 7,334 yards. He finished fifth in the Heisman voting in
1988 and third in 1989.
He passed up his final year of
college eligibility to enter the NFL
draft. He was selected by the
NFL 's Los Angeles Raiders m the
12th round but signed instead with
British Colu!Tlbia.
The Raiders hold Harris • NFL
rights for another two years.
"'We are currendy talkin~ to the
Raiders about Major playmg for
them this year,'' Abram said.

MAJOR HARRIS

being advised ·to ·wear wading wouldn't be repeated._That was the
boots because the gallery areas year that Jony j.ackhn foujlhl off
were quagmires.
ramy. co 1 con Jhons ~ wm on a
· "I was_ worried as hell,'' Reed hounlf.;our0pensc that wasn 1 ready to
Mackenzte, U.S. Open general ost
. ·.
·
chairman and former Hazeltine { H~z~l.tn~ts ~rroun1·~d
president, said Monday. "But · arbm &amp;n 11~nl•s h nfa~!J su •
IA&gt;day ... today,l'm delighted."
ur · . ave 1• • w o tnts
SCC·
And for good reason. The last ond 10 1970, likednedal the course to a
week has brought sunny and breezy cow pasture, an
most e~~one
conditions. Humidity has been low. who play~d the course cnttctzed
The course and the parking lots famed dest~r Robert Trent Jones
have dried to the point that the for hts ltberal use of severe
.
.
,
three-eighths inch of rain ll!at fell . doglegs. .
Under the dtrecuon of Jones
late Sunday was a welcome sight
and not a prelude to disaster.
son, Rees~ t~e course has under"Thcre was talk yesterday after- gone a mtllton-dollar face-It ft.
noon that the fairways and greens . D~g!ess havebeen reduced or
were too hard and that we might eltmmated. Trees have matured.
need to put some water on them," Tees ~a~e been elevated to
Mackenzie said. "But the liUic bit tmprovc stghtlines.
.
of rain tDOk care of thaL"
And most pros who pracuced
Ten days ago, rain was truly a Mon~ay gave thum~s-up to the
four-letter word to Hazeltine offi- new,tmp~ved HazeiUne.
·
cials
"It's a nice •course,'' said big
The Open which runs from hitter Davis Love Ill. "It's going to
Thursday thr'ough Sunday, was be challenging but not impossible,
seen as Hazeltine's big chance to like a U.S. Open course should

V

be."

�Juno 11,

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
. . .

....

-

,•.

Paga 6

•..

•
ciimpletely losl your mind? Your
reiplllSC 10 "Mall« Over Mind in.
Missachusetts" was wrong, wrong,
IW'.o"gl He coukll!'t Slqllhinking of
hill girlfriend's previouiiO¥erS, lind
yOu told him he shouldn' be asking
19 about them in the fnt place. Ia
this day and age of AIDS, llnyone
Who is not asking prospec:tive
pli1nen about previous liaisons is
pitying Russian roulclte. Mcnover,
if •the ·next girlfriend says it's a
"ounovyerbizniz-type qUestion,· she
s~ould not be trusted enough to
~ the next girlfriend.
AIDS aside, lasting relationships
requile trust, shared values, openneSs and underslanding. Why would
you eRCOUf18e people II! withhold
illfonnalion and/or lie about issues
that arc fundamen!JIIto detumining
compalibility? Had ro-two people
never discussed their previous sex
lives and gone blissfully on to
marriage and family, they might
have been happy for a while, but I
bet it wouldn't have lasled very long.
Finally, "Matter Over Mind" says
the problem with his girlfriend
is his fault and that she is all
too willing to reinforce his low
self-esteem with accusations or
juvenile behavior. Isn't it possible
that "Molly" is a manipulative witch
who is working this py over for
her own purposes? Couldn't it be
that "Maner's" feelings of jealousy
ltei.Uy hiliJ!!uitim.

10 leU him IOIIIClhing7
Your lack of Clllpllhy fer me~~ his
been obvioUI for mMy yan. When
it memy results in 111111-buhing,
that's one thiDc- But when it clouds
your judgment.IO the point of poaihly endangering people's lives,
perhaps itslime to pact it in. _. N:O
ANN FAN IN VIRGINIA
DEAR NO FAN IN VIRGINIA:
I hope by the lime this leaer
rs
in print you will have ~
f01m off your mouth and regained

your composure.
I have always believed IIIII have
never hesitsled to say that when
couples become lqious they should

tell one IIIOiber the IIVdt lbout past
relationships. Blil - and this is a
big one - they shou1d oot give the

names and numbcq of the previous
players.
.
There is no good reason for a man
or woman 10 identify past lovets. It
invariably leads 10 slrlinc:d relalions
and serves no useful purpoee. This
has been my position for lliiiiY years
and I Sllnd by iL
Dear AIID Loden: My husllud
is 61 years old and very good-looking. Harry 1111 been bald since he
was 40 but his. IUiness hun't hun
his loob a bit and he was never
self-aJIIICiouJ about iL
· · About two months ago, Harry
said, "Don~ dtink rm crazy. but rm
growing blir." I looked, and sure
-,h, there were several little

Ann
Landers

...........

_...

ANN LANDEIIB

'l1mla I) 'c *r ...

ere--. a,.. eae."

more sprouu and his hair is indeed

growingbactin.
'
Friends are begging him for his
ICCreL He keeps telling them lhat he
isn~ doingllnydting, but they don't
believe him. Wllu'a the explanalion
for the new powdt? We can't f~pre
it out •• DAYTON
DEAR DAYTON: Dead hair
follicles cannot .be brought back to
life, but apperendy, Harry's weren't
dead. They were just "resting."
Acccrding to Dr. Paul Lazar, at the
NaliOIIII Dermatology Foundation,
this is a rare oc:cumnce, but several
eases have been recorded and it is
.elalal.to hormonal changes. So now
his Dillie fits. '

Feeling pl'tstured to hlwt sex?
How weU-informed ore you? Write
for AM Ltwltrs' booklet ·sa and
the Tee"-tlger." Send ·a u/f-addrtssed,long, busilltss-size enW!/ope,
alld a check or mQMY ·order for
$3.65 (this incllldts postage and
llandliltg) to: TttiiS, clo Ann La/1dtn, P.O. Boz 11562, Chicago, II/.
60611-0562, (In Cartadb, mad

BRADLEY JON&amp;'i

Birthday observed
Bradley Dean Jones, son of k !T

and Linda Jones, Happy Hollow
Road, Middlepon, celebrated his
ftrst birthday recently with a party
at his home.
Attending were matemal grandparents, Glen and Grace Thoma,
paternal grandmother, Diane Jones,
Ann Buskirk, Joe Buskirk, Christopller Busltirk, Ruby Burnside, Pat
'rhoma, Jim and Kristy Dailey,
Jana and Ryan Dailey and Carolyn
Dailey.
.
·
Others. presenting gifts were
Marylou lioudashelt, Faye Jones,
Mark ·and Pam Jones and Jack
Niday.

Mr. and Mrs. Roy HoweD spent
some time in Florida with their
dluahter, Mr. and Mrs. Larty (Kay)
Walker and boys. Mrs. Walker
underwent major surgery but is at
home now and doing fine.
Mrs. Ann ~h. Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Mash, Christi and Bobby, and
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne pullins I!Dd
son, Jesse, spent Sunday with Mrs.
Burdell Brofford. They also visited
the Miffm Cemetery in Gahanna.
Mrs. Ruth Douglas; Columbus,
spent the weekend wilh her mother.
Mrs. Emma Fox.
·
Mrs. Sandy Gilmore and granddaughter, Darbie, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Jame s
Gilmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Van lnwagen and boys, Cincinnati, visiti:d
\llr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs on

Monday.
Mrs. Ida Mash, Columbus, spent
a few days widt Mrs. Ann Mash.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs
and Mr. n Mrs. Entest Van Iowagen attended the wedding of their
great niece, Bridget Bing and Bob
Richie in Racine on Saturday.

POUC if.S
"Ads ouls 'li u Mer y•. Gc•llr il o r Masun
p ;11d

The May meeting of the Chatter
Club was held at the home or Doris
Wilt in Middleport.
Dues and flower fund were collected and the officerS reports were
given.
· Brenda Bolin received an
anniversary gift and Kathy Dalton
received a binhday gift.
The group planned to go out to
eat for a late Mother's Day dinner.
Games were played·and won by
Kathy Dalton, Delores Whitlock,
Linda Hubbard and Janice Fetty.
A bake sale was held during the
meeting and the door prize was
won by Mary Myers.
The next meeling will be held at
the home of Kathy Daltolj in Harrisonville.

coutt~r ~

mu s1 b u

News bn·~ e~s
1
i

d~ itltt!f

publl cuh on l o

Happ y A&lt;b
Y ard S01l us

ptllt!i O ouly TrtbttntL m .iichtnu Dvtlr 18.000' h ot Ut.'S

OAY BEFORE PUBLI CATION
COPY OEAOUNE
11 00 AM SATURDAY
MONDAY PAP ER
2 00 PM . MONDAY
tUESDAY PAPER
2 .00 PM . TUESOAV
WEONFSOAY PAPER
2 .00 PM . WEDI'IESOAV
THURSDAY PAPER
2 :00PM THURSOAY
t'HIUAY PAPER
2 IJO PM . FA IDAY
• . SUNDI\V PAP ER

BULLETIN

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

engiqe •
ded&lt; • Electric Slart
• 21" cut, staggered
wheel

•14-gaugesteeldeck

279

95
UST

'•'

-

••

list
719.95

269.95

' .I

l21ZSN

.
Self-Propelled ............ 399.95

.

t

•

•'
•'

•

V \l

PRICE REOUCEDI ·

Partial ow~J fi!landnfafft
The price
hi! been ... uc:ed to
, $n,900 and
owner t~ancin&amp;=l
u to · ~ purchase
amount may be
· e tor quaflyin&amp; to buy VII!Y nice t~llomeon 3\locresin AI·
cine. 4BR, 3 both!, 2 -es, ~e~~lld I BR apt
Property lui11les 4.800 sq. n. farm bldl

••

If~~:~·
.,

.,._

i21 .. Mlf·prOpetl. .

14 HP

•4 HP Commerel..
grede eFtglne

...

.......

I

•
~

HEMLOCK GROVE- Vacation
Bible Sdlool will be held at HemlOck Grove United Methodist
Chun:h through Friday from 6:30
pJD. 10 8:30p.m. es:h evening.

', HEMLOCK

GROVE - The
Hemloc:k Grove Christian Chun:h
will bold Vacation Bible School
rn~m 6:30 10 8:30 p.m.
Friday. This year's theme is Jesus
IIIII You at Camp Can-Do". Classes will be held fer IJIOSIWO thlough
hilh ~ehool. The c:lolina JIIOII'8RI
wiD be held June 16 11 7 p.m. All
cJilldrea Ire inviled 10 lllelld.

lhroue

' POMIIROY • Laurel Cliff Free
Melhodi•~ Chun:h will hold V.:ation Bible School throuah Pridly
ftonl 6 p.m. 10 8 p.m. c'-a will
be ~eel fer IP, four llmiP 16.
1)le PIOII•I will be on June 16 •
~

RUTI.AND - The Rutland Village Council will meet in regular
session on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Rudand Civic Center.
POMEROY • The Pomeroy and
Long Bottom Chapters of Aame
Fellowshql will meet Tuesday • 7
Jl.m. •t the Faith Full Gospel
Church in l..onj Bottom. Gerri Vincent, Akron, will be the guest
speaker. The public is invited.
POMEROY - Revival is in
progress lhloualt Wednesday II the
Believers Fellowship Mlniltry
Chun:h, Kingsbury Road. Evange.
list is Sister foy Sizemore IIIII there
are special singers nightly. Rev.
Margaret Robinson invites the public.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • A represenlltive
from Congrenman · Clarence
'

'JU,

,'?

Me•gsCounty
Area Code &amp;1•

446
367
3e8
245
251
643
379

992 MtddltrPOfl

GaHtpohs

Ch•'*•
Vinton

Rio G•ande
Guyen P isl.

