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· Pege DB Sunday nmea Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolll, OH Point Pl....nt, wv

Meigs County
Agenfs Corner

Proper timing key to
·success with rotary hoe

Jolla C. Rice
MeipCOUDiy
ExteUioa Aaeat

POMER~

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meias Soil and Water
C0111enatioll District, is located somewhere in
MEIGS County. llldividualll wishing to partldpllte in the weekly conteSt may do so by a-ing
tile lana's owuer. JWit maU, or drop orr your
lllftS orr to the Dally Sentinel,lll Court St.,
Pollleroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis DaUy
Trlbuae, 825 third AYe~ Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631,

and 7011

aa:r willa $5 prbe from «'e &lt;Xllo VaJ..

ley PubHIIhr.l Co. Law JOIU' naae, addreaa

and lelepbone nUDiber with ,_. card or letter.
No telepbone ealll wiU be accepted. AD ~test

entries alloald be tunaed r. tO tle aewspaper
olllce by 4 p.m. eac11 weer. l~y.lll Cl!llf oh tie,
the wblaer wiU be c~ by Joaery. Next week,
a GaiDa Coaaty fana will lie reamed by the
GaUia SoU and Water COIIIei'Yation Di11tr1ct.

Dobbins, Campbell. receive
__forestry camp scholarships
.'

By C!!!ISfance S. White
Gdla COUIItY SWCD

GALLIPOLIS - Two young
· mea from Gallia County will be
• attendi~ the 1991 Ohio Forestry
: Aacx:lllion Forestry Camp through
: echolanhips from the Gallia Coun·
· !1 Conservation Club and tbe Gal·: ba Soil and Water Consenation
·· disuict. The camp is a one week
• summer resident camp for high
·• ecbool Sllldents.
i David Dobbins, IJI is recipient
• of the Conservation Club scholar·
: ship aod S~YC Campbell is recipi- ·
' ent of the Gallia SWCD award.
·! Dobbins and CamllbeU are students.
• at North GaUia Aigh School and
. are "'embers of the Envirothon
: Team. ·
The Ohio Forestry Association
: is a private, non-profit organizalion
: whose purpose 1s to promote the
~ wlae 11181111eD1eDt of Ohio's forest
• and related naiural resources. To
: achieYe this goal the association
. conducts several educational pro:•
One of the major projects is
' the Ohio Forestry Camp,
: The fust Ohio Forestry Cam~ .
' w11 held In 150 at Camp
• MIJihin&amp;wn in Carroll County with
58 boys attending from 40 coun·
· ties. Since then over .7000 high
: scbool students from every county
in Ohio have attended. It has
matured into an academic camp
: with nearly 300 students attending

: each year.

· The camp is open to any student
: boy or girl lhat is at least 14 Years
: old or has completed the eighth
• pade.
: It is preferred that they have at
• lealll one mOte year of high school
: a\'lillble but this is not mandatory.
:; The student should have an interest
•, ill conserwtion and the outdoors.
.: The Sllldents lltellding will par·
·• ticipate in classes covering tree
· idaltifiCIIion, silviculture, ecology
: llld forest products They will also
·: have • opportunity to learn.how to
· mua rc the size of S181lding trees
: and logs and determine their value.
- The cfaascs are held in the out: doon.
.,: Sludents 11 the camp sre taught
· by a Iliff of professional foresters
'; 1'llelc foresters are employed by
:~ both public and private sector.
:· Each siUdenl wiD get to particic:.~ I field triv to Observe
•
·related activtties such as a
,: workinl sawmill to see how a log
~~ ilpoc :n :d into a usable product,
t aa acliYe logging operation to see
;,. how !lees barVesied, a tree fann
·: where aees are managed The Ohio
;- DIYision of Forestry also demon-

•:

sttates fii'C suppression teehRlques.
This is the second year for the
Conservation Club and Gallia
SWCD to provide scholarships to
students in the county This camp
can be an asset in man}: careers,
just to mention, as Patty Dyer, Disbicl Conservationist and myself are

DAVID DOBBINS m

'

both graduates of fcirmer Forestry
Camps.
If you are a students interested
in the enYiron-t and conservation and would lilce to attend next
year conlaCt-the Gallia SWCD at
446-8687 or a Conservation Club
member for more infCJ11181ion.

STEVE CAMPBELL

THE BRANCHWOOD
"WHERE DINING'S GOOD"

OPEN JUNE 20TH
I

RESERVATIONS ONLY
Visit us for a special evening
with elegant dining.
Open: Thursday and Saturday tvening ·
Serving Hours are 6:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.
Reservations must be made 5 ·days in advanca.
When y~ call you wiH piGCI your or•r.
Call 992'2719 from 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. enryclay.
Proper Attire Raqutsttd (Sorry, no jlans)
Crew ld. (behind .... Co. F. . .•ntlal

John and 5arah Fish• Ho••
Sarah Fisher ;_ Own•

n

June9, 1991

over tbe
last two weeks has been limited ill
pans of the state. and many fields
have been treated with preemergeace herbicides durint this time.
In order for preemergence berbici&lt;lo ~ts 10 Jl1"0'ide effectiYe
control, rainfall must generally.
occur within 7 to IQ days of herbicide ~qJplication.
·
The minimum amount of rain·
fall needed to move beroicide into
tbe soil where weeds are BetJDinat·
ing dqlends upon the hei'bicide(s)
used. taraet weed species, .00 the
soil moisture. II iS therefore difficultiO state exactly how mucb rain
is needed for effective weed control, but consider 1/3 to 1/l. inch to
be the minimum. More than 112
InCh may be needed when soils are
exllemely dry, for deep-germinal, ing weeds, or when relatively
immoblle herbicides such as Prowl,
Preview, Scepter, Pursuit, and
Lorox Plus are liPJIIied.
Where it appears that rainfall
within 10 days of planting will be
insufficient to promote herbicide
activity, .tbe rotary hoe can be used
to eliminate emerring weeds and
"buy time• unli more rain is
received. The rotary hoe can also
be used in reduCed-herbicide week
management programs to delay
weed eslablisbment until a more
aggressive weed control strategy

Revcofiles
reorganizational
plan with court
AKRON, Ohio (AP)- Revco
D.S. rnc., the first major company
to seek bankruplcy pllteetion after
a failed junk-bond buyOUl, has submined a reorganization plan nearly
three years after filing for Olapter
II.
.
Under the ~sed reorganization, which sun must be approved
by creditors, a large portion of the
company's value would be disbibuted in the form of common
stock, Revco executive vice presi·
dent Gregory K. Raven said
Revco, which operates more
than 1,100 drug stores in 10 Eastem stales, and its parent, Anac
Holding Corp., have &amp;een operating
under Chapter 11 of the federal
bankruptcy code since July 1988.
_The reorganization 111an filed
Fndar also calls for dtsmissing
lawswts connected with the lililed
Sl.S billion leveraged buyout in
1986, in ·which the company was
taken private with money raised by
iSSUing hi h·yielding junk bonds:
The !iFwinsburg-based chain
entered Chapter 11 after it couldn't
meet interest payments on the debt.
A bankruptcy examiner had said
it was possible for Revco creditors
to sue shar~holders, investment
bankers and other parties for losses
the creditors suffered after the
buyout.
.

can be used (cultivation or poste·
meracnce herbicideS).
~ timing is the key to sue·
cess w1t11 the ro111ry hoe. The ideal
time for operation is after the
weeds germinate but before the
shoot emerges aboYe tbe soil surface (white stage). Depending upon
the date of planling the optimum
time for a first rotary hoeing occurs
within 3 to 7 days after planting.
Weeds will germinate and emerge
more rapidly as planting is delayed
from early May to early June. A
second r01ary l!oeing 5 to 7 days
afler the fust wiD improve control.
The rotary bQe may control weeds
up to 1f}. inch taU, but if the weeds
can be seen, tbey are probably past
the sta~e of maximum rotary hoe
effectiveness.
Large-seeded
broadleaf weeds such as giant ragweed and velvetleaf will be espe·
ciaDy difficult to cootrol once they
haYe emerged.
The rotary hoe is most effective
where the soil surface ls smooth,
dry, and finn, or where a crust is
present. Rain shortly before or after
rotary hoeing can greatly reduce

Meigs... .

Bulls one·win
away from
NBA crown

Pick .3:392

Pick 4:0636
Cards : Q-H, S,C
6-D; 8-S
Super Lotto:
2-13-16-20-28-34

Page4

Kicker:769812

.'

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'

Museum
activities
draw more
than 300

Mary, and sons, Walter and Jedidi:
ah.

.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Senlil!el News Starr
From demonstrations of blacltsmithing to basket making, to displays ol model trains and antique
toys, there was something for
everyone at tbe 20th Annual Heritage Weekend staged at the Meigs
County M;useum.
"Traveling Through Time in
Meigs County" was the theme of
events • the Museum Salurday and
Sunday. The more than 300 visitors
enjoyed a variety of exhibits and
demonstrations of yesteryear skiDs,
as weU as music jJrovided by the
Country Kin Band and the MiddlepOrt Church of Christ.
One special display featured a
salute·IO Desert Storm servicemen
and women. In the upstairs Military
Room pictures of tbe Meigs Coun·
tians who went to the Gulf were
displayed alon~ with information,
print,s, 111d ~facts from earlier

Near-term wheat rises

CHICAGO {AP)
Wh
£
.
.
eat
1u1Y delivery Jumped more thanor
4
cents a bushel F~day as worries
about crop quahty prompted a
~in demand f~ near-term supf.hes. Other gram a~d soybean
~lures closed mostly htgher.
At the close, whear futures were
1 _cent lower to 4 3/4 cents higher
With the contract for deliyery in
July at $2.95 3{4 a bushel: COil! was
· II~ cent lower to I 1{4 cents h1gher
With July at $2.46 a bushel; oats
were Ill cent to I cent higher with
July at $1.23 a ~ushel: soybeans
were unc.hanged to 3 1/4 cents
htgher wuh July at $5.83 3/4 a
bushel.

wars.

on the m/s Cariba
Cruise to the best of
the Caribbean and see
some of the best in
Country Music perform
especially for you!

' BLACKSMITH SHOP - Herman Schul aad hil
MOBILE
. mobile blacbmltll Bllop ~ to Heritage Weekead at the Melp
· MllSellm. On llotb days be sbowed b- to create regular bousebold
· ltem•l'rolll ·raw 1ro11. Candle lliolden, cartaiD tie backs, plut lwlg·
en, eoit ..... doat bila'dll!l, lllld ~ ol"lli ldlldi J!llde by ~ul
were displayed. .
·
·. · . -··., · , ·
•

••

1

•

•

'

'.

Sept. 28 ·Oct. 5, 19S1
Hosted by Peggy Penrod

Call or stop by

GALLIPOLIS

-l

CoatiDued l'rolll D-1
~ also belongs to Pomeroy Masonic
: LodJc. He resides in Middleport
with his wife, Laurie and their
~ dlu&amp;llter, Katie.
·
~
Sruce J. Reed joined the bank
duD time in 1980. As vice presi" c1en1, he oYersees the operation of
:: dll baak's loan departmenL Bruce
·; 1. Reed II a l!lllduate of Ohio State
~ Ulliwnlty, Ohio School of Bank:. lq, the Kent State University
; SdiOOi ol Consumer Lending and
:!- lilt Colondo Graduate School of
~ 1 ' ... Bruce J. Reed serYed as
" ... 11r1t Jll'llideat of tbe Meigs
~
a.tJer of Commerce, a
~ . . Iii wllicll be continues to be
l ..._ HI IIIlO ~am~ as a member
; ollllt Pam
Village CounciL
~ ar.I. Reed 1 member of the
, a...lplnpd Cbun:h. He and
P lUI wife Rill
three sons,
~ .,.. ~- .tJCJIIIaa. He also
~ ........... JCri1 Jeakins, who

TIE mobile home.

. heat pump...the air
conditioner
that also
heats. Financing Available
. 10K2..t:=:' ...

ee.ar

lOK S_rr,

...... ,.....c•z:•.,.

or.

••ve

~ 1 It 1willdleJieeds

Dill']

•

:1

,..

Bennetts Mobile Home Htating &amp; Cooling
Rt. 2 Box 447, GaWpolt•. Ohio
Call 1·8D0-872-&amp;987 or 448·8418

}

,.

r.m &amp; Wlor .,

't

A "history wall" prepared for
Heritage Weekend detailed infor·
mation on the townships and villages of the county. Essays written
by Meigs fifth graders who attended the Retired Senior Volunteer's
Yesteryear program ill April were
displayed, and it was announced
that Mike Bm of Salisbury. was tbe
COWIIntfthe"$11thYea~leltalwthinnere
M·u.seum,'
""
slides, "Retrdspective of Meigs
County• were shown, cowiesy of
tbe Fanilers Bank.
A collection of antique toys
oWned by the Ray Karr family was

THE SEWING ROOM • Nancy Schul of
Tuppers PlaiDs demonstrated wenln1 and
spinning In tbe .Museum's Sewing Room for
Heritlllle Weekend. Here she works oa a small"

·modern-style loom. In the background can be
seen a large antique "barn" loom which Is oa
loan to the Museum.

on display for viewing by the visi- · showed seven different sizes of
tors. Also displayed for the week· collectible engineS and cars.
end was a car made for the SoapA variety of pioneer skills were
box Derby to be staged in Middle- . demonstrated over the weekend.
pon later this month.
Nancy Schul was in the sewing
Gersld Shuster, Matthew Jus- room doing both spinning and
!Jce, ~rian Iu,stice, N~th~. R\)bi: , wf!~~in,g. l'[hileher hl!sband, Hernette and. l&gt;avici" Robinette, mem- 'man SCI!ut·, was·aaoss die ·street on
bers of the Meigs Division of the the Museum lot doing blackSoutheastern Oliio Railroad Club, smithing.
.
were on hand both days ID operate
June Ashley demonstrated rag
their cxtensiYe layout of a·worlcing basket makin~, RSVP volunteers
. model train. Ot~er displays from the Semor Citizens Center

shared their expenise at quilting,
Elizabeth Davis showed the an of
crocheting, and Kevin Kohls of
Bucyrus, displayed a variety of tin
cookie cutters from his family's
·Little Fox Factory and demonstrated sOme finishin~ techniques.
. CorJII!Ieuiorauve cups ani! publications of lhe Meigs County Pio·
neer and Historical Society were
for sale and Museum volunteers
operated a refreshment stand for
the observance.

today!
Activities sponsored b7 the
Pomeroy Merchants Associalton ill
conjunction with Heritsge Weekend on Saturday brought many
people to town to watch tbe parade
and see tbe crafts. Civil War camp
and entertainment throughout the
day.

360 SECOND AVE .
446-0699

, _ ,pu!Jk.; Min 011~//~i~~bm.

COULD BE

Immediately following · the
parade, Swy Butcher performed a
moving n:ndition of ''God Bless the
U.S.A." and winners of tbe parade
were announced by Lenny Eliason
who served as emcee for the day.

·THAI.YOU THill
At Smith Buick-Pontiac,
Our New Car Inventory
MUST BE REDUCED So We Are Prepared
To Offer You Big Trade-In Allowances
On All New Buicks And Pontiacs In Stockl
BDICD lllftiCI
l·l.rUUI'I
I· PIRKIRIUI'S
I· Cll I DIY'S
I·IIYLIII'I
•
4·11ML4•u•

Partly cloudy. Low
tonight in mid 60s.
Tuesday, high in mid80s.

•

aI

e

••

BEST EQUESTRIAN UNIT • Mel'fla and Carol CrOIIS were
awarded a trophy for Best Equestrian Ualt during Saturday's
. Herltqe Parade In Pomeroy for tbeir horse IUid bnUJ aDd JudlaD
cO&amp;tame.

&lt;'

~ Kloes...
..

•

•'

Continued from D-1

ator ·at the Meigs No. 2 mine.
O'DeU resides in Rutland.
.~ark A. ~ierce , continuous
m1~10g machm~ operator at _the
MeigS No. 31 m111e. P1en:e res1des
in Racine with his wife Rosemary
ancl.sons, Marc, Antho~y. Stephen:
and Isaac.
Edward A. Schaekel, Jr., section
supervisor al tbe Meigs No, imine.
Schaelcel resides in Long Bottom
with his wife Patricia ad has three
children James ianine and
Edward. '
'
'
Harry A. Shain, general inside
hiborer at the Meigs No. 2 mine.
Shain resides in Racine with his
wife, Helen, and son, Clayton.
Walter G. Tomblin, Jr., beltman
at the Meigs No. 31 mine. Tomblin
resides in Lun~ville wilh his wife,
.

...
.

effectiveness.
For best results, operate the
JO!II)' hoe with tbe crop rows at a
min1mum speed of 6 miles per
acre. Some newer models with
wheels mounted on individual
springloaded arms perform better
on uaevea surfaces than old« models. Newer models may alao maintain effectiveness where crop
residue is present.
When using the rotary hoe, take
precautions to minimize crop
tnjury. Avoid coYering the crop
with soil as it emerges.
Corn can be hoed up to a height
of 4 10 5 inches, but aYoid hoeing
com planted in furrows in l&lt;iose
soil from the spike to one-leaf stage
to prevent covering plants. Soybeans should not be rotary-hoed
between lhe crook stage, just prior
to emergence, until approximately
3 days after emergence. Hoeiqg
soybeans during emergence results
in S to 10% stand loss. If necessary. rotary lloe a test strip and
evaluate crop damage before pro- ·
ceeding over the entire field.

Ohio Lottery

·Question ofjurisdiction
delays charges in case
The question of jurisdiction is
delaying charges in an alleged rape
of a 14-year-old girl from Gal·
lipolis, according to a spokesman
for the Mason County Sheriff's
Department.
The location of the alleged assault is still in question, the
spokesman said The sheriff's
department and the Gallipolis City
Police are working tbgether on the

case.

According to a spokesman for
the sheriff's ~ent, West Vrrginia has jurisdiction on tbe river to
the low wlller marter on the Ohio
side.
·
The assault aUqedly occurred
Wednesday, May 29, while the girl
was in a boat with four Mason
County males. GalliP.Olis City
Police lnvestiptor Mike Tucker

said the department received a caU
around 2:48 p.m. on May 29 in

Heritage Parade winnets are the
Eastern High School Marching
Band and the Meigs High School
Marching Bands - best m~hing
units: the American Legion Drew
Webster Post No. 39 - best walking
unit; the 9lst Ohio Volunteer
Infantty Group Company B · best
authentic group; the Pomeroy Cub
Scout Group No. 249 under the
direction of Dale Thoene · most
creative: the Ruffles .00 Flourishes
Twirlin~ group lllldei- the direction
of April Hudson - best youth
group; and Melvin and Caml Cross
with their horse and wagon and
Indian outfit- best equestrian.
Winners of the Heritage Costume Cuntesa. sponsored by Bank
One, were Stephanie Ballard, first,
Deanna o\bboll. second. and Sarah
Nuckols, third, in the category of
reproduction of costume , adult
female. Rachael Downie won the
category of best.authentic costume,
adult female . Ashley Roach was
the winner of the best authentic
costume, children. Ryan Prau and
Joseph McCaU wem co-winners of
tbe best children's reproduction of
costume, male; and Nancy Pickens
won for best cbildren 's reproduc·
tion of costume, female.

reference to a JUvenile in dislreSS.
According to a n:pon from the
police department, tbe attacks oc·
curted between 10 a.m. and the
time of the call. The report also
Entertainment during the day
stated the girl may have been
featured the Rainbow Clog11ers,
raped. Tucker said it apptared the
Shirley Quickel and The Dance
girl may haYe bad something 10 Company, Dee and Dallas, Mod
drink.
.
River Band, and The Obio State
A reliable source told the Regis· University Formation Dance Team
ter three of the males have signed .consisting of the members, Cbris
confessions of having intercourse Jellen, Shelley Hornikel, Stacy
with the girl. One subject did not Coit, Tom Mako and Dan Rigas.
take pan in the incident and his The 91st Ohio Volunteer Infantry
Group Comp.ty B addecl much to
story was backed up by the other
three. The giriiiiiM she had inter- the day's festivities with ita camp
behind tbe Meigs County Court
coane wilh the ptales.
·
The incident is still under inYes- House and drills on Court Street
tigation by authorities in Ohio and during the afternoon.
West Virginia,

ADULT WINNERS· Dtaua Abbott, Sarah
Nuckoll and Slep•aDie Ba}lard, J.r, were wla·
ners In the cate1ory .for best adult costume
reproductloD In Bank One's HerltaiC Costume
Contest held in coajunclion with HerllaJ!e

Weekend OD Saturday. Racbael DOWilie, rlglit
was the winner In the best adult authentic cate~
gory, wllh her outfit which sbe purdtlled when
she atteaded college In Germany. ·

Three dead, one injured in
separate King Island accidents
. KINOS MILLS, Ohio (AP) State iilspectors and investigators at
, Kings·Island amuaement put wiD
try to delermine tbe cause of two
separate ~idealS that ldlled three
people and ·injwed another man, a
park spokesman said.
T'/VO men, including a park
emp'!&gt;fee. fiiJPIII'eDtly were eloctrocuted m a pond at tbe put, and a
woman died after falhns from a
ride Sunday aight, hospitsl and
park officiala said.
Officials said today they are
talking with witnesses involving
the deaths at the pond. And offi·

cials of the Swiss manufacturer of
the Flight Commander are flying in
to Inspect tbe ride. .
"The inYestigations wiD contin•
. ue when all the involved parties
arrive al the patk," said Steve
Edwards. the park's manqer of
public relalions. "We're aJill trying
to piece together what happened.''
The two men apparcnUy were
uying to rescue another man in tbe
pond about 9 p.m,
"We're not sure if he slipped or
was ,I!Uihed," Edwards aaid .
"We re !t)'lng to piece together
some of thl! eyewitness accounts.''

William Haithcoat of Cincinnati
and Darrell Roberllon of Ham iliOn.
both 20, wem pronounced dead at
University of Cincinnati Medical
Center, h~tal spokesman Carey
Hotrman said.
Hoffman said Haithcoat and
Robetuon apparently were electrocuted. Robertson worted at Kings
Island, Edwards Slid.
Timothy Benning, 22, of
Cincinnati, was taken to Bethesda
North Hospital in Cincinnati ,
where he was listed in fair condition, hospital spokeswoman Joyce
Coalinued oa page l

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:C ommentary
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Ohio

Pag&amp;-2-The Dally SenUnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 10, 1991

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The Daily Sentinel
,

Ill Court Street
Pomeror, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·M.UON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Mana1er

J'AT WHI1'EHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of Tbe Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and tbe American Newspaper Publishers
. Association.

.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All t.tters are subject to editing aDd midi be aiped with
name. address and telephone number. No unsiped letters will be published. Letters should be in aood taste, addreutng Issue•. notpenonall·
ttes.

'

::Excerptsfrom other
Ohio newspapers
I

By Tbe .._.tated PreM
The following arc recent ex~ from Oliio newspaper editorials:
Tbe CIDdtaaad Ellqulrer, Ma7JO
If President bush bas his way, ConJresa will soon auth&lt;xize grants 10
the stateS 10 8llow them to develop new methods for certifying teachers

Syrian invite almost rains on parade

WASHINGTON - America
almost went too far today in its
gush of ~ over tile OIIICOIIIe of
the .Persian Gulf W.•. The parade
in New Yort City 10 honor returning troops was to have included a
contingent from Syria, a U.S. ally
in the war. As it turns out, the
nation that specializes in torture,
terrorism and unmitigated bruiBlity
will not be represented in todaf s
parade. But not for lack of trymg
by the hosts.
It was Syria that diplomatically
declined the invitation by New
Yort City Ma or David DinkiDsan invillltion
should never have
been issued. Perhaps Dinkins
looked down the list of allies and
decided it wouldn't be polite to
1"-ve anyone out on the big doy.
America bas llrcady been forced to
be eotimly too polite to this malignant ally. It was one thing to have
to stomach a relationship with
Syria in the name of pdting down
another butcher- I1aq - but it is
entirely too much to liave Syrian
soldiers marching through the Big
Apple on a day to honor men and
women who thought they were

2:

fightina rcr freedom.
The invilation 10 Syria brought a
howl of protest, as il should have,
rrom American Jews and from the
families of the victims of the Pan
Am 103 terrorist bomb' . s . is
. . safe havenmg
yna
su'II giVmg
to Ahmed
Jibril, the terrorist wbom all the
evidence points to as the culprit for
Pan Am 103.
Unholy alliances sometimes
must be tnleraled during a war, but
the war is over and human rights
experts warn that our new blend is
not the fine fellow he appears to be.
Amnesty littemational has compiled • bill of particulars against
Syria and its president, Hafez aiAssad. Hundreds of people are
dellined in Syria without charges
or trial. Political dissidents are
jailed, tortured and executed, or
they simply disappear. Anyone
who challenges Assad does not last
long in Syria.
Riad AI-Turk is a case in poinl
Turk, the first secretary of the
banned Communist Party in Syria,
was arrested in 1980 and is hanging
on 10 life in a Syrian prison today.
He has been brutally tortured and

denied medical tteaimenl He has
been in and out of a coma.
Syria is the tortUre capital of the·
Middle East. Syria is to torture
devices as Japan is to the
microchip. The Syrians are particularlf proud of the Black Slave, a
dev1ce that inserts a heated metal
skewer iniO the victim's anus. The
"washing machine" is a hollow
spinning drum·into which a victim's arms are pushed and spun
until they arc crushed. Then there
is the Syrian metal chair that crushes the occupaDt's spine while cutting his ankles with metal blades.
We trust none of those toys would
have been displayed in today's
"Operation Welcome Home"
parade had a Syrian contingent
decided to join the festivities.
Assad would rather thai Americans not see that side of his dirty
litUe government, especially when
he is enjoying such a good relationship with the White House. President Bush says he and Assad differ
on many things, but the two nations
swck together during the war on
the principle that a bigger nation
should not be aUowed to gobble up
•

and principals. .
•
Ofthand, it's hsrd to imagine any beUer single measure to improve the

II

·,..

