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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middlepcirt, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Reds
defeat
Giants

Pick 3:
039
Pick 4:
7555
Buckeye 5:
7-24-25-32-33

Low tonlabt In 60s. Cltu.
Thlll'lKiay, sunny, hlah·ln 901.

Page4

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Yol44,NO.M
lllultl............

THE CLASSICS - The Classics provided
musical entertainment at the Meigs County
Museum in Pomeroy on Sunday afternoon. Sev-

·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 16, 1993

•

eral displays and demonstrations were featured
at the museum which observed its annual cele·
bration of Heritage Weekend.

Conferees await state
budget instructions

· People in the. news-··- - -

M!~NEAP!)us (AP) .. week rhat he wants to be referred to
What s m a name? A ~t of publiCI· ~irh rhe symbol that combines the .
ty fo.r the former P~mce, whose s1gns for male and female. It's also
deciSion to change h1s nan:te to an . the ti tle of his latest album. But
~npronounceable S¥J!100.1 IS keep- there 's no spoken word for the
mg everyone .guessm~ about what symbol and the former Prince, born
the pop s~ will call hunself.
Prince Rogers Nelson, gave no clue
That S•gn Guy, HeShe, Purple how to pronounce it
prima donna and Andy- short for
The newspaper ~eported MonAn~ogynous- are among sug- day that a few caUers said they'd
gesuons made by more than 400 go along with whatever Paisley
pe?ple who have called t~e Star 'Park, the Minneapolis-born popTnbune newspa~r, w.hJCh mv1ted star's record studio, deeided.
readers to nam.e that Prince.
But most caners were cynical
~rock smger announced last
"Prince's new moniker can'be

OSCAR MAYER

SHOP.-ERS VALUE

JERUSALEM (AP) - The
times they are a cbangin' for Bob
Dylan. The rock legend apparently
had to wait in line u!'On arrival in
·Israel on Monday, JUSt like any
other tourist.
•
Dylan's passpon was handed to
the head passport officer at ,Ben
Gurion Airport. Airport officials
said the officer refused to process it

.

99 C
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1/2
..GAL.

on

...
~

•
·

.
-. . .
~d told the smger to Wllll'ln hne
l~.every~y else. . .
.
There s no ~vo~USJ!I w1th us:
He shoul~, stand 111 hne like everyone e!se; the officer was quoted
as SliYID$· • ,.•
. The pubhcuy-shy Dylan, who

was met ·on tlie tannac wirh a special car that brought blm to ihe terminal, took his place in line, the ·
officials said.
.
Dylan could not be reached for
comment an&lt;J his publicity. agent in
Israel said she knew nothing of the

49

GATORADE

c

RIVER SWEEP SATURDAY· The fillh
annual Oblo Rlvtr Sweep will take piJ!(e lip and
down tbe Oblo Rinr Saturday. Above, Paul
Saucleree, Huntington, W.Va., pitched in to help

oz.

DURKEE

·. MIKE·SELLS

·

II OZ.

79

4

GROUND BE·EF

•

(With Triple Vendor Cow~~ttn .At Left)
1001 FOR FIVE MANUFACIUIER'S
COUPONS of SOC OR LESS VALUE

•

298 SECOND SIIEET
WI IISIIVE Ill

IIIIi TO
•

..

...._.._Local brief·-Three injured in wreck

GOOD WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16
ONLY.

ALL
AVAILABLE WHILE
SUPPLIES LAST.
NO RAINCHECIS.

who make, design and r.. artificial
eyes.
Rep. William Thompson, RDelphos, the sponsor, said while
Ohio has only about 20 ocularists,
the number of Ohioans who need
or want their services has reached
aboUt 2,000 a year and the profession is growing.
.
.
His bill requires the Optical Dis-· ·
pensers Board to issue licenses
under prescribed national standards. It now goes to the Senate.
In other business, Voinovic:h
signed into law a bill prohibiting
corporal punishment in schools
except in districts rhat adopt pollcies to pennitit by Sept I, f994.
Voinovich did not comment on
the proposal, which finally passed
the Legislature as a compromise
after opponents of corporal punishment had fought for years to enact
an outright ban.
·
. . Although it sets a deadline for
$Chool districts to adopt policies on
paddling, they could review and
change them after SepL 1, 1998.

.

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1

r.::.on.

. TRIPLE COUPONS

c

d

Ion'

2 LITER

4

July 1 deadline.
· "We think the decision-making
process will be completed this
week," said Aronoff, who had eartier targeted June 18 as the date for
final passage. He said he now
hopes for action sometime next
week.
Meanwhile, in floor session
Tqesday, the Senate approved a
l!andful of housekeeping bills,
including one requiring cosmetolopsts to take eight hours of continumg education to renew their Iicenses.
Sen. Richard Sc:hafrath, RLoudonville, won 26-6 approval
after telling colleagues that the biU
is needed for safety.
He said hairdressers and others
use chemicals that can be dang'erous ·if used in combination with
each other must keep up to date on
such pitfalls, as well as other
changes in their field.
Schafrath's bill ~as sent to the
·House, which had JUSt appf&lt;1ved
90-3 a bill to license ocular1sts,

Former Texas Gov. John Connally dead at 76

RC COLA or DIET RITE

CHEESE PUFFS

. other state deparUnents, local' gov- may tee of(~ 8.30 AM lll!d,con- .. . - ,_.... • ·r .th "H 1pp1
emments and public-private orga- tinue rhroughout the day.
·
.-.~~.ntatton o , e·
-a ness
nizations.
·
The dinner meeting wiD be pre- Is Helpmg Others awar and a
Prior to his appointment as ceded br a hoSpitality hour which talk by Carl Dahlberg on n.otary
Director of Development, Jakeway will begm at 5:30 p.m.
Foundation hig.hlighted the .Manserved the 9ity of Cleveland in sevG. Kenner Bush, chairman of day mght meeung of the Middleera! economic development capaci- the SEORC Highway Commiuee, port-Pomeroy Rotary. Club held at
ties. His most recent position was has called a meeting of the High- Heath Um~ Meth~t Church.
·that of Director of Development way Committee for 4:30p.m. prior
Gene Riggs, pres1dent, presentServices for the city 9f Sarasota, to the evening festivities.
ed the award to Lloyd Bl~lcwoo&lt;!,
Florida.
·
· Tickets for the dinner meeting club treasurer. Blackwood m addiEvans added that it was antici- may be purchased from local tion to his regular duties and at!Cnpated that Jakeway would talk Chambers of Commerce. Golf dance. at. the. club, was ~1ble
istration.
.
about current and future develop- reservations may be made by mail- ~thor brinlastgmg mnewtomemmbershibersp .1JJ( of
As director of the Ohio Depart- ment initiatives in southeasten ing the entry fee of $45 per golfer
e
seven
l!le . ·
ment of Development Jakeway is Ohio.
to the SEORC,PO Box 271, ·WeDD_ahlberg who hves. m. WeUston
responsible for promoting and
Golfers from throughout south- ston, Ohio. The entry application and IS a pas! Rotary di~t ~ver­
planning programs to assure eco- eastdn Ohio will compete in a Cal- should request a tee bme. The first nor, a longume execu~ve dir~tor
nomic growth; rhe creation of and . Joway Tournament for a variety of 80 entries will compete.
of the .sourheastem OhiO.Regional
retention of jobs ~nd ·to provide nn•es. Gary Keller will be the tour.
Council, and currently VICe pres•,..,.,
dent for Rio Grande Community
College
and serving on the board of
'
directors, emJ?hasized the club's
purpose, "ServiCe Above Self'.
He said that \he Foundation is
. HOUSTON (AP) - John Con- something Texas definitely needed
just one part of the world-wide
·
nally was a three-tenn governor, at rhat time."
Rotary organization which has
Coonally
was
in
his
first
tenn
as
former Cabinet member and a busi1,166,454 members in 26,201 clubs
ness tycoon who.made and lost a governor when a sniper f~red on
in 187 countries and geographical
fOI'I\IIIe- Tall, handsome and a war Kennedy's presidential motorcade
areas.
as it ·passed through downtown
The Foundation started in 1917,
hero, he cast a
shadow.
But to a certam genemtion of Dallas' Dealey Plaza on Nov. 22,
made its first ~rant in 1930, but
.
Americans, he was always rhe nian 1963.
with the depress1on and World War
He was struck ioo and the bullet
wounded in the gunfll'e that tiDed
II, not much happened, Dahlberg
President ·Kennedy that fall day .in . passed throug~ his body, leaving
said. In 1948 rhe Foundation raised
. him with scars on his back, chest,
over a million dollars and today
·~3.
Coanally died Tuesday of' pul- wrist and thigh.
ei~ht programs are funded worldmonary fibrosis. He was 76.
Reflecting 20 years after the
• w1de rhrough rhe program.
Dahlberg said that probably the
He and his close friend and assassination, Connally said, "It
one project which has achieved
POlitical
• rhe late Pmident m~ you realize in a fleeting sec·
• Lyndoo
were dominant ond you could be gone, so you realworldwide publicity is Polio Plus
forces in TeXIS POiiticl for decadel ly don't have any time to waste, to
whose goal is to eradicate polio
until the _,,. 1c)10s.
from rhe world.
fritter. away on petty things or
Above all else, friends say, the frivolities."
Other projects include scholar• 6-foot-2 Connally was a Texan,
ships for graduate study. Meigs
Cpnnally was governor from
from his silver mane down to the 1263 to 1968. In 1961 be served for
County had one of these when
Vicki Spencer Merryman recei..-1
· tip of his W111em boocs.
a few months as Kennedy's secrea scholarship to study in Germany.
"He personified wbtlt the people tary of the Navy but left to run for
, of TeXIS WIIU.ed their~ to governor. He was 'treaSury secre·
More re~ent rrojects have been
. loOk I~" said Ben B1111CS, Con- tary for Plaident Nixo~ from 1971
recognition o the need for clean
water in Honduras where money
. . naUy's former politicaJ protep llld toim.
.
his
popularity
waned.
was provided for equipment and
buaine11 partner. "He looked . After Johnson's dearh in 1973,
Connally's
1974
indicunent
by
a
training
and Rotarians of Honduras
Texas. He 10unded Ttxas. He Collllally switched from the DemoWatergate
grand
jury
further
erodprovided
the manpower.
exuded confidence. John was cratic lp the Repul?lican Party, and
ed his political power, thouah he
Other progri!IIS include marchwas acquitted of charges that he
ing gran11 and group 'study to pro~ted a $10,000 bribe from milk
mote better world understandmg.
prOducers to persuade Nixon to Dahlberg concluded his talk by
raise price SU111l011S.
saying !hat there are given and Ilk·
.RegiOIIN
sliJ'IImer 111eeting
IIlii 'JOif IOUIIIIIDBDt will be bald on
Thunday, July 8 81 the Fairgreens
Country Club in Jacklon County, it
was limounced by Robert L. (Bob)
Evans, president of the SEORC.
Evans also said rhat Donald E.
Jakeway, Director of the Ohio
Deplrlment of Development, will
speak following the golf tournament IIJd dinner. Jlkeway has been
, director of development since the .
beginning of the Voinovich adinin-

'

•

during the volunteer project two years ago.
Activities will take from Piltshurgb., Pa., to
Cairo, Ill. (AP file photo).

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
joint conference committee that has
worked on details of the $30.9 biliion state budget for a week apparently is ready for guidance from
Gov. George Voinovich and the
Legislature's top leaders.
Rep. Patrick Sweeney, D-Cleveland, used a basketball analogy
Tuesday when asked if decisions
had been made about education,
welfare, prisons and some other big
issues that divide the Senate and
House.
•'Those things will be decided
by the committee tl!lt plays above
the rim," said Swe!ney, meaning
that Voinovich, House Speaker
Vern Riffe and Senate President
Stanley Aronoff will slam-du~k rhe
budget once they compromJSC on
the issues.
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, said he
is awaiting the governor's call.
Aronoff, R·Cincinnati, said he
would meet today with his majority
clUICus in preparation for a meeting
Thursday wirh Voinovich.
The two-year budget faces a

Rotarians Iionor Blackwo{o d;
S!!!!lf!~!m.!~[~~~~f!.R~!!~f!"!.
Dahlberg
guest
speaker
Council

SEASON SAlT

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DURKEE'S

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3 $1

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MUSTARD.

STOKELY CATSUP

LITE SEASON .SALT
2.87
4
oz.

••

PLOCHMAN'S SPOONAILE

320Z•.

32or.

incident
:~
The singer, scheduled to per:
form three concerts during the triPt
was last in Ismel in 1987, when h'i
gave two concerts that critics caUe(
disappointing.

.c 1601.

.-

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'•

FLAVORITE FROZ.EN PEAS,
CORN, MIXED VEGETABLES

.c

60Z.

ICE CREAM

•

game of croquet as ·part of Heritage Weekencr:
festivities at the Meip County Museum
Sun.":':
day.
·
·
',

CROQUET ANYONE? - This group of
authenticaUy dressed members of tbe Civil War
reenactment group, Company B, ga~ered for a

FLAVORIT·E YOG.URT.

WIENERS
1601. PIIG.

traced back to old Persian script.
Roughly translated it means gimmick," said Tom Shaughnessy of
Minnetonka.

2 s.ctlon. 14 P-voe 25 cenla
A Multimodlalnc: ....,opaptr

Tlu.e people Al1ained minor

injuries Tuesday afternoon when

their veltide llnlCk 1 tree in Cheater Township, the Gallia-Melgs
· Post of lbe su. Hlabway Pllrol ftliiOI1ed.
.
Driver Alay B. RldoYiaa, 16, 35749 Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy,
and w par mpn, Belnna M. Lisle, 15, S)'lloCUID, and Nicole, D.
Nelson; 14, 35!141 Flatwoodl Road, were trllllponed by private
vehicle to Velerlnl Mmllllrial Holpital where they were treated and
rekased.
Acooldin.lto the' aeeldent report, Rcdovian was 1011thbound on
New Hope ROid (foWIIIblp Road 91) when she lost control, went
off tile Wlllde of tile road and ~ a tree. The patrol listed
. . -1J11111 • the coalribulinl factor.
No c:iiatlalllwtn iiiUid. Tfie vdlicle sustained heavy, disabling
dlmap IDd- towed from the~.

I

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ldhw'l 110te1
.,... -. oftldll npar11.

PRESENTED PLAQUE • The "Happiness Is Helping 00 1 t'
award was rresented to Lloyd Blackwood, right, by Gene R11B,
president o the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club at the chili'i
Monday night meeting at Heath Church, Middleport.
ers in the world, and that Rotary
stands for giving to others. He also
pointed to the "power of one".
Guests were Anna Blackwood,
Betsy Parsons, Sara Owen, Rowena
Young, Betty Newell. Linda and
Jay Warner, Judy Riggs, Daisy
Blakeslee, ~ita Dahlberg, Anna
Rice, Tom Brigle, Betty Fultz,
Amy Perrio, and Ruby Vaughan.
Women of the church served the
dinner.
SPEAKER
Carl
Dahlberg talked oli the pro·
grams of the Rotary Foundation when be addressed those
attending SpoUies Niaht or the
Middleport-Pomeroy Club
held at Heath United
Methodist Church Monday

'

Meigs, Gallia to benefit from $500,000 .grant
Families employers day care
roviders .U.d communities in 28
~ppalachian co\mties, including
Meigs and GaUia will benefit from
a grant of mor~ than $500,000
awarded by the Ohio Department
of Human Servicea thil waet 10 the
Corporation for Ohio Appllachian
Development, with offices.located
in Athens.
·
Tbe pant Is one ot six awarded
to child day care resource and
referralqenciel in Ohio to prcMde
comprehenlivc child day care
Information, ODHS Director

Arnold R. Tompkins announced.
Resource and referral informalion is critical 10 fl!niliol who need.
life and reliablo child day care so
that parenu can bold jobs and stay
off public assistance programs,
Tompkins said. The need II ospecially felt in Ohio Appalachian
counties where unemployment
tends to be higher and there are
fewer dlly cart cenetliaiMD•ble.
The paoli will be uetiiO provide counaeliliJ IDd lnformali?n
for parenu on chooalna a quality
child cart amnpment that meetS

their needl, referrals to available ·
child cart providers, deveiO!ll!'~t
and ex~aon of ~.Y care ~~emcea,
and wntten educauonal mat.llrilll
on day care.
. ·
.
.
The grants will also be ~ 10
recruit new day care provulers,
help eltisting pro~ to Dllllqe
their centerS. and J)!Oytde
•t
uaiatance and trunmg on topics
relatled to chiidlf:n.
Employers willl!Cnefi~ hmlbe
grants as the qencMII ,wiD lie lillie
· to assess a company • day care
needl, design benefiti*OiiiiiiiO

*"""'

,J

=

·

IMit a eoniPMy'a needs, provide
referial ,services to a
COBI
'1 employee~. and help
design on sue care dlly

care centers.
.
Tho aa~cies will also use the
anat money 10 analyze the day
Clll u.b of 1 ~ commu!d_ll,lll!l inaelse publiC a'lolaeJ

·

Of thole Melli.
ODHS awarded the granu. in
complilllce wltb H.B. !SS. whicll
Mill in10 ~in J~. 1991.
Orant JeCllliellll wiD lie able ID
·~~~WintheirJIIO.IecUonluly l.

�Commentary

•

Thunday,June 17
Accu-Weather• forecast
MICH.

The Daily Sentinel
111 COurt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST!I .Of' THE IIEI08-IIABON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS Ol' OPINION are welcome. They sbould be loss tban 300
words. All !otters are subject to edilirig and must be signed with name.
addms and telepbone number. No unsigned !otters will bo publisbod. Letters
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

The political price of
names that float, then sink
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
wASHINGTON - The Supreme Court search was exhaustive and
awkward, a spring-long succes~ion of stops and starts, of names that floated and sank.
·
.
President Clinton had interviewed Ruth Bader Gmsburg one day
before he named her on Monday, after a hectic weekend of background
, checks hy weary White House aides.
While a three-month selection process is not unprecedented- the last
Democratic justice was nominated after ~at same tinle span - this one
was semi-public. Candidates were~ the brink, then su~nly gone.
Bu·t not without a consolauon pnze of sorts. Another ume, perhaps, the
president said of two men bypassed for the nomination. It seemed an apdy
odd fooblote to a se81Ch that could serve as a guide to problems to be
avoided when selecting a nominee.
"
None of that will make any difference when, as seems probable, Ginsburg is confirmed by the Senate to move from the U.S. Court of Appealll
10 the Supreme Court. But the process hasn't helped Clinton's unage
problems.
·
He's still got to deal with the impression that he wavers. and can be
pushed into changing course - or candidares.
Clinton bristled when a TV correspondent began what was to have
been a nomination news conference with a questJon suggesting just that,
inviting him to dispel the notion "of a ceruun zigzag quality in the decision-making process here.:·
The president snapped a reply to match the argumentative question,
without answering. ''I have long since given up the thought that ! .could
disabuse some of you turning any substantive decision into anything but
political process." he said.
.
"How you could ask a question lilce that after the statement she just
made is beyond me,'' Clinton said, turning toward Ginsburg. who had just
ended her thanks by invoking the memory of her mother.
.
.
The rebuke drew applause among the senators, guests and preSidenual
aides assembled in the sunlit Rose Garden. But the question persists, a
problem for Clinton. ·
So does the impression that political concerns were a factor. Presenting
his nominee Clinton said Ginsburg is a consensus builder, a moderate,
neither liberiu nor conservative but a .leading centrist judge. That choice
ftts the Clinton effort 10 teelaim his own credentials as a cenlrist New
Democi-at
'
'
Then too the selection of a woman for the court was his first major
personnel move since the with~w~l of a _b~~k woman nominee to be
head of the Justice Department•cml nghts divts1on.
Until the last two days of the longest Supreme Court search in 26
years, the Clinton While House had been floating the names of two men
for the seat of the retiring Justice Byron R. White.
First it was Inrerior Secretary Bruce Babbitt, until he l'illl up against
both foes and friends. ·senate Repu_blicans indic~ted he might .face a co~­
fmnation fight And environmenlaltsts w!lJlted h1m to stay putm the Cabinet That's obviously not what. Babbiu wan~.
.
But suddenly his status sw1tched from cmch to maybe, and the Whtle
House vetting squad turned ~Stephen G. Bre&gt;:er, U.S. Co~ of Appeals
jud~e in Boston. He'd been mJured when h1s b1cycle was hit by a car, so
White House aides went to his hospilal room in Boston on Thursday, and
he took the train to Washington on Friday to see Clinton.
Done deal, they were saying by_then.
1.
Breyer did have the now-familw problem of havmg employed a part·
time.maid without paying her Social Scicurity, though when he found out
he was supposed to last winrer, he did. The White House knew !hat w~ks
ago, and discounted it as an obstacle, although two potenual Jusa_ce
Department npminees, one man and one woman. were droilP.ed earher
ov~ similar episodes.
Suddenly, on Saturday, things stalled again. Exit Breyer, enter Gins-

Watergate and the 'Greek con.nection'

The Los Angeles Philharmonic
was in town recently. I had heard
much about its brilliant YOW!&amp; conductor, Esa-Pekka Salone.n. As I
followed his baton, I wondered if
perhaps I might be observing a historic lalent. Like visiting Picasso in
his studio or Vl!atching Olivier on
stage or hearing Caruso at a con~rt
hall.
It never occurred to me that my
artistic enrichment that evening
should somehow be subsidized by
the government. As it was I who
personally derived value from
attending the symphony, it seemed
perfectly reasonable that I should
pay for that pleasure.
,
But the arts crowd does not see
it that way. They believe that
orchestras and theiliers and dance
troupes and museums have some
b~iinton said he'd been impressed with both men.
sort
of entitlement to government
"I think either one of these candidates, as well as the handful of pth_ers
funding.
They seem to think the
whom 1 closely considered, may well find themselves in that posluon
taxpayers
should gladly spare some
some day in the future," the president said Monday.
change
for
aspiring thespians and
Could be. Clinton may have another court opening before 1996. Justice
divas
and
sculptorS
and ballerinas.
Harry A. Blackmon, a1 84 the oldest on the court, may be retiring soon.
It is that mind-set that brought a
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum- gaggle of artists and art administranist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and tors to a recent meeting of San
Diego's City Council. The artists
national politics for more than 30 years.
draped themselves in black to dra.
matize the " black eye" that the

B'erryls World

;, .

•

. Joseph Perkins
This is the kind of protest that
greets government officials not
only at the local level, but also at
the state and federal level who dare
to suggest that arts funding should
be in the private domain. To the
minds .o f the art crowd, the withdrawal of government support for
the arts will inevitably lead to
America's cultural decline.
Arf advocates often point out
that some of the greatest works in
history - some of Beethoven's
symphonies, some of da Vinci's
canvasses, some of Shakespeare's
plays - were sponsored by aesthetic-minded governments. But,
then, much has changed over the
last several centuries.
During the lifetimes of
Beethoven, da Vinci and Shakespeare, wealth was concentrated in
the hands of the few, mainly
monarchs and nobles. Had it been
left to the De8S8DICY to fmancially

support the arts, llien artists truly
would have starved.
.
,By continuing in modern-day
Alnerica the centuries-old tradition
of government support of the arts,
we acbtally do the average taxpayer an injustice. Go to the ballet or
the symphony or the opera, attend a
museum opening, check out a play
or musical. Look over the audience. They are disproportionately
affiuenL
Government funding of the arts
amounts to an income transf~ from
average working stiffs to the most
well-off members of our society. If
Joe Sixpack has to pay the .full
frei~ht to catch a ballgame or a
moVIe or rock conCert, why should
he be forced to subsidize the
amusements of people who are
earning far more than he?
There is another perverse aspect
to public funding oC the ans: Even
as arts advocates in San Diego and
certain other cities throilghout the
country Iamen1-cuts, certain segments of the 1rt world are making
huge sums of money. Broadway
theater{!oers, for instance, spent
$327 million during the recent season, the highest total ever. Art buyers dropped $146 million at Sothe-

by's and Christie's spring auctions
on various contemporary, Impressionistic and modem paintings.
Altogether, the arts industry
generates more than $300 billion a
year in business, or rougbly 6 per:
cent of gross domestic producL An
induStry of this size should hardly
need subsidy from the tupayen.
But if goveptment backs away
from the arts,llilv~ aay, what's
to become of small kal theatas or
museums or repertory houses?
Well, some wij.l survive, some will
go under. That's the law of tlie
marketplace. Art is a commodity
like any other. Put a product out
there that people value, and they
will' pay the gomg rate for it.
Americans cari get used to paying for art the way they pay for
entertainment. If museums and
symphonies and dance companies
operate more like profit-milking
b.usinesses marketing. their product
to the art-consuming public and
lea~ like charities, they won't have
to seek handouts frooi tile government.
Joseph Perkins Is' a tolumnist
for The San Dleao Union-Tribune and a wrller for Newspaper"·
Enterprlle Association.

After 20 years, Watergate persists · ·
For 20 years, I have greeted the
June 17 anniversary of the Watergate burglary with great enthusiasm. The eventtha~ · led ~o the
downfall of the nefanous R1chard
Nixon is , in my judgment,
supremely worthy oC celebmtion.
But this year I am aad. All the
great, gnawing riddles of Watergate seem to have been solved.
There are no mysteries left.
Well. are there? Last year
renowned CBS ip vestigati ve
reporter Mike Wallace revealed
that Deep Throat was the acting
directoroftheFBiatthetime - L.
Patrick Gray. (Gray denied it, but
don't they always?) So Deep
Throat now has a name instead of a
pornographic cognomen and there
goes that'mystery.
'
Then a couple of guys named
Len Colodny and Robert Geulin
published a book called "Silent
Coup: The Removal of a President •• and there went the most
intriguing mystery of ali - the
question of why Nixon's 1972
campaign team felt a need 10 pene·
trate the Democratic National
Committee's Watergate headquartees in the first place.
Theories have abounded
through the years: The bur11tars
were simply seeking politicllmlel·
ligence; !hey were try1ng 10 link the

•

financially strapped city supposedly will suffer if the council follows
through with its plan to trim arts
funding. ·

Democrats with radical groups;
they were really CIA agents and
they deliberately bungled lhe bur-.
J!)ary because the agency distrusted
·
1
J

OSeph S;pear

Nixon.
But all that went out the window
with the Colodny/Gettlin book. The
person who plolled the burglary,
they wrote, was White House counsel John Dean, who was worried
that the DNC files were bulging
with negative stuff about his
fiancee, Maureen, who- was Jood
friends with a woman who was
running a call-girl ring that was
servicing the IIUidy DemOCIIIIS.
But wait a minute. Remember
that Mike Wallace report? One of
the people he interviewed was a
man named Alfred C. Baldwin
amemberoflheblqlaryrin&amp;wbo
wu 11111iooed ICIOII the 1tnet froin
the Watergate office complell and
assigned die llllk of monitoring the
phones that were bugled by his
buddies. Baldwin liltened 10 more
thin 200 Democratic conversationa, and this il what he had to aay
to Mlb
"I...Walllce:
..____.__.
........
,..ve """'' ... Wn..u""
or not any type of call ring or prostitution type ring -~- ~na out

m.

of the Democratic National headquarters, and I can categorically
state ..• that no such operation was
beinB conducted, at least~ the
conversations that I was momtoring.''
·
So perhaps the Colodny/Genlin
theory is a litdc off the wall, and
the "why" of Watergate rellllins a
mystery. But thele ill a solution that
gains credibility as the others collapse, and it is 1alown to lficlonados 111 "the Greek Connection.''
In 1968, Richard Nixon's
Greek-American vice presidential
running mate, Spiro Agnew,
declared his neutrality with regard
to the milillr}' junta holding power
in Athens. Then Agnew did an
abrupt about-face and strongly
endoned the junta. Why?
Greet joumlll*l Elias Demetracopoulos, who had come 10 Wubington to Jet up a one-man, antijunta task force, had an ana"!er:
The Greek lntell!Jence Servtce,
founded and nbaidized by .the
CIA, !'3d funneled $549,'!00 mto
the N1xon•Asnew camp8liJI and
the bagman had been a Greek-

·

American bjiSinessman, Nixon pal
and CIA asset named Thomas Pappas. In 1968, Demetracopoulos
w~nt, to I?N.C. C:hai~an Larry
0 Bnen w1th t111s mtelbsence.
This potentiaUy ruinous information was still tn DNC files in
1972, and Ni.xon knew abput 'it
because the tenacious Demetracopoulos had been under surveillance by the FBI and CIA. John
Mitehell had threa~ned him with
deportation. The U.S. envoy io.
Greece hadtlabeled him a "danlldt·
0111 and myaerious enemy.''
,
Were the burglars lookin&amp; fc)r
the Pappas file? Univenity ofWjfconsilil'rof. Stanley Kutlel', authOr
of an acclaimed hillorr call OJ!
"The Wars ofWaterpte,' camcltD
this conclusion: "The 'Oieek Colinecf:ion' theory ... eansecl ~ ~
anx1ety for the longett penod or
t!me fpr the Nixon administrfl;
uon."
.
'
1;,
The mysteriei of Wllelpte 11111
dwindling by the day.
;
JOHph Spear Ia • IJndlat~
wrller for NeW~pJ~per Ellterprlli
Asloclatioll.
'
t'
1

,.
Thouaht for .,.,()day:· "Not 10 know ia bad. Not to wantiO know• ~·
Nc
hope is ............. Not
unfi •
:-'~. to
unu........... . 10 care Is OIJI'IIble.'' - Nipt.

•

By The Associated Press
Fair weather is expecled through
the weekend, with generally sun·ny
skies and clear nights.
·
Lows will be in the lower 50s
north and upper 50s south. Highs
Thursday will be in the upper 80s.
TOO record high tempemture for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 96 in 1957. The record
low was 43 in 1969.
Sunset today will be at 9:02
p.m. Sunrise on Thursday will be at
6:02am.
Aroond the nation
The nation was. '!'ostly fair and

~

INO.

