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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
utah Jazz ties
series with
Chicago Bulls

Super Lotto:

6-14-27-32-36-41
. Klc;:ker:
.
4-2-7-4-9-5
Pick 3:
4-6-3

Sporta on Pqe 4

Pick 4:

1-6-6-8

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~.41,NO.S7

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Sewer project to begin
~in Tuppers Plains area

pen house observed----.

:Dirt may fly on long..awaited job within 30 days

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'By BRIAN J. REED
Stntlnel News Staff

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. · Construction on a new sewenystern in TUppers Plains is expected to
begin within 30 days, now that the
construction bid has been awarded.
Fields Excavating of Kitts Hill bas
: been awarded the bid for construction
of !he $2.7 million project, which is
· being funded tl!rough a variety of
· public funding sources.
The primary financing for the systern will come from a loan through
the U.S. Department of Agriculture
·Rural Development - formerly !he
Farmers Home Administration. Fund· ing will also come from Community
· Development Block Grant, Issue II,
' Ohio Water ·Development Authority
. . and Ohio Public Works Commission
· funds.
.Fields Construction also installed
t~e sewer system in Rutland.
· although the design of the Thppers
·· Rlains system is different. The Thp· -pers Plains system will be a gravity
· .floW system, rather than grinders, and
'· Will use a lagoon on !he outskirts of
the district for treatment.
Attorney John Lentes, who repre-

sents·the sewer district, said Friday
that a Notice to Proceed on the project was filed Friday following a preconstruction meeting between the
TPRSD bolird and the contractor.
"This starts the clock running for
completion of !he project," Lentes
said. "The contractor lias indicated
!hat most of the project .should be
completed by this winter."
Construction on the project will
begin at the site of the lagoon, and
. will begin as soon as the materials list
. submitted by the · contractor is
approved by . the project engineer,
URS/Greiner of Columbus. The pro- ·
ject inust be completed in 330 days,
Lentes said.
Interim financing' for !he project
has been provided by Farmers ~ank
&amp; Savings Co., Lentes said, to ensure
!hat construction is not interrupted for
lack of available monies; and to assist
with the issuance of bonds for the
. project. Such interim financing is .a
• requirement of RDA.
·Farmers Bank, which operates a
branch office in Thppers Plains, also
financed the purchase of the lagoon
. site from Joseph Ritchie, and has

been "incredibly helpful" wi!h financial assistance for the project, Lentes
said.
A proposal for interim financing
was also, received from Peoples
·
Banking &amp; Trust Co..
Brian Connolly, a Meigs County.
native, will be the superintendent for
the contracting firm, and Wayne
McFarren will serve as an on-site
supervisor and comi!'Qnity liaison for
URS/Greiner.
Both Connolly and ~eFarren will
be available to TPRSD customers for
questions during the construction
period, Lentes said.
Monthly meetings relating to the
project will be held on the last lUesday of each month .
An estim8ted'200 properties in the
Thppers Plains community will be
served by the district, and plans are
being considered for serving the
Apple Tree Estates subdivision under
development by Frank Herald, which
is la&lt;;ated almost two miles outside of ·
Tuppers Plains.
Lentes said no final agreement has
been reached between Herald and the
district relaling to serving the development.

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Melga countlana were given
i look at the new 1G-bed
BehiVIOI'III Health Unit at Vet•
81'1ns Memorial Hoapltal during
an ope.-. houie held Sunday ·
afternoon. The new ficlllty,
located In the ho8pltlll'• aouth
wing _;. which h. . bien c.ompletelf remodeled and redeconrted - will expend the acope
of geriatric health care In Melga
Coilnb'. Kim Eeda, LPN, an
In
Inpatient
1111d Joy
. photo.at .
tiN! ,.nractl!lel
~~ UH. fl'l'lll
tnt. ware offei-W,
and
Clark laboratory
technologllt, drew blood from
Charles Buab of Racine for the
enjoyed touni of the
t11t In the top photo. Vl11tor1
refreebmentl In the

Aesoclated PraM Writer ·

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SCARY, W.Va.·- People who ran
from a fiery ~rash of a train carrying
hazardous chemicals have returned
home and some have complained of
headaches, dizziness and chest pains.
Hundreds of people hid in their
homes and others ran for safety
when the train rear-ended a coal train
and burst into flames late Saturday.
An engineer on the train carrying
· chemicals was killed and two workers received minor injuries.
Thirteen cars and two engines
derailed because of either human
error or a broken signal. investigators
said.
'The collision created a huge fir£-

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FIRST MEMBERS - Looking over a hciOp
skirt Southern gown uaed In one of the earlilr
muelcels of the Big Bend Minstrel Aseoclatlon
are .._rgle Stobllrt Wolfe, left, and her mother,
Mre. Naomi Stobllrt; The gown w.. one of Hverelslmller costuiiiH ~lsplayed Sunday whiln ·

.._,ltllge Sundlly was held at the Melge Mu.. ,
um, plying tribute to the ueoclatlon musicale
that began In 1M4. JIP. Wolfe and Mrs. Stobllrt- memblre ol the celt In the first show
staged by the organization.
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Air, ahmrimm wl.3ds, dlt, C1'tB; AM1FM
ca;seUC and nnv=b morel As low As...

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Defense looks to paint different
picture of .McVeigh ·for his jurors
DEN•VER (AP) -

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VAtlt ~.sll Gil De'*~
'C HEVRDLEI .• OlDSMOBILE • i.EIUIS • IDYiiia
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and entertainment by Denver ·
Rice of Middleport.

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used in the manufacture of acetic acid
and perfumes. The chemical can
substantially weaken the central nernee.
"We were just sitting there watch- : vous system when inhaled, according
ing TV and there was a big boom , to reference books.
Residents were all owed to return
like thunder," said 18-year-old Lisa
home - or emerge from their housCash.
"We were waiting fur a·hall of lire es - by Sunday afternoon.
Some residents crawled through
to come in and get· us," Beverly Post
thick smoke and under rail cars to.
said.
A third train coming from the escape .
opposite direciion on an adjacent
track·nearly smashed into the derailed
People whO fled were told to discars, stopping 500 feel .shy of the card their clothes because they might
have been contaminated. Some comwreck .
Hundreds were asked to leave plained of headaches and dizziness
their homes because the tank that more than .12 hours after the wreck.
exploded coniained roughly 20,000
Hospitals treated 16 people, all·of
gallons of acetaldehyde, which is whom had been released.

ball and cloud of chemical smoke,
causing some in Vintroux Hollow to

In the final

minute videotape depicting-his son's .:strophe on the federal government.
Army buddies will be called to
describe McVeigh as more than just
will use his friends, teachers and faniOther witnesses were expected to an excellent soldier, but a good
.ily in a plea to jurors to .spare his life. include three of McVeigh's former friend.who wQUid pick up pals lit bars
· The witnesses will paint.a starkly · teachers from New York, ·expens on because !hey bad too much to drink.
different picture of McVeigh !han the the government siege of the Branch He didn 'i drink . .
prosecution's portrait of an angry Davidian compound near Waco,
·The defense is seek.ing to counter
bomber with a twisted sense of patri- Texas, and whi!e supremacists, 2-112 days of emotional testimony by
otism. ,To the.defense witnesses, he ·defense attorney R:ichard Burr has bombing surviVO!'S, rescuers and vicwas a model soldier who earned dis- said.
tims'. relatives for the prosecution .
tinction in the Gulf War1 a friendly
Defense witnesses· have already Slime: jurorw wept as .the witnc~ses·
neighbor and a hard worker. He w!IS described Mc:Veigb as a perfect sol- spoke of their lost loved ones and of
shy around w.omen, even socially dier who quickly rose to sergeant and their lingering pain.
awkward, but politically devout.
excelled as a gunner. A former neigh"~defense will clearly focus on
· . ThC ~ntencing phase in the trial bor. Jan McDcnnon. recalled a young McVeigh's absence of criminal. hisWI!S expected to end this week, after McVeigh has a hungry little boy tory and his ·military record and
the defense calls dozens of witness- before telling jurors in a choked they'll hope that his.family can speak
es to try to hum,anize a convicted voiee; ."1 can't im,agine him doing as eloqllently as the many victims of
·m~ m.urderer and provide some 11Df!hing like !his. I can 't~"
the blast," ' said Denver defense
explanation. for tbe horror of the
'l'o help them undersland more lawyer Scott Robinson. "But one
bombing.
abo11t McVeigh, the defe~se has doubls that." .
' .The linal decision - whether promjsed to put jurors in his boots, to
11\e Juron are mosdy white and
M~Veigb should be sentenced to die . readlo them from lbe JN11CS of his middleoc:lau, T811ginll from young
or to life in prison without parole favorite magazine! Soldier of P~ adults to Jelired. Several are religious,
. will JO to the 5a1DC jury that con- and llhow them v1deogpes that vah- · and some have military baatJrollnds
victecl him a week ago on murder and daled his far that somelhina terrible
·
··
conapiracy cliarJes in the April 19, happeoed -Waco.
All jiii'!IIS acknowledJed durinll
199~. bl¥t that killed 168 people.
The jury will be broupt into the their selection that they could impose
1Cstimoily was to resume today.
home of J1111e1 Nichols, a friend of the death peMity, but •-.I said
' The · defense intead1 to call McVeip's and brolher otMcVeiJh'• lhc)o woUld ca.itler a '-IICIIIenCe
· McVe~'a father, William McVeiJh, accuted c:o111pbalor, 'J'tn'y Nichols, if the offender lbowed remone .
to discua how bis 1011 alway• con· on tbc day thefuu rxed tbrouJb the
They lllo may .-nmend thai
slcleled bitiiiCif an undlnchiever. 81'111Ch
Davidilll) compound. · U.S. Dlllrict Judfe IUchlrd Matscb
He repcatedly win nll!'lle a . 1~- Mc:VeiJII. blamed
deadly cala· impose I

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and Jayne Mann, Kathy Hood, Hal Kneen,
Karen Qj lfftllt and Kiltle Crow llnglng a variety
of 1111clloM from a110 clallon
HerItage Sundly'a ot111rwnce peld lrllnle lo the
· mullcell e1a111d by the
llnc~
11M.
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d~ys of~ Oklahoma.City bomb~ng childhood in Lo!:kport, N.Y., a Buf·
tnal, att~ys for Timothy McVctgh . falo suburb.

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By MARqiE MASON

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Evacuees ·returning home
after fleeing train collision· ·

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IS Package, 5spd, powtt steet;U1f !'nnlnl•~
wbeeh, air, AM!FM amllk; AsiDw As...

2 Soctlona, 12 Pagea, 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,·Monday, June 9, 1997

01117, Olllo VllleV Pulllielllng Compeny

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Mond8y, June t, 1117

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OHIO Weather

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,..---~-·--=--___..;_,·_. Nuclear technology contin·ues to spread
The D~y Sentinel
As;.
noted.
If recently convieted mass murderer
nmolhy McVeigh had had
'UttJ/jGsfw{ in 1948
access to nuclear material instead of
fertilizer, the world would be a dif111 Court StrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio
ferent place. And that's the over614-992·2158 • Fax 1182-2157
whelming concern of FBI. CIA and
1 nuclear experts at both the Los Alam. os and LaWJ'ence Livennore nuclear
laboratories.
They've already determined that it
A Gannett C9. Newspaper
I is inevitable that domestic or foreign
1
' terrorists with the know-how to make
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlelwr
; a crude nuclear bomb will eventually obtain the material to do so. So ·
they're preparing for the worst.
·
The brightest hope, according to
MARGARET
LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
top
experts who have spoken with our
Controller
O..raiMM8ger
associate Dale Van Ana, is that there
will be some w11111ing or claim by the
Tiles.....,." • -..-tollludllor"--'""• _ _ ,..,.._
individual or group setting off a
~Illl nuclear device in some American
~end dtt)'fl~w numoer. SpiiCify • CW.If ,..,.•• • oU:a •NOW fD 1 Pllt"IG
chy.
01 - ·
" ' ' - 1D lhe flrlllor. The Stulltlll, ffl COun Ill.. -oy; 011/o
' "If it is an 'unattributed' 'nuclear
L..:45:~::"'::;.:""~·~FAX:=,,:to:,:f:_:l:t::Hr:;:41;::n~-;...----....,,....,..,_,...,..,_...,_~~ explosiOn," one top CIA official told
us, "it will be the worst nightmare we
can imagine in America. Maniallaw
would be declared, civil rights would
probably be trampled on. We would
be susptcious of neighbors and rousting everyone for fear of a second
nuclear device."
What makes a nuclear terror attack

in the United Swes more likely
today than in years Jll$1 is the pocentialleak of ill-guarded nuclear mate·

By Jack Anderson

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Chief -justice:
·M.cVeigh trial should
have been televised

