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                  <text>•

Ohio Lottery

Philsrally
to defeat
Reds 6-3

Pick 3:

230

Pick 4:
8240

Low lualPIIa 501. Jllia.

Thunday, pll'lly cloudy, hiP ID

Buckeye 5:
.16-23-25-26-28

PageS

601.

•
Vol. oM, N0. 24

'

llulllmecll•lnc.

SIXTII GRADE WINNERS- Tbe followillg Salem Center Elementary Scbool slxtb graders were winners ~t tile scbool's recent ·
science fair. Wlnnen were, from lint to tblrd respectively: Bridget
Vaughn, Rebekah Smith and Steplumie Jones. .

F1F1'H GRADE WINNERS- Tbe foDowln&amp; Salem Center Elementary School Mb graders were winners at tile scbool's recent
science fair. Winners were, from first to third respectively:
Stephanie Kopec, Scott Colwell and Lana Payne,

FOURTH GRADE WINNERS - Tbe following Salem Center •. •
Elementary School fourth graders were wlnnen at tbe school's
recent science fair. Winners·were, frolllllrst to third respectively:
Carl Richards, Dultla Er1ew1ne and Automn Slater,

Your Social ·Securitv_._·.

.
AWARDED FOR ACADEMICS- The folIowiog first, second and third graders at Salem
Center Elemeatary School were recently hoaored for academic succas. Haored were, from
left, front row, Adl!m Joaes, Aubry Kopec,.
JosbUIIlay, Kevin G1'811t, Ashley_ ColWell, Lind·
say BoDo, Amanda Priddy and Kristin Napper;
middle row, Shane Napper, Philip Smith, Devin_

Erlewlne, Jessica Scililler, Crystal Johnson;
Shenelle McKnlg•t, Jenl Priddy and Mary
Jane Partlow; back row, Jessica Smith, DooDle
Barnett, Krlsty 'Puckett, Misty Puckett, Josh
Na~er, Josh Bass, Melissa Kirk, Rachel
,Ar
rlpt, Ansdn Crou, Sba• Crisp, Aman•
da mlth and Cory Lonptretb.
'

By ED PETERSON
Soci.I Secwlty
Muaaer Ia Atlle.._
"More low income Medicare
beneficiaries may get help paying
out-of-poc:ket medical expenses
because of recently announced
changes in naliooal poverty guidelines," said Ed Peterson Social
Security mlllliiF in Athens.
The belp is available tbrougb
two _government nmgrams called
the-Qulllified ~ Beneficiary
(QMB) and Spcicified Low-Income
Medicare Beneficiaries (SLMB)
pro~rams. The QMB program
requues States to pay MediCare's
Part A and Part B premiums,
deductibles, and coinsurance
expenses. '"These a the e~tpenses
usually paid bl the beneficiary,"
said Peterson. And could add up
to savings of sevaal hundred dollars or more per yetiC."
Under the SLMB program, the
States pay only the full Medicare
Insurance Pan B mODtbly premi·
um. "Bcc:ause the monthly premium is $36.60, even this limited help
. means a savings of almost $440
annually," Pttcrson said.
Both progranlS are administa'ed
by the Health Care Financing
Administration in conjunction with
lhe States.
The rules vary from State to
State; but in general, to qualify
your:
I
• Annual income m1151 be near .
or below the 1993 national povaty
guidelines of $6,970 for one person
or $9,430 for a family of two for
the QMB Jl1'0111'8111; for the SLMB

-Tbc-Atbe-1180-lftee-isloca_ted_
' at---:.221
program, your annual income must , 1fl N. Columbus Rd and is opene4
be 110 patent or less of the 1993 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. (phone 592~ ....
D8lional poverty levels. Under both 4448).
programs, $20 in monthly.income
will not be counted toward tbe
·· ·
lUniL
: ''
• Resources-such as bank
accoupts or stocks-may not
exceed $4 ;000 for one person ot
$6,000 for a family of two.
(Resources generally are things you
own. However, not everything is
COUIIIed: The bouse you live in; for
example, doesn't count, and, in
some circumstanceS, your car may
State Auto's already
IIDl count either.)
lowJ)IVmiumsc:an be
MOaly the State can decide if
reduc:ed even more by
you are eligible for belp from the
.
insuring
both your car
QMB or .SLMB program. So, if
· and home with the Stfte
you a elderly or disabled, have a
low lnoomc and vr:ry limit.edasaets,
Auto Companies.
and are a MediCU'C beaeficilry,
contact the Human Senices off'JCe
l..et us tell you just
to apply," Petmon said For more
how milCh your savings
information about either~·
can be.
•
call the Health Care Fmanciag
Administration's toll-free tele~b~ne number, 1~800~~!6833 .

ILL 4• POTS."...............50'
ILL TREES••o..........20" OFF
,

Open Mon•.Sat. 9-6
CLOSED SUNDAY

HUBBARDS GREENHOUSE
SyrtlciH •

992•5776

ol

EARLY
AMERICAN

SUITES

Church hosts mother-daughter dinner

The annual mother-daughter board teat~ea a ~donna drawn
dinner of the Heath United by_PJ . Harris. Class-; Madoona !If'
Melhodist Church was held recent- pnnts by famous arusts .were disly in the church dining room.
played to complete_lbe decor.
Decorations were provided by
The Eleanor CirCle hosted the'
Pat Philson. ~ booklets were . dinner. The committee members
prepared by Sue Smtih, Jane RCI!I\ft were . Mary Wtse, Ja.ne. Regan,
and Jennifer Sl!litb: A large bullebn Francts Thomas and Vtcki Rouch-

- Ulll•ty ca}endar
c.·omm

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Regular meeting,
Drew Webster Post No. 39, American Legion, Tuesday. Dinner, 7
p.m. Meeting, 8. p.m. Nomination
of officers.

, .
Middleport Arts Council begiruting
We.dnesday. Begiooers and inter- ,
mediate classes starts at 7:30 p.m.
and advanced dancers are to report
at 8:30p.m. The cost is $7 per cou·
ple and to register or for funber
information, caD 992-2675.

. RACINE - Vacation Bible
CHESTER - Chester Garden
School will be held at the Racine
United Methodist Cburcb Tuesday ' Club will hold its open meeting
through Friday from 9-11 a.m. Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Chester Umted Methodist Church.
daily. All children are welcome.
Betty Mizikio will be guest speaka
on
prize winning slides of OAGC
POMEROY - F.O.E. Ladies
convention
winners.
AuXiliary No. 2171 will meet Tues~Y at 7 p.m. for a plltluck. MeetPOMEROY - Pomeroy Masonic
mg at 7:30p.m.
•
Lodge No. 164 F&amp;:AM meets
BURLINGHAM - The Bedford Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Middleport
Township Volunteer Fire Depart· Masonic Lodge.
ment Commiace will meet Tuesday
LONG BO'ITOM - Revival, Mt.
at 7:30p.m. at the Burlingham
Olive
Community Church, Long
Modem Woodmen Hall.
Bottom, Wednesday through Sunday, 7 p.m. niabdy. David Crowell,
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Country Ravenna, Mich., evangelist. Public
dance cl••ses will be offered by the invited.

ins. The welcome and devotions
were given by Emma Kay Clatworthy. the Rev. Sue Smith gave the
evening dinner grace. Mrs. Betty
Dean guest speaker was introduced by Marker W~r. ' •
The theme of the evening was
"Blessed Art Thou Among Mothers." A program on Madonnas and
their usc in worship settings with
flower arrangements featuring
Madonnas. The life of Christ was
exemplifed as she completed each
.arrangement. Her lecture, as she •
worked,-informed the audience of
the various categories of Madonnas, as well as tlieir proper usc in
floral compositions. Helpful information sheets were given to all present
To conclude the program, several mother-daughter teams created
floral arrangemellll with Madonna
figures. Those participating were
Donna and Sarah Jenkins, Twlla
and Klltie Cbilda, Mary Wise and
granddall(lbter, Llura Harrison, and
Srcphanie and Katie Alexander.
Special rocognition of mothers
in various cateBories concluded the
evening. Pots of flowering pinks
were awarded to Julie Hubbard,
Mary W'ISC, Kathleen Scott, Twila
Childs, Donna Jenkins, Nan
Moore, Marsaret Weber, Jane
Regan, Becky l'arsons and
Stephanie Alexilnder.

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7 CU. FT.

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OAK or CHERRY

(Blue or Brown)

TABLES

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DELUXE
REFRIGEUTOR

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Wlm.wlmMHUII

•

IIIlTH

CAIU READY , CONSOU IV
TV .

Th~ Eastern Local School District wiD have a new superintendent
effective July I.
Ronald Minard was hired May
25 by the Eastern Local Board of ·
Education to replace former Superintendent Robert Smith who left
the district in .early 'April. Riclu!M
Roberts, a retired former supenntendent, is currently serving as tem~ supcrinlelldenL Mtaard bas been a school
administrator for II years and is
presendy a building principal in the
Caldwell Exempted Village School
System. He was a teacher for eight
years before becoming an administrator. He bas been a coach and albletic director, coaching fQOtball and

Minar.d ~ua,ted from Mansfield Sem~ High m Mansfield and
received a bachelor, o~ arts depe
fmm...Marshall UniYmUY. H.u!ltinll
ton, W.Va., where he part!Ctpated
in inteicollegiate athletics. He then
received a master• of arts degree
from Clevelatid State University in
1975.
PurcU.I'uel tanb
In addition, ~ board awarded a
contract to Weber Construction to
remove four fuel tanks at the

UADY

liio...-;l

Under the direction of art
teacher Jeff Baker, several
murals decorate the walls at
Meigs Hi&amp;b Sdlool.
In the library Is a colorful
book repllea with Ill laacrlptiOD entitled "Read to Brlna
Imaglilatloa to Life*', Here
Mellsaa ·Vance and Keith
.Darst llnisb up the mnnl
In the careterla, one com·
plete side h• beell dealrated.
Wide maroon·and gold stripes
were painted by James
Kopczlnky and Ell Fink aloaa
tile waD leadinl to two murals,
one a Melp Mll'lluder paint·
ed by Sonja Bateman, pic·
tured bere, alld Becky GIII'Del,
and tbe otber entitled Melp
Cafe painted by Juon Wltli·
ereD. Aaotber student who bas
worked oa the project Is
R.lchle Canon. (Photos by
Charlene Hoellldt)

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
1114)112-TOLL
FREE -..426-1511
•

l.ay+Wayt

MasterCanl •
Vial

., .

.• \r.

-•

and the results of much _time and ing for the tests. Today we should
B)' JIM FREEMAN
energy
spent by students m preparContinued on page 3
Sentinel News Starr
More than 15,000 members of
Ohio's class of 1994 have yet to
pass all fo!H' sections of the Ohio r - - Proficiency Test required for graduation.
.
According to the Ohio DepartA Glendale, Ariz., woman's vehicle sustained moderall: damage
ment of Education, 23,785 memMonday afternoon when it struck a ditch, the Gallia-Meigs Post of
bers of Ohio's junior class retook
the State Highway Patrol reported.
the tests !bey bad previously failed
The vehicle was southbound on State Route 684 in Scipio Townor missed due to absence. Thirty
ship
when it drove off the left side of the roadway and struck a
percent, or 7,061, of these students
ditch.
The driver of the vehicle is unknown. The vehicle was towed
passed all the tests they were
from
the
scene.
required to take.
This leaves 16,724 members out
of about 117,000 enrolled in the
A 7-year~ld Middleport girl was listed in fair condition at Chilclass of 1994 yet to pass one or
dren's Hospital in Columbus aCta being SIIUck by a car on South
more of the tests, which cover
Second Avenue in Middleport Tuesday around 5:45p.m.
:
reading, writing, mathematics·and
Elizabeth A. Landers of S04 South Third Avenue ran into the ·
citizenship.
path of a 1992 Geo Tracker driven by Michael L. Childs, 40, of :
The department estimates that
Middleport, a Middleport Police Oepai bnatt spokeswoman said
:
,about 85 percent of the junior class
Landers was transported by the Middleport squad of the Meigs -:
bas passed all the required tests.
County Emergency Medical Service to VelmiiS Memorial Hospi- :
Sixty-seven percent of juniors who
tal. She was later transported via LifeFiight to Children's Hospital. ' will still be taking the test in the
fall have only one test yet to pass,
the depiubJ1CIIt reported.
··
Two charges of rape were dismiss¢ Tuesday against a Meigs •
Aft« six attempts, 85 percent of
. County mlllJ.
the juniors at Eastern High School
Charles Re~t Justis, 24, was arraigned Nov. 23, 1992, following
have passed the writing section of
an indictment in September by a Meigs County Grand Jury.
the test, while 96 percent have
According to Judge Dan W. Favreau, visiting from Morgan
passed the reading section. SixtyCounty, the dismissal resulted from Special Prosecutor K. Robert
five perCC!nt of the juniors have
Toy's failure to provide Justis a bill of particulars. A bill of particu·
passed the math section while 80
Iars is a document which specifies elements of the alleged crime ,
percent have passed the ~lizen.sbip
and is more specific than the indictment
:
section.
I
ustis
was
represented
by
Public
Defender
William
H. Safranek. •
AI Meigs High School, 89 percent passed the writing section
while 98 percent have passed the
C?fficers of the Po~roy. Police Department investigated two
reading J10i lion of the test Sevenaccidents Tuesday. No inJunes were repoutd.
·
ty·IWO percent have passed the ·
A Pomeroy woman was cited foUowing a two-car accident on
Ann Street around 2:45 p,m.
·
~=:2 percent have
Michelle
Whittington,
19, Pomeroy, was coming down Ann ·
Ninety-nine percent of Soutbem
Street and met a car driven by Ruth Francis, 65, Pomeroy a polic:e •
HiJh School jUI)iors have passed
spokckwoman
reported. Whittington stopped her vehicle. Francis ·
the writing teSt while 88 percent
~= to stop and struck Whittington's car, the spokeswoman
bsve passed the reading section.
Sixty-five ~ent and 16 'percent
Damage to Wbitlingtoo's 1984 Mercury Lynx and Francis' 1987
have JII8IICd the math and sections,
Ford Tempo was listed as light Francis was cited for failure to
~vely.
.
maintain USind clear distanco.
'I am very encouraged by
A Racine man was cited b no insurance followin.la two-c. ·
today's announcement on -profiaccidenl on the loWCI'r PIRina: lot in l'ooleroy IIOUIId 6:311 p.DJ.
ciency Nlllill for !be junior clasa,"
Raymood Se~. 21, wu leavinJ_the parkin&amp; lot then turned
said Ted Sanden, Obio'a_superinaround, backing 11110 a taxi driven by Hmy Clart, 60, or Pomny
tendent of public instruction. "I
Damage 10 Sayre's 1976 Pord and Clart's vehicle, a 19il
believe we're llllelng the pay4f of
&lt;;bevrolet owned by Willilm Snouffer of Middleport, wu'u.c! u
the many bonn teiCben and parlight.
.
enll bavc lpCilt helping students,

Patroi probes wreck

Girl injured in accident

,,

Police probe two. accidents

•"•
•

,,•
~

(CASH I CARRY)

. Credit Terma

The new tanks, one with a 2,000
gallon capacity, the other with a
1,000 gallon capacity,. will be
installed above ground With protective dikes. The board also aJ¥.0ved
the purchase of two reconditioned
pumps through Larry Miller.
Personae! matters
The board approved Deborah
Weber as head teacher at
Riverview Elementary School for
\he 1993-94 school year and
approved the installation of an
electronic management information
system unit in the Chester Elementary School to meet the needs of
entering student data. .
The lioar~ also apProved the
lists 'fJf sut,s01111e clasSified pilrsol!nel and substitute leac:bas for the
1993-94 school year.
AAA of South Cenbal Ohio was
awarded a contract from drivers'
education for the 1993-94 school
year while the district transportalion director was granted permission to attend an advanced school
bus drivers education course in

Local briefs_;.,-

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY, INC.
106 NORTH SECOND AVE.

Iron.

..•
.•

••
••

Gll4ND MAIISIIALL • lAo SW,, N, tile
only ••niYIDI World War I vetera ol Drew
WeHter Pllft 3t, waa r.·ead mar1halfqr tbe
Memor~ Day Parade • P-eroy. He II pie·
.. lured here wltb llaJaiOIId Jewel,,...

-··n·

••

der, Job WHirl, cea•aader, aad Ke11et•

u.rte, Jllll-·nder, 11ft tn rWat. Jwt prior
to tile JlfOII'III• Stlll'J llu been a member ol tlle
poit tli' 7CJ couecutl.e yean.
.

.,

~

Mar!~ th~ summa. In addllion,
Pa.I11C18 Shriven was IIPPJOVI!'i b
retmbursemenl for professtonal :
gro~.
. transti
. • '"' board . ercd also Cindy.
Lmton ~m kindergarten at Tup-:
pers Platll8.1!1ement&amp;!'Y !0 fourth,
grade effecuve the beginning of the:
1993-94 scboo1 year. .
Other actiOn
In other action, the bClard:
. - Approved re-enrollmentto
the Ohio School Board Aasocialion's 1994 Worker's Compcnsalion GroupRatingProtp'IIR;
- Approved the mter-district
an~ \ntradistrict open enrollment
polictes;
- Commended the high school
band for outstandinJ performance
~d recognized .William Hall, 1iand
director;
- Approved participation in all
s_tate and federal programs for !be
1993-94 school year. · ··
. Allellding were B~ President
Ray Karr, Vie6-prealdent Jim
Smiih and board members Ron
Eastman, Bill Hannun and Mike
Martin.
. The next regular board mceri!lg
· will be held June 30 at 6:30p.m. in
the Eastern High School library.

schools to meet Environmental
Protection Agency requirements
and approved the purchase of two .
new fuel tanks from Mid-Valley

Bulk of M.eigs County students
have passed proficiency tests

RIMOII n1110

s2aaoo $499
""'
""'

WASHER &amp;
DRYER

.
....
5
95 SJ99'5 •s49'

25• Dill.

the gross domestic jlroduct, soared:
at a 4.7 pm:enl annual rate in the
fourth quarter but·advanced at only
a 0.9 percent rate in the firsL
Economists said lhe growth rate
would be further depressed by a
rise in interest rates that could·
occur if Congress fails to follow:
through on President Clinton's pbm:
to reduce the budget defiCit
:

Rape charges dismissed

••

VCR's
RIMOII CAlLI

or

tain sign
whether the economy
will'beexpandingorcontrseting.
So far this year, the index has
fallen in January and March and
risen in February and April. The
March decline was the worst since
November I990 signaling a continuation of the' sharp slowdown
from the economy's end-of-theyear growth rate.

.Eastern superinten:~ent

DISHWAiHER

ICE MAIER Y. Price

tious about adding to payrolls.··
In advance, economists were
looking for a somewhat stronger
gain in the index of 0.3 percent or
0.4 pen:enL
The leading index is designed to
predict economic activity six to
nine months in advance. Three consecutive monthly movements in
O!IC direction, up cr down, are con-

' .Mrn~;Jn;me{f;,"ew

WHITE·
WlftiNGHOUSI
UIDEI COU1111R

95
95
$699
$299 95 $28895
$299
ZENITH
19• DIAG. COLOR

Meigs murals

•

95
95
0
95
$699
$299
$166°
$129
FULL

growth has been so painfully slow
that the nation's unemployment
rate, stuck at 7 pc;tcent sit!ce.February, may even lick up dunng the
summer, they warn.
"It's certainlr, not any kind of
boom situation, ' said economist
Lynn Reaser of First Interstate
Bancorp of Los An~eles. "Companies are still remauiing very cau-

•

•

TWO POSinON

2 PC.
LIVING ROOM SECTIONAL$ RECLINER

SPRING AIR
MISMATCH
BEDDING*
TWII $5995 ea.

the Index of Leading Indicators,
following a I percent plummet in
March, fi~ ~it~ the views. of tbe
more pesstmtsuc economtc anaIysts who see little chance the
economy will soon break out of its
lethargic growth pattern;
Few analysts see any chance the
economy is on the brink of another
recession. At the same time,

track.

•
•'

VALUES
Scott Colwell, Stephanie Kopec and Laura
· Payne; sixth ~tade, back row, Jessica Priddy, ·
Rebekah Smltb, Beth Call, Brldaet Vau&amp;•n,
Lori Kinnllon, Candy Bamett aad Kim Ritter·
beck. Also hooored but not pictured were flftll
graden Orloa Barrett, Jeremiah Smith, Lisa
Blaa and Tawny JODeL

By DAVE SKIDMORE
Associated Press Writer
. WA~HIN_GTON - .The gov.emment s chief econonuc forecast·inf gauge rebounded only a feeble
·0. percent in AJlril after taking its
worst plunge 10 two years the
·month before, the Commerce
-Department said today.
The barely perceptible rise in

..,.._uranee
,/!j ~t.re
Auto .
eo...,..,.,••

.

AUullmecllelna• .....,....,

Lfadiltg indicators up 0.1 percent in April .