B:y 'ack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

responsibility for arts funding

ccnditions and

ITolec:lolaso I

WASHINGTON- Twenty-one from th~ GR'.\Ik KYP io the Nixon . Greek junta t0 the Nixon campaign. anxiety for the longes.t period of
years after the infamous W81etgate cam_Paign. In essence, the CIA was
Accordina to some theories, time for the Nixon administration,
burglary poisoned the Nixon presi- induectly contributina to the Nixon's curiosity about Demeua- and the agencies that served it The
dency, conspiracy theories are still Republican candidateS.
copoulos and the dirt he supplied · FBI, the CIA, the State Deparllllent
evolving about the true motives
D~mocrats in 1968 compelled and the Department of Justice all
behind the political scandal of the
N1xon to authorize the Water~ maintained fil es containing
century.
·
break-in four years tarer.
. allegedly hostile information on
This week's anniversary of the
J'
It sounds far-fetched, but Demetracopoulos - information
burglary gives us a chance to cletail
strangely complements what G. that each agency eventually
an intriguing theory about the mysGordon Liddy - convicted for acknowledged was wrong."
Though we may never know
rerious motives of the break-in. The
bein~ one of the co-conspirators in
why the bungled burglary
exacdy
theory, known as the "Greek conthe burglary of the DNC headquarwas
ordered,
Nixon's own comnection," was first reponed by us a
ters at tile.Watergate hotel - has
ments
during
.the
Watergate coverdecade ago.
The conduit for the illegal con- long contended: that the lireak-in
up
are
interesting
to note. In one of
It revolves around the persecu- tributions was Thomas Pappa$, a "was to fmd out what O'Brien had
tion of a distinguished Greek jour- high-rolling Greek-American busi- of a derogatory nature about us, not the many references to Pa&amp;lllas on
nalist named Elias Dematracopou- nessman, whose enterprises were for us to get something on him ot the much-quoted White-House
los, whose investigative reporting alleged to be fronts for CIA opera- the Democrats.'' Anotller Nixon transcripts, Nixon said this:
dogged the Nixon administration. tions in Greece . Pappas was a aide testified that the purpose of · "I think it's a mauer of fact,
A few weeks before the 1968 elec- major fund-raiser and contributor bu.uglary was to ''do photocopy though, that somebody-said be sure
to talk to Pappas because he's
tion, Dematracopoulos presented to the 1968 campaign of Nixon and work of docllllents."
being
very hel~ful on the, uh,
explosive evidence to the Demo- his running mate. Spiro T. Agnew,
The theory is explored in the.
Watergate
thing.'
cratic National Cornmiuee that had who became the highest-elected only seholarly account of the scanDINNER
"~WITH CHENEY the potential to doom Nixon's can- official of Greek-American back• dal, "The Wm of Watergate: The
President
Clinton
may be less· than
didacy.
·
ground.
·
Last Crisis of Ric bard Nixon,"
.•
five
months
into
his
presidency,llut
In a meeting with then-DNC
In 1971, Demetracopoulos laid · which was recently penned by
several
Republican
heavyweights
Chairman Lawrence O'Brien, out his evidence to a congressional Stanley I. Coder. A Guggenheim
t&gt;ematraeopoulos alleged that the subcommiltee - resisting pressure Fellow and a professor at the Uni- are already testing the waters for a
Greek KYP -. a spy agency found- from Nixon's longtime adviser, venity ofWiaconsin, Cud~ spent a possible White House run in 1996.
ed and partially funded by the Murray Chotiner. The "Greek con- decade researching and writing the Senate Minority Leader Robert
Dole, R-Kan., and former Housing
American CIA- may have been nection" was lent credence in 1976 .book.
· secretly bankrolling the Nixon when a former U.S. ambassador to
As Cutler points out: "Si~ifi- Se~;retary Jack Kemp are considcampaign. He was able to trace Greece confl111led before Congress cantly, the 'Greek Connection the~ ered the early favaites, but former
Secretary Richard Cheney
three cash payments of $549,000JV--t~h:e~f~un:n:e~lin~g~of~m~o=ne~y~fr~o~m~th=e~o:ry~o~f~W:a:te:.r!ga:te:;,:ca=••~sed:,the:,~m~o!st~ Defense
is elbowing his way into the mill. ·
.,...-----·~
Cheney, who has suffered three
hean attacks, recently told friends
at a small dinner narty in Calif~
that the "health' r isSue is the only
thing that has deprived him of
front-runner status. But Cheney
added that his doctors have assured
him that his health is ''fine.''
Candidate or not, Cheney has
some strong opinions ori some of
the issues facing Clinton. Cheney
disasrees vehemently with his sue•
cessor as defense secretary, Les ·
Aspin, about the future of the ''Star
Wars" program, which was recently canceled. Cheney believes the
.expensive missile defense program
is essential in today's world climate, when smaller (;ountries are
quickly
developing nuclear
•
weapons capabilities.
.
Chen'ey al.so s~id that _he !s
against Amencan mtervent1on ~n
Bosnia, but that if the plot to ki_ll
former President Bush on hiS
recent visil to Kuwait is true, then
the Uniled States should feel compelled to retaliate against the guilty
party, believed to be Iran.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blnsteln are writers for United
Feature Syndlt:ate,.lnc. , ,. ,

Th~

Fair weather expected through weekend ·

OHIO Weather
Page-2- i'he Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, June 16,·1993

• IColumbus las- I

89"

•

W. VA.

·

5:::y

Pte:ty Cloudy

011183Accu--. Int.

Weather
· , South-Central Ohio
Fr!day tbro!Jgh Sunday:.
in
,
Tonight, clear. Low 60-65 .
F8lf. Lows m the 60s. Hig~s
• Thursday, sunny. High near 90.
the upper 80s to lo.w 90s Fnda~,
-_ Extended forecast: .
85-90 Saturday and m the 80s Su •
day.

Area deaths

...
&lt;" James Branham

Jamea Thomas Branham, 65, of
,.. Mason, died Tuesday, June 15,
1993, in the Veterans Administra-.. tion Hospital, Huntington.
&gt; Born Jan. 6, 1928, in Valdosta,
·.. Ga., he was a son of the late
&lt; George W. and Helen Jenne! Bran... ham.
-. A coal miner, he was a veteran of
· the U.S. Navy in World War II. He
.. was a member of the Smith· ·· Capehart American Legion Post
• 14() oC New Haven. and a lifetime
· · member oC the Stewart-Johnson
·' VFW Post 9926 Qf Mason, where
he Will serVing as quartermaster for
· the past eight years, and State Aid
. · DeCamp He was a past VFW
' : CornmanderoftheEighlh District
• Surviving are three sons, Wii- .
· · liam Ray Branham of Cumberland
· Ky., James Timothy Branham of
·' Mason Gregory L Herrin of Allentown Pa.· four ~ghters Kathy K
"· sweei ~f Maynardvill~, Tenn.:
~· Teresa G Hannan· of Columbus .
Debbie D: VanMeter oC Mason, and
Jacqueline Curtis of Tucson, Ariz.;
former wife, Juanita M. Clelland of
Millon_: and eight grandchildren.
The funeral will be Friday, 1
. p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral
·: Home with the Rev. Jerry Scott
· · officiating. Burial will be in
.. !Grldand Memorial Gardens, where
' full military rites will be conducted.
,. Friends may call at the funeral
' horne Thursday, 6 to 9 p.m.

'Kerr Jackson
.·, Kerr James Jaclcson, 68, of Gal: lipolis. Oh,jo, died Tuesday, June
.. IS, 1993, at University Hospi~ in
Columbus, Ohio, afrer a long ill' IICII.

. BOrn May 25,

1925, in Hogsett,
· he was 11011 of the late Lowell and
W"tndon Jackson.
A retired loclcmaster with the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, .he
was a U.S. Navy veteran, member
or the American Legion Post 23 of
·Point Pleasant, and Morning Dawn
Lodge No. 7 F&amp;AM.
: Surviving are his wife, Norma
VanMatre Jackson; brother, John
.Jackson of Beech Hil~ daughter,
, Sharon Jacbon oC Gallipolis; two
· sons and daughters-in-law,' Riclty
and Cathy Jackson of Gallipolis,
· Dave and Karen JackSon of Point
· Pleasint; and ftve ~hildren.
• The funeral w1ll be Friday 2
p.m., at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with the Rev. Johnny Jeffrey

:Ora

The Daily Sentinel
~(tiBPIIl:S.IIIO)

Pllbliohod eYery lftomooo, Mooday
. ' lll._tl Friday, ll1 Courf St.,_ ~ ..roy,
Ohio by ._. Ohio 'Valley ruoliohlow
CampAilyiMuiii....U. Inc., PatMray,
Ohio 457681 Ph. M-21116. Second "i
poRap piia a&amp; PuiiWSIOj, Ohio.

-led

Member: The
i'n!u, and U.. .
Ohio Newlpoper Al-'odon, NaUooal .
. : Ad\oertilinc ~ntad•e , Branham
Newopapor Soloo, 733 Third Avenue,

·. NewYorlt, NowYooklOOI7.

Bond-

•1

'

pegrMAST£R:
" The . Dally SonliMI,
l'o&lt;IIIIO)'; OHio 457811.

ehaow•"'
lU Coun St.,
. .

IVIIICRIPTION RATEI
BTeu.t. or M-lto•ta
One Weok .......................... ................. uo
C)ne M6n&amp;h.........................................l8.81
' One Year.. ..................................- ...183.30
lll'llll.l COPY
..
PUCB
llaDy............. ................................26 Cenll

lluliocribon ... cloolri.. to po)' ll1o oarrt.. may nmlt 1ft ad¥01101 to Tho

Dally Sentinel 011 a U,no, all or Iii
-.111 baa1o. Cndlt wiD IN!
eanioT
ueh week.
No tulloerip&amp;no by ma11 pormluod In
UOII wMn home carrier ..me~ it

tP""

IYatllble.
JIAolllaboOrllltloM

INide Molp CoanQ&lt;

'
13 w............................................. bU4
:MWoob.......................................... l43.18

5Jw..tl..................._,, ,,, ....................78
O.tolde Jlotp OolonQ&gt;

II Woob. .........................................bUO

118 Woob ......................................... 141.110
l!ll Woob. ............................................. 40

..,

and Rev. Ralph Workman officiai' in g. Burial will be in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens.
Pallbearers will include Louis
Bodimer, Hoadley Garlick, Jr.,
Wendall Haner, Jeny Haner, John
McMillin and Herbert Williamson.
Friends may call at the; funeral
home Thursday, 7 to 9 p.m.

Anna R.oush
Anna Mae Roush, 87, of New
Haven, W.Va., died 'Tuesday June
IS, 1993 at the Pleasant Valley
Hospilljl in Point Pleasan~. W.Va.
She was fo!mertr Superintendent of the Children s Department
at the_. New Haven United
Methodist Church, where she was a
member. She was also secrellr}' oC
Live Wire Sunday Class an~ a
m11mber of New Haven Fue
Department Women's Awilliary.
Born July 16, 1905 in New
Haven, she was the daughter of the
la_te ~ilson ~- Miller an.d the la!C
Lmme T. M1Uer. Preceding her m
death were hez husband. Joseph ~- .
Roush, and three _brothers, Cha!he,
Bill and .J~es MiUer. . ,
Surv1v!ng are one twm Sl_ster,
Ada F. Gnnstead, ~ew Haven, one
brother, Horner Miller, Logan;_one
son; Charles W. Roush (Geraldine),
New Haven; one daughter. Faye
Montgomery (Donald). Greeley,
Colo.; four gran~ch1ldren and
seven great-grandchildren.
Services will be at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Foglesong Funeral Horne
in Mason, W.Va., with the Rev.
Eldon Shingleton officiating. Burl·
a1 will follow in Graham·Cemetery.
Friends may call6 to 9 p.m. Friday at the funeral home.

Mary Rime
Mary Margaret Riffte, wife of
the late Heber H. Riffte. died Wednesday, June 16, 1993, pt her home.
Arrangements will be announced
by the Crow-Russell Funeral
Home.

Genevieve Schneider
Genevieve V. Schneider, 80, of
Syracuse, died Tuesday; June 15,
1993, at Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
Born in Syl'acuse, July 30, 1912,
she was the daughter of the late
Albert C. and Daisy Wise Duckworth. She was a retired postal
employee, worked 20 years at
ElberfcHds, and had also worked at
one time witll Francis Florists.
She was a member of the First
United Presbyterian Church of
Syracuse, the Second Monday
Club, and the Syracuse Homemalcers Club.
She is survived by her husband,
George H. Schneider, a dauJhter
lnd son-in-law, Eleanor Kay and
Marvin McKelvey, two grandsons,
Michael and Jay McKelver. all of
Syracuse; a brother and SISter-inlaw. Charles and Cecil Mary o..,t.
worth of Creston, two nieces,
LaDonna Lewis of Creston, and
Delores Brubaker of Wadsworth,
several great nieces and one great
nephew.
Besides hez parentl ahe was preceded in death by a sister,
Josephine HJtden, and. a brother,
Bill Duckworlh.
Paneral services will be held
Saturday at 11 a.m. at the First
United Presbyterian Church in
Syracuse. The Rev. Kris Trietong
Robin1011 will officlate and burial
WiD be in the Letan Falls Cemetery. Friends may call 11 the Fisher .
Funeral Home, Friday 2 10 4 and 7
10 9 p.m. and one.lieu prior to the
aervices II the chureh.

•

warm today as a high pressure system over the Plains moved east.
But scattered thundershowers
were expected later in the day
through the Carolinas and along the
western Gulf Coast A few thundershowers also will develop across
parts of the Midwest and the northwest Great Lakes states.
Much of the West Coast was
fo recast to be sunny and milder,
while the intense Southwest heat
was expected to coni slightly.
On Tuesday , in McAlester,
Okla.• one man died and another

was hurt when lightning struck as
they sought shelter fro m a fas tmoving thunderstorm, authorities
said.
Wiblesses said Randy Maness,
32, who died, was thrown 25 feet.
Tracey Wingo, 29, also of
McAlester, was in stable condition ·
at McAlesler Re~~:ional Heallh Center.
Severe thunderstorms also ~it ·
parts of the Northeast and the m1d. Atlantic states.
Tornados were reported near
Towanda, Pa., and near Fonda in
eastern New York. Golf-ball-sized

•

hail also was reported .in parts .of
the region.
Other sttong thunderstorms hit
parts of the Rockies. Midwest and
Plains. Tornadoes were reported in
parts of Idaho, Colorado and in St
Petersburg, Fla.
· .
The h1gh temperature Tuesday
in the lower 48 states was 116 at
Lake Havasu City, Ariz.
Highs today were forecast to be
mostly in the 80s, with 90s in the
South, West and parts of the Midwest. and some 70s in the Northeast and Northwest.

•

Pepsi executive says tampering
all·b.ut impossible at bottling_plants

(f .

'.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wedneldlly. June 16, 1993

By SKIP WOLLENB.ERG
AP Business Writ~r
Res.ponding . to reports of
syrin~es and needles being found in
Peps1 cans, Pepsi-Cola's U.S. chief
said tOday it was virtually impossible for any tampering to have
occurred at bottling plants.
The Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday it was investigati~g at least a dozen complaints of
J!O$Sible tampering, while at least
one person was arrested on charges
of making a false reporL
People in 18 states have reported finding syringes and hypodermic needles in Pepsi cans over th~
last week, according to police and
media reports.
'
Pepsi's North American division
president and chief executive Craig
Weatherup, appearing on all three
ielevision networks this morning,
was asked whether he was positive
that tampering had not occurred in
the plants. ,
.
"I can't give you a 100 percent
~tee, but I would assure you it
IS 99.99 percent assured that nothing is happening in the facili.ties
themselves, in the plants. It's literally, physically impossible," he
said on NBC's "Today" show.
Pepsi's highly mechanized production process churns out some 30
millioncansaday,hesaid.

" Th~se cans 'were produced at
very different plants, some six
months _ago, some six weeks ago,
some slx days ago," Weatherup
said. "And therefore there's no
correlation between the complaints,
when these cans were produced or
where they were produced."
The cans are typically turned
upside down, blasted with hot air
~d water and then flipped to be
f1lled and sealed, a process that
takes seconds.
Pepsi-Cola Co., based in
Somers, N.Y. , has said it has no
plans for a recall, and federal officials caution that the claims
appeared unrelaled and many could
be hoaxes.
.
The cases have surfaced 1n
Arkansas, California, Connecticut.
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana,
Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi,
Missouri, New York, Ohio, Oklahom a, Pennsylvania, Virginia,
Washington and Wyoming. ·
FDA Commissioner David
K~ler said that a central Pennsylvama man ·had been arrested on
federal chm:ge~ of maki~g a f~lse
report of fmdmg a synl)ge m a
Pepsi can,
.c~ristopher J. Burnette of
W!ll.lamsport, Pa., w~s to be
arra1gned t~day: sa1d . FDA
spokesman J1m 0 Hara satd. He

Lottery numbers

Meigs
annou.ncements

CLEVELAND (AP)'-- Here are
Tuesday, night's Ohio Lottery
selections:
·
Pick 3 Numbers
0-3-9
(zero, three, nine)
Pick 4 Numbers
7-5-5-5
(seven, five, five, five)
Buckeye 5
7-24-25-32-33
(seven. twenty-four, twentyfive, thirty-two, thirty-three)
The jackpot for Wednesday's
Super Lotto drawing is worth $40
million.

Mildred Harris

Mildred Opal Harris, 81, 54210
SR 681, R~ville.• died Tuesday
evening, June 15, 1993, at Camden
Clark Memorial Hospilal in Parkerburg, W.Va.
She was born in Clarksburg, W.
Va., a daughter of the laiC Leonidas
and Alice Oliver Barr. She was a
housewife, a member of the Joppa
United Methodist Church, Joppa
United Methodist Women, a cllarter member of the Riverview Garden Club and a charter member of
the Meigs County Senior Citizens.
She is survived by a son, Larry
Harris; a son and daughter-in-law,
Clearmont "Sonny" and Mary Harris Jr., all of Reedsville; two daughters, Margaret Grossnickle,
Reedsville, and Lucielle Cable,
North Highland, Calif., two daughters and sons-in-law, Betty and
David Hamilton, and Sylvia and
Harland Webb, all of Mansfield;
four brothers, Horace Barr, Pittsburgh, Pa., Russell of St. Petersburg, Fla., Charles of Belpre, and
Dale of Reedsville; 16 grandchildren, 25 great-grandchildren, one
step-great-grandson ; one greatgreat-grandson; a special friend,
1Teresa Bar'ringer; and several
nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband,
Clearmont Park Harris Sr.; two
brothers, Arthur and Wayne; and
two grandchildren.
Services will be Friday at 1 p.m.
at the Joppa United Methodist
Church in Reedsville with Rev.
. · ·
Burial
Seldon Jo hnson off!Clating.
wHI be in Ed11n Cemetery in
Reedsville.
Friends may call at the. White
Funeral Horne in Coolville after 2
Thursda
p.m: iam TY·hompson·
W111
William (Tommy) Thompson,
79, formerly of Cheshire, died
· Monday, June 7, 1993 at his residonee in Lancaster, Calif.
Memorial services will be at 1
p.m. Friday a1 the Cheshire Baptist
Church with the Rev. Ken Sanclers
officiating. Interment will follow at
the Gravel Hill Cemetery under the
. direction of the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Wetherllolt Chapel,
Oallipolis.
Graveside Military Rites will be
conducted by !he Feeney Bennett
American Le111on Post 128, MiddleporL
.

faces up to five _year:; in pris~ and
a ,$250,000 fme 1f conv1cted ,
· 0 Hara sa1d.
.
.
.. K~s_s!er had e~rher sa1d o~ce
an !f!llial ~mplamt of larRJ?C':'"g
rece1ves widespread pubhclly,
there ;u-e always subsequent complaints, many of which tum out to
be false.':
.
_The fmt re_port of a fore1g_n
ObJect m a Peps! can, a hypodermiC
needle that was found to he uncontaminated, surfaced last Wednesday in Tacoma, Wash.
The maker of soft. drinks, bottied at more than 400 locations, is_
one of the most
and

s1:ve adv~rs. But unbl Tuesday
mght, 11 had kept_ a low-key
approa:h to the growmg reports of
tampe~g.
.
Pepsl spoke~man_ Andrew Glangola said, ,no m]unes have been
r~ported and there IS no health
nsk to consumers. We see no reason for a pr~~uct recall and the
FDA concurs.
.
. There ~ere some stgns of growmg uneasmess .. A grocery m Iowa
pulled all PepSI products from the
shelves Tu~ay afte~ a c~stomer
reoorted.finding -~ synnge m a can
ohegul!lr Peps1 purchased two
days e8Iber.

Camp postponed
The Eagle football camp for
junior high players has been postponed until Monday at 5 p.m.
Information may be obtained by
calling Dave Barr at 992-3302. Par·
ticipants may register the ftrst day
of camp.
Trustees to meet
The Scipio Township Trustees
will hold a special meeting June 23 .
at 6:30 p.m. at the home of the
clerk, Connie Chapman, to discuss
the 1993 budget.
Preaching and singing
Faith Full Gospel Church, Long
Bottom, will have preaching and
sin~ing Friday at 7 p.m. with David
Da1ley, evangelist. Pastor Steve
Reed invites the public. Fellowship
will follow.

SYRINGE INVESTIGATION- New Orleans police omcers
James Ducos, left, and Carlton Lawless examine a Pepsi Cola can
Tuesday which contained a needle and syringe. The can was discovered by Albert Harris.on. This is the fourth can In tbe New
Orleans area found to contain a needle and syringe. (AP)

Squads make six runs

Ul)itS of the Meigs County
Emergency Service made six calls
for assistance on Tuesday and early
Wednesday
morning. ·
Revival
.
Uniis
responding
were: 10:02
Full Gospel Lighthouse, Hiland
a.m.
Middleport
to
Oliver'
Street for
Road, Pomeroy, will have revival
Lashia
Mitchell
who
was
transporttoday through Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
nighdy with Betty Baker and the. ed to Vererans Memorial Hospital;
5:45 p.m. Syracuse to Third Street
Joyful Sounds. Public welcome.
for Helen Jeffers who was transported to VMH; 6:38 p.m., Middleport to Laudberry Road for Roberta
Gary Leo Smith, 34. Pomeroy Kail who was transponed to Holzer
and Kathryn Rae Rilberts, 28, Bid- Medical Center; 7:38 p.m. Middlewell were issued a marriage license port to N. Third Street for Lance
in the Meigs County Probate-Court
Tuesday.

License granted

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday
Admissions: Helen Jeffers,
Syracuse.
.
Discharges: Alice G!lmes, Dexter; Luevenia Hyman; Long Bottom.

LI"vestock
rep 0 r t

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Wednesday by ihe Ohio Department of
AgnB·carulrtourews: and gilts: mostly SO
cents lower; demand light.
U.S. I-3, 230-260 Ibs., country
points, 46 _0047 .00: plants 47.2548 ·~~~~etf.·~2.

230.260 lbs.,
country points, 47.25-48.00. ·
.
Recetpts Tuesday 9,800. Esumated receipts Wednesday 7,500.
Prices from The Producers LivestoCk Association:
Cattle: l.OOto 1.50low~.
Slaughter stee~J: choice 74.00·
80.25; select 68.00.74.50.
Slaughter heifers: choice 72.0080.10; select 67.00-74.50.
Cows: 1.00 to 1.50 higher; !Ill
cows 56.00 and down.
Bulls: steady; all blills 69.25 and
down.
Sheep and -lambs: 4.00 Iowa- to
2.00 higher; choice wools 42.00SS.2S; choice clips, no report; feed. ·
er lambs 70.00 and down; aged
sheep 38.00 and down.

Hospital news

Harman who was transported to
VMH; 11:08 p.m. Columbia Fire
Department to Capenter Hill Road
for a car fire involving Eddie
Smathers' car; 2:37 a.m. Syracuse
to Apple Grove Dorcas Road for
Charles Spawn who was transported to VMH.

Stocks
Am Ele Power....................36 1/8
Ashland Oil ........................25 1/2
AT&amp;T................................62 1/4
Bank One...........................S2 ~
Bob Evans ......................... 16 718
Charming Shop.................. 14 ~
Chmp Industries.................l3 314
City Holding......................25
Federal M~ul... .................20
Goodyear &amp;R ..................38 3/8

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
June 15 discharges - Thomas
Duncan, Cheryl Sanders, John
Roach, Katherine Fillinger, Lois
l..and.s End..........................30
Adkins, Ruth Avery, Cherish
Limited Inc. ...................... 24 1/4
Wallen, Mary Witt, Paul Perry,
M~ltimedia Inc ..................36
Geraldean Harrison, Natalie Price,
Pomt Bancorp ....................14 .
Christine Williams, Minnie Martin,
Rax Restaurant ..................l/8
Heather James, Casey Jarrell and · Relia!'Ce Electric................ l91/2
Shauna Beaver.
Robbms&amp;Myers ................ 161/4
June 15 births - Mr. and Mrs.
Shoney's Inc...................... l7 1/4
Gary Bryan. son, Crown City. Mr.
Sw Bank.;····---..................3S l/2.
and Mrs. Harold Gregory, daughWendy Int
Worth'
.... .14· 314
ter, Wellstone. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
mgton Ind................ 31 3/4
Hodge, son, Point Pleasant. Mr.
Stock reports Ire the 10:30
and Mrs. Winston O'Connor, son.
a.m. qpotea provided by
Rio Grande.
Kemper Seearlties, lac., oi
GaUipoliL
·

!...................

Court news

The following actions have ·
recendy been ordered in the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas.
In the case of State of Ohio vs.
Michael Mill~ a request for a separate trial and a motion to disqualify
was denied.
.
The following parties were
grilnted divorces James A Weaver
and Beverly A Weaver, Sheila A.
Long and Dennis E. Long, Trudy
A. Dent and Roger Dent, Diana
Starch~ and Ronald Starch~. S.bara A. Windsor and Robert Windsor II, Shawnette Marie ~­
bam liarman and Larry Richud
Harman, Terry L. Brewer and Bonnie Sue Brewer.
In addition, Mark Haley, Mid·
dleport, and Theresa Whitt Haley,
Pomeroy, filed for divoru.

I

�The

Sentinel

Ohio

June 1

co.
" Our bullpen has been good all
year," said Giants manager Dusty
Baker. "This ·was a case of too
many Reds' chances and too many
Red s' hits. We had a couple
chances early in the game and
could have broken the game open.
They just beat us."
Kevin Mitchell also homered,
and Mitchell, Sanders and Morris
each had three hits to hack up Tim
Belcher (5-4). who was hit twice
by balls, once by a line drive and
later by a pitch.
"Belcher deserves a Purpl e
Heart and Blue Cross and I don' t
know what else," said Reds manager Davey Johnson.
Belcher was hit on his.pitching
shoulder by a line drive by Robli:,:
Thompson in the 11\ird and was bit
by a pitch from Dave Burba in the

sixth. He didn' t stick around to talk
about it but, according to his practice, taped his written comments to
his dressing room cubicle.
"Please except (sic) the following as my_serious and truthful
account of the game just ended,"
Belcher wrote.
" I felt good before and after the
shot off my shoulder. 'l wasn't
aware that the ball was right beside
me, or I would have thrown him
out
•'What a nice offensive night for
our club. As it t!lffied out, we needed them all.
.
" Burba gave me a chance to
forget about my shoulder during
the next innin~.
" Hal Moms can flat hit"
What woul.d have been the
Reds' opening-day lineup made its
debut in the 64th game of the season. Morris missed 56 games with
a shoulder separation from a preseason brawl, and Chris Saba
missed the past I 3 games at third
base with a ruptured disc in his
lower back.
"I'm sure the Reds are glad to
have Morris back," said Giants
manager Dusty Baker, who credited the first baseman with snuffmg
out a San· Francisco opportunity
with a sliding catch of a sacrifice
bunt attempt in the fifth.
"It's almost like spring training," said Morris. " I always did
well in spring training.
"Of course, when you're hitting
in front of Barry and Mitchell
you're going to get balls to hit." '
The Giants scored in the first
inning on a single by Todd Ben.
zinger, then were held in check
until the seventh
Mitchell homered to lead off the
second, his eighth homer of the
season, extending his hitting streak
to 10 games. Belcher also singled
in a run off Jeff' Brantley (3-5).
Sanders' three-run homer
capped a five-run fl.fih as the Reds
took a 7-1 lead, including a two-run single !1y Bobby Kelly.
The Giants chased Belcher in
the seventh with two men on base.
Reliever Bobby Ayala then gave up
a two-run single to Thompson and
a two-run homer to Bonds.
The Reds added three in the
eighth on a two--run single by Morris and a wild pitch by Kevin
Rogers.
"We just have to co,me back
(See NL on Page S)
,

POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTinES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JUNE 19, 1993

. R.C •.
COLA
PRODUCTS

'

24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

MR. BEE

GOOD DRIVE, MITCH! -Cincinnati third base coach Bobby
Valentine (left) congratulates slugger Kevin Mitchell as the latter
trots bome after hitting a home run off Jeff Brantley in the second
inning or Tuesday night's National League game against the visiting
San Francisco Giants, who lost 10-5. (AP)

ScoreiJoard
Team

Eu&amp;ern DlvWon
W L Pet.