...

level of teaching ....:. and lcaming - in schools across America.
'
There is no.doubling that m~g people come out of college after
majoring in fields other than
·on and then become interested in
teaching careers. Existing certif1C81ion procedures bar them from pursuing
: those opporiWiities - unless they arc willing to go back to college and
: c~ up on methods courses.
The statuS quo means an obvious loss of young, energetic, talented
men and women wbo could make usefUl contributions to the nation's ·
· schools. The existing certification structure also bars Americans consider·
ing teaching as new c.-eers after ~ years in other lines of work.
Some states may be fully satisfied with existing certification procedures. But all deserve the chance to weigh the alternatives.
· Tbe Columbus Dispatch, May 31
.
.
The decision of the Justice Department to continue to bar foreigners
with AIDS from entering the United States is the correct one, even though
it rnns counter 10 the opinion of Dr. Louis W. Sullivan, secretary of
Health and Human Services,
·
·
Sullivan had recommended tatin~ acquired immune deficiency syndrome orr the list of diseases justifymg the exclusion of aliens from the
United States. He arglled the AIDS is not "a communicable disease of
public health significance."
Admittedly, the disease is not as essily transmitted as some others. But
once SODieolle is infected, that.is the same as a death sentence. There is no
cure, so far, or any effective vaccine for the disease.
Until some successful way to treat the disease is found, the United
States is just being prudent and safe in denying entry to those who carry
the HIV virus.

•

TheAmerican~~Y(;~e~er~~~~yo;:rhawofi~b.ood
. Exercise
collection, testing
distribution system.

;n·

its~~~~of:~~u':o1cl:o~':'~.a:ou~:reos!~!

and Dale Van Atta
its neighbors. Never mind that last
October, during Operation Desert
Shield; Assad's anny slaughtered
thousands of people m Lebanon to
consolidale his .grip on that neigh-

llor.

Like Saddam Hussein, Assad
doesn't mind killing his own people too if that's what it takes to get
the job done. The buldJer of Damascus used artillery and tanks to
quell an uprising in the Syrian city
of Harna in 1982, killing an esti.
maled 2S,IXXJ Syrians. ·
And, like Saddam, Assad knows
how to put his money where his
me...lnmania is. Saudi Arabia paid
syri;$1 billion for its participation
in the Persian Gulf War, and Assad
immediately used the money to buy
Scud missiles &amp;om North Korea.
CASH FLOW PROBLEMS The world faces a critical money
shortage that could slow down economic activity. Confidential estimates by the Centrll Intelligence
Agency say that the Soviet economy co~d shrink br, 10 to 15 ~r­
. eent this year. It, will cost $30 billion to $90 billion to rebuild the
Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.
Even the oil-rich Persian Gulf
countries are mapped for cash. The
shortage of hard cash will push
world interest rates up iwo or three
points. That will force govemmcnts
10 (K!nt money and boOst inflation.
which will inevitably be followed
by an economic slowdown.
INVITATION- Periodically
we haw: been invited to act as sem·
inar leaders on tours of foreign
countries. In the past, we have
accompanied tour poups of our
readers to the Sov'1et Union and
Eastern Europe. This fall, we will
go to Olina on a tour that includes
a five-day cruise on the Yan~e
River and bri~finss. by' political
leaders in The People's Republic of
China. Side trips include Hong
Kong and Thailand. The tour runs
from Aug. 23 through Sept. 8.
Interested readers can get more
iofonnation about the program by
calling Fran Perry at 1-800-3667833.

.

..

.,a•rn
,... ,..,_
WEATHER MAP - Tbe Accu weather forecast for Tuesday
calls for thunclenbowen ahead t1 a enid rroat Ia tbe Northeast.
Thunderstorms are also expected over portions or Texas,
· Louisiana and Arkanaas as weD as Ar~ and New Mexko. The
remainder' of the country will experience fair skies. (AP)

--Local briefs--.Man hurt in crash
A Pomeroy man .suffered minor injuries Sunday after the car he
was driving went out of control on State Route 681 .
Harold D. McDaniel, 36, of Carpenter Hill Road. was not treated
for his injuries at the scene of the crash, a report from the State
Highway Patrol said.
Accor.ding to the-report, McDaniel was eastbound on SR 681
when his car slid off the left side of the roadway. His ·1971 Chevrolet Custom then slammed into an embankment, resulting in heavy
damage.
·
.
·
McDaniel was cited for failure to control and failure to wear a
Safety belt.
·

Three accidents, none with injuries, were investigated by
Pomeroy Police Friday and Saturday.
At 9:35 a.m. Friday, police investigated a wreck on East Main
near the intersection of Sycamore and Main. Gretchen Young, Bid·
well, was rnalring a left tum on East Main from the Pomeroy park·
ing lot when a car operated by Sylvia Wolfe, Racine, parked on the
right side of the street pulled from a parlting place into the right side
ofhercar.
·
Wolfe was cited for failure to yield. There was modemte damage
to tbe left side of the Wolfe vehicle, and light to tbe right side of the ·
Young car.
In an accident at 5:09 p.m. Friday on Court Street, there were no
cita!ions. Police reported that Randy Smith was baclring from a
parking space on Court Street and struck t!Je right side of a car driven by Erwin Gloeckner, Racine, traveling south on Court. There
was moderate damage to the right front fender of the Gloeckner car,
and light damage to the driver's side of the Smith vehicle.
At 7:21 Saturday on West Main St. police investigated an accident involving Paul Clay, Rutland, and Claude Eblin, Pomeroy. It
was reported that Eblm was traveling nonh on West Main when his
vehicle wen.t left of center and he Jlll)lck the Clay car . There was ,
moderate damage 10 bOlli vehicles. Bblin was cited for left of center.

half of a~ desths •. and !he article
5!1YS that JUSt walking briskly three
llmes.a week can "slash" your risk
of dymg from any of the _three by
as much as 50 perce.nt, ~t _would
seem to follow that this trivial output of energy can reduce your overall probabil!tY of s~mething or
other (could It be dymg?) by over
25 percent - perhaps even as
much as a thin!.
Here, of co~. common sense
threa~ns to set m. In the back of
our mands, even the most health·
co~scious of us know that we are
goang to die sooner or later of
something: if ,not of bean disease,
can~er or a stroke, then of
. erysapelas, adult measles or s~gling ~a fish ~ne..The ~y tha~
the bnsk walking ICCOf!!l'!'shes 1s
to rearran~e the probabilities. Our
risk of dymg from certsin diseases .
may go down, but the risk of dying
from certain others must, inexo~bly, go up- up, in fact, preCISCly as far as the fust set declines,
so. thst the _ulti~ probability of
dymg remams at11S usual percent·
age: 100.
.
Ah, the heallb fanallCS will say,

·
but you miss the point! We may all
be doomed to die sooner or later.
•
But for you it will, in all proiJabili- average, will be seven more
ty, be sooner, whereas in the case months of existence; a woman's,
of those of us who jol!, walt five.
·
briskly, do push-ups, don t smoke
In fact, if all desths from heart
or drink avoid saturated fBIS, etc it disease could be eliminated comwill very lilcely be later. lit shcirt. pletely, 35-year-old males would
we will (on tbe average) live enjoy (if that's the word) an averlonger.
.
age of 3.1 more years on this globe;
OK, but just bow much longer? women, 3.3.
Here we have the benefit of a
But is "enjoy" the word after
recent study by researchers at all? Bear in mind that these
Brigham and Women's Hospital in "bonus" months or years will be
Boston and the Harvard School of confer:red on brisk walkers, not in
Public Health. According to the · lhe bloom of their youth, but u the
study (wliich is intended to encour- end of whatever span would other&amp;ge us 10 exercise), the beni:fits of .wise have been allotted to them.
exercise are astoniJhingly amall.
Just how much would you bid for
According to the researchers~ 10 more months of life when you
getting tile blood JllflSSWe of 8 man are 80? A jog (or a brisk walk)
under control will on average
three times a week for 45 years?
lengthen his life by :.. one )'l:llr. iJi
According to The Associated
the case of a wcman, five months. Press,
the
Massachusetts
Gelti.n~ his cholesterol CClUIIt under resetiiCheiS arc painfully aware that
200 will stave off his extinction for their statistics may not inspire
just eight months· hers by 10
everyone. Their
tiley cooQuitting smoldng winrenilhen ~ cede, ''reflects the di ·lculties of
life by an average of lO mooths; pushing bact the JV!!maries of old
hers, by eighl If he maintains an age" when .we reach our 80s. In
ideal weight, a man's reward, 00 short, joggers may run, but they
can't hide. '

William A Rusher

:Squads respond to 20 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to 20 ciills for assiStance
over the weekend and early Mooday morning.
On Saturday at 12:28 p.m. the
' Pomeroy unit weht .lo Oak Hill
Road for Buddy Carnahan, taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 1:30 p.m. the Scipio Fire
Dep11rtment responded to HarrisonviHe on a brush fire at the
' Riggs Farm.
The Pomeroy unit, at 2:01 p.m.,
·responded to a brush fire on the ·
Romine property at Hemlock
Grove. The Syracuse unit assisted
at 2:14p.m and the Middleport Fire
Department assisted at2:21 p.m.
At 2:34 p.m. the Racine unit
' went to Forked Run State Parle for
Jonathan Shon who was transported 10 Jackson General Hospital.
• The Pomeroy unit, at 5:35 p.m.
;went to Mulberry Avenue for
Hazel McCloud who was taken to ·
Veterans,
At 8:08p.m. the Middleport unit
was called to Page Street for Bernice Willford, taken to Veterans. ·
The Rutland unit,.at 10:18 p.m.,
:went to McCumber Road for BeuJah Collier who was tranSported 10
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 10:56 p.m. the Middleport
. unit responded to the Middleport
Police Department for Charles
.wallcerwho was taken to Veterans.

findinfr.

Is it VI•ta·I whether Gospeii·s truth?.

'
shephml" ... "I am the light or the
world" ... "I sm the bread of life"
are mostly the worlc of the author
of John's Gospel, says Fortna. He
::l:,!~;hc: =~ bases this conclusion partly on the
is built 00 the Bible accounts of fjJ !hal Jesusother~ers 10 him·
Jesus' 11•._7
se m IDe
(Matthew,
'"
Mark and Luke) that arc considered
;
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, vice -M·m and columnist
If Jesus never said he would to hsve historical sources.
: fcir The Associated Press, has reponed on Wash.:;gro;-and national poli- return til earth for the Second ComThe Jesus Seminar is now
: tiel for more than 25 years.
ing: if the.Lord's Prayer was com- preparing to cast its critical eye on
,
·
·
J.IOSed by some early Christians the happenings in Jesus' life' T.
(incorporating some of Jesus' ideas such lhinp as his miracles and his
. I
with some of their own); if he resurrection. This could produce
•
never preacbed the Sermon on the another shockef.
•
M~t- what would this do 10 the
How will Christians respond?
;
By Tbt Associated Preas
faith of the believing Clnistian?
The fundamentalists will dis:
Todly is Monday, June 10, the I61st day of 1991. There are 204 days .. Sue~ revelations would be !!'iss the findings of the Jesus Sem• left in tbc year.
startling to most people and mar as "Intellectualism'' or even
:
Today'• HiPiiaht in ffulory:
deeply offensive to many - and . the work of the devil. They may
,· On JIIIC 10: 1940, Italy declared war on France and Britain; the same not just fundamentalists," says also marshal their own corps of
•: day,C,.....declarcdwarooltaly.
RobertFortnaofVassarCollcge.
Bible scholars to refute the Jesus
:· On lhiadlt.e:
.
Fortna is a member of the Jesus Seminar.
• In 1101, dlo north African Sllte d Tripoli declared war on the United Seminar, a group of 200 Bible
The mainline churches will trllv; S•• Ia a dilpll1l over safe pasaage of merchant vessels through the scholars and professors whd have el another eotne,IKXlepling for the
: flr1iklttter
.
already dropped a bombshell in most part the conelusions of the
In 11165, ...,.,.. "Tristan und Isolde" by Richard Wagner premiered • C1uistiao circles wilb.tbeir declara- Jesus Seminar while at tile same
•· in Mnnicb, Oa •ny.
tiDI! that ~ percent of the Bible time reassuriitg their conareptions
•
In 1922, lina«·actreas Judy Garland was born Frances Gumm in sayangs aunbuted to Jesus are not thai this does not subtract &amp;om the
:. Cltlad ltiDidl. MiiiiL
llllhe!ltic.
reliabili mthe Golpels
In 193!, AlcoiiOiica Anonymous was founded in Akron, Ohio, by
Forma recently chopped his own
The 'l.:s Anaeles Times has
: U!l?$ 0. Willol..a Dr. Robert Smith.
bombshell.
publiJhetl .. inlelview with Robert
Ia lf42, die Oea~assacred 173 male residents of Lidice,
"Most scholars, if they bad Guelldt professor of New TCSII- ·
cw h'll9vlldl,ill...,
for the ldUing of a Nazi ofticial.
worked through the sayings of meDt 11 'coaservative Fuller Thco·
' In 1946.11111 llllllcld ill*lished monarc~with uepublic.
Jesua u we have," be said, ~ff•l Seminary in Pasadena,
• II 19154, lbe U.S. S• ' ¥Cited to limit
deblte on a popo:.d "would ICIId !0 ~ tbat there is
.
• c:lviJrilllllllllll. 7
I ~~~~buster by Southern IlliteS.
vlnua7Iy nothing m tile ~I of
Whst tbe Gospels give us are
In i967, die Slit-Day W• eaded as ISIIICI and Syria IIJreed to obaervc a John that goes Ja:t to Jesus.'
not snapshots of Jesus but verbal
Ui!IIOCI NMIP me'" I 1 ceMe-llrc.
•
Sayings such as "I am the good · por118its of him, said Gaelich. The
What if the Bible scholars are
right and Jesus dido 't say and do
all the things be is reponed in lhe
Bible to have said and done?

• h IS
• t 0 ry
0 d ay ID

final criterion of a portrait is how
reliably it represents the person.
The details arc important only as
they serve the portrait.
We must think of the Gospel
writers, said Guelich, as portrait

painters, not pllotognq)hers.

"John 3:i6 __:-_.'God
od sso loved
the world ...'- rnav not be a direct
quotation of Jesus/' said tile New
Tesfament scholar, "but it can still
accurately portray Jesus' ministry.'' If he didn't say those words,
is it something he might have said
in the circumstances and setting
described? If it is 1101 true in the lit-

George R. Plagenz

era! sense, is it true to what we
know of Jesus?
Reading the Gospels in this
way, said Guelich, we find we can
s~ll trust them. The portrait they
gave us of Jesus captures the
f h he
essence 0 w 0 was and is.
haJ: :~dCe;:~he=
the Gospels are true, echoing what
Coleridge said, "I know the Bible
is true because it finds me.,
The Gospels are true if they
elicit a response in the heart of the
belie

M. Eloise Smith, Pomeroy, died
Monday, June 10, 1991, at Pleasant
Val)ey Hospital. She is survived by
her husband, Robert E. Smith,
Pomeroy. Funeral arrangements
will be announced by Fisher Funer·
al Home in Middleport.

ver.

Everett Bachner
Everett (Beck) Bachner, 75, of
175 North 11tird Ave., Middleport,
died Sunday, June 9, 1991, at his
residence.
Born on Nov. 28, 1915, at Rut·
land, he was the 1011 of Ray Bachn·
er and Ida Murray Bachner. For
many yean Mr. Bachner and his
wife, the late Kathryn Bachner,
operated a poeery store in Middle-

'IJ"' o«
,j

~·

~'

On Sunday at 12:0 I a.m. the
Racine Fire Department went to
Route 124 on an auto accident
where Romie Donaldson was later
transported at 1:13 a.m. by Life·
Flight 2 to Grant Hospital in
Columbus.
At 8:54 a.m. the Middleport unit
went to North Third for Everen
Bachner. At 2:40 p.m. the unit
went to Pearl Street for Mary
Pauley, taken '!! Veterans, and at
4:~ p.m. the urut transported Mary
Alace Samuels from West Mam m
Pomeroy~ Holzer M~cal Center.
The M_addleport F1re Department, at ~.55 p.m. responded to an .
auto acc1dent on South, Second
where Sharon and George Haw~ey
were talc~ to Vetef8!1S and Ma~e
Ralston, Tamotby Wnght and Tun
Stone were treated but not transported.
.
At 7:36 p.m. the Pomeroy umt
went to Ann Street for Russ Storms
who was taken to Veterans.
On Mond~y at 2:36a.m. the
Pomeroy _umt went transl!orted
Regana Race from the stauon to
Veterans.
.
_At 8:36a.m. the Tuppers Plail)s
unit went to ~oute 7 for Georg1a
Hamric who was taken to Camden
Clark Hospital.
Fmally, ~t I 0:19 a.m. the
Pomeroy unu w~nt to Hudson
Street for Catherme Roach who
was taken to Veterans.

--Area deaths-M. Eloise Smith

~e was a member of tile Mid-

r·--

dleport Prabytr.rilll Chun:h. A vetV'

GREAT PERFORMERS- Dee and Dallas, from Ole Athens
area, performed 1 variety or maaleal seleetloas, reaturln1 keyboard and harm011lea, durla1 Saturday's Heritage Weellead festivities spouored by tbe Pomeroy Merchants Aasociatlon.

By The Associated Presa
Two motorcycle riders were
among 13 people killed in Ohio
traffiC accidents over the weekend,
theStattHighway Patrol said.
The patrol connted traffic fataJi,
ties from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight
Sunday.
The dead;
SUNDAY
AKRON -James F. Moeller,
50, of Stow, when his motorcycle
crashed in Summit County.
CLEVELAND- Tamara John·
son, 26, a passenger on a motorcy·
cle struck by a car on a Cleveland
StreeL

MARION Bertha M.
Cameron, 66, in a two-vehicle coi·
lision at an inteJSCCtion on a Marl· ·
· on County road.
SATURDAY
PORT CLINTON - Bruce A.
Tuc)Jfarbe.r, 29, of Cincinnati, in a
two-car accident on Ohio 53 in
Ottawa County.
LEBANON - Letitia Malott,
42, of Lebanon, in a one-car acci·
dent oo Ohio 123 in Warren Coun·
ty.
XENIA - Sharon R. Dietz, 44,
of New Lebanon, in a one-car acci·
dent on Ohio 725 in Greene County

Three•.. __c:.:o:::n::tin::u:::ed:.:.rro::..:::m:..~P::II:!:':..:•:.__ _ _ _....:.,:..._
Miller said.
Edwards said park officials
weren't sure of the source of the
electricity, but the area was shut
down after the ace idem.
The Flight Commander ride also
was shut down today, although the
rest of the park was open.
Candy Taylor, 32, of Toledo,
fell from the Fligbt Commander
ride shortly before the &lt;park was to
close at 10 p.m., Edwards ssld. She·
was pronounced dead at Miami
VaUey Hospital in Dayton.
Kings Island Amusement Park,
about 20 miles north of Cincinnati,
opened in 1972. Sunday's fatal faD
from Flight Commander, shortly
before the park closed u 10 p.m.,
was the fust fatality direCtly related
to the.operation of ride, Edwards
said.
But in 1982, a person died after

jumping a guard rail and trying to
· ride on top of the elevator at the
11ark's E1ffel Tower replica,
Edwards said.
On Flight Commander, about20
open capsules rotate around center column. Two types of restraints,
a shoulder harness and a lap bar,
hold passengers in their seats,
Edw.-ds said.
"It's kind of lilce a c8psule or
pod that holds two passengers .
Between the passengers is a joy
stick that controls the elevation,
Side-to-side movement, even a 360degree barrel roll," Edwalds said.
"It's been running now for over
a year, and we haven't had any
problems. It's a mystery right now
exactly what happened.''
He said the ride manufacturer
was coming in from Switzerland to
check for possible defects.

a

Meigs announcements
f':~me

FeUowship to meet

The Pomeroy and Long Bouom
Chapters of Flame Fellowship will
meet Tuesday at7 p.m. at the Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom. Gerri Vincent, Akron, will be
. the guest speaker. The public is
invited.

Revival beina beld
Revival is in progress through
Wednesday at the Believers Fellowship Ministry Church, Kingsbury Road. Evangelist is Sister Joy
Sizemore and there are special
singers nightly. Rev. Margaret
Robinson invites the public.

OEStnmeet
The Evangeline Chapter No.
172, Middleport, will have its
The Rutland Freewill Baptist annual inspection on Thursday at
Church will have Vacation Bible 7:30 p.m. Deputr. Grand Matron
School June 17-21 from 6-8 p.m. · Betty Schenkel w1D be the inspectnightly. The public is invited.
ing officer. Officers wear chapter
dreases. Members bring sandwich·
Hymn sing slated
es, relish plate or fruit salad .
VBS scheduled

ZANESVll.LE - Amy McCui·
ley, 21, of NAShport, in a one·vehi·
cle accident on a Muskingum
County road.
.
BATAVIA - Elizabeth A.
Scon, 19, of Bethel, in a one-vehicle accident on a Clennont County
road.
MARION- Marilee J. Augenstein, 55, of Waldo, in a two-vehicle accident in Marion County.
SPRINGFIELD- Francis S.
Kiger, 31, no address available, in
a one-vehicle accident in Clark
County.
· FRIDAY
AKRON - Kevin Groom, 24,
of Tallmadge; in a two-car accident
in Summit County.
CLEVELAND - Darryl Marshall, 25, of Euclid, in a two-vehicle accident on a city street
KETTERING - Carlene J.
Dodge, 51, no address available, in
a two-vehicle accident on a city
street.

Dinner planned
There will be a dinner at the
Meigs County Senior Center on
11wrsday with serving from 5-6:30
p.m . The cost for the meal is $3
with a menu of baked chicken
breast, homemade noodles, mashed
Dance scheduled
potatoes, cole slaw, biscuit and
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens beverage. Pie will be available for
Dance Club will hsve a donee Fri· 15 cent.. Following dinner, music
day from 8-11 p.m. at the center will be played by Junior and Rita
with music by the Happy Hollow White, AI Windon and Ray Ward.
Boys of Athens. Brio$ snacks for A free will offering will be taken
the snack table. Public mvited.
musicians. The public is .
attend.

Hospital news

Stocks

1

c-

.j_J

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SVIISCRIPTION RATI!II
By CArrier or Motor Route

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One Week ...... ,...........................11 .60

Onf' Month ............ ... .................. S6.95
OnP Year ........... .... ............ ...... $83.20

Weather

SINGLE COPY
PRICE

South Central Ohio ·
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low 6().
65. Chance of rain 20 percent.
· TueSday, variable cloudiness with a
chance of showers and thunder·
Storms. Hi~h in the mid-80s.
Chance of ram 50 percent.
Extellded forecast:
Wednesday through Friday:
A chance of showers or thunderSI?£IDS early- on Wednesday, then
fau through the period. Highs in
the 70s Wednesday and Thursday
and warming into the 80s on Friday. Lows mostly in the 50s.

•

Da lly .. ...... .......... ................. 25 Cen ts
Subscribers not desiring t o pay th()Car.
rler may rE'mlt In adv ance dlrt&gt;cf to
ThP Dally Sentin~ on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis . Credit will be glvt"n carrf~r Mch

wef&gt;k .

No subscrlptfom:l by mall permitte-d In
areas where bomf' carrl("f' service- Is

avatlablf' .