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -Maybe the wrong trial was televised.
Last summer. when Americans outraged at O.J. Simpson's trial on mur·
der charges were ready to scrap the enttre court system, OhtQ Supreme Coun
Chtef Justice Thomas Moyer urged restraint.
·: "I cautioned people not to think that trial was typical," Moyer said in an
intervtew last week.
· Much of the blame for the circus-like atmosphere in the courtroom was
placed on the extenstve television coverage, leading some California offi:~tals to suggest kicking cameras out of the courtroom.
: Moyer thought then, and sttllthinks, that would be a mistake.
~ · ·'The more people se~ how the systems works, the more confidence they
:.Jiave m 11," he satd.
. .
~ · In fact, tf Timothy McVeigh's tnal had been broadcast 11 maght have
~ndone some of the damage to the pubhc's perception of the legal system,
j.1oyer added
.: "That's the way the system works in most couns," he said.
: : The Me Vetgh tnal was about seven months shorter than the Stmpson prollecdmgs. It also lacked the bickering among attorneys, and there was no need
'tO replace any JUrors:
~· Ohto courts - except for juvenile cases - have been open to cameras
~mce 1979. Moyer has been on the Supreme Court since 1987 and says he's
Jiever heard from a Judge who thought cameras interfered wtth the conduct
-cif a tnal.
:: Forty-stx other states also allow some fonn of camera coverage, but the
:htlcs are different m federal courts.
-: The Judtctal Conference of the United States- whtch sets the rules for
ihe federal court system -allowed cameras in some courts for three years
.qs a test. But when tt was completed in 1994,the conference decided against
il_ermanently allowmg cameras, saying "the intimidating effect of cameras
on some witnesses and jurors was cause for serious concern."
Last year, the conference voted to allow each federal appeals court to
occtdc whether tls proceedings can be televised or broadcast.
For McVetgh's trial on charges in the 1995 bombing ofthe Alfred P. Murrah Federal Butlding in Oklahoma City,_C~ngress stepped m and passed leg·
islatton allowing survivors and farm lies of the-168 killed to watch the pro·
ceedmgs on a closed-ctrcutt television feed from the Denver courtroom.
But the pubhc apparently had its fill of gavel-to-gavel coverage wtth the
Simpson case A recent USA Today poll showed that 83 percent of Amen'ans agreed with the decision to ban television news cameras from the
McVeigh tnal.
Count U.S. District Coun Judge George Smith among them.
'
Smtih, a former municipal and common pleas judge in Columbus, said \
he has seen both sides of the issue.
"Nothing really terrible happens," he recalled, "but I prefer the system
wtthout the camera.
"It just adds more pressure to everyone involved- including the Judge."

and·
JanMoller
rial in the fonner Soviet Union ••
combined with the will of madmen.
It doesn 'I matter whether it's domestic madmen who hate the federal government or international lunatics who
see the United States as a comtpted
font of evil -- the result wtll be the
same.
America remains the top terrorist
target in the world, accOflling to the
State Department's recent annualter,
rorism report. There were more incidents aimed at American interests
than any pther country in 1996. The
most lethal event was the June,l996
truck bombing at an American military base near Dhahran, Saudt Arabia,
which killed 19 Americans.
Iran is a suspect in that attack and
remains the chief sponsor of international terrorism. "Since 1990, we
estimate -· and indeed, we have sol-

id information •• tJw Iran wu
responsible for over 50 murden of
political dissidents and othen overseas," reported Phillip C. Wilcox Jr..
ihc State Department's coordillator
for counter-terrorism, \JI a recent
briefing.
He added that "the decision-mak·
ing process m Iran is a collective one
in which the most senior members of
the government participate. These
acts of Iraman-supported terrorism
abroad are not the re5ult of rogue elements within the Iranian bureaucracy; they are sanctioned at the very
highest levels."
Iran's penchant for exponulg terrorism makes that nation's covert
nuclear weapons development program more alarming. Among Iranian
government officials, the project for
domestic nuclear bomb production ts
labeled "the great secret plan.'.' Iranian President Hashemi Raf,...jani has
been speeding this Teheran-style
Manhattan Project along.
We have reponed earlier on a
highly classified CIA report delivered
to President Clinton which adds that
there is a high probl!btlity that Iran
has already acquired two nuclear
WBI'heads from a former Central

DOE) THI$ MEAN
'10U'LL FINALLY TUR
OUT THAT FALL.OVT SHELTER,
.SO I CAN PLANT MY

BE'GONfAS?

TwQ.,J;heers·~:.for

For the first time in its 77-year history, the American Civil Libenies
Union is embarked on an endowment
campaign. The goal is $2S million,
and $10 million has already been
raised.
It is indeed a hard time for the
ACLU •• as well as for those other
civil libertarians who do not regard it
as tbe mother church.' At present,
there is no looming clear enemy of
. ctvilliberties ··such as Joe McCarthy
-- around wpom protectors of the Btll
of Rights ate eager to raUy.
Even George Bush brought new
members to the ACLU because of the
scandalously anti-ctvilliberttes campaign he ran agamst Mtchac&lt;l Dukakis
lilY The Associated Press
•
(the
repeated ascent from the nether·
Today is Monday, June 9, the I60th day of 1997. There are 20S days left
world of Willie Horton and a patriot
in the year.
game which, at one point, had Bush
Today's Highlight in History:
almost hterally enfolded in American
On June 9, 1954, Army counsel Joseph N. Welch confronted Sen. Joseph Oags).
~ . McCarthy during the Senate-Army Hearings over McCarthy's attack on
Currently. much more damage
p member of Welch's law firm, Fredenck G. Ftsher. Said Welch: "Have you
had been done to the Consutution by
no sense of decency, sir? At long last, have you left no sense of decency?"
a president to whom ctvil hbentes are
On this date
an irritant. He has nearly abohshed
In A.D. 68, the Roman Emperor Nero committed suicide.
habeas corpus; has worked hard to
In 1870, author Charles Dickens died in Godshtll, England.
censor cyberspace through the ComIn 1940, Norway surrendered to the Nazis dunng World War II.
munications Decency Act; and has
In 1953. about 100 people dted when a tornado struck Worcester, Mass. eviscerated the rights of prisoners and
In 1969, the U.S Senate confirmed Warren Burger to be the new chief immtgran\s while pushing for vastly
JUStice of the Untied States, succeeding Earl Warren.
expanded wiretap powers.
In 1973, Sccretanat became horse racing's first Triple Crown winner tn
But since most of the press have
iS years by winni'hg the Belmont Stakes.
.
downplayed or ignored Bill Clinton's
In 1978, leaders of the Church of Jesus Chnst of Latter-day Saints stru~k campaign agamstthe Constitutton, he
down a 148-ycar-old pohcy of excluding black men from the Mormon priesthood.
.
In 1980, comedtan Rtchard Pryor suffered almost fatal bums at hts San
Fernando Valley, Cahf., home when a mixture of "free-base" cocaine explodBy DeWAYNE WICKHAM
ed.
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON- Now let's see
if I've got this right.
The commanding general at
Aberdeen Proving Ground has been
cians who protect my people who cry forsed into retirement. The reason,
pear Edtlor, ·
· As a leaf of tobacco, I can now out for a natton of truth and liberty. Detenlie Department o(licials say, is
"Gtvc me tobacco or give me death," that the two-star geneflll had a brief
~orne out of the field and express
as
the. orator read from the speech, affair with a civilian woman while he
publicly my true feelings; giving to
prepared
by beautiful young Wash- was separated from his wife.
Jtle earth my contribution to human·
But the four-star general. thought
1ly, bringmg my famtly of chewing Ington tobacco lobbyists.
Tobacco, now recognized by the to be the (ront-runner for the chair·
tobacco, cigars, snuff, nicotine,
ammonia •• added chemicals I admtt, defense department to insert into their manship of.the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
arsenal of weapons to change the will is being forgiven by his ci,vilian boss
I cannot pronounce.
of
future ruthless nations. I am dis- for an adulterous relationship he had,
My family is next to the best of
them in the boundless terrain; com, mayed a talented B-S2 pilot was also with a civilian, while he and his
soy, beans, sunflowers. fruits and removed from the cockpit of a mighty wife were sep~r~ted.
Why the difference?
vegetables ·· although our stalks are bomber, capable of dropping millions
Well, to begin with, time seems to
not celebrated~ television commer- of tons of my family members of
be a factor. Army Maj. Gen. John
caals or used as motivation to help tobacco.
Think of the conflicts that could Longholtser, the Aberdeen commanchildren, "Now sweetheart, you bet·
be
prevented
if America l!els the ene- der, had his exll'llnlarital affllir five
tef inhllle your spinach."
my
wheezing,
coughing, hacking, years ago. Air Force four-star acner• Because I am out m the open as a
force to be used in the scheme of . choking; unable to breath, trying to al Joseph Ralston violated the mili·
things, I am humbled by my political hold a weapon while chain smokina, tary's aati-adultery rule in 1983.
Por whal they llid, l.onJhouser
and economic miJhl; beautiful homes snuffing and chewing; smoke blind~
was made to fill on his sword, bl·
for medical practitioners, funeral ina them.
ston wu liven abaolution.
home owners and fannen of lpf, all
RoprReeb,
Defense Secretary Willi11111 Coben
business people who grant me shelf
said the sackina of Lonahoo- is jusspace, great-paying jobs for polili·

.Today in history

.

Margaret E. Goodwin

republic of the Soviet Union.
The report
however,lhat it
was \IIIClear whether Iran yet had a
"delivery system" cttpeb1e of canying these warheads to • tarpt. Each
of these bombs has a destructive
capacity several times areater than
the bomb dropped on Hiroshima in
World Warn.
In lddition, we have 1eamed that
Iran has already paid for four other
warheads from the former Soviet
~public of Kazakhstan. The deal
began with an April 1992 visit to
Teheran by Katakhstan's ministel of
transportation. The following August,
senior Iranian offiCials mel with top '
Kazakh officials and consummated
the plan.
The CIA has been unable to determine whether Kazakh officials delivered the warheads or not ·• but they
believe there is. a possibility they
reneged on the deal and instead sold
the nuclear material to the United
States, which paid a better price1han
the Iranians.
·
Rafsanjam 's plan for developing
nuclear bombs mvolves settin11 up
competing centers for nuclear
weapons production among different
government agencies. One of those
agencies is the Revolutionary Guards,
the military outfit that is more fanatical and political than the regular
Iranian military.
The Iranian government has
already spent more than $1 billion on
the nuclear program, and has tapped
the expertise of at least S4 nuclear
experts from abroad •• though none
from the United States. Dozens of
Chinese and Russian experts have
traveled to Iran, where they have
engaged in nuclear research, tratned
nuclear specialists. and supervised
the construction of facilities, including nu~ reactors.
.
Rafsanjani's personal instructions
regarding the whole effort are
detailed in a confidenttal memorandum we obtained that was written following a high-level meeting in early
1990. It was essential, Rafsanjani
decreed, that security for the. great
plan be maintained by sponsoring
"several parallel but independent
and self-suffictent systems, including
the necessary laboratories, workshops ami factories, to be built in different pans of Iran."
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

•

Defense chief will discuss
•
:adultery issue with general
0

the ACLU _ _ _
'--

mothers ignorant of the child's, and
their ~wn, condition. And infants
have dted.
With stmtlar rigidity, the ACLU
husarguedbeforetheSupremeCourt
·for the right to physicinn-asststcd suicide. The ACLU ignores the effect of
.legacy of James Madison. The this invitauon to instant death on the
Republicans have been eager collab- clinically depressed; on poor people
orators while most of the Democrats with inferior medical facilities where
have been passive loyalists.
there are few sktUs at. pam man.agcThe national Washmgtori offic'e of ment; an~ on gutlt-ndden pattents
the ACLU has been ably trvinl( to _.wh? don.'- want to be a burden on
bring attention to these attacks on the thetr famthes.
.
Constitution, very.much including the
Thas new wa~ to emphatically cut
Btll of Right.s, but its limited success ~cdtcal costs wtll als~ mvolve phystts due to press •• and therefore pop- ctans gettmg ~rmtsston_ from a surular .. mdifference.
rog~tc to termmate an mcompetent
Nonetheless, the $2S million pauent. And tlul~ means lawf~l
endowment can bring the ACLU euthanasta Wt!l _bCc~me a d~tac
additional needed resources. How- v10latt'!n of ctvtl hberttes for a pauent
ever, it has internal civil liberties who has no idea of what's going on.
problems that money cannot solve.
Then there's the absence of the
There is an increasing ideological ACLU and tts more than 300 chaprigidity within the organization.
t~rs f~om an epidemic of civillibe!·
The ACLU has zealously " pro- ttes dtsasters that have taken place tn
tected" pnvacy, for eKample, by a number of states, and still do. With
actively opposing laws that blind- no physical evidence and the sole testested infonnation about an infant's timony of very young children .who
HIV status be given ~- by government hav(\ been coached by therapists and
mandate-- to the mother. By insist- police investigators, many workers in
ing only on voluntary counseling •• day-care centers have been charged
wtth no guarantee the mother wtll with sexual abuse of those children.
find out •. the ACLU and its alltes Some of the defendants have been
have allowed infant&lt; with weakened imprisoned for long periods.
tmmune systems to be breastfed by
Months ago, I asked Nadine

Nat Hento"

Strossen, prestdent of the ACLU,
why it has not become involved in at
least some of these many cases. I still
await 1\er response. The executive
director of the AoridaACLU, Robin
Blummer, told me that the ACLU
does not get mto crimmal cases. But
Nonnan Siegel, the fearless head of
the New York ACLU, says it docs
take..:riminal ca&lt;es, and if such a case
came up tn New York, he would look
into it. And Harvey Silvergate, a
longtime board member of the MassachusetL&lt; ACLU, told me: "Of course
the ACLU takes crtminal cases."
In one such case m Wenatchee,
Wash., those defendant~ who were on
welfare could not afford experienced
lawyers and wound up in prison.
Defendant.&lt; who could pay for seasoned lawyers were acquitted. If the
ACLU had been involved, defendants
wtthout money and wtthout due
process might never have gone to
prison.
It is too bad the ACLU doesn't
have some competition •. nationally
and locally. On some issues, the
ACLU's thinking has stopped and
there arc only rehearsed responses - or none at all.
Nat Hentoff Is a nationally
renowned authority on the fint
Amendmmt and tile rest Ill the Bill
of Rights. ·

Letters to the editor
Tobacco as a weapon

•I

'

•

I

•

••

.

ly decorated military careers.
It's not fairto give Longhauscrthe
boot and Ralston a loving embrace.
This kind of disparate treatment of
officers who vtolated the same rule
undennincs morale and confidence in
the ability of Pentagon officials to
keep the military's scales or justice in
balance.
For senior officers, a forced retirement is the functional equivalent of
capital punishment. Longhauser
shouldn't be made to pay so heavy a
price for an offense that Cohen treats
as a misdemeanor in the case of Ralston. A mere reprimand should suffice in both cases.
Unlike Kelly A inn, the Air Force
lieutenant who was forced to accept
a aeneral discharat: ror two ~airs the
had, neither general lied - or disobeyed an order- when confronted
with charges of sexual miscondutt.
Both quickly admitted their mis-