Philaddphd ...........45
Sl. Louil .•• •.••.........34
Montteal ................34

CB

18
28
30

.7l 4
.S4&amp;
.531

I 0..5
11..5

Ctuugo.................. 30 31
Aoridl ................... 30 33

.492
.476

14
IS

Piltlburgh ..... w . ...... 28
NewYork .............. 20

.452

.323

16,5
24 ..5

34
42

CIW:aao..................32 29

.m

5

Califomia ...............31
Se~ttle : ...................31
Te~tu .....................30
MU\nea011 ..............29

30
33
32

.508
.484
.484

31
Oakland .................23 36

.483
.390

1.5
3
3
3
1.5

Tuesday's scores
Detroit 10, CI..EVEl.AND 4
Torauo 6, t.tinnclcu 3
New Yolk 9 , Ba~um 1
Baltimo.e 4, Milwaukee 2
OU.caso 4, OUland 0

Sc.aule 6, Kuuu City 1
Tu.u 6, California 5

Western Di•lsiow
San Francisca ........ 41
Lo1 Angelc. .... ....... 34
AU.anll ................... 36

23

.641

28

.548

·

6

30

.S45

6

Houstoo ......... ." .......32 29
C[NCINNA1L ..... 30 34

.525

.469

7.5
II

San Diego ..............26
Colorado ................20

.413
,317

14.5
20.5

Tclday•s games

Tuesday's scores

. Tormto (MorriJ 3- 7) at Minneaoi.l CEr·
tcltlon 3-6), U !l p.m.
,
Baltimore (Muuiaa 9-2) at Milwallkcc
(Nav1no 4-3), 2:0!1 p.m.
~eago (McDowell 9-4) at Oa~ and
(Darlingl·3), 3,!5 P!"·
CI...EVELAND (Knmcr 1·2) 1t Deuoit

C'mcago 3. Aaida 0
At.lll!\11 2. New York l
O NO NNATI 10, San Francilco5
Sm Diego 3, Houlton 0
St.. Louis 6, Pitubullth 3
Moou.al 8, Pbilodcfpllia 4
l..ol Angclca 12, Colorado4

Boston (Dopaon 3-S) at New York
(l'mz4·S), BOp.m.
Texu {Brown 5-4) 1t California (F'. n·
ley 6-5), 10:05 p.m.
Kanau Cit y (Cone 3-7) at Sea n le
(Hanson S-4), lO:OS p.m.

37
43

(Clullidaan 4-2), 7,os p.m.

al '(ll""""fidd 1-4), 7o)S p.m.
San Frtn ciaco (T . Wilson 4 · 3) at

' CINCINNATI (Rijo 6-2), 7,35 p.m.
New YOlk (Schourdc 2-8) at ' Atlant.a
(0 . Modd .. S·l ). 7,40 p .m.

San Dieao {Broc1il 1- 1) n Houston
(Porwsal4-2), 1:0S p.m.
1M An1clca {Kevin Ot6u S-4)
or.ado (byftOIO 3·3). 9 :05p.m.

al

Col·

S1n F~ (Swift 8-3) n CINCIN-

NATI (Smiloy J.IX12,3S p.m.
St. Louit (Cormier 3·3) at Ot.ic ago
(WMdcll ().0), 2'20 p.m.

FloriM (Hammond 6--4} 11 Ptliladcl·
phil Oacbon 6-2), 7,35 p.m. ·

New Yadt (Ociodcn 7-S)

II

PltubwJh

(Walk 7-5),7:35j&gt;...

S1ri DieP:.CB•n• 7-!1 ) it HoU•t~;~ n
(J(ile 5·1), !:o! ,. ...

AMERICAN LEAG UE
E.....mDhilfon

T....

W

L

~.;;k·:::::: : ::: ::~ ~

T.-. .................. 37 28

Pd.

GB

.569

4
4

:m

811..,_ ............... 33

31 ,5 16

8 ....., ....................29
Mil•a-.............27

34

35

.460
.43S

CIJ!VEI.AND., ....:IS 31 .WI

w....... DitilkNI

Kan.. l

Citr ...

n ......

!3 29

.532

••

7J

:fj
1
lS

ettch!BJ'oflnt b11eman, Uld

Toaey, piu:hen. Auip.ed Boume, Coo,
Jona tnd. Stone to Dut!odin of the Flmdt
State Leaau.e and Toney 1o Medicine Hat
or the Pioneer Leap.
N.. lonal Lape
CIDCAGO CUBS' Plaood 0,.. llil&gt;b&amp;rd, pil.chcr, on lhe l S-d1)' disl.blallilt,
retroactive to June 12. Placed Steve
Buechele, \bini b.ICII'n&amp;n, on ~ l.S· day
diubled liat, retro1ctin to June 13 .
Placed Millo """""- piu:t., em lllo IS·
day itiublod Uat, taro~ccivc 10 June 14.
Recalled Shawn Bolkie, Jim. Bllllinpr
and Turk WendeD, pi&amp;chcn, &amp;om Iowa of
lhc Ame:rica:it Aalociation.
·
MON'l'REAL EXPOS' Placed Jimmy
lonea, piu:t., on lhc !S-4ay dlaabled 1i11.
Recalled Bill Rialcy, pitcher. 11om OUawa
or lhe lnlematimal LCap.
NEW YORK METS : Sianed Scott
Adair, pitcher; Bmny Aablytni., ouWcld·
er: J•ut Moral•, ahon.&amp;top, ancl Jarrod
Pancnon, ru-st bucman. Auipod Fer·
nando Vina, infielder, 10 Norfolk of the
lntanation.all.c.apa..

PITTSBURGH PIRATES: Place-d
Andy Van Slyke, aud'"ldder, on lhe 15day cli&amp;~bled lilc ~·led en... Wll·

aon, outficldcr, for Ull.pmci\L Recalled

CLEVELAND (Cook 3-4) at Dclmit

Ch ~ca go (Fernandez 7-3) at Oak la.nd
(B . W1U 5·4), 3..=._15 p.m.
MiMe10t1 (Deahtia 8-4 ) at New Yodc

National Bukelblll Allarlallon
LOS ANGELES CUPPERS: Biter·

Thursday's games
(Moon: 4-3), 135 p.m.

(M. Win 3-2), 7:30p.m.

Botton (QuunriU 2--4) at Toronto (A .
Leiler 3-!i), ?:35 p.m.
.
Tu.aa (ROgeu 4-S) at Ca li fornia
(Sondenoft 7-5), 1CoOSp.m.

'

- * Transactions * Baseball

Thursday 's gam..

Jone~,

Bn:nt Coe, Maubew Stone and Mich1d

William Prnn~Mlh«, a.~tfieldor, and Ben
Shelton, flftt baacm1n·outfielder, from
Bulfalo ~ the Amcrict.n Allodation.

Today's games
Pittsburgh (Z. Smith 0-0) at SL Loui.t
(Mipn e 4-6). I :JS p.m.
FlOrid a (Aquino 4 ·3) aL ChiCICO
(Bautiaa l- 1), 2:20 p_.m.
Jltd)adclphia (Sahillin g I · I) 1t Mootr&amp;

Ryan

Amcriun li.aaue
CALIFO RNIA ANGELS: Activated
Mike Butcher, pit.cher, from lhc 60-day
d.inbled lin and opd.oned kim W&gt; Vancou-

ver mthe Paeilc Cout League.

KANSAS CITY ROYALS; Pilced
Rutty M01_cham, pitcher, on the 15·da y
di.ubled hat. .Retalled Frank DiPino
piiChcr, ~ Omaha of lhe American At~ ·
aocladon.
·NEW YORK YANKEES: Activa ted
O.n.ny TaJU.buU. «Jtfielder, from the IS·
day disabled Hat. Optjoned And y
SJ.anliewicz, inficlda-, tQ Columbu1 of !.he
fntemtlionali.Mpe. Ntmcd Rob Butcher
direct.ar af media ftl.ati MJ and publicity
111d Brian Smith Ulii:LI.nt din:c1.or ot media relationa.

SEATIU! MARINERS' Pia«&lt;! Edgar
Manine:&amp;, dtird buanan, on the 15-day
diubl ed lin. lt.ec1Ued Jim Converse
piu::tlcr, and Brill Bocne, IDCOnd baseman'
from Cal.. ry of the P.ciftc: C01tl t.e.1UC:
Retutnecl Fernando VJ.M, infiClder, to the
NewYon Mcu.
TORONTO BLUE lA YS, Si&amp;nc d
Ch 1rica B 01.1 rne,_ahG_!blO;P· ou tfiel der;

.,

Basketball
ciled ... opti... &lt;lllon !Wpor, auanl. for
... 1993·94 ........

Football
NaUonal Foo&amp;IM"IIIAa&amp;ut

NFL PROPERTIES : Named Cedric
Janca man..., of-'&gt; p101nm1.
Dl!NVER BRONCOS' Slped AniOnilll Kimbfou&amp;b,. wilil receiver, \01 aerie~
of one-year contncta.
NEW YORK JETS:
Saykll, wide m:eiY'tll'.

Wai~ed

1Uc:lt

Hockey
National Hocker IA•aue

DETROIT RED WINGS , Namc4
Scouy Bowman coac:b.
EDMONTON OILI!RS ' Siped luha
JUihijaJVi. fia,hl win&amp;• 10 I tWOoJCilr CM•

"'"'PITTSBUIII)H PENGUINS , Namad
Jack Kelley fli'Oiident..
Colleae

·

810 TEN CONFERENCE, Sipod lim
Delany, commiMioner,to 1 fow--yearcon-

CHIPS

auUtanl bukelbiU coach.

UC SAN!'A BARBARA' Named Bob
Bronuem1 int.-im hud ba~tball coach,
n:pll cina Al Fem:r, who Wit ruuipcd
to an 1dminatralive pOll in the depart·
mcnL

·Reds put intended opening~day
.lineup on field for first time

20 OZ. REG. $3.49

s

SJ59
.
k••••••

99

By TERRY KINNEY
• CINCINNATI (AP) - The
: Reds' starting lineup was notewor· thy:
: Hal Morris at first, Bip Roberts
' at second, Chris Sabo at third,
; Barry Larkin at short, Kevin
· : Mitchell in left, Bobby K~;lly in
;·center and Reggie Sanders in right
Why-noteworthy?
· After 63 games, Tuesday night
was the rust time this season that
' the Reds were able to stan a game
: with all eight position players they
had intended 10 use opening day.
: Morris suffered a shoitlder separation in a preseason game brawI
. and missed 56 games. And. Saba
' missed 13 games with ·a ruptured
disc in his lower back.
Manager Davey Joh.nson was
glad to. get his starting cast back
together.
"But more important is the
pitching, .. said Johnson,' who was
looking to Tim Belchei- lri stop the
Reiis' three-game losing streak.
"A little. winning streilk, put
. something together with the rotation, lll!d ru be a happy camper/'
Johnson sa1d.
The Reds responded with 17
hits, the most against the Giants
this season, and Belcher won for
. the fourth consecutive time in five
starts.

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11
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NL gameS ... . . :&lt;~co:-:nu~·n.:.:ued.;;,fro=m:..:.P.::iag~e:::.t.4)

__,..~=-__:.

House arrest conviction modified
to
eager attend college

PICKENS'
HARDWARE

20%

1

SLBS.

Wickander to rehab
Left·haqded reliever Kevin
Wickander, who has been on the
disabled list since June 2, also 'is
bound for Indianapolis. He'll be
there for rehab work following
time on the DL with a strained
right knee.
"!don 't know about his arm
suength. fie wasn.' t able to do a lot
of throwing while his 'knee was
•
.
weak," Johnson said.•
Wickander was scheduled to
___
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;__ __:
start for Indianapolis tonight
·
. against Nashville.
and beat the Reds tomorrow," said relief.
starter Bret Saberhagen. He moved seventh.
Cardinals starter Bob TewksBaker, who could Jel Will Clark
• Cubs 3, Marlins 0
to third on a sacrifiCe lllld infield
Pete dropped in
bury
(6-6) gave up all but one run
Frank Castillo (2-4) snapped a . sirigle. John Franco relieved and
Pete Rose, who was in Cincin- back in the Giants' lineup.
Clark, who is leading NL first personal three-game losing streak after an intentional walk, gave up of a four-run lead. Don Slaught had
nati for a golf tournament and orig·
a two-run homer and Dave Claric a
baseman
in the Ali·Star balloting, and had the fust multi-hit ~ame of Hunter's !ly ball.
inat"ll his sports talk sho"( here
sacrifice fly in the sixth, the
missed
~uesday
:
s
game
and
has
his
career.
He
allowed
f1ve
hits
Padres3,:Astros0
Tuesday ,'stopped by broadcast row
Pirates'
first inning of three or
not
played
since
leaving
the
game
over
7
1/3
innings
and
struck
out
Phil
Plantier
had
tlu:ee
hits
and
at ~he' Giants-Reds game to be
more
runs
in 127 innings.
Sawrday
after
being
struck
on
the
five.
Charlie
Hough·(3·
7)
lost.
drove
in
two
runs
and
Fred
interviewed by form\ll' Reds teamright
wrist
by
11line
drive.
Expos
8,
Phillles
4
.
McGriff
homered
and
tripled.
mate Joe Morgan, who was
"He was better today than he
Tommy Greene (8·1) )4s~ just · Wally Whitehurst (2-3) and two
announcing· the game !or a San
was
the
last
couple
of
days,''
Baker
'
4
2/3
innmgs and lost for the first · relievets•fOmbined on the six-hitter
Francisco television station.
said.
"I
don't
know
about
tomor-·
this
season
as the Phillies had their as Houston was shut out for the
Rose ended up being interrow,
but
24
hours
can
make
a
lot
of
six-game
winqing
streak snapped. second time this season.
viewed by Reds broadcasters as
difference."
Their
lead
in
the NL East is still a
Astros starter Pete }{amisch (6well.
In
other
NL
games
on
Tuesday
·
tidy
I
0
1{1
games.
~)
went
seven innings and gave up
Reds spokesman Jon Braude
it
was:
Los
Angeles
12,
Colorado
Larry
Walker,
Moises
Alou
and
one
~ed run·on five hits, strilcing
said Rose, who had been banned
from baseball activities, was 4; Chicaso 3, Florida 0; Mon.treal Sean Beny each drove in two runs out nme .
Philadelphia 4; Atlanta 2, New for the Expos. Brian Barnes (2-1) Cardinals Ci, Pirates 3
accredited at Mor~an 's request and 8,
York
.1;
San
Dfe~o 3, Houston 0;
gave
up
nine
hits
over
five
innings
Bernard
Gilkey matched his
that baseball officials were notified and St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 3.
.
10
improve
his
career
mark
against
career-high
with
four RB!s as the ·
Espy to lildy
of his presence in the press box. '
Dodgers
l:Z,
Rockies
4
.
Philadelphia
to
2-6.
visiting
Pirates
lost their sixth
Spare outfielder Cecil Espy was
It :was not Rose's first visit to
There's
no
truth
10
the
rumor
Braves
2,
Mets
1
straight
and
ninth
in 10 games. It
sent to Indianapolis when Saba was Riverfront Stadium since his ban
that
baseball
fields
will
soon
have
Pinch-hiuer
Brian
Hunter's
sacwas
their
rust
game
since losing
activated Tuesday. Espy, who was f~ baseball; he had b,een back to
roJ?CS
around
ll)em
and
dugouts
are.
riftee
fly
with
the
bases
loaded
in
center
fielder
Andy
Van
Slyke to a
hitting .233 and had dr1ven in five watCh a game from the stands.
bemg
renamed
comers.
·
the
ninth
made
a
winner
of
Tom
broken
right
collarbone.
nins in 40 games, got some encourThe most genteel and abstract of Glavine (8-3), who threW just 79
Gilkey had a two-run double in
Makeup date set
aging words from Johnson.
spans
had
two
more
fights
Tuesday
pitches
in
the
complete
game.
.
the
!hird and a run-scoring single.in
The Reds have scheduled a night. They both came in Lot
"I told him there's a lot of this
Our Finest
Jeff
Blauser
opened
the
ninth
the
off Steve Cooke (4-3),
year left, just do down there and Sept. 7 twi-night doullleheader Angeles' 12-4 victory over Col- with an infield single off Eric Hill- . thenfifth
added a sacrifice fly in the
Flat Latex Exteriar
work hard, like I know he will," with StLouis.
orado
and
they
managed
to
over.
man
(0-3),
who
replaced
New
York
The
date
is
a
make
up
for
a
June
lolinson said.
House Paint .
shadow some impressive hitting
' "I said concentrate on keeping 4 rainout at Riverfront Stadium.
An
••Y-to-uoeacrytlc
IIIIa 1111
performances by Mike Piazza of
linioh.
Superior
cloenebiUty,
'
the DodBers and Andres Gatarraga
mildew-rHialllnt and lo~t.an.
oftheRix:kies.
let'ex-Ta~'t1
beauty, Soft, tow-luotwftnloh
"We didn't start it," Dodgers
IJ
helpo hide aurfaee defeot..
" I'm not going to stop him from
mliiJ!IBCI' Tommy Lason1a said.
CINCINNAT1 (AP) - A high
"(J.,os Angeles starter) Ramon school basketball star who admiued going to college because he may
Martioez
started the whole thin!!,..
selling cocame has been sentenced ultimately contribute something .to
CL1VELAND (AP) - Wltat
At this year's Southwestern
Rockies
manager
Don
Baylor
wd.
to
home incarceration, but the sen- society that's good," Schou said.
started as a one-year job for Larry Conference Meet at Olmsted Falls,
Williams stood in court and said
Now
that
who's
to
blame
is
tence
wiD petmit him to attend colNickel .turned out to be a 27-year · all the league's coaches fot IOgeththat
he knew dealing drugs was a
cleared
up,
here
are
the
latest
blowlege
in
Washin$100,
D.C.
career as boys track coach 'at West- er. and presented Nicke a plaque
The profits from selling
mistake.
by-blow
details.
·
Ronell
Willwns;
18,
an
athlete
lake High School. ·
for his years of coaching. His dual
J
cocaine
on
the streets would allow
The
first
incident
occurred
in
the
and
honor
student
at
Cincinnati's
Nickel is retiring from the posi- and triangular meet record is 156tion he originally accepted for one · 75-2 and is highlighted by the seventh. Galarraga. after getting his Taft ·High School, told a judge him to pay for the abortions with·
season, just to get the school 1982, I983 and 1984 teams, wbich fourth hit, was caught Sidling, but Monday that he began selling out ever having to tell his mother,
not 'before a high slide into second cocaine to pay the cost of abortions he said.
through the year. Nickel also ·is won conference titles.
ending a 25-year career as a guid·
Nickel is ·a I 954 graduate of baseman Jody Reed bruised Reed's for two women he got pregnant
"I didn't think I was ready to
ance counselor.
Lakewood Higl!, where he was • left elbow. Reed left the game an
.
.
take on the responsibility of kids,"
"Gary Brewec had resigned the quarterback in JOO!bell' IIIII a catch- inning later.
On the next pitch, Martinez hit Willilllhs said before he was sentrack job and the school did not er in bucball. He attended Capilli
.
have ,anyone 10 take his place," University, where he played both Charlie Hayes and he charged the tenced in Hamilton County Commound, emptying ~Joth benches. mon Pleas Court for aggravated
Nickel said. "I had been an 8S$is- sports for three years.
drug trafllcking.
tant track coach at (Cincinnati)
·Afrer college, Nickel served as Martinez and Hayes were ejected.
In the eighth, after Piazza's go-Judge Donald Schott sentenced
Mount Healthy High and tJtis was • ·an offlcer.in the Air Fon:c.
on my record. I was asked Ill take
After military service, Nickel ahead homer, Rockies relic ver Williams to bome incarceration.
the job and I accepted.
. · began his career at Mount Healthy, Keith Shepherd hit Cory Snyder The sentence is to begin aftbr
••So, what started out a$ a short- coaching in footbell, track and ten- with a pitch and both dugouts emp- Williams' freshman year of school
•'
term situation ended up being 27 nis. After four seasons, he was tied again. Sh~~ was ejected, ~t American ,University in Washuse of an earli- mgton.
years of track."
hired at Westlake, where he also as wu Baylor,
Schott ordered him to remain on
Nickel, whose ·teams had win· was an assisrant footbaU coach for er warning to 1loth benches.
By
the
way,
both
Piazza
and
home
incarceration during any
ning seasons the last 14 years, said· 10 seasons.
•
Oalarrap
were
4
for
5.
Piazza
had
period,
such as summer breaks,
track is fair to all athletea.
Nickel coached a great number
JUST
FOR
DAD.
I 0
•
"I realiZed after I got involved of outsranding athletes, including two homer~ ' and a CII'CCJ'·high five when be is not .in school during the
in track that itsives a lot of athletes the late Frank Sarna, a state qualifi~ RBis and Galartaga came within next four years. The judge placed
•ALL DRESS &amp; CASUAL SHOES
''
one
hit
of
the
National
League
Williams
on
four
years'
probation
the chance to participate. There is er as a hurdler and later a national
by Dexter
no bench in track.
.'
championship qu.lifrer In the hur- record for consecutive hits with and fined him $5.000 after susnine.
pending
a
one-year
prison
sen•'We bad 56 members on our dies .while attending the U.S. Coast
•ALL ATHLETIC SHO_ES by Nlke, Reebok,
It's becom.c a bad situ.Uon for tence.
track team this season and liad Guard Academy. Sarna wu kiOed
between 50-60 athletes on our tnick when his Coast Guard cutter collid- baseball, with TV highlight pack- ,__...;..._ _ _ _ _ _......,.
Converse
Aslca, K·Swlss,
team the last three seasons. In ed with a taOker In TIRipa Bay.
ages seemingly hturinsa brawl or
•ALSO 20% OFF ALL .CAPS AND
track. fOu are guaranreed an opporA track scholarship in Sarna •s two per day. A few owners were at
tunity, '
·
honor is praeaiod each yeu to a the Dodgers-Roclcles pme because
. SHIRTS!
.
.
;.
Westlake student
.
Sports briefs
• Nickel llld ho· wiiiiiJICnd lime ~~are holding meetings in Den•
-GIFI' CEkl'IFICATES AVAILABLEThe Dodgers trailed 3-2 in the
Tennll
paiatlns. gardening and lra¥111ing,
HALLE, Germany (AP) - ' and coming back each spring to eighth when they got 'tine runs off . 111
St.,
•
Fourth-seeded Andre Agasai, play- help with the Westlake Relays. He Shepherd (1-1), who hadn't given
up a run in 13 innings thia seasan.
rs
ins his first lllurnament in mpre is a registered track official.
~
••
than two IIIOIItlll.,......• of a wrilt
Nickel will be replaced by his The last two stored on Piazza's
•
AND
•
injury, dropped a 5·7. 6·2, 6-1 assillllllt of 18 yean, Gary Slmp- 12th homor of the year. The
.
MIDDLEPORT
decisidn to Cul-Uwc Steeb of Ger- son, a former runner at Baldwin- Dodgen added seven runs in the
•••
many In tho flnt round of the Halle Wallace College. Simpson is also ninth. Roaer McDowell (3-0) wu
•
flo N.
the winner with 1 1/3 inni111s of
grill-COUrt evcnL
the cross country coach .

NOW THRU SATURDAY!

10 POUNDS

'I
!I·

GRANULATED SUGAR

?9

·Father's Day
Sale!
.

BEEF

~or--------.,
GREAT LAKES

B~ddy Groom at the stan of the fourth inning
inning of the sea'son with a home run and later
w1th a S-llead, got credit for the win. Krueger
drew a bases-loaded walk. Neal Heaton (1-0)
allowed two runs on five hits in 3 2/3 innings.
was the winner and Steve Farr got his 16th
Paul Abbott (0-1), ml!king his first major
save.
league appearance of the season, gave up seven
Loser Frank Viola (4 -7) is 0-6 sirice his last
runs on Sl?ven hits in 4 213 innings.
victory April 28 at Oakland. Scott Cooper
~ Tigers, wh!' also hit three homers in a
homered and drove in four runs for the Red
7-3 wm Monday n1ght, are 17 games over .500
Sox.
'
for the flfSt time since Sept. 1, 1988, when they
Orioles 4, Brewers 2 - Brady Anderson
were 75-58. Detroit temained four games
and Mark McLemore hit consecutive home
ahead of the Toronto Blue Jays and New York
runs as Baltimore beat Milwaukee for its 12th
Yankees, who also triumphed Tuesday.
victory in 13 games.
The Tigers own the AL ·s best home record
Anderson homered a~ainst Ricky Bones (3at 23-12. The series continues tonight wi th
4) to start the sixth innmg_. Two pitches later,
Cleveland's Tom Kramer (1-2) pitching agaii!St
McLemore liomered for a 3-llead.
.
Bill Gullickson (4-2).
.
Jamie M9yer (2-3) gave up four hits in
In other games, Toronto defeated Minneso'ta
.seven innings. He has won consecutive starts
6-3, New York beat Boston 9-7, Baltimore beat
for the flfSt time since April 1989. Brad PenMilwaukee 4-2; Seattle stopped Kansas City 6nington got his third save.
1, Chicago downed Oakland 4-0 and Texas
White Sox 4, Athletics -o - Wil son
topped California 6-5.
Alvarez pitched a three-hitter and faced only
Blue Jays c;, Twins 3 _ Cecil Fielder has
28 batters as Chicago won at Oakland.
hit three home runs in three days. Brady
Alvarez (6-2) gave up three singles, struCk
Anderson has homered for three sttaight days.
out a career-high 11 and walked none. He did
Bernie Williams has driven in nine runs in
not allow a runner past flfSt base. ·
three games.
.
.
It was the flfSt ~mplete game of the season
None of those hitters, however, IS as hot as
for Alvarez 110d hiS seco~ career sh~touL His
'ohn Olerud.
. . .
,
other shutout was a no-h1tter at Baltimore on
Olerud exten~ed h1s hmmg stre~k to 20
Aug, II, 1991. . . .
g~es T~~ mght, doubhng three umes an,d
Ron Karkov1ce hit h1s 11th home "!nand an
rrusm.g hiS baW~g average tl) .405 m Toronto s
RBI double. :Sob Welch (4-6~ 1s_-:v•.n~ess in
6-3, y~tory at Minnesota.
.
seven ~tm:'S· h1s longest slump smce JOmmg the
I m not really ~omg to t,~1nk about t.he
Athletics 10 1988.
,
.
~!feak or a~out battmg .40~. Olerud sa•d.
Rangers'·· Angels 5 - Juan 9o~ez hit a
You .can hll the ball hard nght at somebody
three-run, ~f, a ~ve-run flfSI mnmg that led
three tunes m a game and lose the streak. And I
Texas ovec
onua
~on' t think I run fast enough ~ bat .400. So I
Gonzalez ended an ~for-18 slump With his
JUSt g~ out there and try to h1t the ball ~ard
17th home run. Doug Strange drove in three
every llll'!e and whatever happei!S h~ppens.
_nms for the Ran.gers.
.
.
Not smce Rod Carew was batu~g..402 on
~harhe Le1~~an~1 (7-3) won hu lOth
July 1~, 1983! had a player !Jeen hitting ov~r
Stral$ht road deciSIOn m'tw!' years. He left afta
:4~ thiS late 10 a ~n. ThiS year, Olerud !s
a P.au of leadoff doubles 1n the ninth inning,
JOmed by Colorado,s Andres Gai31T11ga, who s
wh1ch started a three-run rally.
at ·435.
.
rom He~ ~ot !hTeC outs fo~ his 12th save.
Olerud had a pau ~f bloop doubles at. the
Chad Curt1s, b1dth!'g for a tymg home run,
Metrodome. He also hoed a double and hned
tl1ed out to the wammg ~ to end lh7 game.
out
. .
· , . John Fanell (2-8) .lost his fifth straight deci. Jua!' G.uzman (6-1) gave up fou~ hils m
Sl~n-. He las~ only two. outs in his Shortest
e1ght mn mgs and D u.ane Ward reurcd the
stmt m maJor league swu.
Twms 0!1 three pitches m the runth for h1s 18th
. Marmers 6, Royals 1 - Ke~ Griffey hit
save. .
.
.
his lOOth career home run and Tmo Martinez
Kevm Tapam was the loser.
and Jay Buhner also coonected as Seaale beat
Yankees 9, Red Sox 7 - Be.mie Willian:ts
Kan~ City at the Kingdome.
went 4 ~or 5 and !fiade two runn1,ng catc.h~ m
J11JI &lt;;onverse (1-2), the youngest player in
center f1eld, leading New York over v!s'u'!g
!he b1g, l~gues 81 age 21 , won for the first time
~ston. The Y~ees won for t!Je fi~th u~e m .m th~ maJors..He gave. up_one run on four hits
s1.x games while Boston lost 1ts nmth m 10
and stx w~ m seven mnmgs . .
tnes. . ,
.
.
.
.
. The Manners extended thetr longest winWillilllJIS ~·tan RBI sm~le durmg an eightrung streak of the season to four. Griffey, in his
run fif~ mnmg. He also ~11 a s~lo home run
flft!t full year, Martinez and Buhner each hit
and !I tnple. On Monday mght, hiS grand slam
t1!eu 13th home runs of the season. Hipolito
beat ~oston 4-0. ·
.
P1chardo (4-3) was the loser.
Mike Stanley started the Yankees' b1gges1

MASON, WV.

II
1

Good Only At Powell'a Super V•lu
Offer Good June 13 thru June19, 1993
IL--------~~.! Per Cuatomer

.his arm strong, do a little extra
work in the outfield - be ready."

Nickel to retire as Westlake's
bovs' track coach after 27 years·

s

~.!!!"'-~~~-"!!!tou-Jbw-"!!!~~-"!!!~~.,

tnct exLena:ion.

ARIZONA : Named Den iu Dove
women'• tAiunt btak-.blll eoach.
DUKE: Named lliJi Zodncr women's

WAITING FOR THE HOOK - Cleveland pitcher Paul Abbott
(right) w•lts witb eatcher Junior Ortiz for manager Mike Hargrove
·to come to the mound •nd make the pitching change in tbe firth
inning of Tuesday night's American League game in Detroit, where
the host Tigers won 10·4 in part because of homers hy Cecil Fielder
' and Lou Whitaker comi!tg during Abbott's administration. (AP)

POTATO

~·

; '

(

LB.