.214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992·6687

Ill UIGIIG IISIETS •••15

(IILD OVER ftROUOB m11 8, 1-)

STUDENTS HONORED - The following
rourtb, lll'tll and slxtb lfader&amp; at Satem Center
were mntly bonored with awards for academ·
lc success. SboWD are, from len, fourth grade,
front row, Carl Rickard, Amber Roush, Jessica
Marcum, Kendra Cleland, Eric Montgomery
and Robert Johnson; fifth grade, middle row,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo,Wednesclay, June 2, 1993

E11. Of The Seu111
Clttt·OIIt S1l1
ILL FLITS••••••••- ............•5

2 Beollone. 121'11Qee 25 oenl8

•

�Wed.neaday, June

Commentary

Page 2--The Dally Sentinel
· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Obto
. -DICVOTBD TO THE INTERESTS OF THE IDJG8-ICASOI'f AREA

ROBERT L. WINGE1T
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller
1

LllTI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All lettus are subject to editing and mUll be aigned with n1100,
address and telephooe number. No unsigned letlers will be publisbod. Letlers
lbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

White House image problems
By WALTER R. MEARS
.
AP Spedal Correspolldent
·
.
WASHINGTON- OK, so here's the deal: President Clinton's people
did nothing wrong by calling the FBI in the Case of the Wbite House
Travel Office, and they won't do it again.
And by the way, five of the seven employees purportedly fired over
gross mismanagement are actually on paid administrative leave.
·
Maybe it looks like cronyism was 1ilvolved in their replacement, Clinton conceded ·on national television, but it wasn't And !he woman who
moved in after su~ting the shakeup in the first place is only "about my
fifth or sixth cousm," a proven travel manager because she did it effi- '
ciendy for his campaign.
"There's nothing funny going on here," Clinton said earlier in the
week.
Funny may not be the word, but it has turned in~ a mini-Series, one in
which successive episodes contradict earliez instaUihents. Not quite comedy, but sometimes clOse. And enough to provide grist for TV comics, and
for detractors like Ross ~1, who now describes the president as a sort
of Arkansas bumpkin trying to learn the job.
.· Clinton said the image problems he s having lately srem from overplayed media accounts of lillie things that make them seem big. That happens - but not without White House help.
In the travel office controversy, an mside staff miller has stretched
ovez 10 days and i~ 't closed yeL 1be White House began it with a surt::se announcement on May 19 that seven people were being ftred
ause of gross mismanagement, and that the FBI was loolting into it
. Now the case is being reviewed by Clinton's chief of staff, and the
White House has agreed that future FBI contacts will be made through the
J11stice Department.
The same travel office was reorganized when Ronald Reagan's staff
found management shortcomings there. That 1981 shakeup was handl.ecl
routinely.
Jimmy Carter had a cousin at the White House, as his special assistant
for adminisn:ation. Hugh Carter Jr., a cousin once removed, was assigned
to cut perks and privileges. They called him "cousin cheap."
So both shakeups and cousins are manageable, even in the White
House.
But not with exaggerated, .and inconsistent accounts of an office )?urge.
And not when the cousin, even a distant one, writes a memo anglmg to
take ovez for the people she wants ousted.
Clinton said he and his people were only trying to do right, to get the
!York done more efficiently with less money. At the same time, he conceded that it might now look that way and that appearances are a problem
for a president.
"What I keep telling everybody here is we have to realize when you're
~t, you're a long way from most people in America," be said durmg his CBS-TV town ·meeting. "And so lillie things become big."
Especially in the hlmds of a critic like Perot, a once and perhaps future
rival who d!Jesn't face the same constraints, and doesn't let facts get in the
war of ICCUSIIions.
'Jfe's still doin' things the Arkansas way, like trying to give the travel
business as a political ~yoff, see?" Perot said in a TV interview with
David Frost. "Now that s just strl!ight out of Arkansas ...
·
" 1ben, bringing your cousin in and bringing the !ravel agency in that ·
bailed you out when you were broke in your campaign," said Perot, a
Dallas billionaire who comes from Texarkana, Texas, on the border with
Arkansas.
"That's fmc in Arkansas. That's not fmc in Washington."
Nevez mind whethez that's really what happened, f&gt;ero1's accusations
are founded on appearance. And that is where Clinton is most vulnezable,
on the firings, the pricey haircut. the impression that he's had his head
turned by Hollywood types.
As a candidaie, appearances became one of his strengths. Clinton cast
himself as the avezage man's entry; the foe of privilege, Bubba riding the
bus. Paot's slap notwithstanding, the Arkansas way was the down-hoDJC
style, an asset, not a liability.
Now, Clinton said, his image is being gnarled by liale things blown
out of JRopoition. That's avoidable.
''We have to be supersensitive not ll&gt; do things that we would ordinarily do and not give a second thought ... because of the way it will be perceived in the country ... ," he said. "And we haven't been very smart
about that on a couple of these occasions . ... ''

Accu-Weather• forecut for

· Wednelday, June 2, 1993

·

of poor people in Ibis country, but
nobody is arguing-that blacks
should be exempt from taxation,"
Barry said.

Babbill has enteied ihe lleach to
find an elusive middle. ground.
Dttrins a - t interview with us,
he described Indian gaming as the
"first great c;risis in tmns of dealing with conflict resolution" he
confronted after joini~ the Clinton
Cabinet. "When I htt town that
w115 the fi_rst problem sitting in
front of me," he said. "I'm bere
with no nominees
for
_ _.;__ _._______ · (Interior)
assistant secretaries,
and a building
Tiump vs. Babbill is only one of f11ll of strangm,'' he said.
a series of bitter battles brewing
Babbitt though! he left Indian
over Indian gaming, which has bal- gaming behind when he moved
looned over the past decade from from Arizona to Washington. "I'm
bingo to high-stakes games lite thinking wail a minute, wait a
bllctjaclc and is geMl1lling $6 bil- minute, I left Arizona," he recalls.
lion in annual revenue fll' rescrva- "All of a sudden I'm sitting here
tions. About half the nation's 314 on weekends in a room full of !ribtribes run games ranging from · alleaders and the governll' (of Aribingo to blackjack, and more than zona). They've all sort of just fol40 full-blown casinos operate in 12 lowed me to WQShington."
states.
It's a story of dueling righiS for
The stales fear things are
both tribes and srates. Indians often
out of hand. 1bey want the fl - seek unrestricted gambling, while
gates shut on Indian gaming, which the states seek absolute veto power.
ranks among the top 10 issues 011 Babbiu waniS everyone at the barthe agenda of die National Gover- gaining table, but he tilts toward
nors Association. Indians see gam- the Indian cause partly because of
ing as a panacea. from grinding reservation poverty, and partly
poverty, and within their rights because it's a moot point. He .
under tribal sovereignty.
observes that we are "now a nation

WASHINGTON Four
months into lbc: Clinton administration, Interior Sec:maly Bruce Babbitt never fiJui'ed he would be
splitting his tune between conservation and casinos.
He also nevez figured on being
sued by Donald Trump, who
believes !labbill is ~~~s
gambling empire by allowing
·an tribes to open casinos on reservations. Babbill dismisses Trilmp,
who owns ·three Atlantic City casinos, as saneone trying to preserve
a ' 'virtual monopoly 011 ~~ Coast
gaming." Babbitt may be known
for his professorial demeanor, but
he pulls no punches regarding
Trump.
"My initial reaction was 'Hey,
wait a minule, I've never even met
Marla Ma~les. How can he be
suing me? " he qUipped. "It is
really absurd to think~~ a selfproclaimed tyCOOn is threatened by
a few bands of impoverished Indi-.
ans. It is .the theater of die absurd."
Trump attorney I ohn Barry
argues that Trump believes that
federal law discriminates against
him and _$ives Indians an •'unfair
competiuve" edge by exempting
them from taxes. "1bere are a lot

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

ge:::f.

ofgaming."
. ·
State governments who get
preachy about the morals and dangers associated with gaming are
about 2S years behind the curve.
Babbill asks: Should Native Ameri- ·
cans be allowed the chance to
develop some lrind of comparative
advantage - that is, to pass laws
more !ibm! t1um state laws toward
gambling? He answm the question
this way:
"If the states say never, never ·
except according to our rules, it's ·
never going to he resolved. tf the ·
tribes say they can (gamble) anytime, anYWhere, always whenever
we want, that's not workable
either.
"Neither position in my judgment is adequate because Indians
do have sovereignty and the notion
that they must be sitbjected to the
little dictates of state law in this
area, I don't think, is an adequate
constibltional or historic reading Qf
their sovereignty. On the other
hand, if they ·PUSh it to the ultimate
limit, !hey Will lose their compara- · ·
tive advantage because the economics of it will drive the states
along a faster track toward wide-. . .
open gaming. So the issue becomes · .
is there some way to JO a little .· .
slower, keeping It a httle more : ··
restrained.''

'

·Babbitt chides si:lme tribes for
getting dangerously "inventive."
In a Dettoit case, a tril!e 100 miles
away announced itS desire to buy a · ,.
block in downtown Detroit, have
Babbitt put it in trust as part of· • ·
their reservation; and dlen open up
acasino.
: .
Babbitt also sees an intriguing ..' . '
paradox in the fact that big-time
gaming interests are on both sides:
of the Indian issue. Some share : .
Trump's trepidation, others just ·
want a cut of the gaming action
wherevez it's located. "They spend ,
millions of dollars~ against , ·
Indian gaming and millions ol dol- :·.:
Iars malring ~s to the tribes .. :.
to build casillO$, ' Babbitt said.
. ·
"This thing {Indian gaming) : .
could really blossQID into a confla: .,
gration," lameijts Babbitt. "I am .
stuck right square in the middle. . What I am trymg to say ... is we're :
going to get nowhere if people take ·
a pure ideological position."
Jack Anderson and Michael
·Binsteln are wrlten for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
.

W~'VE

UPG(?ADED
YOUR OLP ~\'STEM
IN rnb WHITE !«lUSt

.WITK THE LA.TEST .

INTEFACTIVE WIRELE~S
TECHNOLOGY .

.

The troubling death of John Wilson
.

I had planned to write about the
Bosnia-Herzegovina tragedy this
week, but that faraway crisis receded quickly when I read a news
story that had terribly depressing
implications for the future of blaclt
males.
The story broughl me back 26
years to a 4 a.m. meeting in a
Newark, NJ .. hotel room. The second national conference on black
power had just ended, only three
weeks after that city's orgy in
racial violence. A small group of us
was sitting on the floor, trying to
cobble the conference's final position papez.
Rap Brown, Maulana Karenga
(the founder of Kwanza, lhe
African-American winter celebration), Bill Strickland (one of the
movement's quiet scholars), John
A. Wilson (from the Student NonViolent Coordinating Commiuee),
Rev. Nathan Wright (our chairman)
and I were seized with a sense of
the black community's historical
mission.
But one member kept demand- .

ing a deeper analysis. "We ought
to be discussing the historical rationale for this conference," s8id Wilson. "We oughl to be asking: How

Chuck Stone
wiD this conference impact on specific agendas?"
"For crying out loud, John,"
exploded an exasperated Strictrand. "At4 o'clock in the morning,
you suddeqly decide to become a
philosophez Iring."
"Well, if Newark doesn't elect
a black mayor next time,'' responded Wilson, ''what sood will this
conference have accomplished?"
"Spoken like a typical Politician," Kai'enga said with a chuckle. The rest of us laughed and lridded Wilson some more. WCj ftnally
completed the agenda at 10 a.m .
and weaily trooPed to a local soulfood resraurant (or breakfast
Seven years after that conference, Wilson harnessed his SNICK
organizing stills to get elected Io

WashingtOn's City Co.uncil. Ironically, the former black powez advOcate would represent one of the
city's most racially integrated districts.
.
.
~n 1990, Wilson, who had
become a respected authority on
the city's budget, was elected the
chairman ·of the City Council.
Washington's rising sw was widely viewed as the favorite if he ran
for mayor next year. But he was
still wrestling with unresolved
inner demons.
Last week, John A. Wilson, only
49, was fo1111d hanged in his bo~­
Even as I write that tragic sentence, I can still feel an inner
numbness.
John Wilson's death dimiilishes
me, not only because of a longtime
friendship, but because we - the
nation's capital, this cOuntry and
the black community - have lost a
rare ~d though~ul llumanitarian.
As dtd Andrew Young, Coleman
Young and Marion Barry, Wilson
made the difficult transition from
civil-rights activist pressuring the

'

•:.. •

.

system from the outside to an elect- ·
ed offiCial woddng inside the sys- ,
tern.

But I anJII.!sh over his death for
another pamful reason. Here is a
black man, who, in a moment of
supreme pain, took his life, just as
young black men in the ghetto are
slaughtering each other with
though~

abandon.

r

.

An endemically powerless black
community cannot continue to be ..
an impolent, silent witness to its,
self-annihilation. We have got to . ·.
find more effective ways to reach . , . . ·
out and brinf, alienated brothers • :
living in the hood to JROIIuctivity : ·
in the American mainstresm. We
must also let the troubled John • .:
Wilsons know that they arc an .
ever-present source of comfort for . ·
our troubles.
When I last saw my old friend at .
an abortion rights rally in Washing- ·
ton, I wish I had told him, "Hey,
man, I'm proud Of rou. and I love
the hell out of you.'
Cbuck Slone Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Assoclallon.

'

Democrats vie for Bill Clinton's soul
Berry's World

q&amp;.

~

C) 11131iy -

· '""-

•

BELT-TIGHTENING AND BULLET·BITING
ARE HARD TO DO AT THE SAME TIME.

••

Motions filed
in Mullen case

MICH •

Babbitt in the middle of Indian gaming issue

The Daily Sentinel

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum·
nisi for Tbe Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
national politics for more tban 30 years.

The Dally

OHIO WcJthcr
Thursday, June 3

.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genenl Mlllllll!er

1993

WASHINGTON (NEA) - As
the administration tries to righl
itself from a rocky start, White
House insiders report that a threeway struggle for Bill Clinton's soul
is under way.
On lhe one side is former highpowered lobbyist Howard Paster,
who is now Wbite House congressional liaison. Paster has taken
most of the best for the failure of
the stimulus package. Early on he
counseled thatlhe way to get things
done was to play hardball with
Capitol Hill Republicans. He
believed they would have to fall in
line ·given the Democratic majorities in both House and Senate. Now
he has revencd himself and advocates building bridges to Senate
Republjcans.
A faction of more CODIICfVative
Democrats in the White House,
represented by Domes1ic Policy
Adviser AI From, argues that
Paster's problem was tryins to
wort through the traditional conpessionalleadershp. From's idea
IS 10 form a new ' centrist-coalition" in both the House and Senate, and then to build oot from
there bringing in those both more
liberal and more conservative. In
this way the more traditional
Democratic ltadenhi is bypused
while your own ~tiel are built.
Now bact ~";l;'~ene is the
Clinton ~ brain trust represented by pohtical aurus James

,,

Carville and Paul B·egala along
with Mandy Grunwald and pollstet
Stan Greenburg. Simply put, their
advice has been to start the campaign again - for Clinton to get

Robert}. Wagman .
out alounct-the country and take his
prosrams directly to lhe
while blaming Washington tnsi
for all of his, and the nation's,
problems.
·
To some extent, it appears that
Clinton is listening to all three
camps. The problem is that their
advice Ia frequently in conflict
House and Senate Democrats
are beconiins enraged u Clinton
101111 lbc: country eUKiring Ca{ritol
HiD. Tbe meaiiiiiC they have gJVCn
Paster ia blunt and clear: We are
not going to rillt: onr polillcal necks
supporting die president's budget
and tax bills only to have him try to
dump allliis problCIIIII on us.

pe':l:

The North 1\rDeriC&amp;n Flee Trade

Agreement is in big trouble in
Conpeu where llebate over its ratification Ia upcxllllina.
Bill Clinton support1 iL It was
nesotillcd by Gc«p Blllh. Both
the Democratic and Republican
leadership are behind it as are most
of the opinioa makers. 1be problem is that most AmericanJ do not
want iL COIIIfCIIiotlal mall is runninR heavy, about 6-1 aRalnsL

the isSue is jobs. Most Americans see jobs flowing into Mexico
where lain costs are a fraction of ,
what they are here. The araument
that, eventually, Mexican wages
and benefits will rise to U.S. levels
while Mexico becomes a major
consumer of American goods
leaves them cold. They don't want
il, and Congress is hegmning to listen.

Capitol Hill insiders say that
unless some major changes arc
made in the treaty - changes that
probably would be totally unacceptable to both Mexico and Canada· - it is likely that when tbe
crunch comea, allllliority will listen
to the folks bact home and VOle it
down.
As first lady Hillary Rodham
Clinton's health-are reform plan
nears its UDvellint_.:;veral titanic
behind-the-scenes
ea are belns
waged. One of lhe most bitter
involves organized lain.
.

company be allowed to cut back on . •
benefit levels while being allowed .
to actually increase premium ·
amounts?
·
··
Organized labor has asked the
same question in a slightly different way. If an employer currently
provides id workezs with a health·
care package that is better than die
standard required under the Clinton
plan, should tbe employc;r be
allowed to cut bact on .what is
being offered? Labor is adamant
that this cannot be allowed 10 happen.
At this point there IIOCDII to be
no answer. Ac:c:ordiJIII to 10111ee11 on
the task force, the tma1 leiDiutlon
may re~olve around whether the
current health care plan is being
voluntarily pro'vided by the :
employer, or whethez it is the 11111ult .
of a collective bargainins agree•.:.:
menL
· ·
..

C

~i~~·~]

· •·

\

•lcolumbusl7o-

I

.IIIIa

:w.··

' lid,.,.~

'

..~.-----Weather----W·Cenlr'al Oblo
Extellded foreeast:
••• Tonight, occas!onal showers and
Friday tbroagb Stlllday:
thunderstorms. Low SS-60. Chance
A chance pf showers Friday.
·pf rain 80 percent. Thursday, Lows 45-S5. Highs 6S-70. Fair on
cloudy. A chance of showers early. Saturday and Sunday. Lows on SatHigh 65-70. Chance of l1in 40 per- urday in die 40s and highs 6S-70.
cent
Lows on Sunday 4S-50 and highs
70-7S.

-.· --Area deaths-.

Woodrow Gammon

; : Woodrow 0. Gammon, 76,
~ died Tuesday, 1une 1,
1993, Ill his residence. .
;-- He was born in Oliver Springs,
'l'enn., on April 28, 1917, a iiOD of
the late Pleasant Thomas and Lula
BeiiJonc:s Gammon. He was a
maintainer for the railroad. He was
!I member of Feeney Bennett Post
No. 128 or the American Legiop.
. He ~u a _world W• n army veteran iild.a member of the Aridersonyille Methodist Church in Tennessee.
.
' Mr. Gammon is survived by two
.daughters, Reva Gammon and.
pemma Gammon, both of Middlepon; two sisters, Mabel Allen of
.WasbilllltOil and Demma Gammon,
~lendale, Calif.; three brothers,
.:.Sill and 1o1m Gammon of Ponland,
~~.. and Bob Gammon of Califor·nia.
:- Besides parents, Mr. Gammon
:wu peded in dealh by his wife,
;.GeneVa; a son. Rodney; and a sisw, Mary. Gammon.
: Services will be Friday at 1 p.m.
;at Fisher Funeral Home m Middle;port. Burial will lie in Gravel Hill
,Cemetery.
, FriCI)ds may call Thursday 7-9
,p.m. at the funeral home.

Donald Hartung

Donald ''T· •,MHartung, 63,'of
Norton and a .onner resident of
Meigs County died Monday, May
31, 1993, in a mOIOicycle accident
in Tuppe~s ~.
Born June 8, 1929, he was the
son of Vemcda Tuttle Hartung of
Chester and the late ~I Hartung.
Further arrangements will be
announced Jater by die CampfieldHickman Funeral Home of B..tx:rton.

Five weekend ICCidents result·
ing in minor injuries and vehicle
damage were investisated by
Pomeroy Police over the weetend.
· Seven leenaprs were taken to
Veterans MemciW ~ where
they were treated and released fol. lowing an accident at 11:42 a.m.
Friday on Welshtown Hill.
· Pomeroy reported thai a car
driven by Shannon Nitz, 17, of
Ramseur, N.C. was traveling down
the hill when his vehicle struck a
car driven by Todd McDade, 16,
Pomeroy, which was traveling up
the hiD. McDade had slowed on the
narrow
curve, Nltz was unable to
' VETERANS MEMORIAL
stop,
and
the vehicles collided.
:. Tuesday admissions There
was lilht damale to the
(larence Spurriez, Pomeroy; Clara
driver's
side and front of the
~Jater. Pomeroy.
• . Tue~:z, dischargcs - John ~cDade car, and light damage to
the front end of the 1981 Audi
Snider, · . 1eport
being driven by Nitz.
McDade and passengers in his
car, all taken to Veterans, were
Anita Riffle. 16, Christi Mash, 16,
and
Cindy Litchfield, 17, all of
~BlePower....................3S 1J8
Pomeroy.
Pusengers in the Nitz
: ~ 00........................26 S/8
car
also
all
taken to the hospital,
~T.tT................................62
were
Joseph
lloyd, 19, Wilkesville;
Bant0ne...........................S4114
Dennis
Boyd,
fr., 27, Wilkesville,
t i BVMS .........................17 SIB
and
Tony
Brown,
1S, Welshtown,
~ St.os&gt;..................171J4
HiD.
Cbmp lndustries. ................l4
The teenagers were transported
City Holdins......................2S
by
squads from Middleport,
Fedenl Mot!ul...................21
Pomeroy
and Symcuse.
~T&amp;R ................ ..41 Sill
Nitz
wu
charged with speeding.
I.arads Bnd•• ~.......................31 7/8
Gregory
Knapp,
30, of MiddleI.Jmitccllrlc....................... 24- 1,44
port
was
charged
with
failure to
Multimedia II!C ................. .36 114
.
m
aintain
assured
clear
distance
rolPoillt Bancorp.................... l4
lowing
an
accident
at
the
intersecRax RestauranL ..................3/16
tion of West Main and Hill at II :52
Reliance E.lectric................21 3J8
a.m.
Friday.
Robbins&amp;:Myers ............... .17
Accordins to the police, the
$honey's Inc...................... l9 3/4
1977 Ford truck driven by Knapp
Star Blllk ........... ;...............36
Wendy Int'L. ......................I3 314 struck the rear of lbc: 1987 OldsmoWorthington Ind ................29 314 bile operated by Phil!~{! Oldaker,
Stock reports are lbe 10:30 29, Hartford, c:.JSinsligllt --end
1'berc was aiJo light dam•·•· qaotes provided by clamlge.
age
to
the
front end of the Knapp
Kemper Securities, Inc., o-f
truck.
Neilhcr
driver was injured.
Galllpolla.
On Saturday at 1:07 p.m. an

.