985 Ch•'"

a•J

ArdiaOisl.

w•nut

Portlend
247 letart hils

949 Aa~e
742 Fhnland
66} Coohl•le

~~~~~~~~~

..........

51

Hou•hold Goods

J 2 - $pottint Goode

w ..tlld To Do

s•

56

21
22
21

NtrW Haven

liiJifl
Buthto

81
82
83
84
815

Anhquet
M ise: Mtt ch-.ndtse
Building Suppl i•

!56 Pe n tor Sate
. 67 Mulic:allnsuumenu

Bt,~lin• s Opportumty
Monev to loan
Prol•sional SJt vi&lt;:vs

· ·58
S9

Hom e lnlprowttnenl ~
Plumbmg &amp; He •mo
E.CI!'I'Aiilly .
.
Electnnl &amp; Rt:tfug uratlon
Gunt~t al t11u hnl'

86 M o btl a Hon1 o Rvp ;ut

Fnnte &amp; Vegtttabl•
For Sel e Of Trad e

8 7 Upho lste ry

PubliC Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

7 1 A~II Os f or Salu
72 Tru ck• lo t Soiiltr
73. li rtn1 • 4WO ' s
1 ,&amp; MOtorc ych•
75 Bull i S &amp; MOton lof S ,lllt
7 6 Au'o Pan s &amp; Acc:••or-••
11 Auta R ep 1111
78 C•mptng Equtpm ttnt
7 9 Camper • &amp; Mo tor Homus

MertlidiHIISP.
53

WANT
ADS

.

WORK! ;~

r

Business ·Services
i
-r========T.========r:=======:lr=::::=====:::j
J&amp;L
'S
YOUNG'S

THE

O'DELL
LUMBER
CO.
634 E. Main St. o Po•roy, OH.

Uasslftedsl
8

PubliC Sale
&amp; Auction

AUCTION

CLASSfiD
. . ADS

SPORTING GOODS STORE

In Memory,

SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 1991-11:00 AM
liqui..ting inwtnlory from former SPOilS
INCOIPOIATED atort ot 12 S. Court StrMI,
AlhtM, Ohio
SALE lOCAnGN: AlhtM foirgroun •• off Union
StrMI in the city of AlhtM
EX&lt;RLENT PIECES jndudina 1 Pma tennis racket n!Sinnflllg .
machine. almosl new:analher aood Elttllon tennis raclcet reslrilg.
ing machine; Eirsrclle aquipment. 11CQueiPMs, bitter p;ves,
elt., baller$111d ~I helmels. hats, caps, VIIKY ilfll! Rteclaori of
alhleiJ: slrles in most sizes (fodbell basluilbal\ luff, socker, tack.
walking. lennis, basebal\ etc.). fo«baals. basebllb, sdtllalb, bats,

klows. masiG, slidins

you ho- tocloy H
we could. We'd all bl to·
vother Juot Ike • lemlty
1hould.
Aft-erda . wo'd let
you go IMide: to your own
_.., ploce. If only
could hold ond klu
pretty little face lor

di!Y.

Lavod and MI-d
Purl - Pet, Mom
Dad; BMIMd

pads, assorted braces, wn1ps, cups, supports, elt., hundreds of jerseys. sweat shirts, t·shllts, link lopS, ell:.,
basebell batter trainins tees, ~on health botn, ofll!lll's clmhin&amp;
shoe linn&amp;~. iron baskellllll ~ assated clip!JJards, jackets,
sociis, wnst bends llld much more!!
· AlSO STORE FlXlURES rncluding baseball bat and tennis racket
rack. shOe fltlr's racks, crcullr ~~ racks. wrap(lllg paper
racks,
lois of fine metll conmla type racks and wall .
me!ll
~hy and lettering lijlted signl han&amp;BB and
r.tJ01 I'IIIRe.
You'd bet1tr ehow up 8ftd Mlect oome of
thele excellent plecMI Spor11 Inc. handled
only top of the line merchandlea end only
name brand merchandile.
PUILIC WELCOME AS ARE DEALERS!

strip.,
sh!Mtf

TERMS:

THESE DRUGS
DON'T COME IN
CHILDPROOF
BOTTLES.

STEWART
One yNr ago you left
ue. for that owaat
home on high.
God etretched Hlo
hand toward you;
.We did not quHtfon
why.
f\lo ·paln will ever enter
I!IYOIId that lhfnlng
gilt e.
W• k11ow you made It
over
Before It wee too late.
We mlee your face,
your laugh, your
emile,
And tender h•"· you
•

•

!

!

The Daily
Sentinel

-=

But you ere thoro,
alone with God
And now W. know
you're frN.
We mutt mtlle the
right daaleloaw
To vlllt you ag•n
In thllt land of no tomolfOwt;
lt'e juot around the
band.
·
If JeiUI hal I (llrdln,
And
only He~~~ren
knowe.
You will be among h.
A brfeht end 811lnl111

rtlle.

ledlym~lly

''

~~----------~---~-------.--.--- ·
'y . . _.., -· ... - -• """"'" • • --.,. - ~ -· . . _, ~ - • •' . . .. . ...
'

Rtfrts~mtnts AYiillble
Cis~ or Check with Positive

AUCTION
HOUSEHOLD. WITH ANTIQUES
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 1991-6:30 pm
· ATHENS, 01110: On lht corner of Elmwood
and Eost State Street. - long time family
.
rtaldlnct.
·.
Nearly new sofa bed w/ maple tram: heavy maple rocker,
brass floor lamp, matthma pair of llble lamps, what-not
shelves, glass lOll ~lfee llble. VIIY small compact color TV.
mce Victorian picture and other pictures, 4 drawer maple
chest on chest, end lebles, II! moon stands, oak rocking
cha1r, ball and daw lulchen captlin choir, copP.er boiler, 5
pc. walnut bedroom su~e willl posler bed, van tly wrth long
drOll center mirror, vanrty stool, dresser and side chair, all
wtlh ball and claw feet: 16" •ound VIctorian walnut white
marble lOll sllnd, 2 walnut whale marble lOll lyre bottom
stands, Duncan Phvfe lyre bottom stand, white marble oval
lOll Victorian stand, 3 pc. walnut parlor set wrth attached
carvinp, larp 3 tier ball and claw pie crust stand, sewing
rocker, early uh one drawer ni&amp;ht stand, early handmade
blanket chest walnut desk, one drawer maple desk, oak
trssdle -1111 midline, 2twin aile 30's posllr bids, lmed
oa~ bad and dres•r, SO's 01k krtcllan table anti 4 chairs,
lnlsslon 011t blok lllnd, handmade quillS, silver tel set, 6
place Mllma ol Haviland china, Currier &amp; lves prints, small
IIIDk jiCktl. mtlll fireside wood reck. wheefbenow, ladder,
1111111 lfldw, cisllm manhole, etectrk: motor. several con·
tljnen of mise. hand tooli.J.wosene heater, interro• doot'
lnd

MUCH MOI!f; NOT us IUtt!
~ (... or ciMck with pelltlwe l.D.

...
..........
OWNEia DANA TOM

•as•uns "''"MI -

'""' ,_ lawn t11a111

AUCliONII• IOMIY HOWm

-c
...- -lloollnt
-t-a•·-

EMILEE MERINAR .
Owner &amp;

Operator

-ftoom AMdona
-G..., wort.
-l-and

SHRUB &amp; TIEl
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD ·

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
•·12·10-tfn

W. H. MOilLE
HOME PAllS

If yO..' re in 111td
of Mobile Home
1
Parts or
Accessories...

SEE US FIRSTI
992·5100
IT. 33 WISI ·OF
DAIWIN, OliO
Cte4Uife

SIGNS
by

tlck mo•llttl(

B9"frby
~UALITY
Pakll

Til-COUNTY
SANITAnON

SEPTIC TA,. PUMPING
POIT-A·JOHN RENTAl
742-2518

4·21·1 mo. pd.

SMALL
WANt ADS

PACK

A8(; AKHI

\,I

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM. SIDING
•ILDWN IN
INSULATION

INSULATION

· PAINTING
111111101 •

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

mneo•

•Aeplaeement

FAEE ESTIMATES

CFREE UTIMATIBI

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

"free EttlmatN"

Y. C. YOUNG Ill

PH. 949-2101
or 111. 949·2160

YEIY IEASONAIII
HA YE IEFUENCES
(6141 ··5~4110

P-lnt

992-621

..

•

AU lUllS
.... It .. Or ••

Plcllllp•

POMEROY

BACKHOE

BOWLING

WORK

sao l•st 2nd St.
992-3432 or
992-2403
1,4-'11 -t mo .

2171.........
N'Dtl,.,_
II

TIUCIIING AVAILAILE
FREE EITIMATES

.........,.'

CAIIPI1 CIIAIIIS
... ftLI PLOOI CAll
•IINeonlbll IIIItH
•Clulilhy Work
•Free Eetlmetee
•Caraet Htl flit Dry
Time
•High Glo• on Tlla
·Floor Flnleh
MillE LIWIS. Ow..,
II. I, lootloool. OH.

742·2451

992-7451

3-14-'91-lln

4·211·11· 1

•A •modeling end

Home Aep1lra
•Roofing
•Siding

•P1intlng

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

IISS~ . &amp;

lUilE
CONSYIUCnON

...........

CONSTIUcnON
992-6641 or
. 691-6164
1 Z·ll ·110-tln

,,.,,
."..'""''

H8nd Tufting
Cuatom Dntpee
36 \'Olio EtcporlenM

614·991·1111

eiiY ..... .,....
OPIN

Tuwdly thru letunley
10:00 •m-1:00 pm

Boward

L WritHe!

ROOFING
NEW- IEPAII
Gutters
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

4-5·91-1 ... pd..

. BISSEU
8UILDERS

CUSTOM IIRLT
HOMES I GARAGES

FULLY INSURED
FlEE ESTIMATES

"At leoton..la PrkH"

PH. 949-2101
., ln. 949·1160

CEDAI
CONSIIUmON
992-6641 or
691-6164

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE

ACADEMIC
AWAIDS
GOLF LESSONS

1·14·'81-tftt

eSidowalks
•Patios

6· FOI S55

Stop &amp; Cen~pue
frHistlnlatll

915·4U3

FAEE ESTIMATES

667·6179

992-7130

CUSTOM GOLF
CLUIS

51. . . .
JOHN T. nAFOID .'
CllnD, OfiO
' '

..

lOS N. Seclltll Slr•t
.-uoll, 0110 4S760

Office 614-992-2116
110111 614-tft-S6t2

All CONDIIKINEIIS • ..AT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOI MOllE I DOUILEWIDE HOMES
o o 0

0

0

I

I

I

I

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

o o

BENNETT'S

DOml

o o 0

o o o o

o 0 o 0

0

o 0

Mo•u HOME

"::1:::

1' .

.._lltl 0. s.Her4 SchMI IW. eff It, 14i
(614) ....9416., 1·100·171·5967
4·211·11

..........
.......,._.,
.....
.............,, ..
. . APPU. .as

ttur williAm

..,.. .
'

lllftiS-S.. ""

-

.

lepalr, Trophlas, ·

1 -4-'11 · 1 mo.

5-31-'90 1fn

W. ley Whet W. Do.
WeDo-Weley.
10-lf-1 MO.

STIWAIT'S
GUNSISUPPI.•s

1139 Bryan Place
Mlddlepor1,

•Driveways

UPHOLSTDY
11J.... IIII ..

992-2772 or
742-2251

Downspouts ·

•SIIbl
1Olfe DISCOUNT TO
SIIIIIOI aftliiiS

--

JAMES IEISEE

•Remodeling and
Ho~?Mt Repalre
•Roofing
•Siding
•Peinting .

•c-plete

··--'···

•lnaulatlon

(614)
696-1006
1-1-'tl

•Garat~•

CEDAR

Wlndowa
•Roofing

1·10·'11· 1 mo.

Open Tu.... Thun ..
Fri .• Set. 7;30 p.m .

PODLTYIHO DACIIINI

........ ,...Office

BULLDOZER end
BACKHOE WORK.
HOME SITES.
LANDCLEARING,
WATER end SEWER
LINES '

''"""'

BOB JONES
EXCAVAnNG
DOZER and

ON'S APPLIAIICI
SilVIa
t92·SJSS er
91S·JS61

HOWARD .EXCAVATING

.

: aowL

MICIOWAYE

OYIN-AII

NO SUNDAY CAlLS

t

•VInyl Siding

Tab lht pllin out of
pointifll,
I
Let me do It for you.

WE 'DO

ROOFING

AND RIIYTII.G . .DD.ATH

.TROMM BUILDERS

ontn-Srt 111

ON'S APftiANCE
.SEIIVKE

742·2421
I'll Iii. •taldl

m.sns • tas-as•1

btl••- ...
U..IW.

......... " " Clfllat
~
Of, OliO
IOJJOflt lf1

1-10.1l·tfw.

hulbtmflndfa
il

1.0.

AUCTIONEER: RODNEY HOWERY
614 698-7231 or 614 594-3780

IN MEMORY OF
RUBY MARLENE

skin care.

Grooming

Pomeroy,

canh;p

In M-ory Of
SHELLEY MAXINE
SMITH .
G•a4ywro

CARPENTER SERVKE

614-992-6820

.~WHO-IJ.O-O

..... - -

GROOM
ROOM
for All lrllds

the