By HARRY ATKINS
I?ETROIT (AP) - You want numbers on
.
CTI F'dtlde(l The De . T'
ry ~se.
tro11 \gers s1ugger 1s on
pace to hll 162 h~me runs if he co~ play a
~hole season agamst Oe:vetand. He s averagg;:~J:r :':~~
season. T sda ,
.
.
. . me runs ue '!
mghf ~ng the Detrmt T1gers past t1!e Indians.. 110 doesn' t 11 h .
. h h' ..
rna . e,r o~ Y~? P11c lm,
leaJ!lmale Tony ~ilhps S8l;d. Wh~n he gets
rolling, whe~ he s loc~ed m, there s no war
you .can g7t him ~t. Like that ~om~ run he hit
to ng~t field ~mg~!· He hasn t h1t one over
ther~ m a long tune.
.
. Fielder, who nearly hom~red. over the_ leftfield roof. Monday, ha.s hll five ~f hu I.5
homers this season; agamst the Ind1~ns. H1s
three RBI~ moved hilJI past Cleveland.s Albert ·
Belle ~d mto the maJOr-league lead With 55.
. In. h1s ~areer, F1elder has 6f&gt; RBis and 69
hits 10 204 at-bats (.338). aga10st Cleveland.
Twenty-seven of those hits have been home
run,s,.We've studied tapes d ryth' el ..
indians manager Mike ~gro~: said~'~! d:; 't
know what else we can do. He hits a lot of
home runs, and he seems to hit a lot of them
against us. When Cecil gets hot h g ts h0 t
especially in this ballpark.
• e e
'
"He gets in streaks, and he seems 10 have a
lot of those stteaks when we come to town •• ·
Fielder's power frequently amazes his-mates, even though they see it every da . It
might be described as quiet despite his iize
H'
· ·
I' 'k
l'k ·
Jo~ ~~.compact, un 1 e a s1ugger 1 e
Fielder the man is just as quiet as his power.
Not long ago, he'd gone 20 ames without a
home run.' He had only twoftBis during the
last 12 games of that slump. And he never
complained.
" I know it's a matter of time before 1 do
what I do best, swing the bat," Fielder said
during thatslump. "I don't get too frustJ3ted. 1
can't change the ~ay I've been approaching
the game the last several years."
His patience paid off. He never pressed. He
just kept trying to recall what had worked for
him before. Now that he's found it, even Fielder can feel the electricity when he steps to the
plate
"iust buckle up for safety," he said, smiling. "I'm getting back to what I did in the past
1 told myself about a month ago, 'Don't WorrY
about it too much. Leave it alone....
Obviously, it was good advice. .
Lou Whitidcec also had a homer, his sixtli
among his three hits. Reggie Jefferson hit h~
sixth for the Indians, who now are 9-26 on the
road.
Bill Kroeger (5·2) taking over from Starter

.::•:0

2 LITER

·298 SECOND ST.

Bill Hubbard LL
Tournament slated
to begin July S
The 1993 Bill Hubbard Memorial Little League Tournament will
begin on July 5, 1993 at Syracuse.
Entry fee for the tournament is $20
with a 15 man roster.
For more information contact
tournament director Eber Pickens
Jr. P.O. Box 416, Syracuse Ohio
45779 or can (614) 992-7181.
•

UP
PRODUCTS

STORE HOURS
.Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·10 PM

Reds hand Giants 10-5 defeat

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Fielder.' s stick .helps Tigers defeat Tribe

SEVEN

In NL affairs,

- • Baseball * -

The

In AL competition,

Sports
By T ERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Reggie
Sanders' ninth homer overshadowed Barry Bonds' 18th, helping
seal a win and a measure of hope
for the Cincinnati Reds.
" You' ve got to capitalize when
. you have guys ~ n scoring positio11
because the G1ants have such a
good-hitting squad," said Sanders.
'_' The way the guys played
tomghl ... we' ve got to maintain
that mentality."
.
For the Reds, Tuesday night's
10-5 win over San Francisco meant
more than slicing a game off the
Giants' lead in the NL West.
Cincinnati still ttails by 11 games.
But the reunited, rejuvenated Reds
sent a signal that they're not ready
to concede anything.
.
Their 17 hits were the most
allowed this season by San Francis-

Ohio

DOWliNG CIILDS
MULLIN MUSSER

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1~~~~=-~=·~,yr::;~;~~=·~~~~&amp;:~;:B;:~:~~~~~~~-:·::-:r~w.::~:.::::~:::::::::::::::l ;

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Ohio

Wednesday, June 16, 1993

June

Pomeroy-Middll!t)ort, Ohio

The Deily Sentlnei-Page-7

Bulls tinkering to keep Suns from tying NBA finals tonight
By HOWARD ULMAN
CIDCAGO (AP)- Your move,
Phil.
Chicago lost its chance for a
sweep after Phoenix coach Paul
Westphal shook up his slrategy in
Game 3 of the NBA finals, The
homecoun "advantage" the Bulls
swiped from lhe Suns may be lhe
next to go.
Tonight it's c.hicago coach Phil
Jackson's turn to tinker. with tactics
and keep Phoenix from evening lhe
series 2-2. But not too much.
"We'll stay preny 1rue to what
our game is," he said Tuesday.
Teams adjust as their fortunes
·shift. Fine-tuning goes on all the
time, especially by lhe losers. But
both coaches downplay the impact
of major changes at this stage of
the seasdn.
~ Westphal shifted numerous
,defensive assignments for Game 3,

'

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:

; SPRINbFIELD, N.J . (AP) ,_
Tom Kite believes in playing his
way in. lack Nicklaus advocates
!&gt;ractic~. practice._practice . .And
Paul Azmger os hopmg to make lhe
bestoutofabadsituation.
. Three different golfers and three
:thfferent approaches to the U.S.
. Open.
·
: ·~he best w~y to l?repare for
·any tournament •s to WID ~~ tour· ·
. nament the we~k before, sao~
:Kite, !he def~ndi~g Open champ•·
' ,on. Kite dodn I WID last last ~eek·
end's Buick Oassic- he firu51!ed
,ninth -but he ~arne away ~eehng
·ljetter about hos chances on the
f ipen, which starts Thursday at
altusrpl. . ,
First; it· put to rest any doubt_s
f1bout the state of his back. And ot
·r epresented a strong perfonnance
· flYer a difficult course - deep
ugh, finn fast ~ns and narrmv
airways ·~- similar to' the com(I·
·. ltions likely to be in effect at Bal·
tusrol. . . . .
,
, ,
~ · The' combmauon sends_ hun mto
. ;the,u.s,. Open is somelhmg more
. PJan ~ seiuimentl!l cho~e to repeat.
.. 1. Nocklaus . b~heves on lhe prac·:t~ce-your-way-m method. ,
·That's the route he s taken
before niost of his 18 victories as a
JlrO in the "lajors. That list includeS
· the_U.S ; Open on 1967 and 1980,
;the'last two times it· was played at
.
.
;Billt..Srol. .
, . The 53-year•old Nocklaus w1ll
J&gt;e back to try fpr a lhird and, as
,recently ~two w~ ago, said '_'I
thmk I suU !\ave another one ,left m
10e."
·. .
·. . · .
: The fact· that h~ ~n't wo_n on
the Yegular tour smce 1986 mdo-~.
~~~s. he· i~ mostl9 _a ~ntimental

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~anger notices Openings
to greens that. .Europeans
• · on_In
• U.S. 'Q pen
tnay··cas,h' In

79 .

· PLASTIC

tiona!. ,
.
. .
T.hat s lhe way ~nger IS gomg.
A kond of .d?dge em approach,
although Its not the way he
planned to get rea~y. The melhod
was forced on ho_m ~Y cucum,j
stance. But, he srud, It very we
could~ lh~ bef.!er w~. th
_
He IS gomg m un r ~eyeh r
and ann -of 7-year-old ug te
Sarah !ean.
.
•
, Azmg~r. the leadmg money.
~mner thos season, won the Memoo
roal tou~n~ment two weeks ag
wolh a bordie from a bunker on lhe
last hole. ked th
th
'
. It mar ,
~seven consecu·
Uve year '" whoch he _ha~ w?n at
le~st once and, _combme_ ~·th a
stnng
near mos~s
ID lhe
seasonofstamped
hom earlieJ.
as a torce
to
•.
.
be consodered'" th_e Open.
And then he mossed theccutlast
week at the Westchester ounlry
Cl~?·
. .
. It. mar, hav7 been a _ble~~m~'"
d~sg~ose~ Azonger Sill~: I JUSt
did~ t adJuSt to the conditions. But
. lhat s 0~. You can t~ow tllat out ·
It d~n. t mean anything.
. If I d m~de th,e cut, m~ybe_ got
Into contenuon, I d be gomg..mto
lhe Open exhausted, worn out.
Instead, he's relaxed, refreshed
, and ready to go. .
.
Allhough he failed to qualify for
weekend play, Azmger c~ose to
stay at Westchester •. take _ot e~sy
and do some very hght practoce
work on his short game,
. He held a putter and a wedge in
hos hands as he and Sarah Jean
stood on a veranda overlooking lhe
practice area 811d_ the hundreds of
spectators watchmg the warm ups
of still-competing players at

f~ceth~d·
method ofpreparlrig fQr W~~h~~plotting a course to
the Open is mote c~sual and dodge t)te attention of the specla·
.

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remote practice area.

" We didn '1 get much support
from our bench, .which was a little
disappointing, " said Jordan, who
felt fatigue contributed to his poor
shooting late in Game 3, " but lhe
effort was !here."
The comment irked backup forward Scott Williams, who had 14
rebounds in 46 minutes.
"It's unfortunate !hat he would
say that," Williams said. " A 101 of
the guys on the bench pride ourselves in what we do and what we
bring to lhis ballclub."
He knows the offense is geared
toward Jordan and Pippen, panicularly wilh lhe game on lhe line.
"If (Jordan) is tired, sometimes
he might just need to let us know
that. Maybe we should step up and
go for the shols," Williams said.
"We've always .been a team that
talks on lhe defensive end. Maybe
we need to start talking on the

offensive end, 100.' '
Dan Majerle, who guarded Jordan lhe first two games, said he
expects Johnson to getlhat assign·
ment most of lhe time tonight.
"I hope I'm not guarding him,"
Johnson said. "Maybe Paul will try
a different look and put Richard
Dumas or Danny Ainge on him.''
Westphal said the match ups
might change,' allhough too much is
made of that in finding reasons
teams win.
Jordan hit 45 of his 87 shots in
lhe series before sinking only 6 of
20 after the third quarter of Game ·
3. He is averaging 33.6 points in
the playoffs on 46.1 percent shooting. Before this year, his playoff
accuracy was 50.7 percent.
"Everyone has tried to make
excuses for me, from my wrist, to
my knees, to my legs, and some ·
people have said I'm playing too

By ALLISON BARKER
·
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
· - · Smokeless tobacco sends kids
the wrong message, says ·a West
Virginia Wheeler who agrees wilh
a minor-league ban on tobacco
products.
· "A lot of kids who watch minor
league ball do what they see .and
too many kids are asking for a
chew or dip," said left fielder
Micah Franklin-, 21. "It's just
wrong to use it where kids can see
you. I'm glad there's a ban."
· Heallh concerns prompted base·
ball officials to ban the use of
tQ)lacco products at all minor·
league stadiums, including Watt
Powell Park, home of the Wheel·
ers, a Class A farm team of lhe
Cirocinneti Reds.
The ban werlt into effect Tuesday. C~&amp;:bes, managers, players or

••

. have to dodge the arm of Sarah

c rotty

"She's my ball retriever,"

Among SE Ohio's baseball players,

'H.O.USe..
..

.I '

COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) _
How a state pane!' of coaches rates
Ohio high school baseball players
'in the All-State Coac.hes Poll
Teams:
·
Division I
First team
Pitchers: Aaron Houdeshell, Sr.,
Newark; Andy Smith, Sr., Defi·
ance. Caicher: Tom Peck, Sr.,
Upper Arlington. First base: Joe
Pukansky, Sr.,. Canton McKinley.
Infielders: Mike Bell, Sr., Cin.
Moeller; Jason Bloomer, Sr., Tot.
stan; Dave R'tz
1 • sr., Medo'na· Out·
fielders: Jack Harless, Sr., Center·
ville; Rodney Johnson, Sr., Lan·
caster; Mark Murphy, Sr., Springfield North.
Second team
Pitchers: Matt King, Jr., Tot.
Stan; Man Vogelesang, Sr., Harri·
son. Catcher: Ken Magoteallll, Sr.,
Piqua. First base: Derek Root; Sr.,
Lakewood SL Edwards. Infielders:
Dan Salomone, 1r ., Barberton;
Alex Tsiros, Sr., Cleve. St.
Ignatius; Mike Huff, Sr., Harrison.
Outfielders: Kris Bugara, Sr.,
Alliance; Drew Robens, Sr., Grove
City; Jon Beier, Sr.. Tol. St.1ohn's.
Honorable mention
Catcher: Joe Ries, Sr., Barber·
ton. First base: Brian Smilh, Sr.,
Newark. Infielders: Troy Butler,
Sr., Canton GlenOak; Chris Mey·
ers, Sr.,1ackson. Outfielders: Nick
Schultz. Sr., Sidney; Neil Stefan.
sky, Sr., Barberton.
Player or the year: Aaron
Houdeshell, Newark.

hard or trying 100 hard, but it's lhe
only way I know how to play,"
Jordan said. " I don't think I've
tried to do 100 much. I try to eYaluate what the olher guys are doing
as the game goes on and do what's
needed 10 win." .
There's one tactical change
Westphal would like to see.
"The main thing they do is go
to Michael and let lhe team play off
him," he said. " I don't think
they ' ll change that. I hope they

do.''

Barkley is the main man for
Phoenix, and he played an out·
standing game Sunday despite a
heavily bandaged right elbow that
was drained a halt hour "*:fore the
game.
"They'd have to ampulate his
arm to keep him from playing,"
Westphal said.
·

'

ihe ball back to me."

-··
•

MUII•IDS
. .TIpton
•
h'onor.ed 10
• po
. II
'

..

Coach of the year: Rich
Divisioom
Arbinger, Toledo Stan.
First team
Division n
Pitchers: Ryan Shank, Sr.,
First team
Brookville; Ben Simon, Sr., Milan
Pitchers: Tarrence Staton, Sr., Edison. Catcher: Jim Mueller, Sr.,
Elyria West; Dave Daugherty, Sr., Coldwater. First base: Man WarthBryan. Catcher: Justin Beasley,Jr.. man, Sr., Utica. Infielders: Mike
Olmsted Falls . First base: 1on Hochanadel, Sr., Cols. Academy;
Aljancic, Sr., Louisville. Infielders: Tony Brannon, Sr., JohnstownRyan Lane, Sr., Bellefontaine; Monroe; Jake Corbett, Sr., Jack,
Clint Houser, Sr., Jackson; Casto son-Milton. Outfielders: Dawann
Aaron, Sr., Canton Soulh. Outfield· Gray, Sr., Beachwood; Mike Cole·
ers: Matt Craig, Jr., Little Miami; man, Sr., Cin. Indian Hill; Pete
Brad Blakenship; Sr., New Rich- Travnicek, Sr., Cols. Ready:
mond·, Ken Lenga, Sr., Poland
Second team
Seminary.
L~ Pitchers: Nathan Miller, Sr.,
Second team
Apple Creek Waynedale; Tory PerPitchers: Chris Noll, Sr. ,.Canton ren, 1r., Doylestown Chippewa.
Soulh; 1eremy Puckett, Jr., Green- Catcher: Joe Shulman, Sr.,
field McClain. Catcher: Rex Kel- Granville. First base: Steve Yeager,
ley, Sr .. Marysville. First base: Sr., Cin . .Indian Hill. Infielders:
Jared Bannister, 1r., Wauseon. Dan Jonas.• Sr.. Granville; Mike
Infielders: Todd Esteridge, Sr., Crotty, Sr., Lucasville Valley;
Norton; Joe Kilburg, 1r., Bay Vii· Man Ashkettle, Sr., Gnadenhutten
!age Bay; Bryan Moledor , Sr., Indian Valley. Out~ielders: Mike
Mogadore Field. Outfielders: Jason Le':"ellen, Sr., Balumore Liberty
Ross, Sr., Canton Soulh; Ted Nigh, Limon; Andy Larn!Jd, Jr., Gates
Sr . Sylvania Northview· ·Josh Mills Gilmour Academy; Ben Lef.
chrisman Sr Cambridge. '
fler, Sr., Utica.
H~no~able mention
.
. Honorable mention
Pitchers: Mike Lapka, Sr.,
Potcher: Duff Googman, Sr.,
Garfield Hts . Eric O' Hare Sr. Johnstown-Monroe. Catcher: Tim
Elyria West:· Infielders: Kevi~ McCabe, Sr., Bellaire. First base:
Ciere Sr · Rocky River· Jason Matt Begansky, Sr., Warren John
Slack 'sr ·Hebron Lakew~. Out- F. Kennedy. Infielder: Chris
field;r: j~rry McClure, Sr., Win· Rhode, Sr., Gates Mills Gilm~ur
tersville ·
Academy. Outfielders: 1oe Tomlin· Play~r of the year: Terrance son, Sr., Ritbnan; Justin Lees, Sr.,
StatOn, Elyria West
,
Cleve. Central Calholic:
Coach or the year: John -tip·
Player or the year: Tony Branton, Portsmouth
•
· non, Johnstown-Monroe.

Coacboftheyear:DennyMar·
tin, Johnstown-Monroe.
Division IV
First tea~
.
Pitchers: !&gt;M ~·· ~r., Mingo
Jet.; Jerry ~och, Sr., Fauport Har"
bor Hardmg. Catcher: Lama~
Do~tsch, Sr.; Edgerton. ~orst ~Chnt Haynes, Sr., Topp ~uy
Bethel. Infielders: Naten Taronck,
Sr., Indepen~; Dou$ Rowland,
Jr., Morral Rodgedale; Jom Iceman,
Sr., .Lucas., Out~oelders: Chad
Beam, Sr., Topp Cuy B~the~ Scott
Westerfiel~. Sr.,
NewH Miamo; Todd
s s
Bruggeman, r., L enry
Second team .
Pitchers: Andrew Gwttar, Sr.,
Newton Local; Denny Stark, Sr.,
Edgerton. Catch~: Todd Flere, Sr.,
McDonald. Fmt base: Dave
DeLauter, Sr., Columbiana. Infielders: Jeff Crawford, Sr., Cory-Rawson; Paul Cluxton, Sr., Lynchburg·
Clay; Travis Hanman, ,Jr., Colum- '
bus Grove. Outfielders: Rob Allen,
Sr., Columbus Grove; Shane
Reynolds, Sr., Spencerville; MikeGladding, Sr., Fairport Harbor·
Harding,
.
Honorable menhon
Catchers: Jay 'Metzger, Sr.,
Spenc~rville; C~ris Wilson, Sr., ,
Worthmgton Christian. First base: ,
Shane Mullins, Sr., Portsmouth :
Notre Dame._Outfielder: Josh Eng- :
land, Jr., Marion Pleasant
flayer of the year: Dan Corsi,
Mingo Junction.
1
Coach of . the year: Mike
Mohner, Fairport Harding.

F•Irs t year
. VI•taI t0 creat•IOn 0f goo d .hun t•Ing dogs::
~

of

'

~J~ ~~~{~~~;d~~lpart~~~ ~eu~Tt~ ~hfl~e~~o~!:~!~ · ~~g;in~~ir~ ~e:: =~n~i~:~ ~~~~~~r!:i~Ta:,t~ ~u.f.o~~ ,

~~~gg~~~~~ng, then working andJ~P~=e often and soon lhe ~~~~i~:i~!'n~'::i: In either case ~~n~~g won't even notice the

A hunting dog's first year is
very important in its development,
and finding the right dog begins
By BOB GREEN
peans have dominated world golf even before lhe pup is born.
'1: SPRINGFIELD, NJ. (AP) .:... in recent years, winning lhe Mas. 'lh
!After a sCouting miSsioQ·over Bill· tees and British Open with regulari"Be sure yo~ se;: 10 e p,arents
,tusrol, Bernhard Langer noticed a ty, lhe U.S. Open has remained an fi:1~t ~~i~e~e~~~ tv:sf.uP.Pro~~~~
crack in the course's defenses that American stronghold.
. a keen,
tive hunting dogs requiTe
Tony 1acklin o f England, in discriminating
coul~ be exploited by Europeans
sense of smell and a
lhis week .in the U.S. Open.
1970,is the only European winner strong desire 10 work and find
Unlike previous Opens, where of this event since 1927. In all
..
· der·of t hose years, s outh African Gary game
underare
all conditions.
target gol f usually was lh e or
"These
inherited traits, .. he
the day, Langer said the Baltusrol Player apd Australian David Graif mom an d dad have
Golf Club had ·"some openings to ham are lhe only other non-Ameri- stresses,
it, chances"so
are bener
your pup will,
the greens ... the rough is not so can winners.
too...
· penalizing as before ... and the
Tom Watson, who owns five ·
Research indicates~ ddg hits its
greens are reasonably fair."
British Open titles and will serve as maximum ability to socialize with
Langer cited lhe collar of rough captain of the American Ryder Cup man between six and eight weeks,
around the greens that prohibit lhe team lhis fall, said Baltusrol .could
d
run-up shot, the bump-and-run even lift the Europeans into the role by which time lhey are weaned an
h ·
f ff
·
becoming independent.
approach t at os 11 standard o o avontes. ·
The puppy is capable of learnBntish golf in particular and Euro"Under the conditions we have ing and will ~0 so quite rapidly.
pean golf in general. He mentioned · this year, it's very much like a Many experts agree that seven
lhe more narrow fairways and 'lhe British Open course," Watson said. --weeks is the ideal time to place a
penalizing rough lhat, he insists,, · "I'd say it f~vors them, makes puppy in a new home, says West, a
"takes chipping out of lhe game." lhem lhe favorites,"
consultant with the Ralston Purina
All of which plays to the
Langer and Faldo certainly C
slfenglh of the 28 foreign players in would be included on any short list
oA
.
take lhe p ppy
0u
•
h
f
·
In dd·u·
to
h'
Mas
s
soon
as
y
lh. e fioeld of 156. In _.act,
1
t e two- o Wl~ners. a
on . IS
• -h0
t him used to being uhan·
ume Masters champoon from Ger- · ters tnumph, Langer won lhe Euro- d1emde,Cghe
· mout h and paws,
. ec k ots
many 5aid if everything is just right pean PGA earlier this sea~on and · lay it on its back and rub its
in lhe tournament lhat stans Thurs- · last week mossed a playoff 10 Ham· tummy. Put lhe dog on a low table
day, he himself could win.
bur~, Germany, by a single stroke.
and play with it That will get the
As for British ()pen title-holder
aldo has won one European dog used to examinations.
. Nick Faldo of England, generally Tour title this year, but ow~s his
A newly weaned puppy should
regarded as lhe world's best player, role as a probable conten~r Simply , be fed a puppy food three times a
"if he is on his game, he can win because he is Nick Filldo, lhe out· day. Reduce the feeding schedule
on any golf course." Langer said stimding player in golf today. Like to twice a day at age four to five
Tuesilay.
Mounger ~ack Nicklaus or TC?m months 1\nd to once a day at eight
U.S. Open golf courses, howevatson, he os a force to be consod- to nine months, West says,
er, have been far from hospitable to ered in any gathering of the world's
Be sure your pup gets its vacciforeign players. While the Euro- best
·
nations and regular checkups at the

Baseball bans tobacco in minors

EASTMAN'S

friends and family:
For Westphal, what happens on
the court is more important than
where the coun is located or what
plans coaches devise.
"I really don't'lhink that anybody makes major adjustments in
the plaroffs," he said. "You make
a lot o minor adjustments and you
hope the team plays better."
Jackson hopes to take better
advantage of the match up of Chica·
go's seven -foot center Bill
Cartwright on offense against 6· ·
foot-S Charles Barkley.
He also wants to get better pass·
ing and more players involved in
the offense. Jordan and Scottie Pip·
pen eombined for 78 of Chicago's
130 shots in Game 3.
Jordan would like more help
from the bench. Chicago's substl·
tutes had nine points and 20 oflhe
59 rebounds Sunday night

Kit~:}fj;klau,.~~. ~i.!f!~!.,P,!qg~!f!!:K f!iffl!!.~!!.~ .~P.l!!Pt!ches to U.S:,;f!l!l!f!. =

I

Soft Drinks:

•
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

r Ylllld
•••••••••••••••••••••
1113' [ii]l

particularly having Kevin Johnson
guard Michael 1o~an . Phoenix
won 129·121 in triple overtime
Sunday nighL
"I don 't think the (new) wrin·
kles matter that much," Westphal
said. "I think the main thing is lhe
game is going to be decided by lhe
players. That's what happened in
alllhree games."
The Bulls will try to become lhe
first team in the best-of-seven
series to win at home. If they do
lhat twice, they will wrap up !heir
lhird consecutive title Friday night
· in noisy Chicago S'tadium. Olherwise, lhe series returns to Phoenix,
where Chicago won the first two
games.
Playing at home ''will be an
adv11111age at some point," Jackson
said, although he feels visitors. are
more fo&lt;;used in a hostile environ·
ment without distractions from

dog will begin to respond toiL
Give the pup freedom to
explore, but supervise it. Don't stine its personality wilh slrict discipline at this young age.
.
At 13 weeks you can stan tram·
ing. lnlroduce him to something to
chase, fmd and return. Thefiupd will
h
learn to use its nose to in t e
object. Reward lhe pup with plenty
of praise.
A puppy learns simple com mands like "come" and "no"
through constant use and gentle
reinforcemen,t. Call !he dog's name
and say "come," then crouch
down to greet him.
This is an exercise in patience.
The call will have to be repeated
time ilfter time. Don'tlct anger or
irritation get into your voice.
Reward lhe pup with lots of praise
when it comes to you.
By 20 weeks you can start
working lhe pup on a lead. Walk
comfortably togelher so he doesn.'t
fight lhe leash. These walks can go
1·nto lhe fi1elds where lhe puppy will
traiQ and work as a mature dog. ·
By 24 weeks, the dog w1'II beg1'n
showing more inde~ndence, bold·
ness and self-confodence. Now is
the time to introduce your dog to
water, birds, guns, boats and what·
ever else will be pan of its hunting
environment.
.
It's important that first experi·
ences with water be in warm
wealher when the water is a pleas·
ant place to be.
If lhe puppy is water shy, go in
yourself. The puppy probably will

ve~~~~-wecks, stan taking the ~~~~~~~~~~~sn't work, try

When you in(!'Oducc lhe dog to
umpires caught dipping snuff, dog everywhere. Spend as much
chewing tobacco· or smoking
cigarettes will be ejected and fined.
The penalty is S300 for Class
AAA and AA leagueS and lhe Ari·
zona Fall League and $100 for aU
other leagues.
·
Wheelers pitching coach Mack
Jenkins said lhe ban should be like
the game itself: three strikes and
you're out. · ·
.
"I lhink the .fine is too heavy,"
1enkins said. "Give them three
strikes. The first sttilce is a warning, the second strike is a small fme .
and then the third strike 'brings the ·
big'fme."
Jenkins said he stopped using
FRIES••,•• $1
smokeless tobacco at the ball park
earlier lhis year but still USC8 it on
his own time. He and others with
.
the Wheelers believe' the ban will
AU.1!ft•M PM. 992·2556
MON.-SUN.
be difficult to enforce.

DAIRY VALLEY

'

•

Crouch down with lhe bird in
your hand. Restrain lhe pup, while
letting him see and smelllhe bird.
Toss it a short distance for him to
retrieve. When he returns, praise
him and once he relaxes, gently
take the bird from his moulh.
lnlfoduce the hdog to gunfore
· f in
conjunction wit somethiDg un,
.such as retrieving birds. Proper
introduction to the gun can lead to
lhe do.g,s Jumpmg
.
. ,or
, JOY
- whenever you bring
it out because it knows
there's ~un .m store.
One suggestion from West is to
put the pup on a checkrope and
have a friend stand 30 yards away
holding a dead pigeon. The friend
can toss lhe pigeon for lhe pup to

As you repeat !he process, move
the shot earlier and earlier in the
retrieve. The dog will become
aware of lhe noise, and associate it
with getting birds.
,
By ~ weeks, constant exercise
becomes important. The dog can
have longer runs in the field and
get swimming work in lhe summer.
By a year, you should be spending more and more time in the foeld
with your dog both havinJ fun and
working wilh basic trainmg commands.
It takes a fuJ1 year for the puppy
to develop and .~et acquainted with
you, its enviroru'lent and the foeld.
Take the time to :levelop him as he
needs it.

Thewei2bt
I~ planlor
chOcolate
lovers.~

Same low calories
as other diet Shakes
and Snack Bars!
With the great
chocolate taste only
Nestle can deliver. ,____ __

�Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh.lo

Wednesday, June 16, 1993

Wednesday, June ·16, 1993

••:
•

MCHA golf tourney
set for Thursday
Area golfers are reminded that
the Meigs County Heart Association golf tournament will be held
Thursday atlhe Meigs County Golf
Course, located on Will Hill Road,
just off S.R. 7 in Pomeroy. .
Golfers playing in the tournament are asked to register between
noon and 12:45 p.m. The format
will be a four-person team scram-'
ble with a blind draw for teams. A
calcutta will be held just prior to
tee-off.
,
Fees are $42 for members· and
$50 for non-members. Prizes for
the tournament will be $300, $200
and $100 for lhe first-, second- and
third-place teams, respectively.
A new vehicle will be awarded
to any golfers having a hole-in-one
on hole number nine, $10.000 for
any hole-in-one on number seven,
and a vacation trip for a hole-inone on hole number five.
A hoi dog lunch and a steal din·
ner are included in the fees. Door
prizes will also be awarded.

'

The Dally Sentlnei-Pape--9

¥!~~+£~~1ltx.,.~~!! !?;~~~- .