Mall Subocrlptlon•
lnlkle Melp County

13 w..ks ........... ,. .................. ... $21.84

26 Weeks ........................ .... ...... 143.16

52 Weeks ............................... ... 184.76
Out•We Mel.- Co•nly

13 Weeks ........ ................. ......... 123 40
26 Woeks ............................: ..... $45:50
52 w..ks ..... .... .................... ..... 188.40

These Gifts WillL....IL...I

DadBladl

FATHER'S .DAY SUNDAY, JUNE 16

TIMEX
WATCHES

Thcre ...will be a hymn sing at the
Mt. Olive Community Church in
Long Bouom on Saturday at 7 p.m.
with Russell Spencer and Southern
Hill Gospel Singers. The public is
invited.

eran of World War II, he was a
member o( Feeney-Bennett Post
128, American Legion. For many
years he was a volunteer with the
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Am Ele Power ..:... ............ 28 1/2
MiddleportF~ De!lanmenl
Discharges, June 7 - Oriole
Ashland Oil ..................... .31 1/2
Survivors include two daughters Adlrins, Mrs. Michael Brannon and
AT&amp;T............................... .36 3/8
and sons·in-law, Karen and Donald daughter, Stephen Gravely,Scott
Bob Evans ... ..................... 17 3/4
Brown, ColtDilbus; and Connie and Jones, Jacla Kirby, Mrs. William
Charming Shop................. 21 7/8
Ronald Thompson, New Haven, Kirker and daughter, Robin
City Holding ..................... l4 1/2
W. Va., five grandchildren, Chris, Pasquale, Howard Robinson,
Federal M~l.................. .l8 718
Stacey and Theresa Brown, Colum· Symra Simpldns, Janette Sisler and
Goodyear &amp;R ................ .32 718
bus, and Sam and Elizabeth Rebekah Smith.
Key Centurion ..................! 3
Thompson, New Haven, and a
Births, June 7 • Mr. and Mrs. II ~:J·End .......................19 3/4
brother, Jack.Bachner, Middleport. · Max Wilson, a ~··
Inc.......................28 1/2
...r, .._
rumeroy. Ill
Besides hIS parents and his wife, . Discharges, une 8 - John
Multimedia Inc. ................29 1/2
Mr. Bachner was preceded in desth Baker, June Dillon, Enda Jefferson,
Rax Restaurant ..................21/32
by two brothers, Elbert and Susan Scurlock and Clarence
Robbins&amp;Myers ...............27 1/4
Eugene.
Stevens.
Shoncy's Inc..................... l6 718
Funeral services will be held u
Births, 1une 8 - Mr. and Mrs.
Star Bank ......................... .21 1/2
11 a.m. Wednesda{ at the Ewing Rof:" Fry, a son, Oak Hill.
Wendy Int'l. ....................... IO
Worthington
Ind...............25 1/2
=:=;..~=!tt;:'~
iseharges, June 9- Mabel
Riverview Ccnl~•-. Middlepon. Cline, Sharoa Henry, Hany Shock·
Stock reportJ tmiiN 10:30 11.111.
. be ~vi'.
ley and Mrs. Mu Wilaon.
There will
no Sltalion. lit lieu
Births, June 9 - Mr. and Mrs.
IJIOUI pro'ldld by Blu111, Bllll
of flowers, donations may be made Joseph Walter, a daughter, GalIIIII Lotwl of Glllllpolil.
to the American
Society.
lipolll Fmy, W.VL

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a

RECEIVES INSTRUCTION • Bradd Schultz, right, mem·
ber or the 9lst Oblo Volunteer Inlaatry Group Company B,
receives some last minute Instructions from Sgt. Jack Nucbols
before tbe group performed Saturday afternoon on Court Street In
Pomeroy lor Heritage Weekead.
.

13 die on Ohio roads · over weekend

No one hurt in 3 wrecks

may buy· precious Iitle time

and
The reforms arc promJlle!l in large part by growing public concern
. •·~ average ~eri~~· .. my
about the safety of the nauon's blood supply after revelations that at least ~ishop IS fond of 5!1~· 1s ~senone Red Cross center mistalc:enly released contaminated blood to hospi- umental, su~ersuuous atheiSt.''
tals.
Probably ~t s w_hy so many peoRather t1Ja1:t administer a uniforJ!I test, "-C~ of the regional blood banks pie are tryulg _fw;tausly ~ .da~s
performs a different test, w1th Widely varymg quality. After testing is to IW~ l;he1r lives. If this life IS
completed, each of the I0 blood banks enters data into separate computer 811 there IS, II stands to reason thst a
systems.
.
.
.
·
~ is well~ to stretch it
The end result IS 10 different blood tests on 10 different computer sys- 10 liS uttermost posstble len~ So
terns.
'
the road:' arc c:loe:: with JOBBers
The Red Cross intends to correct these flaws by spending $1:W million tougherung the1r
muscles, and
during the OCllt several years to reorganize and modernize its regional the supennark~ arc awash with
: blood banks and local centers.
b'!yers ~ly 10 search of No Fat
• These measures will not ensure that absolutely no tainted blood ever this and Lite that and Cholesterol·
: makes it into tile nation's blood supply. But the Red Cross reforms will go free the other, and woe betide the
• a long wsy toward ensuring that bad blood does not slip into the system unfortunate who dares to smoke a
: because of,mismanagement or inefficiency at a regional blood center.
·cagarette. . .
!
·
lit ~ spmt of such an age, the
•
Springfield Newt-SUD, May 29
followmg sentence, ~en fro'!! a
• Ever since 1981, when then-PreSident Reagan decided to decimate the .recent ne~spaper: ~cle, at f1rst
: Food and Drug Administration through neglect, manufacturers have been ~s to bring exCding· ~ws:.
. b . Just a .half-how- of JOggmg or
• free to seD snake oil- and even label it "no cholesterol"
; Fortunately, the Bush administration is stirring on the task of restoring
risk walking ~ timel! a week
• the FDA to its role as the consumers' proteCtor.
can s~h your risk of dymg from
: The FDA has recently ordered makers of SDBiheai sauce, orange juice heart dasease, cancer and su,otes by
: concentrate and coolring oil to stop using misleading labels. Now the asshom~. as SO percent, studies have
• qency is moving on 10 clee up the labels on snackfoods, peanut butter,
fi
: salad dressing, margarine, and mayonnaise.
. ow u urst glance ~ ~
: For years, manufacturers have been 8llowed to ¥el away with making !i!ce a reiOIIItable bargain. S.IDCC at
• absurd claims. Several companies label mayonnatse "no cholesterol," . as well known that heart disease,
• leading consumers to think the product is safe for those concemed about cancer and strokes cause well over
• heart disease

•
• has less effect on blood cbolesterol than does the amount of fat in the diet.
: Presideat Bush and Congress must back efforts 10 give the FDA power
: to seize products, impose penalties and issue subpoenas. FDA scientists
:: paign. As Geplwdt observed, it does lend itaelf to tmadcast commercials
• m Which Democrats could say they voted for a bill to 11m quotas over an
• admlnisaatioo venion with 110 such provision.
•
ACCOnlin.JI to Bush, the Jl!lri10IIed ban actually endorses quotas. "It
• defines the Q word so narrowly at would al.low employers to esllblish per=. sonnel systems btl!ed on numbers, not on merit," he said.