Hospital news

.

Stocks

\

rev·

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
June 1 dlsebar&amp;es - Forrest
Lewis, Ralph Perry, Bobbie
Daniels, Lewis Gillespie, Jeffrey
Parriet, Carrie Saxon, Kaylin
Spradling, Victoria Dixon, Donald
Walton, Virginia Cremeens, Doris
Oiler, Terry VanHoose and Paul
Powell.
Juile 1 births - Mr. and Mrs.
Isaac Hively, son, Scottown. Mr.
and Mrs. Brian King, son,
Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. Shawn
Paugh, daughier, Lelart, W.Va.

Police probe five
weekend accidents

:&amp;.... .:.;..

~eigs

Units of the Meigs County·
Emergency Medical Service had a
busy Memorial Day weekend
responding to more than 20 calls
for assistance including a hayriding
incident at Royal Oak Family
Resort in which II people were
treated for minor injunes.
Uriits responding were:
SATURDAY- 4:23 p.m. Tuppezs Plains squad and Olive Township First Responders to a motor
vehicle accident on Ohi6 681 in
which Wendell Barber was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 6;S3 p.m. Tuppers Plains
squad and volunteer fire department to a motor vehicle accident on
Ohio 681 in which Fred Houghton
was transported to Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
At 7:19 p.m .. the Pomeroy
squads and volunteer ftre depart-

.

.•

.

RACJNB.IOU'I'IIDN QVEBN AND KING • Nk* leqle
' ad K,S. W1t:1t111t, m3 . , . . _ f/1 Sotaawa 111111 Scllonl, wen
: •• cled • tile 1"3 Qaea l8d Kllla f/1 tile lbldae So.tllerll AI-' .al. 1be baaqaet aad daaa wu itld Satarday ewala1 Ia tbe
·, Clarlei W. Ha,.• andltorl- at Solttlllera Hl... Sctlool.
•

'
"

cises at lbe sc;bool on Sunday eveninc. L·r are:

Trusleel to meet
The Sutton Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Syracuse Mumcipal Building.

Swlmmlntletlons ofFered
Swimming lessons will be
offered at London Pool in Syracuse
beginning _Monday through June
18. The cost is $20. To ~gister, or
for further information, call the
J190l at 992-9909.

ment were summoned to Royal
Oat Family Resort near F1ve
Points for a hayriding accident.
Transported to VMH were Kim
Jesse, Christi Lemaster, Jill Johnson. Kenneth Embry, Patti Stuckey;
Am Shillington, Michelle Tedren,
Marianna Lee Riley, Robert Clark,
RusseD Kin!! and Faye Brookover.
Other untts responding in addi"
lion to th\1 Pomeroy units were:
Chester Volunteer Fire Department, and Syracuse, Middleport
and Rutland squads.
In other action Saturday: 8:19
p.m. Racine to Scout Camp Road
for Goldie Cractenburgez who was
·transported to St. Joseph's.Hospital; 10:09 p.m. Pomeroy squad and
ftre department to Ohio 681 for a
motorcycle accident in which Don
Freeman was transported to Holzer
Medical Center; 10: IS p.m. Syra-

Day Saints, .Portland-Racine. Public invited.

Lodge to meet
Masonic Lodge No. 363 will
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
lodge hall in Middleport.
PERI group meets
Meigs PERI group will meet
Thursday at I p.m. at the Meigs
County Senior Citil:ens Centez. All
membezs attend.

ScJ:amble sci
The Eastern Athletic Boosters
Sale planned
wiD hold a golf scramble June J3 at ·
The Ladies ~uxiliary of the
Riverside Golf Course in Mason, Chester Fire .Department will hold
W.Va. Sign-up is at 1:30 p.m. with · a yard sale Friday from 9 a.m. to 4
· tee-off at 2 p.m. The cost IS $3S per p.m. Donations of items will be
person.
accepted.

health care system, especially -in
areas where there is a shortage of
health car professionals. M
"Continuing this program will
provide opportunities to aspiring
medical stiJ(Ienu now, and pezhaps
· a chance for underserved aress to
have dociOrs for~ future," Strictland added.
The grant will also fund OUCOM's "Su_mmer ScbolarsM _prosram which allows undergraduate
pre-med students to ·"try their
wings before applying to medical
school,MKiss said.
Kiss said minority enrollment
and retention numberS are up ~e
the program began seven ye1n ago.

Two (or Arthur Wilson who was
later trllnSpOrted from thO scene to
YMH.via LifoFiigbt.

En4 Of

r•• Sttlln

Clllt·Otlt ltlt

.
1
ALL fliTS.--...- .........;. 5
ALL 01•1 1111m.~ 1 S
ALL •• POIS.-........- ...50'
ALL 1110........,_,20" OFF
.

•

Kim Mic:bael, Lisa Holrman, Letitia Holslnaer
and VIcki Warner.
·•

_Meigs announcements __
.

OU-COM gets minority grant

, Units of the Meiss County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to four caDs for assistance overnight. Units responding
were:
TUESDAY - 11:27 a.m.
Pomeroy to Ihe Meigs County
Sheriff's Oftic:e for Tim Justis who
'!IS tran~ to Velellnl Memorial Holpital; 4:44 p.m. Pomeroy to
East Second Street for Chester
Arthur who was transported to
VMH; S:4S p.m. Middleport to
South Second Strait for ~
Landers who wu tranlpOrtOd to

\

EMS reports busy weekend

accident occurred on the Home
FootbaU camps set
Entertainment Center parking lot,
Eastern High School will hold
West Main Street.
three football camps, The first will
Harold Franldin Elliott, II, 16, be June 7-I 0 for backs and
of Racine, driving a 1984 Chevro- receivers. 1be ·second will be June
let owned by William Stuckey, 14-17 for junior high players. 1be
backed into the parlred 1990 Ispza third will be July 19-22 for lineowned by Troy McDaniel, 29, inen. All c~ps will be from 5-6
Middleport. Elliott was charged p.m. at the high school. Applicawith improper becltiq. There was lions for camps may be picked up
light damage to the iJriver's side at the high school or by contacting
rear qoartet Jllllei of the McDaniel Dave Bahr at 992-3302. The cost is
car, and !iglit damage to the rear SIS per person per camp and lhose
driver's side quarte( panel of the participating wiD receive a t-shirL
Elliott vehicle.
Monday at 7:58 a.m. on MulberTrustees to meet ·
ry Ave. Carlos McKnight, 53, of
The Scipio Township Trustees
Middleport, driving a 1988 Ford will meet Monday at 6:30 p.m. a1
truck, lost control and struck a uti!- !he PageviUe Town Hall.
ity' pole. 1be truck had beavy front
end damage and was towed from
Meellns slated
the scene.
'
· There will be a meeting Tuesday
A second Memorial Day acci- at 7 p.m. _at the Meiss Coupty
dent occunt!d at 8:03 p.m. on West Courthouse to appointp committee
Main St. near the Home Entertain- person for the Bradbury Precinct in
ment Center. ·Thomas Reiunire, 40, Salisbury ToWnship.
Letart, W. Va. was cited for no
insurance, expired plates and failTrustees to meet
ure to -control. Reiunire was comThe Orange Township Trustees
ing onto West Main when he struck wiD nlCCt Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at
the · 1991 Pontiac operated by the home of the clerk, Patty CalHeather Farley, 17, Long Bottom, away.
who was ~ in prq181111ion for
J'rolram planned
making a left hand tum.
K
w· · ·11
t
Tbere was~
· t damage to the
enny tjfgtns w1 presen a
program on biter control on Sunfront driver's · of·the Farley car, day at 7 p.m. at the Reorganized
but no damage to the 1976 GMC Church of Jesu.s Christ of Latter
driven by ReiUnire._

Tbe Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine will receive
a $196,089 grant from the Department 9f Health and Human Services' Public Health Service, Congressman Ted Strickland (DLucasville) announced Tuesday.
Lois Kiss, associate dean of
OU-COM, said the gram will fund
the sch&lt;Xll's Minority Medical Student Program for another year. The
program helps minority and lowinco~studenlS attend OU's medi·
cal scliOol.
"OU's medical school is a ftrStrate training ground for osteopathic
doctors, MStrickland said. "D.O.s
fill a vital role in our nation's

ll .

~

SENIORS SING - Senior me!llbers or tbe
EaslerD H..b Scbool Cbolr, Dllder tile dlredlon
or WOllam Hall, perfona "Friends" during eom-bined
-- - ..baccalau.-eate and c0111mencemenl exer-

EMS responds to four calls

... r,

If it is voluntsry, it is probable :
the employer will be allowed to · :.lower II to the level mandated in · : :
the reform pactaae. However, if •
the plan is die resUlt o1 a c:ollecd11e ·
bargainin1labor agreement, the
employer Will have to continue 11 . :
ita cunent level until it Ia chiDpd •
as a result of further employer. employee negotiations.

One question the Clinton task
force has been mulling for wecb is
what happena :when the recommended bas\1: standard of ~ is
leu than a penon no"!' enJoys
lhronsh his or her c_unent1IISUI'IIIC7
or health plan. For ~· what tf
a penon now has 111 msurance plan
that offers a greaier array of ~- .
ROIIert w.,..a• II a IJIICIJalt·
fits than will be recommended by eel writer for Newpaper Enter· ·:
the tasl( force. Should the insurance prise Aaoclallon.
'

'.

IMansfield I~ I·

""

An attorney representin~ a
Pomeroy attorney accused of eillll
felony counts and three misdemeanor couius relating to an
alleged series of incidents involving two minor females in Pomeroy
on
12 and
asked Tuesday
theMarch
felony
and13 misdemeanor
charges be tried separately and also
asked an assistanl prosccu1or be
disQualified from lbc: case.
Aerman Carson of Athens,
resenting D. Michael Mullen, said
the misdemeanor charges are "no1
intertwinedM With the felony counts
and furthermore asked that Assistant ~tor Charles Knight be
disqualified 'because he may be a
wilneiis in the case.
Knight conducted ti ta~ iDlerview with the alleged v1ctims in
which he asked leading questions,
Carson said.
Prosecutor John Lentes said !he
charges should be tried together
because they' are connected. Concerning the taeed interviews,
Lentes said be wtU not. present the
tape$ durinJ the trial.
Mullen ts accll$ed of furnishing
prescription medicine to twO girls,
ages 11 and 13, and was also
indicted on two counts of contributing to the delinquency of a
minor for alleaedly allowing a 13year-old girl to operate his vehicle
on March 10 and 12. Mullen is also
charged with aggravated menacing
and compelling prostibltion.
Presiding Judge Dan W.
Favreau, visiting from Morgan
County, said he would give his
· decision on lite motions on May
11.