,.

18

Trans JOr t aiJo n

47 W..-.t ed to Rent
48 . Equtpnltnl10f Aunt
49 f01 LI Me

1•

Pt Pl. .~~nt
Leon
Apple Grovlt
Mae on

Complete

Bead

'

I;ID"'

41 Space tO. Rent

HelD W.m:ud

Hay &amp; Gram
Sued &amp; hrhlil ef

w-

botlo•

dangers from friends. Their
friends may be those who try
to sell drugs to them..
·
You can't childproof a bottle
when it comes to street drugs.
But you can drug-proof your
children by talking to them
before someone else does.

HouMS tor Ren t
Mobil e Homn hu Rttll

l i \l est o~

comes back folding money

whh

Cocaine, marijuana, sp~ ed ,
crack and other common
teenage drugs are passed
around in plastic bags, small
vials or just hand to hand.
They don't come in compli·
cated containers when they're
sold to children for quick use.
The side effects of these drugs
aren't written on bottles, and
your children won't learn the

41
42

4 3 Fe, ma tor Rltf'l
•• Apartment tor Ro nt
' 45 Furntshed Ro o ma

Sttuettori W~~nt•
13 lnsur• nc:e
Bustn•s Tre1mng
11 Schools • lnsuuc:unn
16 Aldio. TV &amp; CB Rttplur
11· Mtstall llfttiOUS

A••• Code 30•

67!i
458
576
773
882
895
937

36

Busm•• Bu•dtnga
Lou a. Ac:re~g e
Re al Estat e Wtnhtd

3l
35

Happy~~

hun Eq uepmunl
W01nt ed t o Buv

Ill 11. 1S, 2S; (7) 2, (ltc
llaodovMio. Oh. 4117721..__ _ _ _ _ _ _

'

ttl .. diCit

SAT. 7-6

Lo,t a(!d Found
V•d Sele tpatd tn a dva n n l

11
12

M•s.onCo , WV

Pomerov

Elo~'=!:::A~~

one more

Lifesuard trainias will be
ofC~red by the London Pool in
Syncuse on June 18-July 3.
Class times are 6-11 p.m. and the
fee is$45.
l'lrticipants must be It least IS
years of qe and to register call the
pool at 1192-911011.
·

G•lli • Coumw
Ar e• Code &amp;1•

Bhciwn

MON.-FRI . 7-6:30

6
7

6 ,;
62
63
64
&amp;5

a few pennies spent here

c -...111

THURSDAY
GALLIPOl-IS • The Diabetes
Support Group will meet Thursday
in the French 500 Room at Holzer
Medical Center. Denise Phelps, ET
Nurse, will speak on the topic of

London Pool offers
lifeguard training

tlu•

•Recoil 1t1rt

9.92·5500

•nnoucem•t s
Givt -.way

992~2156 ~-

Call 614·992·7104 tor Appt.

•C.st 1lunHnum

..

3
4
5

IN THE
th1 Eltlte of Wll•er P. thur L. lpena.. o-uld.
Unleol · ••cepttono ere
NOTICE TO·IIDDEAI
COMMON PlEAI COUAT
· DeoMMd .
The lo.d of Edu.,..lon of
PROlATE DIVIIION
IITATI NO. 2ee37 - Fl· !Hod thereto, llld eccounta
MIIGI COUNTY. OHIO
nol•dDIItrtlKrtlvoAooount will bl for hHrlng bllore
Eoltern Loo&lt;ll School D..
of JeMI hlln, Admlnlltrl· llid Court on the 12th day
ttlol dnlree m NColvo IN THE MAnER OF
tor of the hlate of HonryC. DIJuly, 1881 , etwhlchtlme
oMiod bldoonthefoHowlng: SETTLEMENT OF
uld -unto will bl conoid·
Dolry Producto. B*orv ACCOUNTS
Tu-r, Doce-.
P10duct1, O..ollna. Dlllol PROlATE COURT
!ITAT! NO. 21348- Fl· Mid continUed from dlly
Fuol, Fu.t 01. 011 • GrHII, MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
nol Aocount of Edna M..tne to doy untH finally dl.,._
. Tl- • Tuble.
Accounto and vouch.,. of OooltHI, Eucuttlx of tho Eo· of.
'
Any peroon tnterllted
Spoclfloatloll ah-• ere the following named flducl· 1111 of Charlet N. 011IIHI,
may tt•
oxaeptlono
evalloble et the t,..ourer'• lfiH have bien ftlod In the D-.lod.
office.
PIOblll
Court,
Mllgo
ESTATE NO. 281171- Fl· to Mid 1ccount1 or ~o m~~tt­
In order to bl can-..d c nty Qhl fo op· -av•l nol •d Dllttlbu•lve Aooount ero pertaining ta the •ocu·
ell ......, bldo ahell bl re- ..o:f Hti•me~t: r ... ·
of Undo Putne;,, Anolllery tlon of the tNII; not 1111
ESTATE NO . 24102 Admlnlatrttrbt of the Eltetia than live daya prior to the
celvod In the treuurer'o of·
\flae by 12 o'cloall noon on fourth Aocount o1 Donver L. of Soph.. P. Dolo, De· ditto Ill lor hurlng.
'
Roblrt E. luall. Judtl•
.,
lllceenciNord.lllce.Guer· . . - .
July 1.1111.
Common PI- Court.
The bldl will bl for the dleno of the Penon end EoESTATE NO. ze881 ..:. fl . ""'blt•Divloktn
1111·12 ft.,.l ynr. Sold me ofWIIIIom Uoyd Alee.
noiMdDIItributlvtoAaoaunt
' Mllti Count\'. Ohio
loenlofEdu•tlonr.1!1TATIN0.21111-FI· of LAir- A. lrown 1r1d
the right to ,.....,, or Nject nolend Dlltrlbutl¥oAocount l,.,.dl Weber, Co-Adml• JUNI! 11, 1H1
•.
onv
and ell perto ol •nv end 1
· .1------.:~-...J--~..;;.----...L....;------~:
oil bide.
I":::oi~D:,:•:;vld:_:BIO:::-:::·.:;E.:,:•ocu:t:or:,:of:,J~tr~o~b:l:•:.;of:.::;the:,:l::•l8:18:.:,of:,:A:;r,;.

IEAIIAGGER
PUSH MOWEI4656
•20"' pulh mo..,

Self-Propelled
Mower 1243

~

BOARD~

H on1• let S al e
M oblhr Ho n1 n lo r Sill 'I!
33 F•rm• lot s .. e

31
32

8 PubWc Slle. Auction
9 WMt .. to Buy

fullowiral{ t elt•ph•;,lf' t•xc'lumJ.(t'.~ ...

· A cl ,ll ,.htKI adwer1151Jmvnl ~l ..ct.!d m Thl! O;t tly S !!Uttnell t:•
c ~1
cla n thud (ht~l..._ . 8usm un Ctud and h."9 al nott cnl
wtll Ot l$o ••~JHt tlf tn lit e Pt Pl cMttnl R cgt&amp;1Uf ;n ul Hut G a lli

Self-Propelled

Miller's office will conduct an
open door session from II to 1
p.m. at the courthouse in Pomeroy
on Wednesday. Questions regarding the Federal Government should
be addressed to the reprcsentalive.

PQMEROY - There will be a
dinner at the Meigs County Senior
Center on Thursd~ with serving
from 5-6:30 p.m. The cost for the
meal is $3 with a menu of baked
c:hicken breast, homemade noodles,
mashed potatoes, cole slaw, biscuit
and beverage. Pie wiD be available
for 75 cents. Following dinner,
music will be pla)'M by Junior and
Rita White, AI. Windon and Ray
Ward. A free will offering wiD be
iaken for the musicians. The pubUc
is invited to atblld. .
·

16
16

C.d ol n..,ks

2 In Mernofy

.42
.60
.05/ day

Cla.~sifit•tl l'"l{t' .~ cm •t•r

Curd o llhanks

iW;J:-

ron.

15

1

~)I''VIt.t'~

mak t~

IH MUmonam

Community calendar

MIDDLEPORT • Ev~df:~ne
Chapter No. 172, OES, Mi
n,
will hold its annual inspection on
Thursday at 7:30 p.m . Deputy
grand matron Betty Schenkel will
be the inspecting officer. Officers
wear ct.apter dresses. Members
bring sandwiches, relish plate or
fruit salad.
.

$6.00
&amp;9.00
$13.00
t1 .30/ d8y

16 '

PUbliC Notice

• 4·HPcnmmercial-grade
engine • Easy on/off side
~~==II or rear gms bag available
• 21" cut, staggered wheel

.20
. 30

ErJrtJIIJy:r 1:111

CO UI! Ct mn
'Adi lhlt rnu s t be pard m adv• ncv ou• ~

Funeral services were held in
Moscow in 11185 for Soviet leader
K.onstantin U. Chemenko, after
which Vice President Bush met
with Chemenko's successor.
Mikhail S. Gorbachev. .
Eli Whitney received a patent in
1794 for his couon gin, an invention that revolution~ America's
cotton industty.

Push Mower 1.21ZP!'I

.

,I

L•rrn SrJppllf~S
/&lt;; lrvt:SIIit.k

ov, r 15 Wordo

' Pucu of ad 101 01 \1 caprlo11llettttn rs do\l blu putu of a d co • l
'1 ptunl l11tt1 type unly used
,
' S cmm ul " no l rttspon5rbltt tor urr Urs o.I1Ur flf st .dw;' (Ch uck
fm •vnu" hnl diJV ad runs ur plpurl . Citlll u~t o ul 2 . 00 p 111 .

healtb fair In
500 Room
on the outside 'patios from 10
a.m ••, p.m. Tile event Is open and tree to the
pablic. Tllere will be screenings, exhibits,
clemODstnlloas and an abundance of take home
Information to help people maintain a healthy
lifestyle.
'
.

REEDSVILLE - Success
Chun:h of Christ will hold Vacacblr.
tion Bible School at TuPJielS Plains
Elementary School through Friday
TUESDAY ·
from II a.m. to 11:30 a.m. with
, REEDSVll.LE - "Jesus and You . classes for nursery thl'l)ugh sixth
~t Camp Can-Do" will be the
grade. Trans~on is available
theme for Riverview Community by calling Roben White at 696Vacalion Bible Schoollhroulh Fri- 1077 or Joe Hoskins at 667-6973.
day at Riverview School. Clasaes
begin at 6:30p.m . and continue
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
until 9 p.m. All ages, including United Methodist, SL Paul Lutherl!luiiS, are welcome to aaend.
an and Trinity Congregational
· Churthcs will hold a joint Vacation
~ ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Bible School from June 10 tluough
S)&gt;rings United Methodist Chun:h June 14 at' Trinity Church, locaiCCI
~ill hold Vacation Bible School
at Secood and Lynn Strcers. Classtlirough Friday from 9:30 a.m. to es will be offered for children aged
three through sixth grsde and all
children arc invited. The theme is
: POMEROY - Enterprise United MShate God's Blessings." Sessions
'!'ethodist Church will hold Vaca- will be held from 9 a.m. 10 11:30
tiOn Bible School through Friday p.m. Call 11112-3172 for informatiOfL
.
fiom 9 a.m. to II :30 a.m.

u .oo

A-at tn are tOt con.-cui1V41 runs. brallen u pdiY&amp; Wtll be dl • ged
tot e ach dflt • • s..-r••• HI;.

$ SO dtscoum tor adl paatd rn adVan cu.
Gutu away '"'d Found ads undet 15 wonts will be
'"'' 3 d~ • •• no ch•ge .
'
·

2

7 p.in: The theme is "Jesus and
You at Camp Can-Do."

pr~

Rate

· 15

6
10
Monthly

' A e ci!N t~
•f r .:t ~ ads

. yw?

: Community Calendar Items
appear twu clayw before aa eYnt
iad tile day of tbat event. lteJU
• • be reeeived well ill advance
IQ,•ure publk:atiOD in the caleD·

Words

Oay5
1
'3

CLOSED SUNDAY

...... ..r-~

Chatter Club meets

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Laurel Clift community notes

ft/DS sho_uld be· everyone's business
• Dear Ana Landen: Have you

Classifi

'

TUesday,June11,1991

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

fllllniiATD

,.

•20 Y11r11 Experience
eQuellty Homee and
Cuttom Remodellfl9

742-2311

. 1122/tfn

•••

'

�1\.leldly, JUne 11, 1991
June 11 .1191
32 Mobile Homes

Arno u rK l"lle r'!,

44

Apartment
lor Rent

for Sale

18

!'¥"..

_..,....

Fatd AI- ,__ bod • - r.

114 ... ....

FrM P"FP'II 10 ~ home
lui
•llloocfod
w-.114-141-24i7

~~N ~ PE~

WEEK
~EADING BOOKS AT HOME.
~~~no.7-ko CALL 1-415-473-11140 EXT. Blll5.