. By Jack Anderson

30°/o
OFF

MEN'S

COLOGNE

10°/o
OFF

.BUDWEISER
STEINS

25°/o
OFF

SUN
GLASSES

40°/o
Prescription Shop
992-6669
253 North S.Cend
Mltltlltport, Ohio

OFF

•

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•

.Courier defeats Ag~ssi to capture
French Open men's title Sunday
of Becker's semifmlj! lOlls to Agas- around in my face," Agi!Ssi said.
si. But Courier, who .started the '.'Today was a question of who was
Associlted Press Writer
ranked 25th but was ranked going to adapt to the circumstances
year
PARIS (AP) - · If it was Jim
nimh
in the world when the tourna- beuer. You can't control the wind;
Courier's happiest moment, it Was
ment
began two weeks ago, will you can't control where the bail
clearly one of the toughest for
jump
to No. 4, dropping Agassi bounces."
Andre Agassi.
back
a
notch to fifth.
Courier, who now has won all
In his gaudy purple-trimmed
Their
match was lhe first all- four of his career finals, pocketed
outfit, he'd outplayed everybody,
including Boris Becker. After loss- American final at Roland Garros $451,660- more than he made all
es in two previous Grand Slam since 1954: It ended on an ace by of last yeaf Agassi won $225,830.
For Agassi, it was lhe second
ftnals, here was an ideal chance f1r Courier, who flopped backward
onto
the
soft
clay
in
triumph.
year he had lost a French
su.ight
Ap.ssi to break through against a
.In
the
fifth
set,
gusty
winds
Open
final
to an undenlog~ He lost
lower-ranked player be used to
changed the course of many shots in four sets last year to' Andres
practice with at training camp.
But that script went awry. , and made it difficult for the players Gomez, then lost to Pete Sampras
in the U.S. Open fin!ll in SeptemCourier IOSI IWO of the fllSt three to see.
"A
lot
ber.
sets in Sunday's French Open final,
then stormed back - aided at
timc;s by gusts of wind that troubled Agassi- to win 3-6, 6-4, 2,6,
6-1, 6-4 in his fllSt appearance in a
Grand Slam final.
Courier. after flopping on his
back and later lhrowing his lucky
baseball cap into lhe crowd, said,
"There have been lots of happy
moments in my life.... but at lhe
moment, this is the happiest''
But Agassi couldn't conceal his
dismay 11 blowin• atJOther chanCe
for a Grand Slam btle.
"Who knows how many shots
you have? I've been fortUnate to
have lhree finals, but it's disapJl9inting," said Agassi. "The pes- ·
simistic side of me will always
hive questions."
: Courier, 20, had never reached
lhe quanerfinals of a Grand Slam
tournament before, but he was
m!Jre poised than J\gassi after two
seCond-set rain delays.
· "The rain delays hun us a little
bit, but that's life. That's the way it
gcies," said Nick Bolteuieri, who
ci)BChes Agassi and used to train
Courier.
Though Bollettieri shared Agassi's disappointment, he was in
some ways lhe biggest winner of
the roumament
·Not only Courier and Agassi,
but also women's champion Monica Seles are former pupils at Bollettiai.s tennis academy in Florida.
Seles, lhe top seed and defending clulnpion, defeated nflh-sceded Aranxta Sanchez Vicario of
Spain 6-4, 6-4 in a hard-fought
final on Saturday.
Alllhree of Bollettieri's prized
products empbalize powerful baselirio play. B• Courier and Seles both now split from their former
trainer - say they're contemplalCLAIMS MEN'S TITLE - JIID Courier emerged from the first
ing •justments 10 make their game
111-Amerlran
~~~en's thampionshlp round In the Frach Open since
on fast couru, such as the
1954
Sunday
with
tbe title 1fter belling Andre Agassi 3-6, 6-4, l-6,
JF1SS of Wimbledon.
6-l, 6-4. (AP)
.
Selea aald sbe was detennined
10 develop a servc-llld-volley game
even if it meant losing maiChes in
the process.
Seles' victory put ller half way
~ a Grand Slam sweep- she
won lhe Australian ODin in JanBy ROBERT MILLWARD
0 in the WLAF's inaugurii World
IIII'Y· She played down 1w clwlces
AP Sports Writer
Bowl ~fore 61,108 mostly British
of winning both Wim-lodon 8lld
WEMBLE'Y,
England
(AP)
fans
at lhe home ofEngllsb soccer.
the
Open, bul olheta were less
Dan
Crossman
intercepted
three
"I
bave no idea how to get this
doubCful,
Scott
Erney
passes,
returning
one
car
back
home," Crossman said.
"Yea, Monica Cllll make the for a touchdown.
"I
ju11
want
10 know if I have to
Orllld Slim," aaid Coarilr'l COICb
He
also
intercepted
a
car.
declare
it
Ill
CUSIOIIis."
Joaa HiiDII'U. "Slle'll bave to
Bein1 named most valuable
Crouman' s interception return
clllqi Jxr pme a lot ma..-.11111 player
in
lhe
first
championship
for
a touchdown came Ill 2 minutes,
aaay11e thlll won't belp ller, but 011
1ame
of
the
World
League
of
42
seconds
of lhe second quarter.
the adler band abe's a tranendoul American Football meant safety
"I don't think Scott Erney saw
II "
Croasman collected a new car as me," Croaman said, "He lhrew it
i!Miioed ller No. I iiDkinl
wilb bcr ¥lcloiylilll Stdln Edberg bit!~· He also collec:led a win- out Oat, I - In a forward position
ayec1 1J10P the 111e11'1 lilt beca• • 1 rillll as the London Monarchs and mlde lhe catcb and tan in for a
sbutaut dJe Barcelona Druons 21- touchdown."
ByDAVIDC~Y

Plalella c:balleqed hiJ playen during the week-

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of the way through the swon.
. "We need 10 ~ the bleedin as quicld as
Sible 111!1 get Ibis lhing lllmed in
right~
· said Tom BlllWlling (8-4), who allowed two runs in
six innings. "We need a little more inten•;n,. We've
been takiilg losses in stride.
·-·
"We need 10 get a little mad and have a little
moredrive."
·
Piaiella scolded hiJ team following a 4-1 defeat
Salurday 10 the Philliea.
''I keep Ieiding in the ~ from the P,layen that
~·u ~ lhis !bing ,goi~, • Piniella wd Slllllrday
rught (They SlY). Don t worry about it It's right
around lhe corner.' It's a bunch of (expletive). It's
easy '!'talk. ... They're trying. But maybe it's time to
try a little harder."
The Reds broke a pattern of falling beiJind early
and wasting opportunities by rallying Sunday agilinSt
Terry Mulholland (6-S), who lost a two-run lead.
Chris Sabo singled home a run in lhe first inning,
doubled and lhen tripled 10 help the Reds go ahead 32 in the fiflh. GleM Bragp drove in lhe tying and
go-ahead runs wilh sacrifice flies.

t:

.'

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._.

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

=est

ger.

"It Jell
"
Piniella
said.us going if we can build from th~~.
They"ve lllm down everydling they've buih Ibis
aeuon with a paaem of winninJ one, then IQ!Iing
one. The victllry Sunday left lhcm Ill 27·27 oae-ihird

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Hershiser (1-1) allowed two runs, six hits, walked
one and stnlek out six in seven iMings for his IOOih
career victorY. Jay Howell got lhe last three outs. ,
"It was his IOOth victory and that should tell it
all," 11181188etTontmy Lasordasaid.
Hershiser lost his first start on May 29 to Houston
8-2 and piiChed six and one-third sccireless innings in
a game lhe Dodgers eveniWIIly lost 3-2 to SL Louis
last Tuesday.
•
Hershiscr, 5-for-7 in lhree games, had key singles
in lhe faflh inning when lhe Dodgers scoled a pair 10
tie lhe score and in the seventh when they broke the
tie with lhree runs.
Danny Jackson (0-2) took the loss i.n his first
appearance after coming off lhe disabled list Jack- ,
son, on the DL since April 20 with a groin injury,
pv;e up II hits and five runs in six and twn,third
mmngs.
The Cubs took the lead in the second when Andre
Dawson hit his IOth home run after George Bell dou·
bled.
(See NL on Page 6)

Scorch&lt; )ard
While, T--.15;$ ...... willllol

· In tbe majors.••

TRlPLBS-Noll&amp;or, Mllwaubo, 5;

Pdaola. Califamia, 5; ....... au..,.. 4;

u ... liod-1

AMERICAN LEAGlJE
Eut.DIYIIIan

PLAYS KEEP-AWAY - Chicago point
guard Micb•l Jordan (right) plays keep-1way
from L.A. Laker gu~rd Byron ScOtt in the first
hatr of Sunday's NBA cbampi0115hiJ! series contest in the Forum in Inglewood, Caltf. Jordan, in

WLPd.
Gl
T..,...
........ 31 26 .$44
B......... 11 26 .SI9 1'1/2
......... rl 11 .491
3
Now Yodt
....... 25 r1 All 3112
Mil- ...... Zl 31 A26 6 112
Clowdsad
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spite of playing with it jammed toe, scored 1
game-high 28 pol•ts to lead tile Bulls to a 97-81
victory and 1 3-1 advantlge in the best-of-~JeVen
series. (AP)

West Dlrislon

Andrade wins Buick Open Sunday
By BOB GREEN
ing up Ibis week in Chaslc;l, Minn.,
AP Golf Writer
Andrade said he's looking for a
HARRISON, N.Y. (AP) chance to improve on the advice he
Billy Andrade paid attention to received from the plder brother of
some advice from a veteran touring his college roommate.
pro.
"Maybe the easic;st time to win
Early last week, Andrade said: your third," Andrade said, his eyes
"Jay Haas told me tbe best time, wide and bright with wonder, the
the easiest time to win your second hint of a smile playing around his
tournament is right after you've lips, "would be right after you've
won your first He said you're still won your second.''
on a roll and you're up high and
Brad Bryant, the runner-up to
you can keep it going.''
Andrade on the Westchester CounSo Andrade did just thaL
try Club course, said that's not as
The 27-year-old followed up a far-fetched as it may sound. ·
career-first PGA Tour victory in
"Obviously, Billy isn't going to
the Kemper Open witll a two- be the favorite goinginto the
stroke triumph Sunday in the Buick Open," Bryant said. "But right
Classic.
now he's oil a roll. He's playing
"I felt in control. I was feeding bettet than anybody else in the
on last week," Andrade said after world, but he won't be the favorite.
outlasting such international stars Kind of funny, isn't it?".
as Hale Irwin, Seve Ballesteros and
Andrade, now in his fourth sea·
Greg Norman over the final nine son on the pro tour, is in no rush to
holes. ·
get started on the run toward a third
Now, wiih !he U.S . Open com· consecutive title.

t

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"I'm ver)o, very tired," Andrade
said. "Right now llhink a little rest
might be more important lhan prac-

!

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lice."

The Monday after he won his
rtrst tournament in Potomac, Md.,
Andrade went through 36 holes of
U.S. Open qualifying. He played in
pro-ams on each of the next two
days, followed by four days of
competition in the northern suburbs
of New York.
Irwin, the defending !Iuick
champion as well as the defending
title-holder in this week's Open,
and Ballesteros, winner of three of
four international events coming
into this one, each played lhe back
in 2-over-par 37.
So did Norman, who is attempt·
ing a comeback: from what he
called a· 'case o(bumout"
Andrade, meanwhile, played
that side in 34, shot 68 over the
rtnal round and fmisbed with a 273
toral, II under par.
Bryant, 36, who has not won in
a 14-season career and missed the
cut in 10 of 13 previous starts Ibis
year, came on to salvage second
with a round of par 71 and a 275

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Ca1i1oaU ........ 32 23 .SI1 I 1/2
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ICooaaO Clay ...... )I :10 .......
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Saturday'siiDals
B-1. Oaklaaoll

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(All tbMI EDT)
CJenlaatl Wa1 4-4) 11 Mlan..ou,

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SJ .OO I'MIIII JtiiiiT MSMf

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1: 00 ,1: ]$
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MUWN MUSSEl

INSUUNCE

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TOUI ..DIPDDINT
AGIIIS SIIV.G
MGS COUIITY
s•a 11161

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St. Laoio 3. Sao fnocloco 2. 10 inninaJ
Now Yod&lt; 4 , - 3, II iminp

.The Tax Books are now open for the
June or Second Half Collection of the
1990 Real Estate Taxes. Also for delinquent tax. Closing date will be June
20, 1991.
HOWAlD E. FU.
MEIGS COUNTY TIEASU-

71;

Bene~,

San Dl.eao. 64; G. bhddux,

auc. •63; Rijo, Clncinnsti, 63.

cAll times EDT)

1-1) t\ SL Lauil

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Scioto Downs results
COLUMNBUS, Ohio (AI') - Scioto
Down• R..ulll. for S.turda1, June I .

W.._, 10 and O.U. Tnck, Put.
P'ont ~12,400 Cooo1ition Pl&lt;:e.MJoC
battan Boaclo (Miller) 3.20, 3.00, 1.60:
Opou Dai (llllanoa) • .:10, UO; Sociay
a .. u (Moau) 5.20; Timo-1:56. AIIO
Raced-Abdli.l lllnml«, Qeltinl.tion F~.nl,
R 81&amp; P1d1y, Expeditor. Oonlle Noblo,
Swift Loaund Belo¥041 hnaae. Tritoc:ta
(2-4-3) $flt.20. ....,.... Q-41 $15.00.
Second Ruo·$4,000 Over Tho Hill
Oa.. PtooJ Jlloor (Stocl&lt;) 4.00, 1.40,

2.&lt;10i

-Mono-

(Gri.....) 3.00,

NBA Finals

1laiJd Raao-$3,200 C'mditim Pat&amp; J\l.ll
A Lipt
4.10, 3.20, 1.60; Ship·
wrechd
) 6.60, 5."4), Ridley""'

Le«-.

Yodo,l2.

.

(Best-ot-seveo)
CblcJI&amp;O vs. L.A. Lekers

(All Times EDT)

Sundar, Jun. 2
I.A. LaltoD 93, Olicaao 91 .

Otielp l07, LA. Lakcn S6
J'rldaf, June 7
.
au...., t04,I.A.Laton96
SuadiJ, June 9
97, I.A. Laltcn 82, CIW:aao

au..,.

lcldl IJmM 3-1
w.-....7,J~~~~tU

lAm at CJiaao, 7 p.m., if ....

•-•an

(Ohio blab school state
tournament)

At cor• ...,..
DI-D

Cal. W - 1 5 , S - O

lic!Lhr

PI-IV
ltocWerd .Padi:Wa)' 3, Sida1J I..cmtan 0
AI C.,_

DMolool

Fait&amp;lld 4, Y""''........... 0

' :35 pa.

I

CLEVELAND BROWNS- Si&amp;aed

K.D. Dunn, Uatn ond. Acqairelll-Ro)'
Oroea. wido naiv., fram the Phocni:l
CardiulJ {Milt undilc:J.- dnft choice.

1.10; R Ruotr Speciol (loutz"'') • .00;
Timo-1:56. Alto Rou:od.C U Ala', Shan·

Tournament scores

~liltD4-.1~1pl'
... l'"'t:3~Aohby~O.Q) II Cincionod

FootbaU
Nallooal FaoOball Loquo

SA~-llibblo, Cincinnati, 15; Dave
Smilh, Cticaao. t•; Leo Slllilll, SL l.ouio,
13;
Sao o;.p, 13; Fnnco, New

-

I' I

..:·

PITCHINO (5 doclolont)~no,
5-0, 1.000. 2-ll: ~...
SL LouU, 7·1, .175, 2.67; Olavina, Atllnll, 10-2. .833, 2.3S; RM.artinez, Loa:
Anplos, 9·2, .Ill, 2.39; Smiler, Pitts·
boQI,I·2. .1011, 3.34.
STIUKBOUI'S--C- New Yodt, 12;
. Oooolla, New Yodt, 73; 01svioe. Alllnta.

I.A.

Today's1amn

- lm Pro · a

Oaielao. 11; W.

S:Z.r Juae16

BAT11NO-C, lipU., B11timor..

•'

12. 0. BtU.

Atllntal, - - 6

CinciMotl 6, Plliladtiphia 3
Sao FraiiCioco 3. St. Liluio 2
Loa AoFl&lt;- 6, Cl!laa• 3
-I.NewYodoO

,:152; I, - . ........:143; Mali!«,

I•'

Colomaa, Now
Ycnt, 5: Caad1oh, Houlton, 4; Kmk,
Pb:ii'C 1;1 b, 4; L. Ganzllel, Haultaa, 4;
T. F:mrder, San~ 4.
HOIIII! RUNS-MCOriff, S.o !Ji"f.o•

LA. Llkal1t OU.::.,o, 9 p.m., if rMIC-

Major league leaden
"-rrcaa Ltape

I

Suo-.~

rrtd&amp;J, June 14

~~'!!~':.=~:::

'

TRJ~S-T. OwyM, Son Dieao, I;

F-.

Sunday'• 1IOOHII
Sao Diooo 5. PlttoburP 3

Atlaou • - YGit. 7i40rsm.

••

, 63; T. femon.
tla.Sm~63.
,
DotiB~ SL ...... 17; Bani!·
11, Pilu'"•rah, 16: Ju.d~ AllanU., U;
NdloJnalda, New Yodt, 1•; T. 0W)M,
'SIDDi
....

Ooicaao a I.A. Laltm. 9 p.m.

Tundaf•*~es
ll
2!20p.m.

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS

64; NoGeo, Sao

W._..J,June!

au.Oao•. Loa Ant..., 3

c:;,.;cc • t ,

ROUGH-AND-TUMBLE EXPERIENCE -The Reds' Todd
BenziiJitr (top) fillda IDaldnillt to first base a rouab-and-tuiDble
experience after beiDa tanaled up with Pblladelphla nnt bllseman
Ricky Jordan after an ofr·tlrld throw by pitcher Terry MulboiIand lb the seco•d Inning of Sunday's Natlonll League game In
, Clndnnatl's Riverfront StadluiD, whltb the. Reds ·won 6·3. Benzinger lldvaneed to secoad on the play. (AP)

f 'fb'• 31.
I
HITI-T.~w
n, l1a Dioao. U:
Sanuoi,Loo
70;loutioo,Atltnla,

Phil~.

Satuntay•a ftnlll

to.~·"

.330;

STOLEN BASI!S-Colcm1n, New
Yodl:, 32; Orill~~tm, Montrell, 27;
OeS!Uoldo, Mon1na1. 26; Nixm, A 26; 0. -·St. LoWa, 17.

S.mfm .

LEGAL

N:cDo ...u. Qlcaao. 74: 1. Johnson,
Sttulo,69.
SAVES-Bci.onlcy, Oakland, 11:
Apilua, Minnoaota, lS; Jlc•i11on,
lS; Harvey, Cal.U'ornia, tot; D.
Wan!, ........ 12; Joff Ruo..U. Texu,
12.
•

Cadi. SlllFnnci-. II.

41/2
S a o - ...... 22 ,. .393 10 1/2
-...
......... :Ill 35 .364
11

New YOlk (Ooooloa
J-4-3),U5p,m.

DOWNING ClaDS

.....

WLPd.
IMAnploa ...... :11 Zl .SI2
Atlanta
........ .. 29 Zl .551
Sao DioJo .... ... :10 rl .526
CinciMotJ ........ r1 r1 .500

..

BCIItOn, a&amp;;

13; Jobnaon, Now Yolk, ll; 0 NoW,

WLPd.GI
PitlliMqb ......... 34 I 9 .642
Now Yoa
....... 29 :M .S.7
5
St.l.ouio ........., 21 211 .SJ9 6 1/2
........ 11 rl .509
7
....... 25 30 .•55
10

•'
•I

s~.

F....,, Calil'omil. 13; Rran, r ..... 76;

a=--,;

West Dlvlaloa

I

WINS BUICK OPEN -Billy
Andrade nashes a smile as be
bolda tbe wlDDer's tropby rouowlna his llictory in tbe Buick Open
Suuday at Westchester Country
Club in Harrison, N.Y. Andrade,
who nnlshed at 11-under-par
173, allo won $180,000. (AP)

cs.......

r...... ata...t.nd. 7:35p.m.
New Yodt • M
tt1, 1:03 p.m.
£biooJo at T....,l:35 p,m.
.. 0Uiuol.10:05pm.
Mil...._atCelifaraii,IO:l5 p.m.
B0110n ll S•tde., 10:35 p.m.

.... ..... 23 32

•
:

3.33; -an,NewYad!,ol-1,.100, 1.76.

ptoj),

. NATIONALLEAGUE
Eut Dlvlllon

.:

i)o.

.... 5-l • .133, 1 . 9 1 ; - - 11, 9·2. .Ill, 1.53; !tor. T.,..to, 9·1,
.Ill, 1.63; 0-e. T..u, ol-1, .100,

l\81-.r-Uc::., Atluatl, 47; W. Cluk,
S.Pnn' ~~.4lT.o.r,..s.a~
40; McGriff. a.. Dloao. 31; ltrtik.

1--.o ~..., ....l

,
:

!•
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA

I 7.-3

Tuesday'• pme1
x..a.u CiiJ. P:h! ' 7:35p.m.

1

Cali·

J--.-n.

_,Iiiii_!

I

!

-}-&amp;loy.
"="='"

f....U, 10.2, .133, 3.12;

S• DiHo, 4:1;
Coleman, Now York, 31: DeSfti.elda,
Manlleal, 31; 8\dler, 1M AnplOI, 31;

&gt;4-1), 10. p.m.
80110n (OardlDer 1-1) " SNide
(RI
:1-5), 10:05 p.m.
MUwaU• (Boclo ""6) at Califomil
(M&lt;Culrm 6-5). !0:35pm.

1

c.,...-

x m = · ·es2 .

~---.31$.
llUNS-T. fnm••,

(Otttbdool-3),1:05 .....
Clllcoao (OIICia 1).1) at Toua (IIJown
._,),I::B~,

'
:

c--

B.4TTJNO-T.41J:!);

NowYlllk6,T-4
),li. tt• '· a..IIDCI2
CIOoop I , - City 1

OiaoU

STOLEN BAS!!' p .. ni• c.u,..,.,
20; R. Aloaur, T..-., II· ' a . ...,, Oakluol, II; - · ~. II;
12;
12; ll

...... .335; NoOoo.

Sunday'siCOrtl
Calif

nm..

t .., lalt.imo-. 12; O..r, ~i&amp;, 12;
-.Dolloll.l2; Wiallalol,c-.
12.

NatloDal Leque •
s~J~·~
.3'73; ~Loa
.337;
-

Datrori •• Califomll3

I

Nolan Henke, who had a share
of the lead until he double-bogeyed
the 151h hole, tied Irwin for third at
276. Henke shot 70 and Irwin had a
73.
Ballesteros, wilh a 71, was tied
at 277 with Wayne Levi and Larry
Rinker. Levi closed up with a 67
and Rinker had a 71.
Nonnan also had a 71 and finished at 279.

4

~

HOME RlJNs--D. Hoad,_, Oali·
load, 15; c.
Mjn_... 12; c. Ripo

a-t

'

2. a....~ 1
Nolr Ylllk tO. T-7
atl

Mi

lllictao 14,~Cfly7

!•

total,

u.s.

COI••c•.
Si..

...

• llalry l..lrkiD hit a solo bmner off MulhoUand in
"It's just an .aggnvating type of pain. It's not
lhe aixlh. He and Luis Quinones had RBI singles in . going to gel worse, but it's going 10 take a while to
lhe lewmh olf Joe a-.
get better. I've just got to block it OUt''
A lhrowint enor by cBICber Glenn Sult&lt;Y let in
Elsewhere in lhe National League, it was Los
Phi""e'polt'• finll run in the eighth, but Rob Dibble
Angelc;s 6, Chicago 3: San Diego 5, Piusburgh 3:
llniCt OUltwo blaela in lhe ninlh as he recmlcd his
Atlanta 8, Montreal 6: San Franc:isco 3, SL Lo!!is 2;
Natioall Leegne-Jeedlna 15th save in 1schances.
and Houston 1, New York 0.
The Reds have been content to point out that
Dodaen 6, C•ba 3 - Missing more than a year
th:J.;= 4 1/2 gamea behind Los Angeles in lhe
did nolhin' 10 bun Orel Hershiser's batting eye. In
1
N
despite !heir mediocre play.
fact, he's hittinll.714.
Piniella's
~pp~re~~tly caught their IIICIIIIOII.
Hershiser pitched seven strong innings and had
"The bo11om ' is 10 win," Larkin said. "You
two key hits as Los Angeles beat Chicago 6-3 at
can talk all you want We've got lhe guys to win, but Wrigley Field on Sunday for his fllSt victory in three
we're not prcxlucins. Lou said it best: we've got all
starts smce retuminf to the rotation.
·
lhc talent in the world, but we're not producing.
It was Hershiser s first win since AJ!Iil19, 1990.
We've got 10 II)' a little harder."
Then he underwent surgery 10 reconstruct his right
"Hour iniDIISily's !here, teams are ~oing to bave a shoulder in a revolutionary procedure.
IOIJ&amp;h time belling us," B~ said. ' Today we had
There were doubts Hershiser would ever return,
good intensity t'roin the first IMing on."
· .
and certainly not to the form that made him a Cy
They also got a break. Mulholland, the top wmner Young Award winnu in 1988.
on lhe Phillies' staff, was limited Sunday by a sore.
"I've waited 13 months for Ibis day," Hershiser
left knee.
said.
Mant&amp;er Jim Fregosi revealed after the game that
the left-bander has been bolhered by lhe knee in his
recent starts. Mulholland has lost three of his last
four decisioas.
•. .
"He hasn't pushed off real well," Fregosi said.
"It's been bothering him for a couple weeks.''
.
Mulhollud had the knee exlilllined last week tn
Atlanta. Doctors concluded that he has a slightly
sprained ligament.
.
"It's difficult for me to drive off that leg," Mulholland said. "It's lhe type of thing that you've got
to put out of mind and realize you're not going 10 do
any more danger to lhe knee. You've got to g~t
IIC(;UStomed 10 the pain. The doctor tn Atlanta SBld
lhere's no chance of me damaging it further.

end 10 eud two -lhs of mediocrity. They Jt;SpODd-

saoaaer

·London hands Barcelona 21-0
loss in inaugural World Bowl .

IJJOEKAY
AP Sporll Wrller

·

Bulls down Lakers 97-82 to
take 3-llead in NBA Finals

I

-....

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tbe~r.!:'flJ.":b -ocd.Lou Pinic1Ja complained.

off games. The Liters' 82 p(&gt;ints
were lheir fewest in a Finals game
since the 24·second clock was
adopted in 1954-55.
·
Chicago used a 13-4 run to go
ahead 22-13. But the Lalters led
28-27 after one quaner and 30-29
on Johnson's two free throws with
10:07 left in the second. Jordan's
layup on an alley-oop pass from
Craig Hodges put lhe Bulls ahead
to stay, 31-30.
The Lakers missed their first
nine shots of the seeond quarter,
but they scored four strai~h~rints
to cut Chicago's lead 10 5
. Jordan's 20-footer at the buzzer gave
the Bulls their eight-point halftime
lead.
Chicago made its first five shots ·
of the third quaner and went ahead ·
62-48. Jordan took none of lhem
but assisted on three. He finished
with 13 assists to Johnson's I I.
Los Angeles showed some life
by scoring the first seven points of
lhe fourth quarter, five by Johnson
and two by Divac, and extended
lhe spun to 13-4. That cut the lead
to 78-71 wiih 7:03 left.
The momentum shifted immediately as Chicago got two baskets in
18 seconds. Paxson connected from
the left comer. Teny Teagle'then .
missed his shot for the Lakers and
Jordan fll'ed a three-quarters coun
pass to Pippen, ahead of lhe field,
for a dunk tliat made the score 8271 with 6:16 remaining.
The lead never dipped below
nine after lhat.

,.

"-~.

Piniella's goading drives Reds to 6·2 victory over Phillies

MondaY, June 10,1991
Page 4

By HOWARD ULMAN
James Wonhy re-injUred his left
AP Sports Writer
ankle. Byron Scou left the game
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) -' after bruising his tight shoulder in
The Chicago Bulls ~ .beaten the the fourth quarter. Sam Perkins
rap lhat lhey are a one-man team made one of 15 shots.
led b a Superstar wilh the initials
Vladc Divac was the only effecMJ. ~ow lhe Los Angeles !.akers live starter besides Johnson. Wormust face it
thy wasn't sure if he could play
The Bulls spread the weallh on Wednesday night, a possibility that
offense, smothen:d the Laken with would force Dunleavy to tum to his
stingy team defense and moved a weak bench.
win away from the first NBA title
The Bulls bave stronger substiin lheir 25-year historY with a 97- tutes and a group of starters that
82 Yictllry Sundiy.
has outgrown the .stigma of being
Both superstars were shocked at merely Jordan's supporting casL
Chicago's 3-1 a!! vantage in the
"We had five guys get double
best-of-seven series.
figures In shots and points,'' Chica"1 never dreamed lhis would . go guard Jim Paxson said. "When
happen," Los Angeles' Magic weplaythatway, we win."
Johnson said.
Jordan led the Bulls with 28
''No one could lhink you could points, his lowest total of the series.
dominate a team of the Lakers' Paxson added 15; Horace Grant
stature and lhe legacy they carry," and Pippen had 14 each, and Bill
said Chicago's Michael Jordan, Cartwright sank: 12.
who played 44 minutes despite a
Jordan excelled despite jamjammed right big roe.
ming his big roe when he landed
"This is !heir building," Chica- after scorin11 the basket that forced
go'sSCOUiePippensaidoftheLalt- overtime m Game 3, won by
ers. "The only !bing we bave to do Chicago 104-96.
is hold our composure."
Divac, with a career playoff
The Bulls did that Sunday, lead- high 27 points, Johnson with 22
ing 52-44 at halftime, 74-58 after and Worthy with 12 were the only
three quarters and by at least seven Lakers in double figures. The team
points lhe rest of t!Je way.
managed just 16 points in the sec"They are very alhletic, very ond q~ and Ill in lhe tl)ird, hitsmart," Los Angeles head coach ling 12 of 41 shots.
Milce Dunleavy said. "We're in a .
The Bulls were as te~~JD-oriented
diiCh, not a hole, a diiCh."
on defense as much as on offense.
It will be up to Johnson 10 get
The Lakers made just 30 of 82
them out of it if the !.akers are to shots for a series-low 36.6 percent.
Chicago has given up more than
become lhe first team to win an
NBA Finals after trailing 3-1.
100 points only once in its 16 play-

....

llonday,Junt10,1991

'The Daily Sentinel

Sports

- -- ...... _,- --·._.-- --

.-

-~-

(Oblo bJcb ICbool

llllllie 80ftllaU tournameot)
ASHLAND, Ohio (AP) - Champi·

- •••....
s-Putl'lldiScill·
biD. toar
SdurdaJ
at Bmaluido
and &amp;.o.:uide W• Padl :

-.'

· Sports briefs
Golf ,
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP)
- Warren Schutte, a UNLV
sophomore from South Africa, shot
a 5- under 67 on Saturday to
become the fllSt foreign-born player 10 'capture lhe NCAA Championship.
Schutte fmished with a S-under
283 total on 'lhe 6,865-yard Poppy
Hills Golf Course. Davtd Duval of
Georgia Tech finished second at
283 after a fmal round of 69.
Two-time defendln~ champion
Phil Mickelson of Arizona State

failed in his bid to join former
Texas star Ben Crenshaw as lhe
only three-time individual champion. He fmished in a five-way tie for
fourth at 289.
In team competition, senior
Scolt De Serrano shot a 70 and
sophomores Jaxon Brigman and
Craig Hainline added 72s as Oaldahoma State won its sevenlh team
championship and fli'St since 1987.
ThC Cowboys finished wilh a 1,161