ODenMon.-lat.e-6
ClOSED SUNDAY

IIIIIHOUSI
~~~sp~.=a~gb~ HUIIODS
.,...... 192·1776
II :48 p.m. Rutland to MeJs1 Mine

)

Boosters to meet

Eastern Athletic Boosters meet

Th!lr3day at 8:30 p.m. at. the ltigh
school cafeteria.
Trustees meet

The Salisbury Township
Trustees will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at the township buildiug in
Rock Springs.
Preaching and sln&amp;lne
Faith Full Gospel Church in
l.,ong Bottom will have preaching
and singing Friday at 7 p.m. with
Pastor Steve Reed and local
singers. Public invited. Fellowship
fellows.
· Lodge. to meet
Harrisonville Lodge No. 411
F&amp;AM will meet Saturday at 7:30
p.m. All masier m~ns welcome.
Fish ~ planned .
The Scipio Ftre Department will
hold a fish fry Saturday at 2 p.m.
The cost is $:2 for children and $4
for adulu. A tractor pull will be
held with weighin at 5 p.m. and
pull at 6 p.m. with classes for children, 800; and adults, 900, 1,000,
and 1,100 with a 50 peroent pay-

cuse to Third S1ree1 for Don
Richard Hill who was transported
toYMH.
SUNDAY- 12:16 a.m. Racine
to Third Street for Chuck Ritchie
who was transported to VMH;
11:31 a.m. Pomeroy to Second
Street for Mildred Arnold who was
transpotted to VMH; 3:41 p.m.
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Depart,
ment to West Main Street for a
brush ·fire at the Bob Arms residence; 3:51 p.m. Rutland to Red
HiD Road f&lt;x- Carson Deskins who
was transported to YMH; 5:41 p.m.
Middleport to Locust Street for
James Ward who was transported
to VMH; 6:SO p.m. Syracuse 10
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center for Carrie Whaley who
was transported to YMH; 7:04 p.m.
Middleport to Lincoln Street for
Harold Pennel who was transported
to Pleasant Valley Hospital; 9:26
p.m. Syracuse to G.old Ridge !toad
for James Duncan who was transported to YMH; 9:34 p.m. Middleport to PNRC for Edna Swick who
was transported to VMH; !0:08p.m. Tuppers Plains to Ohio 124·
for Pauline Myers who was transported to HMC.
MONDAY- IO:IS a.m. Tuppezs Plains to New Hope Road for
Otis CiSlO who was transported to ·
VMH; I :OS a.m. Tuppers Plains.'
squad and frre department to the;
intersection of Ohio 7 and 681 .for a
motorcycle accidt:nt involving
· Donald Hartung; 3:18p.m. Tuppers
Plains to Reedsville for ,Martha
Bailey who was transported to
CCMH; 6:29 p.m. Racine to Bucktown Road far Laurie Anderson
who was ln'.nsporll:d to YMH.
TUESDAY - 2:48 a.m. Rut·
land to Ohio 143 for Clarence
Spurrier who was transported to

YMH.

Bulk
...
CoDIInued

from page 1
celebrate these. students' aChievements." .
Mathematics remains the final
test that most juniors must pass.
The department estimates that
about 13,600 juniors have yet to
pass this tesL
.
The class of 1994 has three
more auemp1s to pass Ihe tests
before the end of their senior year. ·
"I believe that in the spring of
1994, we'D be very clooe to having
aU members of the junior class succeed on the l)f()ficiency tests and
gniduate with their peers," Sanders

said.

.

.

"ijowever. despite this progress,
we cannot be satisfied until every
member of the class of 1994 and
those in classes following have
passed the proficiency tests," he

added.

Each school district in Meigs
County will be offering summer
remedial classes to help students
pass the tests.
Students begin taking the ninth
grade proficiency test when they
are .ft:csbmen and have eight oppor-·
baclc.
tumues to p~s the four sections
which
qualifies them to graduate.
Trustees to meet
The
only
students exempt from the
The Olive Township Tn!slees requirement
the proficiency
will meel Friday at 7:30p.m. at the , test are thoseto inpass
speciaf
education
Shade River State Forestry Build- classes.
ing.
Students repeating the profteiency
test take only those sections
Group meets
which
The Pomeroy Group of AA will passed. they have not already
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at Sacred
Heart Cathohc Church. Call 992S763 for information.
The Daily Sentinel
(USPSilS-1180)

PubUahed every afternoon, Monday
u.,...h Friday, l1l Courl Sl, Pomei'O)I

Hyou can't work,
we11 help
pay the bills.
If you- become disabled
due to occident or illness and
can't -...c!rk, you're going to need
help paying your household
expeo-. Coli u1 for oil the
details about Nationwide's
Paycheck Prot.clion Pion.
JEFF WARNER

111 w. 2nd lt.
PoiMIOl'. OH. 417.
Oflloe . .-1471

1-taii-7G 1111

.

Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publilh:h,;
Company/Muliimedta Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 46769, Ph. 992-2156. Second e~
po~t.age paid a t Pomeroy, Ohio.
' Meml)er. The Aslociatod .Preu, and t.he ;
Ohio Newapaper AIIOciation, NaHona)
Advert:iaing Repreaentatfve, Branham · '

Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

New York, New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send addreu change~ to
The Daily Sentinet 111 Court St.
Pomeroy, O!f¥146769.
'
8UB8CIUPI10N RATES

By Carrtar or Motor Roate
One Week. ..........................................$1.60
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No oubocrtptiono by man permlUocl In
areu where home ranier eervtw 11
available.
MaiiS.boeriplto,.
laol&lt;le Mol• Co.niJ'
13 Weeb. .......................................121.84
26 Weeb............c........ ,................... ka.te
li2Weeb............................. .................'J8
O..tol&lt;le M. . . CooniJ'
13Weeb..........................................
26 Weeta....................... - .................
62Weeka. ......................................,...
:40

=4CJ

'

�Sports

The D.aily Sentinel

J:Philadelphia h.ands Ci~cinnati 6-3 loss

Wednesday, June~ 1H3
·· Page 4

.

B1JOE ~y
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Philadelphia Phi.lies like to talk
about fintlina cliffemlt ways to win
every nipt, hut this oqt was a bit
much.
: There was catcher Darren
Qaulton, intimidating the Ciilcinnali Reels out of a run. 'J'hen, blck·
up outfielder Jim l!isemich guess·
il)g right with the game on lhe line.
Flinafty, "Wild Thing" Mitch
Willlaus showing~ con·
tro!.in closing out a 6-3 victory
Tuesday nialtL
·The rust-place PhiUies outdid
themselves as they coasted into
another month with the biggest
-Iliad in the m..- leques.
. "They're probably the best
~ in baseball right now., " said
Reds rust baseman Randy Milligao, "We put the pressure on them,
: : they~~·ve got to

--

With clinics by Barklty, Majerlt,

·

Suns.band SuperSonics 120-114
defeat to take 3-2 lead in series
•

'

.

By MEL REISNER
PHOENIX (AP) The
Phoenix Suns used boxing Slrategy
~pinst Seattle: Dan Majerle jab)mg from tong range and Charles
-Barkley providing the body blows.
: Majerle delivered the knockout
.punch, drilling the last of his pl$yoff-record eight three-pOinters with
21 seconds left to power the' Suns
over the SuperSonics 120-114
Tuesday nighL
"This was one of the biggest
shots of my career," Majerle said
of his last-minute three-pointer.
Actually, Majcrle and the Suns
did exactly what the Sonics wanted
"You want him to tate a shot
·l.ik\1 that to try and beat you; he just
hit iL It was a hell ofa shot," SeatllC's Eddie Johnson said
. Barkley and Majerle had playoff
career games to send Phoenix back
to Seattle with a 3-2 lead in the
best-of-seven Western Conference
finals.
· Bartley bad 43 points, 15
rebounds and 10 assists - his third
jlostseason triple-double and first in
two years - and Majerle hit 8 of
IQ shots from three-point range to
finish with 34 points.
"When's he's stroking it like
that, it mates everything easier for .
us," ·Barkley said of Majerle's
long-range bombing. "They were
doubling on me and chasing Kevin
'(Johnson) so much, someone was
'g'o!ng 10 be open...

Being Open and nialdng the shot
are two different thin,s, Phoenix
coach Paul Westpbal said.
"It's tough to make 8 of 10 in
the gym, by yllUI'Self, with nobody
on you," Westphal said.
There were 17 ties - inchxling
28-28 after the first quarter - and
11 lead changes, and S bawn
Kemp's 20 points in the fourth
quarter helped the Sonics eat up a
10-point Phoenix lead in the final
six minutes.
Kemp, who rinished with 33
points, made it 111-110 with a ISfoot jumper with 34.5 seconds tefL
The Suns had not scored since
Barkley's pulback of an offensive
rebound with 2:311eft gave them a
11 1-102 lead. From then until
Majcrle released his climactic shot
with the g&amp;IIIC on the line, Seattle
l~ed like the team which stunned
the Suns here 103-99 in Game 2.
Ricky Pierce made a three·
pointer and a free throw, and Sam
Perldns made two more free throws
before Kemp's baseline jumper.
"My shots had been going all
night, and we realty needed that
one, so I let it go," said Majerte,
who broke the record of seven
three-pointers set by Indiana's
Chuck Person against Boston on
Apri128, 1991.
"What can you say? When, he
sets bis feet and has his rhythm,
basically, he'll hit it," Seattle's
Gary Payton said
Pierce finished with 27 points

and Payton 20. Kevin JohnsOn had
10 assists for the Suns.
Barkley hit 16 of 22 shots and
was 11 of 11 from .the foul line in
surpassing his playoff personal best
of 39 points. He had 13 points in
the fourth quarter.
''Charles gives them great leadership by rebounding and pushing
the ball," Seattle coach George
Karl said. "He played very posse.ssed and very aggressively, but
my basketball team played very

wen, 100...

Tom Chambers conlributed nine
fourth-quarter points to offset the
quick-strike ability of Seattle,
which had made up a 59-54 halflime deficit willr an 11-4 spurt in
the first 3 lf.l minutes of the third
quarter.
Kemp's driving layup efter
Ricbllrd Dmnas missed a dll1lk put
the Sonics up 65-63. In the next
three minutes, Majcrle tied it three
times - at 65, 67 and 72, the third
time with a three-pointer. _
Chambers, who played only
briefly until the fourth period, got
his frrst points with a left-handed
layup with 4:4010 play, tying it 7474. Back-to-back Majerle threepointers erased Seaule leads late in
the quartec and lifted the Suns to an
84-81 third-quarter advantllge.
Majerle also had ' seven
rebounds, one better than anyone
on the Sonics, as the Suns owned ·
the boards 42-25.

Fernandez beats Sabatini in marathon
:to move into French Open semifinals
"
By STEPHEN WILSON
- PARIS (AP)- When Mary Joe
Jlemandez tooted up Ill the scoreoo.d clock, it showed 53 minutes
had elapsed in her match with
Gabriela Sabatini. What's more
Sabatini was up 6-1, 5-1.
'
"I thought, this is unbelievable,
it's almost over " Fernandez
recalled. "I said, 'I:ve got to try to
mate the one hour mark."
Nearly three hours later, Femandez emerged u the winner of one_

of the greatest comebacks in a her frrst match point at 5-1 in the
Grand Slam evenL
second seL
Sabatinisavedfourmatchpoints
"Somehow when I won that
in the third set before Fernandez hit game at 5 -~. I sat down an~ saw
a backhand winner to close out an the clock hll ?ne h?.ur, ~ kmd of
improbable 1-6, 7-6 (7-4), 10-8 relaxed and smd that sa htde more
victory Tuesday to reach the ·acceptable," said Fernandez, the
French OpeJi semifinals.
No. 5 seed.
.
At three hours, 35 minutes, it
"From that mom~nt on, I d1d
was the longest women's malCh in what anybody does when they are
modem Grand Slam history.
so far down. I went for more. I took
None of it would have happened more chances. And the next thing I
had Sabatini not double faulted on
, (See OPEN on Pap 5)

Scot. elloard
- • Baseball • NATIONAL LEAGUE

--

c::::;:r•... . ...
T-

W L
35 IS

..............21 Z2

Qkap... ...........25

23

So. Loolo . ........... ..25 2:5
P1tut p ........... ..lo4 2:5
'" " " " " ' "'" ..22 :19

New Yodr. ........... .. l7 32

Today'a

I'd.
.'100
.!60

OB

.l21
.lOO

9
10
lOS
13.5
17.5

.-490

,431
.347

1

w..... D I ' ......34 19 .6&lt;12
Allaou ... - ........ .. ..29 :l4 .SI7
............. .21 23 .SIO
.21 23 .SIO
ClNClllNATI...... -25 'Z1 .411
. . D~oao .............21 30 .412
C...... - ............ IS :11 .211

Loo-.. ...

S

5.5
5.5

1.5
12
11.5

Tuesday'• I!Cont

Ymt. (loy S·2),7:30p.m.
,
T•u• (Pnllk 1-1) at MiAaotOll
' Toronto (Hcataeft 6-2) at California
(Vat.n 3-3),10:0S'p.m.

Tuelllay's sccre

PNI..Wpbio 6, aNCINNA113

~z.~i

Phoenia 120, Se~tde 114: Phoenill

looclaooricool-1

01ioqo I , Now Ymt. 3
Loo Ai1p1oo 11 , St Louio 6
_.....,I, c..taoolo 6

OicaaoatNewYcnt, 9p.m.

Moauul (~• 1·1) at Houaton
( S - !-4~ I :3S p.m.
Now Y Oldr. (Ooo&lt;loo l-4) " Chicaao
(Caslillo 1-2), 3,jj),....
S. Ptw ' m (Bwba 7-l) at Florida
4-4), 1'3li&gt;DL
(Ri..,. 3-2) at aNCIN·
u~ 7:35p.m.

S..llioao (B.,.. 7-3) 11 Alllnla (Av·

. , l-2~ 7:;jo p.m.

Loo Anploa (Aolacio 3-3) at St

Thunday's cooteats
Sm~ (&lt;laot Rania 5-6) • Alllnla

(Smllh 2-4~ 12:40 p.m.
Chioaao (Moqan 3· 6) n Mont.real
(lolaotn&amp; 3-S), 7:3l p.m.

St LouU (Oliv""' 1-2) 11 CINCIN·
NATI (Plop 3-S),BSp.m.
_....., (NeaaloO.I) atSm Fnncia·
ClO (Br =-1-0), 10:3$ p.m.

-01W L

I'd.
,612
.S17
.lll
.S29
.479
.412
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Illaod. ...................30 19

T_. ..................30 Z2
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CLSVELANJL ....21l 32

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T..-day'aiCOI'tl

Friday's contest

In

S.alo It PhoenU., 3:30p.m., it necet-

.....

I

Cucama.r

injury ftlbabilitaliao UlipnoiL

Sunday, June 6

BaskelbaB

Notlonalllublboll-'-1•11on
ATLANTA HA'III:S: N.. ed Lenny
Wilkens coach. -

CUcaao at New Yoik, 7 p.m., if llCIOtl·

FootbaU
National FoolbaU 1Aq111

- • NHL playoffs • Tuesday's sccre

U. AnJde14, Montretll; Lo. .Mao-

leo .......... 1.()

Thursday's contest
Loo Aqtloo at lobmal. 7:30p.m.

BUFFALO BILLS : Namod John
Uvaey director fll. mutedaa and aalu
an4 Jotrrov llallao!Y~....,...
OIU!l!N BAY PA
S: Sipod IJ.
wt.y, fullback.
KANSAS CITY CmEFS : Sianed
Rqaio Md!lroy, ri&amp;ht llotle, 10 I tJuoo.

--

MIAMI DOLPHINS: Namod Rich

M~ a•liqut offcuivo liDo and

coach. Amlmmcod. tho r«~m­

tipt

• Mooday,June7

I.S
2S
4
6.5
10
11.5

ST. LOlliS CARDINALS: Recallool

Paw Kllaua, p!!d&gt;or, !'nom LouioviUo of
lho Amoilcan .Mooia- Sea! Slm Royer,lbird bulmin,IOlaU.IYiUe.
SAN DIEGO PADRES : Sont Podro
I - . ......... l'mn WldDia ollbeT....
Loip .. ca~­
u..u. Lcop onollAi IIIII ~~caldter, tmm Rlnebo C\amanp to Wichita.

S.tunlar'• contest.

Montrollat Loa A.na,elcl, 1:-40 p.m.

Gl

lociatian.

ollhoPaciftcc.uiLeap.Dave M.aRU:.. rattfl,)der, to Pbomix on

New Yodl.at OUcap, 9p..m.

Satunlay•a cooteat

AMERICAN LEAGUE

b11=m oa dae 15-dly dilablod lia. ltcalled W'ollio O....o, infield•
... -lndianapolia "'!be Amod&lt;an A.

Saba, lhhd

otlbo Picifio ~lAo-SAN PRANCSCO CHANTS: Accintool S""'e Sea
, - · r.., lho IS·
day dinbled U.• aDd opqoned him 10

Pboenb. at hale. 9 p.m.

....

Mantnoal ...... An,eko. 9:10p.m.

mont ofTcny Paiar. fullbadt .

NEW

ENdLAND PATRIOTS :

Named. Sw:ey June. ...u&amp;ant public nsl.a·
d.ana cHr.c:tm.

Nl!'ll YORK lliTS: Apoed 10 1e1m1

wilh llobbylpalcn, linebadt•.

Due baD

w, ""' Fwnondo llonundez, pild&gt;er.
DBTROIT TIGERS: Aclmtcol Dan

IS

6

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

' . .. : '

Qdcqo 4, Oolralt2

CLI!VIllAND IS, NoW Ymt. 6

a:- Cily4,- 3

t:1.TtaM5
Mil-10,-0
T...- I, Ctlilamla 0
0o1:1ao4 4, 8akl
I

7

or tbe Amateur Athletic UuloD's 11-and-uuder
girls' state basketball touruameut 1D Columbus
Friday, , Saturday and Suuday,
the
Netsouyille/Edwards Cardbial team will take ou
Jacksou-Easteru .Friday st 7:30 p.m. at Wood·

Hawks name
Wilkens new
head coach
ATLANTA (AP) - Lenny
Wilkens, who quit as coach of the
Cleveland Cavaliers a week ago,
had been considered a strong contender to fill the coaching V8131Cy
with the Los Angeles Clippers, but
was named head coach of the
Atlanta Hawks Tuesday.
Over the weekend, however,
Magic Johnson said he expected to
be interviewed for the Clippers job,
and Los Angeles ·owner Donald
Sterling went on vacation.
Hawks general manager Pete
Babcoclt and ~t Stan KaSien
seized the opponunity and qgres- '
sively pursued Wilkens, and the
two sides quicldy came to an ogreement. the Atlanla Joumai-Con.stitution said.
Wilkens, 55, succeded Bob
Weiss, who was fued following the
Hawks' opening round playoff loss
PREPARING TO PASS - NellouvUte!Edwardl Cardlultc;;:
to the Chicago Bulls.
Wlll'd JuU llaJIIIUI (U) prepares to pus to tea•••te LJ-. McJrdl.
Rick Pitirlo, coach at the Uni(far Jell, with u.atretcbed hlUids) durilla Saturday's leColld·I'OIIIId
versity of Kentuc9, and television
pme
aplut Sprlllafleld Clast way Red at Woodward Park Mid·
analyst Doug Collins turned down
die Scllool 1D tbe Colwubas suburb ol Beecllcrolt, wllere Edwarcll
overtures from the Hawt,s. - ·
wou 37-12 10 dalm tbe secoud ol ill two wiDs Ia lbe AAU 11-uclunder atrls' state touruameut •• (Seutluel photo by G. Spencer

Turlty pushes Logan
to fifth in preview

Renee Turley of Racine averaged nearly 16 ponts per game as
the Logan Lady Bobcats finished
tied for fifth out of 12 teams in the
Mid-Ohio Girls Basketball Preview
over the past week in Marion.
The Lady Bobcats defeated
Huber Heights 62-59 and Findlay
· 61-41 before losing to Southeastern
Ohio.
"Renee Turley may be frail in
stature, but she's got 1\ huge bean.
She never quits. She's going to be
one of the best players to ever
come out of Southern, " said
Cullen Ruuer, head coach of the
Lady Bobcats.
Turley shot 40% from the field
and scored 63 points for a IS.8
average per game. She also averaged seven rebounds from the
guard position.
An eighth-grader at Southern
Junior High School, J'urley also
shot SO% from the free throw line
and contributed team tournament
highs in steals with 23 and blocked
shots with 12. She had 10 assists.
Turley had 20 points qainst
Findlay, 17 against SEO, and 13
against both Huber Heighu and
New Riegel. In the final two games
she had nine rebounds and seveR
steals in each game.

OsllorH)

•

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'

'

Larry And~rsen '(3-l) got the
win by finishina the seveilth for
Jackson, llld Williams closed out
the Phillies' fourth win in five
games with a perfect ninlh .
Williams lias struggled with his
control lately. After workinl out
some problmls in his delivery over
the weekend, he came out throwing
strikes in a confideuce-builder
Tuesday - two strikeouts and a
routine fly ball to end lhe pme.
"This is the best I've felt all
year," said Williams, who has I 5
saves in' 19 opportunities. "It
doesn't matter how long you've
been at this, everyone wants to feel
confidenL"

.

t. . • ,'

SALEM CENTER A
- Tbe loiiowllla Sale• CIDter
Elemeutary Scllool stucteuts were rectally bwored as outsa"CCIaa
Sllowu are, from left, trout row, Stepllule J - , Brudy
Laudermllt, Kim Rltterbeck, T•-Y JoDeS, Stephaale Kopec:,
Amber Rousll, Mlcllelle Fort aad Auhrle Kopec:, m11t0t; back
row, COIICb C.D. Mcbtyre, Kim Plerfe, Rebebll SBiitla, Bridpt
Vaugtm, Lori Keu•isGa, Laura Payue, Amber Ganlller aDd Alils- .
tant Coach Jolm Smith.

•"letes-

KCLL team entry cutoff June 12
The Kyger Creek Little League
Tournament will run from July 16
to July 25 and be held at the Kyger
Creek Employees Club field on
S.R. 7 across from Ohio Valley
Electric Company's Kyger Creek
plant,
The first 26 notarized team rosters received will be entered into
the toumamenL Additional rosters
received will be placed on a waiting list. No all-star, traveling or
other teams viewed by toUrnament
directors as "special" teams will be
permitted to enter the toumamenL

BACK TO FIRST - Pblladelphia's Jim
Elsenreich (left) takes a long step back to first
base ahead or the tall by Cluciuuati first sacker

Randy MUiigau iu tLe ilxth 1Dniu1 of Tuesday
ni1ht's N•llonal League game in Ciocluuati,
where the PhUiies beat the Reds 6-3. (AP)

tWith two-homer help from Belle,

ATLANTA {AP) ~ Dei on
Sanders signed an $10.75 million,
three-year contract to play full·time
for the Allanta Braves.
The Braves had renewed his
contract for $1 million in March,
but that deal required him to
remain with the Braves only
through July 31.
Sanders, a Pro Bowl cornerb&amp;Ck
with the Atlanta Falcons, returned
to the Braves on May 21 after leaving the club three weeks earlier,
~nhappy with hi~ .lack of .Pil!yiilg

.Cleveland
hammers N.Y. Yankees 15.. 6
..
...
.,~

'

..

BJ •EN WALKER E·sinceNEW
YORK (AP)'- J!ver
he's been in the big leapJes,

;. ·

~bert Belle bu auracted a lot of

:; auention, albeit not always the type
•igfnotorietyhe'WI!Ited. ·

!:' .. Put it this way: Wben Belle

'

:.·Went to the oflicea of~ league
baseball Tuesday morning to
aPPeal his three-game suspension,
tlie receptionist remembefed him
by lllllne. ·
.' Belle, who has already served
(wo suspensions, witJ hear today
frOm American League president'
~Brown on whelher he'll be
penalized for fighting with Klllsas
:l(:ity pitcher Hipolito Pichardo la.!t
""' th.
~"rn ihe meantime, he's building
:Quite a reputation of another kind
)s a slugger. Belle homered twice
""'d drove in four runs in' leading
&amp; Clevellnd Intliaus put the New
;vort Yankees 15-6 Tuesday nighl
~~·· "I get my share of attention, but
;,then you're in last place, you tend

to get less," Belle said. "It's just
one of diose thinp."
Belle is malting it hard not to
tcnow what be's doing this season.
He leads the mlliDfs with 17 home
runsand48RBis.
And, like any aood competitor,
he knows Who'sciOaeto him. ·
"I know Juan Gonzalez is supposed to miss 10 days because of
his injtiry. And I know I was tied
1with Matt Williams for the most
home runs,'' he sUd.
"Everyone is pretty much aware
of where everyone stands," he
said. "When you 1oo1c at all of the
home run hitters, the Cansecos, the
McGriffs, the McGwires, it gives
you confidence to see yourself up
there with them."
While opposing pitchers cannot
stop Belle, Brown has the power to
bench hiln.
'
•'I hope I'm able to play tomorrow,'' Belle said. "Even if I'm not,
this - ·agood game to get in.
:
\

::;.
By JOE KAY
say he might be able to return with::·· CINCINNATI (AP)- Manager in three weeks.
:Davey Johnson knows firsthand
"It's a tribute to Chris ~t ~e
:,What it's.!ike to try to play with a played in all those games, sa1d
i!PJitured bact disc. That's why he Johnson, who ruptured a disc in a
:u; a lot of admiration today for 1978 col~. "He's been ':n a lot
:ciuis Sabo.
of pain. He didn't say anylhmg, he
'':' A medical test ·Tuesday found justwentoutandplayed"
~the Cincinnati Reds third baseUntil Monday, Sabo and short·
man had a slightly ruptured back stop Barry Larkin ~e the only
disc. The Reds put him on the IS- Reds who hadn't m1ssed a start.
day disabled list and called up third Although Sabo has had back prob~an WiUie Greene from Class lems over the last few years,
Ji1AA Ihtlianapotis
t1Km' s never been an indication it
• Sabo had a coitisone shot and was that serious.
will begin a therapy program to
The clue came Sunday, when
. ngthen his bact and abdomen Sabo couldn't bend over to f!Cid a
; surgery is planned and
grounder in a game against the
•
'
~
(Continued from Page 4)

doc:tm

"I think I presented a Jood case.
It was a fair hearing,' he said.

and the fll'St since Andre Thornton

on April 22, 1978, but grounded
out in the ninth inning.
Baerga, wlio drove in three runs,
and Belle each acon:d three times.
Reggie,Jefferson added a two-run
homer and also J,lnjve in three.
Cleveland matched iu highest·
scoring ~e of the ICISOII, a 15-5
routApril8 qainst the Yankees. In
that game, Baerga became the first
player in history to homer from
both sides of the plate in the same
inning.
Baerga is 9-for-18 egainst New
York this season. He showed off
his strong .arm too, throwing out a
runner at the plate who tried to
score from first base on Dion
James' bases-loaded double.
"He's hurt a lot of teams, not
just us,'' Yankees manqer Buck
Showalter said. ' 'But, he has done
well against us.''
The l!ldians stopped a foursame,tosmg streak ~- en~ New
York s four-game wmnmg sbing.

" I'm hoping to get it reduced,
maybe to no games.''
If Brown upholds .the suspension, it's uncertain whether it
would begin tonight, when Clevela!td egain plays at Yankee Stadi-

urn.

''It's been a real bone of contention around baseball lhat anylime someone gets suspended, they
come into New York to appeal it,
and the Mets or Yankees get to
reap the benefits of someone not
being available," Indians manqer
Mike Hargrove said
Belle started the day in a 1-for15 slump, but his three-run homer
higblighted a fi•e-run first inning.
He connected again for a solo shot
in the sixth.
Carlos Baerga contributed a
home run, triple and double, He
had a chanee to become die seventh
Indians player to h\1 fur the cycle,

New York Mets. A magnetic resonanee imaging test Tuesday found
the prob~ .
.
The IDJury Will cost the Reds
their top RBr man. Sabo has seven
homers-two.of~ grand sla_ms
- and has ~ven m a team-h1gh
32runsdespltea.233avemge.
The inJury gives Greene a
c~to~veh~~lfagainafter
a dismal spnng .tralnmJ.
.Greene. 21, IS ~dered one of
the Reds' best mmor-league
prospects and their third baseman
of the future. Sabo, 31, is a free
agent after this season, and the
Reds Jll'l)bahly will try to trim their
$42.8 rRillion payroll, the biggest
in the National League. Sabo
·

'Fr.ench Open ... __;:.:.::.::.:....:_ __:__.:.._ _....-__________ _

SHOES
SlloeStore

makes $3.1 million.
Greene ·hit .269 with a pair of
homers and 13 RBis after his callup last September, but showed up
for trainin¥ camp overwei&amp;ht and
was cut quicldy. He hitjust _.18S. in
42 games for lnd1anapohs w1th
seven homers, 19 RBIS and 43
slrikeouts in 135 at-bats.
He sa!d he's .tost ~b~ut 12
pounds smce spnng tra!nmg, an
1mprovement that waau t lost on
his teammates. One of them walked
by him Tuesday in the clubhouse
and said, "Willie, it's about time
youlostabout20pounds."
Greene said the weight wasn't a
problem.

"I stilrfeel the same,' ' he said.
" I don't think the weight was a

factor."

General manager Jim Bowden

-

~

f new, I was on serve, and from with a double fault, she served
" She was Just/laying too
dlen it was a baUie until the end.
' another double on the next point well," Cilpriall sai . "How can
' "It is definitoly the biggest and lost the game when Fernan~ you trY to hit the balls deep and try
oomeback in tny career in a big hit a forehand winner to make it 5- to dictate ber when she is on top of
Aent like this. It will definitely go 2.
everything right off the baL She is
.4)Jwn in my career as a huge
serving at 5-3, Sabatini failed to hitting it hatd, hittinF. ·it from side
lllch ..
conven three more match points. A to side. She didn t make any
FerMndez' comeback oversbad· fifth match point came and went in ~.··
4iwed top-seeded S teffi Graf' s the next game, and suddenly FerCourier eppeared headed for a
Sharp 6-3, 7-5 quarterfinal victory nandez had won the tielre8ker and quick victory when he breezed
(j;ier No. 6 Jenriifer Capriati. Also the match was in a lhird let.
tJuough the frrst set in 25 minutes
ancing were No. 2 Arantxa
Fernandez had a 1118tch point at while losina just 10 pOints. Prpic
hez Vlc:ario, who ousted Jans S-4 in the third set, but Sabatini took the pace off the ball and
V0111a 6-2, 7-5, IJid No. 8 Alike scored with a backhand volley. seemed to lull Courier to sleep in
ftuber, who rallied to defeat No.4 Sabatini saved two more match the second ICL
~chita Martinez 6-7 (2-7), 6-4,
points with Fernandez ahead 6-5
"Suddenly he wasn't hittin' the
and another at 8-7.
ball any more,'' Prpic said. 'He
·~ Thursday's semifinals will pit
At 9-8, Sabatini double faulted was just staying back at the base·
Oraf vs. Huber and Sanchez to give Fernandez her fifth 1118tch line and pushing the ball back."
point. Fertllndez jumped 011 a short
Yicario VI. Femlndez.
Couner recovered to win the
,. Two-time defending clwnpion ball and hit a bachkand approach third lllllatlove and moved out to a
llm Courier teiChed the final four down the line 10 end the mlllch.
2-0 lead in the fourth. Prpic
. tid! a 6-L, 4-6, 6-0, 7-S, win over
Graf's eenla' court vletory &lt;Mr chipped IWIY and climbed back to
O!laeeded Oonn Prpic. Aflclwadl, Capristi luted I:25. The two-time a !-4 lead. Courier broke for 6- S,
Gourier bluted tournament offi- champion pabbed command in the then served out the match in the
Piala for achedulina him to play rust set wlien lhe 1mib for a 3-2 next game wid! a Jerviee winner.
lead after Capriati led 4().(),
twO days iDa row.
"['didn't need 10 play today,''
The third-aeeded Sabatini wu
Capriati came back stronaJy in Courier said. "It's u simple u