·deecls.
Undenlllldably, l.otlihauser's
continuation u Aberdeen's comllllllder would be aleriout disadon
at a time when enlisted men • thlt

"

WASHINGTON (AP) - · Air Press."
,
Force Gen. Joseph Ralston is meetSen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, a
ing wtth Defense Secretary William member of the Senate Armed Ser·
Cohen to discuss a decade-old adul- vices Committee that must approve
i erous affair that ,appears to have the administration's nominee to head
doomed his chances to be the next the Joint Chiefs, $aid Ralston's case
chainnan of the Joint Chiefs of Stalf. might have been considered differ" ~alston was widely expected to ently "in an isolated context."
withdraw his name as a possible canBut, she said on ABC's "This
didate for the nation's highest mili- Week," in light of the Flinn case and
•tary post following his meetings . other sexual scandals in the military,
today with Cohen and other Pentagon Ralston's nomination would "face a
·officials, including the current Joint rocky road" in,the Senate.
.Chiefs chainnan, Anny Gen. John
Cohen caused a firestonn of critShalikashvili.
icism from women'$ groups and
Ralston returned to Washington on members of Congress when he said
Sunday, cutting short by a day a trip recently that Ralston's affair with a
to central Asia, to discuss the furor CIA employee 13 years ago did not
nsmg from his candidacy. He now is disqualify him as a leading contender
Shalikashvili's deputy.
,
to succeed Shalikashvili, who steps
Critics have accused the Pentagon down this fall.
:or a double standard in considering
He subsequently tempered those
Ralston for promotion when other remarks, and on Saturday set up an
·military personnel, including Air independent commission to study
Force 1st Lt. Kelly Flinn, have been how military law applies to consen•singled out and penalized for sexual· sual sexual relations.
' scandals.
Pentagon officials said last week
, Even those who say Ralston's that Ralston was still determined to
:affair with a civilian woman in tbe fight for ihe nomination. But they
; 1980s while he was married should added that the general. while abroad,
•not disqualify him from promotion had not had a cliance to see the beatacknowledge that m the current cit- ing thfPe~tagon Wll!' taking over the
mate he has httle chotec but to step double-standard issue. ·
aside.
..
A senior Pentagon official, speakRep. Jane Harman, D-Calif., a- ihg on•condition of anonyf!!ity, said
member of the House National Secu- Sunday that to the best of _Ins knowlrity Committee, said the military edge, ~lston had .not c~municated
should stay out of personal sex lives any deciSion on hts candtdacy.
Former Defense Secretary Caspar
unless they interfere with good order
and conduct. But "I think (Ralston) Weinberger, speaking on ABC, said
is going to voluntarily withdraw his Ralston has proven himself a superb
name for the good of the country," officer in his three decades in-uniform
she said Sunday on NBC's "Meet the

Weekend crashes leave 8 dead
By The Aseoclated Pre11
' Six of the eight traffic fatalities
recorded over the weekend were
:motorcycle riders; the State Highway
' Patrol said today.
' The·patrol counted fatalities from
,6 p.m. Friday through Sunday.
' The dead:
,
SUNDAY
: WARREN - Warner C. Red' mond, 37, of Warren, when his
:;motorcycle collided with a car on a
: rural road.
! SPRINGFIELD- Stephen Bray,
: 66, of Springfield, wben his motor·
, cycle collided with a car on a city
; street.
CANfON - Glenn H. Laven! burg, 28, of ijartville, when his
: motorcycle crashed along a Stark
t

Q

'

The Daily Sentinel

Another case of double standards in high places
tified because, as commander of the
Maryland army training facility
plagued by accusations of sexual misconduct among drill sergeants, he
Would play a major role in detenninmg which cases go to tnal if allowed
to keep his job.
Ralston, currently vice chairman
of the JCS, not only is being allowed
to stay in the military, but according
to Cohen, also continues to be one of
the leading candidates to become the
nation's,top military job when Gen.
John Shalikashvili retires in October.
The defense secretary said Ralston's distinguished 32-year service
record - and the fact that his trans·
gression occurred 13 years ago - ts
why he and Longhauser didn'lsuffer
the same fate.
As explanations go, that's pretty
lame.
Both. deserve to be P!Jnishcd for
violating military Iaw. As officers,
they have a specilll responsibility to
adhere to the rules that govern the
behavior of our men and women in
uniform. Cohen is disinaenuo111
when he trie1 to draw a difliilctioa
between Lonaftotuer and Ralston,
each of whom~ had lonalnd hip

•

•

"

base arc being court-milrttaled for
charges ranging from rape to adultery. But transferring him to anothor
post makes more sense than forcing
him to retire.
The offenses for which the
. Aberdeen drill sergeants are being
. prosecuted involve se~ual encounters
· with subordinate military personnel
- people under their command who
arguably felt pressured to give in to
the advances of their superiors. That's
why the military prohibits sucb frat·
emization.
But while Cohen can see the dif·
ferencc between Ralston's case and
those of Flinn and the Aberdeen drill
sergeants, he is blind to the parallels
between Longhauser and the JCS's
vice chairman.
Instead of dealina consistently
and decisively with·the military's sex·
ua1 misconduct problems, the defense
secretary offen up no clear policy to
co~ the way he metes out punish-

ment.

tUSPUI:I-Nil

'

'·

Publlthed eVery Afternoon, Monda~ throuah
Pridlly, Ill Court S1.. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishma CompanyiOannen Co.. ,
Poftroy. Olllo 45769, Ph. 992-1136. S«ond
ciiW pootnae j&gt;lld 01 Pomen&gt;y. Ohio.

M•brr: 1be Ali!OI:ioeed Preu. and 1he Ohio
~ Auocladon
POSTMASTER: Send_,, CGIIOCIIOIII 10
The D11ly Sen1inel, Ill Court St , Pomeroy.
Ohio •5769

SUBSCRIPTION RATBS
ly
One-............................................. $200
' One M-.......... ...... ..... .................... a70
OneV..-.. .... :..,....... .... ... ........... ..... $1~00

Carrlor•--

SlNGLB COPY P8JCB
Doily.. .......................................... 1' c..u

____ __

s.bfltribefl JIOt def,inna co PQ" lhe c.ricr nay
.nmlt in .dYIIftCie direct to the Dilly SeftdneJ
ol•ot 11 monlh btolo. Cnecltwillbe

Oft·-·
-a~----"No

..

oubicrlpd011 by mail IIIOIIIillld Jn ...,

Pulolloho(- .... riaiK ....... - ....
.ill .. :zbecelpdOtl ,.nod. s ' Jpdll . .
. . . . . . ., bo lmp---IIJ ....... tilt
dlnio.ofiMtd 1 .fdD1
••

_....,c..,

MfdLIUII(.'alfi iOF4
13 . . . ..................................- ...........SZ'JI.:tO

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_............................,..........aus

211 w.ob ...........,..... - ....................... 15112

n-.. . . . . . . . . . . .

n - - ·-·--.........:_.............. - ...

And - . Williani Cohen gives
no ratiOIIII explanation for the
Nlllllbble d i t r - In hill t.ltJIIeiM Ill two flip1111kiaa oftlcen
dllrpcl with the offtiiiO.

,, _

- - Molltc..tr

, _ . N00 000 0 oooo 000 .. 00. , \00 " 0 " 000000 . . 00 000ot_O. .

• IColumbus le2• I
·:

(f

.tlet.n

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...................40 718
A~~Jo ..................................17 718
AmrTech ............................. 518
Alhl8nd 011 .......................47 518
ATlT .................................31114

Lod1e to meet
The Shade River Lodge 453 F &amp;
AM will meet on Thursday at 8 p.m.
Work will be in the F.C. Degree.
Refreshments will be served.
Deadline nears
The final deadline for reservations
for the 1997 Eastern High School
alumni banquet is Thursday at4 p.m.

Lilt.=

VBS pluaecl
Vacation Bible School will be held
at Rutland Freewill .Baptist Church
on Salem Street June 16-20 from 6 to
8:30 p.m. Classes will be held for
nursery through teens.

Truatees to meet
The Bedford Township Trustees
will meet in regular session on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Bedford Township Hall in Darwin.

Two tickets claim prize

,

~ .

Dry weather will s~ick
·around for a few days
By The Aaaoclated Preaa
Fnday... Partly cloudy wtth a
All of the rain will move out of chance of showers and thundefr
Ohio tonight as high pressure builds stonns. Lows in the lower 60s and
across the state.
highs in the lower 80s.
Skies will become mostly clear on
Tuesday with temperatures starting to
edge toward normal readings, the
National Weather Service said.
Highs on Tuesday will be in the
uj!per 70s to low 80s. The dry weather will continue on Wednesday with
temperatures slightly warmer.
The record-htgh temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 96 degrees in 1914 while
the record low was 39 in 1913. Sun-.
set tontght will be at 8:59 p.m. and
sunrise Tuesday at 6:03a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Mostly clear. Lows m
the lower 50s. Light wmd.
Tuesday .. .Mostly sunny. Highs in
the lower 80s.
Tuesday night .. Mostly clear.
Lows SS to 60.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday ... Mostly clear. Highs
in the lower 80s.
Thursday...Partly6 cloudy. Lows
in the lower 60s and highs in the lower 80s.

option and will receive a lump sum
of $7,858,023 before federal and state
taxes. The discounted sum is what the
lottery would have invested expecting to pay the advertised amount in
26 installments.
The two tickets were sold at Forest Hills Eagle in East Cleveland and
at Uptown Market in Toledo. The lottery did not say which winner chose
the annuil)l and which one selected
the cash liptton.
The jackpot for Wednesday
night's Super Lotto drawing is worth
The Meigs County Sheriff's $4 million.
There were 300 Super Lotto tick·
Department is investigating a weekets
wilh five of the numbers.
end breaking and entering or the formet Lawrence Grocery's, in Long
_.h
Advertisement
Bottom.
'I
1 ....
m ....... ,....
The break-in was re ned Sunday
evening by Jo Ann Vaughan of
Pomeroy. She said that her son,
Howie Lawrence, had noticed that
the door to the building, located at
DeWitt's Run Road, had been forced
open.
Dolton McCrory, a well
he can teach anyone ro 1rnmcdullely and .comm;tcndy h1t a g:ol r ball us
The windows to the building,
STRAIGHT AS YOU CAN
sive you your money back.. plus $2~ 1 • Dtscuvcr why Dation's health
which is owned by Howie and Daniel
prolllem fon:ed him to pt~blicly n:vealthe shockinsly simple seon:t you've NEVER BEEN TOLD about bow to HIT STRAIGHT GOLF
Lawrence, have been boarded Uf\
SHOTS, osecn:t !IQ mil hils ever e•ploincd to you befon:! • by A15us Wc&gt;l
leaving the door as the enly way of
lasting re..t;ults' You won' t htlvc to w:ah any
Frustmlcd Golfer: If you're tired
""Ajlrr 1run tif lrnnmfnmt lt'fl pms l1uu Jlif/ A"·
entering the building.
lonpr! •The secret of cffonkss hilling.
/til X lrulf I'll JluJ/f /nl#rl hrltmtl 1hu ulld /If lltr n~tt~lr
of
feehnJ
fllllll1\lcd
wtlh
your
pmc:,
The sheriff's report, does not indiYou'll never have to '"think" about your
Mw. I flk'Y llrtllll/1\' rrrn \IIIII fnHII tAr J-trr llfl/!
ond wonder wby Y"'! don't &amp;&lt;I better, keep
l'vr•rl'l't Aocl /ltr tulf nu1t~ txpl#tlltd f1U IINr h't 1U
cate any items were missing,
~o.nce, position, weiJht shin. stiff left ann.
n:adina this anicle. If you want to slop
Jillfllt uJ /·Z I. \tl\~11'1 riMI 1}inJ /'A#(flii'J .wt rrr•r·
etc.! Your swina: will be: as fret:! as
slietna. htlllna bolls behind ,,..,, in the
although investigl!tion will continue.
ldpm, NOBODY f'lr'' lurijirJ 11/1tr Dullttlr " INI

CLEVELAND (AP) -1\vo tickets were sold with 1111 six numbers
drawn in Saturday night's $35 million
Super Lotto drawing, the Ohio Lottery said.
~ One winnet chose to take the prize
in 26 annual payments. That ticket is
worth a total of $17 .S million before
federal and state taxes.
The other winner chose the cash

Deputies probe
old store break-in

•-II'Jitw•k•

..,,...,lit...:..._............

"I'll Teach You To l1it Golf Shots A$ STRAIGHT As
You Can Point, Or This VIdeo Golfing Lesson Is
FREE••.And I'll Pay You $25 For Wasting Your Tlmel"

D""'

Meigs EMS runs
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded six
calls for assastance Saturday and
Sunday. Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
tiO: 13 a.m. Saturday, Lincoln Terrace, Pomeroy, Ralph Graves, Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy
squad asststed;
II: 19 a.m. Saturday, Willow
Creek Road, Pomeroy, Flossie Nelson,VMH;
I :43 p.m. Saturday, Lower Rou1e
7, Middleport. Marvin Yeauger, Holzer Medical Center;
3:49 p.m. Saturday, Grant Street,
Middleport, Homer Smith, HMC;
2:52 p.m. Sunday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Mildred Clark,
· Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·
RACINE
8:39 p.m. Sunday, Durst Ridge
Road, Portland, Fanny Durst, treated
at the scene.

