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The Daily· Sentine~
By The Bend
Indians
triumph;
Reds lose
Monday, June 21, 19~;
PaQt-10:
----~--------------~~~~------~~--~~~~-------·
1953 Pomeroy
Medicare beneficiaries, home •
class holds
•
health
care
costs
may
be
paid
40th reunion
•
Submitted by
and • 80 percent of the approved :
•
The Pomeroy High School Class
of 1953 held its 40th reunion at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Don
(Frances Evans) Hunnel on Rose
Hill Road, on Saturday May 29.
Hosting the reunion were
Frances Evans llunnel, Mary
Holter Huddleston, Shirley Smith,
Sue Struble Cramer and Marlene
Moore Wilson. Decorations were
purple and white balloons and pur·
pie irises.
Attending froin out of town
were: Barbara Wehrung Martin,
Jim Falls, Wisconsin; Ted Scott,
Westland, Michigan; William and
Veronica Roush, El Paso, T~as;
Jerry Snowden, Narcross\ Georgia:
William Kitchen, Palmbay, Aori· ·
da; Louis and pat Osborne, Mel·
borne, Florida; Barbara Halfield
Scarberry, Henderson, West\ Vir·
ginia; Glen and Shirley Rus~ll
Stollar, Toledo, Ohio; Sue Struli~
Cramer, Marion; Sally BartelS
Ayers, Athens; Ralph and Mildred
Stockton Bernard, Coolville:
Harold and Daisy Russell Gillogy,
Albany; Don and Marilyn Dickers
Graham, Columbus; Robert Rein·
hard, Alhens; Gene and Patty Cli~te
Hall, Marietta: James and Betty
Leonard Conkle, Cheshire: Roger
Winebrenner, Gallipolis and Mary
Holter Huddleston, Racine.
Others attending were Shirley
Smith, Jack Raub, Barbara Still
James, Frances Evans Hunnel, Ed
and Carol Kennedy and Marlene
Moore Wilson.
Writing is thought to have been
originated by the Sumerians in
Me!lopcotarrlia about 4000 B.C.
. JOSIE DOERFER
Celebrates fifth
birthday recently
Josie Doerfer celebrated her
fifth birthday recently with a party
at McDonald •s in Pomeroy. .
Attending were he~ parents,
Ginger Doerfer and David Doerfer,
grandmother Julia Darsl, Gina and
Chris Duncun, Gwen Folmer and
Tiffane, Angie and Larisa and
Colby Hood, Mary and Annett
Sheets Andie, Trista and Bubby
Doerfer, Rachel! ~avidson, Summer, Sonny, Can! and Donny
Folmer, Vicky Hill and Shawn
Gilmore.
·
Others presenting gifts were Mr.
and Mrs. Rick Taylor and Nisha
and Tasha, Mary Doerfer, Pat and
Sam Tompson, Betty and Tody
Dill Butch, Lori and Sheldon Mercer Md Tim and Becky Davidson.
How to make child's final ~" s happy ones
Dear Ann Landers: . This is in
m;polise to the parents whose child.
Ann
Landers
"Kathy," 1s incurably ill. They
wanted to know how to make her
ftnal days happy ones.
ANN LANDERS
Forgive me for being critical, but
"1993,, ll..oo~~~
I'm afraid you are missing the boat.
TJma s~
Indulging Kathy with a "dream lrip"
Crnton Syodklte"
or other luxuries will not help
prepare anyone for the inevitable. It advance for organ donation. I(s a
would only add to lhe tension and marvelous way for your child's
drain lhe energy of the entire farn· beauty to live on.
ily. Since this lovely young girl will
In short, help Kathy be part of a
not be able to m•e conlributions in lasting memorial that will bring other
future years, you must now help children a more fulfilling life.
ma1cc her brief life as purposeful and Purposeful living is the bell .
productive as possible.
preparation for dying. -· A
Use the money you would have CARING ROTARIAN
spent on indulgenca, and 1ry to llile
DEAR fRIEND: What a beauti·
additional funds to build !OITlething ful concept. I received thousanda of
thai will provide health, educarioo !etten suggesting ways to make
or recreation for deprived children. Kalhy'slinal days more pleasant, but
Perhaps an aquarium in a ghetto yours was the most aative and
school, a playground for handi· constructive. Keep re.ding for more
capped youngsters, a nature walk, on the same IUbject.
an immunization clinic or a sports
Dear Ann Landen: This letter iJ
center. Get Kathy's friends and for the parents who are faced with
classmates involved in the project the lou of a daughter who is
she ftnds most &ppWing.
terminally ill. They asked for your
Let everyone see that this is guidance.
Kathy's gift to other children. It wiU
You, dear parents, have incred·
give her a gm11 deal 'of pleasure and ible sttmgth lhat you are not yet
might even lengthen her life.
aware of. Once you get past this
Ask for help. Perhaps the local honendous shock and the "why me?"
Rotary, a church youth group or phase, allow yourselves to IBY,
another organization will join in the "Why /IQI me, becall"" I have the
project and make it larger and mm strenglh 10 make each day a good
enduring than !OITlething you pul one for her."
together on your own.
Let each day be calm,Jovins and
And pleue consider ll'flll8ing in ordinary. Do lhe SOrt of things the
.
~-
,...,..
..
. ... ...
whole family would do anyway, as
weU as other things you may have
been putting off. You will get much
advice. That's OK, but trust your
instincts.
When I finally Jolt my dauahter,
my onl)! child, I wu able to wort
through my grief,
I know I
had given her a good life, howew:r
brief, and that 1,- privilepd 10
have had her.
Parents who have lost a child by
accident or ,murdei: cr sudden cieath,
whatever the reasan, had no chance
to p~q~~re. Uec what time there Ia 10
the fullelt. It will become dear 10
you what ia truly impc:alllltanclwhlt
illrivial. May God blea you. You
are in my prayers. - SWAR1H•
MORE,PA.
DEAR READERS: The leucr
about the tenninally ill child pnc~r:
ated mere maillhele last two weeb
than all the other leuera combined.
My tilankJIO all whole aenaitlve IDd
caring words were wonby of prinJ,
but unfOI1UIIalely. JIPICC would not
permit me 10 UIC them,
Wlrcn pltlllllbtg 11 wedtfi•g, who
fJ4YI for wltol? Who iltwb wltiT•1
'Tire AM LoNim Gllltk for Brldu"
lras all the IUIIWVI. Sell!l a "lfoQd·
drdsetl.lollf,IHI.Jblus-llu Ollltlopt
IUid 11 check or 111011ey ortkr for
$3.65 (this irtelllilel pollllgt flllll
lltutdlbtg) to: BrUin, c/o AM IAn·
ders, P.O. Boz 11562, Chicllgo,/11.
......_eo
60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$4.45.)
.
-
.
Mr. and· Mrs. Charles Blakeslee
have recenlly returned from attend·
ing the graduation of lheir grandson Jeff Butcher from South
Spenser High School in Rockport,
Indiana on Saturday May 29. Jeff is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Butch·
cr.
Other family members who
attended the graduation were his
grandmother Ira Butcher, Texas:
his aunt Patricia Circle and cousins
Marianne and Mark Circle and
friend Lance Harra, Kansas, and
sisters, Julie, Jessica and Joanna.
Jeff was recognized as being in
the top 10 percent of his class, a
member of the National Honor
Society and received a special
diploma of academic excellence.
The Blakeslees will return to
Rockport the weekend of Jpne I 9
and 20 to attend the Hardee All·
Star Banquet and football game
among outstanding high school
football players of Southern Indiana. The game will be played at
EvansviUe. Jeff has recdved a foot·
ball scholarship at Western Kentucky University and will start
pncbce in early August. ·
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel NeW!l Stall'
Members of the Pomeroy Village Council Monday night voted
unanimously to close the Pomeroy
Paating Lol from Thursday, Oct 7,
to Sunday, Oct. 10, to provide
space ·for the annual Btg Bend
Sternwheel Festival.
Larry Banks, representing the
Sternwheel
Association,
approached council asking their
continued suppon fer the event. In
addition to asking for usc of the
parking lot, Banks also requested
•'
.....
extra police pairols and permissiqn
to sell beei on the parking lot
· "The Big Bemf Sternwheel Festival has been a real success,"
Councilman Larry Wehrung said.
"I go along with everything you
(Banks) ask."
"~I might cause !OITle publem,"
Wehrung added, "but just for one
weelcend."
In addition, Banks and council
members discussed the possibility
of upgrading the elcciric service in
lhe parkin$ lot.
Councalman John Blaettnar
made the motion that council
approve closing the parking lot for
the festival. All council members
approved the motion.
Council members also viewed
plans for a proposed baUflCld 10 be
located between the old Pomeroy
Junior High Building and the
Meigs High School Football Field.
The plans presented to council,
drawn up by Eugene Triplen, call
for two back·to-back f1elds.
Retirement
discussed
A representative from the Ohio
Public Employees Deferred Com·
Other ·buSiness
Council also discussed amendments to several village ordinances
. pertaining to dogs at large, yard
sales, trailers and tanning beds.
A section of the proposed traiJer
ordinance involves prohibiting
landowners from setting up traiJers
within the village for use as rentals.
Blaennar, opposed to that section of the ordinance, said, "It is
Council members agreed to let not cqrrecting the problem, the
workers meet with a program rep- problem of improper maintenance."
resenlative to see if they would be
Rentals should all be addressed
inierested in the program.
he said. "I don't like this
.,ian
.
Germany's demand turned down
COPENliAGEN, Denmark said arming Muslims would worsen
(AP) - European Community lhe bloodshed, mean withdrawing
leaders today blocked a demand by UN. humanitarian forces and risk
Germany to arm Bosnia-Herzegov- widening the conflict.
French President Francois Mit·
ina's embauled Muslims.
terrand
said that the Europeans
Producing a letter of support
should,
instead,
send more b'OOps
from President Clinton, German
to
protect
U.N.designated "safe
Chancellor Helmut Kohl urged the
havens"
for
Muslims,
which are
community to press the United
still
being
shelled
by
Serbs.
Nations to lift an arms embargo in
Some 60 Bosnian demonstralas
orde~ to help Muslim forces repel
booed;
whistled and shouted
advances by Serbs and Croats.
.
'~killen!"
and ~~shame, shame" as
"If we don't help them, then we
have to give them the chance t.o the west European leaders arrived
help themselves," Dieter Vogel, a in motqrcades on the flll!li day of a
spokesman f<r German Chancellcr two-day meeting.
The community stance in
Helmut Kohl, said today. "It is not
just a question ofpolitic:S, it's ques· Copenhagen effectively piled pressure on Bosnia's Muslim president,
tion of morals."
But Britain, backed by France, Alija Izetbegovic, tb go to peace
called the proposal a "recipe for talks in Geneva on Wednesday and
chaos.'' Prime Minister John ·Majer negotiate a Serb-Croat proposal to
•
..--Local briefs----Counsel appointedfor Lemaster$
Attorney William N. Eachus of Worthington was appointed
Monday by Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W.
Crow Jli to represent William D. Lemasters in his bid for an appeal.
Lemas!Crs, 26, was found guilty May 15 in the Feb. 8, 1991,
shotgun slayings of Jeffrey L. Halley, 36, and 12-year-old JeffreyS.
Halley, both of Gallia County. In addition, he was found ~ty of
aggravated rob~ and !'NO counts ofki~!Jg in the incadent
He is currently servmg two consecuuve life sentences for the
murders. During his trial, Len\asters was represented by attorneys
Eachus and B~ McLane.
Man charged in burglary
A 19-ycar-old Long Bottom man is being held in the Meigs
County Jail on a charfe of receiving stolen property.
Brandon Shuler o 46842 Showalter Road was charged Monday
for his aile~ connection with the theft of a safe from the Robert
Deemer resadence on CoUege Road in Syracuse.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes said Monday
that charges are pending against three juveniles. Lentes said a second adult, who is cooperating with authorities, has yet to be chlrged
and is expected to plead guilty to a charge of receiving stolen property.
A preliminary hearing is scheduled Friday for Shuler, Lentes
said.
Man pleads innocent
A man charged with ~vated burglary with ftrearms specific&·
lions pleaded innocent during his arraignment Monday.
·John Alfred Rose m, 18, of Reyno~urg. is accused in the June
IS armed rob~ of the By the Way Gr0ctzy in Langsville.
Meigs Coun~ Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes said Rose's
trial is schedu~ for July 20 at 9 a.m.
Rose remains in the Meigs County JaiJ in lieu of $50,000 cash
bond.
1993 royalty forms available .
AE'cation forms for·the 1993 Meigs COIDity Junior Fair King
and
Contesl may be picked up at the Meigs County Exten·
sion
Applications are due back at' the extension office by 4:30p.m. on
July 30. No applications will be accepted after that date.
The king and queen mUSl be at least 16 years old as of Jan. I,
1993 not married nor have been married, l)or have borne a child.
FOr more information, please call Chip Haggerty 'at the Meigs
County Extension Office at 992-6696.
Man cited in wreck
An 18-ycar-old Pomeroy man was cited for faiJure to control following a two-car wreck near the junction of Ohio 124 and College
Avenue in Syracuse IIIOUIId 6:30p.m. Monday.
Nathan M. Brown of 210 W. Main Street, Pomeroy, was soulh·
bound on Ohio 124 11 a high rare of spee4 when be lost control of
the I985 Oldsmobile Della 88 he was driving, acconling to a report
fron1 the Meip County Sheriff's De!llnment
Brown's car slid left of ccntec arnlstruck a northbound car driven
by Richard L. Butcher, 42, of 32844 u.s. 33, Pomeroy, the repon
indicated.
.
Butcher was transported by the Syracuse Squad of the Meags
County Emcrge11cy Medical Service 10 Yererans Memorial Hospital
where he was treated and released.
Brown and a pas~ger in his vehicle, Kevin Arnott, 18, of
Racine, were reportedll uninjured in the accident
Damqe to llrown 1 car was listed u heavy while damqe to
Bu!Cher~s 1984 Cadillac Eldorado was listed as moderate.
•
Editor'• am: Nama, 11ft alld llddreun are pablllbed u
tbeJIPJIIII' OD olllciii reporll.
·
carve Bosnia-Herzegovina into
three ethnic regions.
.
In a draft communique, the EC
leaders offered supportive words
including, at the inSistence of Kdll,
a declaration of support for the
Muslims' call for a cease-fire. But
they made no mention of the arms
embargo.
Mitterrand urged lhe community
nations to conUibute to a 7,500·
strong U.N. force to patrol six
Muslim "safe areas."
The Netherlands announced it
would send 400. Britain and France
already provide most of the 10,000 ·
U.N troopS in Bosnia. Two diplomats quoted Mitterrand as sayinj! that if the EC
couldn't commn itself to sending
enough troops to protect Muslim
civilians, then the arms embargo
should be lifted and U.N. troops
withdrawn. ·
Former First Lady
Pat Nixon, 81, dies
WASliiNGTON (AP) - Pat
Nixon, the uncomplaining silent
partner in Richard Nixon's quarter
century of political triumph and
disgrace, died of lung cancer today
at the Nixon home in Park Ridge,
N.J.
She was81.
She had suffered from lung disease for years. ,
. The former president and their
daughters, Tricia Nixon Cox and
Julie Nixon Eisenhower, were with
the forrtier fmt lady when she died.
Funeral services were set for
Saturday at the former president's
library in Yorba Linda, Calif.,
according to a statement from
Nixon •s office that announced the
death.
In their 53 years of marriage their anniversary was on Monday
-through the dark years of Watergate, throu&h the pain of his resig·
nation from the presidency- the
former Thelma Catherine Ryan was
at Nixon •s side, never showing in
public how much it hurt.
,.
DIRECTS TRAFFIC • Aa Italian United
Nations soldier uses bls pistol to direct 111 bus
railed. with Somali resldenll at a cbeckpoiQt ill
MogadWau Tuesday. The situation ill the Somali
capital Is calm foUOwfag last week's altacb by
U.N. forces on Somali warlord Geaeral
Mohammed Farrah Aidid (AP).
Officers say stress part ofjob at prison
CINCINNATI (AP) - Guards
in Ohio prisons receive relatively
good pay and have job security, but
a study says many of them quit
fairly quickly. ·
.
The Criminal Justice Institute, a
trade organization, found that 13.8
percent of Ohio corrections personnel - including 352 ~ among
the 661 employees 11 tracked didn't make it through a six-month
probation period in 1991, the latest
year for which figures were avail·
able. That compared with a nation·
al ave~ge of 9.6 percent, the institute satd.
"I think it's· pretty clear. It's .
extremely sb'essful," said Ohio
Civil Service Employees Association spokesmll) Peter Wray, whose
uniOn represents the guards .
"There's a lot of baggage that
comes wilh the job."
With the danger and stress
inherent in the job, some people
might wonder why anyone would
want to work as a c~~T~~Ctions officer. But Troy Lynch, 28, a guard at
the Warren C~~T~~Ctionallnstitution
in Lebanon, said he could think of
at least two good reasons.
"Better pay, better benefits," he
responded when asked why he left
a municipal utilities.job four years
ago in nearby Blanchester to
become a guard.
Guards' pay in state prisons
averages $21,000 a year, a figure
that frequently is atttactive to people who live near prisons, which
usually are located in economically
depressed areas, Wray said.
But job stress sometimes causes
health problems for guards and
tension in~ family life, he
::.:J::
Ernest Clark, 40, a guard at the
Mansf1eld Correctional Institution,
said his first marriage failed•J P
years ago panly because he lried;tp
ease his wife's fears by not talking
about work.
·
Racine celebration theme announced
· "For God and Counlry" will be
the theme of the Racine July 4 celebration featuring a parade at I
p.m.
The parade wiD form at South·
ern Hi'h School at 12:30 p.in. and
.Jhen will take a route of down Elm
to Third, to Vine, then Fifth, back
to f;lm, returning to .the high
school.
. First, second, and third place
cash prizes will lie awarded for
floats. A $100 prizC for fii'Sl place
is being provided by Home Nation·
al Bank, while the second prize of
$1S and the third prize of $SO ane
being provided by the Racine Fire
Depanment
Individuals or lfOilpS planing to
enter the parade are asked to con,
tract Scott Hill at 949-2231. A .flag
raising by Racine Post, American
Legion, 'will take place at 12:45
p.m.
.
The holiday in Racine will
begin at II a.m. with a chicken
barbecue by the fire department In
addition to chicken, the group will
also sell snow cones, and the fire.
men's aUxiliary wiD be selling ice
cream. Food will also be sold by
the Star MiD Park Board, hot dogs
and sausage dinners with beans and
salad, the Youth League, and
RACO.
.
The Big Bend Farm Antiques
Club will sponsor an antique trao·
tor pull at Star Mill Park at 2:30
p.m. and at the same time there will
be a volleyball tournament, spo!l·
sored by the Racine Baptist
Church. Anyone wanting to have a
team in lhe tournament should con·
tact Rick Harris at949-2867.
At 3:30 p.m. Gary Norris will
have a home run derby for the kids,
and at 5 p.m. Dan and Ted Smith
will have a kiddie tractor pull. The
Racine American Legion will have
a bean dinner and also have bingo
at the hall.
Life Flight will have a helicopter at lhe park from I to 2 p.m.
for local residents 10 view.
. Entertainment at the Star Mill
Park stage will begin at 3 p.m. and
continue each hour until the fireworks. The Kingdom Kids will perform at 3 p.m., the Specks of Bluegrass at 4 p.m. the Born Again
Believers at 5 p.m. the Rambling
Country at 6 p.m. the Out of the
Blue at 7 p.m. White's Hill Band at
8 p.m. and Rock Mountain Blue·
grass at 9 p.m.
Craft booths will be along the.
park building and anyone in~
tn setting up should contac
Kalhryn Hart at 949-2656. The set
up fee is $10.
'
Donations are also being taken'
for a fireworks fund and checks!
made payable to the Racine Firei
Department Fireworks Fund .
should be mailed to P. 0. Box 246
atRacine. ,
,
The celebration will be concluded with a I 0 p.m. fireworks dis- :
play.
j:
All activities following the 1 •
parade will take place at Star Mill, :
Park and the fire department build- ·
ing area. Those attending are '
reminded to take lawn chairs. Pan;.
ing space will be available.
Area retailer disqualified from food
stamp program
.
.
C &: D PennzoU II 34099 State
Route 7. Pomeroy, owned by Timothy Jenkins, has ~II permanently
disqualified from the Meigs Coun
Food Stamp Program, the
Department of Agriculture
announced today.
The firm was charged with
exchanging cash for food stampl. a
practice commonly referred to as
trafficking and for acccptin!! food
stamps in payment of inehgible
u.f.
ilems.
,
A llulllmeda Inc• .....,..,.,
pensation Program met with councilto explain in optional retirement
plan for public workers wh.o pay
mto Ohio retirement funds.
The program allows ·workers to
defer part of their income before it
appears on their pay checks, the
represenlative said. They do not
pay taxes on the deferred income
until they receive it at a later date.
,.
1. . .7424111
•
1 Section. 10 Pagee 21 a.ta
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 22, 1993
Council OKs use of parking lot for festival
113 W. IIIII 11.
OIIM~7t
7328
MultiiMdlalno.
JEFF WARNER
STUDENTS OF THE WEEK - TJae followlnglltadeall trere
selected lor behavioral or acad•lc reuona to be tht studeatl or
the week at Melp Junior Hlab Selaool ror tile m1111th or May. They
are Eddie Saner, biltGrJ; WenciJ SbrlmpiiD, readiDI and speiUng;
Sandra Yoang, art; and Chad Folmer, ~elence.
Low toDJabt In 601, clear•
WedDetday sUDDy. High In 101.
.)
Airman Todd M. llarrison,
Racine, enlisted in the US Air
Force after completing two quartetJ
of ~dies at Ohio Slate Umversity
in Columbus. He graduated from
Basic Military Trainjng on May 21.•
at Lacldand Air Force Base in SBJI
Antonto, Texas.
·
He was a member of Basic Mili·
tary Squadron 331 and llonor
Aight 286. Following seven weeb
of trainin~ u a Computec lnfanna~
tion S~aalist at Keesler Air Force
Base an Biloxi, Miss., Airman Har·
rison will be srationed at Otrut Ait
Force Base in Omaha, Ncbnska.
Todd is the son of Crail and
Judy Harison of Racine. Grandpar·
ents are Ed and Helen I une Kelly
of Syracu!!C and Richard and Pat
Harrison of Duncan Falls. His
fiance is Miss Jody Hayes also of
Racine.
Scott Whitlatch
· Scott W. WhitJitcb, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Max Whitlatch of Mid·
dleport, enlisted in the Air Force
recently, according to TSGT Rllldy ·
Frisby. Air Force recurilier, ~.
. Upon IUCCCIIfully campleling
the Air Force's six-week bail: mlf.
itary ttainlng at I Jlckland Alr Fort,
Base, near San Antonio, Texas,
Airman Whitlatch I• ICbeduled to
receive technical training in th~
Mechanical Career field.
.