lin auch a rolllhll jult about every- the leCOiid set IJid moved to a S-4 tbal. But the fact of the matller is
line aaaumed abe had dte match lead. Serving for the set, she was they don' t care what I think. They
•on. aervina It 3-1 in the IIICOIId broten at love u Graf won dlree just care about their pm:ious liale
aeL After blowing one mllcll point games in a row to finish the match. 'I'V and their achedule."

••

"
"

· Postmarks beginnmg May 12
will be used to determine the
sequence rosters are received. The
cutoff date for accepting rosters
and the $10 entry fee IS June 12.
The tournament directors will
meet with team managers or representatives for the bracket drawing
and rules review on July 12.
Registration forms will be made
available through area league JRSI·
dents. For more information, call
tournament chairman Don Bameue
at 1-304-675-6713.

Sports briefs

!

'

FIRST DAY OF PICKING
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2 - 8 a.m ••·l2 Noon

,,

enL"

'=Ruptured disc puts Sabo on IS-day disabled list

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Come ride the berry wagon to and from the field.

JEFF WARNER

Milligan.
The Reds didn't get much off
former ~ate Danny Jackson,
w.ho's beateu every NL team
except them. The left-bander shut
the Reds out for the first five
innings, holding a 3-0 lead, then
escaped a threat in the six lh with
Qllly one run because of his catch·
er,
With one out and runners on
~~ond arid third, Reggie Sanders
\;Jipgled to center. Lenny Dykstra
~~lded alid lhrew .a one-hop strike
NIOme. Milligan, trying to score
second to make it 3-2, saw
lton standing in front of the
lite and flinched.
~ · He remembered bis encounter
~With Daullon in Philadelphia Cartier
tthis season. Milligan_slid into his
~in guard and was out, and his
P1tllee was sore for weeks. So he
f-decided that this time, he would
~wlthe~over. .

ward Park Midclle Sclloollll t1te Cul•llal .U!i-e
urh of Beechcroft. K-H•a are (L-R) Brody '
Adams, Courtuey Cag, Lisa Morris, Carrie :
Fussner ud Adrleuue McCabe. Staudlll&amp; are ·
Alisha Rojas, Darcy Clark, Rebecca Daltoa; ·
Karl Elsuauate, Amauda Daltou IUld Jull Hay-~
mau. (OVP photo)

EDWARDS AAU TEAM - After wiDDlna
two out of three COIItestll llllbe opeuilla rouuda

89 4 lb.

M '

anythinJ,'' he said. " I'm llad to be
playing the game, alid glad to be
playing for a te1111 lila's wilinina.
11-very night it's someone differ-

1:'

Pick Your·
Own
Fresh
Strawberries.

A_._IAiaue
Cl.EVI!l.AND INDIANS: Ae&lt;juited
1-.J 11ananote., pildlo&lt;, l'mn lho Son
Dieso Plcbelfor Tncy Sa-, oWidd-

Trouble was, he didn't tuive to. Fregosi said. " lie hasn 't gotten a
If he'd slid behind him, lie proba· lot of.wins, but he's kept us in
bly would have been safe. Instead, · nearly every game he's pitched.
he was out - and then dut of the I'm lllalty happy with his perfor• pme with a aore bllck.
lll8llee-"
"It's my fault for notllliding,''
Freii
' is lhrilled with EisenreJlofilligan said. "If I'd bave sfid, ich, a
cufielder who's hil·
maybe it would have been differ- ting .3S9. e singled in the go.ent. In Philadelphia, there wu a u.t run oft' Greg Cadaret (1·1) in
simil.. play. I've stili ·sot a 113'. I · the top of the eighth, his fifth hit in
said dill wouldn't happen apia. "
his last ICVCII at-bats.
Different tactic, same result.
Cadaret tried 10 outsmart EisenNext, it was E.iaerueich's turn to reich by tbrowinJ him a fastball
play hero.
instead of a ~g baD. EisenreJackson gave up a two-out, two- ich '1181 too smart for thaL
run single to the slumping Kevin
"I boDed he'd be looking for a
Mitchell - ' hittin~~: iust .186 since slider tliere ·and swin' late, "
May 17 :.... 10 tie it in the seventh. Cadaretsaid "He wasn 't. •
Manager Jim FI'CIOSi wun 't too
Eisenreich signed with the
upset-Jackson (4-2) has given up Pbillies as a free agent last January
three earned runs or less in each of just fuoking to play occasionally.
his last five SIIW.
He's made II starts in right field
"Danny got a little tired in the and is enjoying himself immensely:
se~enth and ·g-~t ~he ~all up,' '
"I'd SIIY I'm mORI blessed than

rest of the NL East is doing
that,. The surprising Phillie5 lead
the division by seven 11111es, the
rust time since 1981 that they've
gOne into June alone in first pJaee.
And the reasons were all on dis·
pia,&gt;: Tuesday - good defense,
solid pitchinJ• clutch hitting aud
even a little mtimidation. Just ask

- • Transactions • -

2.S
3.5 •

l.S

1~

REbs: Placoo! ChriJ

R-aool lloua B...,.,\ pildlw,l'mn La

ThurSday's e011test

Lou;.

(Oobomo :1'2),1:35 p.m.
PS.u.buqh (Wapcrl ·l) ., Colorado
(Rulftoll · 2), 9 ~ p.m.

CINCINNATI

v-

Ton12ht's contest

Todu's conleltl

N-U..Oe
All.ANTA BRAVEf: N101ool John
V1111 Om\D adftDot 100UL
CIIICAOO CUBS: Tndool Healhdilf
Slacumb, pildlot, 1&lt;1 1be a...taM lndi·
anafai'Jo.Ou-,.epder

Thunday's cooChica1o (McCukill. :1-.S) at Detroit
(M. Leilor:J.I),2~p.m.
Milwaubo ~ ]..3) at X..O...
City (Oudoor 3-2).1:3S p.m.

- • NBA playoffs • -

Floddi7,Sool'luldlco3, 1Apme
San Pra.cilclo '· Flmida 3, 2nd pmc

w.....
Calllaada ...........
..:l'lltaMa Cily ........ ..26
o.koto&gt;·"""""'"""2S
T... ....................25
s-lo ................l.S
Mi
. . .. ... .......21
o.tland ...............211

City (Applcr 5-4) at B01ton

(Clan&lt;u 6-4), 6~ p.m.
Clicqo (Beoo 0.1) ll Douolt (MooJo
3-1)~7~_p_.m. IU!Vl!U.ND (M. Y - 0.3) "Now

(B-4-2),1:05 p.m.

s.. p,

T-

COD-

Baldmooo (Valonzuela l·l) ll OaJdOnd
(B. Wial·2l. 3 :l~p.m.
MilwallkH (Eldred 6-S) at Seattle
(l'kmlaa 0-0), 3:3l p.m.
~ ••

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

.

has refused to trade Greene, who's

often mentioned by other teams.
Greene doesn't think his poor
spring training and stint with lndianapotis have hurt his status with ·
the front office.
" If he'd lost faith in me, I
would nbt be here,'' Greene said
Johnson decided to use Jeff
Branson at third base qain Tuesday , mainly because he didn't
know much about Greene. Branson
went 3 for 4 in a 6-3 Joss to lhe
Philadelphia Phillies. '
But Oreene will gel a chance
during Sabo's absence.
"I know a liUie bit more about
Jeff than about WiUie,'' Johnson
said "I've aeen the repcJIU on hun
and I know the orpnization 's high
on him.''
Branson, 1 utility infielder,
expects Gteene to get more games
at third base, which is Greene's
aatural position. Branson also
knows tbal the front office bu high
reprll for Greene.
' "l'h81. 1111 • lot 10' do with it,..
B11111011 llid. "His future is play. lug up here. That's why they've got
to let him in die ~· lbere'sno
doubt he C111 handlll iL '

~

'

'

'·

time and contract nelollalions,
Sanders, 25, is hitting .294 wid! a
homer and six RBis in 21 gameS
this season.
llaRbaU
DETROIT (AP) - The American League is in.vestigating the
conduct of Seattle's Ken Griffey .
Jr., who cursed and gestured at
Detroit manqer Sparky Anderson
after homering Sunday night, The
homer was his only hit of the threegame series in which the Tigers
walked him six times.

�By The Bend

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine

Rutland

Jolm C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate ProfeSsor
of
Medicine

By Jolm C. Wolt, D.O. ~~

ate ProteiiOI' of Family Medicine .
0~ UaiYenity CoUeae of Osteo-

pathlc Medlcille

; Question: My previoos doctor,
~ho has now retired. used to give
me Bl2 shots every month. My new
doctor doesn't believe Bl2 would
h~lp !DY condition, ~o he d~n't
gtve tt to me. Why IS Bl2 gtven,
and why did my previous doctor
give it to me and my new one
won't? Answer: Vitamin Bl2 , also
called cobalamin, is necess•ry for
good health. Lack of this essential
nutrient results in seveml problems,
the most common of which are
anemia, mental confusion, a loss of
proper functioning of tbe nerves
(particularly those that control the
legs) and a sore tongue.
1 think that it is safe 10 assume
that ~~vious doctor gave you
B12
he or she thought you
had one or more of the symptoms
of Bl2 deficiency. The laboratory
iests available today are much bet·
ler for determining cobalamin defi.
ciency than those used just a few
years ago. Yout new doctor has
undoubtedly done one of tbese tests
and determined that you do not
need the Bl2 shots.
Despite your experience, cobalumin defic~ncy is. relativ~ly common, affecnng 10 percent or more
of selected populabon groups. It is
most common among older poople,
particularly those who are fmil and
debilitated, but it is not limited to
this age group. Anyone, at any age,
can have thts problem. And new
research has shown that the first
symptom 1of cobalamin deficiency
may be nervous system problems.
Docton used 10 think that anemia
·was always the key element in an
early diagnosis of cobalamin defi·
~ ciency. Now we know that anemia
may develop at a laler stage or not
at all.
The nervous system abnormalities that result from cobalamin
• deficiency include the loss or
decrease of sensation in the feet
and lower legs, frequent stumbling
: and difficulty walking, and even
difficulty with memory of recent
~ events. Of course there are other
illnesses that can produce these
same symp~oms. The important

•

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, June 2, 1993
Page-7

·h·alumni award scholarshi s to five area students

- ·-r~

- Nearly 200 Rutland High
Si:lklol gmduates returned Saturday
night for the annual Rutland Alum·
iii Association bllnquet·and dance
(leld at the Rutland Civic Center.
• Decorations carried out the n:d
and ·black colors of the scbool
which closed in 1968 following
consolidation of Pomeroy, Middle- .
pon and Rutland into the Meigs
Local School District. Richard
Dugan, president, welcomed the
alumni and guestS before ~ blln·
quet served by Sonja's Country
Kitchens. Red and black placemats
featured the Red Devil mascot.
Roberta Smith Meyer led the group
in the sinpg of the alma maler.
Spec:ial guest at the banquet was
James Vennari, a coach and teacher
at ltutland. He was recognized and
spoke briefly on his yean 8l Rut·
MICHELLE YOUNG
land High. Others recognized were
Jeny Brogan, who bave
. led the far.
Scholarships Awarded
Alu111nl AtteDdin&amp;
thest, and Beatrice Pond Reinhart
Five scholarships of $250 each
Alumni at the banquet were
of the class of 1922, the oldest
alumni attendin$. ~en Haynes were awarded at the banquet to !he Vernon Alvis, Gladys Amsbury,
Meadows was wmner of the door sons daugblerS or gmndchildren Gamet Rice Bachner, Duane R.
of alumni.
Barr, Ann Weavt:1 Barren, Adrian
jlrize.
Receiving the scholarships and · Barton, Andy Banon, Dane R. BarNew officers elected were
James R. Sheets, president; Bill their qualifying parent were Kevin ton, Marie Bildtfield. Barbara DilWilliamson, vice president; Sally Lambert, son ofJames P. Lambert, Jon Black, Roger R. Black, Ronald
Williams Lainbert, secretary; and class of 1965, and June Jarvis E. Black, Alan Blackwood, Max
Mowery, class of 1967; Michelle Bolen,.Janet Turner Bolin, Joe
Dottie Lucus T'urner, treasurer.
It was noaid that the 30 banQuet Young, daughter of Diane Holliday Bolin, Ruth Tillis Bower, Thomas
tables approved for purchase last ....Young, and Ronnie Young, both of P. Brewer, Jerry Brogan, Charles
had been purchased and were the class of 1968: Deborah Alkire~ William Buck, Jr., Harold Carson,
daughter ofCharldine King Alkire, Larry D. CarsOn, Virginia Carson,
muse·this year.
·
class of 1964, and Roger Alkire, Joe CbapiiUID, Leroy R. Chapman,
class of 1967; Linda Ch~~~san, Martha~. Edith A. dart.
daughter of Joe Chapman,
of
Joan Corder, William G. Coy,
1963; Melissa Kuhn, gnmddaugh- Barb Cremeans, Dan Cremeans,
1er of Edwin Nelson, class of 1944
Ancil B. Cross, Wilma Davidson,
Chester Council No. 323 and Goldie Knous Nelson, class of Clyde DaviJ, Marcia Dennison,
DaughlerS of America met recently 1945.
Nell Rice Dicken, Ruby Diehl,
at the ball with Betty Young, counLambert was co-valedictorian, Gerald Drenner, Rebecca J. Haley
cilor.
, Young was salutatorian, and Drenner, Melanie Dudding,
_
..
·
u1ar
Alkire, and Chapman, honomrians, Ricbanl Paul Dugan, Maxine Rum.
The meeb ng open.,.. 10 reg
in the 1993 graduating class of field Dyer, Jenea Hayes Dyke,
.81f?:O.and officers reports were . Meigs High School. Kuhn is a Jobn Dyke, Judy Hayes Eads,
.
graduate of Wiynedale High P.atrick Eads, Margaret Smith
Edwards, Dorothy Colwell
: NationaI an d state 0 ff •cers School at Apple Creek..
.·received inclucled Dorothy Ritcbie

point is that cobalamin deficiency

IS a preventable cause.

Cobalamin deficiency may
result from eating a diet that provides an inadecjuate amount of this
essential n~tn.ent. Jt .is found in '
abundance m liver, milk, fish and
shellfish. Individuals that eat a
stric~ vegetarian die~ are 8l particuJar risk for developmg this COIIdilion. More often, however, cobalamin deficiency is due to a loss of
the body's ability to absorb this
nutrient mther than to diCWf causes. This absotption problem ts most
common in the elderly. Therefore,
those over 65 years of age, particularly if they are frail, should be
checked for low levels of cobal· amin.
A recent study done at the Denver V.A. Medical Center and University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado,
found that 14.5 pereentofindividua1s age 65 and older who were seen
as outpatients bad cobalamin deficiency. The study also showed that
measurement of blood levels of
cobalamin alone may not be &amp;dequate to delermine which individuals need tteatment with Bl2 shots.
The researchers recommend that
the urine also be tested for the
byproducts . of
cobalamin
metabolism, methylmalonic acid
and homocysteine.
Cobalamin defiCiency is a serious concern because the problems
it causes are completely preventable but only partially treatable
once symptoms have begun. li:t
addition, Bl2 shots, which is the
only treatment for those with
impaired absorption of this nutri·
ent, aren't a perfect solution. The
anemia and sore tongue symptoms
clear up once the amount of cobalamin in the body is restored to normal. Unfonunately, the nervous
system damage that can result ftom
it does not. So, in cobalamin deliciency. as in most conditions, prevention is much better than the
cure.
"Family MI!Ciicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
Ohio University CoUece or Osteopathle Medidne, Gl'OIVenor Hall,
AtlleDS, Ohio 45701.

nr

rear

Daughters of
Amen,·Ca meet

: ~~~= ~~.':'J:Cde;n;;,.

Smiths travel .

UNDA CHAPMAN

Emmons, Eugene Fink, James
Fink, Katy F:ink, William Gates,
Avanell George, Fred George,
Eileen E. Gerton.
-Charlotte Birchfield' Grant,
David Grate, Donna Williams
Grueser, Jr.nes E. Grueser, Nancy
Lambert Haddox, Lelia Kitchen
Haggy, Charlotte Harrison Harper,
Joyce E. Hlad, Danny Holliday,
Robert Holliday, Tom Hysell,
Kathy Simmons Jeffers, Thomas E.
Jeffers, Janet Ogdin Jones, Vivian
L. Jones, Carrie Johhnsoli
Kennedy, Esther Tillis Kel)nedy,
Perry Kennedy, Burnie Frank
Knapp, Peggy L. Kuhns, Carence .
Lambert, James Lambert, Sally
Williams Lambert, William Lamben, James C. Lanning, Sue Dugan
Little. Doullas Long.
K~nneih Longstreth, Joan
SnowdenMay,SantuelBruceMay,
Daniel Wesley McDonald, Judith
C. McDonald, Judy Brogan McEIroy, Loretta Harless McQuade,
Karen Hayes Meadows, Roberta
Smith Meyer, Virginia Moroe

Michael, Nancy 'J. Michels, Dr.
· Cloyd M. Million, Alberta Mont·
gomery, Caude Montgomery, Larry
Montgomery, Linda S. Montgomery, John MontgOmery; Carl E.
Morris, Janet Theobald Morris,
Paul Musaer, Delma Ri~s Nelson,
Donna Nelson. Edwtn Nelson,
Goldie Nelson, Jim Nelson, Ronald
Nicholson, Margaret Wells Parsons, Paul L. Patterson.
Rose SlaWier PlllterSOII, Carol F.
Pierce, Harry H. Plummer, Bob
Pope, Rosemary Pope, .Sharro·n
Pratt, Sharon K. Pratt, Judson H.
j&gt;rice, Tim Priddy, Geraldine Reed,
Beatrice Reinhart, Dave Rice,
Harold Rice, Marjorie Rice,
Marigie Priddy Rife, Ronald Rife,
Carl&gt;lyn Riggs, Rodney Riggs, Mil·
dred Riley, Emma CarofRousb,
Linda Brogan Russell, Gerald J.
Saxton, Jim Sheets, Carl E. Shenefield, Catheriog Shenefield, Ronald.
E. Siders, Shirley J. Simons, Phillis
Simpkins, Hiram Slawter. Giles

Middleport native receives doctorate

MELISSA KUHN
Smiih, DatrcU. E. Smith.
. Roben Smith, Sandm K. Smith,
· Shirley Dugan Smith, ltobert E.
Smith, Sr., Glenna Lambert Snow4eo. Harry E. Snowden, Robert F.
Snowden, John Snowden, Beattice
. Stephenson , Donald Swisher,
Dorothy Taylor Mildred From
Teledo, Kathleen Tillis, Naomi
Carroll Tillis, Irene Grueser Tom,
Sue Turner, Ann Webster, Leroy
Welsh, John Werner, Kenneth Wilicox, Raymond Wilcox, Kim Wil·
ford, Ray Wilford, Norman Will.
Mildred Williams,
Bill
Williamson, Eleanor · Hill
Williamson, Tom L. Williamson,
John Wise, Joan · Rife Wolfe,
Dorothy Ledlie Woodard, Diane
Holliday Young, and Prank Young.
MusiC for dancing following the
dinner was by Mike Morrison alid
Swing Shift Band. Plower armngements for the tables were provided ·
by the Rutland Frieadly Gardeners
and the Rutland Garden Club.

Sunday school class meets
· The Faithful Servants Sunday
School Class of the Racine First
Baptist Church met recently at the
.home of Bill and Laura Cozan for
a potluck dinner and class meeting.
Attending were Ivan and Carolyn Powefl, Rod and Marjorie
Grimm, Bob and Martha Lou Beegle, Lin and Mildred Hart, George
Holman, John and Naomi Stobart,
Frank and Delores Cleland, Dale
and Wilma McGraw, Sam and'

Mary Curtis, Dave, Linda and Selena Spencer, Esther Metcalf, Bill
and Laura Cozart.
The blessing was aiven by
Prank Cleland. A sbon buainess
· followed dinner with pro;:1?or the ·summer beina discussed.
The next dinner llld class meeting will be held at the home of Bob
and Martha Lou Beegle on June 26
816p.m.

Mr. mid Mrs. William F. Smith
Will Slater received the. doctor assistant proressor of psycholo~.
mittee; Charloue Gt:ant, state pub- Jr., Newark, and Mrs. Ellen Smith, of philosophy degree in educaticrtal He is a 1969 graduate of Metgs
: licity committee; and Joann Baum, Middleport, recendy visited Coal psychology/research ftom the Uni- High Scbool, a 1975 graduate of
state inside sentinel. Each officer River, W.Va., and Wbite House, v~ityo(AlabamaonMay 15.
Rio Grande College, and a 1983
waspresenteidagift.
W.Va. Also traveling with them
Dr. Slater's parents, Mr. and grad.uate of United Theological
Margaret Amberger and Zelda were Mrs. Sharon Conisford, Mrs. William Slaler of Middleport, Semmary.
·
Alexandria; Mrs. Patty Fry, and his SOliS, Matthew and Dylan,
An ordained United Methodist
Webc:rwerereportednotwell.
Members were invited to the Newark; and Mr. and Mrs. T.E. attended the commencement pro- minister, he will be preaching on
·Belpre Hill for a potluck on June Spires, Defiance. The visited sis- gram. .
Suqday at the Pomeroy United
14 at 6:30 p.m. to celebrate the ters, brothers and mother of Mrs.
Dr. Slater is currently teaching Methodist Olurch.
joq of anotherloclp.
Ellen S!nith.
.., .J _
at Bluf(lQn College_ :wbere be is . ·' ·,
. ·•
1'he dislrict cleputiea .and ·mem-·- · :..·:..
·- _..:.,.~,.;-·-:1;:.-..10ii!::.::....:;"-'-~-""..;:;.7, ==i~r-==~=::.:....::.:...::.......,;.:.7"__.;;....._____...,..._'--.,.....,:------.,.....-..,...._..._------~bers picnic wiD be June 26 at the
••
park m Logan 81 noon.
•
Flag bearers escorted Laura Mae
Nice to the altar where she was : ·
presented a 50 year pin.
·
Greta Riffle was awarded a
$3,000 gmnt ovt:1 the yean by the
DaughlerS of America.
A cake walk was held by the
home and orphans committee and
Wo Rodeo"' Fodotd Food Slampo
Alta Ballard and Betty DeMy were
Guantity Rigllts Ro•~
. the winners.
: The 57th anniversary of the.
l)augbters of America was noted.
Ada "Bissell was presented a flower
and her sister, Mae McPeek read
Opal Hollon, state credential com-

A .TASTEOF

Each

lb.
JUMBO 12 SIZE

U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED

Texas cantaloupes

Genuine Ground Chuck

hera~m.

.flower and her daughter read her a

~!en Wolf sang "Just One Lit-

tle Candle."
· . JoAnn Bawn made and decOi'al·
ed the cake.
Two other charter members are
Ada Mcx:ris 8l the Pomero)" Nursing and Rehabilitation Center and
Zelda Weber who recently had

•

Community·Calendar
WEDNESD.\Y
RACINE - Vacation Bible
School will be held at the Racine
United Methodist Church through
Friday from 9-11 a.m. daily. All
children are welcome.

Plains. will hold a spriitg yard sale
Thursday through Saturday in the
church basement. Hot dogs and
drinks will be sold and there will
be a bake sBie. Proceeds will be
used for vacation bible sch901.

MIDDLEPORT • County dance
classes will be offered by the Middleport Arts Council beginning
Wednesday. BegiMers and intermediate classes starts at 7:30 p.m.
and advanced dancers-are 10 report
at8:3() p.m. The cost is $7 per couple and to register or for further
information, call992-2675.

RACINE • Racine American
Legion Post 602 will meet Thursday at the post home. Dinner will
be at 6:30 p.m. with meeting afler.
The post will have a bean dinner
Saturday beginning at noon. The
cost is $2.

CHESTER · Chester Garden
Club will hold its open meeting
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
Chester United Methodist Church.
Betty Mizikio will be guest Speaker
on prize winning slides of OAGC
convention winners.

•JJ

.

~~·meeting closed in regular

12-Pack
12-oz. cans

·•I

Cantaloupe·
'

lach
First of The Season

Betty Biggs.

'

3·/b.

CAFFEINE FllEE DIET COKE, DIET COKE,

IIECULAR

spotlight sean CoHee
•

Sentinel

Sflfl/TE OR

coca Cola Classic

1-LB.. . $1.09

Classifieds ·
992-2156
•
•••

•.
'

"IN THE OELI·PASTRY SHOPPE"
llEADY TO EAT

Armour star
Meat Wieners

••

Deli Fried
Chicken

1-lb. Pkll.

sur , ••..,..,. o••

••

.

'·

: DOWIIING CIILDS
MULUN MUSSER

.:
1

k INSUUNCE
:111 Secantl St., POIItl'.:t

B·Pieces ·

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak

·YO.IIIDEPIIIDE
IIIIlS 111¥111

••tscou•n

•'

Lll.

SINCE 1168

'•

.

lceCold

Reel Ripe Cut
Water111elon
Ouatt.n, and
Eighth's

Lll.
USDA Choice ~ Beef Loin

.

Halves,

c

2·Ltr.

Bag

..

California
Peaches

•

Regular, Diet and Caffeine Free Diet

Worrel Classics.
Soft Drinks

Great For Cookouts

Foocl Clu•
Pork ·

''

12 Pack
12oa.Cana

':.

;
'

Texas Grown

fonn.
Refreshments were served to
Jean Fredrick, Alta Ballard, Ada
Bissell, Mae McPeek, Laura Nice,
Goldie Fredridc, Lillian Demoslty,
Betty Denny, Doria Koenig, Eliza.
Jiedt Hayes, Helen Wolf, Brma Oelitnd, Etllel Orr, Charlotte Grant,
Gpal Hollon, Lora Damewood,
Esther Smith,· Everett Orant, Mary
Barringer, JoAnn Baum, Mary
Holter, Thelma White, Betty
Young, Leta Krautter, Jean Welsh,
Dorothy Ritchie, Sandy White and

MIDDLEPORT • Evangeline
Chaplet No. 172, Order of the East·
ern Star, Middleport, will have
officers practice Thursday at 7:30
p.m. All officers are to atleild.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. Virgie Bumgardner will
POMEROY · ,Pomeroy Masonic install officers. Everyone urged to
Lodge No. 164 F&amp;A~ meets atleild.
Wednesday. 7:30 p.m., Middleport
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Masonic Lodge.
Group of AA will meet Thursday 81
7 p.m. at Sacred Hean Catholic
LONG BOTTOM • Revival, Mt. Church. Call 992-5763 for inforOlive Community Church, Long mation.
Bottom, Wednesday through Sunday, 7 p.m. nigbdy. David CroweD,
. POMEROY - Meigs PERI
Ravenna, Mich., evangelist. Public group will meet Thursday at 1 p.m.
invited.
. at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. All members attend.
THURSDAY
RVILAND • Rutland Township
REEDSVIT.LE - Eastern AthletTrustees meet Thursday at 6:30 ic BOOSim meet Thursday at 8:30
p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station. p.m. at the high school cafeteria.
Public invited. '
ROCK SPRINGS • The Salis·
.TUPPERS PLAINS • United bury Township Tll18tees will meet
Methodist Women of St PatJI Unit- Th..-sday at 7 p.m. 8l the township
ed Methodist Church, Tuppers building in Rock Springs.

Top Fresh

Elizabeth Hayes was presented a

PARTICIPANT • People&amp; Bank of Middleport was a participant with Midclleport Elementary School in the Partners In Educatkul program durin&amp; the 1992-93school year. Pictured are Don
Hanning, principal ol Middleport elementary; Emma Jatie Paugh,
manager or· Peoples Bank and Caltlyn Graziaao-Runyon and
Cassie Lee, students.
.
,

•

••

'r

'·o'

'

I

'\J

�The

Sentinel

The

3 Announcernenl8

PEPSI
COLA
PRODUCTS
.

STORE HOURS .
.Monday tin Suaday

T·•

. -:

CLUB

. i IN PoMEROY
8:46p.m.
• Special Early Bird
5100 Payoff
Thla ad good for 1
·FREE card.

Lie. No. 0051-32

Middleport,
Po•royf ·R1ci1t,
RutlaiMI,MaiH

Call992-2156

R.C •.
COLA
.
PRODUCTS

MON! lhru FRJ~ 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.S-12:

4:30 P. &amp; DAY BEFORE
"BLICAnON

'

•

'I,.LL 992·6123

• Acllea..W. tiM eouty yav ad I'UIIII •a~l M F P.W
• Reeebe di.co1111t for ada paid iD ad..oae.·
• Frio Ado: GI-""Y ud F.....! adl uod• 15 -rdo wUII1e :
I'UII3 dayo at 110 . _.
• Prloo el ad for .U capilal leUen It double Pflce ol od - •
• 7 poiatllao typo ..Jy ......
•
• S..tlllollo- ...P.,..
for ort'On after r - day(..... :::
for ornnllnt day
Ito paper). Cal looforo 2:00 P·•· ';;

COUPON

24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

Ireas

CLOSED SUNDAY .

POUClES

Good For '2.00 Qll ·
One Reg. '6.00 Haircut From

·Reasonable Rates.
Dependable
Service

u...
od.....,.

HIGLEY'S BARBER SHOP
1587 Slate AI. 7 N. , Gallipolis, OH.

&lt;lay oft. paWioatioa to atabcornclloll

By Appolntment · 1 ·81~
Otter Good Thru July 31, 1993

; •;

od•-...

SUNSHINE
DOG FOOD
20 LB.

ROUND STEAK••~!:

.

$169

fo"'*ins telepliofiiJ e:~Cchontfe•...

S674' .'b•

Po-ror

388-Vbttoa

985 G cer

245-RioGn....
256-G.ym Dlot.
Ma....Ardla Dlot.

MS-Portlaad
247-Lotut F.U.
949-Rodae
742-LdaM
667...Coolwlle

379-Wol,.,.t

Card of Thanks

DUNCAN .HINES

CAKE MIX
BOX

c
JIFFY CORN
MUFFIN
VALLEY BELL ·
$189
MIX
2% MILK.•.•...•~!~.... ·. ·
.
8!12 oz.

·
.

I
I
II
I
I
I

DOMINO SUGAR

s)69

Good~

Olfer

Sill.

Pow.ll'a super Valu
30 thru June &amp;, 111113

Limit

DOUBLE
CHEESE PillA
2801.

.r

KOOLAID

11

11

11

1a:!fO/J99Coz.
.

IIII
I

'Good
Olfer

I1

II
I

..BEEF

IIII

II
l1I

$299

34J

.oz.

liiiii------------------

II
II
1

~

- - "UUPOI
~:.-------il
IF~·-~~-----------,

. CHARMIN BATH TISSUE
12 ROll

PIG.

lI

$279

II

.,
Powell'• super Valu ·

III

QOO.Cf Mil¥ :30 lhru June 6, 11183

90

·

GROUND
CHUCK
10 POUNDS

s

90

•

, ....,.• .,State RL 7

(614) 992-7878

Gallipolis

6 14·446·0736

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

. Steel Fabrication ·
and Weldi~g

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

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

IEYIN1 S Uft
llllmiWICE
949·2391.,

·Shade.River Saddle Shop
'

1·10N37·1460

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER 'REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

2 fro•t Struts • Lallor
• 4 Wllttlllip•••
PrlcH Startf11g ..

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree

1 129.95

I

+Tax

Trimming &amp; Removal
IRellklllniMIIA ComiiWGIIIII
FREE ESTIIIATEI

1, 2, ,

141, I To ? Clolheo, F - .

Chester, Oh. 45720

36358SR7

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity
"""'~- u 11u.. Out

PomeiOy,

lldd'aF art
&amp; VIcinity

..

,.....,...,.~-:-.~
. . .. t:=.:::r;.:::r~t.~-~~
.

=-.
lljllll.

I='·...._=-:t:.:· c
1

High Cllllr,

985-3406

......

2Dllw,
Fooiti)J
: 141,
II Dobblo
U Yllrd
llll•CUI
....... 1n1ni,._._
day ..... Hot l:otd . _ . . - -

3/8/lfn

l';:============:::;~,
Ckll
.... - .._
.....
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2 Filii~:
1:'1....~

20+ lliiiiiJ
" " •""
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eoror ........
KeyoiOM
Ill

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=-

..... _....._
_ , - 121•
...,..
.....

1!:'tr:
.:= :Zi
w~ llll!lnl door, lid,
._.....,
__ _

T.: •: IMw::. ·- - - - - 1 1 0 - - ..... hold

He.

-.•~~oma-.-

"-::::..:1.::.•..::-31'11:::·.:.
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·~~-::a

I. I 111

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""1,::::1"F-:':="''~:::7::=::7.-:-

--:-..,....,':!-

_, CNolt Road, I
0ut J ... , . Ancllnd, ..... .._

i i - ..... -

ForlllgnL

Adw•w.

3 -1'1 Yllrd lolo: - . Ill,
Tlturo, Ill. Drive 011
'11M
.
!J1or1111t
CNidi-, Ckld*.. - ·

• - In
D•••:Ill I:Oarlott
1111
.. .. .....

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

~ -1 .. t:CIIIpoll ~
llooldoii
10 X •
7 ..,. 0

=-.. .