Hospital new$

Vetel'lllll MeiiiOI'ial
Saturday admissions - Ralph
BsBOnbkE~Iflnllo•••••••n•uoooooooou1•5,4314/31816 QJ'a~~. Pomeroy. ', -...
....................
Saturd d'sch
El' F
801f"WBmlf .,.,,,.,.,,.,,.,,50 118
ay I arges IZI aye
CMm~ ...............................17
Wolfe.
Chinn 8hpa ............... _ ....5 7111
Sunday admissions- none.
32 318
Sunday disciwJes - Mary Day.
I Mogul ~...... ,,,_,,28 718
.Holaer Medlnl c..ter
GarMlett ......................._••••13 7/8
~ ~- 6 - Helen
GooctvMr ...........................80 118 H
. 'Vi . M C
M
Kmlll'f.................................131/8
artwas. Jrga 1 c arty, esan
Lllnd• Elfd........................21 718 Jewell. ·
·
Ud .....................................11111
Birth - Mr. and. Mrs. Roaer
OYB ..........................................36 Dowell, son, Middleport.
One Valley.................... u ...40 314
Dlttclllarpa Jane 7 - Teresa
"-9~ .............................32 318 Justice, Hugh Paterson, Virginia BID'·
PrM1 Flnl ...........................17 711
M I . S
R~li ...........................IO 112
ton, e van arsent, April Roush,
AD-Shall ..........................1171/4 Marilyn Shafer.
11101..,-............................~1718
Birth - Mr. and Mn. Robert
ltllr 18nk ..........................41 718 Halens, daughter, Wellston.
Wenctv'• .................- ........23 112
Ditcbaraea June I - Ernie
Worthlngton ......................11 318 Worlanan Steven Stover Dorothy
-•-•I·
'
•
$tocll report• era the 1o:aol .Walker, Max Vaers, ~- Roaer Dow·
~ld by
ell .and son, April Arvin.
ofG-=S.
Birth- Mr. and Mn. Randy
'
Wise, daughter, Middleport.
(Pub" t td wtda jNI blae)

=-.. . . . . . .

The cost is $8 per person . The banquet will be held at Chester Elementary School on Saturday, beginning at
6p.m.
Ticke~ are available from Ntesel
Duvall Gerard at 985-4362.

.,

W.VA.

warer, on lhe cmund, whalever... you're
about 10 discover how lO leamrhe one
aspect otaour ~our swinartw everyone's
taught you lnc:omoctly . .llllll how to

INSTANTLY oorre&lt;l this stunnmaly sim·
pie mistllkcl One of BOif'o hiahest pwd

pnvDtc insii'U4.1on, Dnllon McCrory, o true
golf p:mus, has been
10 stop ,_vmg

mchviduallessons

how 10

:mtl
cancer, nnd hts
doctor ordered

1o srop teDChing tn 1he

sun Dolton llskcd how he was to teach.

and 1he doctor ~lied, "Do a video or
whateYer, but you're out or lhc sun 1" Bod

luck for Dillon .but JMOI news for you!
Most sol fen wopllo act better .. NOW,

bul tlon 'I' The truth 11 you ond your

playtnllPOUP finished the ljOif sc.SOn no
better than you stlllled . Some IUY who
won ol( the bets last year won them ollthis
ycnr! Think obovllh11. If olllhe tochnicol
advances in clubs and balls are so
£lelll •• why is the OYel1lgC SI:Of'C COIR(I; UP7
If 1111 it took W"-' a Titan tum dnver, or
c:ushioned putter to lower your scoo:,
you'd be betler But, you nrcn' t. 10
somdhma's wronc
'l'hcn there'• the so-called iriuninc"
you gel (rom club proo, book&lt;, videos, e1e
lbey've been leachinJ this au« forever
and you'n: still"'" getuna better! So.

whot 'stbe problem1 Why don't you

tmprove' Do you really want to fiiKI out"

Dalton knows, and willt=h you. •The
Gralsl Myth In Goin Thi• point io the
most impo1111111 poll or • n:peatoble,
coosistenl owina. ond NO ONE tolko ol&gt;out
it! Om:e you understllnd !hit simple coo·
ccpl. you will &amp;&lt;I IMMEDIATE n:sulls!
See. the bottom """in coif il Simple· illlW
l.uoJ Qllll:lllt"""' ~ C(ub(@ 5!ltiB
&amp; Illlllllllltm Qf lQlll SwinJ71 Dolton
willl...,h you how to inc....., the "zone
of squ.......," from the typlcoll-2 inches
on either side oflmpact .• M 40., •MW
llttltn, 20 Inches berote lmfllll'l, and 20

•nches ofler hlljll&lt;l! (lr yow clubfocc i•
squlll'l' tbollOOJ when: do you think the
ball's fi&amp;~n'to p&gt;'P) STRAIGHT!! I (How
1'1')1 is YOUR clubflco 1111- II the bottom? Do yoo know?) If il'o not SQUARE.
the boll't 001 Join&amp; STRAIGHT, period!
The LONGER your club is oquareltlfllo:
ond lfla: itnpiiCI. the .,..... your ..WS Ole
of hinina the boll STRA~HT! 'llllt It 11M
SECRET OF GOLJ'IIl Once you uoderJiond !hit, Md Jeam how IO dian&amp;&lt; your
IIIUICie nwniOIY to make the clubheld ' ,
1111..., fi.e umes looaerthan 1111

-

... yOIW pme will finally imp&lt;OYC,
bocousc y011rbotl wdlp&gt; STRAIGHT!!!!!!
•Tito •aillollJ.........., ..
JMII' CWftllt . . . . . •tZDIJt 10,....

"'""Ide

.... STaAIGHTI An easy cltlnF
thol you ..,lolnt Ia a few mi- from
llllllln, IIIII &amp;&lt;I IMMBDIA'lli and 1....

-

swin&amp;ina. an llX ala pie1.1: of firewood!

(How muc~ '1htnking" do you do when
swinam&amp; on ox? None. you JU!il SWING'}
You'll know whal: you d1d wrong, and

most unportnnt, WHY your ball sltcl!d or
hooked ood be oblc to stop the m1stakc
tnstanlly, hining the next hall su:ught as Wl
:urow! l..ettming how to h11 slratght golf
shot !iii in JlW .QDG h:.wm is only p.1n of what
you must know. Yes. lngree JUSI lhot
would cur probDbly 10 shot:. off your J:IUOC
olone, but you olso must know "WHY"
The frustru1ion of golf i.'l lihcmg, aad
hov1ng ubsolui"IY no 1&lt;k:a "WHY".

Dalton wtllleo•h you EXACTLY

WHY you mhs your shots. Without
ql.k:sllon Instant mental fecdhou,.i t, Trust
me here, folb, 1f you can push .u. shot and
Instantly tell yourself. "Of cour'liC, 11 went

nght,look what I did 1", then you'll know ·
how to correct il ... and your

ts
gone Om., ; you undt:rslo.nd how to hll your
shots strwght a.~ you can pomt, and olsu
undersiGn&lt;~ why you lniS..'i them, Dallon's
job as over, Wld you 're goanJ to get bc1tcr 1
We'd be ly1ng tfwc !mid you weren't
gomg to have !tOme bad shots You Will

I

'

fru~tnatton

tne!ill up Bur. the more you piny

DALTON'SGUARANTEED GOLF

1

W...~l, Wortd l..._r GollA_...""

1torr7

f-.

AII·P,. Bid, Pl....... SOitkn
"WTJ.u u fCtttll/r'f!lin~ Bcfi'rt /ttJtll. lr.rm•u frrw
\Y!f/, f lUll (INIJH/tl//1\ !/toll/Ill~ 1111/tt mtr/I}U,\ l.u.tt
11rrk. IJliU\tJ l.tKU&lt;1 rmJ dJtJI Ull 1131I rmrr 1111 u
bulllttr I J1J tltllt rk11 I r111il Hull I /1 111~ /nm"'''""'
HIM 'lilfllltl l1 uH 11r\ t f 11k111~ 1~111 tllll~h fnr kl.ll'illllfC
mr 111ltu u 111/f bUll smuxht 1' M1tlht..- o..t.atr.
n.p.t, • .,. G«oont, """"
'/ll,t q41/rtll'llll'

"'

mdt

urrunl(tiiWI" /lltuh ' ''II' GUARANTEED GOLF SYl'·

TEM Ray Glnrd, Pres.. Film Fuldla-.ltM:.
"I ul'pluuJ \Iliff r.Dum rmd k / dr 11111 n11 Uf Itt/II
\Mil udfnl ti1Hr t~pfUIIUtUJn lUI( Uf Sl"'f(t fU / 'l't
mr ltl'fJrd '

Jelul H•rdy, P&lt;;A' MUlti' PniiMiaul

/hfllrt I 1mJ /)ul/1111 J

SWt lll, XITUttltl xbl11s

c-. t -

lhrough m.ul ord~r Aft~r all, you dun 't
know him. and have no rewmn to lrU!it him
So, ht.:'~ offcnng the sume no·nsk. Iron
dad, more than your money hack guaran·
h:c lo you, as he offered h1s pnvnte du.:nts!
If yuu don't truly f~cl Dalloh taught you
the hidden d!st.:oVel)' nf the game of golf,

the TRUTH uhout how to keep tho

YOIJR OONTROLI You 'll finally be tho

master of your mind and body, knowmg
you cnn do wh:u others c~~nnot You'll feel
a sense of occ:omph~hmenl thld you

oven:ome ob5~a~:lcs and bad a boll of • lot
Of fun! lsn"t thDf what golf IS suppo~d IO
be all obout urway' Won't it feel gn:at to

look rorword lo hovins fun bcfm• you lc:C
off.. and liCiuillty HAVE FUN the cnltro
round111 dOlOR'! -Iter tryiMishoot
114, or .... • 4 llandl&lt;op, yuu cannot get
bolter . - you team b• to comlotentty h"ll"the bd otnl&amp;lllll Here's the
deal; Dalton's video of an o&lt;tuol le.,on

will glue you to your senl t In the rarst 6
minutes, you 'II KNOW EXACTLY why
what you've been roua;ht bboot your 5wina
,. a pile of 8 S.lln ploin Enslish, (well.

vmr

1n l'lll't' 111 a W.IIJ fflitiJ/mm Mm l111111t11 tlrr hull
f/fllll(ltl, um/l'm umuuJ ut ho11 t lf.W\:11 u" '-l•rtJ
M1r.. Rlritn CMI,., La&lt; \'tpl
IJIIJ'HIIMLTtlN Gllr'IRANTf:U&gt;frOLF SY!ITI:M' 111 ln.:

cluhhead

Wh1ch bnnp a psycholugicul change
You ' ll feel n:al hu(K: that you t.:tm g'-1
better You'll be l.lAt.:ttcd thut your game
CAN be tnon: \.:ons1stcnt , prcd1ctuhlc and
dependable. You'll t.:DJOY the satisfaction nf
h1tt1ng shuts EXACTLY where yuu tnld
the ball to go, and arc able to br:ang that
mu~h pn."Ctston and power tuullly under

~uarc fur 40 mchcll. and hll

STRAIGHT shots lokc ulockwott .. just
~&gt;end

the h1pc hotek w1thm 90 day~. and
he 'll rcfum.l your purdw.S~: pm:c u.nd IP\Ie
you a $2S check to boot'
Dalton 's !aught 4,."i 12 pcoph: uvcr the
la~l nmc ycal'!l , and he' s only hud 6 ~1plc
whn couldn't don, sn he's nnl worrtcd'
Also, to convmcc you to gel hili tape, hc 1!i
e,mng to g1vc you a FREE book that
cxphuns the enure sw10g, auul whw. to do 1f
you're makmg tmsl~o~kcs! Thi!i book ts
wrincn at a first "rude level. with c.;leW' pictun:s, su even your ktds can follow whal'!l
gomg on' (And so YOU can figure it out
t0o 1) How can you say no" The no nsk
v1dco 1s only 2 payments of $47. plus $S
shtppmg The book IS FREE, and yours to
keep tf you send tho lope bnck I 1b ord&lt;'r,

.
'

oolltoll-frec t-800-44l-8150, Dept. 0157,
24 hours! They'll get you• MC, Visa,
Americnn Ellpruss, l&gt;iscow:r nr

per&gt;onol check tnfo on the phone, ond your
~ysrcrn

w1lllle on ns woy! If you woncto

'·

order by mail, write· I WANT TO HIT
STRAIGHT GOLF SHOTS on o ptc:&lt;e of
paper with you na,nc. uddre5s, phone:. 11nd

a check for $9'1to Dalton'• Guoi'Miocd
Texos En&amp;lish) with IM&gt;lnlk oboul physu;s
or pavity, uncoilina or natun: .. .he'llleacb GolfSyotan•w. Scad lito. Dolton
McCI'V)', 1111 W. Diehl Rd., HGe DepL
you the TRUTH about hllllnJ otmiJht ·
shols no one'tlold you bef~l!l He's just 0157, N.,.rvllle,ll60563. You'lllovo
watching th1s VIdeo over nnd over, because
o stnitlhl •'-in' Te&amp;oo, who speaks
Dolton's so enlertruntna, and you'll keep
simply, ma way thai everyone ...,
• being remtnded of the secret or hinin&amp;
uodentand!
STRAIGHT SHOTS I CALL NOW, and
Ooltoa doosa'l wont you to feel
finally ehnilnote your fruslnllon of not
uncomfoltlblc about whether you'"'
aeuing
better!! ·
molt••• a JODd doci11oa in buyina his ...,.

•

''

"''"'""tml 11, ""''"'t "''" ltCfllllr

'"'"'fl"'rt lllr1r ~~~If~" 111~ unJ tUittt

YO~LL

SEE INSTANT IMPROVEMENT!

!~

'E'ltn llmr I I'UII Kllh lmt/lrllrtl fliMI'IhiiiK I
KilN/~ 't /rt~flllfr /II k/1 Wl\llllf /11 /ejkf ~~'Jif lf'llrfr"

SYSTEM 11•1 , the beuer you'll get BUT

•

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County road.
CANTON - Troy W. Orzo, 30,"
of Massillon, when his truck ran off
of U.S. 30 and crashed in Stark County.
SATURDAY
WOOSTER- Robert L. Coward,
52, of Clinton, a driver of a motorcycle that btl a truck on a Wayne
County road.
FRIDAY NIGHT ,
DELAWARE _:: Winifred M.
Rodgers, 80, of Prospect, a passenger,
in a two-car accident on Ohio 203 in
Delaware County.
COLUMBUS - Nelson Price,
28, hometown unavailable, a motorcyclist involved in an accident with
another motorcycle on a Columbus
city street.
AKRON - An unidentified
motorcycle rider in an accident on a
Summit County road.