Airman Whitlatch, a 1993 lfld·
uate of Meigs High School, will be
earning credits toward 10 uiOCiate
degree in applied science& throu.lh
the.Community CoUege of the Air
Force while attending basic and
technical trainingiChoola.
Pomero,, OH. 4l7le
Pick 4:
Vol. 44, NO. 31
Rose
Barrows
earns
Mt Zion Church of Christ
holds mother-daughter fete first plac~ in contest
. FIVE .G~NERATIONS- This rive generation family
mcludes, satttng, great-great-grandmother, Henrietta Hayman·
holding baby, William Folmer is grandmother Ella Roush, wbil;
mother, Samantha Folmer, stands in center. At right Is greatgrandmother, Blanche Stewart
922
•
Sa1' bury
Elementary
holds ac adem1' c
banquet
Blakeslees attend
graduation of grandson
Pick 3:
Page4
you: and • The agency providing
EdPetenon,
your home health services must cost of durable medical equipment;
Sodal Security
participate in Medicare.
· (including items such as oxygen.
IDIDIJ&er ID Athena
If you meet all four conditions, equipment. wheelchairs, 1111~ other:
"Medicare may pay the costs of Medicare will pay the full medically necessary equapment
treatment by a participatint~ home approved cost for all medically prescribed by your doctor for you
health ~ncy for beneflcianes who ·required covered home health ser- to use at home).
·
need slcilled la1th care services in vices, When ~ou no longer .need
Mr. Peterson notes that "If you
their l)wn home," according to Ed intermittent slciDed nursing care or receive home health care, the home
Peterson, manager of the Athens physical or speech therapy, Medi • health agency will submit the claim
Social Security office. "If you think care will continue to pay for cov· for payment directly to Medicare.
you may be eligible for thts ~ Of ered home health services if you You don't have to send in any bills
service," Mr. Peterson said; ask continue to need occupalional ther· · yourself."
your doctor to refer you to a local apy.
Medicare participating home health
"It's important to remember that
agency to sec if you meet the general
household serviceslS
· TREE AS TRIBUTE • This cyprus tree Will planted at the Sal·
requirements. That home health
to do the ~. prepare
isbury Elementary School as a tribute to RosaUe Story, left, and
agency will evaluate your case free someone
mealS, or do your shOIIIIJRg- are
Dorothy Chuey,long time teache~ there. Both teachers retired at
of charge."
.
not covered my Medfcare." Mr.
·
the end of the school year.
A home health agency may be a
poiniS OUL "Nor are other .
public or private agency. Its spe· Peterson
home care services that mainly
·.
.
.
cialty is providing skilled nursang
services and therapeutic services- =~rsonal, family. or domestic
like physical therapy-to homeHere •s what Medicare covers:
Salisbury Elementary recently were donated by the Meigs County bound individuals.
• Part-time or intermittent . Salisbury Elementary recently ·
dedicated a Bald Cypress !lee as a Utter Control Office. The students
According to Mr. Peterson, to skiUed nursing care (including up held their academic banquet w!th.
living tribute to ROialie Story, who were given bidges, pencils and var- be eligible for home health visits, to 8 hours of reasonable and neces· students being served a steak din-.
taught there for 37 years and ious trinkets with an Earth Day you must meet all four of the fol- sary care per day for up to 21 con- ner by the Salisbury PTO. The'.
·
Dorothy Chaney, who has taught logo.
lowing conditions:
secutive days-or lont~er in some meal for the students was provided· ·
The
sixth
gr8de class continued
for 29 1/2 years. Story and Chaney
•
You
must
need
care
that
circumstances): • PhySical therapy; through a grant from Effective·
were also honored lit a tea held at its monthly dean-up of the school includes intermittent skilled nurs- and • Speech therapy.
Schools.
·
·
the school on May 16 for the com· playground and surrounding area. ing care, physical therapy, or
If
you
need
any
of
these
covered
Principal
Halar
spoke
to
the
munity. They were honored a~ a They also started a newspaper speech therapy: • You must be services, Medicare also pays for:
audience about the importance of
retirement party held at Dale's wath recycling program which they plan confined to your home (home•
Occupational
therapy:
having the elementary school years
the faculty and staff of Salisbury on to continue.
bound); • Your physician mUSl say
•
Part-time
or
intermittent
home
as
foundation for education.
The fourth grade class turned that you need home health care and health aide services; • Medical Asaagood
June 2.
.
part
of this good foundation;
As part of the Arbor I?ay ce.le· · their lOOm into a II'Opical rain forest must set up a home health plan for social services: • Medical supplies: the math and science parent work·
bration, the classes were giVen pme and decorated T-shlrts with a Save
shops, with hands-on materials,
seedlings to plant. The seedlings Our.Earth theme.
which were conducted as part of
the Effective School program this
year were explained.
Harlar explained the Effective
School seven components; a sense
of mission. stronl! building leader·
ship, high expectations for all stuRose Barrows received first to have a table at both the state fair dents and staff. frequent monitor·
The Zion Church of Christ held Lambert. Garnes were played and · place in the crocheted rable cloth, and the county fair. She will have ing of student progress, a positive
a mother-daughter banquet iecently several potted flowers were given baby set, counted cross stitc)l, mis· background ready for work at our learning climate, sufficient oppor· .
cellaneous, holiday wreath and Fun Night on June 19.
at the church .. The theme for this away as prizes.
!Unity for learning and parent/com·
Johnson and Dummitt served as stuffed toy categories at the judg·
year's banquet was hospitality.
Eldon Barrows, legislative mumty involverru:nt. ·
•:
ing held recently at the Start chairman, repof!ed on the Dove
Program booklets and table co-chairman for the event
Grace Kitchen and Tricia DaviS •
arrangements were decorated with
Gra~$e 11778 me~ting. Oth~r
Bill. He also reported lhat the abor· were announced .as the Meigs~
recetVJng fU'Sl place m the embroa-· tion and casino gambling bills will County honorees in highest aca· .~'
pineapples, which are a symbol of
dery categories were Maxine Dyer.
hospitality. The program opened
· demic achievement. Harlar also··
Franklin D. Roosevelt vetoed more Patty Dyer received fmt place in . be up for vote soon.
with Kathryn Johnson giving a
announced that students who were·:
The
Ohio
State
Grange
Convenreading "Thoughts of Mother." A congressional bills than any other the embroidery cateaory and count· tion in October was discussed. on the honor roll all year will have,;
president. His &35 vetoes far outdis· ed cross stitch categories. Opal
song was sung by Kay McElroy lance
the 414 of his 'nearesl competi- Dyer received first place in the Meigs County is responsible for the their names engraved on a plaque •
and Bonnie Arnold. Charlotte Lam· tor, Grover
table favors for the youth luncheon. which will be posted in the main ';
Cleveland.
plastic canvas, young adult pillow Opal Dyer, county youth chairman, hallway of the school
bert spoke on the hospitality of dif·
:
ferent women in the Bible, and the
contest
and
county
cross
stitch
reported work on them will take
The biggest gainer in congressionhospitality she receives as she ttav· al reapportionment after the 1990 catagories. Freda Smith won the place at the next meeting.
els.
Dyer announced that Meigs
census was Californi'!, which picked piUow contest. Judges for ihe COR·
Other readings were given by .up seven additional seats. The biggest test conducted by 1aile I Morris County Pomona Grange will meet
Tammy Dummiu and Bonnie loser was New York, whose congres- were llazel Davas and Mildred on Friday July 2. The meeting wiD
Arnold. A comedy skit was pre• sional delegation shrank by three Morris.
begin with a potluck supper at 6 .
Hazel Stanley and Ann seats.
Winners of the the state baking p.m. followed by inspection and
contest judged recently at the lhe fifth degree in fuU form at 7:30
Grange Deputies Conference held p.m. Any fourth degree member
in Zanesville were Chelsea Mont· who would like to advance to the
gomery, fmt place in the junior 5·9 fifth degree should attend. Pomona
age group with brownies: Alan officers were reminded of a pracSmith, fmt place with youth tice session on June 2S.
1 crunchy brownie bars and Patty
Janis Macomber, deaf chainnan,
Dyer, fourth place in the young presented a' program on deaf and
adult banana muffin contests.
hearing. She showed a video and
During the meeting conducted discussed various types of aids for
br Mastec Patty Dyer. the commu- the hearing impaired.
mty service project was discussed
Forty-two members, juniors and
and I anis Macomber reported that visitors enjoyed potluck ·refresh·
she will take the food from the bar· ments following the meeting.
rei to a local food bank after our
The next meeting will be fun
next meeting.
night and work session on Saturday
Dyer discussed the fair booths June 19. It will ·begin with a
and reported that we are signed up potluck supper at 6:30p.m.
Trees dedicated to teachers
Ohio Lottery
A USDA offacial explained lhat regulations governing the Food
food coupons can be used only to Stamp Program. Woods said that
buy food for human consumption ·any farm which violates the regulaand for plants and seeds to grow tions, and anyone who pressures a
food for the household.
fum to do so, weakens and endanMonroe Woods, Midwest gers the whole program which was
Regional Administrator of the eslablished to combat hunger and
USDA's Food and Nutrition Ser- malnutrition.
vice which administers the proAs a means of protecting the
gram, explained that before being integrity of the Food Stamp Pro·
authorized to accept food coupons, gram. each retail food lion:: autJto..
firms must agree to abide by the rized to accept food stamps is
required to post in a suitable and
.
.
.
conspicuous location in the Store a
sign which provides information on
how persons may repon abuses
they have observed in the operation
of the program.
1
Food stamp fraud can be rqx_~~~,
ed to USDA, Food and Nutrition
Service, 200 N. High Street, Room
S03, Columbus, Olilo. 43215 or by
telephone 11 (614)469-(j864 or the
Ust>A, Office of InspcciDr Clenera1
(toll ftee) 1-~24-9121.
�. '' . •.
·· -!"
... .
. . ...,
.. .
, ~
...
,.....
..
- .......
.
•
Tuesday, June 22,1993
Commentary
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Dry, .warm weather will return to Oh·io .
OHIO Weather
P&ge--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
TUesday, June 22,1993
Wednesday, June 23 ·
Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
I
MICH.
•
The 'borking' of Bruce Babbitt
The Daily Sentinel
I
111 Court Stnlet
Pomeroy, Ohio
way, a president and his 8upporten
need not suffer the: embarrassment
:hired!!.~;! sec!~ ~~e · of seeing a nominee defealed or of
ne · ·
· · 24 h
f having to withdraw the: nomination.
B~bbttl w~s wtthm
?!Irs o
·
bemg noounated for a poSIUOn on
the .suprcn:t~ Court, and he was
bustl6 wnung an acceptance
speec ·
h
· ·d h
When it became clear that ClinThen, as 1 er_~ik~~~ ~ .e ton was serious about naming BabBeltway! he got
b k' st- bitt to the court, some very disdent Cf hntho.n whocaskedseen ~c ~~ ~arate grouKs s~g into action.
away rom IS. s
n~mee. .
the end, Babbmwas d~ m -. m
orne saw ab ill as a potential ·
about.equal pans- by his friends ~':tl{e ~~rf.~~~f:~!:;:d
aild h~.enem•,C:S·
.. -'-ed" Babbitt ;nA;~nsabte in his ....,..,.nt
To boric, or to be bo•~ •
u~....
r--·
is a \lerb in the modern political position, and w~ed an intensi.ve
lexicon derived from~ defeat of battle to keep hun at the Intenor
Supreme Court nomiDee Judge Department
Robert Bork in 1986 As used
Within hours of Babbitt's name
· f.eat an ·sur facmg
·
· a po t en t"•a I co urt
as
today, it means to de
appomtee, prevent an appomtment, appointment, a package of anti·
or to be on the receiving end of Babbitt material landed on the
such an action.
·
desks of several influential RepubIn the confmnation fights of the: lican senators and staffers on the
last five 10 six years, pohucal Judiciary Commiltee, as well as at
groups have learned . that.the best some conservative media OJltlets.
time to defeat a ~rnee JS beThfore The package contained details of
the person IS officially named. at never-proven, two-decade-old
WASHINGTON (NEA) _
·
· "ders
"t
a
·
DEVOTED TO 1'HJt llfl'ElU8'l'S OJ' 1'HJt IIEIGS-IIASON .AJt&A
Robert}. Wagman
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publbber
MARGAREI' LEHEW
Controller
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gene.ral Manager
!.E'ITERS OF OPINION m wek:ome. They should be le11 than 300
words .. All letters are subject to editing and musl be sig~ wilh name,
address and 1e!epbone number."No unsigned leaers will be published. Leaers
sboukl be in good tas1e, addreu~g iuues, nol personalities.
Letters to the editor
Disagrees with criticism
I
!
l
overdue reforms,
Dear Editor;
In his Jetter, the Speaker takes
You recently received a letter
credit
on behalf of the majority for
from Vern Riffe, Speaker of the
a
provision
in the budget allowing
Ohio House of Representali ve~,
employers
to
pay for up 10 $1,000
criticizing the Ohio House Republiin
medical
care
directly, a reform·
can caucus for the position we toOk
on recent workers' compensation that will greatly reduce claims at
the Bureau of Workers' Compensa·
budgetlegislation.
. .
While we disagree strongly w•th lion. This was a Republican initiathe thrust of the criticism, as we tive offered by Representative E. J.
will explain in this teller, we Thomas and suppcll'ted by all of the
applaud the fact ~at the Speaker Republican members of the
has joined the public debate on the Finance Committee.
But politics aside, there remairts
issue and has set forth so clearly
what' members of the majority in before the General Assembly the
workers' compensation reform
the House consider to be reform.
Politics is about choices, and in issue, and there are two clear views
the case of workers' compemation of what conslitules reform.
The majority's version o(
legislation, there are real choices
reform
comes essentially from the
before the people of Ohio, and
existing
workers' compensation
therefore before the General
bureaucracy.
Our version comes
Assembly. Reform is critical and
from
our
constituent
mail which
even the Speaker asse_rts
shows
graphically
how
much suf" Democrats seek construcllve
change through the BWC budget fering there is among w<Xking men
and in separate Workers' Compen- and women because of inefficiency
sation refonn legislation being con- and ineptitude of the system, from
a report done by McKinsey and
sidered in the General Assembly.
· The question is how extensive Company, expert consultants who
reviewed the system, and from a
the refonn will be.
In his criticism of House Repub- coalition of eight business organilicans, Speaker Riffe sugg~ts that zations united for the fli"St lime in
Republicans are obstrucung the support of reform.
-The House Democrat version
path to reform ." In the letter's
has
been bleSSed y a handful of top
account Of what transpired on the
labor
leaders who some believe
workers • compensation budget,
have
lost
contact -with heir own
Republicans were chastised for
member.
We
have taken our cue
opposing the bill. Two important
from
worker
themselves,
instead
facts were omitted in this account
who
are
outraged
a
the
system's
- the increased levels of the fundproblems,
and
fro
hundreds
of sufing for the Bureau and the Hou~e
fering
small
business
people
across
Democrat position on Republican
the
state.
effort to include substantive reform
The majority's approach is minprovisions in the budget
On the funding side, the budget imal in nature. because 10 do more
bill which the House Democrats would be to acknowledge jUst how
tout as refonn, contained a 49 per- sour the system has gone under
cent increase in operating costs for Democrat conuol of the House. our
BWC and authorization for 800 is the: product of Republican caucus
members who have consistently
· more employees.
.
·
.
During, considerauon of the bill urged refonn over the same period
by the House Fi~ce and Appro- of lime.
The Speaker's letter has called
priations Commmee, 14 of 15
amendments to strengthen the bill attention to the issue and set forth
offered by Republicans were sys- his caucus • agenda. We welcome
tematically rejected. In fact, most the comparison to ours,. and we
were swnmarily ruled out of order believe you will agree with us that
. in a display of heavy-handedness we must hold.out for meaningful
seldom seen in the Finance c~m- reform of his system which is so
mittee. Among amendments reJeCt- imponant to our working men and
ed without debate were ~l!lend women.
We urge you to let us, and the
ments to restrict the defimuon of
Speaker,
know of your concerns,
intentional ton to its original meanand
we
urge
you to insist on the
ing in the: law. to get the swe out
strongest
.
b
ill
possible from the
of the rehabilitation business and
General
Assembly.
·
allow competent private sector
providers to do the job better, to
Ann Davidson
implement manaaed medical care
House
Minority
Leader
(a step taken by state government
William .Batcheler
as a whole two years ago), and to
Assistant Minority Leader
employ private sector adn!inisuaRandall Gardner
tors to accept, process, revtew and
Minority Whip
determine claims. All of these are
Tom Johnson
strongly endorsed by those who
Assistant Minority Whip
have studied the system as long
K
.
•
IToledols2" I
rumors lin~ing Babbitt to Las that Babbitt had rece1ved a $45,000
Vegas gambling and mob payoffs.
cash payoff.
.
.
In 1977, allegations surfaced
It is widely ~hevedRiflon Capt~l
that Babbiu, then Arizona's attor- Hill that the National . e AsSC?C•ney general, ran up large gambling ation is bellind the mformauon
debts in Las Vegas which were jwlr•ge, although a spOkesman for
ultilllJllel
"doffbYthemob. The thegroupstronglydeniesithadany
allegati~lfurther state that he was hand in C!lmpiling. or. dis~butrng
given a large cash payoff aflet: he the matenal. BabbtU IS vtewed as
withdrew his objections to an " soft" on the absolute right to
allegedly mob-connected company keep and bear arms, although he
running six greyhound racing supports continued access to spcll'ttracks in Arizona.
ing weapons.
.
. .
An FBI invesligalimi in 1977
Robert Corb1n was Anzona
and a later investigation by the Ari; attorney general in 19~. ~d it ~as
zona attorney general's office after he who~ a majOr mvesbgaB bb"
failed to tion of Babbilt after the tape sura ttl became go"ernor,
.
.
. il
Toda Corbin
substantiate the cha~g~s. The f~e~d~~~vof~·NRA~He told
charges ~surfaced agam 1D 198~ ThrWashin n Times, which ran
when details of a 10-year-old. pre
_.,
.gto the: ch es that
v1'ously
···'-··wn w;.,.,.n , .... sur· in
sev1986
..... stones
on tried toarg
•
••••
A Thew......, had beeu'"'7m';;d;; durhis offJCC
subslll!lli~~·
~
. . . th
ate the charges but kept runnmg
mg the 197f6 .•Anv~gauo~ mtobl" e into roadblocks'- people unwill ~
murder o
nzona epu •c .
talk "We couldn't put it all
reporter Don. BoUes. The tape--: of :::g:J.er:. ·he is quoted as saying.
~ conversauon betwee.n a pollee
gAt the same time these charges
·~formant and. a man w•~corec: surfaced, environmental or~aniza~ons .to ~te ~~.~ stateme~ts tions _ which had tobbted for
mg cucw
.
Babbitt's appoinunent to the Interior job - were fighting furiously to
keep him there. When the White
House began a frantic search for a
replacement at Interior, these
groups let it be known th!ly would
vehemently oppose any of the: people on the White Houae's short list
In the frnal hours before naming
Babbilt, Clinton reportedly made
the final condition of his nomination the frnding of a replacement at
Interior that was acceptable to
environmentalists, and who could
be easily confmned in the Senate.
Reportedly, environmental groups
responded that such a person did
not exist Anyone they approved of
other than Babbitt would be bitterly
OllllOSCd by Western Republicans.
· "The death knell of the Babbitt
appoinunent came when Judiciary
Committee Republican Orrin ·
Hatch, R-Utah, told .the White
House that Babbitt's eoilfmnalion
"might be difficult." Above all,
the White House does want any
kiild of confmnation fight over the
Supreme Court nominee.
·
Robert Wagman is 1 syndicated writer tor Newpaper Enter. prise Association.
Protecting Ohio consumers
Every day we hear of some
trusting, unsuspicious consumer
being taken advantage of by fly-by. night salesman and contractors.
Often these consumers are the
elderly that lose their life savings
or people in ~ area that has bee_n
hit by some disaster of nature, ThiS
type fraud must be stopped, and the
Attorney General's oftice has created a contractor registration process/ disaster relief program which
wiU do just that.
.
The need for this program made
itself apparent in . the mid-1970's
following the tornado that struck
the city of Xenia. Immediately fol- ·
lowing the disaster, hundreds of
home improvement contractors
llooded "the area preying on families that were still in a state of
· shock. Hundreds of unsuspecting
consumers gave money up-front to
contraciOrs for clean-up and repair.
After cashing the checks the contractors would disappear without
performing the agreed worlc.
· In the spring of 1985, a series of
tornadoes struck nonheastem Ohio
and Pennsylvania. Millions of dol-
Iars in damage occurred, affecting
thousands of citizens. The story
was covered by the national media
and within days hundreds of con-
Sen.]an M. Long
tractors from as far away as Texas
aild Mississippi had poured into the
area.
Investigators from the Attorney
General's office were sent in to
propose and assist in implementing
the registration procedure. The
local officials, already .aware of the
need, met the investi~ators with
open arms. Registration centers
were established and within 24
hours contractor registration had
begun. In the next two weeks, over
600 contractors were registered and
it is estimated that at least that
many fled the area after learning of
the mandate to be registered.
Tbe purpose of the program is to
assist local government and its citizens iri what could be their most
difficult and demanding hour.
Another goal is 10 make it iitconve- power, forms, and resources neednient ~or the unscrupulous contrac- ed to verify the information pretor 10 stay in the area, and if he sented by contractors. The Attordoes stay, the registration process ney General's office will not
wiU provide information so as 10 be approve or disapprove of any conable to locate the contractor in the tractor. Information f,~ered will
event of a problem.
be Biven to local offic
and these
The Attorney General does not offtcials could decide whether or
have the: authority to order contmc- . not to issue permits, while con- ·
tor registration. That power rests somers are urged to review the
_with local government. In a situa- information before hiring the contion where the disaster strikes a tractor.
city, the Auorney General suggests
For example, if a contractor disthat current building codes. be closes that he is from out of swe,
amended to require registration haS been found guilty of ~ny ,by
prior to work beginning. The al101- trick, and refuses to provtde any
ney general also suggest a criminal other information, then, if his
penalty for non-compliance, this assertions are true, the Attorney
wiU allow local law Cnforcement to General would pus this informaremove the non-compliant contrac- tion on to lucal officials for their
tor from the job and into custody. attention and potenlial action.
In villa~es or unincorporated areas
As always, if you have any
of the county, the commissioners questions or comments on this or
should pass an emergency resolu- any other issue please feel free 10
tion asking that contractors regis- contact my office. My address is,
ter.
Ohio Senate, Statehouse, Room
At the: request of lqcal govern- 134, Columbus, Ohio, 43266-0604
ment, the Attorne~ General will and my phone number is (614)
adminisier the regtstration proce- 466-8156.
dure as well as provide the ·man-
An interview.with Bill .Clinton
There is one question I have Barry Goldwater had also finally Adviser George Stephanopolous): massive but little-noticed cut in the:
wanted to ask Bill Clinton for a gone public in support of gays in "My conservative adviser ~ no, current budget proposal, zeroing
long lime. 1 got my chanr.e, unex: military service.