~~~-~~...., ~.:::=..,""':::
I , _ , Juno, Jnd.lnl. 2 Ill!
cJut :Ill, On lllglll, .....

TUPPIERII PUJIII 2 olory frame home !hat hal been very
well taken eare of. lncludel 3 bedrooms, balh, , _ wiring, 2
fi....,._., 1+ acre with nice lenoed back ywd. REDUCED
to $45,000 owner may IICC8pt an ofterl
·

-.Ill-. c:..pot.

Stone

.SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614·992· ·
6637
St. Rt. 7

c•···ire,.

MiDDLEPORT· Spacious 10 room horne with 5 bedrooms,
2% bello, !Waplace, woodburnar, N.G. heat, I car garage,
llhed, pllllo wlfumllunt. Very nice hamel $69.000
.

667-6179

PubliC 8818
&amp;Auction

lballon IITD, Ryan,
·I. D.C. Repair Cenlar

PICKUP and OEUVERY
jioura Ill- M-F 11-3 Sal
Cloeed Sunday

OFFICE 9f2~2116

'

I

. UPHOLSIIIY

'

'

,.

J

Cuatoms.t
~ Cowra, C8rplt,

'

11411M11:1
'

...............
Muon w.v.

~

m-ms

, ....,.rt,Ohlo

. ;: : ll.ll DOtJNG

'"
PONDS
: 8EP11C BYITEMS

~ LAND CLEARING
;,''" .WATER &amp; 8EWER .

·One olory home with 2 bedrooms, 1% bathl,

TPC - . olllatiid on approx. 1. 16ecrea.
a 111111 elder hOme at lhe locAollo.l.
Allor $23.000

POMEROY PIKE· ApproM . 1 mile from Sta• Aoute~7c'cl~ . I
. _ or mobile home olta wllh w...r and ..1
.IMII.... Agraatlocatlon and a gntat buildina alia.
.
,

Alii&lt;ING $8,000 ,

MIIJDlBIORT • I 511 • Hao 8-8 rooms, • biidooomo, llld 2
lui balhl. Looll at 1ha axllllo: hao mal"'"- lntelidng,
Mat pump, f1lnoiid booc:lwMI. open ....ay. lormal dnlnO
room with bay wludowo, lull ' - - ! , and k lo clooe Ill .,.
llchaala.
·
. ~.1500
POMEROY • Raalcaprlnge Ad. • A beaulllul country ltlllna
can be yount when you purchate IIIia 3 biidoown, I batt,
1112 11ory home wllh a lull buement, 8Nnlah loolc lnllrior,
Ylnyt lldlng, and large bam 1hat hal lnl1hiid rooms upalal".
AI thio II on IIPIJIOX. 4 acrn.
.
Riiduciid. Prlciid at $311,1500 t

·LJNEB
· 1. iABE"ENTS &amp;

111111go .
~- ~ . . .
lnll ..
.........
-_
_ ,·_
·

•

AMuol Block - :

.tor llrM,
-

RAISED PANEL GAUGI DOOR
INSTILLED PRICES
· 9x7-$275.00
16x7-$450.00

.....

THE BOOK
BARN

CMckiiiiM12&amp;11HP

............ Olllo

FIWKIJG AVAILAIIE

Ill • SIU •IUH
117 .. 2111111.
IOUUr

·

......... 10100-2;00
CLOSEt 111101Y

992·3577

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GUYIL &amp; COIL
.......b..

o£010 lRIMMERS ·
oiRIISIKUITERS
........ -I!Od.ls.

'MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
....

5-5-91-1

OPENERS INSTILLED
Y. HP..$200.00
WI~ 2 Tra~smltters.

ALSO- TRY OUR NEW
VINYL SEAL TRIM
SI.OO PER FT.

Rates
JOE N.SIYRE
SAYRE

614·742·2138

(Co.

01.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE

3-4-113- 1
Plumbing

. - - -.. Place your
Clas'sified tod~y
and hold out
..__ __.your hand...

Gelling mM'IIId? Neild

now••? 'aa •••orlae?

Check out my prlo!la flraL ·

"Inspirations"
Flower Shop
N&amp;-&lt;1171

4110

'I'

·. ' 'HOlE SITES
HAUUNG: Umaatone,
· IJii1. GntVtl and Coal
' .LdNIIDandiDMB

•
•

fl. 61M92-55t1

12-5-lln

. .,.....
~

:.. CIARLII'S
:

•

:
'
'

'

Auetiou•r: Rick Peanon

Termo: Ouh or chedi wttoi.O. oU1 of .... buyara muat
hiMI a rlurntnt bank 1a11ar of cncltl NO EXCEPTIONS. Not
mponlllble for aocldoooll or loll of p.upaol).

510 N. and Ava.

IIC EICIVITINI

""""rad

a..ca.caar clad.., ·

HelldUIIII'I,

. Convallble Topa
: aoyn.eapwloo-

·=board,

**''·

.

p.m.

· 01-lllllpltltL

5-111-1:1

!COIIPLITIIITO

I'

Chip &amp; Dalt blanktl llhMt ~ IBied. bracket r.t a 2
drawers, Vk:t.wuhllandta.ooppuh,modamclwlygrandlalherdocll, Ml o14 oak chlira, 181 ol8 oak clawlool chalra,
pine
oakdrafllman cloak, oak bulla!, oplnde

Ioria,..,...,.,

(614) 992-7878

949·2104
. '

back
·a rocker, walnut Jilnnr L.rnn Bed, Quill, J. c.
Hlggana
, 30 pc. Ar'nerican Foolaria-Round c:Ua, hat,
Lg. vue, bud vue, lootld go~Mta, lhedlell, oouar.d oom·
pole, candklholdors, Lg. IMdwioh ...... ~Ilion=
cheny blo110111 pilcher, prlrxaoo butl8rclllh,
llln
dlah, CXIOide jar,
c:andy dlah. Mill' Fair, umbl...rio
waler pilchor, Ruby dllad pilcher l other .,.._, 70 pc.
Noritake, HarleqUin china (Homer l.a9in) Pridla mlxlng
bowl HI, plallar • other plecea, Virginia Role .,._, Blue
Ridge china. hand peillllld dHp dill .,.... lg. pUdld
china pltda, Fenton glua animlia aother Diac:el. malchlng 11
pc. Ridgaway a-Ina borouah Flow Blue fo pc. MIOC. Flow
Blue, Colbc* BbtplecM, . .
Hefleltbowll
llmbler, OCCliiMecl .Iapan CXMOiid dill, caMnal, .Jeanatlo,
Millenburg, Northwood, lmparlal 1 Jalltrlon glallw••·
vernilaoelery dlah, 111 pc. Dntldan Blue onion
bowl, cuNt'Oiclllh,bowla l 111*1, 4 pc. nippon, BMwtlow,
15 colacD plain; Blue l .Yttlllllllh bowl, Opaque (r:r-),
Lg. I'OIIIld opode plallar, Hooallr augw _...,., Watt
Cookie jar apple l**fl, Hul artpotllly, condor pottery, blue
&amp; brown orac11 pllchlr, cnx:kl, 111one Jn, blue muon jan,
-v
omall • • """"'· Jumbo l'alnut Buttar
Depnoulan lira a.by Buaav, olk graph • phaloe, old oallng
Ugh~ bellutllul hni, OiliWotd meat grinder, INiby lhoel,
dollleo,flrlcyploanal"-,lloxofrnloo.I.ITI(n.Jy),Bruo
k8llle • buc:lcM ~ IIIUCih - ·

MARTECH
INDUSTRIES

Aulhorlad: Brlggi •

RHI Eltate General

id,IR 11M . .

Dozer Work

Ptuts 1111 s.nke
MoWen • O.U. S.ws
w..-len

HENRY E. CLELAND........................................ tl2~1t1
TRACY BRINAGER--··-···...........~-···--MII-2411 .
IHERRI ttART-..........................,..,_..,_.. 74z..z317
KATHY CLELAND,...___ ....,..,_. ____ ft2..111
ot=FICE...........- -.......................·--·-......... 112-2211

If

and small

WllllllLUY

WANT '10 SELL'I GIVE Us A CALLI
WE NEED USTINGSI

IN,.IQUE
IUC!ION

~ , _ \!,

. . . 4tlt, lth. ..... 1 -

Backhoe

UCINE
MOWER CLINIC

t

"~""';"' ~llloiJ:l:

~.

l!undoY
• 2:00• ......
Frldo~i
odlllon
2:00

&amp;II-

2-7·~12-tla

hr

.....,,._ Clmlb.

DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
•~.
...., ................
to ......

Foraa.,.IJ~ of llaJrs' TN• ..,. . .
IISUIED
FlU

'

....-.

I • of

At.7,-to
:
ow-, m +'-~ .
Ctoll*ll• ,_ Rood,
11118go . . . , _ 21t11 Mil 1n1;
:ne.
- n.~~~...; n.n 111M&amp;
ALLYini ..... Mulllehldln .....,., 'f ............ ·

TltiMING and
TREE &amp; STUMP REMOVAL

I'OIIEROY· Bunker Hill Peach Fork area 136+ acreo of
vac.nt ground wilh 2 producing . oil • gao wella witt!
royalllu ASKING $48,000

=
~

llilpt. Dw

· - · A t - · · - Shop
At-.o,IM,2nd,lrd,K

, =- ,!!, Air~

SYRACUSE· Two olory frame home wilh 2-3 badroomo;
family room, utility in kitchen, gao F.A. heating, carport. 2
))OIIlha, IWO lola with 1hed and garden 1111a. $25,000 ·
•

COMMERCIAL BUILDING- W. Main Pomeroy. 360 11q.lt.
with 1 bedroom apt. upllalra, Good locatoon, heavily
;.._____,:..!==----~ _ , , baY8Ied ..... $17.000

LWICh

IODIERI E-1 RIDI

212 To- - .

Uclnliid a aoudtd.ln 9NO, Kr 1w:v. aoae '

CuaiDmar

.!

-l:

''

Pmllm--

--~~l~~u~~~-------J•
'

.'

s

IIII

Good~~~ AI Powell'• Super Valu
Olfer
May 30 lhru June 6, 11183

IL

~~
II

10 POUNDS

I:

FOLGER'SCUSTOM ROAST COFFEE

Side Ill IN. (Co. 7)
· IITWit, 01.
742·2455

..-..edpulll,hlghlyCIIWd~IOia,MIIpgninpUIIMI

GROUND

--•-tfi--pQi-111!!!!!~~-lll!!!!~-'!!!!!1;"1

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

'

rocker, S lag oak hlrwlt lable, VIet.
walnuthalllr88,mlalionoakdalk.niahoganyllblel6chairl,
oval oak ibrary table. doYe IBiedOik IUg8J' llhMt VIet. llhMI
Clrol8d pulo. eerty drop leal labia. oak rocker, viet. ""'"'

P.!!!--.r------

FIIIUCIIG AYIUIU

· 773-11-•
882-l'l- Bo•oa
895-Letort
937-Baffalo : :

a.-., La. fancy oilebolrd, round oak

'"

Ur.--~~U~WARL-----nm,U

:1

c-

Voc:t. mwblelop wuh lllnl, Cuowd glau o0 IIICntWy,

IIII

A
l'a Super Valu
Mey 30 lhru June 6, 11183

3HP ·11 HP

aevaral fancy oak
fable, child's wlckar

' I1

26

MINI KARS

.