The Eastern OAPSE Local 448
picnic for members and their families
will be held at Royal Oak Resort on
Saturday, beginning at 5 p.m., with
meal at 6:30 p.m. Meat, drinks and
table service will be provided. Those
attending should bring a covered dish
(vegetable, salad, or dessert).

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INO.

Meigs announcements
Plcalc plalllltd

M.

'..,

'

YESTERYEAR MUSICALS - Newspllper 'IICcounta of PMt
mullcale of the Big Bend Minstrel Aaaocl.tlon- a part ot the
enocltltlon'a display Sunday when the organization's ~­
saluted during Herltlge Sunday IICIIvltles at tha Matgs Museum.
Looking ovar one of the two tablea on which tha clippings, dlapleved, from laft around the tllble, were Floy Holtllr, Andrea
• Krawsczyn, John Krawsczyn snd Cella McCoy. Both Ancha end
Cella have participated In some of the aaaoclatlon's musicale In
past. years.
'

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is not seen in the land as a betrayer
of fundamental liberties.. Nor is the
Congress, whtch has gone along
with the president's shrinkage of the

MlrpJet B. Ooodwin, II, MI:Anhur, died Sunday, June 8, 1997 at her
nesidence.
Born Dec. 3, 1915 ill Vlatoa, dlughterofthe late John Robert and Myrta McCI~n Hull, abe - • mired adloolteacher with. 30 yean of experience. teaching mostly first grade at the Harri1011ville and Vmton elementary
schools.
She was • I934 paduate of Rio Grande Colleae, attended the McArthur
.Presbyterian Oturch, and was a member of the Joseph Freeman American
Leaion Post 476 Ladies Auxiliary in Wilkesville, and the Vinton County
Retired Teachen' Association.
She is sutVived by a daughter and son-in-law, Jaca and Daniel Hussey of
RocheSter, N.H.; a son, Jolm A. Goodwin of Athens; a granddaughter; and
several nieces and nephews. "
She was preceded in death by her husband, William McKinley Goodwin,
on July 28, 1984; and by a brother, Gerald Hull.
Services will be II 11-m. Wednesday in the Garrett Funeral Home,
McArthur, with the Rev. larry Lane officiating. Burial will be in the Elk
Cemetery. Friends may'call at the funeral borne from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Tuesday.

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The Daily
Sentinel
·
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Sports
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NBA Flnsls continue

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times you never get it. And I was
able to."
.
.
The rest of Utah's final surge
belonged to Stockton. Chicago was
up ? 1-66 on Jondan 's dunk with 2:42
to play.
Stockton began the comeback
with a 25-foot j uniper from the top
of the key, far beyond the three-point
line.
·
"That got them back in the ballgame," Chicago coach Phil Jackson
said. "We ·hod all the momentum,
two and a half minutes to go In the
ballgame. and he came up with a
rather large shot."
Still, J9J'(Ian's IS-foot . jumper,
his 12th and final point of the quarter. had Chicago up 73-69 ·with just
·Over two minutes to play. Utah's Jeff
Hornacek missed and the Bulls were
in position to bury the Jazz.
B.ut here came Stockton, sneaking
up on Jordan for a clean steal and·
heading for a layup. Jondan recov· .
ered and soared to block the sho~ but
was called for a foul.
·
. ....
"I thought I got it clean." Jordan
said. "They-said J'goc him with the
HAMMERED- Utah center Greg Ostertag (lett) hammers Chicabody."
go forw•d Scottie Pippen In the third quarter of Game 4 of the NBA
Stockton made one of two free
Finala Sunday In Salt Lake City, whers the Jau;e 78-73 win tied the
throws and it was 73-70. After Scot·
beat-of-seven HI'I• at 2·2. (AP)
.
..
tie Pippen's miss. Stockton grab.bed
the rebound and was fouled by Jor·
must have been on the v~rge of a quarter and just 1-for-8 in the middan. The Jazz guard made both this breakdown.
dle half of the game.
time and the Bulls' lead had shrunk
"I think if you could have sus"I guess I looked like a mortal
to 73-72 with 1:03 to go.
pended time right as the ball was in person at times,.. he said.
After Steve Kerr missed a three· . the air, Je.iy would have probably
Incredibly, Jordan didn't take a
pointer, Stockton ~ad his most spec· s.trangled me for throwing it," Stock- free throw.
tacular play of the night. Stockton to ton said. "It was one of those, 'No,
"I don't know when the last time
Malone is an NBA cliche. but this
I went a game without getting any
no, no -· Yes!"type deals."
was no ordinary pass.
' Jordan. for once. was unable to free throws," he said. "This is not
· Stockton had the ball deep in his · ·come up with the big play at ihe fin· Cpicago Stadium. I'm pretty sure at
backcourt when he saw Malone ish. '
Chicago Stadium, I would have gotstreaking tow and ·the basket, just
After Malone's two free throws ten some free throws."
ahead of Jordan. Stockton let fly with ' put Utah up 76-73. Jordan got a look
There wasn't much scoring ail
a full-court pass that just cleared Jor- at a game, tying three-pointer, and night. especially in a grueling first
dan's arms. Malone made the layup the ball was halfway past the rim half that ended with Chicago up 40and Utah had a 74-73 lead with 45
before it bounced out.
3-5. The 151 points were the secondseconds to play.
"There are going to be games I fewest in an NBA final since the shot
"Of all the g&lt;ea t ones he 's can't live up to the fantasy or the clock was instituted in · 1954. The
made," Malone said, "I'll remember hype that people haye built Michael only lower-scoring one was on April
that one."
Jordan up to he," he said. ·
7, 1955, when Fort Wayne heat SyraStockton knew he was taking a
. Jordan stili led the Bulls with 22 cuse 74-71.
big chance by throwing that pass in points, but he was just 11-for-27
What scoring there was came
such a tenuous situation, and on the from the field. He was scoreless and from the usual players. Malone had
sidelines, Utah coach Jerry Sloan 0-for-4 from the field in the third 23 points and I0 rebounds. ·

Gordon shakes tire woes to win Pocono 500

\

By DICK BRINSTER .
LONG POND, Pa. (AP) - They
call themselves the Rainbow War- riors, this pit crew many believe is
the best in stock car racing.
.
Crew chief Ray Evemham - the
man wbo leads their effort for driver
Jeff Gordon - has another term to
describe himself.
"l'm the Rainbow Worrier," he
said Sunday after Gondon overcame
an early tire problem to win the

Pocono 500.
. ,
. !t was .similar to the fashion in
whic~ Gordon opened the season
with a victory in the Daytona 500.
"We had confidence only because
it happened to us in Daytona,"
Evernham said. "We' ve .had trouble
before and been able to come back."
But Evernharn rejects the suggestion his knowledge is the main
reason Gondon is the ~river to beat
on the NASCAR CirCUli.

·

lla."Wsr~ JUne 1. 1117

"Jeff and I stay in communication,': Evernham said. "He is my
only link to what to do to·that car.
" I'm just back there taking numbers and worrying a lot. "
But it was Gondon who did much
of the worrying when he cut a tire on ·
his Chevrolet after just20 of 200 laps
at the 2 112-mile Pocono International Raceway. He wa5 forced to pit
under green, and regained race speed
with Ward Burton just a few car·

lengths shy of lapping him.
"I' thoilght the day was over,"
Gondon said. "At least we were at
Pocono, where there 's a lot of race
track to work with."
That waS appropriate, considering
the difficulty Gordon
had earlier this
j
weekend. He was among the
favorites for the pole, but qualifiec,l
only lith-fastest.
"The team worked so hard this
(See POCONO 500 on Page 6)

CANAVAN ·
·
I,By·TOM
DETROIT (AP)- Lotr111ter the

Pillsburgh ............ J I JO

Hous1on ....... ...... ... J I 31
S1. l...ollis ..... .......2H 32
CINCINNATI... ..... 24 36

Bell~.

AL standings

Chicnao ........... ....... 24 37

..'i~
.'iOO
.467
.400
.J93

Eatlt"- OMslon

r..
1\:
8D.IIimore .............. J9

1;, !!d.
17 .696

New York ....... " ..... 34 27
Toronto .................. 2R JO

.S.Ii7
.483

7't:
12

~l

.4~8

IJ'I!

JS

.407

l6h

Detroh .................... l 7

B~OIL ........... .... 24

Wt*m DIYilion

...... .................... 3)
Anaheim ................ J J
Teltlll ........ .............. :u
Oaltloncl ................. 26

28 541
28 .525
28 . ~25
.)7 ,41)

2&gt;
2h
3

s

o
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8

·Saturday's S&lt;ores
Kansas Cily 10, Te~~ou 4
Chif.!D&amp;O White So11o I ~ Baltimore 0 (II)
N.Y. Ynnkees1, Milwuukee 0 .
Toronlo ), O..kland I
·
CLEVELAND 9. Boa1on 5
Detroi13. Sullie I

Oakland 7. Toron1o 5

~ Sr.CIIe

2. Oetroil 0
N.Y. Yanlu:a: J; Milwaukee I
Anaheim 8, Minncsola 6
\ Baltimore 2. Olic.np White Soi I
Kau• City"· Tcxu 2

.

Tonilht'spma
7· 1) • Chic11,go

n I:OS p.m.

WhileS.. (a.lciwln 3-

Arubeim (Watson ._.3) a1 Kwu Cit)'
CROJdl 3-3), 8:05p.m. .
DH: 8altimor1 (Eri eklon 8· 2 ant!
Bootie 3·2)., a..t... {Wokfocld 2-4 on4

--!HI~ ~: 0:1 p.m.

Oatlold•(PriOlO 4-3) II Domlil (lhoi&lt;

3·2), 7:0:&lt; p.m.
·
.
Mllw•k.. (Eldred 6-5) 11 CLEVELAND (Lopez 2-4~ 7:0! p,m.
aMcaa,o While So• (l'tavano 4-4) ar
N.Y. Y - ( - 7·3), 7:35p.m.
·

• r..... cHon·

~- 2&gt;

... 5-l). 7:35 p.IO. '
TIUI (Win 7·2) II MinleiOCI (Tewb·
(lory U), I :D.'l p.m.
·
A - . (Oieluoo 7-2) II KMool City
&lt;AA&gt;i&lt;t4-4), 8:0! p.m.

--

NLstandinp
' .

7.1\: " ra.
AI .... ................... 41 20 .672
Florido ................... 35
-Yad&lt; ..........,... 3J
......:......... 32
Plilodolp(llo ........... 21

•'

25 .513
27 .5!10

2S J l3

3' J!IO

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CINCINNATI 10, N.Y. Mels ~
AI lama 5, San FraJK:isco 2
Florida 7, Col""""' S
Pinmt.ursh 9 , Phil.lphi a 2

Momreal ~. Chic11ao tubs o.
Lot Angek:s t S1. Louis 2
San Diego~ . Hooslon 4 (10)

Sunday's S&lt;ores
DH: Colorado 7, Aorid:e 2; florida 9.
Colomdo I (7 inn.-rain)
Monlrral .'i, Ol icosu Cubs 4
Phl!Miclphia J, Pillsbursh 2
St louis 9. l..os An.selcs :\
HovMon 9, Stl.n Di~.so 0
San Francisco $, A1lon1a ~
N.Y..Me!s Dt CI!'-ICINNATI . PJkl., ruin

Tonight's games ·.

Tunday'' aame5

florida (Brown ' ·4) • San Francisco
(Vanl..lnclinJhAm J-3 ), J : J~ p.m.
l'tlilldolphiaiS..,...,.. 2-2) ,. Mon-

Phllbouah ISchmldt 1-4) ot CINciN·
. NATI (8u&lt;bo ..5), 7:)5 p.m.
N.Y. Meta (Miicki I·S) 11 Chlcqo
O..a {Foater1·l), 8:0S,.m.
Adliala (Naale 11-t ·ot ColOrado !Rioz
5-4), 9 :~ p.m.
·
Ho.110n (Reynolds U) a1 Las Anples(Volda :l-7), !0:05p.m.
St. Loula (StotllttnY" 4·4) at San
Dleao&lt;Bersman 1· 1),

tO: ~

p.m.

H_ITS i A. Rodri1uez, Sreanle, 83 ; 1:
Rodn1uez. Tt::r.u, 81; G. Andersnn. Ann·
hcim, 80: F. Tho~n~~,~, Olicago ~ 79; Bernie ·
Williams. New York. 78~ Cora. Seanle.
15 : Cordt:ro, Boston, 11; T. Mulint:l,
IX.)UBl.ES: A. Rodri&amp;uer.. Seotllt. 21 ; .

O'Neill. New York, 21; Spn.aue. Toronto,
20; I. Rodri&amp;uc:~. Te11u, 18;_ Cora. ~1111le.
I K: Erslatf. Anaheim, 17: Gi11mbi, Oak·
land, I l ; Ciriilo, Milwaukee. 17: B~titie
- Wllli:ul\'1,-New York. 17.
TRIPLES : Gorclar•nu. Bnslnn, S:
Jeter. New York , 4: Offerman, Kuns;u;
Ci!y , 4: Vizquel, CLEVELAND, 4: ~i­
iccn, Anaheim, 4: 10 lift lied with :\.
HOME RUNS: Griffey, Seun'le, H:
Ml.-Gwire, OaklaOO. 24: T. M1111incz. New
·Y01k, 21; Todd Clark, O.:lroit, IK; JuSikc.
CLEV~LANl&gt;, 17 ; Thome, CLEVELAND. 16: M. Vnughn. Bo~ wn . 16: F:
'lbotru•-' · O.kal(l, 16.
·
. ST&lt;&gt;LEN BASES: Knobluuch, Min-

BAmNO: F. '~born.~, Chica1o. J 91 ;

T-•.:wl: G. A - An*lm. .342.