:Edberg
draws
'
;second seed ·
:at Wimbledon
By JOSEPH WHITE
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
! - It often takes more than just a
: great grass-court game to win
• Wimbledon. Sometimes it requires
; a little luck.
, This year the good fortune has
, smiled oil Stefan Edberg. Seeking
: his third Wimbledon title, the No. 2
• seed was given an apparently easy
:ride through the early rounds of lhe
;tournament' when the draw was
. made Tuesday.
·
: The 27 -year-old Swede sits in a
' bracket void of big names. He
:races a qualifier in lhe first round
:aod looks to have a comfortable
-road against unheralded opposition
:until at least the fourlh round, when
:he could face the No. 16 seed,
·Thomas Muster.
; And, in a tennis year plagued by
·injuries. upsets and the stabbing of
:Monica Seles, it could be the cool,
:cons~tent Edberg who earns a tick·et to another Grand Slam final.
: But lest Edberg be 1;0mplacent,
·it should be remembered a match
:against a qualifier doesn't guaran;tee success. Ivan Lend! learned that
·lesson the hard way when he lost to
:newcomer ~ tephane Huet in the
first round of lhe French Open last
.month.
t Edberg and seventh-seeded
·Lend! are projected to meet in the
:Wimbledon quarterfmals, although
·Lend! may first have to gel by
:Ukrainian sensation Andrei
;Medvedev, seeded lOth.
• The draw was not as beneficial
:to some of the other top seeds.
. : Defending champion Andre
Agassi, trying to recover from a
nagging wrist injury. probably
would have loved to warm up
against a qualifier in the first
round. Instead the American drew
Bernd Karbacher of Germany.
: Karbacher, No. 36 in the ATP
'four rankings, upset Michael
Chang in the second round of the
french Open, and beat Chang again
Mond!IY at the Wimbledon tuneup
iournament in Halle, Germany.
: Agassi also lost his first-round
match in Halle on Tuesday. Despite
the defeat - his first competitive
match since April 9 - Agassi still
plans to be at Wimbledon.
. "I'd have probably gone to
Wimbledon in a cast." Agassi said
after the 5-7,6-2, 6-1loss to CarlUwe Steeb. "II is possibly a oncein-a-lifetime chance to go and
defend lhe title. My heart tells me
to play Wimbledon, my head tells
me one year of Wimbledon is not
worth making the injury worse and
maybe affecting my later career."
Three-tim·e champion Boris
Becker. the No. 4 seed, also drew
stiff first-round opposition in fellow German Marc Goellner. The
big-serving Goellner, ranked No.
34, beat Edberg and Lend! back-toback lhis vear on his wav to winning a tournament in Nice as a
qualifier. He also upset Petr Korda
while reaching the fourth round of
the French Open.
If Becker survives Goellner,
plus a few other big names in his
part of the draw, he could face No.
6 Michael Stich in the quarterfinals. Stich won when the two met
in the 1991 fmal.
Another possible quarterfinal
would match.Agassi against topseeded Pete.Sampras, who drew
Wimbledon 'newcomer Neil Borwick in the llrst round. The fourth
quarterfinal is projected to be
between No. 3 Jim Courier and No.
5 Goran lvanisevic.
Steffi Graf got the best of the
women's draw. The top-seeded
German could cruise through lhe
first four rounds before facing a
serious challenge.
Jennifer Capriati, who would be
Graf' s quarterfinal opponent, may
have 10 get by tough-serving Brenda Schultz of the Netherlands
before reaching the final eight
No. 2 seed Martina Navratilova
was not as fortunate as Graf. The
nine-time champion should have an
easy first-round match against Australian Michelle Jaggard-Lai, but
dangerous matches with veteran
':-&amp;ura !Jildemeister or Patricia Hy
he beyond.
Navratilova's quarterfinal opponent would be Mary Joe Fernandez,
the No. 5 seed.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

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divorced father of sons I always
lhoughll wanted a dauibter, but 1
also ·knew that my reason for this
: was II !east putially unlalthy and
dangerous. My -ua1 urges f&lt;l' very
)'OIIIIi fcnilles have long frighlenCd
me, and 1felled they would include
, I 'f I h d
my own gtr s t
a any.
Fortunately, I didn'L
Some time ago, 1 met a divOJCed
woman who has daughters. we
jlegan dating, and the relationship
progressed to whcle marriage was
iliscussed 1 was scared because 1
knew
I was physically il1racted
to' her very . youag daughtm; My
lady friend didJI't understand the
. reason. for my reluctance to commit
ID marriage and convinced me to
move in witb her to solidify our
relationship and provide the children
witb a fllher figUre
'
In my heart, 1 knew lhis was a
bad move, but·! agreed 10 try. Ann,
1 would get aiOUied when the girls
rushed between their bedrooms and
the balhroom in their nighties. Even
wane, ~y often asked me to oome
into llleir rooms 11 bedtime and tuck
them in. As Qod is my witness,
never once did 1 iouc:b one of them

A ·.
· flfl
Landers
ANN LANDERS

"1993, Loo Anaol,.
Tim .. Syndiaot•
c...aton Syndiaoli'

ma
and 1m now
marrie4 to a wonderful woman ••

disorder
~
,. Th~vtordisorder
·
usually m~ifests

who, !hank heavens, has 80115. TOAD OF THE ROAD .IN
CALIFORNIA
.
DEAR ROAD: The klinker in
your think~r has a pedophile·ljke
twist that oould cause real trouble at
any time. Please get counseling at
once. Good luck.
·
Dear ADD LaDders: Several
months ago, you printed a letter that
may have done a grave injustice Ill
your correspondent's husbind. 1
refer to the 1ettet from "A Shiner
For.My 33rd Wedding Annivenary. •
The woman reported that her
husband kicks her and pulls her hair
in his sleep. You said he was
probably exhibiting repressed
hostility and should get counse
ling. ,
' •
inappioprwe!y, although 1 wanted
My husband often woke me up to
to, and it was a struggle to keep my say I had been shouting in my sleep.
impulses in check
Once, a ·friend I traveled wilh said
.
After
seva-al
nKxllhs
of
walking
she
would never go anywhere wilh
1
flUs sexual tightrope, 1 reali~ that me again because I kept her awake
a tragedy was on the brink of all night with my never-ending fi
clccurring. I moved out and monologues. lhavefallenoutofbed
rl:nninated the relationship. 1 know several times and injured myself.
ltW my leaving bun Ibis lovely Once when sleepwallcing, I fell on
Wlllllllll and her dt!ughtera, but they11
my race. cracked three front teeth ·
tievet know how luclcf they wer-e 10 and broke my. nose. I checked into a
be rid of me.
sleep diiOrdcr clinic wh=' I was
I ':~"~ tign
name bec;NI"' I diagnosed as havipg REM sleep

thai

•

·'··

Visitors on Memorial Day were
Lisa and Nick McCoy, Londonder·
ry, Susie and Jim Foster and son,'
Jim10y, Grove City ,' Jennifer
Grueser and friend, Larry Milyof
Columbus; Martha Lee, Becky and
Keith Bentz, Racine. A potluck
meal was held.

WEDNESDAY
will be offered at London Pool on meeting at 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT • Heath United Wednesday from 7:30-9:30 p.m .
Methodist Church, Middleport, will Admission is $1.
POMEROY - Meigs County
have vacation bible school through
Democratic Executive Committee
•
Friday from 9:30 a.m. to noon.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Safety meets Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Car- .
"Celebration Park" is the theme.
Parrol will have a picnic Saturday penters Hall, Pomeroy.
from 7-9 p.m. at London Pool.
BRADFORD - Brad(ord Church Family and one friend of safety
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
of Christ, Vacation Bible S.chool, patrol members permitted. Bring a Springs Better Health Club meets
through Friday, 9-11 :30 a.m. All covered dish, except meat. Call Thi;U'sday at I p.m. at Rock Springs .
ages welcome.
Becky Triplett at 992-5:485, or Jen- ·· Umted Methodist Church.
·
nifer Lambert or Jennifer H~k by
CHESTER - Vacation Bible Wednesday if attending.
RACINE- There will be a meet- :
School, Chester United Methodist
ing of Racine Fire Department July
Church, through Friday, 9:15-11 :30
THURSDAY
Fourth planning committee at the ·
a.m. for ages two through teens.
· POMEROY - The Young frre station on Thursday at 7 p.m.
Theme: "Celebmtion Park."
Democrats Club will meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Carpenters Hall jn
FRIDAY
POMEROY- "Amazing Jour- Pomeroy.
.
CHESTER - Free community
ney 10 Bible Times" is the theme of
immunization clinic. Chester Fire
Vacation Bible School at the Zion
POMEROY - Pomeroy Group Department, Friday, 1-3 p.m., ages
Church of Christ through June 25 of AA meets Thursday at 7 p.m. at two months through kindergarten
from 9-11:30 a.m. daily for ages Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Call age. Parents bring child's immu- ·
nursery through high school. Pro- 992-5763.
nization record.
·
.
gram is June 27 at 7 p.m. Kathryn
Johnson,.992-5195, is director.
. RUTLAND - Leading Creek
TUPPERS PLAINS - Round
Cohservancy District meets Thurs- and square dance Friday 8-11:30 ·
POMEROY - All-family revival day, 5 p.m. at the office. Public p.m. sponsored by Tuppers Plains
and vacation bible school, Laurel invited.
YFW Post Ladies. Auxiliary. Music
Cliff Free Methodist Church,
by CJ and Country Gentlemen
Wednesday through Saturday and
REEDSVIT.LE - There will be a Melvin Cross and Red Carr callers: ·
Sunday with evangelist, Rev. Dave Reedsville town meeting Thursday Everyone welcome.
Canfield and gospel music by Jim at 7 p.m. at the frre station to disand Kathy Sisson. Bible school cuss the proposed gravel pit on
CHESTER - Special meeting
theme is "Victory Station" for ages Route 124.
·
Shade River Lodge No. 453
4-12.
F&amp;AM, Fnday, 8 p.m. with work ·
RACINE - Racine American in the master mason degree. ' ·
POMEROY ' Full Gospel Legion Post 602 will meet Thurs- Refreshments served. All master
Lighthouse, Hiland Road, day with supper at 6:30 p.m. and masons invited.
Pomerciy, will have revival today
through.Sun~y at7:30 p.m. night·
ly. Pubhc welcome.

.

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PoSl Selections -Fun For AU Ages
Session Fee 524.99

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...

Community Calendar

'

'
Logan; G'ma
•·:Mrs. Janet Grueser,
and Perry· Meyers, and two chi!dten. laMa and Simon, Columbus,
spent the night recently with her
mother, Elhel Orr.
John Robert Bentz, Amy Lee,
Racha~l Marshall, Racine, and
.Janna Meyers had a slumber party
at lhe home . .

•

_ An innovative program
organized by Gordon Fisher
matched Meigs Hi&amp;h School
seniors interested in furthering their education in fields
relating to children with class·
es at the Salisbury Elementary
School.
·
The s~niors were assigned
to a classroom ror one period
each day and were given a
quarter or a credit for the
year. They worked in a variety
or assignments including grad·
ing papers, Putting grades on
the computer, working in
small groups witb students,
one oo one instruction, assisting in computer learning, spe·
cial projects and filing,
Among those involved in
the group were Jodi Imboden,
top photo, working with a sec·
ond grade student on a read· ·
ing ·Computer skills game, lind
~yan Spencer, bottom, gradmg papers.

ttself w~n I have bwlnveling or
eating out, espcci~ly if I have
. c~~ m~um glularnlte,
1
which IS •present m one fCJr!!l or
another 10 many commercially
prepared foods.
Counsel' will
hel
1e
m&amp;;
not
P peop
wbo ~ve fhJS ~Iem .. ~ good
news IS that. there ts medicanon that
can help. W1tb Jl~ trealment, that
reader's husband w1ll be ab~ to lead
a perfectly normal hfe. ·FORMERLY PLAGUED IN
CLAREMONT, CALIF.
DEAR FO~Y: People who
are sleep-depJ?ved. or have the
POMEROY- Sugar Run School
problems ~bed m your letter
Restoration
Committee, Wednesshou~ avail themselv~ f!l the help
day.
7
p.m.
at Trinity Church in
prov1ded ~Y sleep chn.tcs. For a
Call
co-chairmen,
Pomeroy.
refenal, wnte to the National Sleep
Downie
or
Eleanor Smith
Rachael
Foundation,. 122 South Robertson
for
information.
Blvd., Th•.rd Floor-AL, Los
Angeles, Calif. 90048.
RUTLAND
Rutland Fire
Lonesome? Ttk charge of yoru I;lepartment
Ladies Auxiliary,
lift and IIU'~ It arolllld. W:itt for Wednesday, 7:30p.m., fire statiorr.
Ann Landt_rs new booklet, 'Huw to Ox roast plans.
Make ;,mnds and Stop Btfng
Lo~ly. S~nd a self-4ddrts.sed,l011g,
LONG BOTTOM - Pastor Don
bu.S~U.!S:SI:&amp;t tnWII~ lW1 a ~he.ck Miller will ~ at the ~~- 01\ve
or IIJDM'I order for $4.15 ~tit# 0- Commuqity Ghurch ·in Long Bot. cl~s postage and htwUi11g) to: tom on Wednesday at 7 p.m. fastor
Fr~ndr.clo A1111 Landtrs. P.O. Box Lawrence Bush invites the public. .
11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611..()562. (1n
.....
cl1111Jda~~·~se~nd~$5~.0.~l5~.)~====;S~YR~A~C~U~S~E~-~~~~~~

.··_!Visit with 'mother recently

Orange lulce

4~~

Medication
·available
for
REM
problem
:. Dear ADD LaDders: I'm a
bella ·

my .

Food Club

Fresh Salmon Fillets

. recently eld a mec:ting May 23 and sale was scheduled for April 0. The
Heather Dailey, News Reporter
twomeeti~gs in Ap~il. Items .of members discussed planting flow~he Meigs Creek 4· H Club
· busmess diScussed mcluded the e.rs l\t the church. Hal Kneeri talked metm May at t])e Calaway home .
·:Cand.Y sales, community projects, to the club members about the dif- Officers were elected and judging
· ::)udgmg dates, 4-H camps, and the ferent 4-H vegetable and flower dates, registration'· dates, livestock
-_W, Va, Beef Judging Expo. The growing projects. Refreshments 1• rules, the kick-off dinner, fair week
'f!roup talked about sheep weigh-in were serVed
shows; and plans for 1993 were
~and watched a home video of Oie
Kelley Grueser, News Reporter discussed. Outside games were
' ibirlhing of Ashley Hager's lambs.
The King and Queen Bees met played. Joann Calaway, Ann
::Demonstrations were done by June 9 at the Hoffman residence Collins, Jeromee Calaway · and
~endy Guess on handling rabbits wilh 8 members and 2 advisors in Sarah Roush served refreshments.
~by Bob James on .the different · attendance. Officers were elected The next meeting was set for May
lcinds of feed and grams. Refresh- and dues, camp dates, and project 23 at 7:00 p.m. at the Calaway,
:ZUents were served.
selection was discussed. Jennifer Farm. Plans for a hayride and
:
Ashley Hager, News Reporier Mora and Debm Frost are planning weiner roast will be discussed.
"' The Bashan Beamers 4·H Club on participating in the Health and
Adam Sanders, News Reporter
:Jnet J\pril 12 and May 25 at the Safety Speaking Contest The parts
' The New Horizons 4-H Club
'jtome of advisor Suzy McKay . ofthepota!Oandhowtoplantpota- met at the home of Donna Neece
"Earth month, candy sales, and toes was discussed. Brian Hoffman wilh 17 members and 5 advisors in
:Camps were discussed. The club set showed several of his paintings. attendance. A bowl-a-lhon to help
April14 as the day to pick up trash Lisa Hoffman served refreshments. with camp fees, the candy sales,
along the road, a community pro· The next meeting was set for June and t-shirts were discussed . .Jessica
jc;ct done )o observe Earth Month. 16 at the Eblin Home where t!Je Hamiltqn gave a report on shopDemonstrations were done by . members will discuss bicycle safe- ping. Each member took turns ridDutchie and Tommy McKay on · ty and making crystals.
ing horses after the business meethogs·. The group played · football
Debm Frost, News Reporter · ing. Members also enjoyed a cookand baseball and enjoyed refreshThe Klassy Klovers met April out. The next meeting was schedments served by Jeffrey Circle, 28 at the home of Lester and Pam uled for April 29 at the Neece
Suzy McKay, and Jeremy Ray- Parker with 11 members and 4· home.
.
mood.
advisors in attendance. The kiCkoff
Amanda Neece, News Reporter
Tara Michael,.!lfews Reporter d'inner and 4-H camp was dis'
The Pioneers 4·H Clu met
The Busy Beavers met April21 cussed. Chip HAggerty talked March 25, April 22, May 13, and
and May 16 where they discussed . about upcoming events at Canter's May 27 at th~ Scout Hall in
the final selection of fair projects · Cave and the candy sales. Pam Chester. Officers were elected and
the members were taken, fund rais- Parker served refreshments and the camps, project selection, !]la candy
-ers for lhe group, and possible field next meeting date was set for May sales, and 4-H Club Congress were
;trips. Delma Karr gave insttuctions 23 at Forked Run Park where the discussed. An Installation Ceremo. on how to groom rabbits. The Busy group will enjoy a picnic and soft- ny was planned and a program on
beavers planted flowers at the ball game.
f1r~t aid was giv~n by Debbie
.Pomeroy Nursing and RehabilitaSheny Burke, News Reporter Sm1th, Marcella Wt)l, and Barbara
tion Center. For recreation, the
The Me1gs County Better Beef Smilh. A Creative Writing demongroup took a field trip to MeDon- Club met Apru25 at the Ervin resi- strati on was given by Melissa
aid's.
dence with 10 members and I advi- Dempsey. The meinbers enjoyed
Susan Tobin, News Reporter sor in attendance. A car wash was playing charades, Win, Lose or
• The Country Shamrocks recent- scheduled for May 22 at the Citgo · Draw. and dodge ball. Refreshly held three meetings- April 25, in Tuppers Plains. Fair projects ments were served. ·
;j';lay 15, and June 4. The group dis- , were discussed and a project lesson
MelissaFrancis,NewsReporter ·
~tlssed judging dates, hog registraon show details and equipment was
The Pleasure Riders met April
tion; fundraisers, t-shirts, and the given. The group played basketball 29 at the Milhoan home with 8
· '.l&gt;hio River Sweep. Project lessons and refreshments were served, The members, 2 advisors, and 4 parents
~overed how to take care of and next meeting was set for May 22 attending. Terri Carsey showed last
plant flowers and how 10 build the following the car wash at Tuppers years fair video of the horse show
correct type of rabbit pen. The Plains.
and parade to the members. The
: iJroup worked on their recycling
. Joshua Ervin, News R.eporter members discussed good and bad
proje&lt;:t. Refreshments were served.
The Meigs County Better Dairy points of showmanship and perfor'
Peggy Hetzer, News Reponer met April 25 at the home of Ed mance. Candy money was collect' · The Dream Weavers met April Holter with 6 members and 2 advi- ed. The next meeting was set for
,, April 15, and April 23 to plan sors attending. Officers were elect- May 17 at the Milhoan home.
activities for this year. 4-H project ed and possible field trips were disDanielle Young, News Reporter
.selecticin, candy sales, and group cussed. The next meeting was set
The Rockin Robins met May 4
· shirts were all discussed .. A game for ·May 23 at 1:28 p.m. at the . and May 23. Items of business dis..of Chinese Jumprope, lead by Warner residence.
cussed included the candy sales,
Shelly Pavich.• was enjoyed for
Patty Nally, News Reporter • carnp,s; fund raisers and a dog train, iecreation. Refreshments were
The Meigs County Marvels met ing class. Amber Perkins made car: served. .
· June 3 at the Crane home with 7 rot sticks and celery and told of
:
Matt Pavich, News Reporter members and 2 advisors attending. their most important nutrients. A
:• The Harrisonville 4·Her's met Officers were elected and 4-H ·demonstration on selfdefense was
April 27, May 11, and May 25 at camp was discussed. Instructions given by Mark s_olin and Amber
the Harrisonville Church. Items of were g1ven on how to show a goat Perkins. The gioup members pracbusinesss discussed included the The members played basketball ticed self-defense moves. Refreshelection of officers, project selec- and refreshments were served by ments were served by Lynn and
,lion, and fund raisers. The !!roup Billy Crane. The next meeting wiU Amber Perkins. The next meeting
)&gt;layed softball and enJoyed be June 17 at the Crane home wilh was set .for June 3 at the fair·tefreshments served by Michael Billy Crane an,d Darrick St. Clair to grounds.
l-amberl anil Stacy Cotterill. The give d~monstrations. ,
members are to try to sell all their
Tara Rose, News Reporter
Amber Perkins, News Reporter
candy by the next meeting and the
The Meigs County Shepherds
. The Shade Valley 4-H Club met
members taking cooking projects Club met April 27 at the Ervm resi- May 23 at the borne of Alan Brown
4te 10 make something ont of fheir dence with 14 members and 4 advi- with 10 members and 3 advisors
~k for the meeting.
sors attending. Officers were elect- attending. Camp was, discussed.
Kristin Brown, News Reporter ed, special event dates and projects The members practiced working
·,
: The Kid Konnection 4-H Club were discussed, and the parts of a with steers. Refreshments were
l:ecently held meetings March 7, lamb were discussed. The group ' served by the ,Haynes. The next
~h 21, April4, and April 18 at
played basketball after the_ meeting. meeting is scheduled for June 20 at
the Enterprise United Methodist Refreshments were served and the the Brown residence.
Jeanie Newell, News Reporter
Chl!fCh. OffiCers were elected, fund next meeting was scheduled for
•

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Baby Food

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Doz.

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Pilot project-----

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Wednesday, June ·16, 1993

Wednesday, June 16, 1·993 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·••. Bl"LLETI~ BO.\RD
•••

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

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Page 1D-The Dally Sentinel
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Family
Medicine

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BULLEnN lOUD DliDLINE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUBLICAnON
Moose Lodge No. 731
"FREE"
"FISH FRY"

..••

..'.

John C. Wolf, D.O.

Associate Professor

Members Only
Monday, June 21, 6·8 PM

of Family Medicine

:;;;;;;~~e;ve;r.~the~;;~~pre~senieruc:eeTs:"pro~ba~-

•

Reader's 'prostate
treatment not quackery

i .

bly the result of a long-lasting
prostate infection.
Treating a urinary and prostate
Ouestion: I developed pain in
my thighs and difficulty urinating. infection can be very difficult.
The doctor detennined that I had a Antibiotics can get into the urine in
urinary infection and prostate cal- high concentrations so that they
...
.;
culi. He jYaS an extremely rich . fight infection in the kidneys or
.... man, but he seemed concerned bladder relatively easily. Prostate
., $bout my health. He prescribed infections, by comparison, are very
medication and did a prost~te mas- difficult to treat. Antibiotics that
sage once a week for six weeks. will kill the common types· of
Another doctor told me that infecting bacteria don't get into the
prostate massage is quac)cery!. He prostate fluid very well, and therethinks the other doctor was JUSt fore, they don't reach a high
"feathering his nest." Is prostate enough concentration within the
massage a good treatment for gland to clear up the infection.
Moving infected prostate fluid
prostate a!ld urinary infection?
Answer: Let me start my answer out of the gland can help clear a
with a brief anatomy lesson. The prostate infection just as drinking
prostate is a gland that is part of the more water cart help clear a bladder
•
male reproductive system, so it is infection. The prostate fluid can be
only found in men. The gland is moved out of the gland by sexual
localed ~xt 10 the urinary bladder. intercourse or masturbation - or it
A tube called the urethra runs from can be pushed out of the gland by
the bladder through the prostrate prostate massage. In fact. prostate
and then 10 the penis. Openings in massage is the preferred method
· the urethrn as it passes through the for collection of prostate fluid that
prostate allow semen - the repro- is to be studied to determine the
ductive fluid - 10 enter the tube. best antibiotic for treatment of the
.
(Additional components of semen, infection.
Pr&lt;Ystate massage can be very
by the way, are manufactured in
•
important in detennining the best
other glands.)
·
•' .
In your leuer you didn't men- treatment for an individual's
tion your age, but I can assume !hat prostate infection, and it can be
you.are over 50 since urinary infec· very helpful in treating it, but most
••
lions are uncommon in males over men prefer the more conventional
year of age and younger than methods for eliminating prostate
••• one
50.
The
most common cause of uri- fluid as part of treatment. I don't
••
nary infection in men is -(a drum think your doctOr was "feathering
his nest" by performing prostate
roll, please) -prostate problems.
•'
The prostate gland enlarges as massage. He was just trymg to help
A'
••
you
age. In many men over 50 the you get over your prostate infec.l"
gland becomes large enough to par- tion.
.•
It is often necessary to take
tially block the urethra as it passes
through the gland. It is this partial medication for prostate infections
blockage that increases the likeli- for weeks or months, so the sixhood of developing a urinary tract 'weeic treatlnent is certainly normal.
infection. ·Luckily. in 95 ·percent of Some men may need 10 take medithe cases. urinary tract mfections cation for three or more months for
arc confined to the bladder, which this condition. Others may even
is less serious than when the kid- . reqUire prostate surgery 10 stop the
neys are in~olved. It is com~on ~ repealed bouts of infection.
"Family Medicine" iii a weekly
have infecuon at the same lime m
column.
To submit questions,
·· • · the prostate gland, just as you have.
write
to
John C. Wolf, D.O.,
The prostate calculi you have
Ohio
University
of Osteo.. are stones, something like kidney pathic Medicine,College
Grosvenor
Hall,
stones. The small, hard stones
within the gland usually cause no Athens, Ohio 4S701.
major problems themselves. How·
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Single parent
camp offered
"A Weekend Together" is the
theme of the 5th annual Single Parent Family Camp offered by the
Ohio State University Extension on
the weekend of July 16-18, at4-H
Camp Palmer near Fayette in Fulton County. Single parents and
their children from all areas of
Ohio, Michigan and Indiana are
invited to attend this educational
and fun filled weekend retreat.
The cost of this camp is $38 for
all adults and youth, 8 years and
over, $20 for those 6 and 7 and $15
for those 3 10 5 years old. Children
must be at least three years old and
diaper free:
CO!its include 5 meals, 2 nights
lodging (bring your own bedding),
snacks and the following activities:
swimming, canoeing, volleyball,
hikes, archery, zipline, crafts, puttputt golf, campfire. kickball and
wagon rides to Harrison Stale Park.
In addition, each camper will
receive a tee-shirt with the camp
logo.
Camp begins at 7 .p.m. o~ Fri~y
evening, July 16, w1th regJstrallon
and will conclude at 2 p.m . on Sunday afternoon, July 18. For ~ore
information or to make a registration, contact: The Meigs County
Extension Office at 614-992-6696.
All educational programs and
activities conducted by Ohio State
University Extension are available
to all potential clientele on a
nondiscriminatory basis without
regard to race, color, creed, reliaion, sexual orientat!on, natio~al
OJialn. ~ex, age handicap or Vtet·
nanl-era veteran Slatus.

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Fortn...l» of...,.... TN• S...l1fe•
INSURED

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WOLFE BED/ .
FACE TANNER
Plare your

·

COLLINS
ENTERPRISES
•Painting Services
interior &amp; Exterior ·.
•We Paint Mobile Homes
and Aluminum Siding
•Power Washing
FREE ESTIMAIES
50 734 Bltley RWge Rd.
Loag lottem, Oh. 45743

949·2826

...

Le•····

Fr0111 Foundation to

.31904
Creek Road
.Middleport, Ohio

Inside and Out

614·992·1-144

Roof

4/29/93 Jftt

Free Eatimalee,
Low Coate.
Work Guaranteed

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U.S.O.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF,
WHOLE BONELESS ROUND STEAK OR

Cube steak

SO

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1"'

LIMIT 1 GAL. WITH COUPON &amp; $10.00 I
OF
ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
.
I
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER
COUPON GOOD SUN. JUNI

.

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JUNI19, 199$

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HENRY E. CLELAND .................................. ..:._m~191
TRACY BAINAGER .....................................·.~ ... I4.2431
SHERRI HART.........- ....................................... 742·2357

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: :: · ~KA:~:I'!!H:!;Y;;CLE:;;;:;LAN:;;;:;D;;;.;;;...;;;
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------~~~--~---_.__ _....,.....:.:Rea:::.l=Est::st:;;:.•.:Gen~e:.:.ra:::l_ _ __

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••
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HAULING

LIMESTONE,
GUYEL &amp; COAL
Rea10aa•le
Rates
JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

t; ,

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1-LB. PKG. HYGRADE BALLPARK
MEAT OR

Lite Meat Franks
/

205 North Second Ave.
- Middleport, OH

.
••
••

"•

.•,&lt;
'•

'•
'•

·.·.·[ .•.•...
. ,,
.,'•

12-Pack
12-oz. cans
CAFF~INE FilE~ DIET COKE,
DIH COK~, SPiliTE Oil

I

coca Cola Classic

.· ~
!J
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"IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE"
READY TO EAT

Deli Fried
Chicken

ZUCCHINI OR

Yellow
Squash

B·Pieces

/!OUnd

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EAGLES

CLUB

WIUS HIU RD. - Alarge modular, with an addtion on
tho 18ar. Has 9 100ms, 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. Has a
heat pump, 2 acres of nice laying land, and an older
garage. Has a spoclacularviaw of the golf course.

· .. • ·

6:45·p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 PayoH
Thla ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-32

LINDA'S
PAINTING

I

IIOOU:PORT- Mil Street- A ttandyman'a Speclal2 lots and a fivo 100m liouao with 2·3 bedroom a. Need•
l!Ulte a bk ol work inside, but the outside looks pretty

INTERIOR ·

BRENDA JEPFERS ..................................._............ H24011
DARLWE STEWART ............................- .............-112 .311

' FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Lat me do II
for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

JERRY IPRADLIG.............................- ...... ~304) 1124411

ti4·915-418Q

$8,000

lANDY IUTCttiR ...,-...............-~ ..•••..........••...Itl-1171

OFFK:E....~.-···r""'''''"-''"''"'"""-····· ......:..............112.ZIII

I

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614-446·0736
Naor

. CONStRUCTION

Howard L Wrltesel

•New Homes

ROOFING

Enlrtea hlrlg ~011 For
llll HUbbent ...._...
l~lle laogue TouiMment AI
Syrocu•, Slorta -""" 1111, eonta'" Eller Plclc-. Jr. T -

~~."'·
~~· 'i:.::nc:
Entry Foe $20, ,....., Roetor.