Located at lhe Youth Cenler on Camden Ave .
in Point Pleasant, W.V.

II

MARTECH INDUSTRIES

p

::"":.::::-:::.:.:"""=::.p=·rlot~~~

. . II,.., J..ll I, 1111
' IO:GOLM • .

r:: ------~~-----~
---------~vvrvw---------,•
2 QUART UNSWEnENED-tP·17-tS-t90-CAPX 3

Place your
Clulifled today
and holdout
your hand .. .

8

CHEF BOY·AR·DEE

571&gt;-.\ptlo

, l ~-

. •

I .

The family of
ndie" Gilmo
I wc,uld like to eXDre&amp;lil(
its
sincere
appreciation' for all the
prayers, concerns,
flowers,
food,
friendship and support
in the loss of our
loved one. Special
thanks
to
the
Po1ner•OY Emergency
ad
veteran's
l·llllernorial Hospital,
Rev. Roland Wildman,
Rev. Samuel Basye,
Rev. Keith Rader,
Ewing Funeral
Lois Burt, "ri~~~~
Werry, .. The T
Church and our
wonderful friends and
neighbors.
Your
kindness will ·always
be remembered.
Elza Gilmore and
Family
.

675-1'1. 458 Looa

JamaeKa ..ea,owner

Sprin• TfnN
Sp.efGJ

Wdllolflvo

Siding and Wlndowa

992-2772

Plumbing Installation
. and
Repairs.

Auto-Rentals.

OWNER:
Jeff WlcbrsiMm

Melp CotUtly Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 3M
992-MJtWioport/

FI"HEatl-u
Replacemant
Wlnclcwft
VInyl Siding
Roofing
Cell ua for
Special Prlcea on

992·3470 ~

Gallla}::ounty

446-GolllpoBo

2112112Mn

SIZED UMESTONE

.

'

Clouified pose• cooer the

367•7350

r

(No S.INiay Calls)

.'

36970 lal I• Road
P0111roj,OIIIo

, ~
Yard Sal•
' !·
• A .._iflod
t ploeed Ito tho Gollipollo Doily
, ••
Tributto (-pl Cluoiflod Dloplay, Bua....., Card or J.pl
Noticoo)willaleo ap,.... Ito ... Poltot Plooout R....... ucl
tbe Doily Seatlael, nochlac · - 18,000 hoaoo
Ia M..oria•

HUGE GARAGE SALE
Locust St. In
Cheshire, Ohio
JUNE 3, 4, 5, EH3:3Q.?
Levi jeans, Dockers pants,
leather jacketrs, beautiful
lamsp, clocks, Home
Interior, cloihing, all sizes.

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

614·992·7643.

HAUUNG
SERVIa

· .
1 1

• Ad. ~t••t .be paid • adniace an:
Can! el Tltub
Happy Ado

•

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE EsTIMATEs

• Ao

EXCAVAnN&amp;
(614)
667·6628

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

J&amp;L INSULAno"

To place an ad

USDA CHOICE BEEF

· AMERICA8 GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

. BISSJll BUILDERS, INC.

20 PK. 12 OZ•

. . IAM·lOPM

-DOZERS
.SACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER : ·
New Homes • VInyl Siding
•TRUCKING
. New Garages • Replacement Windows
. Room Additions • Roofing
D • BOSTON

Gallipolis
&amp;VICinity

r

'

'

SMALL DOm WORK.
•. DIIVIWAY WORI
:: ......51'011
:. DWYEIY SERVICE

!IWOIIAILEIATES
'10 IIOUI

.'

. ·t :992-7153
' •j

,~

N"ROY.r 01.
.,.

•'

...•

.

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING
24 Hour Portable Weldiq Senic:e

•

AllllOU11Cr mr 1,, '

. COMPLm. MACHINE SHOP SERVICES
IN SHOP WELDING SERVICE OR PORTABLE
All TPES OF •VELDING FABRICATION AND

!!.~!~~o:~·H*·

• Cllllidt. ~11/0 Gas. ~ • ~

.

GENERAL MACHINE WORK &amp;WELDING
......... - lUI"'*""" ........ ..,.,. 1M:Iing

• r lbrcatiOti·ADIMV
tel Roll &amp; Bind MMal.
•Mog· ~·-·--1

lilt S..., Fltllltltl
Fully lneuntd
Job lllop FaoiiiiiM '

· COMPLElE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

1
seU s•ee I

fie ·-

-'~

~ ~lJJI"""-·

992-3768
. 17 COLE • POMEROY, OHIO ·

•
'

'''

"'

�":'

SenUnel

Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Belittle

'

~

~

...

"'

~ii~5aJ;u~M!3~1!~~- ----------------------------~~~:flf~~~O~h~~~~~~~-===============~n.~~~~~~~~~~1

-ALLEYOOP

KIT 'N' CARLVLE® by Larry Wrtpt

44

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

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE
... R"MliN\611~ 1',t'\ No"T

ACROSS

olll~'f f)li ~I liE"~ oF "f'~R
c'ua Fofl. cAT)''-I'M

~~......

• PHILLIP
ALDER

" "''N.'t!f

down .

37 1cannot tell

1¥.....

5 2,001,

38 Plutonium

8 Cuttlilt

3t Scottltll

llomtn

IJftlllol .

42=

diMtond

..,.....,

12 Scare.
NORTH

w.n

+1072
.KJI5

•usz

+98 52

!!._~- All 0111 u.s.

~==c~ia~t~io:n~D~a::iy:.':l::t':s:o::n::ily:-o["n::c::e::e:v::ery:::::f::o:ur:y::e::•::rs::l"=~

~'t.'ft.-=~ 111

O.lllpello.

~looh•uthnellecl- !!!!!.:-:;::.':*s:=-:J-7

--. . . - . ===-·-··
.....-.
titer

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

.

' -

...... ~~~~4l'nt.

73 '1111111 6 4 WD'I

~

wOldoyl_...._
...Ill!, !""''" l 11e Ewlnglcn Lorge H - , Wllh

~

·~
-

'

Suppl os
:, L• :htock

'

tu,OOO 114-441-

817.11,~

.

,e:;:.:e
- l n g To a.IIIIIM
-~~~-""'&amp;x....-'1....
~ ;;1 tltn FGr
1

='"And

,. 'n'
Hour

Puau'

Emotional

~=
l:lolclnn · F.- Gillie,

32 llotOblle Homes
for Sale

Wark

o.OrllllgaCourfiM.M

8wDait

2

2

.., CNid.

-

=

Sen1c 11
Pailalon Pll 122 /J1aY

0 t'IIH

Firm. .._

.........tor Coli

111 t41 .U,

Chl--

!IP To -

...,. -nd 71 h.,lllno, ...,.
- . . . . 1ft h.,lllnt. ChiJ.
no Ill 00&lt;n ~- Clohl
==-AIIpdolllll.

12111 llollllt Home ... On Ron.... L l l . - ~ ..... P,IOD

lloy

I

r::-"'1:....~=
lo"Tu-.-

83

Hh.A - And Lta.- Of *Jit'k&gt;
lion To H:Cf"S To RUmen
Dw., P.O. Box 110,

Uvutock

~-2nlcollllllt­

21 ma11111 Dill ....,., IM-IIWIU.

a r: • , CH 41131.

Plgt

tor ..... -1-»11

- - FGrd bact•, 4WD,
-·..,..lollltdl,r.,__
llhlnfln.-r,
IM-lll2 ••••

84

--V-41,·~~
or ·~

010 111 ••• ,.,
-

0 .

Hay 6 Gl'lln

75 Boats 6 Motore
for Sale

441-GIM.

a-n:

............... ,c.-.

_, _,
"""' 1 -

111,

.

46 Space tor Rant

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

Double elud Mel

1:1 aa'c

t

,.

. . .l h o , - . 1

-til

F111JilCIJI

.....

liNGlnogo/Wollolll

................ ..,_
II•-

COUNTY-1111

-

_,.

- - Nllllng--lllecl-.2bllh-.1- ....
r-11. W, V.. P1 I . rt'•

Bl.lllnaU ;

Opponunlty

.:1:'·
:tS

m-

304-m-IU:I or

loti &amp; Acruga

~~

'v"""""'
2 ,........_.... lata. n.IWMMII wf 2

-•PH, .._

-P"·

U .•·
~. .oUIIii
. . ,7201

II

a-upo,

...._.._

0

-

71

AuiOI tor Sale

wanted to Rant

Q

..... t..wsiilllhall

-

-1t1, c.-IY, - - I
A.IL II P.ll. Dolly. 114nMWIU.
~,..._ c1 d PhWial.om'-1, 4:1

To IWII or ltnd aantroct. omoll

AIEl nallliOIIr,I'M .11..

- • · In-Ion
IOMlNlllll, plooll no
wldttNion.
"'*tor-. trd- '..,._
poro. County wotor, lOIII I
- . , . from S2,810. -

lliiYing

-

-

R.icont.

,__, P.O. lox 33, Clol--

llopiii,Cihlo41131.

Full tlollo X-ny loch, LPN, lied
-ww IDr local phyalcane
-..- C-24 % Pt. Pll.

!!IIHI':•
PI

aDO lloln Ill, Palnl

.. WV 211150.

llylot With Exltllng
Cfll
....... ~

=~P~~~·~
on
A1U1. AI Rnp:,..• H.W tn
ecw..,.....

--

&amp;lind ......... Or

T-.

~01-To:CLA~

cilo a. •

•• DIIIJ

11210

, _ ....... Qolllpalle, Ohio

All real es1ate

at~Vertislng

tn

ol1968 whld'i ma1ce1 I !legal

"""'.mop.
.....tor-.011.

to act.terttse ·any prererence,

Rental s

this newspaper 11 subttct lo

Ihe Fedo&lt;al Falf Housing Ad
Umitalton or discrim4nalkH1

--

-

..

I

I

• A.IL ~
•

P.ll. 114-441-

Meded: . . . . YOC81e

- · -~~
.,._..,n

_.loll

plano,

, _ . ...,.... 10 yr. Dill """·
.. ohlll, "" ~

27M-

Coli

,~­

llOS8d on "'"'· c:olor, 1811glon,

sex tamilialslalus or national ·
origin. or anv lnte~lon lo
make any suCh prelerence,
limitatiOn or ~sctimlna11on."

Hortl ......,. Noodod: Oro•

........., Once A Woek. Coli Bit,

-IIE'4RAL J. ACRE MRCELS:
... lao County, ....... ,..,_,
taafl ..... IIOmat.. - l u i
lind; - . ........ and 111111.

Thts newspaper will nol
knowtf9y toCOPt
advertisements tor real ntale
wNch lllt'1 viO ..Uon of lnt
law. Our readers are nereby

...ormed lhat lildwellngo
advei11Pd In It-is newspaper
are avaMable on an equal

41 Hounl tor Rant
l l o - . . - . Rl¥ooo'-1
IINoo 7, Cloi_IIPalll
II,
81-,
Rlfrlaorllor,
MOOIIIo.

·~,....·--·

3 811t1oom llodlm MouN Ju.ll
Outoldo OtiiDallt C1tv UmMI,

11t UII2JIAieriP.M.

s -.

lllh Vou Pay
Ullllllll, No - · a..i AI: 11a
- . Oollpollo. No

-Colla.

..............r, ..,., ..... plio,
nolftl
-to iloi to . .
_ .....
~104-

........ 11'81

-lnato--a .. a,,·..,.

:::i:'

For-:OIIIotFurnllultoll-

~~-,;.:::
~'1~
ll:"J
~
W no '!
Equ
1111.
• • p 1101 . . m.ahlne.
•

2111

Calnt. tf71111a.

5I

HOUIIhold

Goodl

¥1'RA FURNITURE
'10 DAV IAIIE AI CASH

'11t 4II 11111 Or 11t ttl 1121
OR REHT-2-0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

Wit._.... - . . - -

w.aon.

CMw -_...,......_
$1,8GO,tMfll
Choir, pd - -

........

Auto P8Jtl &amp;

..

!""'

OUR LANGUAGE

(alibi'.)

21 llaltt
......._nt
23 Capital of

(2 Wdl.)

ldtllo

=~·ll~f~l1"r~S'11~~m,

Z2l

•

11.100 Finn. ~

IIIIIIUII

RE-ELECTION
lO~Y...

..... ---.a•

D1 I lllllp._ -.,
Hullr$21,
...--t-adz.
....... """"-- WI 2 1'1, Dlnct , _ Fadory,
Twln_lot ...,FuM lion,
...
O..n tMI Ill; 4
lltlll Proll I r'oll844.111; car llld'o lnd~'fWIIo= Wllh- ...,...,.._ To 0U. ~lh HE
.....
..........
AnM'In
1
lunlo llld'o, Pooler llldl. Ful
1111. ......., Lwn bod. as. .,._
Uno 01 loUI-..n -

2471.

.

P.oa•. 2 , _ _ -~~~~~o
Auction Or 4 lillie Out 141.
Clptn I Ul. To. P.ll.llon -OOOD UIID -~· - ••~·

:-----:-,.....---,---

--

Lawn -

.,. tte 2181.

11&amp;8 ~~at.r,

d

--111,

.

f71.

~··
'11121.

se

••-.on.

wv.

Pill for Sale

0111

.;;;;;-;~~f;;;;;;;;p:ji;i
~ IIIII

rtftid ...... - ·
S100,

=-"T'--

1111-lu ...., .. ~
= I I, 7 ..... iltl . _ . .

..............
$100 010, 114-lQ2U2-Ipm.

_.,..._...,h

Rogltorod"-~1~

Pl~pl ,,., . .,

Llotor "''''lr,
Splnot......
plano,
ml11110,

:5::~~~1 :-~-= ~ ~~~':F
-

-

u.,_ _

A. A verb that adds lhe suffix -lNG
is called PROGRESSIVE. As I've been
pointing out, this type of verb shows
an action or state in progress. "I jog, •
for example, may mean that I occasionally exercise; the -lNG in "I am
jogging," however, shows·that my exercise is in progress even as I speak.
To remember this type of verb, be
sure to think of PROGRESSIVE as a
way to make progress.

HE: Pl.AHe
TO RUN fOR

I 'T\.JA'T

Supplies

•uri

-.12011,- 11.

that end with -lNG. What is it?

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

Building

1711-lliiV

ue.......
am. sao, ·Ptclwp Lood,

Q. I know there's a term for verbs

c.::."&amp;":'-::J:

-tw polnllil, ~~
chtln, llel btlrlnQ, 3 112 ""'
~!!....- IPiill ill.. SlOG :10t-

Goal!

NE!XTYEb.R ...
H!;A"vt:N
I-IEI.PUS

J
1111 Oldl cue...

~ -.....

AI..L-!

./

,, .•,.. a

Cciidtlont
---.No-

~·?'

25 Allove (-L)

26 lllf) 1bbr.
27 SurrOIIIICIM
bw enomloo
28Comtdlloi'Phlllpt
2g erw
30 Dlltr"'
llgnel
32 Spanllh
35 Sln1111 Rudr
38 TIPI IIIIJII
38 GrHk letltf
3D C.vt (poeL)
40 Charecter In
''Othtllo''
41 RhJihmicll
awlna .
42 Twpeof .

43~~klft

44

iwr+-+-+-1

'RLA
.RlA

RTIYLOE
YTXXE

AFOS

TMU

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VAXI

OWVLI
VOlE

T

AM

_,__.___

NOV

Co'!l"""'
.... 4 .,_ Eloo
' I'll T - I jj..;.'d,
.,...,
, ........ --woo:
...-llolldiJimiiKint"'L

XTMUEYTZ06E,

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S@ttQ{llA-l&amp;ttrs· ::::

_ _ _ __;__;; E41tod

~r

CU.Y I. POLLAN. ;;__ ___:,:...._

lefteln of
0 Rearrange
four scrambled words

ba~J ~~

I I. I I I 1

law to form four simple words.,

CREWHT

I

2

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JAROM

II
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•IN YI J 150 EI

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"Do you remember," tha old
timer asked his buddy, "when
people worried about how

I

.-------·---.much it took to buy a new
F T H I GL
horne instead of --- -·-- ?"

I

1---,.;~6,..._...;.1...:..:..,;17;...:1;...::..1,....--1 G) Compleie lhe chuckle quoled
'-.l...
-.L..-.L..-L.._;_L.;..J
by filling in the missing words
you de¥elop from step No. 3 below .

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
,.,
Purely - Antic - Welsh - Sadism • NURSES
\Yife to h_
usband in hospital bed, "You've made quite
· an 1mpress1on on the staff here You received a get well
· card from all the NURSES."

Sr1 '.lees

••

2 -

•

=-oz.~·=
.......
,....

........

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

PICKENS FURNITURE

you focus on building

·i

people wilh whOrn you're involved. Pushing
and shoving won'l cui ot
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Keep a low
profile loday on mailers pertaining IO your

should run rather smoothly tor you today,
because others will be there to help you
over the rough spots. Be sure to acknowl-

career_ If you do things that draw aHention
to yoursen, they could turn out to be coun -

terproductive.

edge lheir assis1anco.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2o-Feb. 19) Even lhough
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You migl\1 be a bit you may be eager lo involve an inl!uenlial
of a risk taker today and this could be bOth
bad and good . Gambles in familiar fie lds

fnend 1n your present plans. it might be wise
to wail unt1l he/she expresses a desire to

may work out. but gambling. in lhe blind participale.
probably won't
.
PISCES (Fob. 2D-March 20) This is one ol
VI ROO (Aug. 23·Sopt. 22) Lady Luck those unusual days where you might do as

..

i!.~"'=
~

l

Juno3, 1983

tends to . favor 1fOU today in yoUr financ ial

many things wrong as you do right. yet

and commercial dealings , but she mighl
ignore you in your personal rela!ionships. In
the latter case. you're on your own.
UBRA (Sipt 23-0ct. 23) Your best asse1 ,
today is your abilily to lake lhe good ideas

when lhe final sco•e is lallied. you're likely
to come oul on the plus side ol the ledger. '
ARIES (lllrch 21-Aprll19) Your ideas and
concepts lor doing tl11ngs today will be on·
1rack, but you might not execule them in

In 1he year ahead you• chart indicates you'll
bi·making Iota 01 new friends from all walks
aflffe. lnlerestingly, lhe little guyi may of others and tum them into somethff1Q bet- accordance with your preconceive·d plans
proye as helpful to you as the big guy!! do.
ter. You moght have two opporlunitie' to uli- and !all a bit short ol your marl&lt;.
·
TAURUS (April »1/ity 20) In manero that
GEMINI (118y 21-.luno 20) II you have to lize your gih.
make an Important decision today. be SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Follow your pertain to your career and finances give
ptlient and mothodbl, bee41usa your lirot ·own instincts today in your ma1erial affairs them the serious attention they deserve
thoughts might not be your beat oMS. You instead ollhe adviCe ol associales. You're " today. Save !he jokes and small 1alk tor
', _ time 10 r1110n tl11ngo oul from evef'l more in tune to developments then they tater when evel)'thing is lied down to your
satistaerion.
·
a(lgle. Trying io palch · up a broken are.
romance? The Astro-Graph Matchmaker SAG,ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-DIC. 21) Things

IF7

W

8111' W.T W~ SOME
OF 1ft( ~~ WOR\&lt;.!

long, self-addressed. s1amped env~lope to
Matchmaker. P.O. Box 4465. New York, NY
10t63.
CANCER (Jun• 21-July 22) Slluations

48 Btl lick

AI

...

truiill . . . . . LTD
............i114111ao.

tum

45 Feclltalt

IBWOMUE

II

- ; 11111 Clilw- ......
a w1ioi1 AT¥-"-~ p,u•

F'UrtM lltp.'

VGOEE.
~
DOll
YOET8WA.
.•
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I have ~ deep desire to know God 'and k · ~--~
God Isn't just• a matter ol going to confession and prayin~ .,
noHw ng · Keitel.
•· ~rvey

I

By Jeffrey McQuain ·
CONOID ("KOH -noid"J means
"shaped like a cone," as in "the conoid
structure." Avoid any misspelling of
the adjective CONOID, which ends
like AVOID.

oohld tumlohlng. 112 rn!.
lolh
On c..t 1111 1'"1
Jlrrtcho Rd. Pt.. Pl-...:, WY,
..... . .Dtpoolt,
Roll·a m1No, CIIIM
.: 11+ COII-1410.
lltiiiZZ

'

@ .... NIWIPAPIR llf1WU NR Ahll.

'TtltlAY?/./,;~

~:-.;~~":'i~~iit...;.IOOI make the relationship work. Mail $2 plus a

.,

"Sorry,. partner."

~am 'a14-llli,•

flao

Prtdtdl ,..,._,

~...

••

i~~~~c~c;•~•;•o~~~~~~:
Tu••• -'""
la-.u..di
.........
......
-Ziti.

=--=====--::-c:-="""-=-Tll"'*'tl w -

Of.ll\1£ FRtTZ. Tlolt~ HTER-. WIIOO(i tt-l

~ II U. Aid """""""'· ;;;11111~t~tt~l~-~~~~:__::---::--:-_:
Tho -WIYI'!ilol.

Fen llldl .....,~ Choir fll• 114
-.Ar...w-.y:;.-$121.00 '

;:::.,~ea:.: ~.:"'J

76

~~(....

.....
..._ Allllnt ____
1101,114 4• SilL
~,.,_....
..tilll IIi Wudln Lila 1: • L1dJ 1 10
-. A - .,.. To11- llonpfiO Eoohlol,

ot11111DE
FURNISHINGS:
W........ INn T - W/4 Chtl18;

oppottunlry baSis.

u-

8 Famoua
clock

wonhlp

Pllnttr

n,., .

f,OM

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I'Gr-:T-,FibiAFul- - - - • • - ·
Truak.
Ill' ~I~:I
- . Ctl ti*1
114 441l'tolr
1110~lon• ...