To narno molhof Collco
... , ........... 114..........

-n

w.-

bm Extra ~I
t,.ln,
work pur own hoU.., U.., cur,.,. lab. 24hr 21ws&amp;-3213

Exmf
EARN MONEY Aoldkll(l Boakll
II)Come Pa4onnol.
pC)UNI)o '
=-rd, • Moll Ho&lt;lnd 114-112· Dolollo. It - - Ell. y.
10118.
FIIEE JOB TRAINING OHIO AND
W.VL YDUTHB. Are you Inti114-1124181.
tid In trllnlngln hMIIo occupoo
lion ouch .. LPN, Hunlnw 10o
LOBT· 2 loo- biOM Hck olelonl, -!all .tulotont ond
..,...., ~.White a tan.,..-,

6

Lost &amp;Found

•·-r'·

Wanted to Do ·

34
Business
Win llobyolt -klndo 11 your
Buildings
hoUM or mine. Have rtftrencel. ,
114-tt2-4103.
Building Far Aonl: 10x30 Cicio
To Town, Coi!C- ~ )!u
Wll
bUild
polio
.......
·
·
oareonod roamo, pu1 up vinYl Etoelrlc I Wllllj_ 114o44....12
oldlng ar troller oklrtlng. IM· ExL 212 llltor. ..,.m,, 114-441111:1 Enning-.
241-41157.
.
-CE POll LEASE on
Wll ..,. "" oldoriy In OFFICE
2nd Awo., Clolllpallo. ClaM to
my haN, Allzholmore COu, Hauu. 1 room, 2 rooma,
loll, 114-4t7.f113.
, ......,4-.ANnlcely
Will Do l!obvoltllngln My Homo. -..1111, olr -Ianing,
~~':u~lliOFIIllilo AduN. 114- ,your w11or I bill ore po1a.
Mlkl your now. No
qua1oo lho llhono, you
rnu.1 them. Pr.ont a •n
Flllanc1al
:rl~;:".!.
doy,

·--

21

35 Lota &amp; Acreage ·

. Business

Log

I. ICrwage IVIIIable for

new home •-ruction an
Opportunity
Roybuin Aced. Povod - .
county
wllor
INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUSLIIHING CO. ry!r!Ctlono. COr\oplolo lnfvnno·
lion
mollod
an
roquoll.
3M-t71ro-monla IIIII you do bUolo
!11M wllh pooplo
k -1 ond 11213, John o. Clorloah, no
NOT loOIIMI .....,,.._h lhe llng-ldllrolloro, plo-.
_, clarki. Allo, moll unll you have 1.-lgllld
- - Dlllor oreo 114- trolnlng In .. lllelgo
·
. 2v.t.....
Y"""' the_.... .
.,. ldcfllon.
1'hli VIUI lnd
'1112-·2331, t.wo on worn~n and men ~ run
hoo- lncludod. 304ald. Old al - . drofo!Mil• or Mhur'o Chain Unk • Fenco. -77WIII.
grocloMI• -Into Pl. PM. Jolo Rooldonllll, Carnmorclll, In·
Sorvlae, 221 llllh II, P - dUIIrlol, Freo Elllmllool Cam' :1-4 Acroo Ovortoaklng Your
PIMUIII, Thur'8dly, June 13, Dlolo lnololllllon. Phono: 114Own Beet Dock. All lJIIIHioo
10:001m IO 3:G0 pm, 10 lor Jolo tl4-4:m
.
Down, 1111-- 114-251·
Carpo rop.
(
Vondlng llaut!M:ooh Buolnou 1218.
Yard Sale
FIIIJ.IIme-W~W11h Far Solo~p. Sill Quickly. 1·
IDTS FOR SALE In GIIHpallo
Public. - i ! l l Expoitonco 100 344o
.
.
Forry. Will
trolloro. cHy
Hecollirr. Sond .
To:
wat ... IVIIIIbltl. Phon11 304-illP.O. Box 21S, Golllpollo, OH l.Gelt Vending AoUie. For Sale, 2722
•.
Cheep. t.-.:~J~t.-.
W31.
.
·
Gallipolis
Vondlng Aauto: Far Sole. CUh Privett, 1 112 Acrw, Unra'lltrtcted.
Rodney,_
$15,000.
&amp; VIcinity
B u -. Hlall Trofflc Locol Rl.35,
l.ocl!llono. Hoft ... Uochlnoo On (-IIIIo OW.. HnencoJ 114·
24H441.
I , _ , Yord - : CI-M*""'o
Uo"'"'. 1-400 Ill 03M.
Clolhlo, FumNunt, Etc. 2711
,....,, Gllllpollo, TUoldoy,
For
RIVer be'* proporty In
22 Money to Loan
--m-1111.
Ww4l IIIIJJ, 1:00..:00.
Holr llytill noodld, - h rent·
LIMNS BY IIAIL
I , - t~~ awn ~be
AU. Tord 8oloo II Pold In I
your"""'
' :104-4,....T.J or Up to 11,000 F... l Sotlolocllon
Hentals
.W..OIIO. DIADUHI!: 2:00 p.m. 17Wm.
. . . doy - · h e od lo 10 Nn.
"""'"' l d - • 2:GO p.m. lnvnldlllo ~nlnao Avollobll 1 - 11111127 ..... ,...
......... lllo!tdor odNion ° 2:00 Far Ful~nmo A.N.IL.P.N.'o. 11·7
............y.
.
Shift. A1oo Avollllllo flori.IIIM
A.NJLP.N. C..OU!vo Wagoo,
.luno 11-13, I:CIII-4~ 1.. Sollor Dl-111 Willi E.-nee,
- · Wn1INL Lclo ......,_ I Floxlblo Schodullna Avollobll.
~ Clolhoo, I WhHior And Conllct The Dlrocfar of Nu,..
31 Homes tor Saie .
lng, P._rool Coro Conlor, 1111
Wl4i IIIIIIJ, 12th, 1 mit. ~ P I - Drlvo, Gllllpolll, Ofllo S or 4br Flnlohldlll-,~
481131 1,._.7112. Equoo ' Opo
Grooi\ 'Cffy So
li'i;~;;;~~~;i;Y,iii
· 'Grot.•
- etoehlng,
Ad. portunlly Employer.
Dlllrlcl, Lei,
ClaM To T...., &amp; 3 bodr- nlco lo1, 2 o""f, In
••--.
lllbf, mene
......11.141.000.tM41144a. town. ........,., new fUmKe,
-lion
Avolllblo
In
3044711-11'11 oft• I:GO Pll.
Hc.'O*ooplng. Apply In Po-. -- •rul
Pomeroy,
Btl_.10-11un. W•lulan. 8t Hooil ,..., I M- flram Hoi- I roomo, beth, 2110 North lloln
- w...orn Wl ..m Ann', .,, ,.'o, '""'" North Clillll St, Point P-orft, :104-4111·1811.
Middleport
A-...
No H.S., Al.130, -M7111.
Fow bedroom brick ranch,
flltano Cillo Plleoo.
VIcinity
4br, 1 112
Fr HIL FuK !:"~~
llroptoao pluo
!IIIIMIIf. 2 lalhl.a. ~. CIOM
burnw, - - S47&amp;trno.
oO T-n~ Dood ana Slrool, - N d ,.;;-ft~roklr. 304Prlcod To ..nr -11-71:12.
1711o18«1ar ~2405.

f:ii~~K==

rau

....

oc-

-mo

-=

Clo-.-·-··

....,.,.

-

w·-

-, 2

Clol lpallo.

a

-,_G_ A-.

.ory

,_,

:"~'L~!.~h.~ 42

Down, SZOtflmo, 114-211-1211.
F - - Aroo,. P-ay. 2 14x70 3 bldroom In Rutland
Storr Homo. Kllchon,
lothroom &amp; Corpollng. · t7 oreo. 1225.00 Dluo - · no

Juno 11·12, 2 mlloo an Hrull
11un alll11124, T - A.. fondJ

....
sm.

c;zz:.~~

:.~-:...

Mobile Homes
for Rent

mlio. l!l.iii:

.

Public sale

a Auction

pliO, 114o'fl12o20'11.

""-· 114-4411-2311.

-

In Cffy: 5br, 4 llotha, UIIINy
~-. Flllllly I Llvfnil
A00t11 Wllh Pockl1 o-o,
Glroao I lion! Carnoi ol
Fowih &amp; Stllo. C1oM To
Scllaolo, 114-441-21111 lfttr

14x7U IMioilo homo Sond Hill
Aold, :104-f71.1a4.

2 l1droom lloblle Hol'n!r Lower

Third A - , Prlnle ,..otlng,
w.ter 'umlelwd. NIOfmo, Plu.
UIIINio&amp; O...h And Ao,_onco
?p.m.
Aoqulred. Phone: 114-441-3711
Paint - n t . W'lolloull • 5 AIIOrlp.m. '
- •1.4.11odr- 31ull llolha,
Nlal UnH,
booldUII ~. onoraY elfl. 2111', AC, Clbll, Very View
In
clonl, IIIII" kllcllon, ptonly of Konol!ll, NoAlvor
CNy T-1 F01o
coblno1o,
--·
dl-1;
bod-•llrro
Willi
11'1" -1103.lllibllo H - Porll. 114-441·
- . . . 1ormo clnlng utHhr, roam an mern 11¥11, 3 IR lrolor, Mil Creak Ad.
,_ly ,....., II",...,-..._
1100 clop. 114-311'
third both ond bodroam In 0434.
.......,.,., two luU lonll, 32141,
Far Nil ar ronl: Mabllo home
morl)l lllree you would
-.,,_ lumlohad,
Ia llild In 1 muah - . •XP""" 12XIO,
olvo homo. ~ IO'o, :104-4'11- ~~ u-rplnnod. 114:rotv•
phone
Rlduoo~ To Soli: 2 llorr :lbr
Lei "' Cfllohlro, Ofllo. 114 1•• 0101 or
- . . CondNion. -1132·
H51,-·'117U.
44
Apartment

-llul .

1210.-.

••fiiCI

....... ,. ...,, ........ *"'
·~----·-4

,....,..... 1111

--

TO 111M .tllltlo .......... _ C o l
Lony LlwofJ, 114111 II'.

=
.,.,.,. =;'. .

32 Mobile Homes

WII-TOiur:~

I'l:'l:!l.

for Sale

114o

- ......

for Rent
2br Aportment Far Aont. In

Crown cny. 114-25&amp;4415.

, . _ • AI~ Colt 11ot11yn

..._tot-...s.

~~7~21m.

Nlco Z Iii, 4 V2 mi. from CJol.
llpollo. Stove I rolrlg., wator &amp;
truh plcl..,p pold, S235/mo. No
Aloo, 2. BA opootmont In
Rio Oronclo. 114-441~.
Fumlohod mobile homo, 1 milo
below town. o~ rlvw,
Nol - - "" Children, Plio,
CA.I-st.
Now oCclpll~ oppllcallono lor
Uooon Aporlmonlo. Equol Houolng Opp., olr cond., llun*y
roam, trM lrooh pickup, c Ia llarH &amp; oahoolo. 304-T13552V.

45

Furnished
Rooins
Aporlment ovdobll lw 2 ar 3
--ion---·

-··--·

11a1o1o H - Porlt,
A - 33, Nartlo of Parnoroy.
~·.~-. porto, ..... Cl~

S,.._.J1171,

Merchandise

5I

114

t=r

12

Situation
Wanted

Sotil
-·'"'
Sll;IIM.OO.OPEH:
7 pc. Codor
81 room
Iuiie.
Mondoy Thru Soturdor, lo.m. lo
lp.m., Sundoy 12 rooon Till
lp.m., 4 111101 ON Aaulo 7 On
lfoulo 141 In Clntonorr.

!:'rTfY ~'s CM

Ill
0,.,.,..._.,.,

llap In The Gun lhoot And Soo
S h l - Ot Colfoa.
•Do- K-. Greoo Far Fo.IIOYI - l l o - · · 114-4417051.

PHIPPS 1111 by Joseph Farris

Motorcycles

74

53

Antiques
luy ar 1111. A - Antlquoo.
1124 E. lllln 11-, P - .
Ho&lt;Jre: II.T.W.10:00 o.m.lo S:l10
p.m..._
- Y 1:GO to 1:00 p.m.
114-... 21521.
·
·
54 MIICIIIaneous

Marchandlae

:~p ~'b 1 1l'o!,ld~=~

1110.114 111 1111

710 Tolloaao lllcko, sea. 1171
Chryolor NIMport, - · 11444WOD7.

lhp

.tall~

DoiN lldlng llwn

moww, like new,.,.....~.
.. . , crib, lllgh ohllr, .wing, 01r

S1

1100, Firm. 1114 1tl 311~.

58

1114 Horloy Sportllor, low '
miNge, exc cOnd, 304-a82~

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables
Cobboao, you cut .2k I haod
John R. HIU,~~!'. Flllo, OH
114-241'2142 ..,_.,
.
Dunnwln Fruit Form: Jllll oH
SA Ill al Albony 114-llllo
1211. -.sun -7PII. Frooll
Fn~N ond lfoplabloo, Amloh
producto,UpjiiOI.

-•. 01ro11er, ploy pon, now golf

lldlng lawn - .
GE wuhof In good con&lt;lllon.
304..75-1381
·
Fot Soia: 411 Ullllly Trolor,
Loodod Wllh Plywood Doaro,
Wlro &amp; Mloc. GOod Troller For
•-·of
~-- ar 4 --·•··
,...,.. ..,...
.,...,_, IIu11
loki All, $175, 114-37S-2211.
For Soil: Fun Flgurwd, Pluo Silo
Woddlng Gown, (Apprax sao:
24-2IJ o.-lptlan, Vlctorlon
Sl-, ond C"- Longlh
Troln, V Uno, Wllh U.. &amp;
Soquenco, Aoldng Prlco: 1275 .
• ••••• -··
IJynollorll

*'""

_.._

:::L

Groomlna. All IWMdo, 11\'111.
lomo Pol Food Doolor. Julie
Wobb. Clll 114 441 0231, I.IOQ.
313-G231.

-

.'""=old-.

Nt.C
&amp; oponlol
lomlly
iloCIIIIJod, rOidy nciW, 114-44f.

1177.

pullllloo. 1100.00, reldy
-l*tft-4144.
!loG .,., Cot aroom1nc1 on
-lotlzid In flitodlo
yro · - - · ·

c=,:

.loa-

Flolo Tank, Avo.
Point Pllilunl, :1044714013,
lull lno T,.,ptool floll, blnlo,
8111all ~nl•.. 1nd 1uppiiM.

cMclclld, ehola

a

woi'I'MCI.

2148.