EXanc LAOIES LIVE 1-«»48!1r
7810 $3.!MHnln. MC-YISA 1 · 1115·1111 12-mln. 18+.

VIII

Flohor_,. Co.. Flohlng Late,
Vlnlan, Ohla, 3 112 lllloo North
On Slole Open All
Night Frldlly'a •325.Sotuldoy'o.
Lift Bal And Tocldo, Picnic
Aroa, r.s:srouncl, 0,.... AI: 1
A.M. C
On Thurodayo.Stocking Waaldy Clttlsh. 114388-tlM, No AlcOhol B10eo g
Po...,hted. IITaka A Kid Flolllngll

114-3811-1117!1.

Ho....omlng 3:00pm, JuM
20th, Slloom Chun:h, Big 16

•Gar•..•

. NEW- REPAIR

eCo•plete

(304) 773·5533

Stop &amp; CoiQ•re

Downsj)outs

Pliny, WV. Revtval 1110 llartlnQ
eame nlglrt.

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!

R••••liag

Gutters

ASK FOR CHRIS

FlEE ESTIIIATES

Gutter Cleaning

985·4473 .
6'67·6J79

Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

949·2168
3·16-13-tln

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL .
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643

Linde - _ .., a..tlc; 1Will
Not S. RH-Iblo Fot Her
Bille AI 01 Tille Dalo, Ex·

Huobancl.
Uva 24 Houra /(~I T... To
B•ulilul Glrlolll 1
Za-26112
Ert 13711, $3.18 Per Min. Muot
Bo. 18 Yra, P-.11 Co. 102-631·

0615.

MISTRESS MADONNA LIVE

IIYRTL£ BEACH RAMADA·
Oceon Foont 1 lr., LuK. Condo.

110 Pool, Sl11pe 4 To 1. $8,0
W•k, Call Owner, 803-Ut-3157.

tor

2112192/tfn

1·

100·1'1!1r1115 12 min. i-80H8578110-11C.VISA 1a..

Do you neN

(No Sunday Callsl

· •LIGHT HAULING .
•FIREWOOD

•

11H

Gallipolis

2 Front Struts • La•or ·
• 4 Wheel AliJnment
Pric11 Starting at
1129.95 + Tilx

&amp; BURKE

801M01te

to care

laved Southam Hille
Ellalo, loon. We havo oponlngo
avall1bla. 304-458-1003.
OHIO'S CONNECTION ALTER·

NATIVE ~1110-3337 S2.5Gmin 18+/aN llleal- detoiiM
moot 100'1 of olngfa~ 1n

BILL SLACK

rour lrM today. CCI

- 992·2269

'L

REDUCE; Bum 011 Fal While
You SIMp, Taka OPAL Anillblo
AI: Fruth Pharmacy.

USED RAILROAD TIES
IHG-92·tfw

WAYNE

DALTON

LAWN CARE

J&amp;L INSULATION

Middleport,
Pomeroy, R•cine,

Replacement

Free Estimates
Windows

Reasonable Rates

VInyl Siding
Roofing
C.llue for
Spacial Prl~aa on
Siding and Wlndowa

Dependable

992-2772

Ar•••
CALL 992·6123
Service

DO IT YOU
&amp; COITUCTOR
SPECIAL

WAYN~

DALTON

REDUCE; Burn off 1o1 while JOU
OPAL, available et
FMhPharmocy.

allop. Take

THE GAY CONNECTION 1·-

Steel Wood Grained Textured Raised
Panel Garage Doors Complete With
.Track, Lock, Spring and Hardware.
. . WHILE THEY LAST!

'
These Sizes Oalyl
~

1110.3337 12.SO-mln. lit ....,
100'• of exciting men In your
araa tonight . Go&lt; phona f'o. CCI
BOCA .FL•

While, divorced. m11le, U, IMka
*lnkar

componlanahlp. Social

omokar, Ilk• ..mptng, n.i
met1ttte. and country muelc

~·~-.

.

8x7~ •••••••••• $17

Women To Tllk

9x7 ••••••••••• $1
16x7 ••••••••• $

Coli Thle Excl- 24 Hour Hot.
MMIII 1·-1110-33De Ell 1482,
13.111 Per Min. Muot So 1t Yra.

Untor-blo

With

You Uvei

Conv-tlonot

Prooaiii02431.0S15.

4

Giveaway

24 HOUR EMERIJENCT BERVICE
'

TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING
24 Hour Portable Weldiq Service

POMEROY- Brownell Ave. -A homo to g(Ow in is lhis
2 slofY older homo with 3 bedrooms, living room, dining
room, kitchen and a bealltifui atairway. II you want a
house in-lown at an anordable price, chock lhia ona out.
· ,
ONLY 124,800

nice.•

. POMEROY, 01,

. IN POMEROY

$40,000

DOTTIE TURNER. Broker ••••.•.••..•• - ...................... HZ-1112

REGULARLY . .. $5.99

EVERY THURSDAY

POMEROY- Locual Sl- A3 bedroom, 1'/, slory home
that-needs some work. Has some paneling, 2 porchet.
and a basement. Lot is 40X100. ·
J~ST $4,000

-...,

992·7553

Rutl•nd, Mason

WELCHTOWN ROAD- Need a trailer lot or home site?
This a,38 acl8 parcel has oloc., older aoplic, and opring&gt;
water. Pilblic water available. Just move your lmUor in.

~·····

-

3-4-93· 1 mo.

$8,000

fJ

-

SYRACUSE - Looking lor a stoner or 18tiroment homo
then you need to sao this house. it has two good slzod
bed100ms, large iving room, 1•t, baths, huge main bath
dona in black and r11d marble with sun~ lub, stap·savor
kitchen with dining room, now furnace with central air,
vinyl siding and garage s~ting on A(_nat 100X71 lot and a
nice nllig.borho?d·
$35,800

102431.0S11.
WoAlloH.,.
7&amp;

6181'0211

SHRUB &amp; TREE
L__~
TRIM and
. REMOVAL
.

'•

Auto-Ben fills
SpriqTfme
Special

992·3838 ·

LICENSED and BONDED

••

,1.:•

-

BEAUTIFUL GiRLSI Ex..lnd
Pa..-ol Talk To 'Em Uve111·
-7110-3388 E111. 1424 h.18 Per
Min. Muot a. 18 Yrw. P . - Co

,.......
RODGERS 1-Z RIDE

PH. 614·992-5591

;·

3/8/tln

Announcements

WoAIIolllvo
BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
7&amp; 12
and TRACKHOE WORK
· AVAILAB.LE.
SEPnC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES •nd
TRAILER SITE.S,
LANDCLEARING,
11'-&lt;IA&lt;c State Rl. 7
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
Maltaf'Card
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

30 HOUR

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
:BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limeatone,
Dirt, Grav.J and Coal

•

FREE ESTIMATES

OWNER: Jell Wickorsho11

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

Ponror,Ohlo

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

.1

5/10/93

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406

3 Announcements

REASONABLE RATES

992·3470

REDUCED I SYRACUSE - 1988 modular with 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, F.A.N.G. heal, CiA. decking,
dishwasher &amp; range, pan fenced yaRI, sto~ building,
•t. acr11 lot. Very nice &amp; roomy! NOW: $45,500. ·

36358 SR J

!i/201113

DRIVEWAY WORK
alii LIMESTO"E ·
DELIVERY SERVICE

GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

NEW USTINGI - RACINE - One noor frame homo with
2 bed100ms, bath, dock, fir~~place, nawor carpet, 1p1~ air.
ASKING $23,000..

WE WAHr TO WORK FOR YOUI
GIVE US ACALL TODAY!

~: "'i1"r

BUV ONE-GET ONE

Shade River Saddle Shop

614·1112-&amp;163

SMAU DOZER WORK,I

36970 Ball Run Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

SKINNER RD. -lovely contempomry home with 3 bedlOOms, 2 baths, sun 100m, fi18place, 'appliances, decking,
swimming &amp; fishing pond, extm cabin In the woods and a
stomga shed. $98,000.

.. j

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WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

RE~t Juat Pilat Cheater - Speclacwar home with
4 bed100ms, 2 baths, 2 decks, 2 car ga~. heat
pump/C.A. fireplace, stomga building, cailar. MUST
MUST SEE HOME! NOW: $114,500.

. ,;: '
.f;

YOUNG'S

510 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

CHARLIE'S

nice yaRI with 3 +I· aol8s, 3 badrooma, bath, carpon,
ba011mon~ and CIKllmi air. VERY NICE HOME! GOOD
LOCATION! NOW: $35,000 .

:0 ·

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Tanks, Leach Lines
Repair &amp; Installation
Licensed, lasured aad loaded
Call614-992·7878

992-6215

30 yra. ......r~ence.

Call 614.-992·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Claeshire,

...

••

sea/test 2% Lowfat Milk

CAll614·992·7878

CUSTOM SADDLES, .
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

Covera, Carpet,
Htldllntrs,
Convertible Tops

· SIZED UMESTONE
FOR SALE

.:

~lo

lb.

.EWER PROBLEMS

COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

5-24-1

Stone

~·

Gal.

(614) 742·2345

D. A. BOSTON
EXCAVAnNG
(614)
667·6628

CARPENTER SERVIa

liB

614·949·2911 or
614·593-5010

FREE ESTIMATES

CustomS•t

.
-.. ''
-.
t. ./ 1------=-:..:...:.:::;.=.:.
.. REDUCED! - · 2 story home that has heel exC&lt;JIIent cal8,

~

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

~

IMPROVEMENTS

COMMERCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL
licensetl1 Insured &amp; Bonded

4126/tfn

;a~

J&amp;T HOME

Trouble·Shootlng

'SUMMER HOURS'
Sun.-Thur 5-10 pm
Fri·Sat 5·11 pm
CLOSED WEDNESDAY

Plumbing
.......

6-17·13-1 mo.

6·9·93-tfn

~·

ADDITIONAL
QUANTITIES
GA.L. $1.99

•

New Wiring, Rewiring,

(304) 773·5585

DAVIDSON'S
PlUMBING

Tackenlllt Rd.
Racine

985·4181

Real E118te General ·' ·

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Mowen • Chall Saws

(former Mason Lanes)
'3rd &amp; Pomeroy Streets
Mason, WV

. 949·2104

FOREVER
BRONZE

Cla.osificd today
and hold out
your hand .. .

:' '
.: ... ,.

~·::

EAGLE LANES

Authorized: Brlgga l
Stratton MTD, Ryan,
· I.D.C. Repair Canter'
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Hours 96- M·F 9-3 Sat.
Closed Sunday

$25.00

24 HI. EMERGENCY SERVICE

WAllER ALLEY
Paris oad Service

UNLIMITED ONE
MONTH TANNING

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

EBLIN'S ELECTRIC

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC

(6) 9,16, 2lc

FREE

256·6640

Wettleaters -

PubliC Notice
Joieph, lorJM&lt;Iy known aa
Evelyn Joaoph H.iae; Willer
Will; Lawronca Will; Larry
Will; Jo Ann O'Neil; and tho
u~;~known hoira, davlaeea,
~ega-, adtniniatratora, exocutora, peraonal repreoen·
talivea, apouaea anfl
aooigna of Alva C. Will, Ida
Ota Radford, Ola Ida
Joaeph, Evelyn Booton, .U
Evelyn Helae, aka Evelyn
Jo..ph, Mary Marr.ret W"lll,
Margaret M. Wil, Helena
Elizabeth Sayre'~ Lena
Hellman,
Waller
Lawrence Will,
Larry Will,
Will
and Jo Ann O'Neil, whoa•
last
•ddreaaea
are
unknown:
You are hereby notified
that you have l!ean named
Defendant• in a legal action
entitle Richard A. Radford
va. Alta May Morgan, et at.
This action has bean
aaoigned Case No. 93·CV·
154 and lo pending in the

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

TRIMING and
TREE &amp; STUMP REMOVAL

''

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AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE anti
ACCIDENT I~SURANCE COMPANY

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ing that the Commilllonere
.would receive projeclappllcationa lor FY't13 until 4:00
o'clock P.M. on Juno 21,
1903. Project applicaUone
re-ceived on June 21 will be
reviewed by the Board and a
final public hearing will ·be
hold on July 7, 111V3, at 1
o'clo~k
P.M . in the
Commluionora olllce Iii
which lime the Board will
announce which project•
will be Included in the
County's application for
funding.
.
.
The public Ia Invited to
attend thla hearing on July 7
to provide their input on the
County's application.
Melgo County
·
Commiuionaro
Mary Hobate-,
Clerk/CDBG Admin.

· ' •· • ~=======:;
•. .
IN ' MEM0RY OF
~:~.;.
OUR SISTER, .
HELEN MILHOAN
WHO LEFT US ON
JUNE 17, 1987 ·
w, Cherish Your
Memories and Love
Them Dearty.
Brothers, Sisters,
Nieces &amp; Nephews
•' · ~::::::::;:~;:~~~~on~ti~·n:u:ed~o:n~P~eg~e~1~4~)--l

-

NEW YORK (AP) -People
with the most serious form of
diabetes can retard serious complications in their eyes, kidneys
and nervous systems by check·
ing their blood sugar and injecting insulin more oflen, a land·
mark study says.
Such intensive treatment
appeared to delay the appearance of complications and slow
their progression when· compared to a more standard regi·
men for controlling blood sugar,
said Dr. Phillip Gorden.
Although the study included
only people with "Type I" diabetes, who require daily insulin
injections to survive, the con·
cept also may apply to other
people with diabetes, said Gorden, director of the National

NOncE OF
PUBUC HEARING
The Meigs County
Comml11lonera intend lo
apply to the Ohio
Department of Development
lor funding under tho
Community Development
Block Grant (CDBG) Small
Citlee Program, a federally
funded program adminiotered by the s~aw.
The county will be eligible
lor $142,000.00 of Fiocal
Year 11193 CDBG funding,
providing the County mMta
applicable program re·
quir..,.nla.
On May 17, 1993, the first of
two public hearing• waa
held at the M"'g" County
Courthouae to provide citi·
zeno with pertinent information about the program. II
waa determined at thai hear·

'

::. :
PubliC Notice
~
'; . •
NOnCE BY
;.•
· PUBUCAOON
• •. · IN THE COMMON PLEAS
:::
COURT OF '
;· ,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
•; • " RICHA!ID A. RADFORD,
• ••.
Plaintiff
:-; VS
·:.; ALTA MAY MORGAN, etal.,
; .;
.
Delenclanla
•' •
Caoa N0.13-CV·154
::. · To: Evelyn Boaton, form·
• ;-: arty known · •• . Evelyn
•. •• - - - - - - - ~:· · 2
In Memory

.

Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. The
institute sponsored the srudy.
Gorden spoke in a telephone
interview before announcing the
study results Sunday in Las
Vegas at the annual meeting of
the American Diabetes Association.
.
"It's a landmark study ... of
major clinical importance," said
diabetes association president
Dr. F. Xavier Pi-Sunyer.
Although his association ' s
guidelines support the kind of
intense blood-sugar control tested in the experiment. most pea·
pie with diabetes do not practice
such control, he said.
In diabetes, the body does
not control levels of blood
sugar, called glucose,,because it
fails to make insulin or to use
insulin properly. About 14 million Americans have diabetes,
including about 1.4 million with
Type!.
.
The Diabetes -Control and
Complications Trial followed
1,441 patients in the United
Stales and Canada for an average of. about six years. ~orden
called it the largest dtabetes
study in history.
Participants were randomly
assigned to one of two treatment
regimens. Those in the intensive-control group tested their
blood sugar four or more times a
day and injected insulin three or
more times a day, or used an
insulin pump. They also followed a special diet and visited
a clinic weekly 10 monthly.
The other participants fol·
lowed what the federal institute
said ·was the regimen used by
most people with Type I dia·
betes: insulin injections once or
twice a day with daily blood
sugar tests. They visited a clinic
every three months.
Compared to those .following
this regtmen, participants in the
intensive-contro.l group showed
reductions of approximately:
- 70 percent in progression
of detectable diabeuc retinopathy, an eye disease that can lead
. to blindness.
-· 50 percent in retinopathy
becoming bad enough to be
referred for treaunent.
- 50 percent in rates of
treatment for sight-threatening
retinopathy.
- 50 percent in rates of significant kidney damage, called
diabetic nephropathy.
- 60 percent in rates of sig·
nificant nerve damage called
neuropathy.

011r son.

.~

•

.~

Study reveals intense treatment
slows complications in diabetes

Upper R1. 7-Gallipolis
Will Be Closed Until Monday,
June 21 due to the death of

Public Notice

.."&gt;•~
'
'. •.-~::::::::::::~r:==~~~~~~

.·"'.

..

VI'RA FURNITURE

.'' ·.

p

Public Notice

COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP SERVJCIS
. iN StiOP WElDI~G SERVICE OR PORTABLE
ALL TPES OF 1'iELOING FABRICATION AND REI'AIF

WE
LEASE
• Hy4rogeo • Co2 A1gon • Hoium •

O·~·Acelyleoe•~ogtn

~Gases

• Clltl&gt;Oe • ~!PO Gas• Po~ • CJinde!1

.

GENERAL MACHINE WORK &amp; WELDING

HOUilS.

1 mole, 1 -le, 112 Cockar
Spaniol
• Ral ~412-blcf.
Tomer " " -·
to good-·

•

2

........

declawwd,

7:30am · 5.00pm

17WII24.

Jilt . , FKII~Ios

Fully lnourtid
Shop Facilillaa.

l

sell Sll'le ,

COMPLETE fie ·- ..:filii!'•
RADIATOR .,. ~wro-SERVICE ~
.

• Hei!IIC . Alum1Mum &amp; St•nttll • Sprly WtkSing
• Mtg Weldlllljl • St"l &amp; A.lurrunum • W-'&lt;ltnQ Suppltll

• rabrttatton·i\bdny to Roll&amp; Bend Metal

992·3768
17 COLE • POMEROY . OHIO .

8/101113/1 mo. pd

'

'

trained.

olamooo,goodw/-.o.304-

Mon . Fri

7:30am - 12:()(Jpm Sot

Job

opoywol,
1

....

...

'

.

�..

2..:..Tiie
4

· Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Giveaway

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

45

Woolci Old, I Calico, I
I lllock WMh WhHo P...., 2 Gr-r
: • Whlto, 114-3~.
- .7

per~~ .

• 1451.

cata • kit·

Lost &amp; Found

'

A.,.,.,.

r=========1r=========i

Bolt••.

7

-··

knowlniJiy accept

WhMI chllr, bod, '-Plio! _,_
...... kftcllon .....,. _ ,...
doors. 1ool8, ralalll*, ehllil
.... . . . . ....... turnllure •

-Hickory
moro.
Follow
roodllko
- tot
Chlpol
Church,

Nood babyoiH• for the

"::1;1

1752 If no oniWII loovo ""'"

llarta WIL, 10:001m. 30M71-

ugo.

Yord Solo: 405 241h St-. Pollll
PIIUIIII I :OOOrn-3:00pm; Thur.

Juno t7ih I Fri. Juno lllh.
Yord SolO: toon'o • largo
wo,.n'a CIOihla. 10-lpeid
and

mono. 'ni.... Juno 17th i fit.
Juno IBih. 403 24th 81-.

adYenlsed In 1hls newspaper

ar,.vallabie on an equal
owo~unity basis.

~~~~~~~~~

No Eoporllorcol 1800 To 1100

WMidLo,/Polontlal - - n g
~... 1 2,"a:41~"'\.,~
24 Houri.
u~ ~0 Lila ~0 11 ~ E
""'
' Soli Avonl
' lluot
•- u..rotno
llonoyl
In
O.Uiopll City UmH1 or South
CJI . Rt. 35 Qolllo ,._ __ Slott
F
For "1 umMldw;;-~·
,_
.:"
....01
'••-. ·

•

31 Homes for Sale
2 Story Loa Sided - . , 4
Bldroomo, :1' Botho, Boumont
Doub'•
• Car Goro:a;• On 4.'
•
AcrM. 114:-315-U , 114-387-

7734.
3.41

ocroo, 44x24, 3bdrm., 2 112

Ina gl11o Ouloldo ontronco, por-

Middleport

11-.

885 Gononl Hortlnger, lllddJepon, June 11-11, cklthlrta,

Ad., uat off SR33, 1 mllta North

un

01

·~._ TRUCK

.,

.. gn,

on.....

DRIVERS

a.n.tHe

Urnlted

112 btthl, garbaa• dlapoeal,

Avallab6e.

Hau ... 1Agrand1 81Yd, OrMn

1:00.5:00, Juno 111-11.
Send RIIIUIIII To: DRIVE~, School, 3 BR, Ulll Rm, Cherry
Lourot CIIH Rd.c 11101 hou11 on P.O. Box 101, Jocklon, uot Cpolob,l I ntl/2 1B14•1 ~;. ~• rago, Ap·
n me ··· -~ 8'0.
rl~h' behind .roo llllhodill 45HO,
C urch.
Nice 2 - - wllh full baHmont, on Rldgo Avon,., Rio
Granda, 1 blocll from compuo,
8
Public Sale
1!4:-1112·3033.
&amp; Auction
32 Mobile Homes
Rlc~ .Pur.on Auction ~ny,
for Sale
full limo ouclionMr, complllo
ouctlon H&lt;Yic:e. Uconood
73 FonHt Parte, 2 bedroom,
1086,0hlo I Wool Ylrglnlo, good condlllon, 814-112-lllll.
713-5785.

Antklue• and U'Md turnMure, no

1ar111 « too omoll, wll 45831.
buy ono ptoco or complolo
ho,.thoid, cd
lllllln, 12
Situation
114-882·11141.
wanted
Qocorolld ot_.,., oM Iampo,
ol\llqlll turnnuro, WIOil pouch Will ooro lor oldorty In tholr
lhlihiOIYIII-. .norll 11111- I'MMM, have r...rtncH. ....a..
3311 ... 304-TI3-IMO.
~:'ro, R
l - Antlq., Rownlf. We
..
prolloii,IM-tfii-Ha,
18 WantldtoDo
Don, J ... ftl Soli uo , .... WOI!dng
llojor AppltoncOa,
Color TVo
llolrigloot.,.,

Oo..,

FrMzer•t vc'R•a,

Air ConaftloMta, Guller

HouH For Ront_;; Fumlohld, 1
112 111111 Out "' Rio Granda,
Coll•(lt4) 245-1227.
Nice 2 . Bodroom Trollor' For
Ronl, 8 111111 OUI218, Rol Dopooil Roquor.d, . II+
258-1251.
Two llldroom - . . for oale or
,.~, no land con1racta, dl~ll
• raterenc .. r.qulred on rent,

no llllldo polo, 114-882-3010.
Two bedroom ho,.o, Rutland,
dapoalt.

and

,.,..neat ,.

..

qulrfd, no polo, 614-1112-2661.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent
12170 2 bedr-.. rroobUto horne,
U7Simo.,
pi""
do,...
lllnarovlllo - . tt4-41u2.iT77
lfttrlpm.
2 bedroom furnlohld mobile
homo, 304-175-ISI2.
2 Bedroom llobllo Homo In Rio

'dl,

304-713-5343.
Top Prt.o Pofd: - Old U.S. GJ goo P - .._MI don,
1
Colno,OoldA· hiUI your toao lo lho IIIII .....
Gold
Co1M. II.T:i.CGfnflhop,
cofiiOM7S-Itl7.
Ill Socond
Oollpollo.

-uo,

'

.

••

EAST
.Q97 3
.KQ7

EEKANDMEEK

Polnl

tz

Mobile Homo ....,. For Rlnt,
Wolor I ....... FlllnlohM, 114Ml'-11131,.

.106542

SOUTH
.K2

.J 10951
tA K 73

Merchandise

Oonnlo

IHiu~ng

Household

Sl

Goods
VI'RA FU,RNITURE

11t ... 3'111 Or ..4 441 . . .

.

"10 DAY SAIII.U CASH
OR IIEHT~ (NO DEP081T)
'

.

OUTSIDE

FURNISHIHQI:

w.-111 Iron T- W/4 Cholrl;
Pan laok.- Aoolllng Chllr Mil;

--Woy·o-.00

-~~'!Win 111111 Sol .... Full
hi 8oi Ouoon $141 . ., 4
Drowor
144.11;
lunk 8od'1, Pool• ....._ FuM
llno Of lout-om V...

Car-..

~'::."'-""~a:..~

"===0:
a.. ,.._

ta.oo. 2 Locollc!no ....!do~
Auotton or 4 1111n

Open I A.M. To IP.M. Mon -&amp;1.

Brown l

Nutrhion Produclo
Amino Acid Body

S7

. ~::!ngior:.'1.:. =~-:
Instruments
cluofvoly at Rita Aid Phormocy,.
Tho u!O woy to dill.
Trumpot, ooxophono, Poovor
amp, Hlrmonr 1mp. Y1rn&amp;M
Hutry oxm:loo blko, 120; ladloo dlg•of o~lzor, wllforn otyto blue joon jockot, gullor wl..,.., Foncfor bioi,
mldlum,l:l; 114-M1'2522.
Gflllon p.L hood,. 114-1'12·2441,
lnground pool Iller oyolom wt I I:OIIam-8:00pm.
hp pump.
Llrgo
goo
""'"•
AD 58
Fruits &amp;
Bmfth.
AI
- MW
ool«
blonkll
lor II' X :12' pool. Buy oil for
Vegetables
1250. 304-l?l'tm or :IIIWJ5. _ _....:..:::.:..::.:..;::._ _
4238,
STRAWBERRIES • You Pick. Wo
Klllo ,_II Buy Enforcor FIN Pick. Taylor'o lorry Potch. kerr
Kllloro lor llelo, homo • yord.: Rd. Cl- Sunday, 114-441Guorontood ~ffoctlv111 Avllloblo 88!12, or814:-245-11178.
Point ••Plo-nt
Co-op, Iiiii 91..• - .. - Qu I rt . Wo
...
Sl
,_now.~ ·
Pick. Call 114-1112·3080 To Plaoo
Uft oholr • wolklr. - : 304- ~Onl::-=:.;·.:_-'------­
l75-8ll5.
Slrowborrloo1 Pick Your Own.
Truck to=r, full e&amp;ze, 8', $50; C.II Cl8u• Wlnla,._ Rio
114-tfll
4.
Grondo, Ohio. 114-246-11121.

!:

r.-. •...•

llodol 21, S.... pump oholgun,

IIOid """""· good

20 gouge, nico looking gun, !!rot
noctoar. $100,
114-882-2661.

oond.m. Tan -

conning joJI, UtdoZ:, 814111-4137.
'
Roduco JOUr wol!l!"·loko "New
Shope Dlol Plari I Hvdrox
Wolor Plllo. . Ani!- 'rlllh
-rm•cy.
Soora Corllel C!Oonor WI P Ilato • Uploolotory Anochmontl,
Ellcollent CondMIOn, I V2 Ho,..
Powor Air ComPNMor, 230
Amp Weldor, ,114-371-21711.
Sooro Llwn lloww M.~. Hoovilf
Voccum Cloonor with AI·
totchmonto, 130 Phone 114:-24111111 Alk For Mark.
Soml_v_ OU..n Size
Woto-. Uke Now, Whfto Ook
WMh lootoc..O l Holdboard,
1250 OBO, 114-441-1810.
Bot olllwM HlomiMon ColltcUon
Piotto, • Rurll
..
St.,.fronl1, $100. 304-171-1038.
Slgnotu,. comcordor wHh carryQuill

Whirlpool Moblll Hom• Central,
AC, 34,000 BTU, 2 314 Ton $:175,

114-448-0433.

'•

•

Apartment
· for Rent

-,-=a,..ld""roo-m-,-=a-ul,...ot_&amp;,....,.Pr""lv-11-o,-A-Ir
Conditioning $250/llo. ~0965,304-175-1550.
.
2bdrm. op11., 111111 oloclrlo, oppllonooo fumlohld, laundry
room foe H!lin d - lo ochool
In town. AP,.i(callonl ovoliob!O
11: Vlllogo G-n Al&gt;ll. t41 Of
Cllill4-i92-37'11. EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jocklon Plko
from l2081mo. Wofk to ihop •
movloo. CaliiM-441-2511. EOH.

l_ng_ case and acceaaorlee,

&amp; Livestock

Foelory Bulb Aololng 188, or
a..t 011or, f14-44W028 or ,,._

441-7153.

61 Farm Equipment

plont'fi.twJJIIrt.
Hol-

AC 110 1111 COfl1
land T liar lrln,

~ Mrw1~1ocl. AI

der/miiM', Dllrtlom

-tor
goodeond.
•
.
For Silo or· ~ No. II ·• FL
Comlo\no Dodge Truoll 12
Fl. Flat ..... DumD .... .,..
388-1471, I_. A.ll, I ·7 PJI.
Hydroolllic oil l14.10.1ouokol• so
Sldoro ' - " - •

gat $128.

RIM...._ WV.I044JI..11111.

304-I7I-I28S.

•

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

, :

1111 Dodao HI Top Van, oct ..l
30,700 ma.., TV ca· buill In;
fronl I rNr air, new tirll I
ohockl, 18100, wll lrldo. ft+
882-2471.
.
1111 TOV01o Excellent Cond~
11011, 8 S'!IMCI. AC, Clll Aft• 4
P.M. 814 141-3el7. ,
'
1181 Ford Bronco U, XLT pkg'
now tifll, 48,000 mlloo, ·oi:'ri
oond,304-e714111.

l,

·PEANUTS
l SAIDMY
1-lANDICAP
IS 1:M A
D06 ..

WI-lEN l WENT INTO
TOWN TO PLAY 60LF,
,TI-lEV ASKED ME WI-IAT
'M'&lt; I-lAND/CAP 15 ...

j

Tl-lEN THE'( SAID
0065 AREN'T
ALLOWED ON
TI-lE COURSE ..

50 I . .
TI-IOU61-1T
MAYSE I'D

6UT 0065 AREN 1T
ALLOWED IN TI-lE
COURTI-lOUSE ..

Nor,.

Earl

1•
4•

Pass
Pass

Pass
3•
Pass

Pass
PaBS
Pass

1 -Haute
2 NW 11111 .

3 Grevel ridge
4 Sharon5 - plu1 ultro
6 Cigar rllldue
7 Former Rut-

la-+-+-

SUE ..

'

Motorcycles

•• YomohiiiOOYX Roolon, 11{10
~

mllea, 114-112·3202.

•

'17 Hlltoy Dovfchon Sportllor,
IVOiulion beM drl.., 111100, ew.
882-3142.
'

·FRANK AND ERNEST

lnt""'"' :n:ooo
...... 12,200. 114-441-4201.
•

1111 -

..

Wing l.ol!i
lllloo'l ExcoRint Conollloft.
814.
441-1114.
-

-

1 l&gt;ui'INO·:IT MUST ,~ ~ITttt~

••

Gold

/

ue 028.•

1111 KE 100 MOO, 114

A P((IEST o, AN
AL'-~'61ST.

1112 - . 250X ...........
••••
~·- 4 - old, S21VO.
304-a7t-l!on
·

2317.

-?

ol-.

Y..!'.•

..,..:eo· -

Cleo..,_ lolo: S II' C1ooln
Drlvo TMior1 _Rog S35th· Solo
1211; 12 "" 31 lno Cut
l)ynoomoirll 11._ R~ 11,281
Silo: tt,OIS, Now AI WomofdCWil
• Thornoo, 12 Court Slrlll, Go~
11-'1
'""o.
Co=, Konlca lllodtf 1210, Excol
CondHion, 114~41--.
CroftiiMn Rid TOOl llort, s
8hllll, L.oclo Bollom $100; PUll
011 Tonk UMd, 110. 114-441·1321.

BORN LOSER
' .
.....

· 'KflO.J WWIT TliE DEFI~ITI&lt;»..
,. •(JX1) l&lt;XltK. IS ?
. -----"1

...:

,_

Transportation

Accessories

Autos tor Sale
.11114 aoo., ,lolofr, 4 - . 281
motor, kl- aood ·oond.~
71

2MI.

.'

;you'li!e NOTMUQ-4 OF A
EN1HUSIAST,
ARE 'l't:JI.J'i

For 1110: roll bor lor LWB FOJ&lt;I'
oltof or Chow Ptckup, 135. Call 304i

30W7WIM

.

Cudl=. . . .,

OFA~Ie

cN"THLl51A6T.

I

'

i'

411
. 30W15-

, 1185 Caviler, IUIIII • - · good,
outo,$1450.
1171 Oklo Cui- 210 ilnalno.
Now • - · lrokoo, lMi 79
Campers &amp;
Exhouot, Good, 1100.
Homes
080 ~
· =,m:;:.::Poo:::n::tloo:::-:;:::...,...,...,-..,-.-,-. itmmiTJ~cot~w~~;=•dri20~Fl~Lo=;J;:-·":f.;:ii~~
oondiUon, NOD; Nil Wwn loft Conlo--, 1\000, I
loalhlr - · · _,.,. flrll 1111.
•
longlh, SIO; -773-1111 dna.
114-882-2031 ou•olr+o orfto; liM Pofomlno Pop-.Up Com""'

60 !'MNOTMUCH

.

.

~

4JI..15U:

'M:L.L, I LIKE:TOWA"lZ:Hco.RS
DRIVE iHE' WROI-JG WAY ON
A ONE- WAY s~eeT.

5PC'RT~

!ttator

3pm.

.

. 1110 01c1o Dolt• ...._ Runnor$550, - - .

11181

T-=-....

otlr,--.

Olclo
kopl, pis, piW, ,.,

-.

~
miloo,..,.._to~lllo,

lilt, onrl-,

HM MW, t4200 . . . . . . .1171 or

304-111-4231.

I

M"'I&gt;M; I KNOW IT'S NON~ ~f toll'{
BUSINESS \lOW VoV t&gt;ISCIPLIN~

'

'(OUR C.t\ILI), BUT IIOW'T

'1'01! ~INK IT1S A
L\TTL!; \11\PS!-11() ...
· Ut.\ ... 1 MI:"-N, HE
WAS &lt;lNLY.•. vH. ·

=-~OIIIInl Condltloit~
Set v1ces

81

Home

lmprovaments , ••
1

BASEMENT

·!

' WATERPIIOOFINQ , • ,
UncondH_, ltou... guoron·
.... locof .......... fumlolood.
Coli I-I00.287-Gs71 Dr 114-237=~TJ:.t;;..Wollfpl 0• •.,b-

•

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Thullday, Juno .17, 111!13

'Prudent management ol your resources
w)Ji be required in the yeiu aheed. You'll
have bener eaming polenlialltlan yoo pre·
viously had, bul you may also be a bit more

·. -

.,

9 TV' t - Haw

10
11
12
17

Se mistaken
Davee' hOme
WWII 1111

Movafrom
1ido to olde
19 ·Anger
21 Coton111
24 Froquently
(poel)
, : Humorlet
28 Sprite
211 Hawallon
timber tr11
31Toand33 Encountored
35 E11 (prel.)
36Teen
38 P011111
3!1 GrHk IIIIer
42 Fill wHh Ill
45 Baril
47 Rodent
41 Cui or beer
51 Fiber
52 Mountain
lake
54 Indian Ocean
boot
56 Pertlclplo
ending
58 Perform
511 Short for
AU!IUIIUI
60MICIW
82 IHiolt
66 ·-ball

By Jelll'ey Mdluain
The olden ZOIC &lt;"ZOH-ik") means
"ol or pertaining to animals," as in
"zoic activity in the lorest." Pro nouncing the start or lhe adjective
ZOIC like ZOO would be a beastly mis ·
take.

new words in Merriam-Webster's Col, legiale Dictionary, Tenth Edition . This
excellent resource defines KARAOKE
&lt;pronounced "kar-ee-OH-kee") as "a
device that plays instrumental ac·
companiments for a selection or songs
to which the user sings along and that
records the user's singing with the
music ." The word comes rrom the
Japanese KARA, "empty," and OKE,
short for "orchestra." If you hear
music with no orchestra present,
that's either KARAOKE or a hearing
problem.

r
I

CEHEL

I

I
I I I t

I

Wy B A L

"For six months," the doctor
lectured the executive, "I want
~. you to rest and forget every·
.
·
.
- ·•
thing." Than he laughed and
. - - - - - - - - - . added, "Everything excepl
V U· R E Q I
what you ••• ··!"
.

I

I0

~-T~.:_;;.I...;.;.TI;;_;y,,,,..::...TI-1
.

you

Complete the chuckle quoted

dby 1illing in the missing words
eve1op 1rom step No. 3 below.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Viable - Wrung • Cubit • Afraid • INVITED
Our neiQhbors were having a big celebration and
making qUite a ruckus. "Well,· sighed my husband, "no·
· thing makes you mora intolerant of a neighbors party
than not being INVITED ."