total, seven strokes better lhi!D second-place North Carolina.

FINAL
CLEARANCE SALE
THIS WHI ONLY
June 3 til 8

AU FLATS OF
BEDDING PLANTS
NOW $300 EA.
10" HANGING $ 00
BASKRS

3

Open Mon. thru Sat.
9 am-5 pm
CLOSED SUNDAYS

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GREENHOUSE

SYRACUSE. OHIO
992-5778

• Kid. Rioina EaaJo.l'llfoc--

" !H) f12.00.

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R...t· C'Natlke. u... To 11-. Di·

-lind«,
Speed Of'Illwldm:, ·
tiale-u.
Trifocto (1 ...1) $2!13.:111. Per-

f""' (I-I! $&lt;16.00.
. Fourth llo...$4.000 C..dltioo Plco.Su·

_ ......... (8011011) 6.10. 4.00. 2.10:
Stand Up (Prl") 7.10 ••. 60: W&amp;J Sur
(Miller) 3.20; T._l :56 3-5. Alto iloced·
F..... '• Wapr, Onoy N'*•· Rich R-,
Jlanlwar
(6-4) $67.40,
Fifth R•co·$2,400 Coadhion

Pula,.""'""'

P~e•.C~ry'•

Tm1ure (Miller) 25.20,

13.20. 1.20; Roctr'• Aw.....o (lloo..,)

1.60, 6.10; ICaron Mun Machine
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'

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lbccd ·O K Spunky, Dol Bone, Slle'a
Hen, Natiu Bay, 1&amp;1 Stippcr. Killer
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SUnb R.co-$3,000 Condit.ioa Paoo.T«·
-(Van Rhodat) 41.10, 12.00, 5.1)(%
1uot Plain Bill (Ooyor) 6.60, 5.00: SW:i&lt;
Falcon (Canoy) 5.60; Timc-1 :57 2·5.
Allo Rtced·Billy Vclvel, Bi&amp; Seu,
Banyan Bay, Anp• TNo Torn. Crown
Tir. . Rocky· IHR. Trifec11 (5· 3-7)

$:10:16.00.1'111- (s.l) $115.10.
a....$2,100 Coimloa Paoe.Ad

A T11 (Taubert) 6.40, 3.10, 1.10: Shan·
non Fielldam (CoUW) 10.10, S.90; Chinbra Rum't SIUp (Millor) • ."4), T-1:59
ol-5. A!ao .......,.,...., llriuo. Olftod One.
Willnlna Olo, No M... Ea..-, 0 Y01,
lun Wooolr. JIUiando . _ , 1ncJ Hall
Twin Trif..,. (l·l -3) $21,614.50. Tritoot&amp;
(5·1·3) $391.10.
Ei&amp;hlh Raeo-$6,000 Open P"•.We:n
Hor lJto (Dio*) 13.40, I 0.00; •.J!O. Pat P
(Todd Jr.) 6.10. 3.10; C&amp;Jolina Stm
(Tb•'l"l 4.00; Tiott-1:56 1·5. A!ao
R•oei-OII.lmatea.d, Wildwood Fowler,
S...... ()( ~..... 0t.- TritOCIO 15·
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Nilllt a-14,2110 Clalolial Pooa.llltl&amp;r Valilal (OdJmon) 36.40. 14.20,
II.~ C 1'S Domluto&lt; ~) 6.10,

7.~ 11 Romu (C..... Jr.) 4.20, 5.10;
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tioll. BlDr Dalita. i'riokr'•llmrican. Moottor
v.. J:!eol. Ta llao To
S"'!', Tdfocta (7·5-1) $2,019.10. PWfecta
C7·3l $)10.:111.
TO!llb a.c..sto.ooo lmitaticmJ Pte..
Tllondon !map CC.... Jr.) 4.:10. 2.60,

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Ptoo.Ttll MoN.,. N con.an~
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40.

6,549,

RUTLAND FURNITURE
and BOTTLE GAS
GIOIGE GIATI-MANAGR

STATE lOUIE 124

IUTLAID

.,

�Monday, June 10, 1991

Padac;

PJJgr 6 The Dally Sentinel

bill

.

Tbe Twins, wbo baveo ' t COIII.e!lded since dleir
- World Suits cbampianship in 1981, woo their aptb
lllligbl by bealing tbe Cleveland ~ 9·2 Sundar. ·
The Yankees beat Teus 6-4 for their 12dl VJCflli'Y m
16 ~·
'lt's a CCIIfJdence dling," said Jar;k Manis, who

N'L games...

.

.
As*!OI 1, Mds 0 - Pete Har~nsch pitched a
tJarce.biaa- and suuck out a carcer-hlgh 11.
.
Hlraixh, who came 10 Houston from Ba1111110rc
. in the Glnm Davis trade, tossed his fmt major league
shutout. The only run be needed came on Ken
· Caminiti's RBI double in the foonh inning off DaVId
· Ca1e (6-4). ·
Cone g~;ve up thr~ bi~ in seven innings and
stnx:k out e1ght, 1ntreaS111g his NL lead 10.82..
Bnves 1, EqMJI 6- David Justice hit two tworun homers 10 belp Tum Glavine become the NL's
· tim 10-geme winner with his eighth Consecutive vic-

.

tory. •

. .
. .
.
•
Jlllllte brote a 3-3 ue m abe fifth mrung Wldl his
second two-run shot off Marl&lt; Gardner (1·3).

Gtavine (10-2) became abe fust Atlanta pircber 10
win eight in a row since l'blual Perez won nine in a ,
row over a two-season span in 1982-83.
.
Plldres 5, Plretes 3- Tony Gwynn extended his
bittiaalllalt 10 1.5 games with a triple and tie-break·
ing sin8Je.

J_J ld ,n
Sodel seamty Muecer te

piiCIIed five-hit bill for eigbl illlliDp IIIII !lilp-v-ml'"'
his m:ord against Cleftllnd to 28-9. "Y011 taft

SOII"1hing good is JOin&amp; to haj•eo 1f ~ bqJ ~ .
gae clole, P•!tl•dy his e •II• =c 10 hit
m
abe ...., and bleak open abe pme 00 ofti ,.,.

*;,Nil

Monis (7-S) woo his founb COIISCCU'jve pme,
giving lbe Twins their flflt eight-game win!Ung
pralt siJu Mey 22-29, 1988.
Mot is allowed 011e Clllncd 11111. struck out t.l!lee
aDd wa1ktd tine.
. "I ci!do 't have ~ food swff._but 1 fouocl my
mydun m die""' uod JDIIIIII," be said.
.
In adler ......... California beat Delroit7-3, Chica~ball Kaas city 8-2, Seartle beat Mil~ 6-1,
Qaldond beat BoslOn 8-0 1BJ11 T~ beat B•Jrim«R

TEAM HONORED • The Salem Center girls' basketball tea111
wes ncendy_boaored at their sports baaquet. Tbe P.T.O. narded
tbe 1lrla with ladividuai trophies aad the girls preseated their
c:oecbel with gifts. Pictured, first row l·r are Tasba Jadd, Bridaet
Vauablll, Rebekah Smith, MeUnda Lambert, Jaa1 Judd. Second
row, 1-r, assistant Coacb Michelle Scott, Coach Billy Keanedy,
Beth Reynolds, Daaielle Lambert, Becky Scott, Micbelle Smith,
Asslsteot Coecb Duke Kennedy. Absent was Michelle Grant.

1-2.

(Continued from Page S)

.

.

Anlty Benes (&lt;Hi) gave up SIX b1ts ~ three runs
in eiJbt and two-thin! innings. Zane Snuth (7-4) lost
his sccond atrai~t S1ai1.
Gwynn is hitting .439 (25-for-~7) during his hit·
ling III'CIIk. the longest m abe NL dJjs ~
.
. Gt.• 3, Ca~dlaa.ls ~ - . Kevm Bass two-run
·sinlle 1Jro1!e an e~gbtb-lllillllg ue.
.
• 0l'CII u- llomeml for ~an Franc1scu and J~
Budlell (4-3) pvc up ~ hils and one nm m. et~ht
inmags. Jeli Brantley relieved Dave R1gbetu w•th
one out and two on in die ninth and fmished for his
fd'l.b save.
• IOIC Deleon dropped 10 2-5.

Rod Nicbols (0-S) was die loser as lbe Indians losl
their fOIIth stnlighl. They have not sand mote thaD .
two nms in seYCII straight games.
Sbaoe Mack led abe Twins with a dlrce-run homer
in me seventh inning.
y •be 6, Rucen 4 - Rookie Pal Kdly bit a
two-nmbOOicrintheeigbthiming.
Jobn Habyao (4- 1), the third offOJ!l' Yank~s
· pilcbm, was the winner and SieVe Farr pilcbed a bit·
less 1Undl for his sixth save.
.
Kelly's homer the sec:ond of bis inaJor league
cateel' came off f;.._. Yankee Rich Go
r (4-1)
after Alvaro Espinoza singled with one out in the
eighth. The Rengen blew a 4-llead.
.UceiJ 7, 'fi&amp;en 3 -Chuck f'Ulley gave up one
run end stnx:k 0111 nine in six and two-thin! innings
10 become lbe AL's fust tO-game winner.
f'mley (10-2) joined Atlanta's Tom Glavine as the
majon • only 1O-game willlll:n. He bas 8;3 $1rike0td.S.
second in the teague to Roser Ocmcm' 88.
Wally Joyner and Dave Winfield bit home runs
for the Angels.
Wlllt.e 5os .. Royals 2 - Jar;k McDowell !Wred
the fust 18 belten IIICI fmisbed wid! a four-billtr.
McDowell (7-3) struCk 0111 three and waited two.
He lost his no-bit bid wberl Gary Thurmen led off the
teYCIIth with a single.
Mike Boddicker (5-S) allowed sill bits and six
runs in fioe and ooo-tbird iminp.
Athletics 1, Red Sox 0 - Bob Welcb piu:bed a
five-hitter and Harold Baine&lt; drove in three runs wid!
a double a a homer.
vance Law bad two doubles and two RBls and
Marl&lt; McGwire added a solo home run.
Tom Bolloo (S-4) gave up four lUllS and seven bits
in one-plus ioning.

STEAL A'n'EMPI' THWARTED- Cleft.
lull lwditas atder Joel SkiM« (left) pllll tllf
Ia&amp; • Min ,..., Sloew Med: es Med: tries to

"Wendy: for a family birthday party .
and overnight visit Brad and Wendy
arc wqnderful hosts and they've
always trcated me beautifully. I
brought my overnight bag, 70
bomcmlde lppCiiz.crs for the party
two bomernade pies, two bottles of
wine. a bo1tcss gift for Wendy, a
birthday gift for Brad, and some
books and puzzles for dleir children.
I was in ~ bouse no more than
five minul.eS when Wendy and Brad
informed me that on Jan. 1 they had
instilllled a nu-smoking policy in
their borne. They hadn't IOld me
about It before my visit because they
fearcd that I might not come. They
let me btow 1could smoke only on
their deck, where it happened to be
rainy, cold and windy.
Polled on the refrigerator was
your list of New Year's Resolutions '
from your Jan. 1 column. No. I was:

Perrysburg, Akron Hoban, Strasburg-Franklin
capture state softball championships Satur~y
ASHLAND, Ohio (AP) - As a
pitcher, Perrysburg's lenny Naumann was dominant durioll the
SIPle lllfthiiiiOI!IIIIIIIeiiL She made
even an eveo a.;.,_ hit IS a bauer.
In lbe ~ ct.mpionsbip,
NIIWIIIIftil 1irm1Cd defending Cbem·
pion Akron Springfield 10 tlwe hits
and bad three-extra-base hits to
drive in four runs IS Perrysburg
beat Springfield 9-1.
In Saturday's other championship games, Abon Hoban beat
S~ringf~eld Northwestern 2-0 in
Division n and StiliSburg-Franklin
defeated Loudonville S-1 in Division ill.

Naumann, who said sbe was
cuncenttating on her hillinll more
this season, doubled twice and
tripled.
.
.
"Last year I was happy wid! my
piiCbiog. This year, I want 10 be
happy wilh my himog. I'm about a
90 percent betl.er biller this year
than last."
The ICIIior tripled in die game's
fust nm in the fmt inning.
Perrysburg, 29-3, took a 4-0
lead in the third on Naumann's
double and two run-scoring wild
piu:bes.
Tbe Yellow Jackets added three
runs in the fourth on Karen

Kramer's RBI iiagJe end two runseoring infield errors.
.
N1om•n doubled in her third
and fumth runs in die sixth.
SpringfJdd, 30-2, soored in the
fifth when Laura Mercer singled
and saxed on an error.
The game was e mnatcb of lbe
1990 title game wbea Springfield
won4-2.
1n Friday's 54 semiliul •.ictory
over WCilerVille South, N•nmann
(23-3) pitched 1 six-bitter and
drove in four runs, inchsding a
tbrce-nm double.
In Divisioo II, Hoban finished
its cbampionsbip SC11S011 • 33..().

You've heard from people like me
before, Ann. I'm one of those
smokers who bas tried everydling
but can't quit Wben I do try, 1
become irritable, anxious, unable to
cuncenlnll.e headachy and weepy.
Needless '10 say, I spent a miser·
able afl.ernoon, didn't enjoy the
party, and teft early die following
morning. I love my brother and his
wife but I wiD nut return to their
home until I have kicked the habit I
hope my next visit will be this
summer, but it could be 10 or 20
years from now, thanks 10 you. I
guess wben you SU88esl.ed 10 your
rcac~qs that they "be rolcranl" you
meant 10ward everyone except
smokers. - HURT, ANGRY AND
HUMILIATED IN n.LINOIS
DEAR ILLINOIS: I am sotry
you arc burt, angry and humiliated,
but just because you brought

FATHER'S DAY SUNDAY, JUNE 16TH!!!

'

A

.
•

While choosing that special gift
for Dad, make s-.re you register at
participating merchants for the
2 Free Tickets to see the
Cincinnati Reds play on August
26, plus a one night stay for 2
at the Clarion Hotel•
Donated by Farmers Bank and
WMPO RAdio.

•
•
•

..
.
•

•
•

•
. ..

.•

••
•
.,•

"

.:

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'

bcllb 477'liieiii~~;awiit

h~mc:::erun.: =..~~e.

He srops 011 his way 10 work and his

(H .
mother fllCS him uauneal. en IS
perfect. Mine bas lumps.) If

!::"c:is
~ ~J~ :yo!:~ .
way. Tbne mghts wee1c be
stops

1

81 her house for an "appetizer," just
enough 10 ruiD his appctil.e fur die
dinner I fix him.
I've had it up 10 berc and need
some advice. _ SECOND FIDDLE

IND~JR FIDDLE: If this bas been
going on for 19 years you should
be used 10 it by this time. Hetman
chan
is not going 10 cbaoge, so
IC
yoar aUiiUde and bqJ y&lt;U blood
pn;,ssttR' down.

20°/o

REEDSVILLE • Success
Church of Christ will bold Vaca·
Lion Bible School at Tuppers Plains
Elementary School through Friday
from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. with
classes for nursery through sixtb
grade. Transportation is available
by calling Robert White at 696R£EDSVn.LE. "Jesus and You 1017 or Joe Hosldns at 667-6973.
at Camp Can-Do" will be the
theme fur Riverview Cummuinty
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Vacation Bible School through fri. United Mclhodist, St. Paul Luther·
day at Riverview School. CI';Sses an and Trinity Congregational
begin at 6:30p.m. and eonunue Churches will bold ajoiot Vacation ·
unti19 p.m. All ages, including Bible School from June 10 ~!trough ,
adults, arc wctcome 10 atl.end.
· June 14 at Trinity Church, located
at Second and Lynn S~ts. ClassROCK SPRINGS · Ruck es will be offercd for children aged
Springs United Methodist Church three through si&gt;&lt;th grade and all
will hold Vacation Bible School children arc invited. The tbcme is
through Friday from 9:30a.m. 10 "Sbarc God's Blessings." Sessions
noon. .
will be held from 9 a.m. 10 11:30 .
p.m. Cal1992·3172 fur informa·
POMEROY • Enl.erprise United tion.
Methodist Church wiD bold VacaPOMEROY • Disabled Amerition Bible School tbrougb Friday
can
Veterans and die Ladies Auxilfrom 9 a.m. 10 11:30 a.m.
iary will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
HEMLOCK GROVE • Vacation the headquarters, 124 Butternut
Bible School will be held at Hem· Ave., Pomeroy. Refreshments wiD
lock Grove United Methodist be served.
Chutth through Friday ~m 6:30 .
TUESDAY
p.m. 10 8:30p.m. each evenmg.
RUTI..AND • The Rutland VilHEMLOCK GROVE • The lage Council will meet in regular
Hemlock Grove Christian Church session on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the ·
will hold Vacation Bible School Rutland Civic Center.
from 6:30 10 8:30p.m. through Fri·
day. This year's theme is "Jesus
WEDNESDAY
and You at Camp Can·Do". Class·
POMEROY • A rcpresentative
es will be held for ages two from Congressman Clarence
thruullh bif.h school. The closing Miller's orrice will conduct an
program will be held June 16 at 7 open dour session from 11 to I
p,m. All children are invited to p.m. 81 the courthouse in Pomeroy
on Wednesday. Questions regardattend.
ing die Fedetal Government should
POMEROY • Laurel Cliff Free be addressed to die representative.

"SHOP LOCAL"

.

.

No purch••• nec81sery. Need not be pre1ent to win.

GreQt

2 Free Tickets to see the
Cincinnati Reds play on August
26, plus a one night stay for 2
· · at the Clarion Hotel.
·
Donated by Farmers Bank and
WMPO Radio•

...'
'

---~---

LLOYD/FLANDERS
•.

1b insure )OOr home,car, boat, condo,mdJile home, apartment, or even )rnr
business. gi~ me a call. I have a lock on just the right policy.
I

Allstate·

DAVIS-QUICKEL
AGENCY INC•

---,.,·---

NSURANCE

Mill pG11,
Ohio

An.

Father's
BRAND NAME
WATCHES

~· nay

--~-

FATHERS DAY
JUNE16_TH

OFF

290
SIICond

No .purcha1e necellll"f. Need not be present to win.

.' .

If it has akey,
I have apolicy to fit it.

•MEN'S SHORTS
•SHIRTS
•BELTS
•KNIVES

the

&gt;Dad's Day
~- Gift Ideas

arc

MAKE US YOUR
FATHER'S DAY GIFT
GIVING HEADQUARTERS

While choosing that spec~al gift
for Dad, make sure you register
at participating merchants for

SHOP LOCALLY AND SAVE!

Beauty •••Comfort••• and Durability
Casual Outdoor Furniture at its Finest

-·I!JtMI&lt;*..,
ere_, s,...-..,

MONDAY
ORANGE TOWNSHIP . The
Orange Township Trustees will
bold a special meeting on Monday
at7:30 p.m. 10 discuss personnel
and finances. The meeting will be
held .at the home of the clerk,
Dorodly Calaway.

-~

FATHER'S
DAY
SUNDAY,
JUNE.t6!

AND FIND SUPER SAVINGS FOR ''DAD''!

•

"!n'et

,

Lao Alii.._

endar.

SHOP WITH THESE MERCHANTS
THIS WEEK AND FIND SUPER
.SAVINGS FOR "DAD"!

:

· ============~========;========= ·
~..
SHOP WITH THESE LOCAL ERCHANTS lHIS WEEK :
'

should be permuted 10 bnng a
possible caile of lung cancer.
Obviously you did nut have my
New Year's column in front of .you
when you wrote. My suliJCSlions
were not numbered and nowhere
did I say••"Be II?~". Wbat I did
say was, Be kind. It 1s !X' act of
kindness.IO ~smoki_ng ~~
the medical eytcleoce, ~t 11 IS
so overwbclmmg tbat1t IS~
permilliCd on any dumesnc airli,ne
and hundreds of ~ ~U:S
will nut allow smokmg 1n theu
buildings.
.
~Y you arc oc!d~ and ·
I reel ,arry for you, but millions of
smdcers have quit and you can. IOU.
Keep ~ng ~ iL Don't give up.
The v1ctury wtU be sweet. Good
luck.
Dear Ann Lende!': My husband
and I have been married for 19 years.

~N~~~
....,

Methodist Church will bold Vaca·
lion Bible SchQOI thru~,!;i~Y
from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
will
be offered for ..es four lbro!tgh 16.
The Pfllll'lill will be on June 16 at
7 p.in. The theme is "Je.sus and
You at Camp Can· Do."

Coamunlty Celender ltem1
eppew' two deJI before • evmt
10d lite 'de:r of dlat eveat. Items
mlllt be receiYed well In advence
to _.-e publk:atlon Ia tbe cal·

'Ann .

Dear
Landers: Last Sunday "Be tolerant· No. 9 was: "Don't put 70 homemade appetizers, two
I drove 80 miles 10 the home of my up with secondhand smoke." Wendy homemade pies and a couple of
brother "Brad" and his wife and Brad bad tbatone underlined.
butlles of wine ~'t ~ you

•

•

Security benefit dcposil.ed direcUy
iniO 1 IJank and doo't report theu
~..._
new address run abe risk that their
Ooe of the mUll common ra- ~~~~{;kbe io~ Perisons why pooplo don't get their uJhcally,
Security Ullluires 10
Social Security cbeclt when they . make surc the proper penon is act·
expect It is that dley did not report ling benefill. lf ilur letters come
a cbange of lddteas 10 Social Secu· hlltk "undelivenble." their benefits
rity. Even people who have dim:t may be stopped.
deposit sbou1d report their addrcss
To report 1 change of address,.
cbenges so the}' don't miss out oo all people have 10 do is call our
important Social Security notices IOU"free l.elepbone number, 1-8()()..
sentiO their homes.
234S-SSA. they can talk io a repSome people think that all they resentative from 1 Lm. 10 1 p.m.
have 10 do is notify the post office weekdays. The best time to call is
of their change of address. The post early in 1be mor!Unll or 1a1.e in the
office, however, will only forw.-d afternoon. Or, pecl{)le caJi report a .
mail to the new address for one change of addrcss m ~ 81 the
year. After that, all mail that does Athens Social Secunty Office at
nut show the new addrcal, inchid· 221 1/2 N. Columbus ROad. The
ing Social Security checks, will be phone number is S92-4448.
rcfumed 10 the sender.
People who have their Social
·

Smoker
can
quit
for
family's
sake
~na

•
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'•

Community calendar

YOUR
SOCIAL SECURITY

Minnesota tops Cleveland 9-2
for eighth consecutive victory

ly Tilt A111J I led p._
Neither die M'nmesola Twila: nor die New Yort
Yw et are faVIftd 10 win mcr rcipCCtive Americao 1..Q1uc divisions. 1o fact. !bey were p
,.,,
. piclJ 10 linisb -the boCiom
.
But, abe two wilhlart a dne-pme suits Tuesday
mlbt at abe M\:Uodume as 1be boaat teamS in base-

The Daily Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middl•port, Ohio

Sale

30°/o OFF

POMEIOY/GA~POUS

SAVE

.

su

Are you IXptCtinaa aift this Father'sDay?
Not from the kids? Not even from the little wife? We
thoupt not. Well. if you cut out this eel 1nd brinalt to us,
you will&amp;lt 1 aift. It will be in· the form of $100 OFF Any
pnt's dil1110nd rina Ylllltd It $400 or 1110re. Tlllnk 1bout it.
you rHIIy 1re the boss. lllflt?

20°/o to30°/o

ER FURNITURE

Reg. S131 Lo-back Spring Base Chair ••••Sale 57 9
Reg. S153 Hi-back Spring Base Chair .... Sale 589
Reg. S289 Spring Base Lounger .......... Sale S179
Reg. 53~ 2 2-Seat Glider .........~ ••.••.••.••• Sale S189

ALL MEN'S SHOES

20 °/o OFF THRU.JUNE 15

"HAPPY FATH

DElli I

DIESS SHOES
CASUALS

MANY MORE ITEMS IN STOCK AND ON SALE ·

HISII PUPPIES
CHDOIIE
CH.PIWA

WOII SHOES
HOUSI SLIPPEIS

16thr' .

POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

212 1. Mlln -

Pomeroy

.-

.-.

'

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Sunglasses

WATCHES - RINGS
NECKLACES • LIGHTERS
KEY RINGS - MONEY CLIPS
TIE TACKS ·• BRACELETS

1/2

··----.:-· ..

-

...

COLOGNES

30°/o OFF

PRICE

FATHER'S DAY SUNDAY, JUNE 16

Oreat Olfta For Da•l

5UJISHER LOHSE
t'

h (I :

...... _._, .'.~·r -- --

11'1 0 ( '.1
'
••

"::.~:.-........... .

EASTLAND

CHAPMAN SHOES.

MEN'S

Mon. liMv ht. 1.00 o.m. 10 1 :00 p.m.
lund., 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m. 1
PIIIICIIIPTIONI
PH. t12-2881
I . Moln
Fri..-,.......
""""'"'· OH

342 SECOND
GAWPOUS

446-2691

.... -...

o... -

·,

:·

...........

;.--~- ··-·.- ~ ... Jl ---~:· · - p-

.w

�M ........

...

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.~ ' ~

June 10, 1991

Paper says students suffer from alleged food mismanagement

Consider this ...
.

CLE~ (AP) - .The city

school distnct wastes more than
$250,000 a year of taxpayec money
in the area of food services, a

'

By Brilll J. Reed

DCWSJ1141C!' IJI!S reported.

of lhe brocbure, write to ConaerYaOpn for baslatss ••• The tion ~The NllicJial Arbor Da
AppalachiaD Craft ~. a famil. Foundation, Nebnska City, Ncb~
iar sigbl from lhe ChrisiiiiU shop- 68410.
ping season, is open ooce again to
Not only that, but planting a cree
local craft hounds.
or two is good for the environmen!.
·Located on Butternut Avenue . and of course, we're all intereatecl
near the Pomeroy Firehouse, the in that.
Appalachian Craft House will conduct regular hours on Friday and
offered.-The Middleport
Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. ArtsClass
Council
will offer a five-week
The Opening was "ticked oil" with course in basic
sign language on
extended hours durinf lhe recent Mondays beginning .July I. The
Heritage Weekend. I you 're in cost for lhe class is $25. The course
town. be sure to Stop in lhe big yel- will be taught by Deln Wilker of
low~ and take a look at what's
who is a kindc;,cn
available from your (talented) Thurman,
ICaCher
at
Cheshire-Kyger
neighbcn.
tary Scbool and is now doin&amp; gnldSupJ.K&gt;rl of the craft house is · uate work in deaf Mratio&lt;J at Ohio
crucial m these early weeks, so that Stale
To make arrangethe group can get a strong start. mentsUniversity.
for the class, call Susan
Classes, demonstrations and lee- Baker at 992-m3 or Mary Wise at
luteS ·are in the planning stages, as 992-2675 before nt:rt Monday.
well.
course is open to everyone 12
U you're interested in participat- 'The
andover.
·
ing in lhe aaft house, you can call
Joyce Gillilan at 985-4348. She'll
Good Job ...Pomeroy looked
tell you exactly what you need to really
great for Haitap: Weekend.
do.
There's something to be said for a
with so much pride •
community
Couervatloa trees.•.Everyone
would like to add some value to and a community with so many
dedicated cilizem.
their home, right?
Hats should be off to those who
According to lhe National Arbor
dedicated
hours of hard work for
Day Foundalion, planting and carnothing
in
return
to make the weeking for trees on your propeny can
end
an
enjoyable
one. The memadd thousand of dollars in value
bers
of
the
Heritage
Weekend com(not to mention a few songbirds
mittee
{and
those
who
organized
and a cut in your energy costs) to
activities at the Meigs Coupty
yourpt~.
.
'Jbe ~llcJ.tion's Conservation Museum) are to be commended for
Trtts brochure is a colorful their hard work toward a job well
brochure that will show you how to done.
We should all follow your
use ueea to beautify and weatherize example.
your home. Joining lhe foundation
can even allow you to receive free
Take care.
trees. For information and a copy

How to unclog a sink
AP Newsfeatures
Clotged sinks are usually
caused by an accumulation of hair,
grease or other debris lodged somewhere ncar the drain.
Act promptly when a drain empties more slowly &amp;han usual, and
you may avoid calling a plumber
because of a complete block, whicb
can be mi'Ch rougher to clear.
Hot Water:
In cue of a slow drain or a 10111
block, first empty the sink. Pour in
liberal quantities of boiling wBitZ.
This may dissolve the b'ocJrage, Do
not usc this method on plastic
pipes.
Plunger:
A plunger - also called a
plumber's friend - can often free
a blockage.
I. Remove the sink stopper or
strainer. Most wash basins bave
pop-up stoppers that can be
removed by s1mply puUing them
up. On some models you must
reach under the basin and remove a
nut that rellins the puU conttol.
2. Plug up the overflow opening
with a wet cloth or have someone
hold his hand. tic:!y ajlainst it.
This prevents Ill'
bemg drawn
in or water expelled as you plunge.
3. Run an inch or two of water
into the basin. (Or bail out the
backed-up water leaving an inch or
two.) The water should just cover
the/.lunger cup.
• Place the cue over the drain
and press down, lilting lhe cup as
you do to get rid of trapped air.·
Vigorously pump the plunger up
and down about 10 times to creare
a surge in the w81Cr bapped in the
drain.
5. Lift the plunger Sharply up
from lhe water on lhe last lljiSiloke.
If the water rushes out, you have
dislodpd the blocka,e. Run more
WIICI' IDIO the sink. I it doesn't go
down easily, repeat the process.
Sink Auger.
Also called a plumber's snake, a
sink auger conststs of a length of
stiff wire cable with a screw-like

The Dally Sentinel-Page 9

Ohio

coil of spring at one end and a sliding crank that lets you turn the
wire.

I

Insert the snake into the drain
opening and crank it clockwise and
gradually downward through the
trap under the sink until it breaks
duough lhe ~- Do not push
the blockag~r(to hook It or
break it up. Yoa can distinsuisb
between the llllllhy re.Astance of a
bl~ and lhe hard resistance of
a bend m lhe pipe.
Opening die Tntp:
Pllce a bucket benCath the u.
shaped trap under the sink.
Uriscrew lhe cleanout plug on lhe
bottom of lhe trap with a wrench
and let the warer run ouL
Clear the StopPIIge by hand or
with a bent wue coat hanger.
Replace the pius.
If there is no cleanout plu,,
remove the entire trap, which 1s
held by two coupling nuts. Remove
lhe higher coupling nut with a pipe
wrench. (Wrap tbc jaws of the
wrench with ~ to {ICOtect the
chrome on lhe slip nuts.) Then sup- .
port lhe tt11p and remove the lower
coupling nuL Clean out the stoppage and replace the trap. Do not
overj~hten the fittings, or they
may
.
Chemicals:
Chemical drain openers can be

effective, but they are dangerous.
Follow the manufacturer's directions exactly.
U you get any treated water on
yourself, wash It off immediately
with cold water. Liquid drain
cleaners are designed to sink
through wBitZ making them more
effective than dry chemicals. In
addition, IIIey lt:lld to be less caustic.
the chemical opent7 does not
open your drain, call a plumber. Do
not ay to unclog the sink any other
way - with a plunger or auger, by
opening the deanout plug, or by
pouring in boiling water. All of
these may cause you to be splashed
and burned.

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MEIGS BAND· The Meigs High Scbool
MarcbiDII Band; onder the direction of Toney