-- ----------

'

0.1.0., LM1 Than 3,000 Mh1, ·
Still Under Worronty; 1111 HD,
JUII AOI1crid. ti14..Zllloll7l
Hondo 11112 Xli· 200, Exaollont '
COr!dlllon. l14o2434441.
lloltod, Llko now, 120 millo.' ·
Pofd sen, wllllllllot 13'11. 114-&gt;
245-1173.

IIIII John Dooro

llodol I,
Aobuln, e-11on1 Con'iiillon; AI·
llo Cllolmore D1 .... !orv
Good Candlllon. .......
Allal c•lmore 12 hp, ~ictlng
- . H•: 32 Inc~ llawlng
Deck, H8 Hart Plow, Dlac,
Snaldtfode Ratotlller, An ssaa.
114 311 M01.
F So
· or
II: Squore Bolo,., Hoy
linN,
Mow. ., O.,.n
Rli., Trac·
PTO
Mllnur11 8pn8•r,
tar &amp; E&lt;toilpment, Ullllly Troller,
Olhor Flolil l!oody Equipment.
- · · Porm Mochlnorr, Jock·
oan, OH 114-21111-111144.
J~' ,
I 1
SA 3.
~ • orm . qu pmenl, : . 5,
w...
CIIUipallo, 114 ...11-11777;
Wldo loloctlon , _ . Ulldlorm
lrocl- I ..,.....,_, Buy,
olll, trldo, 1:00-6:00 wookdoyo,
Sol. Ull-.

A:l

'.'

Atlanta Braves at New York
Mela (L)
1:00 (JJ
aJ Matlock MeiiOCk
defends a bOxer accursed o1
murderiQlil a IOUmallst. (R)

e

Stereo.~;~

&lt;II Dugotillllow
.
(I) Ill. Wllo'l IllS IIGso1

Angell'l llle II ISkln OYII' by
Iter new lloylrlend. (R)

Slll'e0. C·
1D (!J HOve The IQmtel'

surgeon general speaks his
mind on hlllth 111ue1. D

Ill DeR-:1111.
POliceman Is ohol whlla
handllllQ.! car thief. (R)
·

boonllou1·boord. Phone 304-;

1:30 &lt;II MljOr LNgue .......
Cltlcago Whtls Sox at Texaa
Ringen (L)
(I) Ill. Hllld ot IllS Cllll
Blly and the CIIU 1o1m T.J .
. haa a tllont. Stereo. ·

i

M 'W£Y &lt;ERTAINlY
ro &lt;CMAILNtCffi't

Campere &amp;

-ric·-·-

.. :,
63
LIVestOCk
IGJII eo,..r 22 11, 1111 can- '
,...._...,.,,....;.;._...;...,.....,....._ tolnod,
bot·
2 old while ~ hono, tory,
304-412·2MI.
'
- --~ ·~ - ••
'
- - ~~ '
IIIII comper 27 II, good cond
Umouoln bUll, 20 montho old, ole, TV ontonno, new UrN, 1111::
rwg&amp;.teNd HrMR l•tld. Alao cantalnM, 304.f71..24U.
·
n!Co yoorllna. 112 LlmaUIIn, 112 tm 20ft Cldlt Coochmon Ac
GortNcllo bull, 114-llllo , AwninG, • Soii-Canoolnod. aM:
·
1 441-2811.
Ltmo.ln oow calf ,..,., Nil• "'m,....;rn=on_m_at_ar_h_omo,
__
lol_d_ld_.
lorld. ~~ Ullllllioln Clll 114-317o0182 lw moro In·:
holloro. 5
10.
lonnotlon.

Motor Homes

71

81

1m VW body goad,
ue 4'14"1 lftll' 1 or
on u•mda.
1m 0~, 4dr, PS, PB, $400,
114-441o1f15, 114-441-1244 Afflr
lp.m.
-,'o171--:-llao:-d-o_Co_rl_o._G_aa_d_Candl__
lion. Runo Good, 114 411 2111.
$311.CII 114

am.

'*""

1171 Chryoler.
1007.
1171 Novo, good body, noldo
OftBino, 104-f71.2441.
1171 Oldl

c..-.

:104-411-3141.

" " ChryoW Cctoabe 310,

. "'""
lrono,
groot aood
lntO'ifM,- grut......
..,,
11100. Dly~ 114-112-2155. Aftor
!1:30PM, coli :104-47Wt5!.
1110 Dol- 210ZX, new point &amp;
11ru1o, 1 ........ suao. 304-l'll23111oowo """'" ond numbor.
1130 Oldl Dollo '!~ noodo tlroo
I luno-up. SIIOO UIIO. IM-44113011
doyo,
114·2M-4111
...1'1111(11.
1111 Iuick Skylorll, 2 doaro, 2.1
porto. 1100 or
4 cyl., mony allor. :104-4711-4018.
1111 Ford Eoaarl GLX, C.lll14·
.._.1411 1fter lp.m.
1t82 Monte Corio, 221 V-4,
Dlroatlcnol Whoolo ond Spoiler.
Loatco And Auno Good! SZ,IIOO.
114-441-1021.

Mowle (2:00) SISrtO. 0

Rotllrt Danllll va. Tony
WINII, OWigltt Qwal va.
J1mea Salerno, Fred
PendletOn va. TBA (L)
Ill HaiiMIIe Now Stereo.

1ta ~ofiiOI(o
CO!oli•,
_.,work,
'"""
ond
onilno
. -. 0 '30W'II-3f11.
1111 Arlll K, auto, air, pt, l»b,
11100. o.b.o.
114ottZ-t332

=on.....,
onnl-

II Aorolo. 4dr

qui-nt. 3GII V-1 $2?11. 114o
IH-4711.

a uny KJng u..1

1:30 (I) Ill e Coacll Hayden

cat1CIIII 1111 plana 10 he can
meet a lrllnd of Christine's.

(RISIII'eO.r;J
10:00 Ill. 0 Law • Order

IIASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncancll"'""l lllollme guoron·

reflrlnc• tumllhed!

FrM ootlmatM. Coli callocl I·
114-231-o411, doy or nlght1
A - BIMmlnt Wotorpr"'"\
Hng.
I
Bluo Ribbon Drtwoll. Aoolcfon.i
till Commorc'-1 Ropolrolo Pll..,
lor, Dtyolroll, Wolor Dlmogo Ill'
Crockl. Boo,.NIA Hew Cllllngo.

-

.,.". .
BARNEY
LOVE THESE
SUMMER
SHOWERS!!

Yoore lbporlootCO on Otdor a .•
Nowor - ·
- AddBiono,
Faundlllon
Wotic,
Roell"', I•
I Sldl"f. FIM f!i.• .
tiMit•l ....,.. :u, No Job To :
llg0rS..UI-o022t.
,,
E I R TREE SERVICE.

l!Fit,•!·

Trllnmlng, Tl'll Aemo¥11,

j

Trlmmlni. Freo loltmlllol I

,

aJ-1111.'"

•

.

.

.

.

wv•

-In-...
. . ...
_

In

I
.

MEPRET
6 I · 17 I
I
1

\........
O Compllle

••

.

•

tho chuc:'klo qua4od
by lilllnV In the milling wards
you dovolop from llep No. 3 below.

....
'

.

lf1081111(3:30)

10:301D w- Comlnl Out ot

the ltledawl women from
variOus baclcgrounda and
ranging In age trom mid 20a
to TO convey lnlormlllon
about their alcohOlism and
what made them drink. (0:30)
I!De M*A'8'H
Ill CIOOII and Chue

."•

.•

··"'·

SCI•M Ll11 ANSWIIS
,.,o '
Editor- Tulip - Wheat - Mutiny - PUT on TODAY
Sign seen in weight control clinic: "A diet is a plan for .
putting off tomorrow whal you PUT on TOOAY. •

BRIDGE

NORTH

••

"U·Il

+12

••\76
tAKQJ
+AKQS

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST
+A 10 3
.KQ9

"•

EAST

us

.J543

t854Z

tl03

..

+862

+Jl070 .

SOUTH
+KQJ764
.1012
t976
+9

Help your
partner out

...

..

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer; South

-

By PhiiUp Alder
When you are defending, not only is
it important to watch all \he spot·
cards like a hawk, but it also pays.to
make your partner's life easy.
Scan today's deal. Fallowing the
·weak twc.-bid which showed a six-ca~
spade suit and some 5-9 high-card
points, North's jump to live spades
asked his partner to go on to six with
good trumps. South was happy to do
business.
What do you thillt the outcome
should be? AI first glance, the siam
laou easy. South wlM the heart lead
In the dummy, discards his twa heart
IOR1'S on dummy's top clubs, and tht!ll
plays a trump to the king and are, losing one spade trick. However, a claser
examination shows thai there is a
mosquito in the ointment
West led the club jack after winning
with the trump ace. Seeing no reason
to do anything elle, East discarded a
diamond. Declarer ruffed, drew
trumps and claimed.
True, East made a mistake. Ruffing
·with the spade nine was Indicated - it

P au
Pau

0

N•lll

~·

Pau

Eool
Pau
Paa

•

.·-·.

Opening lead: • K

I

Lo..---.-----------·,
couldn't hurl. Here it doesn't bUill'
Eul, but it definitely hurts South, wllo·
has to averrufl with the spade jack..
Now Well's spade 10 is promoted ..
the lellln&amp; trick.
.~
West had a clever way to protect h~
partner from error. While Sotltb Ia.
caabiDC dwnmy's club winners, ~
should follow suit with the three, aev-.
en and 10, not with the three, four ailcr;
seven. When Wesl WiM with \he spade
ace, lte leada the ~lub lour, no_rt tile cl•lr
, J8Ck. AI dummy a live is wtlllliDI tlie.
trick, East bas to ruff to stop declarer
from obtaining another dllcard. This
,elfe&lt;:ts the trump promotion.
@

t••· _.,._.

D r • "" 1

I

••111.

..
.

~

Tbe World Almanac Crossword Puzzle , .,.~ ·
ACROSS
1LIHII dovll
4 Camparellve
auHIX
7 I think, ther•
!oro-10 Surtydoga
12 Hondlo
roughly
14 12, Romen
15 Elbow'•
·-tarparl
18 Pra adtllt

rnuct

11 Tu •acr.
18 Slxlleo rid~
Cll (al.)
20 lltarary
compot111on

22Co=t
24Nak
VI

28RIYarduck

30 Autltar
FIHIIng
31 Canine cry
33 Artllt'a dag.
34 Pront on
blnll acct.

" .~.

.'

35 ActorCalhoun
37 Wnlorn
homlophort
org.

38The-

40 Nllllter ma-

culntltmlnlnl

42 Dltelp!t

45 Underatand?
47 Floh lrep
51 Vu
52 Allan chill
54 Tibetan monk
55 Actor'• 11111nal
58 Skinny ftihtl
57 Cotmonaul
- G1girln
58 TV network
58 Actreu
Charton•80MHW11t

Paul3 - tehool
4 Put11tr
5 - Clalrt,
Wlo.
a Coin al India
1 eom•y
8 BrHIY

roll

DOWN
1o.tr

2 401 film oter

&lt;lle

111

oe

IliOn=
8

((J ........ VIae

ASTRO·GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

tl

Plumbing &amp;

1111 Dodgo Col. e x Refrlgemlon
Col •an. Pw100.114 1tl Hll. I==~-:--=-----,..
,.......lol ar _ _... '
, . . AI
~=;l'·ooo wlrfntl, new
011 ,....,... '.
-.......
......, u - -dclon. ·,
,..... ~- ••. - Dt 0 .1.0 ., ~· Eloclrlcol, 304-1'11-,.11
, Worrontyl 114o24•
1177.
~
Upholstery
"
72 TruCks for sate
::
...
~.~..,-.-:.o;,.:;U~phol~llol~$;;:;.:=-~-~-v:-lc-'
... t r l - y - 21
... The
1t7l Chovr Holt Tan Pick..,.,
Full ~ lloloulll Enalno, 111"1' Coli :104-171-4154 ""' friO ...
PortL 11.000. l~/lllo4Siol. .._
1

greateal single

I!De Anenlo Hall Stereo. Q

;!•!!•:.:..::.:.::=--

...

.

. . . . . - - - - - - - - . ralsl~ children ls parental

IDHI-IIeh

0

1111 Chryolor Lit.._ GTB,
Heating
Aldo. Alr, ...,.,.., 13300; 1111 1---:Co:-:rtor~'o-::PI:-um..;.bl,..ng___
Novo, Auto. Air, 13100; 1tQ Lo
ond -Ina
llano, Aldo. Air, 13100. tn4-211F - lnd Prno
12111.
Ollllpallo, Ohio
1111 Tltundarblnl Elln. V-1, :1~,14!;4~4!!;1
. . - . 14'"'· Dip: ,,....... 84
Electrical &amp;
-.1-..go:--..m.

10:20 Ill MOVII!: T1w Clout

-.-

.. '

(L)

In

1eu Tron. .'"il T~-. ~. " 11 82
power,
... ~ . 14 u~oen.

a 100 e1u11 Willi Pll

11:aofll• Cll
ONtwl

lddftion8

roallng. ~lllfl, lnotolllllcno, 1ii
yro oxoorlonce, ootlm-. 3G4o
171-2440.
Aan'o TV Sorvlco, -llllzlng
Z.nNh olio - n g ...., branclo. - · ....
-304-4'11-2~!11
......._
.........
wv
Dlllo IM441-2414.
Sopllc Tonk Pumping hG Dolllo
Ca. RON EVANS ENTEAPNBES,
.locklon, OH 1-.a:l7-41121.
Dovlo
Sow·Voc
lllrvlco,
~ Creak Ad. POlio, oupplloo, pickup, one! dellvofy. 11444142M.

ewoold-

......,.