114-446- Glnllll

-on
,
.
---------·1
=

Real Estate

1m a., ... eoo.M~o .,_., 111

farm wllh 3 I:IIBGIII 'hou.t,
114-11111!8,
114-111-1151,

110 -ll'.:l?""3Bod-.~
&amp;co. Ft. Full-,,_-. t100, ..a
~lvo
'• Notr _ _ . _ . - .

"'*.-tor -......
•
Rlybum Ad,
lllo . - - . ; - , .
-"'

~w.:.~=!"'l:!

oNe,

for

·-7:00pm.

Noolh, 110,000 Wll Cow ,.,

Hlilng: Pooplo,
WI t Dllh• r Peopfe,
Afif1if AI: '41'N Fwnllurl, On

~ 10 Nlll

z monilia. 3041711-1412.

ao4 m- ~;.;~~;,~;.;q:"A.
For Leas8

_...,. On Route

-

7 Outflow

24 UK broadCHI.,.

TtiAT

...., To

33 F1nn1 for Sale
_

In'• utlt

2 Vow
3 Roglon
4 Pltct of

Eut
Pau
Pau

Even though it was a long time ago,
we still hear a lot about World Warn.
Spike Milligan included this line in 1111
movie: •At Victoria Station, the Railway Transportation Officer gave me a
·travel warrant, a white leather and a
picture of Hitler marked 'Tbil is your
enemy.' I searched every compartment but he wasn't 011 the train."
An Important aspect of World War
n was ti!e · decoding o( secret mesACTUALL't'. I
sages. Be1ng able to lnlercept and de. SLEEP WELL,
cipher tile German Ultra Machine
CAN'T
TELL
01.' PAL ..TOMORROW
transmissions was pivotal to the sucONE
DA'(
FROM
WILL BE A NEW DAY,
cess of the Allies.
TME OTI4Eit.
It is similar at the bridge table. SigAND WE NEVER
nals
from one defender to the other
KNOW WllAT
are bei~g intercepted by the declarer.
E~CITEMENT
But although he may make use of the
lnformatiOII,
more often than not these
'----- AAEAD..~~;itik7flL
signals ..: if sent and Interpreted correctly - are vital in the defeat of a
contract.
West led the spade live: two, ace,
-:ruNKAND ERNEsT
four. East cashed the spade king:
~----~--------~--~--------------~ - eight, three, seven. East switched to
the club nine. Declarer won, drew
.I' V~ BEtN LOO~ti'IG OVt, YOull
trumps and claimed his contract, con/ JOI APPLIC.ATION
ceding a diamOOtd.
"Wby didn't you switch to a dia__2~
AGO, F,~tiLE.
mond?" asked West.
"Because you asked me to switch to
PO YOU ,EA£-IZ~
~
a club," replied East.
I,'IA PAYING FOil i
"How did 1 do that?" ,
"By playing the spade three at trick
lfO POIJNI&gt;S OF YOU.!
two. Wben I showed you I bad a doub"
.l NtVtll ti1F~P1
leton spade by playing the ace before
the king, you were expected to pve me
a suit-preference aicnaJ. to tell me
where your entry lay. You dropped
lowest spade, 10 I tiwitched to a
club. You should have played your
spade jack under my king. Then I
t&gt;t~~R
TMEN TH£. ot~fl(bH. ~ CJ.N m¥TIItllf. a5e ~
would have led a dlamoDd."

YEAttS .

T1 J11spo 1t dt 10 n

~-~-

Ride.,!!!' .... Iaiii,

.• .

0/111 II,OiiO - .
lxoollonl Coo - : ; 111,1110,441-1714 Allor 4 •
.,

1114 -

Gullar '--1!111 For
CcM.nry Old Roell lain ctlvt

W..ud To
HeM
- , Elo. .,.___,_,

1-+llrtc

Barnyard cry
0Mp crack In

II Plllnl lndllll
10 EnltrtaiHr
- McEnllre
11 Jot
1D Aptect

8 Mllrlod worn-

By Phillip Alder

......... 1111•

-

5 Handlt
rouahly

DoWtit

Wager
Thaw

Signals must be
seen and decoded

~.-r 111

~~w:~~~=
""' -

.

-····-

=.
ol

Nortll
z•
Pau

Welt
Pus
Pus

24 Unlnter•Una

54Unclllmtd
IIIII dtpt.
55 lltNorlzaUon

Opening lead: • S

- ·-· ..-.-~..::=.:..=~~
Rd.,~lllolllll13,
tor ....
1111:':::.:'.~ ~":

.......

4•

lng . - - ...-.,.,..
tloll1 tumiOIIo4l, Irani ~.

........ - - - .
iNti_...~-

I

t•

S.tl1

tlmo

53 c.rrw

glacier
38 Jtrkl up and

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

--=

=:::
Pl-. ,.~..~wrld~;

Help Wanted

AWN I All -

.AKJ

Help wanted
31 Homes tor Sale
'PU"'""'·TIIIIe"'""_;_:;;A'"'He;,..;;.;;.,;.'l;_;o;;_..
-.,..- • ••
.. ~ • ....._ a &lt;ft
An,llone. ~ K,_... 01
.;.;.:;:"".:ki\ .;;,;_

E·n;JIO\ mcnt Serv1ces

' 11

tK6

I.

52 Ptrtodl of

20 ChHt'lul
22 - Trlvl.lla
23 lltondM

31
32
33
34

.AQI072

"February 29th is perfect for 'Landlord Appre-

htatlnt

27 Sklnnl1111n

+Q8 4

lolr, . . llonoJ Qulcld

=•no!

51

pti'IOR

SOUTH

- ......
----~To...,:~

150 Ewe ~~nor-

18 Snt8ll church

+AK
•uu

- - Top DOiiMIIIid.

47111torr
4llllon.l -

ICrHn

EAST

..........,.!!IMdlnl--

14 Romtn road
15 Article

• Q 107

~ ::=r'*-·

48 Wading bird

18 Navy lhlp
prtf•
17 MicrophOne

• Q107

: uv---•':.:1::

13 Letttra of

'

'·

,,

�.

f

Ohio Lottery .

Reds lose
5·2 battle
to .Phillies

DOUBLE

MANUFACTURER'S
All THIS WEEK

COUPONS

Pick 3:

931
Pick4:

9329
Super Lotto:
6-7-8-27-34-47
704199

Page4

•• '•

•

I
I
I

save as much as

5

1 11
Vol. 44, NO. 25
MuiUrnedl•lnc.

36-39 02. CAN
•ADC •EL. PERK OR
•FRENCH ROAST COFFEE

... '

~

....

'

UMW expands coal strike -~

HARDWORKING lOW PRICfS·

DANIELLE SCOTT
DELEGATE, MUS
'

...

.

.

save as n1uch as $1

10

~

MICHELLE GUESS
DELEGATE, EHS

PENNY AEIKER
DELEGATE, EHS

save as much as 95'.
160Z. CANS
VAN CAMP'S

24 02. CTN. • SMALL CURD •LARGE CURD OR •LOW FAT

Pork 'n ·

.Poodland Cottage Cheese

'

/?t£5(5
...

.lOW PRICfS

. Delegates and alternates to
Buckey.e Girls State have been
aMounced by AmericiiD Legion
Feeney-Bennen Post No. 128 and
Auxiliary, Middleport
Buckeye Girls State will take
place June 19--26 at Ashland Uni·
versity.
Each delegate and her alternate
.will be seniors during the 1993-94
school year.
Delegates from Eastern High
School are Michelle Guess, Penny
Aciter, Jamie Wilson and Nora
Eastman. Their alternates are
Wendy Rach, Kathy Bernard,
Amber Well and Marilyn Kibble.
Delegates from Meigs High
School are Danielle Scon, Tonya
Thornton, Jennifer Fink and Erin
Harper. Their allemate is Ann Rif.

18 02. JAR HERSHEY .
.CREAMY
. •CRUNCHY

-

Reese's
Peanut Butter
••

Bonele11
English Roast

. $1!9

LB .

FOODLAND STORE COUPON
.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Foodand Spec•o1
Coupon 1189
Valid 51»8/5193

,.

-

22 OZ. - DISHWASHING

1

Sunlifht i
LiqUid

t1e.
Michelle 6uess is the daughter
of Michael and Marcia Gueas, Tuppers Plains. She is a member of
F.H.A., Feeney-Bennett Post No.
128 Junior Ullit. and is a nine-year
member of the Alfred Uvestock 4HOub.

HARDWORKING LOW PRICIB

i

save as much as 30'.
'

WITH COUPON

1

5LB. BAG
•PLAIN •SELF RISING

Hudson·
Cream Flour

L-----------------~-----------~

.EASTMAN'S

BIG BEND

ODLA

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Labor
Department
today
announced regulations, effective
Aug. .5, implementing,a new lliw
that provide&amp; about 40 percent of
American workers .with unpaid
leave for family amcqencle.l.
· President Clinton signed the
Falilily and Madical· Leave Act of
1993 011 Feb. .5, 16 days after Ilk·
ing office. Former Prelident Bush
lwice vetoed limlllr mouurea.
The law provldea for up to 12 ,
weeb of ••id leave Cor w11bn
to care for newborn or adoftod
children within 12 months o tbe
birth or edoptlon, to cope wilb ICI'ious lllneu of family me111ben or
for thole employDCI wboae bellth
condldon 1*0•'01111 them l'rom pill'·
flllllliD&amp; lhelr .lobi.
The Labor Deputment issoed
the 94 pages of resuladons after

¢
...

~

••You'D Notice fta Savlags!
W. Ra aan. lte Righi to Limit Ouan.... • Prlc• E"-cttve Tllru ht., June 5, 11111 • UIDA Food ltM!pil and W1C
Coupone Ace aplltd ~Not Reeponelblelor ~llPhllllll or PlatorW Erron.

,.

RKING

PRICfS
-···-_,..

I

"We'll be here one day lon(!er
than the operators," he sat d.
''Whatever it takes.''

.

Ward said about five miners had
been picketin~ since midnight at
each of the Ohw locations. He said
they would remain until the strike
ended

0

0

0

•

•

CONSOL Vice President
Thomas Hoffmann, a spokesman
for the Bituminous Coal OperatOrs
Association's negotiating commit·
tee, criticized the .expansion late
Wednesday.
"Instead of workin$ to create
the opportunities for JObs in the
future, the union seems intent on
working overtime 10 ~ the
job base its membershtp already
has," Hoffman said.

CONSOL.
The union and coal operators
have been trying since November
to reach aareement on a new contract. covering 60,000 miners in
Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia,
KenlUCky. Dlinois and Indiana: • '
The union has accused the operators of evading a provision of die
expired contract that guaranteed @
percent of new jobs at mines
owned by BCOA memben would
be offered 10 UMW millen.
"Peabody iS ~Bing profi1S ICDCI·
a,ted by Ollr ina:eascd produetivjty
to open new mmes and to create
new jobs that they refuae 10 give to
our members ... who are responsible for the prosperity of the coal
industry." said union Presidenr
Richard Thunta.
. The operators say the ~mt
d.•ll: n~t apply to non-umon subSidiari~s and that they must compete With low-cost non-union alill
overseas producers.

House OKs milk pricing bill

0

JENNIFER FINK
DELEGATE, MUS

ERIN HARPER
DELEGATE, MHS

Penny L. Aeiker is the daughter of Ron and Linda Eastman,
of Pat and Cindy Aeiker, Pom:f). Chester. She is active in 4-H, Teen
She is activo in vanity volley , Institute, student council, basket·
basketball and softball. She is a · ·ball, softball and track. She is a
member of if!e 'Varsity "E" Club. member of the Varsity "E" Club
summec softball. She IS a member and was a recent member of the
oftheQueenBce's4-HCiub.
Meigs County Fair Queen's Coun.
Jaime Willlon is the daughter of She was a Miss Columbus CandiBeryl and L.ioda Wilson Jr.. date and a candidate for Middleport
ReedsVille. st1e is lldive with Bill· Fesllval Queen.
dent council, NllliOIIII Honor Soci·
Wendy Rach is the daughter of
ety, volleybull, b!lkelball, softball, Jerry and Sheila Rach, Rcedsville.
Varsity "E" Club, Teen Institute, . She is active in volleyball, tuck,
Who's Who. She mjoys water and prom comiuee, Governor's Schol·
snow skiing and alhleucs.
ars Rrogram, yearbook staff and
N~ K. Easunan is 1111? daughter
• Continued on page 3

Regu(ations implementing family
leave law to take effect Aug..s

E-GET ONE :I
I
I
I
I
I
I

'

Girls State
delegates,
alternates
named

save as much as 70"

•

as necessary.

No one answered the telepholie

this moming at the Ohio officea of

~.

.

Boneless Chuck Roast

NorJhem Panhandle of West Virgiriia.
Ward said the walkout would
continue to expand until coal operators a~ to give workers job
security. He said union me~ bers
were prepared to strike for as long

By JIM FREEMAN
Commissioner Manning Roush trial of William D. Li~M~ters u.
Sentinel Ne'll'l Staff
~aid i~stallation should begin
Com~lssioncn ~ier Plssed;JI
Residents and employees of the !ID111~tely. W~ are .c~ntly resolutton requmng county
Meigs County Infirmary face a !nstalh~g addlt!onal wmng for employ~ to ~ lime off in lieu
cooler-than-normal forecast this m~. he~·
. .
of recetvmg overume pay. Howevsumnrer clue to tho ·~ County ,. · 1bifleen people cwreotly live m '.· er, it WIS. pointed outthanho·C9IIIt
Boanf·of!·Commisaioners put'chiliil thtdl'fllnn.Y, he lllid. 1 '"···- · 4 ' can1101 alford 10o 1J11ft1 T)lioir»o
of air condltioaers for the bui1cWJ1
, Contract approved
. Drummer for the 82 bOUr period. · ~
• The' ~ori;dUrihg ii!J reg'rile commissi~n signed Into a
· · • · . otlier lidJan
, . •·
u1ar meeting Wednesday, accepted · new ~yoar pubUc defenders conIn other action, commissioners:
three quotes from local suppliers to ~1, e~liye July .1. for represen·
- Appointed Linda Dye: as
secure 18 window units and one tallon of mdigent clients.
deputy dog warden 10 serve only in
outside unit. Individuali'OOiils will
The contract call.s for the. county the absence of the regular dog waf.
be cooled by the window units to pay $9,143.25 IQ four mstal!- . den.
.
··
·while the outside unit will cool the ments which will be ~lit between
- Met with Rick Hagerty a
kiu:hen and dining room commis- . public defenders William Safranek Columbia Township owner, 10 Jm.
sioners said.
'
and Steve Story, the commission cuss Hagerty's )!llliXI8ed selling of ·
Thirteen upstairs window air said.
lots off Old State ll.oute 346 IIC3l.
conditioners were purchased for
Acting upon the recommend&amp;- U.S. 32. Commissioners said they
$7,076 from Anderson Furniture lion of Common Pleas Judge Fred approvedoftheJI!Ojecl.
and Appliance in Pomeroy while W. Crow Ill, the commission unan- Tabled btds for the sale of
five additional window uruts were imously approved pl!ying Bailiff property seized in drug forfei-s
·. purchased from Anderson's for Teresa Tyson-Drummer 82 hours and currently owned by the com$2,700 1p cool downstairs rooms. overtime at 1.5 times the regular mission.
the outside unit was pun;llased for rate.
Attendi11g were Commission
$6,000 from Warner Heating and
Tyson-Drummer accumulated Plesident,Roben Hanenbach Viii:'
Cooling in Chester.
the overtime during the ,murder President Janet Howard, Ro~sh and
Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

ToNYA TJiORNTON
,;DELEGATE, MRS'

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE BEEF

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
-The United Mine Workers today
targeted nine mines and a pre~­
tion plant owned by the nauon's
two largest coal companies in
. orderin~ about 3,000 union members to JOin a 3-week-old strike.
· The walkout now includes 9,200
miners in Illinois, Indiana. Ohio:
Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
The third expansion of the strike
that began May 10 involved two
Peabody Holding Co. Inc. mines in
Indiana, two in West Virginia and
one in illinois, two CONSOL Inc.
mines in Illinois, one each in West
Virginia and Ohio, and a CONSOL
coal preparation plant in Ohio.
The iwo CONSOL operations
targeted in Ohio were Mahoning
Valle,Y mine No.36 and the Georgetown Preparation 'Plant, both
owned by CONSOL and in Harrison County in eastern Ohio.
Larry Ward, president of District 6, said today that about 90
union members were employed at
the Ohio operations. The district
represents miners in Ohio and the

Commissioners OK purchase :=
of infirmary air conditioners

-Beans

HARDWO

2 Sectlona. 12 hgee 25 cenla
A Multlmdalnc...........

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo,Thura$y, June 3,1993

MaxweU
·House

.

In 70..

•

aI

L------·-.;.. __

Low IODJabt Ill 511. Part17 _.

cloudy. FrldaJ, rala llbiJ, llllll ·

seeking public comment on Mirth
I 0 ori ·how to implement tbe new
law, the firsl major social Jelri•la·
tion of the ClinuJn ~.
The regulali0111 require companica thai employ It Ieist SO wort.
era within a 7.5-adlo radiul 10 provide ll..,md leave 11 the omp1oyeea
have wcrkcd for atlalst 12 IIICIIIha
and for at lwt 1~ houn during
the year JJRCCdina lhe 1ta1t of the
leave, or ibout 2Sllowa a week.
The regulations also aay that
under certain COIIdiliona and' at
either '!:c::loyea 01 employer
OJIIillu,
paid leave IUCb u
vacations can be substituted for

wotters conditions," according to
the regulations. "It must involve
the ~e or substanlially similar
duties and responsibilities and must
entail sublll®anr. oqui~ skiD,
effllfl, responlibtlity and authority."
The regulalions also
the
employee to be reato;:r: the
same wort sile and the .ue shift
or schedule:
Although tho law provide&amp; for
no compensation for the leave,
includin&amp; unemployment benefits,
II does require employeq 10 COIJiin.
ue payinallDilth care premiums.
But If an employee doea not
~leave.
reiUnl 10 wodt . . die leave Jllri·
At tbe end of tbe leave. the law od, tho employer hal the rlaflt Ia
JUir8Dteel emp,!!g..ee• their old mOlt 10 recover tbc c:ost of
providing maclical beoafil8 during
,iolll, or "Ill oqu11
t IJQiition."
"An equivalent polit1011 must . the abaeilee.
have the same pa,., benefits and

'

=ft

in the proposed $30.9 billion state
budget bill. The bill now goes to a
conference committee to reconcile
differences. House F'mance Chair·
man Patrick Sweeney, D-Cleveland, said the panel would begin
work this afternoon.
-Approved 96-0 ·a Senate bill
that would allow persons accused
of sexual offenses against the
elderly or disabled to be charged

with felonies instead of misde- •
meanors. The bill now goes back to
the Senate for consideration of
House changes•
The House approved a milk
pricing bill last year that made it
out of the Senate Agriculture Committee but did not reach the full:
Senate for a vote. ·
. Logan knows he faces anothet;
tough figbt in the Senate..
-

JAMES SMITH

JOIINSPENCD

Smith, Spencer named·
Boys State delegates .. .

~

.'

Racine American Legion Post
Smith and Spencer will lie·
602 has selected Its deloptel to , senlan at Soudlem Hilb Sc:llooL : "'
rep'esellt the J101t II Bucbye BoYs
Smith Is die 1011 rl.Mr. . . Mn.
State on Saturday at Bowling .C. 1bomal Slllidl.
·
Green Uni\WIIty.
SpeBCOt II 1M - of Mr
J8111C1 Smith and Jolul Speaeer Mrs. Emeat s...,..,
. .
will repreae.ll Poll 602. ThOy Ire
Smilh ltld Spaccar will ba It
co-spoasored by tho post and session at Bueb)O 11C1J1 S• ...
Dravo Sand and Gtavel
June 13•
-

-i

.

,,

-

0

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
dispute over a milk pricing bill that
could affect what consumers pay
bas returned 10 the Senate where a
similarmeasurefailedlastyear.
The House on Wednesday
approved 59-36 a measure 1p J?Cf·
mit the state 10 set minimum pnces
paid by bottlers to dairy farmers for
milk. The bill. now goes to the Sen·ate.
.
Rep. Scan Logan, D-Lisbon,
said the measure was needed to
help farmers who face economic
problems partly as a result of what
he called an inadequate federal
milk pricing system.
He acknowledged that the bill
could lead to a retail price increase.
· "The price could go up at the
store slightly. In theory it should
not go up It all bee•nse we're·deaJ.
lng with the raw milk produced
between the fanner and the processor, 1lut we cannot predict how a
ret8ilt~t is going to react if this measure iS 10 be implemented," Logan
said.
Rep. Iim Buehy, R-Greenville,
and other OJIPOOOIIts said the prognlll would lltifk:ially infllle Ohio
pric:et compnd wilh other IWI!I.
"Whea we control pr1ee1 from
production to C0111U111J1ti01 ••• we're
to create a litiWion that is
ve indeed," Buchy slid.
DireciOl' Fred Dailey rl.lhe Ohio
J:)qwtmcnt of Alriculture llld die ·
price increue for COII8UIDell Would
likely be lnsisnlflcant. "You're
talkin~ about one or two cents a
pllon, ' he llkl. ·
However, Dailey is liPJ)Oied to
the beclaae be 1iOiieft8 it
could place ()!llo proccnon It a
compedliw dilldVIIIIIP, CDCOur·
qlng out-of·lllte boufen to lblp
llielr milt into Olllo.
In other ICiion Wedneldly, the
Houe:
~90-S SCIIIIIte c~Janaea

't
f

'I

.

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