~~~~----~~~
-- ~--~
-- ·~
· ~~

---3211.

, , .,

•

OJITH 1-11~ eco~!

(;()(.f'

... · OUR LANGUAGE

A. Look for KARAOKE among the

Budaol Tronomloolono, Uoocf •
nbulfl, ofiiYJIII, lllrtifta o1 1111
owner 114-2411-~ 'll4-37ti
2281.
•

1-

'

HCX£ W"-'.1

.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

PIIKI~

••

sa ... £&amp;LIEV€: THM"

'

Q. We go to a club that features
KARAOKE. Can you tell us where that
word comes rrom'

Auto Parts &amp;

. dJ!~f!O
:i?i.' A,!f_
- !~.DO
• ~~..t. 8~

•

(..f.T~

,.Af'tRSOI..l WHO'!l F'tA't'IWG

24 Fl.

Floro! - h...~. Oft -lonot
oouch,IU. Delli II ICiJid
oond., S35CJO, 104,. 3i:ii
For Solo: 3 Hully llkoo: 0no
llirelve "'"" •so And 2 Root,lg
Illite, OM leu · TIIINitplan
Sorloo 130 And 0no 200 Sorfoo
•-, - · IIP~...
.,......,:
~-.
l'or Silo: Klr_by lwwpor Can fill
loon AI: .........., 1 2185, To Plica Yout ltd.
F lole RCA II
..
:
41" Long
Good C o - . $100, Phonri:
114-441-11131.
F ~~~ Two Clol~ •-or

,

"-!t-IE..!

Rogillorld AKC Cockor Sponlof
Pupploo For Silo, 114-3J5.27aa.
CUIAKC Sl. llrnord, -on Tlfrlor, 11183
lroughloo; 1101 ...,_.h
lllnlalu,. Plnchlr, Pug, Cocker Horllon, tl4-·1711.
Spaniol, Po.._. 1 EarlY Anwtcon Couch • Chol• 0404 .., 304:-1171-:f207 .........
Ruol Pttnt, Coffoo To- • &amp;iii~
T•- To.._, Gfoo1 Tobit
Din- I . 4 Ovor Sluflld
Chllra Ruot, 114441-1124.

~

.
Of,_

4411-7117.

76

8 Hurled

II

_..._

11711

1100.

Ugly dock or
Rootoro
wOOd docko I ..._. 10 llko
now -lion tofthoul ocnrbblng ••h EnForcor Dock Care.
Avollablto Hordmon Homo Can'"• Rt. 2Br.P•oo, Pl. Pn,
Uprtghl Ko..,._ sw..por, 120;
Uprtghl Eurokl Swoopor 117.50;
Llwn llowor 20 Inch Cui 171,
1
~21157.
WHITE'S IIETAL DETECTORS
LaiYel. IIMII lllaneeaq, Rorr AUioon 1210 Second
llanuot Hiootollof Bod, llanuol Avon .., GolfipoUI, Ohio, 114Chll!r, Clnob loro For lull, ~33t.
Grob loro ,.. Com_. &amp; In'
nUll Commode 114 4• 0114.
55
Building
AJr hockey, MOi ~. . U;
Supplies
loblor, tiS; c""':L,:: ihopp':Z
•
leo
• 1211; I
Block, brick. win111 2 ~·•·
dow., llntell, etc. Claude Wifto.
,,,., Rio Grondll, OH CaM tl4Cllenao uhoull .,....., 245.at2~
pllll, 111. Chovollo ilion,
crllo wt
Oiolrooe,
304-17841M,

in the world champi·
I ~~~f .:'::!~L!~:~~ in four hearts. you
I;
have made it, perhaps our inter·
national team needs you.
·

II Ft. SoooiJI'iahl Wlih Troftor,
tm, 1 With- tm Jcohnooil
Motor, 15 HP. 114 418 .. ...
11111 J o h - Flborgi!W al.ot,
50 HP llolor Johnoono • Elllrl
Condhlon, IUOO, 114-441·
Hertford Roglot- Sloolt 2 Good
.
Young Cowo, Wllh Co- ly tcr.ll.
Sldo Brod Bock, Ollor, IWo Jet Skill, 1111 tcowoookl ISO
44MI82.
And 150 With Tl-, M,IOO,
114-211-10!18 (Jocklon~
Roglol-:=:. lulto, II 20
Now 1.1 HP, Now - · Trolling
Mollor, New lattery, M' Alurn.
lion, 614· · -·
Somi-¥M Wllh 4 BIIIIDh Boola
64 Hay &amp; Grain
And 2 Upholol- Swlvot - o
Wllh
Arm -~ Hd Tflllor, Qood lllxld Hoy. Ploii.U. In llclnoo
Until ~':'~780
Flold, 11.00 Por loto, ll14'o3U ean A"•Good
1 P.M. 814.•
7710.
PontSVIvon
Wllh
Round Bolo On:hord I Trollor, ' No Meior, tl,800. 114Cfo-. H1j Flrot Culling, 114- 448-lltl.
'

-.·

tlan rulor
(VII,)

'1l:.m

.
'

250 Yamoha dltl blko, good
GOnd.,MOO. »t-17W113. · ;

TV llond, SS; w - whh li..._ 8:00pm.
S20N.; oonnl,. jroro, . 13.50
'117'1 Olcla
doZiftiCOH.. 1a~,SSil~~ onglno,
outo,

=·

Ulll-.

=r.

74

I~

Srnolf Troller For Gordon Troct«

GaiiiDoll1.

UUUtlt8 Pakl, S,_. lath, 701

..,. ,~··:.sa;:-·
114o1'12
244S,a:flllom.l
Cllomolot, Ford, .,.,.. ........
..... tloOrl ........ llri , .,

814-241-1182.

. 882~085.

Sonlora, DIHblld, I Hondlcop- 54 Miscellaneous
old. FIIHA ' - - l d
lloni1 Boood On Of
Merchandise
HoullhOid lnc:omo. APDIIancoo, I '""..,.,-,;_,~;;.;.;:.;.:..:__
c
un11 otfr con1 On-Silo Ll oidr AIC 20 000 R~l:int Poyo E~rto" 'UIIIftr dH'kinOr, lll'icld on l._..lon,
Only. Juno Oocuponcy. RLJ 114-'1112,.,.,
llonogomont, lno~~33M711
614:-3lll-4237, t14-or.H11\ Equor1 21,000 8TU WI.- Air ConHouaing OpportUnlly.
ll,71b!,::::!!112J;:
Fumlohld ' 2 - · bofh, 114~111301
•how
Cloon _...,
~
" · !urn-.
,., ..,...~""-nco,
no ..,a. 3 Pc. Black •~
UIKH!oo
- ....
-•• -h
""
dopoolt r.qulr.d.l14-441-lilll
Monrooe I llort lprlngo, M._
Dinino With 1 Cholio, • 2
Fumllhed Apartment, 1br next

Wett

DOWN

After the dummy comes down, you
plan JOUt campaign. Sometimes you
will devise a complete itinerary. But
there will be other deals on which you
must take things trick by trick, seeing
how the play develops and the oppos·
IDg cards lie.
This latter scheme was true on today's deal. It occur~ during the final
of the 1971 World Team Championship, in which the United States defeated France.
South felt confident when he saw tbe
dummy. But, as you can see, the cards
lay badly. After winning trick one with
the spade king, you finesse the heart
jack. East wins with the queen and,
let's say, returns a spade. (If he re·
111
turns his diamond, you must win, cross L....L.....I87
to dummy's spade ace and take tbe
club finesse.) You win in the dummy
and take the club finesse. However, it
loses and West .tries to cash a spade
JO
AWCKD
trick. You ruff and carefully ~ash the 'KXDJMA
club ace before leading the heart 10.
N R G
ACD
You plan to take a second finesse (the DZCWKHN
DR
best play in the suit), but West's dis·
LR
DZJMAO
N R G 'L
card puts paid to the idea.
.
Now you seem destined to lose four
ACD
tricks: two hearts, one diamond and ·MRWFKSSN
KWWCOOCL
one club. But there is one faint chance
remaining. Win with dummy's heart
ace, cash the club jack, discarding a
diamond, play off ~e A·K of diamonds
and exit with a trump.
If East started with at most two diamonds, be must concede a ruff-and·
discard, on which your diamond

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

llobllo Homo Pork, 114-1112·21S7.
Nice mobile homo - for up 1o
11~10 hO!IIn betwoon Alhllll •
Pomeroy, $85/mon., 114-112-2117.
Smoli llobllo Home In Country,
N- N.G.H.S. Ponlolly Furnl~~ Wot!or, Truh Pold, $200,
Dlpoon. 114:-385-IIBt.

St,

Soo,.

AniWtr lo PrMkMII Pull ..

Can you outplay
the experts?

1 - GIIC .....; '1t Joop, M
Iori; 2 l)oovy ..., 1NIIori

.......,. Extontion Yon, M,ooo'.
or ..., 011w. Oood Condftton1

Farm Supploc',

-p.

1::3.

THEY'RE
SCAIRT TO ·
COME OVER
HERE!!

f,luslcal

3 bedroom trailer tor rent, $210;'
friO., pluo dopooh, Country

C.dar

32
Conway
34 Unclaimed
mall dept.
35 Stamp of
approval

37 Shlap 't foot
4D Miltleal note
41 Aunt In S..eln
43 Night bird
44- will be
dOftl
48 Rlvor In
German1
48 lltlh
50 Kiln
53 RldleUon
mtlllfrt
55 llaaball 1111•
57 Ingrid
Bargman'•
deughtor
58 Writer - ·
Cltrltllll
61 Cricket
POIIIIonl
83 Fathor of Jr.
84' Una knife
on
85 llg monkar
68 Mao- tung
&amp;e Ridge on
cloth
70 BarberaGoddll

Opening lead: • J

-•Ito

And

r:.'

.AB

w.-.

44

16 Boat rope
1811 pluton•
20 Forlll'unnor
of CIA
22 Ethloplan
IIIII
23 Archltoct Saarinen
25 SUtch
27 Carfllval
ptlrtarmer
30 It PIICetlll

• QJ9

tar JM!: car 1o1

a -

1 Couple
4 Firing
craaturo
8 Over- hill
11 Continual
13 Abavo (poet.l
14 Alternollva
word
15 FroMhfor

"summer"

tl064

· ' ;1, '

Space for Rent

Buofnooo -

t-JI.ts

.A6 !2
•• ,

I '

(

NORTH
.A 54

t7Mt24.
120.
· - · - . 110. Animo! Croft For H!&gt;9l,
Cal-, Doon Both
o. *-· aoo- P . - Endl, Hoovy
Duly $80, 114-258all flclod OOftJ. IOMJ5.
1811.
Grande, 1225 Per Month Plua
GOOD USED APPLIANCES $150 Dopooft, 614-245-11082.
Ollor -lrlo lood g~ndor,
dty«o, ..fllgwoton, never UMd, $25, 114-112...,.
2 Bodr_, Troller For Rolli On ..~. -~~~~~ Appll- ,. boforoiOOm.
Nofghborhood Rood, Wotor •
Sowogo Furnllhld, ean 114-411- ~~~-•.~- Nlcl Wllfto Rollbll Fur Joekot
Ellcolllll Condition,' Slzo Smoll
1755.
Kenmore 30" EloCtrto !IJnp $20, 114~ 41 2201.
:2: bedroom natural ~·· dty
Qold, 114-241-1811:1.
Olfloo Dolko, , -1'4"113'4" 171,'1
wotor, portloly fumlahod, In -2'1"111'1" S28, 304-175o22611.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
country, 814:-885-3113.
CoMplllo homo flnnlolt"2 bedroom, untumlsMd 12 1 Hou.a: lion .... .... 114-411!, Orlontol Colloo T1b!O • Sldo
60, V2 milo ""' H.II.C., d-h 11322, s mlloo OUI
lid. Toli!O $100, t13-441-7137.
&amp; rele...nce rec.utr.d. t14-44&amp;- FrooDollwry.
4381or 30H71-2330.
2 BR unfumlohld. No Plio. hH
mo. W•l• Included. $100
d-H. t14-448-3817.

-'"""Y

atao buying Junll Cll'll 6 lrucb.

.

18,400 ,.,., .,..

~

sm.-wv.

$100 d~. 304-882-3413.
7 Roome 6 Bath, In Country,
~¥;""· a Roforonco. 114-37S-

r' .

amp.,

ALDER

...,_ Qnnd Pill Ll, Vt,

3 bedroom, $250/mo, wller Incl.,

191S Skyll,. Jofrl llobllo Homo, Complalty '•noloolrM . _
Houoo, . - . +
'I
E!octrlc,. Now
Point, Poottlng. No PilL CaR .
Elltro nlcol $13 0. 1 - P.ll..l"' 411 G31
7810, 11+4411-11
Ono bod"""" -~
lVII F.,.ot Pork, 3 lldr_., I 122illrno. !Jio" dU ..llllloo,
112 81tho, On 314 ,t,c,., Conlor·
.._II, no p111; 114o
point Rd., Jocklon County, 10 H2•2211.
lllnul.. From Rio Orondo. Rural
b d -,.....,.....,,
Of!ll, - Wotor. Will Soli llobi!O Homo Btllolouo
PIIIng, 2fiiiiOL
Wllholrl Lind. tt4:-281-148e After tomMy .. _ _,., on ...
5:00 P.ll.
monog•. 1011. 304 IIW71I or
19U Skyline Holly Rldgo Mx70, oomo toy lodlf, Laurtond Apia,
111 .,.c, · 2 b.ctroome, AJC, llh 81, lfow 110Von, WV.
coYered porch, khchtn leland, Taro Towoolo- Alooll-o,
lltorage
underpennlng, 11M SQ. Fl. Ll"! 2 Wo•rw,
tiki now,
711-24114.
t;A, 2 Poole, Dlillfl ........ rllfL
I,.ARGE DfSCOUNT ON ALL No Pella, Eleatrlo Mal lnalud1d.
DISPLAY MODELS MOUNTAIN 1320 I YNr Llooo. l330 I - h .
STATE lj()IIE~,)if. P~EASANT, Llloa, $311 - h To Monh,
114-387-7150.
wv, 304-I75-140U.

Etc. II4-251-12M.
J 1 0'1 Auto and So!Yogo,

PHlLLIP

t14-18$-3117.

On Rented Lal, 3 Bedrooms, All

llleiW&amp;UN,

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

2·3 bedroom In Pomeroy,
$300/mo. pluo OIOpoolt, no poll,

Fourth, Golllpolll, 114 441 4411
AllOr 7P~.
Fumlohld Ell: 1 112 Noll, 0.~
llpollo, $185, UIIII!Oo Pd, 114448-4411 Aft• 7PII.
Fumlohld EHiollnoy $let
UIUIUn Poid 8horo loth, 107
Second, Ga!Upollo, 114 44t 4411
Allor7P.II.
,
Groclouo llvt,.. I ond 2 bodroom aport- 11 Ytuoao
Monor
ond
Rlv•llill
Aportrnontoln II!Hfoport, Frvm
1171
T111n,
2
bedroom, 1202. Coli IM-112-IISt. EOH.
remode~d, atave 6 r•triger~~tor,
Nlco 3 bedr- opor1 . .n1 tar
15000. Call Donni Bockuo, ERA ron!
In Po..oy, 114-tfll·llll,
Town I · Country A••l ut111
114-882-2000.
·
304-1711-8541 Of 304-171-3073.
1m Ublrty MxtO 3 Bldroom1, Nlco Ono BR UntumTo1ol Ellclrlc, Undorplnnlngl Aprorlmont. Rongo.L __Rifrla.
Prooidld. w•r, a;,._ Polil.
Muat Set Apprwclate, Reduced
'"'''"''d Colli Only. t14-418- Air Condftlonlng, 0oto0o11 "-"
qulr.d.I-Ahorlp.m.
8340.

""" too

__,,.,..

ACRO~

41 Houses for Rent

plonliful cablnol1, :r coiling fono, to Ubrary, poottlng. oontrol - ·
comlortoblo homo In nice olr, roloroncoo. 814 441 0338,
neighborhood, 141,500. coli lor llf.,.7p.m.
appolnt!Mnt 304-:182·3773.
F 1
.....
urn ohld ..,.; llr, 1200

ForHt

Sleeping room&amp; wlttt laaklnf.
AtiCilt&amp;JI• .,... All h ah 'V
ean ••• 2:00 p.m., 304o77J.

NEA CroSB\VOrd Puzzle

BRIDGE

---------

"· ··-•·-.. !)ponlngo With Jocklon eounty
- P·
Trucking Com pony. No Qvei.
Homo of llichoof ond Sholto nlghl ·lrovol. An Excellent Op.
Wamar,. 0 , . mne tram SA 7 on IMH'tunltr
For
~Enoployrnont
For QuOUfllol
R Rd look for _,

POSITION OPEN: CUSTODIAL
Houro: 30 P• Woolc. s Hourw
Por 0.1, I Doyo Por WooiL 1'-

ALLEYOOP

Rentals

Doy: Eony llornlng 11'12).
Woao: aut 1&gt;• Hour. Frlngo
lloriollo Included. Colllocl:
~,
~L : · · - r d II_... Ubnlry. No
- u.-,.
-Calli. Ctooing Doll: Juno
Go- Solo- Fry rool~r- nord 20, 11183.
to Solllbury Elo'"""'"ry School, Tomporory ea;::
· « -·
Frldl~ Juno lllh, 3ploellpm, •-~- ~ ...., llull Own
•·t
Juno,••
....,._
_,.,
--.
- ur y,
"'"• _,,..,,
Hond "I ' IIW:II-1733,
10 4
Go...,. Solo- J,.. l7-l8, """"· P.ll.
·'
Frld·-.·.- 12 .~$1._, s m~oo

no~h of

of

Ohio

Vulnerable: Neither
, Dealer: North

omoroy, Homo Notional
~onk, Roclno, Ohio 45771.
Phone &amp;14:-1411-2210.
I mlln from town, nlca 4 bodroom homo, 2 ooth, 2 cor
goro•, h8101 puml!rR1.1 1010· Call
CoDonn•, •Rcku1••E11
'" ,A !~~..!'
un fY ••
• • -·5548 or 30H7il-3073.
By _,.., lovely hiotorlcol Jim
Llyno h01111 '-ltd 414 Second
•·
N H
R ·-•
m, IW ovon. "'~- trim,
woodwoott • dooro wlothor ln.t
provoliionlo. 3 to 4 bodrcomo, 1

'

~:':42' 111110.
.. · - - Holol.

!lolly fumlohod, front porch,
lorao rwciwood dock ovortooklng
rovtno Iron horoo 50'x32' ..,ltdlnft wHh comonl
IO'xtl'
ul ft~ building, locolld llcGnrth Firol Holzer Aporll\llnls, Flnrl

&amp; VIcinity
be.., Homo, Hcxno llllortor,
toolo, ond mlac.
•• Yord SalOl 111111 11 Poid In
00pm ,..
Advonco. Doocl1,., I: 10
day bel- the ld to
""'·
~'!."! ldft!'!""ftiont:~ :::•

-

.....

I

WI conopy,
Pl-.~-

lnlonned I hal oil dwenlnga

hours 2:15 ·11 :30, call I

rood lo rlaht, In groy trollor,

4021

advertisements for real etlale
which Is tn violation oflha
law. Our readers are hereby

......

flnl·-•-h.

Nlco lol 80xl25, Comp Conloy,
Toytor Rd. Cfty- t. - - ·
Cable •vaUabte. No nnfng

tel1rietloM, 112,100. Daya J04:.

• tl4-882•61111.
'
'
F"""d: llole Llrgo Black Hound
Dog1 With Brown Powo, Conlonory ""'· 614-446-m2.
U&gt;ot: 2 tomo!O Blue Tick lllogloo
w/ orang41 collar•.
H 'F•rloy 30H71-n42.
"I don't ca re if you had Chinese food. •
...~ p
F
You s houldn ' t have had that pizza delivered."
YlclnMr: BulnMII /Addloon Plko
Loot: ....,;.
"!!PP'.Chlid'o
...Pol,
....
1Poo1um
Trot Rood,
Roword!IM-3&amp;7-0505·
9 wanted to Buy
18 Wanted to Do
U&gt;ot: Go"""n Shopllord, Block
Poula'l Doy Coro Coni« 1
Maio, lA&gt;ot On 141, 114-2151-19117. Wonted to buy: uood mobllo llloo
Block Will Of HIIC On ......_
U&gt;ot: Ioiii"' brill • - wHh homoo.IM-446-0171
Plko 111-1' 8 A.M. -1:30 P.M. N
_ , . In lluon, ,.word, 114:Oua!lty And Ellportonco lo Tho
882-7352.
Concom For Your Chlld'o
Employment Services 11
ea... Coli u. For A v..n. 1n11111
/Toddloro 811 448 1227. P 7
Yard Sale
ohoo!Ono llchool Ago . _
1224.
11 Help Wanted
Gallipolis
Nood Spring Cloonlng? Will Do
'AVON• AllAREAIIShoro your WlnoloWI, Rofrfg«Mor, fllawo,
&amp; VIcinity
limo wllh ... You'll love lho o-ol -!Ooni:Jaj Yard
Work, Rtnonabte. AelllCII,
2 Family Yard SIJe,, South Routt company. 1.aoo.ll2..e:J51.
!1 V2 IIIIo Before Rl. 218, AVON I AI ...,._1 I Shklly 8-7131
"oyMhold htma, Fr.~mhure, Spooro, ,_711-1421.
T..CII'Ina 11Y T - , Grodoo K·
Clothing, All Ag .., Sttwday,
Bonondlf
Apply
1n
...,_,
At
I, le.GO P'lf :10 llln. - ·
June 19th.
Addloon Club, Stoll Roulo ~ or ~~~~·~4~··!::·~0!1~2.~-.,..-....,.....,.­
3 lllloo Out Bulavlilo, Lift On CaliiM-4411-&lt;1111.
. Wolllld fo do houolng c!Oonlng.
Morton Wooda Roed, Thura
Lola: 114-288-1151 or Noncj:
Dlroctor
ol
Educlllon
to
Dian,
-Sol. ClllldrORI Clolhot, Etc.
diNe~ ond ooonllnolo oil eol.,.. 1-1451
38 Smllhara AvtnUI, 9-? Friday, tion-rololod octivflloo and ouSlturdiy &amp; Sundly, Old
porviH ochool ...II of on WMidoon'--304-17H4M
' DllhM, Clothet, Etc.
MRIDD progntm pnwldlna Early ""• 7:30pm.
PN.acmoar; anil
4 Family: Th.,,., Frl, June 17th, lnlarvamlori,
Schoo~Ago
tar
Financial
18th. Rain, Shlnt. Routt 7, 3 chlld,.n In . fi!Gli'OIllig~ Coull'Y·
liMN Below Eurokl. Ou1H1, Oualillcollono InclUde
....,..
ClothH, Blanktll, Curtalna, Dogroo In Spoct.l Eduaotlon or 21
Business
Dish•, Fumhul'l And M:
..latld lill&lt;!i. IUplrvloor ..ufl.
llony lloro Thlngol 814- 5
....
from
&lt;IIIIo
Dooorlof
Opportunity
11815.
Educotlon or ollglblo tar INOTlCEI
61111, Out 14\ Centenary, Tum llllcollon. 'rhroo poro 1-ng
Left, 1tt ~old Pa~ Jwnbo, oxporlonco and OM yoor- OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
Cron Northup Bridge, Follow ......, ••porllo- lor - - ,.commondl thol you do bulltor child,., with •••l=of • - wllh people you know, ond
Slgn-.
dlootollltllo pr.loo old.
~
NOT to lind money througn tho
All Yord Saleo lluot II Poid In tlvo 11lary ond benollo. Ap- mall until you have lnvNUgated
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. plication dMcllne: Friday, ..lune the oflorlng.
tho doy IIIIo,. tho od lo to Nn. 18, 1113. Sand ......... lo:
Sunday edttlon • 2:00 . p.m. S11von E. llho, Ellocutiw Loco! Vending Aouto: $1,200 A
Wook Polontlal. IIUII Soli. 1 Frldoy. llondoy ldllion • 2:00 Dlroctor, 11t1ao Count~ of 153-Yond.
IIRJDD, Clrleton Sc
t:no
p.m. Saturday.
Corlolon StNot, Syroc-. OH.
Gar1g1 Sale: Frldly, June 18th, 45778. EOE.
Real Estate
11-3, I 114 IIIII Out George'o
Do You Wont To Work A Few
c.. ok OH Routt 7.
Hou,. Each Woolc And llokl
June' 17th, 181:h, 588, Bahlnd $100 Or lloro??? Plok Yow Own
Fofth
Boplill
Church, limo. I A,ll. •I P.ll. or I P.ll. •
Bed•..-•ds, Lampe, PiclurWI, I P.ll. If Thil lo YouP.,~ou
Air Condltlan•r, Microwave.
Hovo A Ploaoont
hy
Arid Wont To Work Ill lly Olfloit
Polio Solo: Frldoy lllh, Salur· Wllh
Other Ploooolll Porday 18th, 73 Unooln Plko, Twin sonolllln,
Ill AI 114-441•
Bid, Rocllnor, Bld1onad1, 1194 FDr Clll
Mare lnfomwUon,
Children• Clotho, Mile. heme.
E.O.E. IIIF
All reaiiSiolo adve~lolntl n
Thurlday, Frldoy, t-4! Second E11y Woottl Excollont Pori f4.a.
HouM Uh Past G~ Course,
tills newspaper Is sub)ecl to
Hmblo Producto AI · Coli
991 Mill CrM!(. Gray GIIISJei Toll
lho Federal Fair Housing Acl
F,..., 1..aoo-t87-llll, Ext.
RNrOIHouH.
of 1968 wllltll makeS K Illegal
313.
to actvenlse ·an~ preference,
Wanda's Yard Sail: Wed1,
eountw Porwri Ell·
Thuro 1 152 Union Rood, Bldwoll, Front
lmhatlon or discrimination
porlonco
Holpful,
APDIY
In
P
..
PoUICI Plante, KerOHM Hater, eon. cardinal DrY · Cleanan.
based on race, cM~?r. reUg6on,
Mor•l
Ohio Rivlf Piau, Golllpollo. No
aex tamlllal status or national
PhonoCIIIe.
origin, or any Intention to
Pt. Pleasant
make~ such preference,
Sifter For 7 Yoor Old Room
And Slllry. 114 141-4014
Imitation or disatintnatlon."
&amp; VIcinity
I day only, Wid. Juno lllh,
1:110-71 :td Popul•or SL, Tho
· . This rteW!ipaper wll not

n..