Ill Mljor Laa111w . . . . .

'
RON;

JET
·•,
Aorotlon Matoro, -IM. 1 ,..,..," moloro In -11.
EVANS, JACKSON, OH . 1 -. ·
137-IUI.
a'
Ntw kHche01,
belhrooma,

room

Cragen Ia bnlugl1t up on
cttergea of corruption and
bribery. (Rt Stereo. Q
(I) (I) • CNna lellilh As
Sllgan IIIII, K.C. delperllt81y
aearctwa lor his daughllr.
Stereo. D
(!J The •tae W)IO'a In prison
and why.

Rall1rt8on

Coml*ltlld Ofw 100 CUcihKII
In TtW AIH.I1t 441 :IISl.
•:
CurU1 .._. tmprou ....nte: : •

IMIOMIY

MOVII!:

((J TueiCIIy Nlgltll'lghiS

Home
Improvements

tM. Local

a•

'lftcii11Uidl1 CIS Tueldly

Serv1ces

S81a

tnlllll IRI Stereo. Q
(1)(1)
......_

111

&lt;

Autos for

Chuld1111Mt 8lllllan
I:GO (JJ. aJ In the HMt ot IllS
Nlgltl A f'llltded girl II the
aulplclad mother ot a dead
RotMnne ISIIcltea a 1ou0n
In redly to DsMM's class.
(R)s-.~~
1D (J)I'hwl wQ

••••'II"

-:=:--:-;:i;.;.;:~~~.;;_=

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

0 MOVIE: OMIIilora Train
to llob (PClJ (2:00)

,e::;

Transport at 10 n

SISreo.I;J
((J MllnMr, llltt Wrote

lll01t818g1SIII'e0.

G-ron 17 h. 110, lnboonllou1oboord. - \·
875-6470.

:=•

-bd
.
""""'
......
'~
·
~ • The
factor

'

...,I,:;..L..;;EI,..;'E;.,IB;;....;,.IIr-.

ili Etillltillmllnl

· 7:31 (l)llsjor La..,. •HIIIH

175-4470.

Wantld: Old limber lrome bam : 79
In aood cone!. lor ,_.II I .
....-ubcNon.l14--2782.
.

r

1

a Croaallra

Wonllo buy gaM running 7.5 to•
T - Dolor 8230, now _1o_h..:.p.;;bo.;,ll;;;.;;moo=or;;,. .;,304;.;..;-41,;.;2';.;··2; ;11411.:.:; .,. :
tronomloolon. I.GMime lllfllnl,
:!,~
0
76 Auto Pans &amp;
1211.. )IW U 100. ~ form
Accessories
troalor wnnp bUOkll, oxc cone!,
romavld lrom MF 24511100. 304- "67
4111·!031.
1• Ford AIIMIIN Cl T(onomlo- ·
olon\
$121.
114 US 2281
Wontld: 10 oo 1111. 1ondam ulo Dlyt me, 11.-.1118 ono;'
llltbod 1r~111r. a14-21111-2'l12.
,;:4P.:;;m;;;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _'- ',

=L';,.

1 M;.;._pt:...:;x'--ll

(LI

In·~

110,

1

3
..;..:...r.:,...

'

h

lllle a SISr Stereo.
lllllljor Lngw ........

1114 Clorlo Croft Covefllr 32 11,
duo! 2lll Chivy ongln~~ (lza hro
ohor
robUHit,
oilopo I ,
Nfrlaarator, ltow, 2 alnk1,
hald, Kohlllr - l o r . Drive
on lrollor wll~ llanl rolloro.
llo ko ollor g1111ng aut of boll·
lng, 304~111 o11or 1:00 PM. ,
21ft. Skl11croft lnboord Dulboord'
ClblnJ Wotor Roody. $2,850. 114441·1023.
=s7hp~_,;.:.;,.-moo...,..«-w""n"'h""3"'1111...,..1.-~~~~-.;
tenk, 304-87W801.
:
ft.

~--1

loMbsll Cincinnati Reds at
Montraal Expos (l)

17 ft. S.rw Clnoe plu1 ertraa. ·
1250. 114-441-7710 oftor Spill. ,

17

'

0

Ill WIIMI 01 Fortune r;1
liD .llojor I 1a...

lor Sale

G1111tron

••

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T~~:.I'ID·
Q
Ill...
•• l'llnfiV

~~~=IO~HO:::-:-:U::-IIri-:::CII,-11-:-Ic-,11:-1-:-:,IIOO=or
- :

~·

E L F A ME

7:30~Uc!:fb~ g
(I)

0 .

law 1G farm lour li"''&gt;la -.!1.

3 lciNCIIS and Milo lUng
7:01 CIJ The Jefllr10111

75 Boals &amp; Motors

-lui tar..
lomlly cor. A·l
alllhe •

111/11. 1114-4441-1334.

·=- .

•

11811 Hondl V-30 Magl'llll, 7.100 :
mloo, like now $1,890. 30W82..

'

11U Oldl -

lltoglolorld rei lorrlor puppltoo,
t r i - I bllak I ton. v.t

oo,

Candlllon •
·

3355.

fJI'11 Supflllc'
S. Livestock

ohoooola lv 112. ~MI.

E col'· 1
x ~n

.'
""

PRINT NUMBERED (ETTERS
W IN THESE SQUARES

j&amp;~~ftokr;J

7714
=
= ·-=-:-:-==:--:':'::-:
llll2 suzuki GS4110L, 4,IQO

••

A

~~~~g

IGJII Hondo 110 Cl, 1400, 1141115-31111
~ii~~~~~~ii11112 Hondo Goldwlllfl 114-112·

Musical
Instruments
I M Hood I1GO DOD
4 Chin:.,;
-• Dunlo
IIuo poll! .... . &gt;P
High Olin VOiumo pllol 131.
3111-482-21141.

1111

!i!·~"-::2.g
Ill 11:1 e CaiHJa r;J

(t) S.Z·1 c - ..

liD • Altltt Grllfttll
Ill Up CioN
1:35 Cll Altltt Gllllllt1
7:00 IJ1·• aJ Whoel ot .._
11) I D1Mn! of JMnnll

_, _,

c'

-- -

WAKE UP VOUR 006 ...

1--· 0
Law

I

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

e

Mlloogo,
~_!:========:;:=======~~ :lp.~m~·~-------------

52 Sporting Goods.
The -

I:GI(J) lewiiDI..cl
1:30 (JJ
aJ NIC Newa !;I
I]) AbiiOit IIICI Ca ltla

'

Warlc boalo. 114-4411-31511.

LIVING ROOM: I Chair,
Aoallllor1 _ 1141.110;
SWfvol HOCilor, ht.vo; Coffoo I
End TobiOI, 18.00 Sot.DININCI
ROOM: T - WNh 4 Plddld
Cholnl, 114•.00; Country Pine
Dlnotlo With Bonah And 3
Chilre1..1211.00; Uotchlng 2
Door ""ch $341: Or SIIII.OG
Sot; Ook Tiblo, Gii2 wnh 1
Bow
Boa~
Chalro,
II21.00.BEDROOM: lido
rooM SuMo 15 pc.j, 134V.OO; 4
Drowor ~ 144.1!; Bunk
lod, SZ2Bi_CoinPIIII rul ....

'fi.IEN VOV HAVE TO 6E REAL
QUIET A6AIN WilEN YO\J PUT
IT MCK ON, SO VOU DON'T

'::~::.' S(C\\.4.\lA-4~~s·
-llyQAYLPCIUAII
Roarrallfll letter! ol tho
0 ,_
"'"''"blod -.II be-

••

Ill H8A T11111Y
Ill WOIId Tocley
OOur_.._.

• •"

f:~. ~':[~
Uold - - .... pl.... oven
Dryor Sol, 1150 Eoch~:~~­ ssoo.oo 114-lll:l-2011.
Waohof, SIS· All
Wllh
conotrucllon trollor, troll
Guorontool Skaago Appllonceo,
10130 1100.00 or trade
114-4441-7381.
tor arnall ~ bolt, 114-7112·
2101.
RENT20WN
6~58 .
WATER WELLS DRILLED: loll,
Vl'ro Fumlluro
'
roooonoblo NrYico. 114-431-1311.
Solo &amp; Choir, 11UO Wookj
Aocflner, $5.47 Wook, Swl•ll 55
Building
Aacklr, U.13 Wook.Bunk Bod
Complolo 11.41 Wook, 4 Drowor
Supplies
Chill, U .21 Wook; - o r llolf.
room Suite, 7 pc., 111.17 Waok, Block, ilfk:k, _ . , llilteo, win·
lncfudoo -lng.Countrr Plno dowl:, lln1111, tto. ct.~ Win·
Dlnotlo Whh 8onCh &amp; 4 Chalro, lore, Rio Clronda, OH Coli I1C.
110.1111 Wook.OPEN : Uandoy 245ollllt
Tlwu 811-y. llo.m. lo lp.m.,
SUndoy 12 N- Till Sp.m. 4 56 Peta for 'Sale
Mil•
on R - 7 an R - 141, 7n;;;;~;i~;;i;~i;;;:p;
In
Conlonorr.
G_, ond ~ Shop ...,

Slii.OOL

YOU TAKE THE

UD OFF THE COOKIE JAR ...

f&amp;M

t;rr

SWAIN
AUCTION 1 I'UANITURE. 12
Olivo St., GlilllpaNo. Hew 1 Uood
lumiiiA'o, halloro, Wootom 1

QUIET W~EN

.

ltatl Ford Econollno Can-··
. olon Van, fully
pluoh,
73,000 mU.,
. ~2112 onor tr:30
•

fr-••,

..'::.":rw.':....,

4441-1157.

'(OU HAVE TO 5E REAL

•

!=..'Pg
gi.*,Cg

...,

1m Ford 4 WhiOI cktve, good
onciM. 4 opoed 1ro,..ml-•
larig whMI - . :104-4'11-IIG4.
1111 DodGe Cer1van van. 14100.