RUNS: Griffey, &amp;!an~. 52 ~ A. Ro---

driJun, Se•Uie. !50; Bernie

Gil

Willi•~•·

New Yon. !10: F. Tho- aue.,o, !10:
Kool&gt;-. MlniiCIOia, 46: Todd Clatk,
llmlil, 44; Thotnt, CUiVELAND, 43;
M.V ...... Booron,4l.,
RBI: Griffe)'. Seoo~. 64; T. M.,inez,
New Yon, ~9: F.
Cilleqo, 55;

n.o-.

1
. 28.1
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· STRIKEOUTS : Schillina.

·

Ill ; P.J. Manlnn,"Monueal, 98 ;
Nnmo •.Los Anaelc:s, 9S: Alan Benes, St
Lou"ia, 90 ; K.J. Brown, Florida, 87 ;
, Smollz. Adanta, 71r Sionlemyre, Sr .
· · Loui1, 7J :·R. Marliner.. Loa 'AnJCit:l. 73
SAVES: Bet.:k, San Ftancb co, 19 ;
Nen, Florida. t6; John Fl'Mt.:O, New York.
15; Todd Womll, l.oJ ADJ!!Ie•. 14; Bol·
1ulico, PhiladelPhia, l~o Wohler,, AIIIU'lta,
13:.Eckcrsley. Sr. Loutt, 12.

.

F-y
U1ah ut Chicago, 9 p.m.SUMIIJ,Junel5
, Ullrh al Clli!;IIO, 7J O p.m.,

SOX : Si.....

Nolloool !.'"It• .

if~~

Transactions

ARIZONA IJtAMONIJBAC KS :
Si(l,n.:d LHP Jo. 5t~ll Jen ion , 01: John
Adurm. RHP Sl.1h Turc, LHP Scnu Abe:ylu, C kreiny Quire, OF Julio Guzman and
RHP William JnncR.
. CINCIN~ATI REDS : Plnced RHP.

Re&lt;:allcd RHP Fell• Rudriaucz from lndl·

Baseball

A•ericln Lfapt
BOSTON RED SOX : Re&lt;alled P Joe

llntlf'.'Oiis nf 1he American Aua.tciahon~·· ,

Fne ••mmeJlt or Jllllr tldlllto
help you decide
job II riiJII for

what

RBI: Oolorruo. Colondo, ~­

,

51;"'""· Flori..., 49: Bldootie. Colo&lt;odo, 41: Gwrno,
s.o oteao. 46. ·

.
' HIT'S: Owyna, S1a DitJc, 94; L.
Walker, Colorado. 91 ; Loftoil, AdaMI,
~ ; Eric Yo•na, Colorado, 77 ; D.
Sanderi , CINCINNATI , 7.1; laJwlll,
74: Golorr-. C.t• ..... 14.
DOUBLES: Gnoizlotonok, 111-ol,

o~, qillcts;
. MoDen, Muaer

2l;. Booltlo. Florida. 21 : Cloy1oo; So.
Louis, 20: L W._,, Cob .... 30; H.

..,,........___
. ... 19;-11,

111 E. Second St., Pomeroy

~-

l'llilldolpbla,19..
TIIII'LES: W.
Ouomr'o.
Lot """"'·'
.

Ill
......

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SEEING IS BELIEVING.

THIS EVElT WILL BE HELD THIS WEEK ONLY!

FREE

~~F~R~E~E~
. ~

VIDEO EAR INSPECTION

COMPUTERIZED EAR ANALYSIS
\.

You'll SEE ... exactly what we SEE

Real Ear Analysis

We'll look into your ear canal with our New MEDRx Video Ear Camera.
You'll watch the TV screen and we'll explain to you what you're seeing.
We'll do a complete inspection of your ear canal and your ear drum.
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)8

Mall Bcrt~,c:t, SS Eliu Dorgucs, lb. Kevin
Connacher, RHP Tim Cum:ils. 28 Chad
Uurhuin, SS Rnlnndu Guru, lB·OF
Mh:hucl Hill, RHP Anllrcw lac11b!kln.
RHP J11y Ku5nicka. OF J.R. Mounll.
RHP Armn Myette, OF Jeff Newkirk, C
·:Travis Rapp, RHP Bryun Swu, and RHP
Thnnw Williama.
·
TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Re••·
li tnal RHP C~~rlm AlrT\11117.111" tn Syra~:uiiC
nf.lhe IDil.Tntdinrulll.cnguc,

'"l'

5:-n

w-.

WHIT~

The .-caUia-Meigs·.TTPA

.416.oOwyna,
Pieao • .40.•: BI.,ICf,
Allo,.., . 3~: Piaza, u.o A..,les, J 47:
Lofton, Allarila, _.34S; OalanaJa, Ccl·
ondo•.m:tonitto, 1'1-..m .
.
RUNS ~ L. Walker, ColoradO, 61 ;
G...... Colorollo, ~1: ~ /IIIMia. ·
48; florcll. 46; Blulo, HousrOn. 46: 8wb. Co&amp;ondo. 44; t!tic Youna.

....

Sunday's scoi-e

Urnh 7K. O.ica~tn 7:\ : k-rlea tied 2·2:
Wtd-J

. BATTING : L. Walker, Colorado,

Sf: L

•.

ChicaBo al U1ah, 9 p.m.

NLleaders

well, -

CHICAGO

Futurega._

Phil od ~ l ·

phia ~

PITCHING (K decilioa5J: Clemens,
Tnrunlo, 11-0. 1:000, _1.69: Key. Balli·
mort!, 10-1 , .009, 2.56, Randy Juhn~mn ,
Scnlllt!, ~ - 1 , .900. 2. 4~ ; MuuinA, Bultimurc , 7· 1, .K7 :'i, l6tli: Erickson, Balli·
rnun:, K-l, .KOO, l $M; l&gt;it.:btln, Annhcim,
7-2•. 17H, 3.4.•: Will, T~1a 1 , 7·2, .71K,
.U CJ.
STRIKEOUTS: Run&amp;iy John1o11, Sealtie. 120; ~one . New York. Ill : Arpicr,
Kanans Cily. 94; ClemciU, Tnrnnto, 118:
AIYIIRt. Chi~, 74; Hcnlpn, Toronlo,
10; B. tdcDonaJd. Milwa.lcee.70.
SAVES: M. Rivera, New York, 19:
Randy Mya1, Baltimore, 19: Ooua June•,
- Mil\\'uuka:. 14; Aauncra. MtMes01a, t4:
R. Hernandez, Chlcaao. 12; Wtllclantl,
Tc1aa, ll;Taylo.-, o.kiMd, ll . .

52; Keol, 3oo -

S. Alomar, CUiVELAND, J66: Julli«.
CLEVELAND, .365: W, Cl1&lt;k. Teau.
.361 ; Cort, Sattle, .J$9; I. RodriJIICl ,

Cluyton, St. l.ouia, IS; Ml.'Crackc:n, Col·
orndo. 14; L Walker, Colorado, 14.
PITCHING (8 decisiom ): Neagle, AIIDnln, 8· 1. Jl89, :t09; B.J. Jonc a. New
York, 10·2, .s:n . 2.22: Es1ea, Snn Fmn·
d Jco, 8·2, .1100, 2."77; P.J. Martinet. Montrc41. 8-'2,. .800, 1.78; Kile, Hou1100. 1·2.
.178, 2.07; G. Maddu ~~:. Allanla, 7- 2, .778,
2.01 ; Ourdn~r , San Fmm.: i1co, 6-2, .7~0 .

ncNota. 2K: B.L. Hunter . Dctroil. 27:

14. '

Basketball
NBAFinals

Ill
I

••.

Hudsnn frnm Pnwluckel or 1hc lntc:rnn·
tiunul LcaKuc. De"ijniall!d OF Rully ~m­
berton ror lll lillnmenl.

CALL TOLL FREE!
1-800-634-5265
OR
614•446·1744 'TO SCHEDULE
APPOINTMENTS NOW!

I'