·
my cenaist adviser - David. says out any domestic discretionary
pectedly, on Tuesday afternoon,
I asked Clinton why, if he saw I made a mistake by cutting the spending increases for the next five
June 15, when I was at a White
White House staff levels by 25 per- years.
House ceremony announcing a
cent." Clinton's context seemed
In response to Barnes' question
solid n.ew policy fo~ American
b
clear: It was a shortage of White regarding the process by which he
intemabonal broadcasllllg. SuddenHouse slots that was now making it chose Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg
ly, 1 was invited, along with one . himself as a moderate, there w~re difficult to bring moderates aboard. for the Supreme Court, Clinton said
other commentator, to interview so few moderat~s on the Whtte . The president also thinks the be had started with a pool of about
the president in the: Oval OffiCe.
~ou~ ~taff. I SBld I believed that perception of him as a liberal tax40 potential candidates. He nar·
My question to the president hts onginally tough-minded educa- and-spender will soon fade. He rowed the list down to seven, and
was: "If you were forced to give a bon JI!Ogr8ID had been .transformed • says that everyone is agreed that then to two fully qualified final isis,
one-word answer, would you and dilute!~ by liberals m Congress; the current round of tax increases is Judge Stephen Brer,er and Ginsdescribe yourself as a ' liberal' or a I suggested that the sam~ fate as much as the economy can burg, stressin~ ihat ' both 1re mod'moderate?'"
. would hl:rall hJS other ~t tmpor- afford.
erates." (Clinton said he chose
In the conversation that fol- tant soc tal programs, cnme an.d
Moreover, Clinton revealed that Otnsburg because, in a personal
lowed, the president said he welfare, unless he had ~ore of hiS he is expecting important bud~et interview, he was profoundly
believed he has been unfairly~- own tdeologtcal Whtte House results from the report of Vtce impressed by her inner strength and
cast as governing from the left stde shock uoops to.fight for them.
President Albert Gore's "National deep conviction: "As we say down
of the political spectrum. MoreClinton said he tho.ught. that be Performance Review" task force, home, her waters run deep.")
over, he disclosed that he expects would end ll.Jl wt.th sobd ~~ and whose recommendations to streamSo, the president has plenty of
to produce further evidence of his welfare legtslatton. He mdtcated line and slenderize government are answers for his moderate and concentrist economic tendencies later that he was ~oncem~ about w.hat expected b~ fait
·
servative critics. What he says, and
this year.
was happenm~ to hu educ~t.•on
Clinton emphasized that the alludes to, !ltakes senle: more modIn answer to my question, Clin- proposal. H'? ad read a ~nucal Gore report can trig~er "a big erates to fight his fiJht, more
ton paused momentarily, and said N~w York :nmes op-ed aru~le by round of lpendin~ cuts. • The pres- spending cuts, leaner and meaner
" moderate." He quickly added Dtane Ravttch (former assutant ident is now trymll to determine government, careful attention to
that, of course, it was complex, secretary of Education in the Qush what legislative vehiCle would best keep the tough integrity of the origb~cause he was liberal on civil adJ'!linislfa.tion),_and had directed get the Gore-general~ spending inal domestic agenda he cam J
policy advtser Bill Galston to find cuts into the congressiOnal budjlet
. rights and conservative on crime.
on.
Clinton thinks he has been mis- out the s~ of olav,.
cycle for Fiscal Year '94, whtch paigned
f'm impressed. All he has 10 d
takenly portrayed as a liberal large•
The prestdent said he had asked begin~ Oct. I, '93..
.
to win me over is deliver.
Clinton also c•~s conservauve
Iy because of the issue of gays in AI From, head of t~e mod~~ate
William Wattenberg is a synthe military, although be has spent Democratic~ Counct • to congressional leader Charles Sten- dicated writer for Newspaper
little time on the issue since taking work at the: Wh•te.House, bu(Ft that holm, D·Texas, wh_o says the Enterprise Assoclallon.
office. He does not regard the issue From had turned hir_n down:
House of Representauves made a
as liberal or conservative. " To confirms th~ tnvttaDOD, noung
me," he said, "it's an issue of civil · it had been ex~ded late IIISI year,
liberties "
durin~ the II"IIISIUOD.)
.
He noted that Sen. Charles
Clinton then ela~ted, tumma
Robb, a Marine hero and "erie of to his recently appomted ~selor
the most conservative Democrats," David Gergen ~nt • thl.lmter"To ~nderstand Is hard. Once one understands, action
shared his view. He said he was view, along wtth ~red Barnes. of
Is easy."- Sun Yat-sen, Chinese statesman (11166-1925). ·
very pleased that conservative The New Republic a.nd Semor
Ben Wattenbero
Berry's World
,,
1
=
,
Thought for Today
MOVIN' TO THE CENTER
-
!Mansfield !s1•
I•
Youngstown
. •lcolumbus!s3•
I
By The Associated Press
Dry, warm weather is forecast
throughout Ohio for the next few
days.
Skies will be clear toni&ht, and
sunshine wiU continue Wednesday.
Lows tonight will be from 50 to 60.
Highs Wedilesday will be from 75
degrees to 85 degrees.
· The record high temperature for
this date at the: Columbus weather
station was 97 in 1988. The record
low was 41 in 1992.
Sunset today will be at 9:04
p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be at
6:04a.m.
Around the nation
The East Coast got a break from
hot, humid weather early today and
clouds hung over southern Texas,
where Tropical Storm Arlene
already has brought flooding. .
A band of thuilderstorms in the
East moved into the Atl:~ntic
Agreement
•
near on sen1or
health care
overnight, leaving in their wake west; in the '· • in western New .
cooler, more comfortable condi· England, in the northern Great
lions. A high pressure front in New Lakes region and along the CaliforEngland brought temperatures in nia coast: over 100 in southeastern :
the 70s to the western pan of the California and part of southern Ari- :
zona; over II 0 in the southwest ;
region.
corner
of Arizona; and .in the 80s '
In Texas, several homes were
flooded Monday. More rain later · and 90s elsewhere in the Lower 48 , ·
today was expected to cause more states.
flooding.
The high te!.ll perature in the :
· High temperatures were exjlect- nation Monday was 111 degrees at :
ed in the 60s and 70s in the North- Coolidge, Ariz.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A
Senate-House conference committee trying to reach an agreement on
W. VA.
the new state budget is close to a ·
compromise on a program designed
KY.
to help Medicaid patients avoid
nursing homes.
·
Conferees, after a five-hour
meeting Monday, also reported
progress in education and S8Jd they
T-atctmS Rllln FluniM snoW
rc. SUnny Pl. c::1y Cloudy want to restore a $20 million reduc011113Accu-W-.Inc:. tion in local ~overnment funding
that was m. Gov. George
Voinovich's bud~et proposal.
However, Rep. Patrick
Sweeney,
D-Cieveland, the comFair on Thursday. Lows 60-65.
South-Central Ohio
miltee
chairman,
sai!l the commitTonight, clear. Low around 60. Highs in 80s. Chance of showers
tee
still
hasn't
decided
how 10
Wednesday, sunny: High around and thunderstorms Friday. Lows in
the mid-60s. Highs in the mid-80s. make up a projected revenue deficit
85.
Fair
on Saturday. Lows in the low of as much as $190 million, resultExtended forecast:
ing from upward revisions in wel60s.
Highsnear80.
Thursday_tl)rougb Saturday:
Busovaca near Vitez Tuesday. Busovaca is '
BANG BANG - Bosniu Croat cbildren take
fare caseload estimates.
almost
entirely surrounded by B"clsnian Muslim
cease:llre
to
sbont
at
imaginary
advantage
of
the
The committee of three
forces
(AP).
enemy aircraft witb ho!De-made toy g!JnS in
Democrats and three Republicans
is in its third week of private delib.
I
erations
on the: two-year, $30.9 bil- of human services and aging," said ·House conferee Barney Quilter, D- big boys (Riffe and Aronoff) and,;
Whaley reunion
music by Pure Country Band. Pub- .
lion
spending
. plan, which is Finan.
Toledo, said they expect tl!e budget of course, the governor. If he is
The Whaley family reunion will lie invited.
He
didn't
give
details,
but
said
to
run
the
stale
for
two
designed
to be ~ on. time despite a large going to sign.something, he wants'
be Sunday at Forked Run Lake.
new
language
would
ensure
that
to be a part of the action and I.
years
starling
July
1.
number
of unresolved issues.
Dance slated
Bring a covered dish and table serdon't
the
tax
isn't
spent
on
a
new
bureaublame him," Quilter said.
·
"We're
waiting
to
hear
from
the
Sweeney
said
the
money
shortvice. Family and friends weli:ome.
There will be a round and
cracy
designed
to
to
screen
elderly
age
will
be
sol.
v
ed
with
unspecified
square -dance at the Tuppers Plains
Farewell dinner
VFW Post No. 90S3 on Friday cuts rather than by new taxes patients rather than to provide ser·
A pollock dinner and farewell from 8-11:30 p.m. with music by unless Voinovich and legislative vices.
Sweeney
and
Finan
said the
party for Rev. and Mrs. Roger Smoky Mountain Drifters. This leaders decide otherwise.
committee
made
progress
in
prima- .
Any tax boost "would have to
G~ and family will be Friday at
will be the: last dance until Septemry
and
secondary
education
by
gencome from on high, •' he said.
4 p.m. with dinner at 6 p.m. The ber.
·
erally
agreeing
to
drop
a
Senate
Sweeney and Senate conferee
event will be held at the picnic
Richard
Finan, R-Cincinnali, said plan to ~ chan~es in the state's
~better house behind the ~acine
Youtil volleyball tournament
the)'
are
near a compromise that seh~~u':~Y!;~ ~-Senate
United Methodist Church and is
Regisualion is now being taken
.. WASHINGrON (~) - ~si='"- Senate Finance Cominiuee, said:
allocates
a $1-per-day nursing won't insist on itS plan to Close the . dent
open to the public. Bring a dish to for a church youth vo~yball tourClinton, ctefending his deficit- after the panel's Democrats pUshed'
share and table service.
nament to be held on Jutr, 4 at Star home bed tax for programs that often-criticized Ohio Veterim, s reduction plan against Republican through a version of Clinton's pial),'·
Mill Park. Each team will need at help the elderly stay at home rather
attacks, says his aim is fauness A new analysis by the CongresVSC to iJ1eet
least six players and a registration than enter nursing homes.
Children's Home in Xenia
not to soak the rich.
sional Budget Office ipcJi.c ated:
"I think we are close to resolvThe Meigs County Veterans fee of $S .00. The tournament is
Voinovich, HQuse Speaker Vern
''This is not about the politics of :those with ineomes 'of $200,000 or
ing
the: problem in the departments Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, and Senate envy, this is about who can afford more would pay 78.5 percent of the·
Service Commission will meet being held in conjunction with the
Monday at 7:30p.m. in the Veter- Racine Area Community OrganizaPresident Stanter. Aronoff, R- to pay the freight," Clinton said $249 billion tax increase ·in the:.
ans Service Office in Pomeroy.
tion. For more information or to Three Scioto residents Cincinnati, haven t publicly dis- Monday on WCBS Radio, New .senate plan. They would pay:
cussed taxes or other means of York.
$2$,195 more a year, on average.·
register .youth may contact Rick killed in auto wreck
Dance planned
closing the bud~et gap.
"In the last 12 years, we had tax Those with incomes under $30000
Harris at 949-2867.
PORTSMOtiTH, Ohio (AP) There wiD be a dance at the: Rpt'
·
Sweeney saul "a tax boost "is decreases on upper-income people would get tax cuts.
Three Scioto County residents died not on our llibie."
,
and tax. 'increases on the middle
-. .
land American Legion Hall on SatRacine Cblldrens Camp
urday from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m . .with
Taxes were raised .in December :Class, even though tlteir income
The typical family. with income
Racine First Baptist Chui"ch is in a head-on collision near
Lucasville.
to
offset
a
$250
million
deficit
in
..
,trends
w~
ju~
tile
reverse,"
Clin·
.
betw
ll_e.p $30,000 and $40,000
sponsoring a cbildrens camp at
· ·DOnald R. Fitzpatrick; 33, the the-c:wreld fiacii ')'Oiir Ute~ 10,1'10:· . -!On·said. r<evcn~ng
11e edded, siJoc4d .., aiJout S6l - . ,_.
Parchnlent Vallily'Retreat',ceh& in
Ripley, West Virginia from July driver, and passenger Judy Alonan, vide $900 million ill new. reyenue "is not about class war, this is becwtse of lhc bill's 4.3-cent-a-galabout fairness."
IQII tax on motor fuels, CBO esli·
12-15. Recreation includes tennis, 29. both of Otway, died in the for the budget now under study.
crash, the State Highway Pau'ol
The
$900
million
is
about
3
perRepublican
leaders
have·
mat~d.
The $40,000-lll-SSO,OOO
basketball,
swimming
(in
a
pool
Peggy Levin
·
said
Moilday.
cent
of
the
budget
and
covers
half·
accused
Clinton
and
his
Democratfamtly
should pay about ,$122 .
C. B. "Peggy" Levin, died Sun- with a lifeguard), and nature· hike.
The
two
were
killed
by
a
car
try·
of
a
sharp
increase
in
the
federally
·
ic
allies
of
an
anti-business,
anti·
more;
the
$SO,OOO-to-S7S,OOO fam- ·
day, June 20, 1993, at Hampton The cost is $85 and brochuflS are ing to pass another vehicle on Ohio mandated Medicaid program, success attitude in writing a deficit· ily, about $338.
available at the church or by calling
Court Nursing Care. '
104 at about 7 p.m. Sunday, said which will be allocated $9.9 billion reduction plan that faces votes in
949-2867.
.
A daughter of the late Asbury
patrol Dispatcher Evereu·Benneu.
in the new budget, compared with the Senate later this week. The ·
The energy tax is the only pan
and Mary Frances "Ayres" Stover,
A
passenger
in
lite
passing
car,
$8.1
billion
in
the
current
plan.
bill's
biggest
money-raiser
wo~ld
of
the bill that would
higher
Dance announced
she was a retired nurse at SL Ann's
Judy
Brannon,
33,
of
McDermott,
Sweeney,
Senate
conferee
raise
taxes
sharply
on
those
making
taxes
on
most
middle-income
peaThe Oldies But Ooodies Dance
Hospital and a member of Briggs
also
was
killed,
Bennett
said.
Robert Ney, R-St. Clairsville and more than about $100,000 a year.
pie. However, about 2 million
Club wiU hold a dance Friday from
Baptist Church.
8-11
p.m.
at the Russell Building in
"I
don'.
t
buy
the
arglunent
that
retirees
with incomes of about
0
She is survived by sons and Mlllfield. Music will be provided
just
because
we
tax
the
rich
a
high·
$32,000
(single
people) or $40,000
daughters-in-law, Robert (Jinny) by Off Seasons."
er
percentage,
this
therefore
is
a
<couples>
woutd
pay tal! on a big·
Powell, Samuel (Betty) Powell,
goOd bjU,'' Sen. Bob Packwood of ger share of their Social Security
Dale (Kathy) Levin, all of ColumThe following marriage licenses Christopher Michael Cox, 20; and ·o
· R publican on the checks .
. ..
Dance ·planned
were granted Friday in the Meigs Penny Lynn Lewis, 18, both of · regon, semor e
bus; siSters-in-law, Frances Stover,
There
w.ill
be
a
round
and
Chillicothe, Jane Stover, Middle- ~quare dance Saturday from 8-11 · County Probate Court.
Middlepon, and Patrick Lee
.J.JJ
· ·
port: 16 grandchildren; 20 great- p.m. at the Russell Buildin~ in
Receiving licenses were: Grego- son, 39, and Julie Ann Wandling, - -.
lUUt,tpO~
OUrt
ry Alan Bush, 27, and Carol Denise 24, both of Albany.
grandchildren; several nieces and
nephews; special friends, Eunice Millfield. Music will be provtded Trussell, 23, both of Middleport;
Twelve were fined -and eight loitering; and $25 8nd costs, disorJones, Betty Leist, Kathy Graham ·by Out of the Blue. John Russell
others
forfeited bonds in the court derly manner; Brian Hliyes, Midwill be the: caller.
aild Lola Kelly.
of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoff- dleport, disorderly D)lllmer, $2S.and .
Besides her parents, she was
let cream social
man Monday night.
costs on ench charge; and lames E.
preceded in death by brothers, BeuThere will be an ice cream
Fined
we.
r
e
Brian
E.
Durham,
Simpson, Jr., Middleport, $50 and
Units of the Meigs County was transported to Pleasant Valley ' Rutland, $20 and costs, speeding; costs,
nas W., Harry W. and Howard sucial at the Basban Fire House on
driving under suspension.
Stover; sisters, Katheryn Ireland Friday beginning at S p.m. spon- Emergency Medical Service Hospital; 6:39 p.m. Syracuse Vol- Tom Buclcley, Rutland, $22 and
Forfeiting
bonds were Duane
and Bertha Wolfe; and a son, O.R. sored by the ladies auxiliary. There responded to seven calls for assis- unteer Fire Department and Squad costs, speeding; Allen Dale James Mensch, Lewisville, Texas,
to State Route 124 for a motor Lpikart, Mason, W. Va., $16 and $460, physical conuol of a motor
Powell.
will be sandwiches, sloppy joes, tance ovemighL Responding were:
Monday
..:.
10:26
a.m.
Tuppers
vehicle accident following which costs, speeding; Marshall R. vehicle while uilder the influence
Services will be Wednesday at 1 hot dogs, hot sausage and 10 flaPlains
to
State
Route
124
for
Don
Richard
Butcher was transported to · Roush, Racine, court COS I$ only, of alcohol or drugs; Lawrence R. .
p.m. at Maeder-Quint-Tiberi vors of homemade ic.e cream as
Myers
who
was
transported
to
VMH; 6:48 p.m. Pomeroy f.() ~ul- ·· pa~sing in a· no passing zone; Lee, Shade, $460, physical contiot
Funeral Home, 106~ S~th High well as pie, coffee and pop. EniCJ'Street, Columbus, wtth Rev. Ron tainment will be provtded by Holzer Medical CeniCJ'; 12:25 ·p.m. berry Avenue for Sybil .Ebersbach Harold R. Bush, Gallipolis, $19 of a motor vehicle while under the:
Racine to State Route 338 for Clif- who was transported to VMH; and costs, speeding; Michael A. influence of alcohol or drugs, and
Hopkins .officiating. Burial will be . Specks of Bluegrass.
in Sunset Cemetery.
..
ford Hill who was transported to 10:39 p.m . Middleport to Page Norton, Racine, $10 and costs, · $60, failure to control; Garr L.
HMC; 1:30 p.m. Syracuse 10 Perry Street for· Lola Bohlen who was expired registration.
Friends may call at the funeral
Nelson, Logan, $S3; speedmg;
home on Tuesday from 2-4 and 7-9
·
Run Road for Karen Moore who taken to VMH.
Diane Schartiger, Middleport, Thomas R. McCloud, Middleport,
p.m.
Tuesday - 3:07 a.m. Middle- $10 and costs, passing in a no pass- $SO, speeding; William M. Jones,
A dissolution of marriage was
to Oliver Street for Loshia ing zone; Lenora R. Garnes, Racine, $54, speeding; Olair C.
port
Name
contest
winner
granted Monday in the Meigs
who was transported to Pomeroy, $10 and costs, no opera- Reed, Pomeroy, $60, squealing
Mitchell
Coimty Court of Common Pleas to
Kevin Ihle of P. 0 . Box 844, VMH.
Daily Sentinel
Eric A. Harris and JaneL. Jell Har- Racine, was the winncr of the mys·
tor's license, and $10 and costs, tires; Charles William Nelson,
(USPS 21S.ll80)
ris; both of Racine. In addition, tery farm contest in the June 13
fictitious tags; Tommy N. Lane, Jr., CoolviUe, $60, running a red light;
Publtohed every ofternoon, Monday
Jane L. Jett Harris' name was Sunday Times-Sentinel. He will
Middlepon, $50 and costs, driving and Donna J. Lacomb, Tuppers
th""'ih Friday, lll Court Sl, Pomeroy,
restored
to
her
maiden
name
of
under court suspension; Timothy E. Plains, $60, expired tagS.
Ohio by tho Ohio Valley Publiahin(
receive a checlc for $5 from the
Company/MulUmedla Inc., Pomeroy,
Jeu.
Shane,
Middleport, $50 and costs,
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. which
· Ohlo '45769, Ph. 992-2156. Seoond ....
co-sponsors the contest with the
paid al Pomeroy, Ohio.
Registration for swimming
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation lessons
at the ¥iddlep:m Pool ~
Member. Tho A.oci.ted Prele. and the
District Ihle was one of six to ~or,
Ohio New1p11per Aaaoda&ton, National .
now being taken by Ryan Cowan,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Advertisina Rapraentative, Branham
rectly identify the farm as that of instructor,
Sheep and lambs: 3.00 to 5.00
at992-7999.
Newspaper Sales, 133 Third. Avenue,
Am Eie Power....................36. 1(2 • Larry and Patty Circle of Racine.
The lessons will begin on July 5· Direct livestock prices and receipts higher; choice wools 49.00-S6.7S;
New York. New York 10017.
.
Ashland Oil. ............·...........25
His name as winner w&S selected in and continue to July 16.
•
.
at selected buying points Tuesday choice clips 55.50 and down; feedPOSTMASTER: Send addre~~ changes to
AT&:T.................................61 S/8 a drawing.
The
class
schedule
is
8
am.
for
by the Ohio Department of Agri- er lambs 65.00 and down; aged
The Daily Sentinel, lU · Court St.,
Bank One...........................54 1/8
sheep 29.50 and down.
.
Pomeroy, OHio 45769.
swimmers;
9
am.
for
intennediate
culture:
Bob Evans ......................... 17 1/4
swimmers; 10 a.m. for advanced
Barrows and gilts: mostly
SUBSCIIIPTION RATES
Charming Shop.................. l3 1/8
By Carrier or Motor Roa.te
beginners, and 11 a.m. for begin- steady; demand moderate.
One Wook........................................... SI.60
Chmp Industries.,...............13 3/4
VETERANS
MEMORIAL
I).S. 1-3, 230-260 Ibs., counay .
One Monlh ........., ............................... l6.915
SPRI~G VAllEY CI~EMA -,
City
Holding.
.....................
25
Earl
ners.
points,
4700-48.00; plants 48.50Monday
admissions
One v-..................... ,............"-.....183.:10
446 4574
'
49.50, a few 50.00.
Federal MQa.uJ ............... ....19 3/8 Fricker, Pomeroy; Virginia Dean,
· liNGLE COPY
PlliOll:
.
Goodyear TU ..................38 SIB
Pomeroy. and Sybil Ebersbach, Man held by authorities
S.oited u.s. 1-2, 23_0-260 lbs.,
llo0y.............................................26 Conia
Lands End...................,......27 S/8
Pomeroy.
.
.
A Columbus man is being held ··. Cbililtry pointS, 48;2549.00.