Dingess, perrormed ia the Heritllge Parade on

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Saturday Ia Pomeroy for Herltaire Weekend,
Tbe group also received a trophy ror Best
Marching Unit.

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POLICIES
'Ads ~utsKh: Mctgs, Galha or Mason counties must b e prt
pa.d.
'RecetY~! S !tO d•scount lor adf patd tn advance
'free ads
Giveaway and Found ads under 15 words wtll be
run 3 dws at nu ch•ge.

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'Pr•ce ot ad for all capilalleUe!s 1s double puct ot ad cost
'7 poKII hnt typtl onlY used
'Sentindts not unpons•blll! lo r errors ilhtJr lust d..,. (Clld
lor 11rrurs first day ad runs"' piilpm) . C~tll belon 2 .00 p "'

•

'Ads that must be patd m· adwillntl! aru

''

C cud of Th;•uks
In MunlDrliMll

'

Seniors who trashed

,I

high school observe
graduation ceremony

c~pt

dcu1s•hud d•s~h•v . B•!si nuss C;ud &lt;tnd lt.ogal nolicnl
Wtll ;dsu ••PP~ifl '" 1h'l Pt Phmsant ~ll'~lllih:r and ttl" Gallt
~HiltS Ooutv Trtbuntt. machtn1t owr 18,000 han1es

COPY DEADLINE
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
W£0Nf.SDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
tHIUAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

tiCipllmg m a ..-.,,.rion ceremony

!I

aft« he )lillie~ vandalizing
achooJ ji~SIYS be has 1carned
that it pays to . .
Scott Simison watclled from the
audience Sunday as his Circleville
HiJh School classmates accepted
their diplomas. Simison wore his
black cap and the medallion signifying that he is an honor student at
die schooL
Simison an&lt;llO other seniors
were prohibited from participating
in pluation after coafessing they
were involved in what they called a
senior prank May 29.
"The only lesson I learned is if
you tell the truth, you get in ttouble. If you lie, you don't," Simison
said afiCI' his class graduated without bim.
Students left manure in the
hails; spray-painted obscedities on
· tho walls and put axle grease on

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MOST CREATIVE • Pomeroy Cub Seoul
Groap No. 249, uDder the dlrectloa of,Cabmaster Dale Thoene, received a trophy for Most
Crea~ve In Saturday's Heritage Parade,' spoa-

•''

so• ed by the PomeroJ' Men:haats Allodatlott.
Pictured acceptl•J the trophy from paradt
chairman, Anile SWift, are, 1-r, Dale Thoene,
Wes Tbaeae, Rytm Pratt and J~~~~eph McCalL

'-•)

doorknobs.
The students face criminal tres·

passing and criminal mischief
charges.
But what hurts the most was the
decision by Superinrlllldeat Richard
Slaven to bar them from lhe ceremony, students said.
The students tried unsi'Ccessfully to participate by filing a lawsuit
in Pictaway County Common
Pleas Coun. But a judge ruled Friday that graduation is a privilege,
not a right, and upheld Slaven's
decision.
The students accepted SIaven' s

invitation to sit in the stands. Most
wore their caps and carried their
gowns and applauded as their
classmates received their diplomas.
Jennifer Ferguson, who was not
involved in the mischief, said she
was disappointed the II students
were not able to participate with
her.
"They should be punished. But
not graduation,.. she said.
In his valedicrory address, Warren Sneed told his classmates to
look to lhe future.
"In the next few years, no one
is going 10 care what he did in high
school .... The real world is cruel.
We already have one strike against
us because of the so-called senior
prank," Sneed said.

.•. ",..•
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Heritage Costume Conttst on Saturday spon~

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Galtia County
Area Code 614

Meigs County
Atel Cod• 614

446 Gallepolis
367 Ch•hir•

992 'MiddllpOrt

388 Vin•on

91&amp; Ch•llr
843 Ponl.nd

675
458
576
713

247

882

245 Aio
256

Gt~nde

Guyan Diu

643 ArabiaOist.
379 Wllnut

949 Radne
742 AuliMtd
667 Coolville

•

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Rw.AIH-ind-

llunr!ti!J FridWJ. II

.

JOHN A.· WADE, M.D., Inc.
PLEASANT YAUIY HOSPITAL

EAI, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

\\WE HAVE HEARINI AIDS"
(304) 675-1244
.
- ..
1

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·-

&lt;l r11

tor their kind

Dubo•

end COIWOiing wordl.
' To 'the
Church of
Chrilt, MldchpOi'l. ()II••
~the food--' lift•

the fulllrll.

teNice.

•

· Hlldred - Wife

Donne • H•rold.

ru :11• r.t

MONDAY • Turkey Club, French Fries &amp; Soup
TUESDAY • Beans &amp; Cornbread
WEQNESPAY • Philly Sandwich, French Fries
&amp;Soup
THUBSPAY • Grilled Ham &amp; Cheese. French Fires
Soup &amp; Salad
FBIPAY • Liver &amp; Onions, Choice of Potatoes,
~u~~ &amp; Salad Bar

Richard

D..,g~~~.,.

•

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. . ....

Son

Thottmlyof
MARGARET
BLANKENSHIP
would llko to th•nk all

Real Estate General

h•"'·
H.-.....Zenle

- . In our

.•

••nlll••hlp;

,., """";

Chlldl•: IIIJJ •L

Motller Ab Pe11illl;
lotharl and ll8tln

NINI Haven

895 let.,t
937 8ufl•a

63- L1ve5tock
64 tiay &amp;. Gram

(

65

12 Si•u•lion WMtted
lnau•ance
• Busin•s Train•no
Schools • lnstmchcln
Radio, TV • CB Rup;ur
M11tel!an..aus
Wanted -To Do •

&amp; Fetlll•lfl t

Trans ortation

Houses for Rem
Mabile Hames for Ri!t1\
F•rms to1 Atln1
·Apariment fo• Rent
Furnished Roonts
Space tot Rent
Wanted to Rer~t
Equipment tor Run'
For leMe

71 Au1os f o r Salu
7 2 Tru ck s tor Sul e
73

74
15
76
77
78
79

Merchandise

V..n s &amp; 4 WO 's
Motorc;;ydus

Aut o P.an s &amp; Ac ce&amp;sOt •os
Au to Re p ;m
Ca mp"mg Eqmpnu~nt
Ca mpen &amp; Mol or Honn..os

B1

Hom~

lmp1o11umvn1 10
Plumbing &amp; Hl!atM\g
83 E •cifValmQ
84 Elect n e al &amp; Reh•gnrilllon

57 MUiic.alntlrumen's
58 fruita
Vtg!ft1ble1

85

Gun uta I Hau ltny

86

Mobtl u Hvmu

87

Uphoh,;lery

82

e.

59

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5.t Misc . Merchandfi&amp;e
55 Building Suppli-.
56 Petl for Stle

53 Antlquea

-·

Boats 8i M o t ors tor S al e

Services

·51 HouseholdGood&amp;
6 ·2 - Sport tog .Gooda

21 Bu.sin•• Opponwuty
22 Mon81;' to loan
23 Ptof•lional Servicn

St~t:d

For Salll'l 01 Tr1fle

•

•

'~ttpilu

'"

Business· Services
Til-COUNTY
SANITAtiON

4·21·, mo. pd.

CtUltlllt

SIGNS

by tlcJr HIDHI'ltl(

991-2259
6D8 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

. ~~~?;;
Poinl Pltltllll • 175·692• I

W. H. MOBaE
HOME PAITS

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

SEE US FIRSTI

992-5100

USED RAilROAD TIES

PORTlAND - One floor, 2 bedroom, I bath w~h full base·
menl. garage and metal shed silting on I+ acre. ALL THIS
AND FREE GAS FOR $29,500.
POIIEROY - 2 slory home with 5 lots and I car garage. 2·3
bedrooms; some hardwood floors and fireplace. A NICE
HOME FOR $14,500.
RUTlAND - Looking for some land to farm on1 Build on?
Hunt on? STOP LOOKING! .THIS IS IT! W~h 119.89 acres of
larm land and 100 acres oltimber you can do what you want!
Property also has an older home and some buildings. ASK·
lNG $36,000.
MIDDLEPORT - REDUCED - Nice starter home, 3 bed·
rooms, 1 balh. Some remodelin&amp; has been completed. Atlhis
pril:l! you can fimsh ~ any way you want. $16.000.
POIIEIOV- LONG HOLLOW- Approx. 113acres of woods

&amp; meadows. Older 4 room home, bam &amp; sheds. ASKING

$45.000.

MENRY E. CLELAND .............. 992-1191
JEAN TRUIIIU. ., ............. ;... 948-2110

JO HILL ................................ ~ 111-4411
TRACY IRtNAOER ................ 949-2438

OFFICE .................................. 182·2211

•

painting.
let mt do it fOI' you.
YIIY IEASONAIU
HAVI IEFEIE..CES
(614) 915~4110

· 8-1 o-.,, • , mo. pd.

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)

696-1006
H-'91

SHIUI &amp; TIEE
TIIM and

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
rooms lull basement. wood features. Counlry feeling on the
inside' but all the comforts of !own on lhe oulside. ONLY
$20,000.

FREE ESTIMATES
Tab the pci11 lltlf of

OPEN
Tuuday thru Saturday
10:00 1m·I:OO pm

•LIGHT HAULING

- fsl01y home .

INIIIIOI-ULWOI

WIST OF
DliWIII, OHIO

IEMOYAL

flEW LISTING-

LINDA'S
PAINTING

STEWAll'S
GUNS I SUPPLIES

n. U

Davlil Curfman.
I d lllut 1101 ~t·

42
43
44
45 ·
46
47
48
49

Help W1n1.S

13

6 1 •· Faun Equ•pmunl
G2 1/Vatlte d tu Buy

l;tijdl

Appte Grove
Muon

742-2&amp;18

HOW LOlli W VOUI HOUSE lUll ON THE IAIKm
LOlli EIOUIH FOI YOU TD IE DISCOUIIMED7 LONG EIIOUIH FOI YOU TO WDIDII WHAT IS WIOHf LOIIC El·
011811 F01 YOU 111 TA!Illllll ACTIOif 1011£TIIES A
lULL ADJUSNEIT OIIIDPIIIIM ALHIATIGI CAll
lAIII AIJOIU) OF DIFFUEICI. DOI1 II DIICGUI·
MID. liVE US ACALL AID IH lftiAT IJIATDY IUUIam. YOU'll PAY US IOTIUIIC TILL YOU arT muLm

PI

) Y•d Salelp.std in actwancel
8 Pubtic Sale li AuctiOn
9 W•t.d lo Buy

14
15.
16
11
1,8

Mobtfe Homes lor "S&lt;tl e
F.i'rms for Sale
.
Busin-.s Buildings

JS Lots • Ac1eage
36 Ani Es1111 W~nted

Pt .Pie..,.t

I'HT ·A· JOliN IENTAl

LETART- lllnutl Rd.- Mobile home s~e. one acre landcaped lor mob~t home or building s~e. AGREAT DEAL AT
$3,500.

Margaret will lie 11lly

32
33
3l

4 ow.....,
5 Happy Ads
6 Lost 1nd found.

11

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livesto ck

Eslate

31 - Homes lot Sale

~nnoucements

3

Leon

SEPTIC TANI PUII'ING

of tha.o who gwo ao
v-ou•lv of th..r
love and ldnd- In
their time of torrow.
We wWt to tlwnk Blgony end Jordan Fu.,... Horne, end Rw.

."
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2 00 PM . FRIDAY

1 card of Thanlta

~.

lelar1 falls

II · dl~

The t.mlly of IWold
K. c.non would like to
tlwlk Ill their friencll
end
nelghltorw who
Mnt 11--. food and
-.11 during our ..cent
lola. To the l*fOI',

tltc•

Mason Co., WV
,, Are. Cude 304

Pom•ov

Admlnlotralar
Pomeroy VIllage Council
BrendaMonl1.
Cleott/TrNourer
(8) 3. 10. 2tc

HOIHESTYLE I.l!NCII SPL'CIA! '-:

-

2 .00 PM TUESDAY

2 .00 PM . WEDNESDAY
2:00PM . THURSDAY

1 Card ol Th.,.lu ,

2. In Memorr

Employmt·nl
s~r v ll:e s

termo of paynwnt.
The VIH1ge Council roo·
....,., the right to reject ony
and all bldl.
'
John A. Anderoon.

Think you to ~IMI
Flaher Funer•l Home
for their '*Y efficient

Locltad on Rl. 33 beSide Muon Exxon and Mlaan MDIII, Mason, wv

:.':::f.:t: =-~a:::

11 00 AM . SATURDAY
2 00 P.M MONDAY

Re~l

41

PUBLiC NOTICE
latH bld1 will be ,.
celvod In tho office of the
CIOI'k, Pomeroy Munlclpol
Building. 320 E11t M1ln
Stroet. Pomeroy.
Ohio
45789 1untll 12 o'clock
noon. Manday. June 17.
1991 for the following lifO·
pooel.
900 tono man or luo. of
Spec. 404 aophah concrete
inllllld with tackcoat on
oivnatod by Vllt.ge Council.
An materlalo and equip·
m8ftt ar• to mee1 Ohio De~
partmenl of Hlghw1y1 - ·
clftcatlono.
An bld01ietil'bobytheton
In place and the price par ton
oholl Include all n..,.1ury
clunlllfl. Spaclflcallono of
tho atreetoto 1141 ourfoced era
on fila In the offlco of tho VII·
lage · AdmlnlotraiDr. VIllage
of Pomeroy.
Each bid muot contoin the
full neme of ovary paroon or
companY lntlftltod In the
ume, end muat be eccom·
ponied by 1 bond or carlfled
chiCk In the oum of 5 par·
cent of their bid to the ootl•
f1ctlon of Ylllag1 Council. 11
a gueranty that If lhe bid II
•cceplecf. • contr.ct or bid
wll be Mltond Into 1nd Ito
perform1nce properly ...
cured.
Then cheak1 or bond1wlll
be retumed 1t on~ to 111 P·
cepe the 1uccellful bidder.
Hl1 chock or bond will 1141
held unll the contract or bid
lo pooparly executed by him.
The autolde of the oulad bid
envelope ohou., 1141 m1rkod
"Aophllt Bid".
•
All bldo muot Include

.60
, .05/doy

tO. conMc::utweruns. brobn up d~s ••• be ch.lfged

Public Notice

liltent

.&lt;12

$13.00
.Sl .30/day

PubliC Notice

ati"Htl

:20 .
.30

$9.00

Public Notice

VlriGUI

.

lor each d.., u •••rate ads

for Mf'Ythingp

t

--

Monthly

a...-naket

•

•

3
6
10

CLASSIFIED ADS

sored by Bank ODe.

.

OA\' BEFORE PUBLIC AT ION

BIG KIDS &amp; BABIES PROGRAM
TUESDAY, JUNE 11-6:30 PM
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
DOWNSTAIRS CONFERENCE ROOM
Call 675-4340, Ext. 304
To REGISTER

OV4pr 1 5 Wcrda

followi Ill{ I ,.,,.,,h,;,,. ,.:r..lw11 J{l'.~-- ·

"A dil&amp;ttthod tttlv~~rr1isullhlnt pldCt;' ll 111 lh~ Omtv Stmh.n tllle•

CIRCLEVILLE, Obio -

A
l!i~ ~~ senior~ from par-

1

A ales Me

$4.00 .
86.00 .

15
'15
15
15
15

Cla.~.~ ijif'll IJOJ{f' .~ l"lll 'l'r

Hi11p1Jy Ads
Yard SaiL'S

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

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Rate

Words

Days

.•

BULLETIN 80 ARD ~

· Simiele did not return a tele·
phone message left at his home
Sunday.
'
But a former district official said
a change in management methods
is needed.
Gecqe J. Mazzaro, achool busi·
n~ 11181184er from 19111. to 1982,
satd quesuonable pracuces hun
children and taxpayers at a time
when the administration wants to
Jay off 600 reachen and staff, close
four achools and seek a levy 10 prevent an operati111 defteiL
"It just doesll't make any sense
to me," he said. "It's not manage- .
menLit'smismanagerncnL"
_,

RATES

dwt ahttr publtcal ion to tnak e correction

'

'

vendor.
The newspaper also reponed
that when compared to six other
ma)or meuopoli~n disuicts ia
.Ohio, Ocveland is paying an average of I7 C!lDIS. more pa: l~h this
~. resulbng m $1.4 million more
tnfoodcosts.
The analysis also said that
Cleveland spends millions of dolIars a year on items lhe district did
not ask for in its bid. Some of those
"alternate choices" offered by
vendors were more expensive or
infetior,thenewspapetsaid

TO PLACE AN A.D CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SU.NDA Y

•

PATRIOTIC
PERFOR·
MANCE • Sandy B•tcher performed "God Blesa 0e U.S.A.''
oa Sat.rday followlq the HerItage Parade Ia Pomeroy. Tbe
P~atroy Men:ullb ~latioa
lpOIIJOI'ed tile activities oa Court
Street during the day.

District Food Servicos Director
Regis F. Bal•bM. BuaJne!s ~er W. Harrison Dillard, General
Counsel Thomas C. Simiolc and
Superintclldent Frank J. Hum! did
not respood to requests for interviews, the IICWSJliPCI' said.
Huml could DOl~ reached for
comment Sunday 01gbt. A taped
messageathisoft"tcesaidlheol!ice
was closed IIIII no one answaed at
a phone listing for bim.
Balaban, reached by telephone
at home, said Sunday aftanooa he ,
hadnotseentbestoryandpreferred
to discuss it with scbool officials
andatiOmCYsbaforecommenting.

Classifie

"
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Hot weather coolers
By RON GASBARRO
Frieling USA of Charlotte, N.C., ·
AP Newsftatures
keeps baked goods cool and under
When you cannot air condition, glaSs with ill special double staina powerful fin can keep you cool less steel trays that secure an icc
by circulatina ·the air. But in a pack betwoea lhem. You can also
small space. 1lie an office, a blow- cool dQwn tarll, paslries and appeing fan can intrude on other's tizers as you transport them in even
SJIICC. In a small room, a big fan the hottest car.
can aet in )'0111' way.
The $40 set is 12 inches in
Vca...SO,Inaatime maker of big diameter - big enough for~';
fana. bas solveCl the small space angel food cake - and can
problem with the Vornado Com- food fresh for hours, says the manpiiCl. a powaful fan that creates 70 ufacturer.
percent of the air movement of
On a aweltering day, a pint of
ibeiilllpfan.
Tile Cotaplct 'II'Oighs under five icc cream can become cbocolate
poanda, Ia ~morican made and soup before
can servo it up.
operate• quietly. Tbe Wichita, .The XeeD It
I Ice Cream Serv·
Kao.. co:;x:: calla it their er, by lfut Hamptemlnduatrics,
'')loltallll!
fin ODihe fioor." Inc. of But HanpfOD, N.Y., keeps
your ice ere.~ llllllhcrtJota from
It nllll1l fer • •
melting while scniq. No more
ThoN aummonlme backyard sticky banda. No more tutelell •
piadca ... flmlly reunion• would freezer bum on your vanilla .
almond auncb.
The SS unit JOCS direcdy 6om
"How wW I pt II from bere to freezer to table to f'roozor apln,
keeping frozen confections solid.
dlcn wldlout liioilina?"
Tho Cool and S"erve Set, by not liquid.

The distn~t:s 70,000 students
also II'C recetvmg_ bad food, as a
result of the quesbonable biddi_ng
methods and wasteful food servtee
manacent, The (Cleveland)
Plain
er reoortecl Sunday.
The Plain bealer' s computer
analysis of more than 20,000 food
service bids submitted to Ohio's.
public schools found that the
Cleveland district wastes more than
$250,000 a year by
bids

a_nd buying iilentical «nearly idenneal prodi!Cis from more than one

•

8·12-10-ffll

THE

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming
For All lneds
EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

614-992-6820
Po_.Dy,

OIUY •Sill onJADI

742-2421
2'11 MI. &lt;ovttl.
lutlalld on lltw

u-1c1.1·10. 'tl-lfl.

tl MJiiii,IH
UPHOLSTDY
:tU··· Socell•

J&amp;L
INSULAtiON

•Slabs
1 Olfo DISCOUNT TO
51111101 CITIZENS

•lntulatlon

'AMES IUESEE

992-2772 or
742-2251

FREE ESTIMATES

131 BIV•n Place

992-7130

Middleport,

8-&lt;1- '91 -1 mo.

Howard L Wrltesel

BI'SSELL
BUILDERS

.ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR

cusrOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Gutters

Downapouts

"~ t

ltasonablt Prices"
PH. 949·21D1

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

or 111. 949-2860
Dar

949-2168

4·16·86·tfn

•VINYL SIDINC;I
•AWMINUM SII)ING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

•Reatonllblo Rates
•Ouellty Work
•Froe Ettlmetea
•Carget Hu Fnt Dry
Tim•
•High Glo•l on Tile
Floor Finiah

Eltilftlltea' •

PH. 949·1101
or 111. 949·2160

Mil£ LEWIS, OwMt
II. I, lur .. nd, OH.

NO SUNDAY UllS

742-2451

3-11-tfn

3-14-'91-tfn

POO&amp;~~!~ca1•
JIO lftt 2nd St.

614-992·2121

992-3432 or
992-2403
._._ ..,.,mo.

USID APPUAN(ES

90 UY WAIIAIIJY
•ASIIPS-$1 DO .,
DIYIS-$69 op
IIF-DATOIS-$1 00 up

IUIGIS-Iot·lloc.-$125
FIIIZIIS-$125 .,

.

11(10 OVIIIS-$79 up

liEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992-SUS ., 915•3561

· HOWARD
EXCAVAnNG

lrl•lt .. Or We

BULLDOZER •nd
BACKHOE WORK.
HOME SITES.
LANDCL!ARING.
WATER end SEWER
LINES

IUMIDS

Pldllp.
UN'S APPUAIIQ
SIIVICI
"2·SJJ5 er

915·1561

Acna'f - .... 01"1171.........

TIUCIING AVAILAIU
FREE ESTIMATES

POMIIIOY, . .

992-7458

YOUNG'S
CAIPENTII
_..... , SEIYICE

eRemoclellng and

·

II

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

·---*
.......
,_...

-c ..........

.

llloo • . . _
(FRO llnMATUI

V. C. YOUNG.
99!-6215

•· 1·, mo.

GOLF LESSONS
FOI

S55

Repair, Trophies,

Signage
JOHN T. TEAFORD ,,
(Himl,. OliO

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
- •Siding
•Painting

.e~'1osuLL
........
CDAI

..

..•

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION · ·
992·6648 ar . ..
698-6864
,

•. ....... .

'

HOME 614-992-5692
.,
DOmE S. TUIHO, 11010 •,
HOUSES•LOTUFARMS
COMMERCIAL
We Need Llollnp!
ll-1'10-lfl

BISSELL &amp; BUllE
CONSIRUCDON
•Now Ho11101
•Garage•
•co ..pJtto
· ltiiiO. .Int

WE DO

..

Stop &amp; Co...are
FrH Ettlmattt

985-4473
667-6179

from ,.., Office
POMIIOY, OHO
10/30!19

..

205 H. S.COIICI StrMI
IIDOLIPORT, 01110 45 760
Offi&lt;t 614-9U·2116

--·

5·31-'!10 tin

ROOFING

AND IYIIYIHING UNDERNEATH

.

'

,TROMM BUILDERS
FID 1nuuns

•20 Y•ra Experience
eQuality Homes end
CUllom Romocloling

742·2328
5122/lfft

.

FREE EITIUTES

,,

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

Hcimll RePIIrt

•Roofing

..•

CUSTOM GOLF
CLUBS

Acr. .

&gt;.. • •

.CIOWAVI
OVEN IIPAII

AWARDS

IIIDIPDIDIItT •

.... ._...,

S6Yeuoltllperl•eo

•

CAIPIT CUANEIS
and TILE FLOOI CAIE

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Opan Tuo1 •• Thura.,
Fri .• Sat. 7:30 p.m.

Night

NO SUNDAY CAllS

4-5·11·1 mo. pd.

"Fr•

01'

ACADEMIC

6

•Driveways

•Roofing

POMEROY
BOWLING

10-1......

•Sidewalks
•Patios

•VInyl Siding
•Raplacemant
Window•

Mllla ..rl
Hand Tufting
Cuatom Drape•
W•l•yWhltW.Oa.
We Do Whit We loy.

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE

AIR CONDITIONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOI MOllE &amp;DOUilEWIDE HOMES

·································
·
•o•u 110111

BENNETT'S "::::,'

Lee IINI 0. s.tfenl SchMI ••· lfflt. 141
16141 446·9416 or I•III8•1171••Jtj~7
--~------

•

�•

Sentinel

0-The

SNAFU~

Announce rnents

by Bnce Beattie

32

Mobile Homes

44

tor Sale

3

Announcements

1171

72 Trucks tor sara

Apartment
for Rant

Npollo, 0116....,.

""'"'lla.':'.J'mo.

wood-.

an.

'Prolar
1apt,adult.
AJC,
nl1231.Carpot,
ptw
alae.
prlvota. Rat••and
dopoalt.
:JIM-1175-2151.
Fumlahad mobile - · 1 milo
btlow town, avwtooldng river,

Children, Pete,

CA. I1~8.

Now accaptlng app!lcatlona tor

M..on Apartments. Equal Hou•

To . - home mother Calico
coli oulaldll-,114-115-4611.
w-n , . _ to a~-•Y·

Wlndllor 14•70 mobllo homo,
toaU alaclrlc, 3 badrooma, 2 lull
betha,. AJC, IMN'CI'I, undti'JMn~ P~ablo sawmill, don't
heui,LO: loat to tht mill j ult . nlng, ...pe. ~.
call
7!1·1117.
Mitt Paull't Dey CIN Center. 33 Fanna tor Sale
sa•. affordable, chlldctrtl. M·F 1 mile off M4, hunlert pit11cl11,
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ago• 2~10. '10
acm ol land, aocct water
Btforll, after 8Chool. Drop-lnt plpee In houM, p~~llne on 11nd,
wolcoma. 114 Ul 8226. Naw In· good timber on lend, IM
f1nt Toddllr Ctre, S1.t.,...&amp;-122l
~'Wima, Carl Oolnar CoOlville,

Qa~

Flnl
- Trlbuno,
lint -825
· Third
llpolla·
Dolly

Ave., O.Hipollo.

Futl·llma PoaiUon W«klng With
Public. Aocounllng Exparianca
Naco..., . Sand Anuma To:
6 Lost &amp; Found
P.O. BOo 213, Galllpolla, OH
FOIJNO.
Female
Gonnan 45131.
I Mala Hound IM-lll2· Govarnmont Hiring $70Q.S1500
wHkly. Job HCur1tr, tantaatlc
FOIJNO. Lock hu-p, tound blntfhl, no experience necce.
laat ......, on Klngobury Road, ury. 24hr 211H155-32011 aot.
CHilD.
IM-1112-31111.
.
LAoot:
ea..... In VInton lmmadlala Opanlngo Available
c-ary. M Law!na On A For Fuii·Tima A,NJLP.N.'a. l1·7
Torn-one. H Found, PluM Shift. Alao Avallabla P•~·tlma
Call 114·311 1134.
A.NJL.P.N. Cornpolftlvo Wogaa,
Dllto,.ntlll With E•parlanca,
.;_
Flnlblo S&lt;:hadullng Avallabla.
7
Yard Sale
Contad Tha Dlroctor of Nurs-

=""''

_____

•

GaNipolls
VIcinity

a.

3 Farnlty Yard !Ilia: Chltclran'a

Fumlu,., Etc. :ml
IIIIa - · Clalllpolla, Twaday,
' Wedn11 d.,-, 8:00-4:00.
AU Yn -lluat Ia Paid In
Advanc.. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho dlly batorw tho ad Ia to run.
IUndoi' adMion - 2:011 p.m.
Frldlly. llonday adHion • 2:00
ClolhN,

~

..,.....

''

~urdl,.

-....

'"Juno 11-1:1, 1:00-4:0111•• a.nor
.: Road, VInton. Lola ChiiGr.n I
....Actvl Cklthaa, 3 Whaalar And

· ~·--~------------Pomeroy,
. .. ,

.'

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Run olf SR 124.-T-d Autfandl
' ' tappln counter top l'llftGI I WII
. - -backa, lilcyclea,
ck:JC~.- dllhM, mlw:. ~
5271.

8

Public sara .

a. Auction

_,__Auction=

tul
--u.n...t
- - l1111111
on
Waat Ylrtlnla, :104-J'l'UliS.

-am

S.cond Avenue, Otlllpollt. No

Phone Call• Plaaao.

AVAILABLE:
COOADINATQR
OF
OUT·
N.TIENT SERVICES • Reapon·
albia For Dovatopmant, Dlroc·
tlon And Coordination Of Ad·
mlnlll,.,lva And Cllnlcol Ac·
llvhloa For Th- Oulpatlont
Cllnlco Locatad In Oallla, Jack·
aon, And lllalgo Countloa. Muat
Provlda -lnlolrallva Suparv~
alon To Clnloal ..... llay Alao
Provlda Limited Dllact Client
lllrvlcH And s - CllnlcoiiU-

814

44~

1408.

POSITION

USW,

LPCC

Or

L - Pay~at With
Strong Cllnlcollaok,c.nd And
Equlvallrll
Eo..
In
!lanapmant p,."'Nd, Salary.
~tabla. Mall A-ma To:
Saftdra McFartand, Woodland
cant.... 412 VInton Plka~_Ga~
tloolla, OH 6M31. E&lt;&amp;~AA
(mployor.

AHidllnl Manager: Muon·
Colurnloua baNd linn lo
-antty - " ' I on Individual

or couple 10

menage and

a..:ea3o4514.

11-1'

..m. CoN

I PII-!PII

EHOEEO.
AN Chorga Nuroa tor long larm
caro taclllty, aoporianoa prafor.
,.d, lull lima or part lima. W«k
ovary .,.har -and. Salon&gt;
:Wonlad lo louy, • . - I dryer oomfMMuratt whh experftnce,
Jn IMOtdna ooildlllon, call aftar 4 plw banalb EOE. Apply Cora

=.-

Area.

Out of Wotll? Naad A Job? Uko
llonay? Callllt-012·3273. ·
Pooltlon
Available
In 441-28,..
H-kaapln,. Apply'*" Poroon,
BatwHn 10.1 a.m. WNkdayo1 at Will Do oan.,.i Houaaclaanlng.
Boat
William Ann, vtB ... 10 Par Hour. OatRpolle A,.L

•

op.m.114-t112-.

Rodney

Rafol'- Available. AH Shltto,
2n4 Ave., Gllllpolla. CioN 10
eon IM-24H711.
Cour1 House. 1 room, 2 rooma,
Will bllbral -kanda at your 3 roome, 4 rooma. AI nicely
- . o r mine. Havo.-e, dacfltatad, air oondltlonlng,
114-t82-1103,
,.... waler &amp; blllaro pold.
llaka your cholca now. No
Will build patio ....,., dackal q,..n ..., lha phone you
ecr..ned roomt, put up vinyl
mual - them. Phcna "' on
aiding or traitor aldrllng. 114- aONintmant.
1114-446-7610 day,
245-5157.
~531•ve.
Will Do Babyolltlng In lly Homo.
Matu,.1_Raaponaltila Acfun. 114- 35 Lots &amp; Acreage

r:J
~.=h~~·~~'::S
Ell K-1110.

..... llllary II troa

Wanted to Buy
)iillnlad to bur. Standing limber,
·lob
• Sona - 11441.-

Anytime,

Plnac,..t Drive, Gallloolll, Ohio
tll31 114-441·7112. llqual 0,..
portuMy Emptoyar.
KUWAIT. SAUDI WORKERS
NEEDED: $31,00 I Up Par Hour,

• maintain an 1-unlt apartmant

~

readlnq. 11 vro. nporlanca, with
Illata,. In Aaodlng Education.
114-24H154.
Wll Babyaft In lly Homo

Ing, PlnecrHI Clrt Cenltr, 170

ponllalon,

• Juno 11·12, 2 mllaa on .Hraatt

Summar tutoring II'! mllh &amp;

F1113r1ftal

21

Business
OpportunRy
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY- PUILIIIING CO.
..commando IIIII you do bu~
nau with paap1e you k.-. and
NOT to aand IIIOftOYihrouah tho
Arthur'•

Chain

RHidenllll,

Aaalgnmente In ~~ and Hock~

Gerltch,

no

alngto-wlda trolloN, ploaaa.
2 ..... at lloiQII llamorlol
VetnM 1ddltlon. The vaul and
haadal- lncludlld. -..
773-11151.
H Acr" Ovtr1ooklng Your
OWn Boat Dock. All 1J111Min
S100 Down, t\11/mo. 114-2M·

1211.

mall unll you have lnvMtTgated

tho olfarlna.'

Commerdal,

ln-

Vancttna Route: For Sale. Cooh
Bualnaaa. High Traffic Local
Locatlona. Hollaat llachlnaa On
Marlcal. HIOO.!I55-03M.
LOI!NS IV IIAIL
Up to $5,000 Fall Slllolactlon
Oaurontaad. 1m-lata Sarvlca.
1-10Q.411.111:1'1SUIIH.

wanted
wam to buy lal with water front
on Racoon c - . wfth or

wlthcut-Hno, 304-17!ol817.

11110p,

.._......,_,Or"p lr

En1p1:11 mrnl

Servtces

41 ' Houses for Ram

Re01i Estate
Homes lor Sale

Water
Paid,
Dapoah
&amp;
Raloranca Aoqulr.d. Pnona:
114-161-37111 Aftar lp.m.

phere, 1225/mo, Plut utllltlee,

Timber Cuttar: Call After 7p.m

114-317·7511.
.TQUAISII DIRECTOR: Saaklna
Enlhualaatlc , c,..tlva Pa..on
Whh Good 1......, And Written
Sklllo Whc - · Tho Public
Will. Bachatoro Dog,.. With
J~o~n.

20. lmtrvlewt

Juno 27-28. Sand Aaaume To:
Clo 071, clo GalllpOIIa D•llr.
Trlbuna1.~21 Third Avanua, Go •
llpolla, Utt •1131.
Wanlad: bpariencad Servica
PINOn

locally tor
~~~~-• eo. tun 1 pa~·ll.,.
fit . . . ""'nz""'"' tnwnadl11a1y
........., h
wagea, Slt·Sun
............
t ::tllol:pm, 114-