champagne and beer and ~ver f Conferonce finals lou to eventual •
else is sipped froni lhe Stanley Cup cliinipp Colorado taught character :
:
: is gone, there remains a silver cup. and penistence.
the dreiUils it insPires, the joy it
" This is the ullimate," said Kris : ·
··brinss and the heartache the quest for Draper, one of the Wings' unsung ~
it causes.
•
heroes. "We were so close the,Jast
As the 1997NHLseason came to two. but never hnd.a hippy ending.
a close Satunday night with the This is the happy endins."
•
Detroit. Red Wings completing a
"nd there were so many of them =
sweep of Philadelphia for their first for the Red Wings.
t
Stanley Cup victory in 42 yean • .it
The ,Cup was the first for the •
· was all there to be seen in Joe Louis Russian Five of Slava Fetisov. Igor =
·Arena.
Larionov, Sergei Fedorov, Vladimir ~
Just seconds before the final horn Konstantinov and Vyliclleslav
i in Detroit's 2·1 win, Steve Yzerm1111, · Kozloz, who have a host of Olympic
the Red Wings captain since 19~, and world championship trophies ~
tossed his stick in the air and led a among them. ·
.~
mad team rush toward goalie Mike .
.It was pai'li_f:ularly meaningful to E
Vernon, the Conn Smythe winner as Fetisov, who eight years ago bucked ~
playoff MVP.
.
Soviet hockey officials and opened ~
As fireworks exploded in the the door to the NHL for Soviet playrafters and confetti fell to the ice, ers, with Larionov being among t.he
Red Wings embraced, shook hands first to join Fetisov.
.
and ~ven cried. Some looked for rei"I .was starting to think that win, ~
iltives in the crowd, and some looked · ninF the Cup was just a dream," ~
foranybody,likeBrendanShanahan.· Fcttsov said. "But I didn 't want to •
He blew kisses to the Detroit faith- stop chasing it."
·~
ful, who just kept clapping and
For fellow defenseman Larry
cheering.
Murphy, who had been on a Cup
While this· was happening, the winning team with Pittsburgh, this =
Philadelphia Flyers stood in front of 'triumph was "unbelievable." .He C
their bench waiting for the traditional was acquired just before the trade ~
postseries handshake. No one was deadline .from Toronto, which was ;
watching the Wings celebrate. Most not going to make the playoffs.
~
of the players bent over so they coUld
"I've gone from the bottom of the ~
stare at the ice, maybe hoping that valleytothetop.ofthemountainthis =
someday .it will be their tum to rev- year," Murphy .said. "Fifteen min- =
el.
Utes before the trading deadline, I :
In thi; series, though, the Wings. was planning on a long golfing sea- :
never gave the Flyers a chance. They son and now I have won the Gup. •
outscored them 16-6 and only let This is like a storybook."
i~
Philadelphia hold the lead for two
For the Flyers, it was a horror sto- .
minutes in giving coach Scotty Bow- ry. No one piayed well and coach
man his seventh title and making Thrry Murray aptly said the team was ~·
him the first coach to win 'the Cup "in a choking situation" on Friday.
with three franchises.
. The remark did not go over well with
Bowman, 63, plans to announce his players and it should he interest· •
soon whether he will return as coach, · ing to sec whether Murray is rehired. ;
Then NHL commissioner Gary His contract expired this year and it ~=
Bettman ·handed Yzerman the Cup, has widely been reported superstar
forever joinin¥ 'this team with the Eric Lindros .di&gt;esn'tlike him.
•
great Red Wmgs of old: Goodie
"We need to learn from this," : ·
Howe, Ted Lindsay, Alex Delvec· Murray said. "That is all. It is not · •
chio and Terry Sawchuk. .
how to hold the trophy over your :
· It was a moment Yzerman had head, it is how to .gct the trophy that ~·
dreamed about.
-·
is going to be the most important · ·
"Since I was 4 or 5 years old. I thing we learn ."
. ·
have watched the Stanley Cup," he
Defenseman Eric Desjardins had ~
said . "I have stayed up and·made a a hard time accepting how the ·Fly- i!
point of staying up and watching it ers collapsed in the finals after play- :
presented in the locker room and ing so well in the opening three .:
always dreamed of the day I would rounds of the playolfs.
•
get there. Sometimes you wonder if
"It hurts and I hope we have :
you will ever get there." .
nightmares all summer long," he •
Detroit .got there because it said.
~~~
learned from th.e disappointments of
The Red Wings. and their fans
the previous two seasons. Being won't.
=
swept in the finals in 1995 by New

Loui s, 18; Eric Y~:nma . ColOradO , I ~;

Ni1mn, TnftNIIo, 27; T. Goodwin, Ka nsw;
Cily. 26: DurhBm. Chl~::.,o , 17: ViUIUCI.
CLEVEI.ANll, Itt: Burmlr., M1lwnukee,

:

ALieaden

=

••
•

6: Woma ck. Pilllburgh, 6: D. Sanders.
CINCINNATI, 6; Rando , Piusbutgh, ~ ;
DeShi•lds, St. Louia. S; Tucker. Allnnto,
4: Eric Young, Colorado. 4: McRa.~ .
Clljcago, 4.
•
HOME RUNS: Bagwell, Hous1on. 19:
L W11lk.er, Colorado, 18: (ialnnagR, Col·
orado, 16; Ca11illn. Colorado. 1~ : Lankford, St. Louis , .14; Sosn, Oticogo, 14:
Hundley, New York. 1:1; Burks, Colorudot
1).
STOLEN BASES: - D. S11 ndc:r s,
CINCINNATI, 30; Wc,nna~.:k , Pit11burgh,
B ; LOfloo, A1Jan1a. 19; DeShit!ltb. Sr.

CLEVELAND, 46.

ltnl (Hennan.on 2-4), 7 : ~' p.m .

T....ay'opma

_,. cw-

ChicaBo, 54; Todd Clark, Dceroil,
:'il ; MeGwire, Oakland, ~ 0 ; Jusricc,

New YOJk, 74; E. Mariincz, Seaule, 74.

Oli~:IIIO Cub1 (Caslillo :\-71 111 M11n·
lreal (Juden ~- 2), 7 : 3~ p.m.
Atlanta (Giavhlc 6-:\) a1 Colorado
(Bai ley ' ' ~ ). 9~ p.m.
Hout lon (Holt 6-4) ut L(t~ Ailg~elc s
(Marlina ~3 ) , IO:Qt; p.m.
S1 . Louis (An. Benes • -2 ) ar Snn
Diqo (Cunnane 4- 1), 10:~ p.m.
Florid a (Rapp ,..2) Iii San Frnncbc'!
I Foulke 0.1), 10:0~ p.m.
.

Sunday's scores

Batton t 2, CLEVELAND 6

(Munin~~

7

N.Y. Mcts Uonu 10· 2) .al CINCIN· ·
NAn (Merckcr ). ~ ). 12 : 3~ p.m.

Mlnnel&lt;lta 6, Anaheim I

Balllmore

6'~

Saturday's scores

Cmtnll Dh·lAon
CLEVELAND ....... 30 27 .526
Kanlu Ciry ...........28 :w&gt; .483
Milwakee ............. 28 ~0 .483
· O.Ie~~o .................. 2R J I .475
Minta01a ................27 Jo6 .44J
.

WesttrriDM!Ion
San Frandseo .........W 26 ..'irl7
Colorodo ................ll 28 .541
Los Anseles .......... .29 J I .48]
San DicJ_o ..............27 H -•~

.
21. .
'•

2

biuer, While lut season's Western •

Scoreboard
Baseball

~

J~y fon:ed the Red 'jVin1s' to get

•

Ctnlral Diwls'on

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

.Red Wings sweep =
!Flyers to ca~ture 1.

Jazz .get past Bulls
78-73 to tie series
ByBOBBAUM
SALTLAKE CITY (AP)- Karl
Malone has redemption. John StockIOn has Utah even with ,the mighty
Chicago Bulls in the NBA Finals.
Given a chance to .relive his
nightmare at the foul line in Game I .
Malone made two free throws with
18 seconds to play 10 help the Jazz
to a 78,73 victory Sunday night;
. squaring the best-of-seven series at ·
two games ap iece.
. .ton did the rest - shooting,
stealmg and. of course, paSsing Utah .
to a 9-0 iun over the last 1 1/2 minutcs.
Utah can move within one win of
its first NBA title with a victory
Wednesday night in the Delta Center, where the Jazz are 48-3 this sea·
son - with 23 straight wins - and
I0-0 in the playoffs.
The Bulls haven't been 2-2 in the
finals since 1992, when Michael Jor_, dan went on to lead Chicago past
Portland for the second of his four
championships.
·
·
"It's stunning for us," Chicago's
Luc Longley ~aid , "and all that
means is that we will come out in the
next game and do it ·again. It's a
three-game series now."
· The dramatic scenario Sunday
night was the kind of thing that usu·
ally must be invented by scriptwrit·
ers. With 18 seconds remaining and
Utah leading 75-73, Malone was .
fouled. Everyone flashed back to
Game I in·Chicago, when Malone
missed two free throws in the final
seconds, allowing Jordan to win the
game with a jumper at the buzzer.
Malone admitted he was nervous
as he walked to the foul line.
" Nonnally~ I think about faraway
places," Malone. said . . "But this
time, I thought about 650 m1lhon
people watching - again:" .
The first free throw needed a cou- ·
pic of friendly bounces on the rim
before falling through. Then, after a
Utah timeout, Malone's second free
'throw was all net.
"As a player. when things don' t
go well, you wish sometimes you'd
have anocher opportunity in a similar situation." Malone said. "S&lt;?me·

.

Junel1 111f.

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•4•
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�Mondlly, June .. 1117

•

BoSox bullpen holds
..
By HOWARD ULMAN
BOSTON (AP) - Cleveland
needed only three innings to steal six
bases. In just one inning, Boston
scored nine runs. And lltere was
anothtr\.very bizarre occurrence.
Red Sox relievers actually pitched
well.
The · performance of Boston's
beleaguered bullpen - one run in
seven innings ...,. kept the Indians
from adding to their 5-0 lead and
helped the Red Sox to a 12-6 win
Sunday.
"The key is, you pitch well, you
shut people down, you've got" a
' hance," Boston's Mo Vaughn said.

The bullpen came into lite game
with a 5.57 ERA. But four relievers
gave up just one run, four hits and a
walk after Jeff Suppan struggled for
the first time in his four starts this
season.
By. the time Joe Hudson (1-0)
ailowed just one hit in three scoreless innings, the Red Sox had a 9-5
lell!l on their way to their second win
in nine games. Kerry Lacy allowed
one run in two innings and Chris
Hammond and HeathCliff Slocumb
followed _wit)J a scoreless inning
apiece.
"It was a great day for the
bullpen,'' said Hudson. called up
Sunday from Pawtucket or the Inter-

g~ests

back in 12-6 ·win ~over Indians

utionnl League. "But what the guys /
"W"IIh th8 -ber oiiiOiea .,._ fe~P~'s double, .-adler two on Oar· because lataned it."
did, scoring nine .runs, made (the th8y had," Boston m"'ICJ Ji~y cilplrra's li11Jie and two more on
·n.e nine-run iaalna wu the
relievers) want to go out and do
Williams said, "we were lucky 10 fana baacm• Jim Thome's error on bigcst for the Reel Sex lliace ICOI"well."
·
still be in th8 game."
Vqhn 's routine grourider. Siaale ing I0 runs apinat 1'oroll!9 on June
Cleveland lltreatened to steal the
Wilfredo Cordero and John Nlll came in on Conlero's double 21, 1994. Cleveland IMt gave up
game .early as Matt Williams had
Valentin drove in three runs each, and sacrifa Hy and Valentin's sin- nine runs in an inning qainst the
lltrce of. its six stolen .bases, match- and . Nomar Garciaparra and Troy gle.
New York Yankees lasl June 22.
·
ing his total for the past two seasons. O'Leary each had three hits for ·
"All of a sudden, you give up
Valentin added a two-run homer,
Williams had just 26 steals in II
Boston.
·
his founh of the year, and Cordero nine runs in one .inning and it takes
years before Sunday, but took advanChad Ogea, who has struggled had another RBI dooble as Boston "the wind out of your s~ils," Indians
tage of Suppan 's slow delivery and against the Red Sox, unraveled after ended the scoring with three runs in manager Mike Hargrove said.
Mike Stanley's rustiness in his first three innings. Darren Bragg's lead· the seventh. ···
Thome did hit. his sixth llorner in
·
start at catcher since last Aug. ~I.
six
games and 16th·.of lite year, a
off single in the founh staned the
"There was not!Jing I could do
"We wanted to be aggressive,"
nine-run, seven-hit inning in which :&gt;nee I was out of the ga111e except two-run sholln the first. But he w~nt .
Williams said. · '.'1 have never, ever 13 batters clime to the plate.
sit," said Oaea. S•S overall but 0-3 0-fo(-3 with tw'o strikeouts after
stole three bases in a game, not even
Two runs scored on Reggie Jef- tgainst Boston. "Biil I was to blame stippan left the game.
in lillie league, and I doubl I'll ever
do it again."
.

Kuerten's title victory puts .
end to unusual French Open
By JOCELYN NOVECK
beat three l"orrncr. champions on his
PARIS (AP) - What was the way to l&gt;ecoming the lowest-ranked
wackiest thing that happened at this player to win the French Open.
wackiest of French Opens'!
In Monday's new ATPTour rankTake your ch!)ice:
lngs, Kuerten moved from 66tli in
. -No. I Pete Sampras losing to a the world to No. 15.
65th-ranked Swede, Magnus NorSunday'sstmight-sel dismantling
man.
of two-time champion Sergi
- The early exits of the next four Bruguera; 6-3, 6-4, 6-2, was only
men 's seeds: Michael Chang, Kucrlen's 49th professional match.
de fending champ Ycvgeny KarelThe Brazilian upstan played with
n iknv, Goran lvanisevic and Thomas such confidence- grinning on both
Muster.
winning and losing points, skipping
-A circus-like "second-round to the chair on changeovers -that
match in which perennial bad boy it seemed like nobody had told him
Jeff Tarango mercilessly mimicked this was a Grand Slam final.
Muster, who obliged by refusing to
Maybe that was the secrel.
shake his hand.
"I didn't think, 'Wow, it's a final ·
-A semifinal draw with three and I have to wi~,'" he said. "I just
unseeded men, including a 122nd- play like I practice."
ranked quali tier..
"I was prelly relaxed," he said in
Let's not forget the women. For a typical understatement.
starters, Steffi Graf didn't make the
The match lasted I hour. 50 minsemis ror the first time in II years.
utes, the fastest final since 1980,
And No. 9 seed Iva Majoli scored when Bjorn Borg beat Vitas Geru:
the biggest · upset ever in the laitis in I:46. ·
'
women's event by defeating the
Kucrten dedicated the win to his
overwhelming favorite, top-ranked rather, who died of a heart auack
Martina Hingis, with stunning case soon arter umpiring a tennis match ·
in the linal.
when Kuerten was 8 years old.
Bui the wackiest surprise came
"He was the person I really loved
las!. Imagine someone predicting . and I miss him a lot," Kucrtcn said.
two weeks ago that the final Sunday "This trophy and this tournament
crowd would be chanting the word goes to him, and I'm sure he's reai"GUGA!"- or that a samba band ly happy right now."
·
composed of overjoyed Brazilians
If the sight of the wiry Brazilian
would he marching through the bou- with a mop of unkempt hair, a
tiquc·lined walkways of Roland Gar- scraggly beard and brilliant blueres.
and-yellow tennis togs kissing the
Two wee~s · ago, Gustavo twphy was a bit unusual fur Roland
Kucrtcn , the aforementioned Garros, so was the aftermath.
"Guga," was an unknown 66th- · That wa.' whcn·a couple of dozen
ranked player wbo'd never won a fans who'd watched the match on
tour even!. In fact , he 'd never gollen TV made their way inside tile gates.
past the quarterfinals.
instruments in himd. They scre•odBut in a story for the record ed their hero with a pulsating sumhooks, the 20-ycar-old Brazilian _ )'&gt;a bent, punctuated l&gt;y . rhythm!.

-~®~~!$$ E$®:~13:~$£$'$~·

~

&lt;1\l l i"

.

Opening Soon

3.qr~ for 60 MO.OR
$1 000 Cash Back

Blum. lri the third row sre Wea Call, Ben.Book·
man, Josh Smith, David Glockner, BUbby Haye,
Jee11 Allen, Adam John11011, Jared Dllchsr, B.J.
Marnhout and Cunta Nelgler. Ill the fourth row are ·
Ike Appet'8on, Cun Crouch, Jordon ·HIU, Juatln
Connolly, Joe Cornell, Nate Mentn, Dally Hill, Tom
TheiSs and Brandon Pierce. Allsalt wu R.J. Har-

mon.

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1997 LINCOLN TOWN CAR .
.

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class picture.
play also noted ·that five of the classA display was set up showing mates were deceased.
where the class members sellled after