Household
GoOds
h12 'Corpol ..... seo. ond up.
- ·==-:::;-;;:--::,.-;;
Clrpol $4.00 &amp; up. llotloluon ;:;~~=::·.;;::
Fumlutre. 114-441-lll44.
Fox l'lro c:- •-· 125 lb, pull
wHh olglllo, qulvor1 _ 1 . , _
Admlrol
21 cu. ft. 140. ond hldtng llpo.
firm; on.d
614 441 0577.
Lllon Mlc,_1, 1 Uool·ln-Ono
wllh rwnovobll ot.N, -k·
County Applllnco~, lno. GaM
uNd 1pp111-, T.v. - · ODin· - . $loa. 11111. 114-44.-s.
I 1.111. lo I p.m. Uan..SII. 814- Ho1 wotor hoolor, 10 gol. Warkl
441·-· 127 3rd. Ave. Gol· good, SIO nrm. 814-231.f1GS,
llpallo,OH
Hyotor 4 111111 31 Volt Farll U11,
Full olzo bod lrlmo. I'll. Excollonl Condlllon. Eloctrlc
11C.2411o8252.
Chain Holll 1 12 Vall 575. Amp.
Charvor. 114-441-2311.
&lt;1000 USED APPLIANCES
Wuherl, !frYttl, retrtpaton, Lumllor: Wolnul 1 Cherry.
So__. &amp; pllnld. Aloa bo..
rlllfiiO.River
Sbgao
- -llano
· · boord, cooing, llc.l14 441 1031.
Upper
Aa. looldo
Croll - • · Clill-11-'1:11111.
A-lonld Waot.ro, Dryoro.
LAYNE'S I'URNITUAE
GuorontNd
prompt lor
Complllo home lumloiii- Ill mokoo, · The Waohlr
Houro: llonoSot, N. 114o441- Dryor ,.,_, 114-441-2M4.
0322, 3 mlloo aut lull\1111 Ad.
Freo fllllverr.
Aowlna llochlno, Excellent
Condition, Rarelr Uud, UO;
PICKENS I'UANITURE
u~~"' ald.!!l'hLit1Bax
NIWIUOid
~~~~c.o'!;
1 !!o.~~.:;. •.:;;,..11.:,
lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jerrioho Rd. Pt. pt. . . .nt, wv, seo. e - 5 .
coli :104-4'11-1410.
Aoyol Dlk Aooorl PI'OIIIrly;
Aolrigorllor X Sldo, Mull 1011 duo lo - h coil 1101AvaaHo,
Glboon,
$111; 7311-4110 offlr I p.m.
Aolrlgorolor,
Froo, lao
Moklf,__Nico,
; Ao'"-lor, Treldmllllap olllno, COIIII,IOO
1300.
:104-4'11-2121
2dr, wntt., Fr.~ Freii, ltli 1011
Eloelrlc Ringo, !10 Inch, WhNo,

\'l'H"rool

aJNewa

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

Ill•· 61 Fann Equipment

Country

I:GO (JJ. (I) . Ill. •

1110 """ Comoncho 1,100 '
mille, tuef lnloelod, ..... 1 cyl,

8la 4 Bod,_, Dlkoto 2111.
:-&gt;
Buln On Your I.Ail 127,1115 ond
Aoomt1 tor rMII • w.k or rnonlh. up.IIWII-1311.
~:o:·ar 1111201.... 011111 Holll. eor.t Cotloctlon: (lllnbol,
•
1110.
kotbel, FaallloHJ 'IO'o • 'tO'o.
Sllllllna , _ wMh -..g. Con 114-441-C172GA11erlp.m.
Allotrolllr -·AI - ...po. Coi!CNio 1 p11o11a ooptlc ,..,
Con oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·T13- Ron Evone Enll=•· 11Jock·
IISI, ....on WY.
- 3211.
.... ON I-41J0.6.,.

46 Space for Rant

TUE. 1 JUNE 11
I!VININQ

114-4411o3158

EPIIilo, 1:1"111 'ir1v crs

HelpWintld

-

M

lf4.24•oo71.

VI'AA I'UANITURE
14x7U mal&gt;llo homo lumlohocl,
LouNI Ctllllld. noor lla Wt.ll,
nc. cond, IM-112·221f or 112·
71114.

11

~·

,....

·••oldlchon.
114-44M131.
M. Vernon Ave
~~
goound opt. _ , "" ono.
szas. pluo oloc. Upololro fur·
nlohod opt, $231. pluo olio.
Prollr 1 odun. Corpol, AIC,
orlvoll. Alloroncoo oo\d dlpod.

Television
Viewing

11111 Chovv Truck, 112 Ton 1
Cvllndor1 _1fllndlrd Shift, . - ,

Fumlohod Apoitmw.l, I loci, _ , 1235/mG. Ullllllle Pold,
,.all, 3 •••roont. Total 107 Second, GIINpollo, 114-44114411 offer 7p.m.
113,111. Col HolM c..ii;, 1 100 •• mo.
Fumlohod Efflcionc'&lt;, $110
1111 1110 -lcnol homo, Ulllfllle Plld, Sha,. &amp;ath, l01
Faurth, Gllllpallo, 114 441 4411
- · 2 llllh. 114-311-1171. Aoll after
7p.m.
lotlninda .. ""·
Fumlohod
Efflcloncy,
AN
Ulllftlle Pold. Share Both.
t1S51mo. 111 second Avtnue,
114-441-3M5.
Groclouo lving. 1 ·ond 2 llod· '
....., oporlmonll II VII'Uonar
ond
Alvorolilo
WlndMr 1411711 -~~ homo, Aporlmenlo In llldd-. F.1Nfl oloctrlc, 3 b I~ _ , . , 2 lull $111. Coll114-tt2·711t EOH.
Hlha,AJC,~,I~
nlntl,
.._
. ... Locotld Hortlord, . oporlmlnl
uiiiHioolnduilld 1300. ~
ling~ or ·uuna '• tao 2 b;iJQCNft
33 Farms for Sale
troller wllhald .niiHioo 1200.
1 tnlll off 144, hurtera ,.,...., wllh u1HIIIIe 12'11. lduHo 2
70 8CI'H of land, aood WIIN ehlldron pre,.M. 304-1112-3121
plpoe !n ,._, goa ITno an lind, 1111- 1:00 om ond 1:00 pm .
good Umbor . an land, oN lor oppoln1menl.
~lml, CArl o .a iMr Coolvllllj
Modern ctown-n,, BA, · 2 hauooo~ 31 • - · 112 milo off
AlybUm Mood. 111m and 3 old·
bulldln111. :104-41'11-2401.

BORN LOSER

72 · Tlucka for 5811

~A~..:'"C:::

The Dall Sentinel Page 8

. Pomeroy-Middl!tDOI't. 0111o.

J-12, 1111
You anellkely to deal wHh Uta In a much
·bolder manntr In lho year ahead lhon
you have In the past. Your new lnltl•
11-Wll enable you to echle'lll thlnga of
penonll lmportonco.
WEI (..., zt..June 211) CondHiona
lhal h - -Impeding your lrodepen·
&lt;fence ond moblltly are about to ......,,
You lhOUid now be IIIIo to lind new ovenuea 10 expr- your Initiative. Gemini,
1n11t yourselllo •. birthday gill. Send tor

.
'

Gemini 's Astro-Graph predictions for things haven 't been up to your expectathe year ahead by mailing $1 .25 plus a tions in the romance dapartmenllataly,
long, sell·addresaed. stamped enve- don't despair. CUpid Is about to rectify
lope to Astra-Graph, c/o this newapa- .things With a brand new game plan.
per, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH CAI'IIICOIIH (Dec. 22......._ 11111 you'w
44101·3428 . Be sure to slate your zodl· been contemplating wayo to generate
· lunda from tourcet other than your
ac sign .
CANCER (June U.JIIIJ 221 People usual one. this II a good time to start
preeently obligated to you Will begin Ia putting your Idees Into action. Profit Ia
repey you tor what you've done tor them In your piCture.
In 1he put. Pleesanl surprises are In AQUIIJIIUI (Jan. 20-Feb. 1tl Addition·
store tor you a - lite next lew - ·· a1 and happier IOCial-11 could be In
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22l111ooksllke you the offing lor you o - lite next lew
may get driiWn Into uvoral conatructlve - · · Your popularHy 11 uc:endlng,
and all your lrlonds Will wont you on
alllencet over the next lew - · · their party IIIII.
They'll be with Individuals whose hopes
and expectations clolely f*allel yours. fiiiCES (1'111, Jll Ill all211) You could
VIRGO (Aua. 23-lepl. 22111 your goela be extromely lucky at IIIII tii;"O In lulftltand objectlvell ane realistic and well-de- lng shorl·t•m objectlvel wttere your
lined at thla time, your chancea tor work II - n e d. They're ,_,lnglul
achieving them ane excellenl. Don't be 10 you flnonclolly.
AIIIU ,......., zt·Aprll 11) """' you
afraid 10 lim a bll higher lhan utual.
IJIIIA (lepl. 11-Get. 211 Alloclat• IUOC II luly monogtl your mundlne
may not be lol811y In accord with your choneo toc11y, Iorge! them and locuo on
p,....,.t Ideas. . H.,_.r, II you allow creaiMI thlngt. You're In a good cycte
lttem time Ia ualmllale your v - . lor new Ideal.
they'll be eupporttvo ol your lntanllono. TAUIIUe (April 211 IIIJ 211) Flnonclol
ICOIII'IO (oat. 21&lt;1 Nor. 221 .joint van- lrendtiiiOuld llarllmprOYing today, ...
lunll COUld turn out to be extremely for· thOUgh your opporlurtltlea might our·
lunlle lor you In lhll cycle, apeclally II face through f)arllllly·vellld clt'cUmyou'ne COIIoCII!HIIY updlllng _.hlng atancet. They lhOUid become more
obvloua Within the next lew clayt.
that II now con-.cl outmoded .
IAGITTAIUUI (Nov. 21 Dec. 11) If
I}

taMa~

111 - • and Milo King

11:30 Ill e 0 Tonlgllt BMw
Stereo.

())....,.

1D Adllmllllflll'l Mon1J

WOIId

I !.'S"'/:.i-.
rc:.::.-:.t ......

D
• .,. ..... cesU\1

!lllporll TOitlght
11:31 (I) ow- Q

1*i!;zc:-~·

...

OTM
llllfllh . . Now

0 MOVII!: bns llilora Train
ttl IIIII &lt;PGt (2:001
.

w.-

12:30(2). Gll.atl ....... With
Dlwld L8tllili I
()) MCMI!: QJ.

=i"'
...... .._
(1 :00)

llNWIIII ...

ComiiiF

111eHMICollr

Ire.

CELEBRITY 1CIPHER
' 1 • by,.,..,..,.,....,,1*1

Cltebrttr ClpMr CfJP'oplml .........

.I
lind~· ·

hctl.....- 6n tM dpNt ........ enoiNr. 1odlly'•ca.: ~....,. R.

'

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

12:01 (I) ....- . g

•

' NMI J

L J

UIIIMIIWIG
XIIIMRZIZ

'
••
•

W 8 I
ZBVLABITWeVG
·Ill II

T

CNIIIZ

'

'.

LZIT.'
OIIISR
CMIIWSBI .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " It II Indeed a doolrable lhlna 10 be WOII- , ,
~. but tho glory belongt to our ancoalora." Plutarch.

••

II 1M1 b)' NEA, InC.

1, :
•

-·
0

,.

�Poineroy~lddlei)Ort, Ohio

Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Tueadlly, June 11,.1991

Scenes from Heritage Weekend in Pomeroy

Ohio Lottery

Reds trip
Expos for 3rd
straight win

Pick3:365
P-ick 4: 3875
Cards : 5·H, Q·C
7-D; 8-S

near 85 •

Page4

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ma•y Herltaae Weekead \'~alton at the Meip
Couty Mueum. Here they learned allollt rag
basket maldq from demoDStrator, Juae Ashley,

MAKING RAG BASKETS ·- Lt. Col.
Edward MD BI'OWII, bls wife, the former Dottie
WUcoxea or RadDe, aad their SOD, Ted, visiting
here f'rom Georgia where Lt. Col. BrOWD is sta·
tioned with the U. S. Air Force, were amODR the

Letart Falls.

·

MEIGS BAND • The Melaa Hlah School
MarcbiDR Baad, ucler the dlndloa of Toney
. Dlnpu, performed In the Herltqe Parade 0!1

PREPARING POR RIVER SWEEP Kenny Wlallu, director of the Melp County
Litter Cotitrol PI'CJII'Im, aad other helpers are
pictured baa2ibg the blllner in Pomeroy lor the
Third Annual 'Oblo River Sweep to be beld Sat-

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ENTERTAINERS ·The C011ntry KID Band
entertabled with a variety, of country aad blae
grass music: Sunday afternooa at the Melt&amp;
.Museum's Herltaae Weekend celebration. b t6e

aroup IJ'om Jackson are J. C. Sbup on tbe
d1111111, JICk Sbarp, baa, Evelyn Sharp, vocalist,
and WIIUe Sbarp, lelld pltar, I to r.

Yesteryear essay winners
Mick Barr, fifth 8rade student at COOICSilUIIS and their parents in the
Salisbury Elementary, is the Meigs fall.
Winners are:
County winner of tbe Yesteryear
essay COIIIest.
.
Salisbury: Mick Barr, also counFifth grade studatts who partici- ty winner; second, Shera PatiCI'SOn ..
Bradbury: filS!, Jenny Hayman;
pated in the Meip County Retired
Senior Volunteer Yesteryear pro- second, Angela Baum.
Racine: l'U'St, Nichole }{ill; secgram, beld at the Meigs County
Museum in April, ~~ written ond, Amanda Theiss.
Rutland: first, A.J. Vaughan;
reports about tbeu work project
and lheir visil to the museum. Stu- second, Tabitha Powell.
Rejoicing Life: fii'St, Aaron Pandents were encouraged to write and
express, in their own words, their gio, second, Sleven Rice.
Tuppen' Plains: f1ts1, Michelle
feelings and personal experiences
Caldwell;
second, Abe Rach.
of their YeSICryear day.
Cbester: first, Leigh Ann CanThe essays have been judged
and wi11ners selected. The essays terbury; second, Todd Marcum.
Letart Falls: first, 1conifer
wiU be on display at the museum
throughout the summer. A recep- Roush; second, Wesley Hall.
tion will be beld for tbe winning

by the Pomeroy Mercbiats .•IIIOdatioli. Post 39
also was awarded a trophy for Best Walkiag
Unit.
·

LEADING THE PARADE· The AlllerlciD
Leglo• Drew Webster Post No. 39 led the Heritqe Parade Ia Pomeroy on Saturday sponsored

June 16th

Malee Dad's Yardwork =

Easier
Ia Pumeroy on Saturday. The band wis awiii'Cl·
eel a trophy ror Best Marchiq Unit.

EASTERN "BAND - Tbe Easter• HIRh
School Marcbla1 Ba•d, uDder tbe dlrectloa of
WUIIIID 111111, marched In the Heritaae Plradr

BEST
YOUTH
AUTHENTIC COSTUMEAsbley ROICb was 8 winDer ID
the HerltaJil! Costume Contest
on Saturday In the categOry or
best youtb autheatlc: costume.
Tbe costume Is OWIIed by Barbara Betzlaa aad dates from
the 1800's.

wnH A

STIHL

Lightweight ond dependable. S~hltrimmers ore
greot lor cutting places
)'OUr mower can't reach.
Got ~e .at a great price
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FORMATION DANCE TEAM PER·
FORMS • Tile OIJJo State Ullhanlt7 I'Drmation
DAce Teaa pel1-ed a •amber ol bal room
dUCe steps oa Satanlay ~ • a part or
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~erltqe Weelend rmlvltles of tile Po•eroy
ercUnll Aaoc:ild011. Members ol tile dance
tea• •e Cbril Jellra, Sllelley Hornikel Stacy
Coli, Tom Mako and Du R....
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FULL LINE OF BlUSH CUnEI$ IN STOCK
AT

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be cleaned. "In so many ways, we
all enjoy the benefits which lhe
river provides; bere is our cbance
The Third An~ual Ohio River to join hands and give something in
Sweep, organized by the Ohio return in cleaning up 1he ri"ver
River·,Valley Water Sanitation front, promoting recreation and
Commission (ORSANCO), in . improving water quality," says
cooperation with Environmental Wiggins.
.
Prolection Asencies, the U.S. . · Wig~!. states that over 300
.Corps ell!ngineen and the Divi- · pe~
.Wady vcilunteere&lt;\
s100 of Litter Preventioo, 1!11d RC~~:y-, tbeir time on SalurdaY. but that
. cling will take plaee Salurday more volunteerS are sull needed.
morning.
ThQ!!C- wining to belp are asked to
!be · ~w~ will encompass the
call 992-6360. AJatn !his yeat I·