Liinited Inc....................... 22 1/8
· · Subocribon no< dooiri"' 1o poy lho corri· Monday ducharges - Jod1 · . the u-.....~ jail pendjng ·- ·
·
er maY TemU in ldvance direct kJ Tt.· · Multimedia Inc..................34 3,14
10
Imboden
Pomeroy.
.
f·:-,
.
1""
"
f
'
I
li"
pes-.
.
R
.
.
Monoay
d S.•.SOO. Esu.
Daily Sentinel on a lhree, tb 1)1" 12
'
sible 1 mg o sever& c arges, .. .
ecetpts
Point BIJICOJji..................... J4
rnaft&h bui1. Credit wiU be (iven carrier
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
including unauthorized use of
mated receipts Tuesday 7,SOO•.
each week.
Rax ReiiiUtlnt. .................. l/8
June
:n
.dlscbargea
Mrs.
motor
v~le
in
Fnnklin
COII!'ty·
Prices · ~. The Producers LiveNo tublcriptiON by mail -pcrmiUed in
Reliance Electric................ l8 7/8
Todd
McManis
and
son,
Boyd
~ to Pomeroy Police, a stock Assocl&Uon:
arna• where home ctrrier ICI"Vice lt
Robbins.tMyers •.....••..."'''16 .
available.
WellingiOI!, Sheryl Gilbert, Marvin 1989 Ponuac owned by Helen
Cattle: 1,oo to 4.00 Io~.
Shoney's Inc......................17 3/4
Mall B•bocrlpllolll
Yeauger,
Mary
Seamen,
Stephanie
Corder,,
Columbus;
was
found
Slaughter steers: chotce 72.00Sill' Blllk ...........................35 1{2
lno1de Melp Cooonly
Caldwell
Benny
Puckell
Patricia
.
parked
near
the
corner
of
Court
and
77
.25;
select 60.00-73.00.
Wendy lnt'l.. ......................l4 S/8
13 Weeka ...................t''""'"'""'''""*21.84
Steams
6ttie
Wiseman
m{d
Wayne
Main
Streets
in
Pomeroy.
Corder
Slaughter
heifers: choice 71 .()()..
26 Weekl .. -. ...................................... $-4.3.18
Worthington Ind................ 30 1!2
g2Weeko ........ .................:................l84. 76
·
Abbott.'
·
·
family
members
wae
in
Porn~
77.85;
select
57.50-72.00.
.
Stoc!k report• are tbe 10:30
O. .. lde Melp Co•ntJ'
.
June
21
blrtbs
~Mr.
and.
Mrs.
·
Moilday
aftcntqorl
!0.
JCI
the
Y.ehi,
·~()ws:
~Y
10
50
~IS
htgher;
w..u .................._.".....................
a.m. q .. tea provided by
26 Weeki...............·...........................
&0
Mirtin
Graves,
.dauihter,
tondon·,.ole.
Ai
of
tbi,t
m~.IIO
-~
-;
ill
COWl
S9.7S
lpd
!lo\\1!·:.
··
·
·.
.
·Kemper Senrlttea, lac;, o
1!2\Voeb.:........................................ .40.
derry.
Mr.
ahd
Mrs.
William
Slone,
·
have
been
flied
apinat
the
suapect.
··
·
&ulls:
·trend
not
available;
all
··
Gallpoli.
·
.
daughter, Gallipolis Ferry, W.'!/1.
police said,
J1ulls 66.75 and down.
4,~,~~--~ (f . . .
s,_,.
------Weather-----
0
.,
•
-Meigs announcements · ·
Clinton says tax
plan's goal is fairness .
uw:
0
Area·death
mean
Marriage •.ICeDSes granted
.
.
Law-
M•
tC
· · · neWS---
Meigs units respond.to 7 c~~ls
Dissolution issued
The
Swim lessons
to begin July 5
poo..,.
Livestock report----
·stocks
Hospital .news.
a
13
r:.40
...
•
�TUesday, June 22, 1993
Sports
The Daily Sentinel
·
In NL action,
Bichette's clutch single helps
Rockies top Reds; Pirates fall
TUesday, June 22, ·1993
Paga-4
In the junior circuit,
Indians blank Brewers 3-0; AL West has three at summit
popup before Kevin Reimer ended
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Tommy !he threat by lining OUt to right.
Robin Yount and Vaughn bolh
Kram er pitched 7 1/3 scoreless
innings and Carlos Baerga and hit flies to !he warning tract for
Albert Belle homered Monday Milwaukee.
night as the Cleveland Indians beat
the Milwaukee Brewers 3-0.
Notes: Indians reliever Ted
Kramer (3-2) outpitched Jaime Power, on a rehabilitation assignNavarro and sent the Brewers to ment at DQuble-A Canton-Akron
their third straight<"loss, limiting because of a sore shoulder, pitched
them to four hits, walking three and three scoreless innin~s Monday
striking out four. Jeremy Heman- night, allowing two hus, striking
dez got the last five outs, fanning out two and walking none . ... The
four, for his second save.
Indians have signed 34 of the 72
Navarro (5-4) gave up three runs players they took in the June draft
and eight hits in his thinl complete Negotiations are under way with
game but saw his personal five- top pick Daron Kirkreit, a rightgame winning streak end.
handed pitcher from CaliforniaThe loss pushed the Brewers ' Riverside .... Milwaukee's Bell was
nine games under .500 for the fii'St held hitless for only the second
time since Aug. 20, 1991.
time in 11 games .... Navarro
Baerga Jed off the fourth iMin,g remained in the ¥arne despite getwith his 13th home run, slipping 1t ting hit in the n$ht shoulder by
just inside the foul pole in right Paul Sorrento's hne ~ive in !he
field. He has hit safely in 22 of his second inning .... The Brewers
last 24 games and shares .the team have lost eight of their last 11
lead wilh 58 RBis.
games.
The Indians added a run in the
sixlh when Wayne Kirby doubled,
In other games, California beat
took third on Baerga's groundout Kansas City 4-3, Chicago topped
and scored on Belle's sacrifice fly Texas 7-6, Boston beat Minnesota
- Belle's 57th RBI. Belle added a 6-3 and Oakland downed Seattle 5two-out home run in the eighth, his 3.
team-leading 19th of the year but
Three-way tie
his fllSI since June 2.
for rll'st in AL West
Kramer kept the Brewers out of
Before the ~n began, no one
scoring position in each of his could seem to settle on who was
innings except the third, when they !he favorite in .the AL West. As the
put runners at second and third halfway marlc approaches, it's easy
with none out on a single by Tom to see why.
.
Lampkin and double by BiD Spiers.
·The Kansas City Royals, picked
· Kramer got Juan BeD on a shallow by some to win the division after
fly, walked Darryl Hamilton, and making several major moves, are
·retired Greg Vaughn on a foul 35-32.
The Chicago White Sox,
thought to be a team in waiting this
year, are 35-32.
The California Angels, considered a longshot with so many
young players, are 35-32.
AU three clubs wound up tied ,
for first place Monday night after
Califo111ill won at Kansas City 4-3
and Chicago defeated Texas 7-6.
"We've seen everybody in the
division now," said Chuck Finley,
the winning pitcher for California.
"We've seen everybody twice.
We've been talking about it and we
don't see anybody running away
with it.
"Nobody is playing really well.
I don't know if we've seen everybody when they're playing bad or
what, but we just don't see anybody running away wilh it"
The Royals lost for the seventh
time in 10 games. Kansas City has
lost consecutive games for Drily !he
third time this season.
"We're just not bunching·hits,"
Royals manager Hal McRae said. .
"We're scratching out hits. You
get 13 hits arid you get nothing.
They get three hits and they get
four runs."
Finley (8-5) won his third
straight decision. He illlowed two
runs in six innings and Steve Frey
got four outs fot' his eighth save.
Chili Davis hit a tw()-run double
in the fJrSt inning and Greg Myers
homered in the second off Hipolito
Pichardo (4-4).
GOOD POKE, CARLOS! -Cleveland third
Gary Gaetti, cut by California
base
coach Jeff Newman (left) congratulates
earlier this month and signed by
Carlos.
Baerp as be rounds third after hitting a
Kansas City, played his fii'St game
(See AL on Page S)
•
bonier in the fourth inning or Monday night's
Ameri~n League game against tbe visiting Milwaukee Brewers, who lost 3.0. (AP)
•
1993 Honda del Sol Si
·501/0
OVER
COST
In Stock
DERBY WINNERS - Pictured are the winners of the ZSth annual Meigs County Fish and
Game Association Fishing Derby. Pictured are
front, Pat Aeiker, boys' Blagest Fish; Anaie
Wolfe, girls Biggest Fish; Jenny Mayle, Girls'
Most Fish; Crystal HolsinRer, Smallest Fish;
- • Baseball • -
TOIW!to ........._...... .42 21
.600
2
New YD ..............41 29
3'
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Baltimcn ............... 35 33
.SI6
T-
Eutem DlwWO.
W L
Philldelphia ...........48
SL Leuia ................ 39
M......U ................36
0Uugo.................. 33
Pit~borgh ............. .32
Florida ................... ]!
New Y<Xi. .......... - ..21
21
2'J
33
34•
36
38
47
Pet.
.696
S14
.522
.493
.471
.449
.309
GB
8.5
12
14
ll.5
17
26.5
Watern DI•Won
San Frw~ciaco ........47 23
Atlanw ...................40 31
LooAn&dco ........... ]6 31
llouotm ................. 34 33
CINONNA1L ..... 32 38
S..l);qo ..............27 42
Colorado ................ 24 44
.671
.563
.537
.S07
.457
.391
.3.53
7.5
9.5
11.5
15
19.5
22
Monday's scores
Sl Louis 4, Florida 3
New Yodt I, MonucaJ 3
AIWno S, l'ltibddphja I
C.!ondo5, C!NCINNATI 4 (IOinn.)
LooAn&dco7, H.u.... o
San Franciaoo 2, San~ 1
Tonl~ht's games
St. Louia (c-onnier 4-3) 11 Florida
(H.........t 7-4), 7:35p.m.
Atllnta (Smith 2-6) I t Philadelphia
(Jad.lon 6-:l) , 7:35 p.m.
Chi
. ·!=•Jo (WenddJ 0.1 } 1t Pit~burJh
(Walk 1·>), H5 p.m.
MonuW. (N1bhoa 3-5) 1t New York
cY"'"'' 0.8), 7:40p.m.
CJNCJNNA11 (Smiley 3-9) ot
orado (IWI"in l -3), 9:05 p.m.
~ ol
Hou•lOII (Kl.le 6- 1) at Los Anaeles
ca.- 5·5).10cl5 pm.
San D-. Ol<ri• 7-<5) "
co (Swill,:}), !Oc35 p.m.
s.. fnncil.
Wed....Say's pmn
Atlnta (SII'lolt& 6-6) at Ph:Uade1ph.ia
(Ill. . . 6-3~ 12:3.5 p.m
_ _, (Mminoz 7·5) ot New Yodt
(T..,... 4-6), I :«1 p.m.
.
San Di9).(0NI HtnU: 7-7) at San
Frutcileo (BwkcCll0-2), 4:05p.m.
CINCNNATI (PU.. 3-8) o.t Co!o"do .
(Pumt 1·2), 5:05p.m.
St. Louit (Arocha S-2) 11 Florida
·
(Do..., .. 7), 7:3.5 p.m.
Ch i e~ao (Bo•kie 1-0) •t Pitttbu rah
<W•anco 2-3J.c7:35 ,.m.
HouAon (Drltleil 3-1) at Loa AnJde.
(Canm.W 3-5), 10:3.5 p.m.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
~~~~Tuot
W . LMGI
Doao0....................43 25
Bottm ....... ..............ll 38
Mil.waukee ....•........29 38
CLEVEJ..AND ..... ..28 41
.515
.449
.433
8
125
13.5
.406
15.5
WOIICrn DIYillon
Califomit ........, .. ,...35 , 32 ' .522
Chicaao................ ..35 32 .522
Kan.., City ........... 35 32 .S22
Scaale .................... 34 3.5
Texu .....................31 37
Minncoata ..............29 37
.493
.456
.439
2
4.5
Oakland •................ 27
.415
7
31
5.5
Monday's ~<ores
a.EVEI..AND l. Milwa\lkela 0
0Uc.ao7,Tau6
California 4, Kmau Cilyl
80il.On 6, Mimetota 3
OUiancl S, Seoa1e 3
Tonlabt's pmes
OU..ao 5, Pioob•"'l"
Milwaukee (tldnd 9-6) at CLEVBLANO(C. Youn.(l-2), 7:05p.m.
New York (Perel 4·6) .t t T o ronlo
(Monio .. 7),7cl5p.m.
'
Detroit (Ou!Jiokton 4-3) 11 Baltlm.,.
(Mullin• 9-3), 7:3.5 p.m.
Minnccota (DuhaJa 1·4) It Botton
(Qu1Auill2-5~ 7:35pm.
Te~1.1 (ROJCN S-5) "' Chic:aao (ferpandez 7-4), 8:0S p.m.
California (Sandenon 7·6) It Kansu
City (Cono4·7), 8:35p.m.
Oakland (Win '6-4) " Seattle (Con·
vene 1-2), 10:0:'5 p.m.
Wednesday's games
Tuu (Pavlik 3· 3) at OU.C.ao (Bere 21), 1:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (Wearn1n 4-11) I t
CI..EVFL\ND (Mela S~S). 7:0S p.m.
New Yod&: (Witt 3·2) at Toronto (Stot·
dcm_]J04-4), 7:3.5 pm.
Devoi1 (Moore 5-3) at Baltim<R (Sutc!llre7·2), 7:35p.m.
MinnMCta (O&wd.tdo 0-1) 11 BOlton
(Se&O.O), 7c35_jUft.
California (Wclf!'lan 4· 11) at Kanau
Cily'(Mtoo 5·5), 1:3.5 p.m.
Oakllnd (DownJ 2-2) 'at Seaale (Flemlna 2·1), IO:O! p.m
- * Transactions * BaseboU
AIMI'kan Lapc
BOSTON RED SOX : Placed Roaer
Clanaw, pilch•, on the 15... ay di11bl.ed
list. NUOicDw 10 June 19. Pwdluod lhe
conuiCl ~Aaron Silo, pilcblr,lrom Paw-
u..,...
tucltct or the Ia........,
Sianod
• ,.. MdJoin, - buonwi.
CIJCAOO
soX: Sianod Bll·
WHITE
1993
John Barnhart, boys' SmaUe5t Fisb. Back-Terey
Hawk or the Ohio Division of Wildlife, Keith
Wood, Meigs Co. Game Wl!rden; and Tom
Grueser, club president. Absent was Jeremy
Honacher, Most Fish in the boys' division.
Honda Accord
In Stock
Units
0
cosr····
NaUonaiLupc
NL: Su.pendecl. kick TIUcet of Lo.t
Anaclco ond Ouy Shoifiold .C Son llioao
for Woe auna each fer 1 -beanball incidatt m J~me 10. Sullpllldod Ja&e Bautiatl
of 0\ic.lao for tlno •arne~ foe in1Cilllon·
ally thmwin& .. and hittina MaD. ~
!son.
New Honda Accord LX
s:
Cuuo INI Plniel Gil. pi
; Btott Me·
Cobc INI Kain Otic, lnfteldcn; INI Vee
In Stock
OVER
COST
ln ·Stock
hom Albuquerque of the Pacific Cout
r....,....
Tuesday Morning
Ladies League
-results announced
BasketbaH
Nallcoallultellloll Alloclltklll
NEW JERSEY NETS: Tr1ded Sam
Bowie. CUller, and 1 ~aliCICGQd•
.....d drol\ ~to the lAo Anteloo Lot·
as for BtnOll a.t.iarDin. .ur.
Hockey
NoU...J Hodtq IAqUI
CARS
CHICAOO BLACKHAWRS: SJanod
Cbrio R""" 111d Ctriotlln SOUI!y, aoal·
llltdta.
NEW JERSEY DEVILS: Announced
they will not offer a contn<ll to Peter
St.allny, center, maki.na him an UN'Citricr.·
ed free •aent. Named Robbie Ftoret
COICit or Albuty or the Amelicott llocUy
"THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"
Leo ....
810 E. State St. • Athens, Ohio
NEW YORK RANOERS: N.....J Cot·
in Ctmpbell utociato eo~ch .
SAN lOSE SHARKS: Aped to tam1
wilh Lee t.c.lie, 1eJ\ wina.
Dept. 594·21 v
New Car Dept. 594:8.555 _
.M2
••
'i
'
'.
I
League contest In Denver, where the Rockies,
despite scoring four rUDS in the frame, needed a
Bichette single to score Daryl Bostoa in the lOth
to win 5-4. (AP)
Reds seem content to stay on canvas
after rest of NL West puts them there
By JOE KAY
Nasty Boys. A clubhouse ringing years. Dibble's no longer domiCINCINNATI (AP) - The with the rap hit, "Can't Touch nant, blowing four of his nine save
Cincinnati Reds are saying all the This," after every win. Reliever chances. And there's nothing nasty
things a team is supposed to say Norm Charlton running over about this team anymore.
when it's 14 ~ames out of fli'St in Dodgers catcher Mite Scioscia to
No one plays an in-your-face
June - there s still time, all they score a meaningless run. A team . song after a win. No one brags. No
need is a long winning streak to get detennined to earn respect by final- one talks about having to prove
back in iL
ly winning it all.
anything. Instead, they wonder how
Sounds good. But do these goys
Somehow, the swagger has l:leen long it's going to be before Bowreally mean it?
swept away in the roster shuffle: den writes off the season and starts
Consider these moments from Char.lton and Randy Myers - who breaking up the team with trades.
last week, a pivotal six -game Conned the Nasty Boys with Dibble
If they stay more distracted than
stretch for the National League's -have been traded in the last two detennined, it won't be'long.
highest-paid and most enigmatic
team:
(Contin.uedfromPage4)
- Before thei( make-or-break
Paquette singled with one out
lhree-game series against the fli'St- for the Royals. He went 2-for-4 and
drove
in
one
run
and
scored
one.
and
the bases loaded off Jeff Nel- ,
place San Francisco Giants, the
Greg
Gagoe
of
the
Royals
was
son.
Terry Steinbat;h doubled home
trainer has trouble getting the reguthrown
out
at
the
plate
in
the
fourth
an
insurance
run in the ninth.
lars to stretch before batting pracinning
and
thrown
out
of
the
game
Storm
Davis
(2-5) got the victotice. They'd rather joke arouild.
by
umpire
Derry!
Cousins.
Gagne
ry
in,
relief
and
Dennis Eckersley
:- Pitcher Jose Rijo, the most
up
arguing
and
it
appeared
got
h1s
15th
save.
came
optimistic soul in the clubhouse,
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his third twosays it'll "take a miracle" to win that the momentum of his slide carried
him
into
Cousins.
Gagne
·put
run
homer in two days. His 16th
theNL West.
hand
on
Cousins'
chest
to
stop
home
run was a drive into the
his
- Outfielde~ Kevin Mitchell
Kingdome's second deck in right
complains about the June heat in himself and was tossed.
White
Sol:
7,
Raa1ers
6
.
fU:ld.
Cincinnati, but .says he's not worRed Sox 6, Twins 3
Jack McDowell, helped by
ried about August: "We'll mate
home
runs
from
Frank
Thomas
and
Billy
Hatcher and Scott Cooper
some moves by then. I'll be someRobin
Ventura;
became
the
first
homered.
where cool." .
Hatcher hit a three-run homer in
- Leadoff hitter Bip Roberts, a 11-gam'e winner in the majors as
Chicago
beat
Texas.
the
fourth inning into Fen way
free agent after the season, says he
Carlton
Fist
of
the
White
Sox
Park's
left-field screen off Scott
likes playing for manager Davey
Johnson: "I told him I hope I'm played his 2,225th game as a catcp- Erickson (3.8). There was a rain
around next year when we tum this er, tying the major league record delay of 2 hours, 8 minutes after
around." 'Jllen he adds the obliga- held by Bob Boone. Fisk is expect- the top of the fifth with Boston
tory: "I'm not giving up on this ed to break the mark tonight at leading 4-2.
Comiskey Park.
Seeing double
year:'
McDowell
(11-4)
was
given
an
OVERLAND
PARK, Kan. (AP)
- Pitcher Tom Browning, who
early
six-run
lead,
but
struggled
to
The
NCAA
believes
it was a
has given up 94 hits in 60 1-3
it.
He
gave
up
home
runs
to
first.
When
VMI
and
Duke
faced
hold
innings and has an earned ruri average of 5.97, balks at the possibility Rafael Palmeiro and Gary Redus, off in a baseball game earlier this
and Roberto Hernandez got his year, spectators were seeing double
of going into the buUpen. ·
12th save. ·
when the ninth inning rolled
Heard enough?
.Thomas hit a three-run homer, around.
A $42.8 million cast of players
Each team had a twin battery.
doesn't seem to have the confi- his 13th, and Ventura hit his 12th
VMI had Merlin Ikenberry pitching
dence or commitment to climb out off Kevin Brown (5-6). .
Athletics 5, Mariners 3
and his twin, Marlin, catching.
of fifth place, much less contend.
Craig
Paquette's
two-run
single
Duke sent Phil Harrell to the
Johnson saw it when he replaced
in
the
eighth
inning
rallied
Oakmound
and twin Matt Harrell
tony Perez on May 24 - he's
land.
behind
the
plate.
spent much of his time trying to
build up the players' self-image.
It's not working. When things
go had - such as closer Rob Dibble blowing a save - the players
are inclined to go into a shell. The
Reds are 1-32 when they trail after
eight innings.
"When that happens, it wears
on this team emotionally," shortstop Barry Larkin said, referring to
Dibble's third straight blown save
last week. "You can see it hap-
AL contests ...
Every year, your
heart pumps
2,625,000 pints
of blood.
a
5°/o ~~~~
New Honda Civic LX .
niehtower and John Sauer, outfieldcn .
A.oianed Ori• ond Jliaht-10 ...... of
lhe.QidweR Lc.pc.
HOUSTON ASTROS: Alii &nod 1..,
AJOIIO, pi.~. lO Tucson of d'le P1cit'1C
Couc l.Ca&H. Recalled Richud Petkor,
outfielder, from TUCSOQ.
LOS ANGELES OODOERS: Plo..C
lody Reed, oocon4 buenwt, on tiM 15·
clay 4iabled litt. re&roaelivolO J~U~e lei.
Rectlled Henry Rodripu:, outfielder,
Courier one of nine
seeded men to win
Bl
STEALS SECOND - Colorado's Dante Bichette (10) arrives at secoad
base abead or the tal by Ciacinnati shortstop in
the fourth inninJil or Monday night's Natioaal
; He was suspended by NL presi'. dent Bill White earlier in the day for hitting Charlie Hayes of the
first time since early April, when
. By i>AVID CRARY
Colorado Rockies with a pitch on
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) he was sidelined by wrist and
·June 15 at Denver, sparking a - With the attention focused on elbow problems.
. pen:'
bench-clearing brawl.