~Low

46

175-11100; OYOnlngl :IIIW'I&amp;-4217.
SEVl.RAL 7- ACRE PARCELS:
llolao Coullly, Solem lwD.
18501 ..... Rlmoll, beiUIIIul
land; - · pulu,. ond l!lllo.
Coli for good . mop. 1-114-5131545, Ath0n1,0H.

-..

1993

Clvlo 4 Door, 1.1,

-

=-~

County watlt, road a
l!octric. from 12.554. :J04.S7II.

2814.

•. Fowu:t:; llaek and whhelolft cat,

blcyca. hounhold

-

lingle wldo lrolllrl.
lot8 tor hou-., tr~~llerl; • cam-

kitten, litter
. l,..nod, lo good homo, 614-882·

: Solid whitt houM

;6

For s..... 112 ocroo, high and
dry, too odid In Ylitaa- of lllddloport, INicld· lor lmmodlolo

water, lnform8tlon m~~le.ct on ,..
queat, 3M-175-5253, piNM no

• Six wMk ~ black kitten~~, aalt

. ,..... ·304-475-2961.

~

R-tar

.....

June16,

-PonllocQronPtb!U.o...,

able, IIWU-1538.

lAta • ocroogotar homo conllructton on Roy""'n Rd,
roo-..blt NotrlciiOno, -nty

Wednesday,

Autos tor Sale

11

Rooms

..... 304-)'J$.51111.

: lor Sonjo, 114-882-5377: .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Fumlshtd

Bulldifta l.olo For Sale or WIN
Build To Sufi, Fl,.nolng Aval-

: To glveawty; outskllt

June16, 1993

Ohio

'

.'

extravagant than,usual.
QUINt (May 2)..Jul10 201 Until tile fundi
are safely in yoor bank account. don't con·
sider it a fait accompli. Somelhing on which
you're counting might be unupectedly
wjlhdrawn. Trying to patch up a broken
roma nce? The Astro·Graph Matchmaker

'"

'

·can help you to understand what to do to
make the relationship work . Mail $2 and a
.long, self·.addressad, slamped envelope to
Matchmaker. P.O. Bo• 4465, New York.
N.Y. 10163.
CANCER (June 2t.July 22) II'S besl not lo
ignore your bel!er judgment foctay and go
along with an individual who has always
been undependable or misinformed . Think
for yoursall.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Irresponsible work
habits mighl calch up with you today. The
close! in which you·ve been stuffing !hose
unllnished prOjects may finally give way.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept., 221 Today you
mlghl have to e&gt;plaln your way out of a·
compllcalad situation if you get Involved
with the wrong associates. Be discrlmlnal·
ing.

LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 231 Be sure your
objectives are clea~y defined today. If not,
you might get off on a bed start and Iaior
no! be able to correct your course.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Today If YQ\1
gel Involved in a critical endeavor with oth·
ers. don't be afraid to ask questions about
things you don't understand . Keep your
ego oul of the picture.
8AGITT4RIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) This

mlghl no! be one of your beller days for
being eilher a buyer or a sellar. In each
instance, you mighl impulsively do something wrong. '
CAPRICORN (Die. 22-Jon. 191 Be very
careful as lo whom you go for advice
today. Someone m1ghtgive you some way
out suggestloos, which you could compound into something evan more foolish.
AQUARIUS (Jin. 20-Ftb. ttl If your
methods and routines are loo lirmly slruc·
lured today, !hey could inhibil rather than
enhance your elforts, because you won't
be prepared to deal with the ul1llllpecled.
PISCES (Feb. 20-MIICh 201 A mlounder·
standing with a close friend might erupl
loday. II you don't lake lime to haar what
he/she is lrying to tell yoy, ~ might jeoper·
, dize your relationship.

ARIES (Mtrch 21-Aprll It) listeners
might no! be very receptive to your ideas
lodey. They may either 111111 you'ra forcing
your view• on !hem or they could think
yoo're a little kooky.
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) Yoo may be
harboring some misconceptions regarding
something you were recently taught.
Before yoy pass onto others whal you think
you know, have yoyr information varilled.

�', The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Giants ,

Wednesday, June 16, 1993
Page-14

Kings announce
birth offirst child

Reds 6-5

'
Vot 44, NO. 35

Hall receives
scholarlship

tho lntoroata of PlalntiH and
tho Oofondonto In 78.16

FUEL SPILL ~ This was the scene at'tbe
Cltgo (Beacon) Station at tl)e Intersection of
Routes 33 and 7 on Wednesday afternoon fol·
lowing a diesel fuel spill at the station. The
Pomeroy Fire Department was called to t~e

s~on·

honored by the Meigs County Historial Soctety in conjunction wilh
the societ( s "Teachers Make a
Difference' ~rogr8!11.
Students m Metgs County were
offered a chance to write essay
nominations honoring a teacher of
their choice who has made a difference in their lives and education.
The top three teachers are Mrs.
Twila Childs, Middleport; Mrs.
Michaela Kucsma, Soulhem Junior
High; and Mrs. Sandra Walker,
Salem Center.
Top student essay writers were
Jenny Howerton, Jenn~er Yeauger
and Tim Lewis.
Other teachers honored were
Mrs. Constance Enslen, Soulhem
Junior High; Mrs. Sandra Baer,
Syracuse; Mrs. Debbie Lowery,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Julie Randolph,
Rutland; Mrs. Hill, Racime; James
- Wick\ine, Southern Junior High;
and Mrs. Rulh Stearns, Syracuse.
Other essay winners were John
Gilland, Evan Struble, Melissa
Reeves, Randy Smith, Amanda
Smith, Billy Sheppard and Brian
Allen.
The winning teachers have been
presented special certificates of

lo •newer the Complaint

within twonty ·eight (28)
doyo alter tho laat
publicotion of thio notice
which will be published
once • week for olx (6)
eucceaaive wHka. The last
publlcotion will be made on
the 21ot dey of July, 1993,
and the twonty ..ight (28)
doyo for onowerlng will
commence on that dote. In
ol your failure to
answer or olherwlae
rHpond .. requ.lred by tho
Ohio Ruleo of Civil
Procedur•, judgement by
default will be rendered
agolnot you for tho relief
do......tod In liMo C&lt;&gt;m:Ciolnl
Dated thl• 1Oth •v of
Juno, 19113.
Lilly E. Spencer,
Clerk of Courta
Htrrloon
Ill 1t, 21, SO;

c•••

By...,_

(1) 7, 14, 21, 6tc

Aiso, both teachers and the nominating student winners will receive
one. year memberships in the Meigs
Co~nty Pioneer and Historical
Soctety. There were 171 entnes .

A reception honoring lh~ winner
teachers and student es~ytsts was
held recently at the Metgs County
Muse~m where they were presented 1he1t awards.

In expanding the strike against
the Bituminous Coal Operators
Association for the sixlh time since
it began May 10, UMW President
Richard Trumks accused its chief
negotiator, CONSOL Inc. Chairman, President and Chief Execu- .
tive Officer B.R. "Bobby" Brown,
of "lying about honoring our 1988
COIItraet (ani!) lyinf about lheir current contraCt offer. '
"They claim lheir current position offers us more jobs than in
1988," Trumka said. "It's just not
true.''
CONSOL Inc. spokesman
Thomas Hoffman, who also is
spokesman for the association's
negotiating committee, dismjssed

COMPLETE
ST()CK

~PRICE

WASHINGTON (AP)
said Wednesday after the Finance
Democrats are ready to muscle panel's 11 Democrats ended a
President Clinton 's deficit-reduc- month-long standoff and crafted a
tion billlhrough the Senate Finance compromise measure.
President Clinton, asked on his
Committee after replacing an
unpopular energy tax wilh a JBSO- morning jog if he liked the bud!!et
Iine tax hike and new Med1care deal, shook his fist and satd,
cuts. "We're making progress," "We're moving forward. We're
Clinton said today.
malting progress.''
Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, i
Like the measure the Democratic-controlled House narrowly . Republican opponent, conceded
•P.Ptoved last month, the Senate today lhst Dcmoci'IIS would get the
btll is dominated by higher taxes on bill through the Senate, but comthe well-to-do, companies and plained on Fox TV: "It's not just a
tax on lhe weallhiest. I guess they
some Social Security recipients.
"We mean to sec it gers all the think that everyone who drives a
way through" the Senate, Majority car is wehlthy."
Leader George Mitchell, D-Maine,

.
Trade deficit widens in April

CASUAL PANTS (like Dockers)

$15 99

ALL MEN'S SHIRTS

20% OFF

MEN'S SOCKS

BRIEFS &amp; T·SHIRTS

HANES

25% OFF.
Case/luck

25% OFF

REMAINING STOCK

SAVE ·
THURSDAY, FRIDAY and
SAIIRDIY
JUNE 17th, 111., 19th

OFF

AFTER SHAVE

20%oFF

20% OFF
MEN'S SHORTS

AND

25%oFF

ALL LEATHER BELTS

~------~------------~~~~

290NORTH
SE(:OND
MIDDLEPORT

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
-The United MineWorken escalated its rhetoric as its expand"ed its
strike, drawing a caustic retort from
coal operators in the · sharpest
exchange since union miners
walked out five weeks ago.
The Wlioll calle4 out 2,000 more
miners W.ednesday in West Virginia and Kentucky, bringing the
number of strikers to more than
14,000 in those two states arid
Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and
Illinois.
The new targets are five mines
owned by Peabody Holding Co. of
St. Louis and two mines owned by
CONSOL Inc. of Upper St. Clair,

.Democr.ats ready to push
tax bill through Senate

AMITY
BILLFOLDS

BASIC
CIGARETTES

30%oFF

WASHINGTON (AP) - The would narrow significantly to
U.S. merchandise trade deficit around $8 .5 billion as imports
widened unexpectedly in April to slowed from their record March
SI 0.49 billion, the worst perfor- pace.
mance in more lhan four years, as
However, im~rts posted only a
Americans • demand for foreign oil tiny dtcline in ril. falling I peJand cars increased, lhe government cent to $48.87 bi ion. At the same
time, U.S. exports fell 1.3 percent
said toda :
The ~mmerce Department said to $38.38 billion. The trade .deficit
that the April deficit was up 0.3 is the difference between imports
percent, following an even larger and exports.
.
32 percent surge in March lhst had
pushed the deficit that month to
$10.45 billion.
The deficit with Japan jumped
4.4 percent 10 s·s.s billion, the
worst showing with that country
since OciObcr 1987.
Three peopJe were treated at
The trade performance caught ·
Veterans
Memorial Hospital
analysts by surprise. They l1ad been
Wednesday
morning followmg a
forecasting that. the . trade gap
two-vehicle accident in Salisb~
Township, the OaiUa-Mcigs Post of
the State Highway Palrol reported.
Driver Lois 0. Riggs, ~3. and
her passenaer. Maranda R. Rius.
11 mon1h1, both of 39104 Yt.
The new waste water treatment ·. Union Rolli, Pomeroy, u well as
plant for the Villqe of Pomeroy driver Carlyon I. Burdwn, 40, 118
will be open to the pubUc on Sun- Ferry Street, Proctorville, were
day {rom 1-4 p.m. The plant is transported by Meigs County
located 81500 Spring Valley Line.
Emeraency Medlcal1ervlce to
John Andcrs()n, village ldlninis· VMH when: they were treated and
trator, says this 'will probably be released.
·
the Jut time lhe plant wiD be open
As a result of the accident Burto the public. He doca, however, cham was trapped in ller vehicle
ellCOIII'IIe biology claues to tour and rescue wOrbn with the Midthe pllnt with prior ~t~~~~aements.
dleport volu11tecr Fire Dqlartment

COMPLEIE
STOCK

30%oFF

Pri&lt;rs !11 Effe&lt;t Through Suuduyl JurH~ 20
•'

The roads to be paved are coun- . construction will be at U.S. Route
ty roads 16 (Beech Grove}, 174 33, St,ate Rou~ 7/124 interchange
(Happy Hollow), 18 (Kingsbury), located at Rock Springs and ending
25 (Pomeroy Pike) and 82 (Texas at State Route 7 located at Five
Road),
Points.
In olher action, commissi011ers:
-tabled bids for a sewer line
-made a motion to send a from lhe existing line to the Rivermemo to county. office holders side Food Mart Wltil a state pennit
requesting their salary adjustments. is received, but not exceeding 30
-received a report from Bob days.
Clark:, regional planner for Emer-considered a letter from
gency Management Agency, on lhe Meigs County Heallh Department
May 13 fu11-scale exercise of Official Keith Little on b.uying a
Metgs County's local emergency freezer for the dog pound. The
plan. The county scored lhe most freezer would be used to store dQd
points possible on all objectives.
dogs until they could be disposed
-passed a resolution \0 cooper- of properly.
· .
ate with the Ohio Department of
-stated 'that the Commissionen
Transportation for the constructi011 meetiri~ with Ted Strickland on
of a new-four-lane-limited-access Friday tn Jackson has been · canhighway in Meigs County. This celed until later notice.

Trumks's statement as "more fairy
tales from lhe fairy tale factory 011
15th Street," referring to the
union's Washington, D.C., headquarters.
Hoffman instead focused his
comments on alleged strike violence, which he called""'a' serioas
problem."
· ·
"But to hear the union tell it,
rocks inexplicably fall from the
sky, jackrocks grow mysteriously
from road surfaces and bullets are
beamed in from outer space,"
Hoffman said. "The facts. are that
strike-related violence is injuring
people and damaging property.''
Trumks called associati011 statements "inflammatory."
''To describe UMWA members,
lheir own employees, as 'terrorists'
underscores the refusal or the
BCOA companies to recol!"ize the
hard work, professionalism and
productivity of their workers,"
Trumks said.
.
The strike deals mainly with job
security for union miners.
Trumka says· the operators
reneged 011 a provision in lhe 1988
agreement lhat promised three out
of every five new jobs. to laid-off
union members. The union says the
provision applied both to association companies and lheir nonunion
subsidiaries.
The operators say the agreement
covered only subsidiaries that
signed the contract and did not
extend to non-union subsidiaries.
The operators say they now
have the authority to negotiate for
lhose nonwtion ·companies, however, and have off~ to make up 10
36 percent of new jobs available to
union members.
•:we urge the union leadership
to read the contract," Hoffman
said.
Among the mines added to the
strike Wednesday was Peabody
Coal Co.'s Camp. No. I mine in
Union County, Ky ., where 163
miners were. suspended for four
days for shouting down company
President Sam Shiflett when he
tried to speak to them.
Peabody Coal is a subsidiary of
Peabody Holding.

.

Former House of Representatives candidate Frank Cremeans
.p ublicly apoloai1ed recently for
false statements he made about his
opponent, State Representative
Mark ' A. Malone (D-94th, South
Point), in lhe 1992 campaign.
"I apologize to Mark Malone for
the difficulty or distress that the
making of these statements to the
public in direct mail literature and
newspaper and radio advertisements may have caused him and
his family during the 1992 general
election campaign and after," Cremeans said in a statement submitted to Malone.
According to a release from
Malone's office, Cremeans made
statements such as Malone was
absent from 33 percent of his committee hearings.
"This statement, among others,
is simply not true,'' Malone said,
Malone explained in that in
response to Cremeans' "false and
misleading statements," he filed a
complaint with the State .Elections
Commission. Instead of facing lhe
commission, Frank Cremeans
offered lhe apology and retraction
for the 24 separate violations or
election laws he was found to have
committed.
"It is inappropriate for a candidate to make untrue, misleading
and professionaUy damaging statements about another candidate for
the sole purpose of winning a polit-

.

ical race," Malone said.
committee meetings. Even worse
"Allhough lhe campaign iii over, he had the arrogance to give him:
l ~feJt il, necessar.y to pursue !It~ . self a nearly 100 percent ])ay raiSe;
complaj(lt to ·vindicate my name ratsmg hts own . salary from
and reputation. It is unfortunate $22.500 to $42,427!"
that lhis apology and retraCtion are
• "When the legislature voted
necessary.
ihemselves a Jl&lt;IY raise, Mark MalMalone added .that he is consid- one was there to insure that his
ering legislation that would make salary jumped an additional 20 ..
election law violations a civil mat- thousand dollars a year."
ter.
• "And when we said 'No,' to
S orne of the statements Cre- legalized gambling in Ohio in 1990
means retracted in his apology by a margin of nearly 3 to 1 .. .
include:
Malone
us again and again
• "Malone ignored us by miss- by
and votini to bring
one out of every three his .
to Ohio!

Three injured in accident;
one·person trapped in vehicle

Water plant plans
open bouse Sunday

PAPER BACK BOOKS

By CHERYL KULAGA
Sentlnel News Stan:
The Meigs County Highway
Department was contracted for a
$562,000 road paving project in a
resolution passed by the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners
Wednesday.
The expected start date for lhe
Issue 2 project (Round 7 funding)
is between June 28 and July 1.
Work is estimated to last 25 working days and paving will include
about 20 miles of road, Meigs
County Highway Department
Director David Spencer said.
The board also passed a motion
to make County Engineer Bob
Eason responsible for notifying lhe
public of road closings in lhe newspaper and on radio.

2,000 more ·miners hit the bricks Crem·e ans apologizes for
remarks made in .' ' 92 campaign

Pa.

MEN'S COLOGNE

2

scene at 1:26 p.m. to ilsslst in dean-up. Brenda
Tutt!e who came in contact wllb ·tbe diesel fuel
was transported by tbe Pomeroy Squad to Vet·
erans Memorial Hospital.

.

Ohio Company'• Purchaee
and Section 35 , Town 3, ·

end proper.
You are hereby required

1

fathet·'s

Town 3 and Range 12 of the

relief aa may be neeessary

Road paving project
to begin late this
month or early July

ety. They are, 1-r, Constance Enslen, Twila
Childs, Michaela Kuscma and· Ruth Stearns.
Back, Debbie Lowery, JuUe Randolph and San·
dra Baer.
·

TEACHERS MAKING A DIFFERENCE
- Pictured are te!lebers wbo were honored In
the "Teachers Make a Dlrrerence" program or
the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Soci-

1 Section. 14 Pogo• 25 centa
A Muldmedla Inc. Newopopor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thurs~y. June 17, 1993

Multl-.lolnc.

MICHAEL J, HALL

Meigs students
named to dean's list

By H.I.S.

Low ton18bt In 601. Cle11r.
Friday SUIJDy, 'high In 90s.

•

STUDENT ESSAYISTS - Pictured are
They are, J.r, front, Jenny Howerton and lenHarrisonville students
essayists who submitted articles for the
nifer Yeauger. Back, Jobn Gilliland, Billy Shep"Teaebers Make a Difference" program
pard and Evan Struble.
·
•
OES honors
10 teachers .
Donna Lathey iii;(~;j~~i's~o~ci~t;·honors
Ten local teachers have been award from lhe historical sciciety. this year.

Range 12 of tho Ohio
Company's Purchase (oome
reference deeds being
Volume 334, Page ·. 113;
Volume 252, Page 717; and
Volume 174, Page 333 1
Meigo
County Dead
Racordo) and that the real
..toto be partitioned or
Ordered oold if it cannot be
J' portltloned, pluo attorney
feet, costs and such other

Kicker:
!171341

PageS

The Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department will hold its annual ox
roast on July 5.
The day will begin with a
parade at 9:30 am. wilh line-up at
9 am. at Depot Street in Rutland.
Events taking place will include
music by Dee and Dallas, kids'
games, other games. A garden traCtor pull will be held at noon and a
celebrity auction will take place at
8 p.m. with f~reworks at 10 p.m.
Food will be served all day
including beef sandwiches, hot
dogs, sloppy joes, ice cream, snow
cones, cotton candy and popcorn. ·
Further information on any of
lhese events may be obtained by
conlacting lhe Rutland Fire Department or an auxiliary member.

4-H news notes

Ohio, and in Section 34 ,

1285
Super Lotto:

6·3Z·35-4J.44.45

Michael John Hall, son of
William ·and Michelle Hall,
Pomeroy, has received ~e $1,000
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney (Misty)
"Sammy Kaye Jazz Scholarship"
King, announce the birth of their
The Office of Records has from the Ohio L'niversity School of
first child, a daughter, Briaunna
Music.
Failh, at Holzer Medical Center on released the University of Rio .
Hall has been active as an
Grande's Spring Quarter 1993 instrumental soloist bolh inside and
March 20.
The infant weighed six pounds Deans Honor List. To achieve the outside of Meigs High School. He
and nine ounces and was 19 inches Deans Honor List status, students has competed in the Ohio Music
must earn a 3.75 grade point aver- Educators Association's Solo and
long.
·
Maternal grandparents are age.
Com~&gt;Ctitions for the last
The following students from Ensemble
William and Carolyn Van Meter,
six years, recetving five superior
Meigs County are listed: Nancy J. ratios and one excellent rating. He
Clifton, W.Va.
Paternal grandparents are Aldridge, Pomeroy; Brian R. Bai- has also competed in the Open
Franklin and Luelle King, Har- ley, Chester; Timothy A. Curfman, Bible Standard Churches "Music
Racine; Ami Jo Davis, Langsville; wilh a Purpose" National Regional
risonville.
Mary Edwards, Long Botto"'; Competition where he took first
Te~ S. Fields, Pomeroy; Healher
plaee instrumental soloist·in the 16L. Fmlaw, Long Bottom; Sheila M, 18 age group.
Harris, Middleport; Darin P.
Hall has played in the Meigs
Logan, Middleport; Terry A. New- Marching and Concert Bands,
some, Pomeroy; Gina N. Pines, Meigs Pep Band, Meigs County
Pomeroy; Jayne A. Ritchie-Collins, Honor Bands, District XVII Honor
Coolville; Mark T. Shrivers, Mid- Bands, Kent State University
dleport; Deedrah L. Simmons, Honor Band, the Ohio Wesleyan
Reedsville; Donna K. Smith, Honor Band, Eastern Kentucky
Langsville; Lynne R. Taylor, University Honor Band, Ohio State
Pomeroy and Darci M. Wolfe, Fair Band and the Ohio University
· Middleport
Communiversity Band, as well as
lhe Big Ben~ Community Band.
. He received notification from
The Meigs 4-H Pleasure Riders
Ernest Bastein, trumpet professor
· recently ·attended a ri~ing cli~ic
at Ohio University on Wednesday.
where riders ~lad professiOnal uamHall is a 1993 graduate of Metgs
ers help lhem. A practice session
High School where he was a trumand meeting was held at the fairpet student of J. Toney Dingess,
BRADLEYJO)'IIES
grounds. A new show motto was
band director.
adopted by the mempers : S.L.C.
Bradley Jones
which means smile, look. and conobserves thrid birthday centrate when showi.ng. Practice !n .
Bradley Jones celebrated his showmanship and horsemanshtp
lhird birthday recently with a party took place with members and their
at his home hosted by his parents, horses.
Plans were made for a ~ wash
Jeff and Linda Jones.
to
be held at McDonalds to help
A "Barney"- theme was carried
The charter was draped for
raise
money for club jackets.
out in the cake and decorations.
Donna
Lathey and a moment of
Attending were his parents, Another riding clinic was sched- silence was held when the Harpaternal grandparents Dtane and uled for July 10. The members will risonville OES met recently with
Frank Jones, maternal grandpar- participate in lhe St. Jude Ride A Pauline Atkins, worthy matron, and
ents, Glen and Grace Thoma, and Thon on June 12 in the Rutland Larry Well, worthy patron in
Ann Buskirk, ChriStopher Buskirk, area. The next meeting and practice charge.
Gail Thoma. Buster, Tonya, Bran- session will be held on JWle 17 at
Instructions were given to new
.
.
don and Carri Cale, Ruby Bum• lhe fairgrounds.
member
Darlene Casto by. Bernice
Members and advtsors attendmg
side, Pat Thoma, Marcia King, Kay
Hoffman.
JessicaWheeler, Holly MilKoehler, Amanda and Chrissy were:
Stella Atlcins observed a birthhoan,
Matt Milhoan, Linzie NotMiller, Jack Niday.
day.
Otflers presenting gifts were tingham, Tracy Shaffer, Sara Craig,
Charles King announced the
Mary Lou , Rich and Betsy Susan Grueser, Sarah Grueser, masons would hold Friend Night
Donald Lambert and advisors Pam
Houdashelt and Beverly Roush.
lhe lhird Saturday in July.
Milhoan and Kay Ward.
A c.ollectiOII was taken by RosWilling Workers meet
alie King.
The worthy matron honored lhe
The Willing Workers of lhe SL reports were given by Mildred
falhers
for Father's Day by reading
Paul United Methodist Church of Brooks.
.
.
an
appropriate
reading and giving
Tuppers Plains met recently at lhe
. The program was gt;;en by MJI.
church for an all day meeting and dred Caldwell, Mae Vmeyard and each a candy bar.
Other Father's Day readings
quilting session.
Evelyn Spencer.
were
given by Fred George and
Glenna Sanders pres.ided ·and
Cake and ice cream were served
in honor of the birthdays of Glenna Rosalie Story and a monologue on
Sanders, Patricia Hal and Joanna " Pants" was given by Chester
Public Notice
Weaver. Special days were cele- King.
Table grace was given by Bob
(Continued from Page 11)
brated by Mildred Brooks, Mae
Reed before lhe groop entered lhe
Common Pleas Court of
Vineyard and Beulah Zumbach.
Meigs County, Ohio, Court
The next meeting ~ill be July lining area where lhey were served
Stroot, Pomeroy, Ohio
13 at 1:30 p.m. and summer plans re freshments by Mr. and Mrs.
45769.
will be made. Hazel Barnhill will Charles King, Anna Shuler and
Tho object of the
Charldene Alkire.
be hostess.
Complaint i1 to determine
acrea, more or lest, of real
eatate located in Chester
Townahip , Meigs County,

PkkJ:
!136
Pkk4:

rally to top

Ox roast to be
held July 5

BRIAUNNA FAITH KING

Ohio Lottery

,,

had to pry back the roof of the
vehicle ·and removed the two driver's side doors in order to free ber.
Nine firefighters were on the
scene for almost 011e hour.
According to the accident
report, Burcham was southbound
on State Route 7 when she stopped
to make I left hllld turn and WIS
stntclc from behind by Rius.
Rigs wu cited for Tailure to
llllintaln 111 assured. clelr distance
ahead. Both vehicles sustained
heavy, disablin&amp; datnqe and were
towed from ·the scene.
Editor's note: Names, 8JieS
arid addreaert are printed as tbey
appear on offtc:lll report&amp;.

RESCUE- Memberl of lbe Middleport Volunteer Fire Department. and Melas County
Emer&amp;ency Medkal Senite.work to free Car·

reo.

lynn J, Bmlwl, ItO, Po.ero,,
her wllltle
Wedatlday ~ n aeddeat on State R•te
7. (Sentinel pbotti by Due Harrla)

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