phonaa

. . . .1

POMEROY
'POSTAL JOBS'
ttUI • 114.10 hr. No e•p.
n.Mid. For e11m and appllca·
" Uon Info., ull 1·21S..967·1537
?Lm. -10p.OI. 7 ...,..

.WSTIIALIA WANTS YOU
Pay,
Banaflla,

Ill-

1'1•: 41 ar18tlon,

m. .......407·205-7600,
top.m. Toll

...........
111.

Shlnay
WEEK
HOME .
11115.

IARif MONET Aoadlna Booul
tto.IOWYr. .._,. Polanllal.
.,..... ltl - - e... y.
10111.

Commnlal
RatriQII'IIIon, Hilling &amp; Air
Conditioning. Applr li1 Person
AI: Vat• Haatlng l Cooling,

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Lower
Third Avenue, Private Parle~,
Water Fumlshed, $250/mo, Plua

For

2111 Wall Collago, Rio Ot'andi,
Ohio.
Wanted: Full·tlme employment
In yaur own home u 1 Horne
SOrvicaa Wotllar wfth Buckoya
Community
s.McM.
We
provlda ulary plua banaJMa ond
a dally room and board raiL
You provkll 1 home, gu'd1nce
In 1 family ltmoephere. fie.
qui,.. abiUiy to 1-h -~~
llvlna oltllla and 1 com.1!11tmont
to tho growth 1nd dovaloflnlaltl
of In lndlvi&lt;Jual wtth 1111nt..
retardation. Home mUIC bl In
Malga County. Contact Coclila
at f-100-531-2302 or wrlto P.O.
Box 604, Jack.on, OH •!JMO, no
Iaior lhon 11113111. Equal Clppor·
lunltr Employar,

12

Situation
Wanted
Give plano ·lenone In my home
to
Malnnera,
advanced
11ud1nta lt adune. Aleo luch
11'1 ntpo-'ng I chording. II In·
tarn ted, calll14f992·54G3 .

Flalwoo$ ArM 1, P._roy, 2
Story Ho1111. Khchan,
Bathroom &amp; Carpatlna. 17
Acroo. IM-44f:2351.
In Chy: llllr, 4 batha, UtiiMy
Room, Family ~- I Living
Room With Pockal Doflta,
Garage I 11-1 Corner of
Fourfl1 &amp; Slate. C - To
7p.m.·· 114-2111 ....

\

Raqulrod. Phone : 614-141-31'91
Aftarlp.m.
2br, M;, Cable, ?.no Nice Unit,
tlaaulllul Alvar Vlaw
In
K1nauga, No Chy Taxnl Foa·
tll'llloblle Home Ptrk. 114-4•6·
1102,

For 1111 or rent: Mobile horn.

12XIO,

2bdrm

fumlahocl,

ewnlng end und.rplnntd. 614·

192-11800.
Mobile Hornet For Rent, phon.
1lui ~. 114-441-0108 or """'321.
beaut
'"'"
~lent, !art&lt;! khchan, plinly ol
Apartment
cablnato, - - · dlapOul; 44
- larr clnlng
wMh room,
largo
c~, tonne
lor Rant
ulllftr, room on mtfn atvel,
taml y room, "'rogo, worbhooo, 2br Apa~mant For Rent. In
· - bllltl or\d badroont lri Crown Chy, IM-2-15.
ba-!11. - tulllo...., :121141,
many ..... you - l d ••_. 84 L.ocwt 81- J Room Fur·
to find In a lftuch m«e ••pan· nl-, Utllhloa Paid, $250/rno.
atva homa, Upper IO'o, 304-1711- ttoo o.-n. .,....&amp;o1340, 114·
441-3170.
3011.
Aaducad To SoU: 2 llfltJ 3br
c:om. l.ol In Cltoahl,., Ditto.
llcollal1l Condhlon, 104·132·

--·
'72.,...._,_,_ =·1221
.,.
.....

fOrSI~

'

UtllltiH. O.poeit And Rellf'enc•

Polnl PlaiUnt, WY-Houu &amp; I
..,.. • badrocmo, 3 tuu bathe,

32 Mobile Homll

Bead
the
Cl. .lftedsl

Roome for rent · week or month.
Starting at S120/mo. G1llla Hotel,
81,...41J.I&amp;SO.
S!Nplng room• with cooking.

Alaol,.,lor apace. All hook·upo.
Cell aftor 2:00 p.m., 304·7731151, llaaon WV.

46

Space lor Rent

Countno llobllo H..,. Park,
Route 33, North of Pomaroy.
loll, Nntate, parts, ......

114-IOJ·llll'V.

can

Merchandise
5'1

Household
Goods

1112 Ctrpet rem. $60. and up.

Carpal .4,00 &amp; up. Mollohan
Fumlulra. 114-ue,7444.
Counly AppUanca Inc. Good
uaad appllanCH, T.'v. aata. Opan
8 a.m. to • p.m. MonAiat. 114441·111!.1. ~ 3rd. Ava. Qa~
llpolla, Utt

c::::':l.
.

2101.

II=

tM-";t

For..-, 1 Mdroom

·~.

I22S uttlltloa lnoltldad, - "
~no palo, 114-·2211.
, __ 4 • lath.
Ctlol\ No Pate. Alallr•ICO I
Dapaatl R...-114-141-11111.

710 Tobacco . Sllcko, $50. tm
Chryalar Nawpo~. UIO. 114•
441.eoo7.

8o12 ft double aolalrollar with 4
tt lldt ancl covered top,· very
good cond, nso.304-t82-32!MI.
Aluminum Dock With PaUo ArM
For 24n. Above Qround Pool.
$150. Motor, Pump tnd Fitter

P""'

t1• IU 1101.
Tank, $71. IM-ZN·fiiB.
Far S.le: lquarw Balerw, H1y
Bla 4 Badroom Dakota Homo, INMI, II..,., RekH, PTO
Bull On Your Lot $27,995 ana lllnr.n SprMdtr, Garden Tracup.ltt-186-7311.
tor I E_qul_., Utllhy Trailer,
Card Colloctlon: (Baabal, laa- Othar Flold Roady Equipment.
katbaH, FoolbaH) 'IO'o • 'IO'o. Howo'o Fant1 llaehlnary, Jackaon, OH IM--Sif4.
Cell 114-441-0720 After lp.m.
Concrota I plaajlc aapllc IInke, Jlm'a FII'OI Equlpmo~ 4~R. 35,
Waat Oallltlollo, et4
'ITT7;
Ron Evan• Ente~riMI, Jack·
-lon
I
uaad
farm
521
aon, OH t.SOQ.I:I1
·
tractON; 1 lmpllm•ntt. 8"1,
DvneMark riding lawn mower, tell, trade, 8:00.1:00 WHkdaya,
G~ waeher In pod conciiJon. Sal. till Noon.
304 .a7s-131141·
Tern
Dozer
8230,
new
For Sale: 4oll Utility Trollar, trtneml••lon. Lowtlme engine,
Loaded With . Plywood Doflta, tracka, rollero, vary gOod,
Wire &amp; lilac. Oood Trailer For
Grundtar Aoci Cruahar
jaw P,IOO. Loador !arm
Small
Cor
or
4
·
lluat
tnoctor wnrip buckal, ••c cond,
Taka All,1171, IM-371-2251.
ramovad ' - MF 24o $1100. 304·
For Sale: Full Flgur.d, Plua Slza 411·11131.
Waddlna - . . (APtHO• Size:
24-211 Doacrlptlon, VIctorian W.ntld: 10 to 18 ft. tandem axle
Slaa-. and Chapel Langth llllbad lraMar. 614-21141-2762.
Troln, V Neck Line, Whh Lace &amp;
lllqOonco, Aoklng Prlca: 1275. Wanted: Okt timber frame blm
In good cond. tor removal &amp;
114-MI-7140.
reconetrubcllon. 11...288-2712.

n-

l:l!?'

Hratar
4 St~~t~~
31 Volt Fotll
Uft,
Livestock
EXeatlonl
Condition.
Eloctrlc
63
Chain Holal A 12 Volt 175 Amp. .:.,:._ _;::;.:..:.,:.:..:,..:,.,.._,..,-Charvar. 114-441-2311.
t8 Month Haralonl Ml•ad Bull,
SilO. Cell 114·379-21147.
LawnB~
lawnmower, ulf·
propol"ng, hao atartar f1g5,00 2 yaar old white laying hana,
IIOC aach. 3.o+-882·3410. ·
111~·812·7352.
For SOlo: Polled H.,.lord Bulla.
Bnt Bloodllnn, R-stlatar.d,
Twelve Month• And Older. Start·
Ina AI: ti~OO. Wrllll Or Call:

St-.

Lynch and Nolin Farma, so W.

P""'=;

PICK ENS FURNITURE
NewAJaed

HoUsehold fumlthlng . 112 mi.
Jarricho Ad. Pt. Plaaaanl, wv,
.... 304·675·1450.
::=.::=::..:.:::~--=--:::-:- ·
Refrigerator Sldll· X Side,
Avocado,
Gibson,
1175;
Rtfrtgeralor, 2dr, Frost Fr.., lea

M•ker, Nice, S185i Refrlgentor,

2dr, Whha, Frvll FrM, S85;
Elactrlc Range, 30 Inch, Whna,
Si5; ElectriC Aanga 1.. Harvaat
Oold, $110; Hotpolnt waahor &amp;
Dryar Sat, $150 EachL Whlripool
Waahar, SSS; All ~old With

Royal Oak lluat aa11 dw to - n oan 10
738-4180 aftar I p.m.
Utllly oonatructlon troller, trail
ntObllo tOdO t\00.00 fit trade
tor amall JOitii boat, 114-1112·
2101,

Roekar, $3.13 WHk.Bunk Bad

Comp'-11 58.41 WMk, 4 Drawer

Chnt, $3.21 WNk; Poatar Badroom Suhe, 7 pc., SIB.57 WHk,
lnclud• Beddlng.COunuy Pine
Dlhette With Bench I 4 Chllrt,

Work boola. 114-448-3151.
VI'AA FURNITURE
114-441-3158
LIVING ROOM: Sola I Chair,
$110.00:
Racllnar, 114g.oo;
Swlval Rocltor, $10.00; Colfaa I
End Ta-. IH.OO Sat.DINING
ROOII: Table Whh f Paddlld
Chalro, t141.00i.. Country Pine
Dlnalta Whh Hnch And 3
Chalra,. 1:111.00; Matching 2
Do« HHeh $349; Or $5811.00
811; Oak Tabla, t2tctl2 Whh I
low
aa..
Chalro,
$121.00.BEDAOOM: - - lad....., aun. (5 pc.l. S348.oo; 4
Drll•r Chellt, 1'4.11; lhiftll
Bad, 1221· Conoptata Full 11111

8111 tiOS.Do Sat; 7 pc. Codllr
learoom ':oulte, Sltt.OO.OPEN:
Monday Thru Saturday, h.m. to
6p.m., lUnday 12 Noon Till
lp.m., 4 Mllaa Oft Aouta 7 On
Route 141 In Cantanary.
.

52 Sporting Goods

o... Slloll And 1M
Tha Now Shlpmant bt Colloc·
toro Knl-. Oreal For Polhora
Dayl Wholnlila Maato, 114_...
7011.

Slop In Tho

53

Antiques

Buy or •en. Alvertn. AnUqun,

112f E. llaln • - · P-roy,
Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
p.m., IUndlly 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
116·1112·2521.

54 Miscellaneous
1 while wood cablnat: hu
enamel top. aboul 40 tn. long,
25 ln. - · 114..82·1135.

wom.n'•

ro~dmlllter

bk:ycle, ••· cend., lUi 2 llmoild ............. 11 ou. ft.,
both Nn ~. tiiOL.IIO.Lllatal
robblt cage 110. IM-..1 ...e.
10HP Jacaln n Rkllng Mower:l
42" Doolt, Good Condftlon

1860. • , .... 1511.

30" OanoraiiEioctrlc On Range,
Electrantc PKot. Pueat nd Nlw
FabrUary '11, E-nt C«W~
tton, 110v1na and Cannot.!"'· j
llorowve 1'abll ; HunG

Dulin

ilodOtA.II.IF.II.
··-·

~a,Cablnat
1-T,.ck,

.

OOUrttot.e
1:01 ()) Bewllched
1:30 (I). 0 N8C Newt !;I
()) Abbin and Coal81o

Llmou~ln

tttW.

cow calf pell'l, regflRegistered LlmouaJn

hallaro. 114-892411\10,

UNCI

4

HorN

GooMfli!Ck

Doluoa Trailer, $2.115; Uaad
tift. Horoo A Stock With Tack

Compartment, ·$1,215; 1991 1211:
Horu &amp; ·Stock wnh Divider,

Pats lor Sale
Groom and Suoply ·Shop-Pal
Groomtna. All &amp;iMd1, tt!VIIL
lama Pal . Food Dealer. Julio
Webb, Collll14-44tlo0231, 1.101).
352.0231.
2 AMC Female Sa- Pupplao.
1 to Tan I WhHa, 1. Ia Trl·
Colorod Had Shota, Boon War·
mad. 114-317-0117, 114·3e7·l'l22.
AMC -nlana mala pup.
....._ I monlha old, $200. each.
!10447W471.
AKC real811red cocker epanlel
pupa. "Pacclgraad I lamlly
-loiHd, raady now, 114-44131T7.
AMC Aaglolorod Dobllrman
Pupa. Do Cia. . Aamovacl, Tall
Duell • w-. All Cotoro
Available. IM-2Stt-1320
Baall pu- t\00.00, rudy

71

Autos tor Sale

'79 Chavllla 1200. '80 Dodge
Omlnl 1111. Oood body and
motor

nee•

1r1n1mlulon. ' 77
Pinta $300. '10 four Whlll driVI

Dodge t\,500. 304-575-2002.
1171 VW Bua: ®dy good, 1400.
C.ll 614-446-4141 affer 6 or on

t80,

O..gonwyncl Cattary Pa...tan,

SltmHI and Hlmela~an kht1n1.

614-141-3844 attar 7 p.m.
Filii Tanlt, 2413 Joekaon Ava .
Point

PIIIMIW, 304-175-2063,

lull llna Tropical llah1 blrda,
amall anlmale and luppiOM.
Poodle JAip-. AKC Champion
Bloodltna, dny toy, 114.fe7-:M04.

51

r.llalcal
rnstNmants

4 Channal No Haad t\00. DOD
11- ohfltuo petal $31. Dunlop
High Gain VDiu.,. petal $35.
3CM..II2-25tl.

58

Aut'&amp;M':,ooo

-1-,114-MI-1110.

..

0 IIDIIOtft Btot10111
dleamt of btlng on 1118 1'1111
Donahue Show. (R) Stereo.

ihaetwo
liZ e Family Man Steve
dt18s
IICI10ol

dance. Stereo. !;I
8 Mualc City Newa Counlly
P,..AWMII Lorlan,. Crook
and Charlie Chase look 81
the nominees. (0:30) Stereo.
1:00 (I)
0 MOVIE: 'Ortglnel
Sin' N8C Monday Night II
1118 Movttl (2:00) Sl8reo. D
111e 'Twin Peak•' Alit
Monday Night Movtto Cooper
and Truman rulh to save
Miss Twin Peeks from
Windom Earle. Sttreo. Q
(l) ()) Mlnl-llrlgona
Singapore struggles at
becoming 1 regional center
for global economy. Stereo.

·_.1

e

w

" 'tOLl WILL "1;6,Kc A\o.l
UNe.:KPecTED ORIP."

VeRY FUNNY.

iis humiliated
liZ e Murphy lrown Jim
when he losota

Home
Improvements

control on the air. (R) Stereo.

iWreltllng
WWF Prkne Tlnl8

, BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llfatlma guaran-

Aogano la•mant 'NIItarproollng.
•
Blua Rlblion DrYWall. AHidan·
llal Commarolll Ropolril 1o Ploftar, Drywoll, 'NIItar Dai!'Of' Jar
Cracka. Buulltul Now Cotunp.
Cornplalad Over 100 Conlra!&gt;l•
In Thlo Arwa. IM-4411o2137.
'

• Mualc City Newt Counlly
Awanla Top country
parfonnara are honored at
lhe Gfand Ole Opry Houoa,
live trorri Nuhvllle. Tenn.
(2:001 Stereo.
.
DWomen'tfllo ...ch
Volleyball From San Diego

BARNEY

, ,, ,,.,

TATII , , , DUT
CHAitf II

WHAR DID
HE CRAWL

-d•

, .,

Sound travels slowly. Some times the things you say
When your kids are teenagers don't rei!Ch th~m until
they're FORTY.
.
•

.---- - ----.

BRIDGE

NORTH

1-IO·tl

+KQJ9
.QJ7
t A6 t
+983

•

PHILLIP
ALDER

EAST

WF3f
+s 5 z
.AKI092
t KQ5

+S

•ass

tl09872
+7 8 52

+H .

SOUTH

•s •

Keep your ·
eyes peeled

tJ3
+KQJIO

Vulnerable: Both
De~ ler: North

By P~llp Alder

Soot~

What makes good defenders at the
bridge table? They build up pictures of
the unseen hands, so that they can
judge how best to try lo defeat the
contract.
How do defenders build up these
pictures? Not only by analyzing the
declarer's line of play, but also - and
this is more important - by watching
lhelr partners• signals. It is vital, for
exunple, to notice that partner played
the three before the two, or vice versa.
It may make the difference between
defeating a contract and letting It
make.
Today's hand is a relatively simple
example. North's opening bid "!'Ill unappealing, with no club h~r. but it
wai the correct action with two threecard minors. South's eventual jump to
four spades was slightly aggressive,
but he liked hls apparent double filln
the black suits. A more scientific bid
would have been a came-try of three
clubs, which North would have rapidly
declined by signing off In three spades.
West led a tlip heart. Eul dropping

W.11

Nortb

Eaot

1+

Pus
z•
2+
Pus
p..,.p. , . p...

t+

••

Opening lead: • K

the three. What did West know about
the heart situation? Eut could hive
had a singleton, but it was unUkely . If
East had two hearts, he would lutve
dropped the higher card, st.lrtlnl an
echo. So East had three or four hearts.
If East held three hearts. cubing
the second top heart immediately
would establish dummy's queen, giving South a discard lor his diamond
loser. As there was nowhere for declarer to dump his second heart loser,
it was correct lor West to switch to the
diamond king al trick two.
.
This play establisbea lour trlclu for
the defense: two hearts, one diamond
and one club.
() 1.1. NIWIPAPIIIIHTIRHt. AIIN.

.

Ill

The World Almana~ Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Bounce
4 SurermM'I
glr
8 Cui of moat
12 Dolores- ·
Rio
13 Loaf-culling
tnt
14 LlkiWise
15 Mt1auro of
ltnd
18 Marthtl'a
bad;•
17 Liver ftuld
18 Crtel
moumlvlly
20 Fine
porc.llln
22 Phyolq_ue
24 Gold (&amp;p.l
25 Quaaay
feeling ·
28 Haevy boring

tool

31 lllghl bird
32 Dellntlte
34

3VMIP

lbbrawlttlon

~Hateful

42 - of London
44 Ne~t to Sun. ·
45 M11181 m1p
of
48 College
subl8ct
41 Wafered tllk
53 Wood
&amp;4 A1trtna•n
58 W1ter barrier
57 Malarial laver
58 Untroquonlld
5$ Jau pleyar
Kid60 BtHtfa
81 NoweHtt
B1gnold
62 OUidacl

tliff

DOWN

c....,.•

Anawer lo l'rawtowl'uut.

hom a
35- gol
37 Wallach tnd
Wltllnoy

~

OFF TO--

1 WWIIawent

2 Of llrcreH
3 a••••• akin

4 AoPtd

5 IIHblll .
Jillyarllal6 Europ11n
country

Larry King Uvel
0 ...uty end 1118 ..... Q
8:30 Ill liZ • Dlatgnlng w-n

WHAl?