Could he win the title again?
established grass-court stars, Jim
General manager Jim Bowden
"It was his decision," Martinez Courier is right where he wants to
"That's what I'm here for," he sees the problem.
said. "I appealed, and we'll see be - out of the Wimbledon spot- said. "I think these fllSI few are the . "I'm a big believer in makeup
what's going to happen. This has light.
·most crucial for me .... I did it last and I'm a big believer in the menial
never happened to me before. I
The world's second-ranked year, so I think, yes, I can." •
aspect of baseball," Bowden said,
didn't worry about it when I came player, devastating on other surCourier was less bold when during a recent interview. "And I
here. I just had to concentrate on faces, won his fJrSt-round match as asked if he could Bdd a Wimbledon . really believe in my heart that the
, the game and pitch my game.''
handily as any of the top con- crown· to his four Australian and menial pan a lot of times can overPiazza broke a scoreless tie in tenders but left no doubt he enjoys French Open titles.
come the physical part.
the fifth inning with three-run his status here as a r.el!ltive out"Ask me in about five rounds,
"A lot of it's menial. We have
homer off Mark Portugal (5-3). He sider.
if I get there," he said after healing not gotten to the point yet where
.
. added a two-run single in the
"I'm certainly not going to · Italy's Gianluca Pozzi. "Wimble- every time they go out there !bey
/eighth and now has 15 homers and complain about it," he said of the don, for me, is not my natural sur- believe they can win. Aild that's
:s1 RBis.
low-key media coverage he has face. It's a crap shoot, really. I have . what they need to do.' '
"I'm just trying not to think received.
to go out there and just take my
Sounds strange, doesn't it? Such
:about it (his numbers)," Piazza
chances,
much more than any other a talented team, so little confi"I do like to slide in and out,
:said "I'm just going out there and and the less kind of commotion, the surface.''
dence? No one expected a veteran
trying to continue the things I've better. Particularly going into a big
Perhaps the pla)'er most at horne team that put a World Series trophy
at Wimbledon, three-time champi- in its case just three years ago to
tournament, it's bener.''
Courier, seeded third, was on Boris Beclrer, moved iniO action suddenly become a baslret case.
among nine men's seeds winning Tuesday in an all-German battle
Remember the World Series
their opening matches Monday. with one of the tour's rising young championShip team of 1990? The
Only 15th-seeded Czech Karel stars, Marc Goellner.
l'{ovacek was upset.
•
The bookmakers' favorite, sec• Winners after 18 holes of play at ond-seeded Stefan Edberg, and No.
;the Meigs County Golf Course 7 seed Ivan Lend! needed four sets
•from the Tuesday Morning Ladies to beat obscure qualifiers. Lend!
' League were: low gross, Becky had lost in the first ·round of the
:Anderson; low net, Jean Powell; past two Grand Slams.
Three younger, power-serving
•low putts, Norma Custer; chip-inplayers
cruised to straisht-sets
:hole, Elizabeth Lohse.
Entry Fa&-$20 plus 15 man roster
wins:
No.
6 Michael Stich of GerNine-hole winner was Nellie
ContKt Eber Piclwla Jr.,
many, No. 9 Richard Krajicek of
:wright, low gross.
the
Netherlands,
and
No.
13
Wayne
Tournament Director
: Debbie Sayre and Julie Hysell
Ferreira
of
South
Africa
.
·were named co-chairmen for the
Box 418, SyracuH, Ohio 45771
Defending champion Andre
upcoming invitational to be held at
1-614-at2-7181
Agassi, seeded eighth,•won for the
:the club on July 20.
of San Francilco on Juno 11. Suspc:nded
Ramon Maninez of Lot An&e101 (or five
aama for hittin& Charlie lfa)"CC of Col·
orado and HayC. for three aamcs for
fiaJttin& af\cr he wa.t hit by the pitch on
June 13. SU.tpended ICeilh Shcphud of
Collndo for IeVen an• for hiUUII Cory
Snyder of l.ol Anaelu with a phch on
Ju.nc IS. All tho ~N~pendod playen al.to
were f~cd undiacloled amaunta. AU ex·
cepl Shephard have appealed and will
continue to play pCII'Idin& hc.rinp. Upheld
a lhree·J•me su1pen.tion Cor Howucl
Johnlon of New YOlk for bwnpina umpito Jerry Layne ml May 21 . Johnson will
Ja"Ye hit su.tpen~imt when he tdWrul from
l.he dilablod liJL.
CIUCAOO CUBS :
Ooinolico
By JOHN MOSSMAN
beeil doing."
Pirates had a four-game winning
DENVER (AP) Dante
Braves 8, PbUUes 1
streak snapped.
Sid Bream had four hits and
Bichette remembers facing Jeff
Sammy· Sosa's three-run uiple
Reardon when both were in the drove in three runs to lead Atlanta followed Bautista's first major
American League. The memories · past Philadelphia at Veterans Stadi- lea,gue hit in a four-run second
were overwhelmingly painful urn for the Braves' third straight innmg. The game took just 1 hour,
victory.
until now.
56 minutes to play.
With two outs in the lOth inning
Greg Maddux (7 -5) ~ave up
Zane Smi!h (0-2) took !he loss.
Monday night, Bichette drove a seven hits and one run 10 eight
Cardinals 4, Marlins 3
Reardon fastball over the head of innings for the victory before Mite
Joe Magrane won his fourth
Bobby Kelly in right-center field Stanton finished.
consecutive start and Gregg Jeffor a run-scoring single that lifted
Curt Schilling (8-2) lasted only feries hit his lOth homer as St.
, the Colorado Rockies over the 2 l/3 inni11gs for the Phillies, giv- Louis beat Florida at ioe Robbie
Cincinnati Reds 5-4.
ing up eight bits and five runs.
. Siadium. The Cardinals climbed to
Giants 2, Padres 1
It was the third straight win and ·
10 game~ over .500 for the first
seventh in the last 10 games for the
Trevor Wilson won his fifth time this se&SOJI.
straight decision and Willie McGee
resurgent Rockies.
Magrane (6-6) gave up five hits
"I think everybody knew the had four hits, leading San Francis- in eight innings. Luis Aquino (4-5)
losing couldn't last," said reliever c.o past San Diego at Candlestick was the loser.
Steve Reed (3-2), who earned his Park.
Mets 8, Expos 3
second win in as many games.
.T he Giants, winners of six
Bobby Bonilla· homered and
"We're kind of on a roll. Guys are straight and 12 of 14, maintained a drove in four runs, and Dave Telgetting big hits, arid the pilehing is 1 Ill-game lead over second-place gheder (1-0) won in his first major
comi~g around. I think everyone Atlanta in the NL West
league start as New York beat
comes to the park now expecting to
Wilson (5-3), is 5-0 with a 1.71 Montreal at Shea Stadium to stop a
wiri."
.
ERA ov.er his last six starts. Doug six-game losing streak.
. Realistically, Bichette shouldn't Brocail (1-3) was the loser.
Telgheder (1-0) came up on
have expected success, unless he
Cubs s, Pirates 1
June 11 and made three relief
considered the law of averages.
Jose Bautista won as a starter appearances. Mike Maddux worked
"Reardon has gonen me out in · for the first time in four years, the last four innings for his third
situations like that in the American pitching four-hit ball over eight save, allowing one run.
League," Bichette said. "I thirik innings to lead Chicago past PittsBrian Barnes dropped to 2-2.
that's the fli'St time I've goaen him. burgh at Three River Sradium. The
"He usually tties to come in on
me. I wasn't going to let him beat
me with a fastball in. I was looking
for a fastball. If he beat me, it was
going to have to be with another
pitch. I finally .got good wood on
one and was lucky enough to put it
between two guys."
The Reds outfield appeared to
be playing shallow, but neither center fielder Kelly nor right fielder
Reggie Sanders came close to hauling in Bichette's drive.
"I don't know if anyone could
have caught it," Rockies manager
. Don Baylor said.
• "He crushed it," Reds manager ·
Davey·Johnson said. " We had no
.chance to catch .it."
, Bichetlc's game-winning blC?w
·was preceded by back-to-back smgles by pinch-hitter Daryl Boston
and Alex Cole.
Those were the first Colorado
hits since the fourth inning. Cincinnati starter Jose Rijo, appearing
stronger the longer he pitched, did
not allow a hit from the fifth
through the eighth innings. Reardon (l-1) replaced him in the nimh
and retired !he flrst four bauers he
faced until Boston stopped the
slide.
"I was happy to see Rijo
leave," Baylor S81d. "He got bener
and better. He was stronger at the
end. His slider was reaDy darting
away from right-handed h1tters.''
Rockiei starter Armando
Reynoso pitched well. Except for
some fieldin.~t mistakes. Revnoso
,_' ,_ . .· [
•
might have had a shutout through
seven innings. When Sanders hit
his lith homer, a 445-foot solo
,.
homer in the ei~hth to tie the score
4-4, and Joe Obver followed with a . ,
single, Reynoso gave way ,to Reed. .
'
Reed pitched 2 1/3 innings, '····c,'?'iJl\31!:7 ·•· '·
allowing no hits and striking out
··'¥-...
.. _,.;:!J:
. two.
Elsewhere in the NL it was Los
Angeles 7, Houston 0; Chicago 5,
Pittsburgh I; St. Louis 4, Florida 3;
.. ·.
' '
New York 8, Montreal 3; Atlanta 8,
PhiladelJ?hia I; and San Francisco
: 2, San D1ego I.
·).
Dodgers 7, Astros 0
The Houston Astros wish they
could have appealed, too.
RETURN ACTION - Switzerland's Manuela Maleeva-FragRamon Martinez, who appealed
niere returns a shot by Georgia's Lelia Mesluibl during women's
his league-imposed five-game susfirst-round acdon at Wimbledon Mo11day.
•
: pension earlier jn the day, pitched a
· tW()-hitter and rookie Mike Piazza
: drove in flve runs as the Los Ange, les Dodgers beat lhe visiting Astros ·
· 7-0 Monday nighL
-. · Martinez (6-4) recorded his 12th
•career shutout and second this sea-
At Wimbledon,
/o OVER
ly Jc~ Hobert, outfielder. and Dnid
Mocxe, thlrd bueman.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
,,
0
1993 1111 Hubbard
Mtmorlal Uttle league
Tournantent
Starts July 5th
.::c
·•
\
Surely, you can
spare a few
+~
_9ive blood again. It will be felt for a lifetime.
•.
'
'·
�_ _.
---
.........
~ ~ -
.. .....
....
,~
•
" "' ' "~ · ·
• • -<t __ ..,. ,.. . ..... . -
. . ...
• •
•
- -
.
. . . . . .-
.,~
... . .
.....
-·~
- .......
..
/
The
Ohio
Sentinel
.
Chester Garden Club
has recent meeting
Beat ofthe Bend.._.
by Bob Hoeflich
Chester Garden Club's open
meeting was held recently al lhe
Chester United Melhodist Church.
V ice president elect, Edna
Wood, conducted the meeting and
welcomed the guestS. The collect in
unison was followed by '"Beautiful
Garden of Prayer" wilh Bette Dean
aspianist
·
Devotional chairman, Kalhryn
Mora, gave two readings, "The
Dogs of God" and "Twelve Old
Men."
~oil call was answered by 34
garden club members and guestS,
representing 12 clubs: The Plains.
best
Not much amid lhe thousands, .
But Still it stood the test
But now as time has sped on by,
And the seasons make a
change,
:
From green to gold, !hen on to
brown,
God's handiwork, pre,,
arranged. .
.
'Till finally, ,when the first fr~t
Alhens, Middlepm Amateurs. ~ut·
land Star. Rutland Friendly, Winding Trail, Friends and Flowers,
Shade Valley Floral Arts, Wild·
wood and Chester.
The '"Save the Earth" lesson on
auto fuel jlollution by Edna Wood,
reported that automobiles and light
truc1cs emit 20 percent of this coun·
try •s fossil fuel carilon dioltide. the
key ingredient in the Greenhouse
Effect Cars give off 20 pounds of
carbon dioude for every gallon of
gasoline consumed. A car that gets
18 miles per ~allon will emit a ton
of carbon dtoxide every 1,800
miles. By comparison, a car !hat
gelS 27 miles per gallon will emil
two thirds of a ton in the same dis·
tance. Cars also cause acid rain by
emitting 34 percent of the nilrogen
oxide pewed out in the United ,
States, an amount that can be
reduced by burning less gasoline.
Cars also emit 27 percent of the
hydro C8lbons thai cause lung-damaging, tree-killing ozone smog. A
simple lhing 10 do would be keep·
ing your car tuned. A well tuned
car uses up to nine percent less
gasoline. Do not let your car idle
unnecessarily. Keep fuel filters
clean. Stay light· surprisingly, an
extra hundred pounds of unneces·
sary objects will decrease your fuel
economy by more lhan one percent.
U a million car owners (thai is less
than one percent) started getting
·their cars tuned regularly, a billion
pounds of carbon dioxide could be
kept out of the atmosphere every
year.
Program chairman, Bette Dean,
introduced the guest speaker, Beny
Mizicko, The Plains garden club.
She showed prize winning !ides
NEW YORK (AP} - "Family
Dog' • even ~s the dinosaurs.
It was six years ago - long
before Steven Spielberg began his
dina-soaring feature "J.ur,assic .
Park" -that this aniq~ated TV
series fust saw life, in lhe form of a
segment on Spielberg's "Amazing
Stories" show.
Six "Dog" years! That'S about
40 years for you and me.
And so it mi~ht seem to Spielberg and the leg10ns of others who
have had a hand in · this longpromised, much-delayed series,
which originally was set for a
March 1991 premiere.
"Family Dog" finally gelS
unleashed Wednesday from 8 to 9
p.m. EDT on CB~ (i~ the weeks
ahead, the Show will atr from 8 to
8:30p.m. EDT).
Besides its belatedness, what's
most remarkable about "Famil)'
Dog" is that such an ordinary an•mal could come from such a noble
pedigree. Besides Spielberg, its
forebears include Tim Burton
("Batman"} and Dennis Klein
(who more recently co-created
HBO's brilliant "Larry Sanders
Show" with Garry Shandling). .. ·
And don 't forget the subsequent
involvement of Nelvana Limited, a
respected Toronto-based animation
house brought. in for emergency
mouth-to-muzzle rcsuscttallon.
If aU those names sound imJ)res:
sive, they pale beside !lllolher one
that keeps cropping up m conversations with "Family Dog's" creators. That name is Charlie Chap·
lin.
In silent films, Chaplin's Little
Tramp was a meek yet intrepid
everyman forever at the mercy of a
harsh, unhee4ing world. Chaplin's
time-tested premise inspired Family Dog, a cartoon character thai
thinks and behaves like a dog, not a
person•. as, Chaplin' lilce, he comes.
It knew its time was ncar.
Just a gentle breeze, lfien a gusi:
It let loose and earth was near.
~iding the wind , it startej
away·.
aupplement revenue el·
relldy evalltble lor auch
pu==
UCIIIE
MOWER CUIIIC
ESTATE NO. 21t31 II: Such ttx ah811
Second Annuel Acoount ol b. .tlhe ret. ol Five Do118r1
WAll II AllEY
Jennllot L Sh..te, Gu8rciMI (IS.OO)per motor vehicle on
Parts •• Sankt
ol th~ Eatete ol Lettie •••h •nd every . motor
Mowen
- CHII Saws .
Young, in Incompetent vehicle In the dlotrlct of
WHdtalers
Cllef's Galley
Person.
rllllltlrtllon ol which, aa
Authorized: Br~l l
ESTATE NO. 27516- A.... deftned In Section 4503. to
Upper River Road, Gallipolis
Stratton MTD, •n,
Md Dlabibutlve Acoount ol ol the Ohio Al¥11ed Code,
I. D.C. Aepllr Cenwr
Louie
B.
VMI!Ihlln, II In lh ' VI" 'II' 0 fA uaand,
446-8154
PICKUP
Md DEUVERY
Aclmlnlalrator ol lhe Eomw 0
· House Special:
~Uon Ill: At Ulld In Houro 16· Y.F 11-3 S•t.
ol William A. .vea, De·
thle
ordinance, lhe term
Clooed Sunday
ceued.
Baby Baclo. Ribs pn;parad in
949•2SD4
•
Unlei• excepUc:tna ••• •motor. vef11cle" m•ne MY
our special Barbeque Sauce
flied thereto, oekl account.
will be lor heerlng before within
definition
of ..
and all the
vllhlclaa
Included
Our Lounge Features
11ld Court on the 23rd day motor vllhlole In SecUona
ol July, 11183, at which time 4sot .ot •nd •sos.Q• or the
FREE
eald
eccounte will be con· Ohio Aevlaed Code.
Country Uned Dancing
aldered Md continued from
Section IV: The tu
dey to d8y until ll1111lly dlo· lmpoaed by tht. ordinance
Every' Thursday.
_
__.J
poaedol,
ohell epply to end be. In
INTERIOR
Any potoon lnleraated e.flect lor the r1111111raUon
FREE ESTIM.ATES
may lila written exceptiORI yelf commencing January
Chef's Galley presents
Take the pain out of
to ..ld account• or to m•t· 1, tiM and oh811 continue
In eHect and eppllcaU11n
painting. Let me do It
The hottest girls In female R1wiew·
ter8 pertaining to .,. exacutor you.
tlon ol the truat, not leoa during · uch reglotr•tlon
"The California Calendar Dolls"
lhotealtot.
VERY REASONABLE
than live clllya prior to the .
· Ttckals on Sale Now
data HI lor hearing.
Section V: The tax
HAVE REFERENCES
Show Time June 30th at 9 P.M.
ROBERT E. BUCK lmpoeed by thla ordlliMice
614•985 •.4180
Common Pteto Court, 1hall be ptld to the
446·8154
·Pro.,.t. Dlvltlon Rll!llltr• ol Mo(9r VehlcleaiJb==~;~m:o-:pcl:!
the St.te ol Ohio or to •
.WU. County, Ohio ol
Deputy Aeglolr•IOI the Ume
221k:
Alzheimer's & Related
appllc•tlon lor reglolratlon
of • motor vllhlcle lo made
Disorders Support Group
Public N.otlce
ao provided In Seotlon
EVERY THURSDAY
41103.01 ol the Ohio AniHCI
Monthly Meeting
ORDINANCE NO. t~
EAGLES
AN ORDINANCE LEVYING Code.
THURSDAY, JUNE 24
Section VI: All Money•
A MUNICIPAL MOTOR
~arlved from
the tex
VEHICLE UCENSE FEE
1:00 P.M.
IN POMEROY
hwelnbelore
levied
ahlll be
PURSUANT TO SECllON uaed by the Vill811
ol
1:45 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Nursing
4504.172 OF THE OHIO
Rutland lor the purpo111
Spec:
III Early Bird
REVISED
CODE
Care Center
NOW, THEREFORE, be It opeclfied In thla ordi-.
$100
P•yolf
Section VII: That thlo
For More Information Call
ordained by the Council ol Ordn.,.e
Thia
lid
good
for 1
\
Ia not paaHCI aa
the VIllage ol Aulland,
304-675-5236
FREE
card.
Melga County, Oh!o, •• an emergency mU.ure bu~
Lie. No. 0051 •32
ohall t.kl e.llect al the
Public lnvned
ear
Ilea
t
period
allowed
by
Section 1: There It
law.
::· ~~~::::::::~:"'~~~:;;.~;:;,=~:. licente
hereby levied
en annu•l
Peaoed thlo 17th dey ~I
the
tax upon
May,
11183.
PubliC Notice
operetlon ol motor vllhlclaa
Public Notice
_ _........:::;,;;,;__.....;...;,;__ 1on the public roado or CERnACATE: I, Sendre
K. Smith, Clerk ol Council
Middleport,
... CContinuecllrom Pllllti Sl order thet • dialrlbutlon ol highway• purauant to ol
the Vill•ge of Audend,
•~ can be.,...._
Secllon 4504.172, Ohio
..
..
ld
P,o,IHrOJ, laciae,
Adminlolralora, Executor•
,.,. hereby required Aev1oed cod•· 1or th • lllelga County, Ohio, do
You are
hoteby
certity
the
foregoing
and Alllgne ol Guy E. to anawer the Petition purpooll ol paying the
R•tlaad, Masoa
' Hunter, Thom81 Belley within twenty-eight C21) coat. and expenlll ol 11 • true •nd correct copy
Areas
. Hunler, Sr., Lettie .18ne11Md d•Y• •Iter the lui enlorolng and edmlnloterlng from the record of
proceedlnp ol ..ld VIllage.
Hunter, M•rg•r•t l•m•
the •~~~ 1 1 thl
1 Garren and l.ebbua Gr•bel publlcMion ol thla notice
- prov .,_ or n •
publlahed 11ctlon; and to provide wun ..a my olgn•lure lhla CALL 992·6123
Garrit t, Addre11e1 un· which will .be
·
additional
r-en""
lor the t 7th cboy ol Mlly, t 1183.
•• t - forth
One. • Week lor olx CSI
Reasonable Rates
f. known.
,
In
S.ndre K. Smith,
oucc•elve weeki. The t.at purpoae1 •• .
It Ia lurlher the OADEA ol
ade
Section 4504.06, Ohio
Clerk ol Council
Dependable
lhlo Court th•t prool of publlcetion 111 1H1 m on Aevllld Code; •nd to
• publication be lurnlohed to the 22nd dey ol June, 11183,
Service
Douglu w. Llnle, Anornei!. and the twenty-eight 1211·
'' tor tha Ea181e ol Guy . daya lor enowerlng will
Hunler, deceued, 211-213 commence on that det.. In
Eaot Second str..t, P. o. caoe ol your l•llure to
SHRUB & TREE
Box 61&, Pomeroy, Ohio anower or otherwlu
4576t.
,.pond •• required by .,.
TRIM and
Aoblf1 E. Buck, Judge Ohio
Aulee ol CIYI
COMPUTE AUTO I•Peointir1a Services
REMOVAL
APPROVED:
Procedure, . judgmn11ntder oil
UPHOLSTERY
Doi191ao W. Lent.o,
del.. n will be 110 1
Interior & Exterior
lor E1IIIIo
· 11!11111111 you lor
Custom Seat
Paint Mobile Honnesl •UGHT HAULING
ney
.............,In the Petition.
and Aluminum Siding
Covel'S, Carpet,
•FIREWOOD
IN THE
Deled thlo 13th dey ol
I•Pcrwer
Washing
Heedllnera,
PROBATE COURT OF
Mlly, 11183. .
BILL SLACK
· FREE ESTIMATES
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Robert E. Buck .
Convertible Tops
50 734 lltl•y ••••••••
JENNIFER $HEETS,
Probat. Judge
30 yn. aperlenoe.
ADMINISTRATRIX
...... K. ........old, Clerk
lotto•, Dh. 45743
114-112-1163
of the E118t. ol
(51 11, 25;
USED RAILROAD TIES
Ave.
Guy E. Huntar, Deceaoed . (SI 1; 8, 15, 22, 611:
. 985·4.181
I »t2·111
Pelld-r
·
·-WI:
"'
.