enure leilgth of the river fnim Pitts- · . shirts will be given to theBe volimburgh, Pa:., to Cairo, IU. which is .a teering in the clean-up work. Trash
total distance of 981 miles.
bags and gloves will ~ provided
Kenny Wiggins, director of the and there wi11 1 of course, be adult
Meigs Cou~ty Litter C~Urol Pro- supetvision for participating youth
~· explains that Me1gs County
in the areas cleaned.
1s_bordeted by 57 miles ~fthe Ohio
Clean-up siiCS have been selectRiv~r, the banks of which need to
ed in Middlepon, Pomeroy, Syra-

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
600 E. MAIN

992-2094

POMEROY

cuse, Racine, Long Bonom and
Forked Run State Park area. VolunteerS will be notified of their work
sites. In Middleport, workers
should repon to Diles Park on d!e
riVerfront near Family DoUar stOre.
In Pomeroy, report to the stage area
on the upper parking lot. In Racine,
the meeting place is the shelter
ho~ee..at tbe Old Ferry, La)ldbig .
Keith Wood wiU~lJ!IJ~as
at l'ortM l.tllli 'SH M 1$upet\'l,:
son will be at each sile afiCr 8:30
!J.m. on Saturday.
V()lunteers should wear old
clothes and shoes or boots, lona
pants or jeans and gloves, if avaifable. Group "Jiiadei'S should brina
cold drinking water for their group.
Clean-up activities shollld conclude by noon and refresbmenls
will be provided for all worken.

7u

By JULIE E. DILLON
Seatinei News Staff
An addition was approved for
an Occupation Work Adjustmenl
(OWA) unit at Meigs Junior High
School and the implementation of a
grads program at Meigs High
School by the Meigs Local Board
of Education at its regular meeting
Tuesday evening.
James Carpenter, superintendent, reported .that the work program at the junior high will benefil
students who are posSibly ai risk of
dropping out of school. Participants
• in the program would work for an
· hour a day, for approximately $1
per hour, under the supervision of a
·. program coordinalor. Carpenter
· stated if work within the business
district .o f the ViUage of Middleport was unobtainable then participants would work around the
_school grounds.
Board mem~ Robert Snowden
: stressed his feelings that a $1 an

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hour OWA participl!Jit ~ould not
replace someone currently worlcing
for the distric~ such as a cook or
custodian, and Board member
Larry Rope voiced his opinion that
the program should not take the
place of the educational process.
The grads program, to be implemented at the high school, will
benefit sludents,in the area of family living and child development.
Carpenter reported that th•s program, which would operate in the
home economics depurunent, has
received approval from the state
and would cost the Meigs Local
School District nothing.
·
In other matters the board
accepted the resignation of Rebecca Zurcher as head teaeher at Middleport Elementary.
The board voted, four to one
with Snowden in disagreement, to
employ Oary Walker IS EMIS
Coordinator for the 1991-92 school
Continued on page 3

A Cheshire man was cited for failure to yield Tuesday following
a two-car acc1dent on Slate Route 7.
Harry T. ~ysell. 68~ was cited following the accident in Salisbury Township. According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs post of
the Swe Highway l'alrol, Hysell was northbound and was aaempting to get to the end of a line of lraff'JC that was in the southbound
lane. flyseU llltmpled to make a U·tum from the benn of the northbound lane, and struck a passing car, driven by Tommy H
MeGI'Ilh, 38, of Racine. The crash did light damage to both vehi:
c~.
.
Neither driver was .injured. Hysell's ~assenger, Gertrude E.
Hysell, 68, or Chesh1re, and McGrath s passenger Tina D
McGrath,l8,ofRacine,wercnotinjured.
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Deputies probe B &amp; E
A breaking and entering at the residence of Ishmael and Shirley
Smitb on State Route 32!1 west ol Danvilla is under investigation by
the Meif! County Sheriff'a DepebiJent and the BCI.
Shenff James M. Soullby reported that when Mr. and Mn.
Smitb recumed home from vecl'ion Monday night they found IICVCoiidnlied OD ~· 3
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PIKETON, Ohio (AP) - Striking union workers blocked
entrances to the Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion Plant early
today, despile a court order limiting
the number of pickets, a union official said.
The workers, members of Local
3·689 of the Oil, Chemical and
Atomic Workers Union, went on
slrike Tuesday at the uranium
enrichment plant in this southern
Ohio cily. The union represents
1,()70 workers at the planL
Union spokesman Don Crufan
said the temporary restraining order
obtained by the plant's manager,
Mallin Marietta EnerRY Syltenls,

a

had not been served ·to union official. He said the pickets would
remain until the aulhoritics had
done so.
.
Union members began picketing
the plant Tuesday afternoon and
used vehicles to block all roads into
plant. officials said
Martin Marietta received a temporary res1.raining order from CO!I'mon Pleas 1udge Gordon Bevms
thai would allow people to enter
and leave the plant. The order, in•
effect until June 25, also limits to
four the number of pickets ·allowed
at each of six gates oil the 3,800acre site.
Crufan said Pike County Sheriff

Lan'y Travis brought the·ordcr to

tbe union's meeting hall Monday
night.
Travis " threw the injunction on
tbe ground and left because there
was no (ofricial) here 10 acoept it,"
Crufan said . "He served the
injunction on the b\IQding."
~. Travis was not in his ocnce
early today, sheriff's dispatcher
John Harris said. Harris did not
know when Travis would be available for com mcnL
Inside the plant, managen and
supervisors had taken over for
unton workers to keep it operating,
Martin Marielta spokesman Tim
Con tlnued 011 pqe 3

GUEST SPEAKER • Tom
Reuter, Pomeroy Postmaster,
spoke at Tuesday'• -dllg or
tbe Melp County Chamber ~
Commerce on tbe United
States Postal Servke,ltl devel·
· opment and Its servlce1. The
meeting was conducted it tbe
Pomeroy Nurs1D1 and Reba·
bilitation Center.

Bates, Sisson

new chamber
directors
By JULIE E. DILLON
Seatlael New~ Starr
Ernie Sisson and Gary Bates
were named to the Board of Directon for the Meip County Clamber
of Commerce at liS regular monlhly
meeting on . Tuesday at the
PomerQy Nursin1 and Rehabilita·
. lion Cenler.
Sisson· will represent the community ol Syracuae and Bat.el wUI
1epa Jeilt the Chester area. Meigs
County Cb1mber of Commeree
President Dr. Nick Robinson
reported tbete are 16 board positionslvailable.
Elizabeth Scblad, Meil8 County
Economic Development l&gt;irector'
Condaued 011 pqe 3

ENERGY PLANT STRIKE • Memben of
Loeall-619 of the 011, Chemical and Atoalc
Workers ••loa called a atrlke a1alut Mardi
Marietta Eaeru S:nteml at the Porttmoutb

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Ohio for n:view and approval. The
plans must include cost estirnates.
with a comparison of COSIS of aliefnative alfllpliance plans considered
by the company. In each case, utilities must show that they chose the
least-cost option.
The bill requires the PUCO to
review the "continued approJ1riale·ness" of each plan withm 30
months, and it says the commission
will deem th~; ·enactment of an
approved compliance plan a pru- ·
dent management action for utility
mte-maldng purposes.
It says that if a utility's compliance plan calls for a switch to a
fuel olher than Ohio coal, the utility must submit to the PUCO an
analysis of job and other losses that
would resufL The PUCO then must
identify tbe statewide economic
impact but is not required to
approve or reject a plan on the
basis of that information.
In addition, the bill includes an .
accelerated perm it process for
locating .and opeta!ing facilities to
dispose of solid waste generated by
scrubbers, and prohibiiS local gOY•
emments from imposing regulations on such facilities.
The bill authorizes the Ohio Air
Quality Development Authority to
assist utilities with bond issue
fmancing for scrub~s and facilities that bandlc solid wastes generated by clean-air plants.
Ney said all the utilities ~Jared
·themselves neutral on the bill but
that it hu the endorsement or the
United Mine Wo~ers, the Ohio ·
Manufacturers Association, the
Ohio Office ·or the C()llsumers'
Counsel and the administration of
Gov. George Voinovich.
Sen. Eugene Watts, R-Columbus, cast tbe only vote against the
bill but did not speak against iL

Piketon workers ignore court
order, block entrance to plant

Meigs board approves
additional OWA unit

Man cited in crash

\PRING VWf\ CINfMA
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ardayiiiOI'JIIna. Cleu-ap lltel llan bee•
eel Ia Middleport, Pomeroy, Syracuse, Rae IDe,
Loa1 Bottom ud Forked Raa S. . Park IU'ea.
Over 300 people have volunteered to help out
with the river bank cleaD-up PJ"'OI''DD·

River Sweep. Saturday

· By JULR E. DILLON
Sentlnel"NeWII Staff

I

towns," he said. "For the lald-off
miners and those other spin-off
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A jobs losses. there are no otber ecobill desi~ to belp Ohio's coal- nomic opportunities. There are no
fired uttlities comply with tbe other industrial bases to rely upon
Clean Air Act while protecting 10 pick up the slack."
A similar bill has had extensive
Ohio's coal industry has cleared
hearings
in the House. That bill's
the Senate.
Sen. Robert Ney, R-Barnesville, sponsor, Rep. Jerry Krupinski, Dwbose bill went to the House on SteubenviUe, said he supports most
Tuesday by a vote of 32-1' and oth- of the Sena1e bill and cxpccu it to
. ers called it a !eBSOI\Able response be the vehicle for filjal considerato a problem that Washin~ton tion.
Ney said he hopes the proposal
unfair!~ ~t the Stale in a btd to
will
be enacted before July 1.
·stop ac1d ram.
.
Under the federal act, Ohio's
The bill provides incenqves for
utilities to continue to bum Ohio's electric utilities are required to
high-sulfur coal. These include tax make signifiCant reductions in sulbreaks for the installation of scrub- fur emissions by Jan. I, 1995.
But American Electric Power
~ technology to reduce the sulfur
Co., owner of the Gavin power
coo'tent of smokestaCk emissions.
Ney said the government used plant in Gallia County, said 11 must
fedeJ'al money to bail out the sav- decide this summer wllether to
ings and loan industry, calling it a install scrubbers or swileh to lownational problem, while forcing sulfur coal from other states to
Ohio and a few other states to • comply wjth the acL
finance acid rain abatement themThe Gavin decision could cost
the jobs of I,258 miners at a mine
selves.
"The White House, the U.S. in Meigs County. AEP has conflouse and the U.S..Seilate has cho-. ducted studies indicating a switch"
sen to be cruel to Ohio," said Ney. to non-Ohio coal would be cheaper
His sentiments were echoed. by than installing scrubbers at a price
it estimated at $800 million.
.members of both parties.
Ney said lhe jobs of 7,000 Ohio
AEP spokesman Michael
miners are at stake, along with Mahoney said Tuesday that the
thos~ of support industries and . decision is pending and the compabusinesses that push the total to ny has no position OQ the bill.
Ney's measure provides a ercdlt
(!11,000 in the coal fields of south'easl .Ohio. That pan of the state against Ohio's gross
wt.
already ,is·'reeling· with poverty and The credit would te $1
ton of
Ohio- ooill used, not to exceed 20
• unemploYrriCrii. · "' ··· .,,
··
percent
of costs or" the installation
Sen. fan Michael Long, D-Cirand
use
of scrubbers - if the utiliclevillo, told tbe Sena1e that the
economic impacl on ·the solitheast ty's generating fuel is 90 percent
Ohio area would be devastating if Ohio coal or 80 percent if mixed
with another fuel.
· ·
the legislation did not pass.
The credits also would apply to
"Quite frankly, ir the mines
close, the potelltial is very real for plants that already have scrubbers.
It requires electric utilities to
many of tliese (southeastern Ohio)
commu11itles to become ghost submit compliance plans to the
Public Utilities Commission of
From staff aa4 wire reporiS

Saturday Ia Pomeroy for Heritage Weekend.
~;t~o received a tropby for Best

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Ptl~
21 ,.,_.
oenta
Muld
lno.
Pkw

1991 · ·

Long-studied coal bill
clears Ohio Senate

MARCHI NO BAND

".

Low tonight in 60s.
Chance of rain 20 per.
cent. High Thursday

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G•eta Dllbliil Plut Tv 'IJ aonlq lifter
a 1eeolld alteiDpt to J•IHtart CODirlct talb
falltd. Some ~ tile l,tSO - b i n bJocl:ed tile
eatranc:e to tbe plant a• part or the atrlkl•l
activities. (AP)

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