Homo lmpro•-"11!.'
Yaara ex,.rlanca On Older .-,
Nawor -··Room Addlllono,
Foundation Wotll, -lo1g,
Wind-• &amp; Skiing. F,.. 1!1tlmetlll Rllerencee, No Job To
llg Or Smaiiii14-141-022S. •:
E &amp; A TREE SERVICE. Tollt&gt;log,
Trimm~. TrM Removal, Hitdg_e
Trimming. FrM Eatlmataal 114'

--

'ft"'+--+--t-i

Chel'lentl joina 1 group tor
military spouse1 lnd ,_ts 8
man. (R) Sl8rao. Q
10:00 (l) ()) .._, In 1118 Pltcllle
Ending the Cold War in the
Pacific ta_provlng to be more
dllflcu~. Q.
llll iiJ • Nortlt8m l!xpllltll'8
Joel u111 sanelllvlty In
treating • proud medlelll8
man. (II)

- -1-+-1---1

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

•l \

tlllurfar .....•IIMI
mance and you'll lind It The Aatro- erwell ,
fiiWorldNirn
Graph Matchmaker Instantly revealS SAOinARIUS (HoY. 23-0.C. 21) It's
0 700 Club Willi Ptt
which signs are romantically perfect tor time to view ap Important arrangement
Flab1rt1on
you. Mall $2 plus a long, sell-ad· you 're InvOlved In lrom a diHerenl andressed. stamped envelope to Match- gle. A fresh perspective could reveal a 111'.20 (I) MOVIE: Clmemltl (2:45)
maker. c/o this newspaper, P.O. BoK number of benefits you've bean 10:30 !II Y8Chl llaclng BOC
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
overlooking.
Challenge Around Alone.
CANCER (JUIMI 21...tuty 22) II some- CAPRICORN (O.C. 22-.lon. 18) Imporflnllh (T)
thing In which you're pr-lly Involved tant cllanges are tronsplrtng allltlsllme
Is prOCMdtng In a constructive fashion , that could have an adv•ntagaoul effect 11:00 (I). (J) (I) ~~~· Ill
ae ONewa
don't alter your. game plan. Leaving It on your car-. Probe tor Information
(!)Ne-=~·
undisturbed enhances Its probablllllea from sources you teal •e reliable.
®elrMnlttHIII
tor gelling even better,
AOUAIIIUI (.len. »1'8b. 11) You could
9 llllml VIae
LIO (.luty 23-Aug. 22) Ventures you be luckier than usual allhlallma In partperaonally create or control have excel- nerahlps - _ . , alliances, not jull
lent chances tor IUCCNI at thla lime. 0118 In partleul.,,
and Cher1le CltiM lnWt'leW
Back your own hone lnataad of betting PIICII (FH. 2111-March 201 You may
not be tiiiMfCIIIIy tortunal8 In your 110pony.
VIRGO (Aug. D lapt. 22) You could be clal afhlln atlhll tlme, but you could be
!IIMonerltte
rather tortunata today: AlthOugh you rem~ luelcy In matartal ways. Each
D laa wow and 11th. King
may not be .ware of It, - - people are operating under different types of
lltew
are pulling tor you. Wh81 they can do lor lnfluertc88.
you Is what you wouldn't be •ble to do
(....,.21·Aprll1t) Perlonallnon your own.
.
t_..een be 8dvartcN tadiiJ - If you
~ (hpt. 2HicL 211 You are p,.._
- bold tllld _ , . . rather lhan timid
(l)=Joumll
ently In afortun81a t!Wid wttera you een and laid-beck. Elfablllh _
.. lltort1118ka your hop8e rHIIIel. Stop oltllng term objac:tW.; you'l tunctton bell
t
on your aKpactaffont end tlart doing when buly.
~Kf I)OIIIr.a abOut them.
TAUIIUa (Aprtt 20 111etJ 20) Yow mat•
8C
(Oct. 14 Now. Ill In your .... proepeclllook 'f81'ytncouraging tocornrl*del nagotlatklnl today, don'.l day, e~Pec~•tty In ••IAIII••III wheN
.ljiOIIITGIIIIhl
be r.luc!MI to Initially 8lk tor tha moon. •what you hope to Q81n can be lflared
11:11
(I) CIIBirl Q
Ewtn II you're cltoppacl down - 8 1 wtlh Olltertt. Oan'l be Nlfllh.
notciiM. you lltOuld IIIH COIIMI out ralh·

7 lndlln
gtrment
8 Work•
8 Mtrkel C,OII' ·
trot by a ttw
10- of Wight
11 Wonla of
denltl
18 M1ny oz.
21 LtYtr of toll
23 PUll to tilt

25-

contendere
28 FNIIcf wllh
r•wtronc•

27 Lalt offer

28T,_,.
flllflc
29 DiarY of-

30
33
38
38

oeBterTrek

HouHwlla
CliChes
llng•r Jolaon

Calm•

Shut htrd '
41 Numaro43 !ar (comb.
form)
41 Post

... ...,_

47 Pk:ll• on

.-1--+--1 ... loy, •. ,.

110 Ptrton loved

.-1--+--1

to•-•..

&amp;1 n:.~.:
52 Fr
11er

torlolla

""--·I

.IUM11,1111
.Jour leaclanlllp qUatltlel will be con' llructr.aty anltlnced In the yur ahead.
Tltara'a a p olllblllly you'N be In tha
fOoeftOIII ol aotMIII*!illtat 18 both ex·
Clttfta andlmpor!MI•
...... ~ 11....... 20) The timing is
rta1t1 to ....,_ -*'*li big you've
- . . oonllmpltll 'i'"" NluOiatlt to at....,., YOU're In 1 CWC11 wtter• you
tiOU1d .. luolly ....... llroa , _ ...
..._had. k,_....,.. to look for ro-

Radio., 114-4fto0718.

::.~= ~':;.~~·

..-a

11:30f.'!,_GI Tlllllglll
wans,..

I.
·
•
'r.C:.....· cea
•o.
.....,,
~==·Q
•

,,

.

581Unof-

L~..:r:..~

H

••

ChicaJI c~:J'
\II
111e
,_ Stereo.

1:30 (I) •

Cortor'aPfw.nblnt
•ndHIOIIntl
Fowlft1ndPfno
Clalllpolla, Ditto

1V71 Ford Pickup XLT, Lorlat, V·
1,
Acluot 111ae.
Oood
nlon, 12,210. 114-

•

+Al076t

7:35 ()) Mljor IAegue Baubotll
Montreal Expos at "ttanta
Braves (L)
1:00 (I). 0 Frellt ""- Of
1181 Air Pl1111p nlks toting a
big account due 10 a
superslltloue etlan!. (R)
Sl8reo. Q
(l) MitiOr LtLtl8lpgtll D
llubotR
Los Angeles Dodgel'8 at

=~
0
......, 81111 1118 ....t 1;1

rl':"o

........... A,.

'

=~!ftl8nl

e

Serv1ces

·--

·

SCIAM·Lm ANSWIIS
Bitler - Flood - Searl - Warmly - FORTY

=

draw peopl8 10 the
dlsa1111r::21agued Pacific rlm.
Sl8reo. Q
!ll Adverilure Three
husky-dog teal)1s attempt lite
summH of Canada's MI.
Logan. Cl
till liZ. Malor Dad Tlte
Major and Poly plan a quiet
first-annlvoroary dinner party.
(RISterao. Cl
liD MOYII!: 'Tite Sitter'
FOX Nlgltt II 1118 MoviQ
(2:00)Q
9 Muriter, lite WnM
Ill On Stege Sl8reo.
!II Wiler Skiing From San

- ·e-•naa=

DunrDvln Frul fann: Juat oil
SR 811 ol Albagy ~14-M~1211. "-"Sun IAII-7PM. Fraoh
Frutt and Vtg .. ablll, Amlah

~

a) Fire on 1118 111m Riches

Dlractlonal Whaala and Spoiler.
L.ooko And Rune Goodl $2,100.
114-MI-7025.
1M2 Dido Cuatloa
ood cond. Slrlou. c1111 onlwo, 317-715T.
M-146-11709,
JET
.
1183 Chavatta Scootar, S$50, Aarotlon llotora, rapalr.d. 304·773-1011.
I r•buln motoro In atock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-1001183 ~o Corolla, good lriH . 537·1528.
and
"""• enalnl work,
SIOO. OB , 304oll71-3f17.
Ron'1 TV SII'VICI, apeclallzlng
1915 Arlaa K, auto, air, po, pb, In ZoftMh llao MrYiclng moll
t\500,
o.b.o.
114-112-U82 other brand•. HouM callo, aiJo
acmo appliance ropalro. WV
avanlnp.
304-6lll-2318 Oltlo 114-448-2454.
tiM Thundarblnl Elon, v.a,
loadacl, ...1111. Daya: 116o441- !llptlc Tank PulftDingi\IOLClallla
Co. ROll EVANS INTEII'RISES,
l'lf-441-!m.
Jockaon, OH 1~37..528.
. 1111 Dodaa eon. Eocat-·Vac
lorvlca,
CondHton. l3,1oo. 114-441-2351. Davie
Geo~ er.k Rd. Patla. • ._
tNt lroc Z-28, $1,300 or 0 .1 .0,.
plcU., and dollYII'J. ....
Still Undllr Warranty! 114·2•521M.
15T7.
82 Plumbing &amp;
72 Trucks lor sara
Hllltlng

FNits&amp;
Vegetable&amp;

/VIf :•

~~·--~$~H~O~E$~~--~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~

tonnatlon.

1181 Fcird Eac~ GLX, Call 614·
4411o1411aftar !p.m.

l

GOTTA

IE

ANP 1-IFTI IN MY

27ft Titan motOf horne, loadld.
Call 114·317.0182 for more ln-

INgle-· 304·578-2718.

s..,..,.,

,, l

•

'

now a.....:ai2·~544.

eo-.,..•

MU$CI-I$ pc..!MPEP "P,
'0£~6fN IN MY l-IP$

~ $IN(;'

eo..-.

Cu~l•

1112 Monle Car1o, 228 V-1,

GOIN(j.

contained, 304 ..75-24113.
,
tm 2011. Cadat
~c.
Awning, llllt.C:Ontalnad. 8)4-

81

CourtQ

•

to 1

bHt olfar. 31M·I75·4M8.

load bablaa, $35. and up. 304175-1043.
bllogla pups,
$50.011 114-192-11122.
Dog 1nd Cat grooming all
- · apaclallztd In POodla
=1.'2~2 yro axporlonca,

'

Wf'IA'r Affe you

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

111. Local refarlncM tumiMtd .
Fraa aatlmatH. Cell oollact ·1·
IM-237-0411, day or nlg!lt.

ertre ••,.., hand

. MY

f:.,A.Cf 1-IFTEP,
TUMMy TLJCftEI&gt;, .My

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
11167 Ford Aabuln C6 Tran•n!laalon,
S125.
114-441-228g
Daytime, 1114-441·1111 after
4p.m.

441-268'1.

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER

A

•

Complere tho chuckle qu&lt;&gt;Nd
by tilllnq In tho milling
you dovolop tram stop No. 3 bolow.

Beach, Calif. (T)

'76 '

79

A
V

·

.

Ill Cnlltflre

1n-

114-148-1115, 6M-441-1244 After
lp.m.
1171 Monta Corio. Qood Conditio!\ Runo Good, 114-448-2569.
1171 Nova, good body, naada
angina, 304.f'l5-244g,
t178'01do Cutl111, 304oii75·31M1.
11m Chryalar Co!doba 310,
auto, rune good new r.buiH
.•,.n..
lnlerlor, g...t car,
$1500. Dora llt4-112-2lSI. Ahar
1:30PM, call304.a7541gll5.
1180 Dotaon 210ZX, now paint I
llrull, s - d . 12,200. 304-1752317 1e1ve name and number.
1981 Buick Skylark, 2 doora, 2.5

eocuu...,

·, I&gt;YEP, MY

Tfff

87!1-t1470.

1175 Granad1 1 4dr, PS, PB, $500,

4 cyt., m1ny new parte. $900 or

(:.A(lEF~ oN

boardlout-l&gt;oa!d. Phona 'lp4-

WHklndl.

a-•

:t
iVI /liAr&gt;'( Fo~ MY NI'W
S'fAGE. : 'GO'T MY HAifl

t

I

ft.

UNMITY

~~~· 11111111'1 Fllllly
Ill~ at t'ortunt Q
IIDe M'A1S'tf
8 Be a liar Sl8rao.
!II Jet Siding From Long

Glaaatron r1 ft. 110, ,,,.
board/out-board. Phone 304f7

.

Tonight Sl8reo.

.

Olullron

Sign seen I, n weight control
clinic: "A diet is a plan for
~~~-~~ tomorrow what you

PRI NT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

!ll

5 hp boat motor whh 3 gat, gaa
lenk, 304-t7S-6101. .
i

Lmtoueln bull, zo montht old,

~~~

7:05 ()) Tlte Jen.IOI\1
7:30(1). 0 Jeoplrdrl Q

75 Boats &amp; Motors ;·
ror sara
~.

175-1470.

T H A WE

II

I . I 15 1'.:. 8

taMOttewt!tte
0 S e t - lnd Mrl. tang

11111 Honda V·30 ~_gna, 7,100
miiH, llka t\,100. ~-

•th
Chillicothe, Ohio
4!1101, IM-773-231141. Ohlo'a
Pl-rllard.

1

V

I

1711-4231.

••·1121.

r T r Lr

!II Up Ctol8

&amp;&amp;..,.AfllllrQ

1114 Honda V-II lllbni, Yo
oond, $1,700. 304.f'la-15N -or

tiM Chrta Craft Ca.,.,lar, 32 ft,
dual 213 Chevy angl- (120 lire
aft• NINIIIt), ....,. ••
rafrlg.,..or, •on, 2 elnka,
head, Kohllar -tor. Drive
on traitor wMfi trent roliaN.
Make ottor aaltl,. IIV1 of boal·
lng, 30f417mH aftar 5:00 Pll.
1111 Rinker Y.205, v.. lull canvn tcip, t\1,100. oxo aond, with
troller, 304-675-1578 fit 1711-t;!f5.
2111. Sklffcraft Inboard Outbojlnl
Cobin, Wllor Raady. l2,110. t;t4-

1

7 I I I II 1A
IL-l-l-.JI.......JI--1-..J
1
V

~!EI.~Q

t'

1110 HD unra Ctaulc, t\1,100 ""
0.1.0., LHa Than 3,000 MI....,
Still Under Warranty; 1181 Hit,
Juat A~totad. 114-2411-MT7. :
Honda 1182 XA 200, Excattoht
Condition, IM-2-41.
•'

ROTDIE

/ii 1 Dream at Jaan."'le

1182 Honda Ooldwlng 114·192·
11114.
1982 Suzuki GS450L, 4,100
Mlln, Excaltant Condhlon.
$100, Rnn. i14-441-3111,'
1914 Harlay Sportalor, low
mU11ge, eJIC cond, 304-812•

•

"'.,..
form lour olmple -do.

~~·~-=.2. Q
(I) :t-2-1 c:om.ct Q

7:00~~~· O~atF­

Motorcycles
1174 Honda 310 CB, $400, 114·
1115-3117.
.

2148.

to

.

1:35 ()) ,.,.., Orlflllh

74

3355.

.·I.

Rl~cw::-Q

&lt; .y-

1

tm campar rT ft, good cond
IJc, TV antenne, new tlr•, 111i

· Building
Supplies

Sola l

Chair, t\1.10 WHk;

5p.m.

55

56

Racllntr, $5.41 WNk, Swivel

18 Wtllltl Tod8J

·
Aer~ Star,
XL,
Loadad, sa,ooo mllao. Eocatlant
Condhlonlt7,100. IM-3~ .
1087 5-10 Bllzer, Tahoe, Loaclkl,
Low Mlluga, 614-446-1134 ~~r

IIlii Ca-r 22 ft, Nil Con•
llined, .-ct:riiD tongue, niW bltlery, evenlnga 304-812·2148.

lloclt, brick, olpoo, win- · llnlala, ate, Cloudo Wln1.,., Rio Ot'anda, OH Call 614265-1121

Vl'ra Furnltu,..

li:¥!";:Q

or UlloNI3.
1087 Ford

WATER WELLS DRILLED: faat, $1,1'91. OWnor Will Flnanca. 614Nuonablourvlca. IM-8118-7311. 21141522.
Whlrii&gt;OOI air oond,7,500 btu
TransportatiOn
1141. 304oi75-2MO.

614-448-7318.
AENT20WN
614-448-3158

10 1DCI.

........000....... 41110- Coltlgo tor ,.nl, turnlahad, AIC,
carpatLaood nalg!tborhood no
141171 Holt1Poltt 1171 111114111 ~. Pla-nt, WV 1·304:
101 • Ioiii il1d o!flllll!da I I 112 llodtitt, .....,_ Doa1111111ro Fumlohad Apart. . .If'( I,
..........! manl. Wator Paid, 1300/mo.lm
dlnlnlinu:: anlll lilllllln. ..._. •
Dopoall. No Pate. 11 Codllr
..... and w1iwc1 IDr · 114 311111113.

__:;::;.::.::,:.:;:;.;::..___ 1,., S7,310i,I::.F

;!761.

Merchandise

Cornplataly turnl- amall
howe tor 1 or 2 ,._ _ No
plu• ulllltiH. et6... fS-

Fann Equipment
7030 Allie cnot-. DIIHI Trocotoaa~ ss,~;
11060 AC
wHh Buah ""'I•
Q(adar Blade, &amp; C.mant llloor,
$4,410; 110 M; . Whh Loader,
$4,1110. OWnar Will Flnanca. l14·
2811411122.
Alloa Chalmaro 12 hP• Aiding
llowar, Hu( 42 Inch Mowing
Dock, Hu Hart
Dl•o,
Suowbll~• AOiotiUir, AL 1100.

Is

iDIIIIIII.:rJ£

5, •46-1m, attar 5 can 448-7570

61

I

LiM111G InC. Fl Worltl, TX

(J)Ciwtl81nCMoleQ

capt. ,chat,. I bad. 310 111111·•
erui8e, tiH Wheel, $'10,500. Cll.l-

MIICIIIanaoua
Merchandise

low

-~~ 111e • oe

,•

1

54

Raarrano- lattero of
O four
....,...,led wordo

EYEHINQ

1981 Chevy convnon van, kM
mil.. , dUll air. ralaN roof~ 4

t==========-r:::::::::j

........

MQN .. JUNE 10 •
C'ttll TV

w-

raglatar.dl Hman lallad. Alao
niCe yNrl ng. 112 Llmoualn, 112
Santa Gartr\ldla loull, 114-IM-

fumhure, halt. ., Weatem &amp;

Ralollono. llllary AangacS12,100
to 114,000. Doadllna •or Ap.
pllcationl

2566.

$10.18 WMK.OPEN : llonday
Thru Sat-y, ta.m. IO lp.m,
Sunday 12 Noon Till lp.m. •
MhH Oft Aouto 7 On Route Mt,
lnCanlanary.
SWAIN
AUC110N I RJANITUAE. 12
Oliva 81., Clalllpolla. Now &amp; Uud

Background In Tourism Public

Help Wanted

Apartment av•llab .. for 2 or 3
eonttructlon workera 304..a82·

OUII'IntMI Skaggs ApplllnciS,

Rentals

axjlarlanca. Wollam lladlcal
SOrvlcH, IM-141-1311,

-'Celnl. rl"
..~:.~
11.T.L CMo
111'

quiNd. 114·192-liiOB.

ac-

2 Bedroom Houaa, Edaa Of
Town, In City, Country ltmo•·

lng Count-. 1 yNr minimum

For: All Old U.S.

tlnglt lady prar.f'Nd. kltcMn &amp;:
batfl facility, Nr.rtncu ,._

~.

22 Money to Loan

31

Furnished
Rooms
1 room tor rent, ucellllnt for 1

lD11I FOR SALE I" Clalllpotla
• Farry, Will
lrallero, city
Unk Fenc4Ji. Water IVIIIIbte. Phone 3()4.171-

Fraa Eatlmataal Com· Prlvato, 1 112 Ac,., Unrellrlctad,
plata lnatolletlon. Phcna: 114· RUS,
Rodney,
t\1,000.
384-11277.
~ Owrlar Flnancal 114Vending Aoula.C.ah lualnau
For Solo, ChNp. Sail Quickly. 1· For Solo: AI- ba"* PIO~ In
800-344-M85.
llaaon. 304-773-!1851.
Local Vending Aoula. For 8111,
36 Real Estate
ChNp. 1-.,1414.
dualrla~

45

Loh -1 ICNIQI IVIIIJble for

new home cOMiructlon on
Rayburn Road. Pavad rood,
oounty
wat•.
rea~nable
,.atrlcllona. Cornplola lnformo-·
tlon mailed on !W41UOII, 304-8751211, John D.

'

Haven or Pornt P...aant, AI. 1

Bo• !!!', Pt. Pn, wv 255110 or
3044110-3005. .
AN'S And LPN'S
OR And OB. To nt.OO par hour,

Business ·
$ulldlngs
Bulldlna For Rant: 801130 CloH
To Town, Concrwta ~ .':'•
E l - &amp; Water, 1114-44
12
Eot. 272 Satora 4p.m., IM.f.M.
lle3 Evantnaa.
OfFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on

lng Opp., air cond., laundry
room, ''" traah pickup, cloH
to llorn &amp; achoolo. 304·7n.
!i52D.

•

1182 Chevy Von In good concl,
304oii7W287.
tilt Chevy 5-10 Blanr 4
drl~~ tuto., air, hklh mllea,
l25ou nag., call U 6a.117!1, after 5 446-7113.
~
1811 Ford Econollno ConY,Orolon Von, tully oqulp.-d, pluah,
73,000 ...... $7.000. 304-lf2·
218hftor 1:30PM.

saoo.

The Dally Sentinel-Page 11

Television
Viewing

lorit wheal-. 30UYW824.

~:':".:.-::.~~.t'z c::::!

trolfar whhout ""'"'•
wan "'""'" sm. adune 2
chlld,.n p,."'Nd. 30• 182 3121
bal- 1:00 am and 1:00 pm
lor appointment.
111. v - Avo lumlahad
round apt. ldall tor one.
:zn plua aloe. Upatoi,. lur-

tor

Pomeroy......allddle~~. ~1!,1~ ~

:

vans &amp; 4 WD'a ,
1171 Fcird
4 · -trono
~~~:::•
........
t apoad

..

'

73

Apart-•

Not Suitable

.

&lt;

'
1110 .Jaop Comanoha 1,100
mllaa, 1ua1 'lnJaclad, aulo, I d)'l,
11000, 114-1112-IIOt.
1181 Dodga Dakota club 04b,
low miiH, -ad, $12,000. 304175-21t6.

FumiOhacl Apari""!!l. 1 BadU1illlaa Pal.d,
1172 ~- 14x'/O, 2 bad• Oalllpolle, 114....
- . 7.•14 • ....,., . - lur· 107
44• aftar 7p.m.
..... unctorplnnlna, - h.
awnlna.
14,000. FumiOhacl lltlolanOY, tiiO
304..fll.3414 or 30U7W111 af· Utllhlaa Paid, - . . 8altl, 701
tori:OOPII.
F...,ll, Galllpolla, 11• Ul u•
after 7~m.
11M Manalon 14d0, 2 bodand ba1ha, all elec, FumiOhacl
Eftlclancy,
AU
·-and dryw, 304-171-N77. UtiiMIH Paid. Shft Bath.
1111- 14dl 1 ~ lad_,., ... llil A......
CA, Carpatod, untumlahad, 114-Mio:IIMI.
~ Molal Bulldlna. Con Sao
Qraclouo IIYing. 1 and 2 AI: ..4 Jacllaon Ph l.ol 10. 100111
apart- at Vllloao
· - " ' " · 1116 t41
~~~and
Al-.lio
In llkJdlapart. From
tNt Clayton, 2 1~ 1 gu hMI,
_,., air, undll.,.nnlng A·1 till. Caiii14-IU·7m EOH.
oondMton.. $1,100. 114·182·7104 .......... Harttord aportmant
aftar 1:30 p.m.

- a.-.
Slngloe
ly Chol
..
1111
eon,_lal,
Wlfto:
--c~:.C?· Boo1043, Gal·

'

-BORN LOSER

1-llald 12110, -tur-

nlahad; ...ooo. 114-441-1211.

A

. ,Monday, June 10, 1991

June 10, 1991

Ohio

•

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XWCODIAF .
PREVIOUS SOL'ci1tON: "AN my are great. Sornt Of them n
but they're 111 greet." - Lew Grllde.

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1111 by NEA, Inc .

bad

•

•

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--·---

--

Beekeeper with diabetes
stung 'from head to toe'

t

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

Monday, June 10,1991

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

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

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

Ohio Lottery

Reds close
home stand
with win

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

Page4

•

•

a1

"They looked lite honeybees IQ

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

VOl. 42, No. 26

Copyrtghled 1991

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

I

I

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

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

ides were spoasorid by the Pomeroy Men:bants
Association.

.

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

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

WRECK SCENt: • RODDie DonatdloD who

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

was tr811111011ed by Lite F!Jabt lO Grmt H01Pi·

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

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

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

at amusement park

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

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

'

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

'•

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

c-..

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

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

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

Prosecution rests in case
offormer HUD director

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

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

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

'·

'.

-·A,...

•'f)

'

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

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

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

HUD.

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

II!

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

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

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

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

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

'II

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