LAWN CARE
*
AUTO
-----HO E
Dustin Salser
celebrates second
birthday
ROGAN
ER
.,.,...........
11,..
A~o
..I!J
r
COMMERCIAL nnd RESI,OENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
614·992·7643
(No Sunclay Calls)
2112192/tfn
IT
& COIITUOOR
SPECIAL
•
9x7 ........... $1
16x7 •••••••••
CHARLIE'S
SMAll DOZER WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK
alii UMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES
0
f
IN THE COMMON
PI,EAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVI
. SION
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE·MATTEA OF
SETTU!MENT
OF ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
AQcounte and vouchera ol
liM following n11111ed ftduclarlea heve been nled In the
Probate Court, Melge
County, Ohio, lor approv81
and uttlernent:
ESTATE NO. 24012- Filth
Annu81 Account ol Denver
L. end Nore E. Alee,
Guardl•n• ol the Parton
and Eo18te of Willt.m Lloyd
w.AJooH-
an
Special
,_Ill'_
RODGERS E-1 RIDE
1112
992·7553
·POMEROY, OH.
b 14·446-0736
1419 State Rt. 7
Gallipolis
511411M1n
J&T HOME
IMPROYEMENU
SEWER PROBLEMS
CAll 614·992·7871
Fro• Fou11tlation
Roof
'
Tanks, Leach lines
Repair & Installation
Inside anti Out
Free Estinudee,
Low Coats.
Work Gual'lnteed
Llceased, lasured ••- loaded
614·949·2988 or
614-593-5010
Call614o992·7871
5-2..1
Howard L Writesel
AMERICAN GEN.EUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY
ROOFING
NEW -REPAIR
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • ·Health
Gutters "'
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
PubliC Notice
·. THE EIITATE OF
·DAVID G. HUNTER,
DECEASED, ET AI..,
Aeepondente
NOnCE BY NOTIACATION .
TO: The Unknown Helrt,
Next ol Kin, Devlaeeo,
, Legalllt, Aclmlnlalretore,
Executoro al)d Aaelgne ol
Guy E. Hunter, Thomea
B•lley Hunter, Sr., l.ettle
' ~•n• RHCI Hunwr, Mllrgarel
' lama Gerrott and Lebbua
· Grebel Gwren.
' You are hereby notified
.!hal you have b•n n•med
Aeopondenll In e lege!
action entllled Jennifer ·L.
Sheel~, Admlnlolratrlx ol
' the Eo- of Guy E. Hunter,
Deeeaoed, _v1. The Eo- ol
O.VId G. ""ntar, 0.0-lld,
, at at. Thlo action h" been
alllgned Call No. 26,103
, and lo pending In the
Common PI••• Court of
Mel go County, Ohio,
,. Probate Dlvlalon; Second
• Slreet, Pomeroy, Ohio
45'76t.
·
The objet! ollhe P.tiUon
lo lo determine the helre,
j next ol kin and peraono
, Mdded lo th• •t.w ol Guy
Auto-Rentals
.Sprinl Time
W.AIIo-
S30HOUR
992-2269
-
UAL lOrJ
These Sizes Oalyl
lx7 ••••••••••• $17
"nor
Tomiko Lewis, chairman; first
place public relation, Mrs. Hampton, chairman. Mts. H~pton also
r~ceived an ~war,d (rOQl Depar.!ment for writing a speech for pub·
lic relations.
Edith Ross and Dorothy Casey
each received a home servioe
award pin.
'
Maxine Barnes, a past district
president, was elected alternate to
National Convention in Toledo.
Mrs. Hainpton was chairman for
the Tellers Committee and too'k
·Part iJ¥the memorial Service.
:
Joann Bond, Ame(ican legion
Auxilairy department jlresident IOfd
or her year's work. Repon of lhe
contributions for poppies were
given by lhe members during the
.
'
meetmg.
Prayerfor peaee by Helen Cui.mer, actin~ chaplain, s.inging Qf
'"America, ' and remarks by the
president closed lhe meeting.
Mrs. Bowles served a ·chicken
dinner.
The next meeting' will he at tlie
home of Helen Culme,r.
WAYNl
Steel Wood Grained Textured Raised
Panel Garage Doors.Complete With
Track, Lock, Spring and Hardware.
WHILE THEY LAST! ..
liB
Lewis Manley Auxiliary
makes contribution · ·
Riverview personals
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
CLUB ·
a tree.
Contributions were made to
Missionaries of Africa, Covenant
House, Veterans of Foteign
Affairs,.and American Indians
· ~~~n· die Lewis Manley A'uxHairy
Unit 263, American Legion, met
recenUy at the home of Margaret
Bowles. The meeting was Qpened
in' ritualistic form with Lorrene
Goggins as president in charge.
· Delegate Lula 'Hampton gave a
repon of the District Summer convention held recently with Auxilairy Unite 371 in Wellston. The
convention was in charge of lhe
outgoing president, Sharon Spires,
Wellston. The newly elected president is Nancy Brown, KJ. Crossen
Auxilairy Unit2l,Athens.
There were 75 in attendance.
Greetings were given by Mayor
John Carey of Wellston, eighth district commander, Ruth Crutcher,
and 371 commander, John Ervin.
Patricia Eagle of Little Hoclcing ·'·with Mr. and Mrs. Steven Boston
'!:here were six past district presand Nina Boston spent a weekend and family at' Springboro.
idents recognized. Reports of dis.
Mr. and Mrs . Herb Everly of trict chairman were given.
Several awards were received
Nashville, Tennessee· visited with
Hazel 'Barton· and Mr. and Mrs. from boih District and Department.
First place, americanism, Margaret
Lyle Balderson recently.
Sarah Frydman of Washington, Bowles, chairman; first place, comD.C. is visiting with her grandpar- munity service, Annette Johnson,
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest White- chairman. Ms. Johnson also
head. Other visitors at lhc Whitereceived honorable mention from
he8d residence were Mr. and Mrs. · Department 'for her outstanding
Walt Hensel!, Lisa and Jordan of .. contributions t() .~enio.r Prayer
Canal Fulton.
•
Book Entry. Second place award,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Williams of
Veteran AffairS and Rehabilitation,
Meggett, Soulh Carolina visited
with Mrs. Lillian Pickens and Mr.
and Mrs. Lyle Balderson.
Mr. and Mrs. John Smith,
Melissa and Brandon of Weston,
West Virginia spent the weekend
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Grant Smilh and Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Smith.
.
Franc_es · Reed . has recently
returned from . aEuropean trip
t' ., e'l ,
DUSTIN SALSER
which included visits to London,
Paris, Holland and AuSiria.
State Auto's already
I' II Have the Salad, Thanks
low premiums can be
reduced .,Yen niOfe by
Although they are aquatic creainsuring
both your car
tures, beavers do n01 eat fish: They
·
and
home
with the St~te
Dustin Mark Salser, son of subsist instead on a vegetabllt diet,
Auto Companh!s.
mainly consisting of bark and ten· .
print, but not in this case. "I hardly Mark Salser, Racine, celebrated his der
shoots.
had lhe time to write the books, let second birthday recently at the
Let us tell you just
alone be involved in niceties of home of Mr. and Mrs. Butch
PubliC Notice
how much your savi~;~gs
contnietual issues," Crichton said.
Brinker.
can
be. · ·
II THE PROBATE COURT
A Barney and Friends theme
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
NEW YORK (AP) - A broken was 'carried out with cake, ice
JENNIFER L SHEETS.
hip Will keep Cab Calloway from cream, Kool-aid and coffee served.
Admlnlalrlllrlx ollie
~
playing at Thursday night's JVC
Attending were Mark Salser,
Ea11118ol
Jazz Festival "Jazz Connection" · BuiCh, Penny and Amanda Brinker,
Guy E. Hunw, D•a••ed, •
. Pellloner
concen.
- Sheila, Amanda and Randi _King,
VI
..
.lllluucl Services
The program · at Avery Fisller · Loonara, Sandy·and David Kjlenig,
THE
ESTATE
OF
Hall wl~ explore lh~ oontribu~ons tony, Wendy and Taylor Deem,
DAVID 0. HUN1EA,
?f Jewtsh and Afncan mus1c to Melissa and Josh Morris, Jeannie
214 EAST MAIN
Jazz. •
and Travis Lipscomb, Amorette
Aeapon.....
CA8E NO.ae,eoa
POMEROY
· The 85·year-old Calloway Salser, Mrs. Jenny Jenkins, Daniel
•
Docket
t•
slipped and fell June 5.
and Greg.
.
992-6687
OADEA
" Cab was ~ of _!his Pf<!gram
Sending gifts were Mrs. Mildred
Upon review ol .,. me, It
because he sta~ m his autobu>gra· Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
t. hereby the OADEA ol
phy that hsterung to cantors m ~yn- Salser Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Scott
thl•· Court lh•t MrVIoe by
State
agog~~s 1_nt)uenced h1s mus•_cal . Williams and Jo~h •. t,ir. and Mrs.
Pllbllutlon be .lft!de upon
· _.,. ullldlown IWti, HUt iOI ..
sty~e . .fesliva1 producer. George
Darrell Jenkins and Destiny, Mr.
1nurlllt:e co-.aiile11 Kin; Devil-, L...tHa,
Wem satd Monday. ·
.
and Mrs. Chuck Johnston Crissy
ceontlnuecl on p... 7)
and Stephanie.
BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
BINuu
The little leaf will waiCh and
see,
The coming of spring, new
leaves everywhere,
Maybe its brother, high up on
Names in the news
WASHINGTON (AP) "Jurassic Park" author Michael
Crichton has another hardback
coming out, but he's not happy
about it
The publishing house Dutton
ljas reissued ··A Case of Need," an
out-of-print medical mystery
CrichiOn wrote 25 yeaJS ago under
the pen name Jeffrey Hudson.
Crichton told the pu,blisher it
would be "shoddy" to reissue the
book in hardcover, which implies
the book is new The Washington
Post rep<Xted todi.y.
"A Case of Need" was one of
10 books Crichton wrote under pen
names while he was attending med·
ical school.
· Dutton publisher J;llaine Koster
said·she was proud of the reissue.
~ights to a book usually revert
to the aulhor after it goes out of
~
To where it did n011a!ow. .~
Coming to rest on Mother eartl).
To await the·winter snow. '
It served its ·purpose, throu gh
summer months,
=
Now a new job was in store. •
To join wilh alllhe others,
:
Lilce a carpet on earth's floor:
Maybe a shelter for creepirlg
things,
,
~
Or a lining for a nest or den. ,
Whatever, it is; its only wish, :
Is to be useful ; some way
again.
'
So as snows come and pa,:;s
Account ot L.. lie Janeue
Atklno, Executrix ol the
Eot.te ol Don Belling, ll<e
L:=====412=· =111=fn~ ~-~======~ •· •---------r---~---.....1
LINDA'S
PAINTING
came,
down,
PubliC Notice
Don L Betzlng, Dna•MI.
4:30 P. M. DAY IEFORE
PUILICAnOII
Nothing fancy about its color, •
Just a shade of green, quit~
plain.
•
All lhrough the summer, it collected dew.
Turned rain, and did its
Public Notice
• Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage
Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. •Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264 5114/U/ttn
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168
3-16-93-lfn
24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE
•
TWIN CITY MACHINE & WELDING
24 Hour Portable Weldin11 Service
'JAYMAi
UNLIMITED ONE
MONnt TANNING
Rice.
Quality
Stone Co.
$25 QQ
ESTATE NO. 27047 P•l!al Account ol Nancy
Bun Reed, Execut~lx of the
Eot.te ol Theodora T. Reed,
Jr., o.c..,..._
ESTATE NO. 27814 Final and Dittrlbutlve
Account of LucreU• M.
Slobart, Admlnlatratrlx ol
lhe Eetete ol Arthur A.
.Stobart, DeceaHCI.
ESTATE NO. 21t73 -
WOLFE• BED'.
1
FACE TANNER
fOREVER
BRONZE
nllle ••
llck.t CIH •
11
949•2826
SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614-992·
6637
St. Rt. 7
c•e••ire,
COMPLnE MACHINE SHOP SERVICES
7.30am : •200pm
IN SHOP WELDING SERVICE OR PORTABLE
ALL TPES QF. >~ELDING FABRICATION AND
.!)
So•
Job Shop Fatilitin
WE LEASE
O•~·Ace~one•N•t•ogen
S!reaalll
Fully lnoured
Job Shop Facilitilo
GENERAL MACHINE WORK & WELDI.NG
SERVICE
• Hyd<oget • Co2 A•gon • Helum •
r·•~
HOURS
7' 30om
· 5 OOpm
Mon · fn
t
S U Stee
COMPLETE fie e .
!
RADIATOR 1r. ~ll,l-~
!loses
• C~ • Uo1po Ga~ • Propane • C~
• Hel•arc , Ah1m1num & Stamlls~ • SPfav W~mg
• M1g Weld•ng . SIM* 8 Alum1num ~ Wel<l•ng &;pp1 .es
• ratll>eltiOO·Abti•IV 1!) R\)111 Bend Mlttl 1
.
992-3768
17 COI.E ·• POMEROY . OHIO
= ~E~-~H~u~nt~•r:,~D~e~ce~a~o~ed~,~ln~F~In~a~l_!•n~d~~~!tt~ ~:::::::~:':7:-~::l:m:~~
: ;·::::::::::Re:l:l:E:M~M:e:Ge::n:•:n:l::::::::~
By
•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING •
.f,,
Dave
Grote
•
of
Rlllc.cl
Fnlt1re
We epend
montl)'kllllng lime.
...
'•
• ••
•
Any loot ct~n criticize, condemn
and complain - •nd rnoet do.
The trouble wllh lldvlce It th.l
you don't know !f It'• lilY goocl
until you no lonll8'
need IL
•
• • •
J
.
'
. JDI• Us 'Ai Rltlatll F~nlllll ;
for TH llggest Seltdloti c~~c~;
lite lett Pritt.
·:
'·
..
...
ahop 171• B•stffNn
~
c:.............opn. ....t
7 SHOWROOMS
•
II WAREHOUSES]
Rutland Furniture
II. 124 lvtlinl., Oh. 7 •
742·2211
•'
'••
•'
·•'
•••
SNODGUSS'
UPHOLSTERY
D. A. BOSIOII
EICAYAniiG
(614)
667·6628
UCIII,OHIO
'"Holplnl You To
Recover Your
f•
••
.Nothing •rou• ..
a more Ieite'
hope th~ the llrot h.U d•y of II.
clet.
t • •
~
11 o you think the 10
Commandment• on two atont
blblete are '-d to keep to - be
glad Mo••• didn't return Iron!
the mount•ln with 1 couple of
' floppy dllko.
,
.'
I&C EXCAVATING
BUllDOZING
Announcements
PONDS
S£P11C $YSTEMS
LAND ClEARING
WATER I SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&
. HOMESITES
HAUUNG: LlmMtona,
Dirt, Gravel end Coal
1
2 Front Struts • Laltor
• 4 Wheel Ali1••••
Prices Startfn1 at
1129.95 + Tnx
3 Announcements
EliOilC LADIES LIVE H l -
7810 IUO·mln. Me-VISA 1·11110lll~1115$2~1n .
FLEA MARKET '
LiCENSED lftdiiONOED
S.lvogo
12711
PH. 614-99~·5591.
12·5-tfn
..1li..Q.tln
•
ft
8.5 acres wrth 1978 12 x 65 mobile home and an
older home wrth 2 saptics, TPC Water, great building
srta. $23,000
•
••
•
liMESTONE,
GUVEL & COAL
.....
Reaioaaltle
Two slory home 3·4 bedrooms, bath, ' utility, part
basamenl, vinr.l siding, ·approx . IJ; ac~a. 2 c•r
garage, paved Rd. TPC water, beaUI~ul v11w! Level
yard. $18,000
·
:
:
l
'••
JOE N.SIYIE
SAYRE
614•7.42·2131
1y, Slory home with 4 bedrooms cellar, garden atea,
added insulation, front sitting porch. Cou_nlfY setting.
$18,000
.
•
~
.
'
~
:
•
;
:
SR 7 2 story home thai has .had excellent care, nice
yard with 3 acres, 3 bedrooms, bath, carport, .
ba~emenl, central air, home has been rec;luctd .Ia
$35,000 ;
.
.
~
' I .
,
'·
· ·Just past Chesler- spac;t.acular hom• whh ..4
bt41rqorna. 2 baths, 2 decks, 2 car .garage, h~tat
'~'. pu(lip/C/1\. !l(eDJace. storage buildi~ and a cell,r. A'·
, 'MUST SEE I'IOMEI'Hais blirHeduc8d to $84,500 ...
•
..
1
•
' •
•. .
• .·. · , ·
'
••
'
•
-
•
••••• '
w1 NliiausTiNGst
. '·
'
•
.
• :'
...
EAGLE
· .' h,ntlcoy~ Ohio ·.
GRAVEL, SAND, ·
.liMlsTONE, ·TOP SOil
... JILl '.DIRT. .
'
. ..
~liES
DIYIDSON'S
PLUMIING
"IIIII!ling
• •
••••••
;:jj•
•
31904LIHIII ·
614-992·7144
.
,,
.'
e(e~te
•••••eli•t
s~e,&eo..u.
flllll'riilnl
915-4473
667-6179
..:. ·. 4/29/91 lh
Shade River Saddle S~op
CUSTOM SADDLES, .
LEATHER REPAIR
and .BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7
Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406
Ext. 137t, lUI
P.,
llln. 111101
lo 11 Yro, PIOCIIII Co. 102oU!-
011S.
MISTRESS MADONNA LIVE 1·
-7115-1111
min. 1-too '15
a
7110MCVI8A11•.
MYRTLE IUCH RAMADA•
Oooon Fftlnl 1 11., Lua. ~.
110
l'ool, . . _ 4 To I. M:IO
W.... , C.H a.-, 111:1-651-311117.
OHIO'S CONNECTION ALTERNATIVE 1-1010-3337 SUO·
min 11.ton IIIMI~I
100'1 oltl....
In
rouraroolodaJ. CCIIOC FL
TilE GAY CONHECTION 1·11110-
7of1• ......,
2 . -.
1CIO'o
- ·In·,....,
oroo 1onlghl. Qef, . _ l 'o. CCI
IOCA 1'1.:
HOWARD
EXCAYAnNG
BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
end TAACKHOE WORK
AVAII.A8LE.
. SEPTiC SYSTEMS.
HOME IITEIII'ICI
TRAILER liTES. ·
LANDCLEAIINO
DIIVEWA'ISINITAWD
o•• · "'A2-mr
. c.........
.w...,..,
..........
...,....
CONSTRUCnOI
(former Mason Lanes)
3rd & Pomeroy Street•
MellOn, WI/
(304) 773-5585
• SUMMER HOURS'
Sun.-Thur5,10 pm
Fri-Sal5·11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY
..·SERVICE
36970 •n Run Roail
.
BISSELL & lURlE
\
~(1\1
HAULING
l----~!...!..!
•
I' '
AUCTIONS
uldo ovollobll.l14-251·
Llwr 24 Houn A O.y!tl Tolk To
-.,llul Ol~alll 1-t00-211 :leta
>
•
1a..
UMU~·TRUCICINO
.
111/'U/t
TRIMMING anti
'TREE & StuMP REMOVAL
l'orm-:1~ •f Bart•' rr.e ....,._
IIIUIID
1111
,,
'
�'
I
June 22, 1993
Ohio
June
The
ALLEYOOP
. KIT ' N' CARLVLE® by LarrY Wrilbt
SNAFU® by Bruc:e Beattie
PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio
ACROSS
41 Hoi lUI lor Rent
-AM.,r:.=z .,... r::r-•
_..,,_,1_,
,,.
:0,.11111ooth, . .
.,...__ 1
I CUll 1011- t Woob Old, 1
Wltk Nilr WH dltnd Drtft.
I~UI1AIIw4:30P.II.
.
___
....... MQOIMoo•ll. II
,...,..
·
• ICitloo!t; • Woob Old, All
,C .O., To Oood HoiM,'I1WM1711.
PHILLIP
ALDER
.•
Nil,
..,
NORTH
._11-tl
•u•
.-hNI_..,_........,
· ~··
•a
.,.
• A lOts
LAYNI'SI'UIINITUIII
' · ••
£..,....._.,
c:_,_ """" .....-.....,
••
•
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
'
!!122..1
- . ""'. •1 •• lid. ~-=:==::t:=::;;;::==;=======d..J 1m
·Didao
led,
Uhd ' ~
~- Dlllvely
fla*411,
loco"""'
.._ llllet,
11.000, 111 ~- t210. ""•
MouN: lion 111, N. ~
---wl
Loii&Found
-
73 Vana&4WD..
Wftldott"f
..... ....
,..
· - ..... Au!o. Vol, 2
~ Tlnlod Wlndoioi Oood
54 MIICIIIaMOUI
Cui$1•114-U7-~~
nngr ·
.. ul:."
Farm Suppl12s
Men:,.ndlu
& L1vrslock
'•
'
,.
Lllloll 100 Will _ . . , . _
IIIIer ue Onn NO, Cell 11+
441 0070.
All iMI 011111 IKNOillllng In
l.ool:
ao....... Sllophlnt
lhll _ . , llaobjod IO
thl F-1 Flllr HoUIIng M
Block
11111, 1.oo1 on 141, e1Wrii-1ae7.
ol1868 wttiCII maklls llllglll
Loll: L11J11 Block "-11. 4
Monlh Pup • Boegll Ftmoll,
Ad11111~le Rd., VIcinity, IM245-115115.
to - • ·~ prelonnce,
lmbllollor<lsalmlnollon
baed on race, color, relglon,
SIX llmila!IWUI or natk)nal
origin, 01 anv lnlentlon to
7
lmltwllon or doafmlnallqn.•
Yard sale
This lli""P"PG'' wll not
AN'SlLPN'I
TO a:10 PER HOUR
Gallipolis
& VICinity
!!lllllilt
Ft.dlli
Or
lcno~
adverllsema,..a for real ealala
lo In violation oltho
low. Our-.. on hoNIIy
lnfonnod lhold -lltlgl
Duly,
........
Moura. ....,....,..
'1'luouthout
-
Ancl
lloullilmWESTEIIN
Ohll. Col IIEDICAL
·1381.
BARNEY
. PAW tl THAR'S A
FLATLAND TOURISTER
Public Sale
& Auction
YARD!!
HE WANTS TO
BUY SOME
OF YORE
HOOK RUGS!!
Hoi-T~IIIn,-'1::
=-:~r:v'"="d. All
-n A-
' bod-.! INilor lor ronl, QOI
..... !fopoolt, CaunlrY
lloblloll- - . 114-tll2-2fll1.
-
molllio
-.lala . . .
up ..
PICKENS FURNITURE
........ d
ps, u..
....... Oood . . . . 2lune
Oood, tt,IOO. , . _ . , _
100 Ford
44
Apanment
torRent
1 Bodooom, Quiet i
1
-.'Air
Concl-.a
hSCtllh · oaes,IDM1a--.
R.il.- - -.....
............ ....
licti-- HeM .. -
....... wv. 304-J'JUMI.
YOU'RE UP NEXT, CI-IARLIE
. BROWN .. YOU CAN !-liT THIS
PITCHER! TME L.AST TIME
YOV FACED MER,YOU MIT
MOME RUN!
.
ploto,........
_ "!"!n! lio
·d
.., -- i
cllolr, • - I oncl - . 2
lompo, TV. M4-TINI4t.
rwnadJIId ldtchln. ..._!M.Im!
Ml....,id,;.-nolahborllood,
'{OU CAN DO IT!
'{OU'RE TI-lE I-IERO T'I'PE!
••
~
FRANK AND ERNEST
lollonytlmo'30447a-IIM.
•dod
Or-
2 ..., Loa
Houoo, 4
loci_ ........ . _....
mr-
Double
Wllllod To Buy: Pool, 11' Wldio Or ...... Ancl 4'
DMp, ....... In QiiOd -
lion; t14-26MII:I.
a._
!lor __
on
11W7M31D,
-
.:t ~'fNT L Y ttAI> AN
HSALTYCLUB
u
OVT·Of·JOC>Y ~)(PfJifNCf
JUT, UNFOICTVNATfLY,
"" .:t GAMf IACIC TO
Ttt~ SAMf ONf.
Slt~N
UP !mRS
'FOR FITNSSS
CLASS
~1.
1rf.llwof - . 3 or
4lldmL, I 112 both, ottuchod I
_ _ a..,..outbulldl"t'o
on - l o l l l oamor of~
:.~-==~'::·
lloclni,
2lldna., full bMimeiw, cloH to
IOMI, lo'90
SII,OOO ar
make
·
14-111:1-7187,
114tlll-3127.
Bur ...~ Timbo< Plno.
~·wood, i Bow 1i.'iil.oi .,._
l""''
·7111.
.
...;ol ' " - .
' lllcotllld - ·
'
C.-11.
"iHAVI'$
Co .,., .,.,11M. lfte,
BORN:LOSER
v--
VCH'a, .wciowauw.
oncl;::=t... .... •
AM Condk-, Oulor Airljle,
Etc•.114 a.-1231.
J i D'a Aulo Parta
trucb: ·
Junll cera,
•nr
'lSI-
Pold:
llli·7SI:I.
Top Prlcoo
12
Situation
Wanted
1r dfl'porl JIID 11
7t Autos for Sale
'77 Daclae - . tli!OO;
114
...... 1.
All Old U.S.
Employm ent Serv1ces
l:o.~.....,
a.....iu don,
lop to tho m1
II }ull
-
-
1011-tllr.r.
nuroii!IJ. Quollflod
,.,.,.. liilwo • llootoro Dog- or
r••• a
compllllng
hoinend- ••
111...,.
DilgrM
previa
~~~~-- polnllng, root
oondldoto
edmlnlel,..tve
experience.
Compotlllvo oolory i pockugo. Sublllll- IO .....
director, Jlclioon Otniorol
H011Ditol, P.O. Bol 720, Rlplly,
WV !16211. EOit
AVON I All ANoo
Spoo.., 30W75-1421.
I Shirley
AvonWonlllnd--
lld In Elmlng 16 -$10 /Hr. No
Door To Door, 1~ .
Bartondor.L Apply In ,._, AI
Add- o;~u~~,..,. A - 7, or
-
You Aro Willing To W0111 Honl
Worttlng With
Children ~ Your RMume For
Con-lion To; ae6 .Jackuon
Ea rn Full·Timl Pay For 'Par1·
Timt Work A• A Chrtetma
... .....,...33.
for Sale
lltt Poulo'o DIY Cote Cent•. I
Wlndoor 3 Bodroomo, 2
·
-IU'
WootI OfA.M.
HIIC-1;30
on .Jackoon
Plku
P.M. H 1180
Botlil, Ellctrlc Goo, CA, 2
Ouollty Ancl E-'"'100 II Tho Ac .... 11ore or L.o, lulldlnf
,CurLe-n
""' y- Child'•
Plllurw, County Wet•,
Call Uo For A Vld. lnflnt Foncod
liT SChool, Excollonl COndKion,
114 iUI 1227. PrM- 114--1.
ohJ I te ISchool Age IJ4..441..
aac.
1112
Com-..,
MXIS,
Srrv1ccs
n......,_
ooo
......
lion, ...
wllh o 14121 odilon, , .... bu11, lull both, · · -1_14111 Hvlng - · nry
nloo1 ,.,1100 or both lor SII,OOO,
114-Mt-2128,
For - : ~ lunll
.......
'"' loch I
,l-olkl Wood,
114 1U •••
Sunnrbiooll,
For_, Oood llooil c,_ n.
-
Cloyton
14180, 2br., 1 112 betM1 uthed111 oolllngo, utility
_,
Sumrnlf' 1Uiorlna1 all eubject1
K-1. For morw liitormotl011
304-175-60111.
M.IIOAP-
Wonting to
onor 7:3Cpm.
=r:
~rector
Of
NursinG.
Holr
Styllot
With
&lotlng
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
""' ..... ,., Clal'-
llookw.
Oood For l'onl ..... "-Dtl
Eoch, Aft• 1:00 P.ll. i14-o44eo
4171.
- • rod porch, ~llchon lot•nd.
otO<oge
uncloipennlng,
llku now,
111-2414.
:tJr....
Mcrcnand 1•,e
Wlldnelldly, June 23, lat:l
In lhe year ahead devote your lime and
energies to lhe lul!illment ol your ambit~s
expectaiKJns, Minim ize participating in loivtllous actlvi«es. because you'll have plenly of
lime to do lhat Iaior.
CANCER (Juno 21 -July 22) A sure·llrt
way 10 have olhers come down haod on
your ideas loday is 10 first lind laun· with
lheirs. Oon'l be lhe one who inlroducos
cOnlroversy in lho relation ship. Gemini,
·lreat yourselllo a birthday gill. Send lor
PJJWOJWt Carl Clntlr, 111
PIDrlvo, Oolllpolll, Ohll
46631, , _...,12.
" - ! V.nclng Route: tt,200 A
Wook PotontiOI. MUII ..II. 1 IA-Yend.
Pl.. - Hlkl on
Alt.U1 AlA R........
1ft
PhoM: t14 ...
Nlw C.Wt•:W. Home
eomCon. ., . .
'1211,
s1nor
""' 1 Y- 0111 Boonl And Bolory, 114-48-4014
Evonlngo.
,
=
addressed. stamped ·envelope to Astro·
Graph: C/o this newspaper, P 0 . Box 4465.
ideas than you .are to deal With little
cautious in your commercial affa irs today. It
In S1tuat1on s or people about whom
Today, however. grandiose schemes
New York, N.Y. 10163. Be sure ld slale lead 10 your undoing.
your zodiac s~n .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 19) You are in
LEO (July 23·Auv. 22) Be prudent and cycle where il mighl prove unwise lo
you make impulsive judgmenls, !hey could know lillie. There could even be pot•enllrl'i
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Stpl. 22) Be your own
persoo IOday , but try to do so wilhoul
offending olhers. There 's a chance you
might be so self-involved . you won't be cog·
Business
Cllont... Noodod l'or Hlaft
TrofliO, ~llpollw Bolon, 111'11.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) UstJall•n
ahead by mailing $1 .25 and a long , sell- you're beller equipped to deal wtlh
create a loss, regardle ss of. whether you're
buying or selling.
•U .tee, 2 bedroome, AJC,
50311.
The
Oullto For Boll
.....
1118 Skyline Holly lllclgo 14x'IV.
Financ1al
21
ASTRO·ORAPH
For_, Ill 014 !loll - ·
11" t!OO
....11,
do
Will clean hOUIII. 304-675-54M 1:00 P.ll.
ThO
Wortd.
DemonlttrJtor. Free $500 ktl No
Collecting or DIIIYOflna, Alao
. · Book~ ·. Portllo, Cull 1'14-248-
~~!/!!!~~"'·y~our Aslro -Graph predictions lor lhe year
-·nil.
Far-: RCA ltoroo, W l.4nfl
Oood Condlllon, ttOO Phoi11:
114 411 oae.
I
•
•
i'O~Igorotor, IIOYO, WhirlPOOl
AC, oil oloclrlo, vinyl unctorpln-
nlng, . 1112 deck, $121500(niQ.)1
cod IM-l185-31112;
Around
FuU Time Po..lono AniUpon HI,. For Curtltlod NuNingg
Aoolotonta. Comootltln Wllgoo,
Difloronllol With Ex.-t!ncol
Sign
On - · AvoU-. E4uo
Dppootunltr
Employor. Contocc
.
- . odd
2IMI"'!:.. 1 111111. .....-
5 Foem
6 Author Anlll
1 That women
2 French lor
11
1ummer"
7 Ferotltlendo
3 Lttsold
4 How sweet
whirlwind
8 Cro11
,,.. lnvilod "' -
11'1
WOIJ' T - IEDS
unne.
lrll'-
ttlt.OO,
1 •
rllo. r PIJI!Iontt
loW • $11.110, 1111 tilcllj FAIE
HEW Colar ColllltisJ, t'4004Z.
"'
PISCES (Feb. 20-MIIrch 20) Persons
whom you'll be involved loday won1 like
you take lhem or whal they do lor you
. granted. This is a volatile area, so be care·
nizant of their needs .
ful .
LIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Oon 'l let your
ego pul you in a posilion loday where you
may fee l compelled 10 do something you
really don'l know how 10 do. II you're honesl
up lrontlhts could be aVOided .
·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22) Someone as
slrong willed as yourself mtghl lry 10 be lhe
dominating Ioree in your peer group loday.
Acolhsion.ls likely if you opposelhis individ·
uat
IAGITIARIUI (Nov. 23· DIC. 21) Today
you mighl have dill icully dislinguishing
belween lhose who aro in your comer and
lhose who oppose you . Poor judgmenl
leesens your char>C41slor success,
AlliES (..-ch 21·AprH II) An•i ;·rnpollartll
asstgnments you've neglected eaMy in
week mighl slart popping up lo haunt
lieginnlng today. Oon'i pretend lhoy
exist
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Try to
your involvemeniS with friends today as
keyed and uncompl lcated ·as P~;::;i:~l
Complex arrangemenls mlghl be ·
lo lail.
GEMINI (llwy 2t..June 20) It won't be
accurate measurement IO compare
echievemenla of an ouiSider against
ol kin . Your prtsenlation could be prejudkej
lowardS any non-family members.
ftll7.
<
problems in areas where you know
you're doing.
"
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Me ond my typewrllor, lhat'a all lhere Ia In lhl
world... - lluc Alirno¥.
'
..
.,
'::!:~:~' S@\\41}!-l&~~s·
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loy ClAY I. POllAN _;,.__ _ __
I~Hool
Rearrange lett•rs of
0 four
acrambled words
the
be·
low to form four words.
I
I
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ctlrd-plll:r , _
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CELEBRITY CIPHER
...._ peoplt, pe81Md ~.
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_., ..,a,,.p1oo~a:,.•iii• .,.0!'-.cllrom Ql
-
LUQIL
to Plt/JJJp AJd<r,' In elite ol t» -per.
TUESDAY
houoocllonlng, 1118 For.ll Park. 3 Bldroomt, 1
Pomeroy- Mlddtapart- Racine '112 Bltho, on 314 Acrw, Coni•
IfNI Syi'KUM 81'M1 1 hiVe eX• DOint Ad., o1oc1iuan County, 10
lllnut• F..., Alo Orondo. A,.ot
Plkw, Suho 101, Qolllpollo, OH .......... ond-....o,I14Woior. Will loR Moblll Homo
. 45631.
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Enloy
)
IIUie., 11,000 ....._ -
-· ilo-·ii Ylnl
Lillo Dontol Hygllntlot To .loin
And
v.t::QI.O ~ -
,.,.._...._ ,.., Fr• 32 Mobile Homes
Tlmo, lt5-719-S508 Ext.K23z,
IA.M.-IP.M. CST.
DENTAL HYGIENISTS: Would
Llconood In Tho Sioto Ot Ohio. H
leA MeWtCE 10
polnll"t..::,id&loli hoUuoo i
Funmono /Pail·
Our Dantal Tum on A Poll And
Or Full-Tim• 8 ..11. Mu• Be
......
lody, homo,
homo
Inlor my
1aabls • • 1~1-2321.
Dallvorinl Logol Papora. O!lori·
,...
-
A. Zoologists have a sl"'cific term ·
for the study of whales. That noun,
CETOLOGY, is pronounced "seeTAH·Ioh-jee" and is based on the
Greek' word KETOS , meaning
"whale." <The term can also be ap·
plied to the study of dolphins.) In use
for almost two centuries, CETOLOGY
idenllfies the field of study for any
marine scientist known as a CETOL·
OGIST, another whale of a word.
..Jt!''-'1
-odul - caro
Call_..,._
DoiiYooy: ttD0-$200 Par Day
All
eooey a= FFOI-e'
1m
Panloo ........, a - ·
- ...........
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......,
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10 bod .... hoopltll ..
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_lilnl .. --nt .. _ .. of
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I
1m, 2 - · Dldao Dorl -
'AVON' ALL AREAS! Slloro your
OOWN
+K
3
·
I
I I 1 1 Is ;:
N0 T E R·
·
~
I :..
CULNOK
'It's not that 1spend more
earn;
than t
the young man
; explained to his parents. •It's
· just that I spend it ••••••• than
lleamit. "
1:6;-1-1~T, ..:;-l....:...,..:l.;_r:l7~
L -'---L--..J.L--..J.L-..J."----1.
whales. What is the word for studying
those?
MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
- - . 4110
114 4411710.
oom,_.,.
Paa
PU.
. Q. My grandson loves to learn about
Bit llooll,
Oood Wllh
-lont
lontl
. _ IIIII•
li,OOG.
-
mobile
tlmo wnh ... You'N lovo tho
1.a taGH.
Pus
By Jefll'ey McQuain
DEFLAGRATE bums quickly and
intensely: "Fierce Dames deftagrated
the .vacant building.'' Warm up to the
verb DEFLAGRATE, which is pro·
nounced "DEF-Iuh-gr'ate."
;;3U;;;7.;;.._ _.....;_ _ _ _...
Colne. M.T.S. Coin lhop,
~UO, QolllpoiiL
11
' Pus
OUR LANGUAGE
WI-: Rlllobllilllt~n Adult
To C.. Far 4 Chll-,
Al:f81• Cll AequiNd, 114-448-
condMion 1 t14-
WI- lo buy: holn.. 114 441 01'71
21 French lor
lithe<
30 Atop
.
311111dt32 Nickell end
dimes
34 Tlnt
7'llq ClUJ
eome.- Rlnao. sn- eo1no.
-
••
3t
5t
Occasionally a deal will come along
in which you musl cling like a barna·
cle to a collecllon of low cards in one
suit. Sometimes the highest card isn't
as low as it looks. But today's deal ex·
hibits a different reason,
In an international team event, only
one pair reached the borderline six dl·
amonds, via tbe given auction. They
held only a combined 23 high-card
points, but five heart tricks would be
enoup to bring home the slam. (Note
that if North has the heart jack extra
or South has three spades and two
clubs, the slam Is phenomenal.)
West led a top club and switched to
the spade queen. South won with the
ace and ran off six rounds of dla·
monds. West discarded four clUbs and
one of his •useless" hearts. Now it was
easy for South to play hearts from tbe
top and claim when tbe jack dropped.
Suppose instead that West defends
better, keeping all four of his hearts.
Even though the percentage play in
hearts is to play off.the kiDI, ace and
queen, South will probably be aware
that West has kept four bearts. U 110.
there are 10 low doubletons that Eut
could bold and only five jack doubletons. So it Is twice as likely that Welt
has jack-fourth than four !Ow cards.
U South thinks this way, be will cash
the heart kiDg and lead a heart to dummy's 10, goiDg down with the actual
distribution .
When you have length In a suit iD
willcll an opponent ilallo kiD&. atwa71
consider keePini your boldlatllntael lf
you can.
-
Don, Junk MIW Uo
Worldilg ...,., Ap,U'"'III
Color
TV'o,_ •llohlflrotoro,
F~
Elttt
27 Rows
By Pbllllp Alder
~=~
'"'r.:i.l.~
mont.
corpoll,
Wanted to Buy
ONIIIIIIIII
55 Obllf¥t
S&CIIeirt
57 ..... thttp
Cling
to 'useless' cards
~no 1111- Jllonle!, ~=
llu
773-1716.
Pass
Pass
Pass
prince
51 - Klnt Cole
52 Publish
54 Spire
Eul
Pus
Nor Ill
Opening lead:
GET THIS KID
OUT OF MY
BACKSWING !!
31 Homtl for S&la
Rick,..,..., Auction Com-,
Nil time - - . -plot•
auction
urvlca.
Ucnsrd
IM,Ohlo I W•t Vlrglnlo, 304-
9
BACK
oct.-lnlhlaM-r
n IIVIIhble on an equal
OJlPO!Iunlty b-.
SERVICES
8
ocoapl
3.
4111oneco
......and.~.
11110i
Pomeroy, ll!'mala.,IIMI24117.
mlli<Oinf ollcn pretoronce,
W..l
2t
OUT IN OUR
61 Fann Equipment
S..lll
431undie
441111tia
41 Aduilln-t
15._...
-
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tKQI0852
•
1ZWW2i•H
13 Attentptel
14 lllade tr..
23 Peychologlat
SOVTH
~-=ion.-::£
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Real Estate
31=.12
JH~
EAST
.QUU2
6
37 Run IWIY to
17
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11
no-
attentiOn
4 lllciMr blck ·
ofmapt
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tl llnl'l hOmt .
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t AJ 7 6
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Ilk lor Gory.
Nloo 2 ..,._, Trollor I For
-·DipaoiiA
211121L
1 Word to c.il
lllhfled
ITV't - Haw
"""""Y -..... - . . Ohio,
I
35 Elec. llllllr.
31 Fecit IIICi
e
by fillinq in the missing 'NOf'ds
you develop from step No. 3 below.
PRINT NUMBERED lETIERS
IN THESE SQUARES
A
V
Complete the chvcklo quoled
I
UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
•
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Loathe • Prawn • Elope • Wisely.· SEE WHO
Office cutie to co- worker, "The walls are so thin in
my new apartment, you not only can hear a pin drop.
next door, but you can SEE WHO dropped it!"
JUNE 22
�By The Bend
The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Lottery
Reds
outlast
Rockies
TUesday, June 22, 1993
Page-10
Pick 3:
838
Pick 4:
1731
BuckeyeS:
6-20-21-24-36
Page4
L<M tonight Ia 60s, clear..
Tbunday, partly sunny. Hl&b Ia
80s.
•
Vol. 44, NO. 3t
2hction.12Page&25GMIII
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 23, 1993
llllllltMdl•lnc.
A MuUimeclalnc. Newopaper
Scrubbers on schedule and Within · budget
PRIMARY CLASS • Awards and certificates were recently given to students at Carleton
School for their outstanding achievements
throughout the school year. Receiving awards
for the primary class were: 1-r, !'root, Mitchell
Powel~ Nicky Wilson, Jennll'er Gray and Ashley
Rhoades. Middle, Melisa Hart, Jennifer Arthur
and Jessica Simpkins. Back, Kay Davis, instructor, and Diana Ash, instructor assistant.
Chester D of A
meets recently
P~CHOOL CLASS- Awards aad certlftcateil were recently
given to students at Carleton School for their outstanding achieve. ments throughout tbe school year. Receiving awards for tbe preschool class were: 1-r, !'root, Luke Lowery, Mathew Boswell, Glenn
Johnson and Timmy Ball. Bai:k, Christopher Musser, Frank
Denny and Adam Wilson with Sally Holman, instructor assistant;
and Teresa Porter, instructor.
.
The Chester Council No. 323
Daughters of America met recently
at lhe hall.
·
The meeting opened in ritualistic form and officers reports were
given.
Goldie Krackomberger is home
· from lhe hospital and Alta Ballard
and Ruth Smith will be .having
surgery. Genieve Ward is ill . .
Books will be audited I uly 3 at
12:30 p.m. at lhe home of Kathryn
Baum.
The district picnic will be Saturday at noon at Logan.
•
Flag bearers escorted Everett
Grant to lhe altar and presented a
gift to him. Erma Cleland read
.. What is a Father-."
Mary Jo Barringer, Leta Mae
· Krauuer and Doris Greuser were
the only members with living
fathers.
·
·
The meeting closed in regulat
form.
Birthdays observed during a
potluck .meal were Leta Mae
Krauter, Erma Cleland, Elhel Orr,
Evereit Grant, Goldie Fredriclc. Iva
PoweU and Eva Robson.
Attending were Opal Hollon,
Charlotte Grant, Ethel Orr. Leta ,
Mae Krauter, Sandy White, Lora
Damewood, Erma Cleland, Mary
Holter, Esther Smith, Faye
Kirkhart, Betty Young, Thelma
White, Betty Denny, Lillian
Demosky, Pauline Ridenour, Mae
McPeek, Ada llissell, Virginia Lee,
Jean Welsh, Lauia Nice, Mary Barringer, Katheryn Baum, Everett
Grant, Eva Robson, Iva Powell,
Elizabelh Hayes, Goldie Fredrick,
Inzy Newell; Doris Grueser. Mar·
cis Keller and AIIB Ballard.
SENIOR mGH CLASS· Awards and cer·
tificates were recently pven to studeats at Carleton School for their outstanding achievements
throughout tbe school year. Receivlna awards
for the senior high class were: 1-r, Andy Lam-
·
Dear Ann Landen: I've been
mameci for 16 years to a man I love
wilh all my heart. We have two
children. "Roy" bas always bad
problems ex~ his feelings. He
never talks to me and keeps
everything inside.
Five years ago, I made lhe
mistake of having an affair wilh a
divorced man in our social group.
AcbJ8lly, it wasn~ SCll I was looking
for. I just~ 10 feel some closeness. I couldn~ handle ~ duplicity
and stopped seeing lhe man afler
lhree monlhs.
I confCSIJCd Ibis to Roy, because
the guilt was killing me. We
separated for a short while but got
back together again. Now here
COillCS lhe real problem. Roy thinlcs ·
I have anolher boyfriend and is
certain lbat this boyfriend and I are
trying 10 make him believe he is
crazy. He hesrs voices and an:uses
me of secretly communicating wi!h
my boyfriend while he's in lhe room.
Everything lbat I say or do he thinlcs
is related to Ibis conspiracy. He
comes home at all hours of lhe day
Riverview Garden Club
tours Glass House
h ld
Ann
Landers
ANN Llt.NPERS.
"1!193,'LOI AD&tl•
TIM• Syndicate
Cnaton Syndlale"
trying 10 catch me and is convinced
that I'm using ultrasonic devices to
hurt him.
. I don't want to leave my
husband, because I really do love
him llid we've had many good years
togelher. Please write me back,
because I am feeling desperate
llid suicidal. - CHULA VISTA,
CALIF.
DEAR CHULA VISTA: Your
husband bu clear symptoms of
schizopbrcmia (hearing voices,
paranoia. delusions about ultrasonic
devices, ete.). He needs 10 see a
psychialrist at once, and you need
counseling to get through this
nightiJiare.
If Roy is reluctant to seek
professional help, enlist the
assistance of your family doctor,
clergyman and family members.
This man will not get bell« without·
medical intervention. .
Dear Ann Landen: I am sure
. lhatmanymembenofCoogressrad
your column. I hope lhey will see
this, ""cause it's lhe best way I can
lhink of to get lheir auention.
. I am enclosing an article from lhe
Rochesler Democrat & Chronicle so
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Loc al Board of Education w'ill
meet in special session Tuesday at
6:30 p.m. at the high school. Purpose of the meeting is to consider
contract services and personnel
matters.
RACINE - Tbe Racine Area
Community Organization will meet
Tuesday at 6:30p.m. at Star Mill
Park in Racine. New members welcome. Members may pick up t·
shins at this meeting.
POMEROY - The First Baptist
Chu rc h of Pomeroy will hold a
rumm age . sale Tu esday , and
Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
POMEROY • The Big Bend
Stemwheel Association will meet
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the Carpenters
Hall in Pomeroy. Plans for this
year's festival will be discussed.
Public invited.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT · The American
Legion Feeney Bennett Post No.
128 and Ladies Auxiliary will meet
Wednesday at lhe annex. The auxiliary will serve dinner to members
at 6 p.m. wilh meeting at 7:30 p.m.
All members, auxiliary. juniors and
SAL members invited.
. POMEROY · Scipio Township
Trustees, special meeting, Wedoesday, 6:30 p.m., home of the clerk,
Conni e Chapman, Route 143,
Pomeroy. Public invited.
SYRACUSE - Night swimming
at London Pool in Syracuse,
Wednesday.
SYRACUSE • Carleton College
Board of Trustees annual meeting,
Thursday, 7 p.m., Syracuse Municipal Building. All members auend.
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.•
The Classics Band will perform
Thursd'ay at 9 p.m. at Tu-EndieWei Park in Point Pleasant for
Stemwheel Regatta.
you willlcnow I am not Jlllking ~
up.
Two professors. one from
Rochester, the other from AUSirllia,
have wodtcd for tJuee years, used.
V0 computclB llid communicated.
10,000 miles by electronic mail,lllld
fmally bave learned the answer 10 a
question lhat has bafl1ed scientists
for 63 years. The question is Ibis: If.
you are having a party and want 10
invite at least four people who know
each othel' and five who don't, bow
many people should you invite? The
answer is 2S. Mathematic:ians and ·
scientists In countries worldwide
have sent messages of congramlalions.
·
I don~ want to lab anylhing iway
from th.. spectacular achievement,,
butitseemstome~thetiinemd
money spent on Ibis project could '
have been bcuer used had they put
it towsrd finding ways 111 &« fOoil
10 the millions of S1lrVina cbildrecl ·
in war-tom countries around lhe ·
world. ·• 8. V.B., ROCHESTER,
N.Y.
•
DEAR B.V.B.: There has 10 be '
more to ihis "discovery" Jb1a you ,
recomted. Tbepinciplemustbeane :
that can be applied to aolve :
important scientifiC problems. If ~
anyone in my reading IUIIIencc can
provide an explanation in language 1
a lay person can undentand, I will ;
print it. Meanwhile I am "Baffled in '
Chicago."
Gem or the Day: A good p1ac:e to
fmd a helping band is at lhe end of
your sleeve.
Notice of Names of Current
or Former Residents of Mel&• County
Appeartng to be owners of Unclaimed Funds
.
Information concem1ng the amount or the fund and any necesscuy Information concem1ng the presentment of a clalm therefor
may be obtained by any person Jl1'91 e86~ a proprtetalylnterest In
the unclaimed funds by addressing a written lnqullylto the Ohio
DepartmentofCommerce..Prescrtbedformswtllbefumlshedupon
request or tnquby ID wdtbag. Name and address must be gtven
ex;ICtly as listed.
Ohio Department d Canmerce .
Division of UncJatrned Funds
•'
77 South High Street, 20th Ftoor
Columbus. OH 43266-0045
unadvertised accounts of less than $50.
RACINE · The Racine American Legion Auxiliary will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home.
REEDSYn.LE - Riverview Garden Club will hold a potluck supper
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the home
of Nola Young. Bring table service,
a covered dish and a lswn chair. 1
SYRACUSE - Adult swimming
only, Thursday, London Pool in
Syracuse. Dates still available for
private parties.
,
CllJofJ.ooqllottom: Ward,.Patsy
Cltr ol Ml4dle11Wl:
Dk:keno,
CllJ of Pwti&D4: Janeo, Creed.
Unknown.
Cltr of Raclu:
Frances. 2Cole St: F'rankltn. HalTiet, Brenda M. Main St Trl.
Culbertson.
809 Second Ave; l"rrlnkkln. Harriet F.
809 2nd Ave: Hubbard , Carol. 796 S
City at Reecle'rille: J91ngelhoDer.
Third Ave ; Klein. Hulda, 462 Pearl St; Loulo . 1836 Reeding Rd .
Putuno, P R. 909 Brownel.l Ave:
V~C8rdlnalf8198.405 Pearl
CltyofRatlaaol: Chapman. Ethel
St.
.
E, Unlmown: Luber. Bertha T. Un·
known.
CllJ ol IIIDernllle:
H~.
KeMeth. 32235 Mlnenville Rd.
CIIJ Ualuaawa: Kelly. Kevin E;
Meigll Local School Dlotrlct.
Oeai.
SI'A1E OF OHIO, DEPARIMENI'OF COMMERCE ·
V. Voblovteh •
GoYa:nor
Nancy ChDel Dlz
Director
TUPPERS PLAINS • VFW Post
No. 90S3 meets Thursdsy at 7:30
p.m. Members urged to attend.
•
QltyofCbeoter: Gaul1Market. 4 · CllJafl'omeror: Gettya. Manley, :'
WMaln St.
Un!Onlt.ve; Miller. Harry A. 214 t/2 ~'
E Main: Queen, Paula, '504 Main St · i
City oiDeJ<ter: Hotrman. Lauren E; Randofph. Richard C. 206 Butti:r- I
E 6: Mer!um V. RR I.
·
nut Ave.
!
A. Rt 1.
BlltJua D. Aller
Chief, Dtv1s1m of
Unclalmed JO\uPS
coal-frred generating piaDt;
Site preparation work on the
$815 mil lion proJ·ect began in
October, 199j , while scrubber construction began in August. 1992.
The project calls for replacing
the plant 's existing I, 100-foot
stack with two 830-foot stacks wilh
six flue gas desulfurization (FGD)
· 180 •
absorber vessels arranged m
degree arc around each stack.
In addition to the stacks and
FGD absorber vessels, facilities are
being constructed for handling lime
needed for scrubber operation and
l
•
Meigs board disc~sses various school
projects and how t/J,ey can be financed
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Short and long term projects
aimed at keeping school buildings
in good repall', buses in operating
condition, and providing students
wilh better instructional materials,
and how lhe various projects can be
fliiBnCCd, were discussed at lenglh
at Tuesday night's meeting of lhe
Meigs Local Board of Education.
Immediate needs Include partial
roof replacement at lhe Bradbury
School, repair o( lhe air conditioning system at Meigs High School,
and removal of some underground
gas tanks at Salem Center, Bradbury, and near the bus garage as
directed by lhe Environmental Pro· tection Agency.
Because of possible interior
damage from the leaky roof and lhe
urgency of air conditioning at
Meigs High where summer classes
have been scheduled, the board
asked SupL Bill Buckley to get two
or lhree estimates on each projecL
If wilhin reasonable price ranges,
he was aulhorized by the board to
select contraCtors and get lhe wo~
started. Aaticipated cost on lhe two
projects is expected to exceed
$20,000.
Buckley was also asked to get
figures and aulhorize replacement
at t~e lowest quo.te a se~tion. of
fencmg at the Me1gs Jumor H1gh
School football field. He wu also
asked to check into lhe cost of con·
tracting mo'l!(in.tL~or the summer
months at Meigs High School. That
request came about because the
mower at the high school was
recently stolen and later found
along lhe road in pieces. It will cost
about $6,000 to purehase a new
, mower, Bucldey~ He said
he is in contact · the insunnce
company for a possible aettleAient
through lhe theft pan of lhe policy.
As for lhe ~ tank removal, lhe
board took no action at lhe meeting. One estimate presented was for
,,
1
$11,345.
Buckley, attending his first
meeting as superintendent of the
district, proposed lhat the board set
up a five year plan for improvements and then work toward funding lbat plan. He cautioned against
lhe approach of just "trying to put
out lhe fue" a5 problems arise. He
said it was also his consensus lhat
lhe IBllpayers would be more willing to suppon a levy if lhe .district
has a plan which is well publicized.
The superintendent talked about
textbook ne~ds, particularly for
replacing lhe language arts series,
E'nglish, literature and reading,
grades K througJJ 12, at a cost of
between $60,000 and $80,000. He
said lhat lhe State Department of
E~ucation's change in curriculum
wiU make some new textbooks criticalto keeping lhe district in compliance.
He also discussed lhe need for
purchasing some new buses in lhe
not too distant future, at a cost of
between $50,000 and $60,000 and
lhe need for thinking about financing now.
Buckley also talked about ex tensive repair of the training track at
the high school to keep it usable
and safe and gave an estimate for
t!Wprojectof$14 000.
FIDBDcing on the proposed projects was discussed at length .
Board member Bob Barton talked
about going into lhe loan program
again. The possibility of putting on
· a levy for pennanent improvements
was proposed by anolher member
but riO decisions were made at lhe
meeting
•
Pmoonel1
. The two summer achool programs at Meigs High School were
discussed.
,
One will be a for-credit program
open .10 students .who, have failed
classea while the otbef is for students who bave failed ~ections of
lhe ninlh pade proficiency rest.
I
•
The scrubbers
will help ~reserve
about 800 jobs at Soulhem Ohio
Coal Company' s Meigs Mine and
'11
·
800 90
w1
r.m reqUire about - 0 area
c tsrnen to construct, he said.
Inbbe
addition,
of the
ld operation
·
20
scru lanrs coulo require up to
new P temp yees.
"You is,"
sawHoward
how complex
slructure
said afterthis
lhe
h' h · 1 d d
·
h
tour w •c mc u e a tnp to t e
top of lhe plant for a site overview.
~e~~i~~ta~u~trl~
R 1a ·
·
of th
..
e lions •s part
e team.
By JIM LONG,
OVPNewsStalr
Construction crews at the Gavin
Plant completed a trio of silos
Tuesday as part of the scrubber
retrofitting project that began in
Octobal991.
Each 70 to 80 feet tall and 40
feet in diameter, lhe newly completed silos will function In a new
emission cleaning system· scheduled to be operational in lhe fall of
1995.
The plant will "scrub" lhe flue
gas emitted during coal burning
wilh lime .to meet lhe stricter sulfur-dioxide-emission limitaiions of
the 1990 Clean Air "Act Amend·
ments: The new cleaning sySiem ·is
built to remove about 95 percent of
such emissions from lhe plant.
The lhree silos completed Tuesday at Gavin will store flY.·ash, lhe
material left over afler lhe burning
of coal. The fly-aSh will be stored
in lhe silos until it can be combined
with the by-product of the gas
cleaning process.
These dry wastes are to be
joined and moved out by way of
conveyor belt to a new solid was!C
landfill to lhe west of lhe plant.
Currently, lhe fly-ash is combined with water to make a wet
substance, which is stored in an ash
GAVIN PLANT MODEL • James Howard, Gavin Plant
pond to the south of the plant.
Retront project manager, explains the layout of lhe Gavin Plant to
According to Gavin officials, conOhio Department or lodustrlal Relations representatives while
verting lhe waste to a dry material . members or tbe press and other AEP representatives look on. The
will be an improvement.
·
government representatives were given a tour of tbe plant and ao
"The ailvantage of lhe dry land·
update on tbe progress or the retrofit project Tuesday (OVP photo
fill is that once you put it in place
by Jim Freeman).
its good for building ," James
Howard , project manager for
main cleaning units are shipped
American Electric Power. aroous material.
explained. He added that the dry
The next major phase of lhe pro- upriver to Gavin from ML Vemon,
v.iaste will be an inert and non-haz- ject will begin in July when the Ind.
requirements. The system, which uses time to
clean sulfur from coal emission, Is scheduled to
be operational by 1995 (OVP photo by Jim Free·
man).
CONSTRUCTION AT GAVIN • Lime stor·
age Iowen 'and ny-ash to'irerS, pictured l1t~
-rrom rlaht to left, m aU part or a new coal emliision deMing system beillg erected at the Geoer·
a1 James M. Gavia Plant to meet clean air af(
for disposing fly ash and sulfur by- unit plus a back up silo,
·
products.
The scrubbers will use a lot of
The pro;ect is difficult because lime... about2.500 tons daily.
,
designers "are not worlcing with a
The IIID
. e w1' 1l be crushed, mill·ed
clean sheet of paper," Howard said into a slurry and pumped lhrougb
referring to lhe diffiCulty in adding spray nozzles ,·n lhe scrubber uru'ts
the scrubbers to an existing .struc- to remove sulfur emissions. The
turc.
lime slurry and sulfur will lhen be
Howard described h\lw the dewatered, m•'xed w•'lh fly ash and
scrubbers will work when complet- more lime and transported . l.25
ed:
· ·
miles via conveyor belt 10 8 landHi-magnesium lime will be fill
·
1
unloaded from barges with a pneuHoward said installing the
malic unloading system and stored scrubbers was lhe best choice as far
in lhree silos - one silo for each lhe area's economy was concerned.·
Three silos that will store
fly ash completed at Gavin
•
N<YnCE: Nameandadc:biseoCunclalmedaccountsadvertlsed
In prtor years are on file With your CoWlty Treasurer as ~II as
.
'
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT ~ Gallia-Meigs
Head Start will hold a "Kid's CarPOMEROY - The Pomeroy
nival" Thursday from 10 a.m. to 4 Group of AA and AI Anon will
p.m. at General Hartinger Parle in · meet Thursday at Sacred Heart
Middle~. Call ?92-3088 or 446- Church at 7 p.m. Call992-5763 for
6674 for informaaon.
information.
POMEROY · Meigs County
Public Library Board meets Thursday at l p.m. at lhe library.
;
UNCLAIMED FUND~
Community Calendar
TUESDAY
CHESHIRE · Crusade for Christ
revival through Saturday at 7 p.m.
ni ghtly . Different singers and
speakers nightly. Sponsored by
Meigs Gallia Mason counties Crusade for Christ Public invited.
:'
:
'
Husband needs medical treatment
The Riverview Garden Club
recently toured lhe Glass House at
Stewart. Exotic and .interesting
plants were viewed by the club
members.
After the tour, members went to
v
the home of Delores Frank refresh1 OUt SefVlCe e
ments were served by Mrs. Frank
The Youth of the Zion Chureh and Betty Boggs. A short business
of Christ led a recent Sunday Night meeting was conducted by the
worship service. Call to worship president, Maxine Whitehead .
was by Whitney Watson at the Devotionals were presented by
piano. Son~ leaders for congrega- Nancy Wachter, which included
tiona! singmg were Lindsay Wat- the poems "Trees" by Joyce Kilmer
son, Whitney Thomas and Whibley and "Yellow Warblers" by Kalhryn
Watson.
Lee Bates.
As an introduction for Bible
RoU call was answered by nam. school, a slcit entitled "The Amaz. ing a favorite bedding plant It was
·. ing Journey" and song "We Say noted lhat flowers had been planted
· , Shalom" was preformed by Addie by the members in front of the
Hubbard, Whitney Watson, Jessica Riverview Elementary school sign
·McElroy, Missy Davis, Whitney and in a planter on the school yard.
Thomas, Lindsay Watson, Scott
Games were played during Jhe
Mitch, Shawn Mitch and Jessica social hour, directed by Mrs .
McElroy.
Whitehead and Mary Alice Bise.
Two teams from the congrega- Prizes were given and the door
tion participated in a "Bible prize was won by Janet Connolly.
Search" led by Scott Mitch. The
Attending were the aboved menINFANT STIMULATION CLASS· Awards and certificates
Seekers was the winning 1C8111.
tioned and Grace Weber, Ella
were recently given to students at Carleton School for their out, Bible school will be held at the Osborne, Ruth Anne Balderson,
standing achievements throughout the school year. Receiving
Z10n Church, on Harrisonville Gladys Thomas and Marilyn Hanawards for the infant stimulation class were: 1-r, Tracy Smith,
Road, June 14 Q June 25 from 9-> num.
Jacob Wilson and Patricia Johnson. Back, Sandy Cobb, instructor.
a.m. to 11 :30 a.m. All children are
There will be a picnic on June
welcome.to attend.
24 at lhe home of Nola Young.
h
bert, Gail Englisb, Chris Lee and Deldra Carteton. Back, Frll~cls Sbrimplin, IDstructor assistant, Jobn Porter,. Instructor, and Pat Carson,
.
.
instructor assistant.
By nM FREEMAN
plant's number one and two generSentinel News Statr
ating units should be completed
Ahead of schedule and wilhin Sept. 1 and Nov. 1, 1995, respec·
· 1
budget.
live y.
. Howard ,
Howard explained lhat AEP has
Th a t was how J 1m
"Team Gavin" project manager, to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions
descn'bed progress Monday on lhe as a r~ u1 tof lhe Clean Air Act of
installation of flue gas scrubbers at 1990. Scrubbing the Gavin Plant is
American Electric Power's General the "cornerstone of our program,"
· Plant m
· Chesb'Ire.
Howard Sill'd•
James M. Gavm
Howard outlined the progress
According 'to information 'sup·
d~ring a meetin~ and flant to~r plied from AEP, Gavin now em•ts.
wtth representanves o lhe OhiO 25 percent of the sulfur dioxide
Department of Industrial Relations released by AEP plants. The scrubMQnday.
. bers will remove 95 percent of lhe
He said the ~crubbers for the sulfur dioxide emitted from the
At last's meeting, S~an Arnold,
Mike C!erlach, and Mike Kennedy
were: hired as teachers for .lhe f~r
credit summer !~Chool; while C!•ff
~nedy, Jeann~ Taylor, and Mike
Wilfong were hired as tc:ach~ for
s~~ts w'll! need ~elp m SCience,
wntmg, social studies, and ~alb,
lhe four areas of the proficiency
test
•
.
all ,
Students must pass .our section~ of lhe test if lhey are to graduate m. 1994, Buckley pomted out.
H~ SBld lhlll; ~ut 20 sbldC!'ts who
will be commg mto lhe semor class
next fall, have not passed all four
secuons. He CIIC0111'18ed those stu·
dents to attend lhe free lhree-week
pro11ram next month . F<;>r those
semors ~nrolled, mere will be an
oppo"!Jnlly to .take lhe parts of the
test foiled earher at the end .O.f lhe
summer, ~d lhen. two additional
opportunmes dunng the regular
school year. .
. .
The proficte~y te~t re!"ediahon
p~gram at Me1gs H1gh IS a comb1n~d program for Eastern and
. Me1gs students. Students of any
grade !evel who haye talten lhe test
and foiled any secuons are encouraged .to attend. lnfo_rmation on
~nrollmg. may be obtained by callmg lhe high school at 992-2158.
As for the regular for-credit
summer program, men; is a charge
of $35 for a semes~r s work and
$70 for a year's credit work. Buckley said that makeup w<d becomes
a time probl;em for vocatiO!Ial students. Re SBid only two Deriods are
open in 8 school day (or courses
other lhan those related 10 lhe vocational program; leaving very little
time 10 m~e up c~sses required
for graduation Which have been
foiled. Currentlr. he said. about 50
pen:ent of Me1gs students are in
Vocational programs.
The need for assistance in the
guidance office was discussed but
no action was talcen. Instead it was
Continued on page 3
Division of Wildlife dedicates
Joseph R. Wilson Wetland
Gray said lhe division ·wants to. members auending the ceremony.
By JIM FREEMAN
.
manage
the wetland for two reaApproximately 25 people
Sentinel News Stall'
attended
the dedication. Among
sons:
to
conserve
it
for
people
to
Thanks to the efforts of a Mid·
officials
attending were
local
enjoy
and
to
serve
as
an
area
for
dleport man and lhe Ohio Division
nesting
waterfowl.
Dewey
Horton,
president
of the
of Wildlife, Meigs and Gan;a counMiddleport
Village
Council,
and
Gray
pointed
out
lhat
nesting
tians should have lhe opportunity
Sheriff
James.M.
Soulsby.
sites
hove
already
been
situated
for
.
to enjoy a quality section of Ohio
Wildlife official Keith Morrow
.
River wetland for a long time 10 wood ducks and geese.
commented
on the wetland's high
"What
(Wilson)
did
was
very
come;
quality.
At a ceremony held Monday commendable," Meigs County
''This wetland is above average
morning, officials of the division of Game Protector Keilh Wood comin size," he said. "The average size
wildlife dedicated the Joseph R. . mented.
Wood also recognized other of an Ohio River wetland is only
Wilson Wetland located in the village of Middleport near lhe vil- wildlife officials and Isaac Walton about three acres." ·
lage's southern corporation limit
The 10-acre tract is situated
J>etween State Route 7 and the
Ohio River approximately I 1/2
mile from the Gallia County borDeputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department are investider.
.
gating
two breaking llid enterings that occurred in Syracuse either
Wilson said Monday he donated ·
Monday
night or Tuesday morning.
the wetland to be able to preserve
According
to a teport from. Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Manlyn
the marsh habitat for wood ducks
Deemer
reported
she discovered lhe concession stand at lhe Syraand .olher wild life. A member of
cuse
Ball
Park
had
been entaW by forcing open a rear door. Severlhe Isaac Walton Club, Wilson said
al
Slim
Jims
were
reported
missing.
protecting wetlands is also a m~or
Deemer noted lbat no money is left in lhe builjling after a game,
part oflhe group's agenda.
In addition, Tom Lowery, manager of the Londoil Pool, reported
Wilson said lhe wetland, which
Tuesday morning lbat . . . - had climbed lhe fence at lhe pool
has been in bis family since lhc
and lhen lcicked open lhe door into lhe concession area. Tllnle boxes
early part of lhe century, is often
of
beef jerky, three cans of pop and a bag of potato chips were
referred to as "Frogville" and is
reported
missing.
·
home to migratory birds and olher
Lowery also noted that SO!DOOIIC had.\lCCD in lhe pool $unday
animals such as muskrats llid tur·
night
as the flotation devices Were found floating in lhe pool Monties,.
day
morning.
·
_
While swallows and olher birds
darted and wheeled overhead ,
Steve Gray, assistant chief of lhe
Three thefts were recently reported ro lhe Meigs Coon!)' Sber-.
division of wildlife, said Wilson
iff
s Department.
·
donated lhe wetland to help with its
Cootlnued
on
J1811!
3
.
Io112.-tton conservation.
---Local briefs--Deputies probe Syracuse B&Es
Theft$ reported
.
�
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06. June
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June 22, 1993
levin
stover