Each classmate allending received
their graduation. One hundred thiny a booklet containing curre~t inror-two remain in Mei"gs County, 44 are mation of the classmates auending
in other pans of Ohio, seven live in the reunion.
West Virginia, five each in Califor- Cla~smates auending from out of
ni~, ~lorida and Vir~inia, four · in the area were Irene Barnes Miller, Ft.
M•chtg~n. three each 10 the states of Salonga. New York; Jan Betzing
. Arizona, Kentucky and North Car- Atkins, Huber Hts.; Jon Buck, Chill·
olina, two in the stale$ of New York, · icothe; Tom Crisp, Caulettsburg, Ky.;
Georgia and Indiana and one in Mis- Janelle Cumings Herlehy, Camas,
souri, Maryland, Illinois, Wyoming, Wash.; Marc Daily, Whitehouse;·
· Washington, Texas and Pennsylvania. JoEIIen Diehl Yeary, South ,
A display was ·also set up of the Charleston, W.Va.; Harvey Erlewine,
classmates who could not be at the Marion; Sheila Powell Knudson.
reunion but sent information about Athens; Pat Gress, Canton, Mich.
llteir lives si~ce gradu~tion . Th_e disMelanie Hackell Franko, Man-

A TOPS program titled "Planting
The Seeds of Success" was presented by Janet Thomas, leader when
TOPS IIOH 1383, Cheshire, met on
May 5 at Cheshire United Methodist
· Church. .
As every gardener kno.ws, flowers
need constant care and attention in
order to blossom. TOPS (Take Off
Pounds Sensibly) members are learning how to nu.nure lltemselves as well
.1!5 llteir gardens.
.
. The secrets to a successful garden
and successful weight loss, According to Janet Thomas, a representative
of TOPS, are amazingly similar.
The first step is to visualize the
·goal. "Whether it's a full garden or
:a·thinner figure, think about what you
want to achieve," said Thomas.
·The second step is to have a plan.
;The gardener looks to protect the
:Plants, watches for signs-or distress
:and avens trouble when possible.
·"The same can 1&gt;e said of weight
loss,''· said Thomas.
. Step ·thrCe is nunure yourself.
'l:.'ike the _plants, feed your body
appropriate nutrients. ·Think about
whatyou!ICCd.Getplentyoffrcshair
~nd sunlight through exercise and
drink lots of water.
Step four: Don-'t compare yourself
to other gardeners. Concentrate on
your own, strengths and build on
them.,'' she advised.
1
Step live is to share the bounty.
Share the success with others. If some
of your plan didn't develop as you
~ad expected, don't be discouraged."
said Janet Thomas, .b\Jt continue to
work for the right balance for yourself.
Helen Trout, Cheshire, read a
verse titled A Wonderful Mother.
TOPS best loser of the \Yeek was Geri
Gibson, . Gallipolis, with Mamie
Stephenson, Pomeroy, as KOPS
(Keep Off Pounds Sensibly)·bestloser. Best losers of lite week receive a
cenificate of recognition and a gift

hattan Beach, Calif.: Debra Hawley
Hensley, Whitehall ; Sherry King
Houck , Hunti"ngton, W.Va.; Fred
Jones, Heath; John Gilliam, Gahan.na; Rick Kelly. Hershey. Pa.: Daniel
Midkiff, Jacksonville, N.C.; John
Muiphy, Lancaster; Marla Neutzling
·Roush. Rushville; Marcy and Fred
Thompson, Hendersonville. N.C.
· Melisa Rizer Allshouse, Arlington, Va.; Susan Rusche! Farren, Mt.
Vernon; Rebecca Scaggs Smith,
Columbus; Debra Wisecup, Columbus; Becky Wright Anderson, Cambridge ;Carolyn Wood . Brickles,
Germantown, Md.; Tony Vaughn,
Lawrenceville, Ga.; Eddie Youhg,
Berrien Springs, Mich.

named the overall c!)unty winner ~n
the 1997 Yesteryear Essay Contest.
Honored were, in order by school:
Pomeoroy Elementary, Mrs. Lowery- Angela Wilson and Nicole Burman; Pomeroy Elementary,. Mrs.
Stanley- Brandy Thomas and Justin
Klein; Salisbury Elementary - Tia
Pratt and Kristin Hall; Chester Elei
mentary --Jennifer Searles and Eric
Batey; Harrisonville Elementary Maegan Dodson and Iiobbi Sue Napper; Tuppers Plains Elementary . Jes-

sica. Boyles (overall county winner)
and Ryan Kidder; Salem Center Ele- .
mentary - Joanna Bowersock and Jessica Smith; Portland · Elementary,
Miss Manuel- Jessica Hill and Sasha
Collins; Ponland Elementary, Miss
. Fisher - Stephanie Bradford and
· Jesse Allen; Syracuse Elementary ·
Shawn Barnhart and Bethany
Amberger; Rutland Elementary Pamela Rupe and Chrissy Miller;
Riverview ~lementary - Kathy Wells
and Sandy Powell.

'Con Air' takes
. off with No. 1 box office spot; 'Lost World' No. 2
dred fewer screens.
"We're ecstatic, it's a great way to
start off the summer season," Chuck
Viane, vice president and ·general
sales manager cif Buena Vista PiCtures said Sunday. "The public was
looking for a new picture and they
got it."
·
The "Jurassic Park" sequel, which
held the top spot for two weekend's;
still earned a healthy $18.5 million
and raised its total earnings to $171
million, according to Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc.
·
The only other debut in the top I0
was "Buddy." The tale about an

eccentric millionairess who raises ·
gorillas earned $3.7 million.
"Liar, Liar" continued to hold its
own. The Jini Carrey comedy was in
lOth place with $1.2 million. It has
grossed $168.5 million in 12 weeks.
· Final figures were to be released
Monday.
.
The top films from Friday lltrough
Sunday:
I. "Con Air, '' $25.5 million. ~'
.
2. "The Lost . World: Jurassic

Park,' ' $18.~ million.
3. "Addicted to Love,'' $3.8 million.
4. "Buddy,'' $3.7 million.
5. "Gone Fishin' ," $3.1 million .
6. "Trial and Error,'' $2.7 million
7. "Austin Powers. International
Man of Mystery, " $2.4 million.
8. "The Fifth Element," $2 .2 million.
9. "Breakdown," $1.9 million.
10. "Liar, Liar," $1.2 million.

·~--------------------------------------,
Let Eve~yon~ Know Your Dad Is

.~someone Very Special With A .

Father's Day Thank You .T ribute To
Be Published In The Daily Sen.inel
~n Friday, June 13!

The Community (:aleodar is
published liS a free service to non··
profit groups wishing to announce
· meeting and special events. The
calendar Is not desipled to promote
sales or lund raisers of any type.
Items 11re printed as space pennits
·and i:annot be guaranteed to nan a
specific: number of days.

a.m. to II :30 a.m. First Baptist
Church, Racine. Theme will be
"Magnifying Christ."

•

lx3 Greeting'- $10.00

MONDAY
- MIDDLEPORT -- Chapter 53,
Disabled American Veterans and
Auxiliary, Monday, 6:30 p.m. at the
:1\all. Refreshments.

Meredith Crow has been accepted ·
."into the Mariella Colltige graduating
:class of 2001. Crow, the ~ughter of
Ji!D and Pam Crow, Pomeroy, will
begin studies in the fall of 1997; She

is a graduate of Eastern High School
and · received a . Marietta College
dean' s scholarship, and .has l&gt;een
acccpled into the college's leadership
program.

The Sentinel News Hotline
.

~

*

992-2156·

$~ell'*[$ tii' $ ~ ,.."'

To offer story susgestions,
report late-breaking n~ws and
offer news tips ·

·"
&lt;I

j) ..

\~,

'

(YOUR FATHER'S
NAME)

POMEROY -- MI. Hermon United· Brethren in Christ Church, vacation Bible school, 9:30 a.m. to noon
Monday through Friday. Theme is
"Promise Builders for Jesus", classes planned for 3 to 12 year olds.
Diana Buckley. director.

Accepted at Marietta Co1_
1ege

8'1!l

HAPPY
FATHER'S DAY

POMEROY -- Meigs County
Chapter of Right to Life will meet at
7:.30 p.m. Monday al the Pomeroy
Library.

: CHESTER -- Chester/Shade His·torical ·Association meeting witjl TUESDAY
PQMEROY -- Meigs County
-qpdate on courthouse restoration and
Ghester-Shade Day planning ses- Chamber of Con'ltnerce luncheon, .
Tuesday, noon, S11\!lor Citizens Cension, Monday, 7 p.m. firehouse.
ter. Audrey SanfotjJ, Ohio Consumer
· POMEROY ·-- Big Bend Fam\ Council, to speak. ,
"
Antiques Club, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs High School Library. All WEDNESDAY
members, past and present urged to
POMEROY -- Red Cross Bloodattend.
mobile al Meigs Cbunty Senior Cit.
· izens on Wednesday1 1-6 p.m. SeekRACINE -- Vacation Bible · ing donors with 0 negative blood
School, Monday through Friday, 9 type.

$5000 CASH BACk

~

i

RSVP essay win nets ·are announced

The · Meigs County Retired and
Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP)
held a reception on May 29 at the
Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center in
Pomeroy honoring the 1997 Yesteryear Essay winners.
· Approximately 60 people attended the event to award trophies to first
and second place winners. Essays
from the gift box.
.were judged by Eleanor and Carolyn ·
· Rhonda Grover, Middleport, Thomas.
received a cenificate and a TOPS
Jessica Boyles, a student .al Tupcharm as lite winner of the "hang In . pers Plains Elementary School, was
there" contest. Awards arc presented
to members w~o lose or stay the same
six weeks in a row.
Allhe May 12 meeting TOPS best
loser was Rh!&gt;nda Grover with Helen
LOS ANGELES (AP) - ' The
Trout as KOPS l&gt;est loser. Katie hijack thriller "Con Air" took lite top
Moore, Syracuse was honored · as box office spot from "The Lost
.KOPS Miss Springtime. She received World: Jurassic Park," earning $25.5
· a cenificate and a TOPS charm.
million in its weekend detiu~ indusA program titled Accentuate The try sources estima~d.
Positive was presented by Janet
Such ovenums arc not uncommon
Thomas, Cheshire. "The catchy old for blockbusters. "Jurassic Park,"·the
· tune advising us to accentuate the highest-grossing film of all time, was
positive" has a good point," said . the top film for only three weeks in
Thomas, who suggested that it's 1994 until Tom Cruise's "The Firm"
always best to focus on what we can came along.
do rather than what we can't.
The Nicolas Cage film about con"Think in terms of possibilities victs taking over an airplane sold
and positives,:· she advised, and then more tickets than "Lost World" even
offered ways to do that: banish terms though il appeared on several hunlike "diet' forbidden food," or "nono's, appre~iate the values of healllty
foods, think of exercise as a healllty
indulgence.by picking an activity you
enjoy.
At the May 19 meeting, TOPS
beit loser was Catherine · Little. "A
TOPS program titled "The Snack
Attack" was given by Janel Thomas.
Geri Gibson was TOPS May best
loser on May 26. KOPS May best
loser was Katie Moore. Best losers of
the month receive a cash prize and a
cenificate.
Meml&gt;ers who recently auended
TOPS Area Recognition Day at Laocaster were Janet Thomas and Geri
Gibson. Emogene Johnson was chosen as Chapter Angel. Chapter Angels
are voted on by chapter meml&gt;ers by
secret ballot
·
Thomas received a first place
rosette as winner ofthe program cover contest. Kay Sage, TOPS coordinator, presented an award to Thomas
and Geri Gibson for souvenir sales.

'/

AS LOW
AS

"We treat your best friend like our beit
. Sl Rt. 681 .
• Clll for Appointment~

1@.9.

Meigs High Class of 1972 r:ccently held it's twenty- fifth class reunion
with 118 classmates and guests
attending.
After the buffet dinner, Jon Buck
played music . from the seventies.
Prizes of Ohio River Bears were given for several categories and lite winners were Melanie Hackett Franko, .
traveling the farthest; Cindy Jordan
Aeiker and Randy Michael, first to
send in their registrations; Melisa
Rizer, newest mother; Steve Hanenbach, newest father; Debm Hawley
Hensley, most grandchildren, and
Irene Barnes Miller, voted on by the
classmates auending to be the classmate lltat most resembled their senior

lx4 Greeting .&amp;
Picture- $13.00

-Community calendar- .

&lt;@§&gt;

(814) 687-3526

Page7
MOnday, June 9, 1997

TOPS program: Planting
the Seeds of Success

:~ · K·9 DESIGNS _ .~
*'* Professloftlll Pet Grooaaf.., •'*
*.
Boarding • Training • Supplies
*
~
frie~" ~
~~ Tuppera Plllnl, OhiO

COATNEY HALEY

TO A11£ND GIRLS Si\TE • MelgJ High School juniors, Rachel
Alhley 1nd Cortney H1iey hava been Hlacted to attand Buck·
eye Girl• Stile at Bowling Green Unlvmlty June 21·28. The two
are being !IPOflacrid by Drew Webltllr Post 38, American Legion.
BIICklye,Cllrll s.l1la e worklhop In dlmocracy ltlged for.rntny
year1, by the Amlrlcan LegiOn. Rachel 18 th1 daughter of Keith
· and Emma Alhley of Pom~roy, 1nd Haley 11 th1 daughter of VIcki and Robin Hally of Pomeroy.

chants of "GUGA!"
Watching from a halcony,
Kucnen laughed, signed autographs · ·
and struggled to pop open a boule of
champagne. But he had to defer to
his coach on that one.
·
"I never won a title - that's why
I don 't know how to open champagne," he said hiler.
Bruguera, the lowest seed at No.
16, is one of the strongest clay-court
"players of his generation and usually dominates his opponents from the
baseline. By reaching the final . he
jumped from 19th to eijlhth on the
ATP computer.
But Sunday, Bruguem was help. SOUTHERN BASKETBALL CAMP - A large
less as Kuenen dictated the points,
group
turned out for the 1897 veralon and 10th
moving him from side to side, stepannual
Southern baslcetbell camp. In front are (L·
ping in to knock off clean winners.
R)"
Josh
Papa, Kyle Mees, Dale Teeford, Derek
Kucnen '&gt; biggest weapon was his
Teaford,
Daniel
Bookman, Du1t1n, Brlnager, 'TYler
forehand , which produced 26 winRoberti
and
Camsrlon
Brlnager. In the MCond
ners·.
row are Craig Randolph, Kyle Mci&lt;Mver, Darin
·.·He played an outstanding
Teaford, Brad Crouch, Shawn Barnhart, Joeh
match,'' Bruj!ucra said.
Harrla, Wallece Hill, Addllon Allen and Derek

The Daily Sentinel

·MHS Class of •72 holds reunion

RACHEL ASHLEY

·Pocono ·500.. _&lt;Continued ti"Om Page 4&gt;
" With l"ive to go, you arc not
weekend l&gt;ecause we had some problems." Gordon said. "One thing this going to catch him ." Burton
teal)l secn'IS to do is never lose sight explained. "You just make sure the
guys behind you don 't catch you."
that hard work pays off."
The victory gave Gordon a .tic in
The victory came a week after the
the
series standings with Hendrick
25-year-old Hoosier crashed late in
the race while pursuing a record Motorsports teammate Terry
fourth straight win at Dover Downs. Lahontc and an $80,000 payoff for
Gordon got the break he needed gaining it with a win.
The bonus was part of a $166.080
when caution came out because
Bobby Labonte spun in the first turn payorf from a purse totaling S1.3
on lap 59. Gordon was able to close 111illion. It gave Gordon earning:; of
$1,682,844 for the season and
up on the leaders. ·
" We were certainly feeling some $12,009,648 for his. career. He is
blessings coming down on us at that eighth in NASCAR career earnings.
Gordon paced all but I 0 of the
time for that caution to come out
when we heeded it." he said .
last 68 laps. and 59 overall in a race
•
Ward Burton dominated until the that featured 25 lead changes among
I 20th lap, when his brother, Jeff. and a season-high 15 drivers.
Gordon closed what had been a twoFour. cautions covering 22 laps
second lead to a few car-lengths. The slowed Gordon 's average speed to
third caution of the race came out on 139.828 mph.
.
lap 131, and all the leaders pitted .
Fords took the next five positions
But the slow pit stops that had behind Gordon; with Dale Jarrettlinchecked Ward Burton over the first ishing third ahead of Mark Martin,
· half of the event bit him again. and . Jeremy Mayfield and Ted Musgrave.
. Gt&gt;rdon got out lirst.
Darrell Waltrip was seventh in a
The winning crew enabled Gor- . Chevy,·followcd by Geoff Bodine's
don lQ cKtc nd his series lead in vicFord and Terry Labonte's Chevy.
tories this year to six. He beat the
Seven-time Winston Cup chamFord of JcO' Burton by 1.415 seconds pion Dale Earnhardt was lOth in a
to win for the 25th time in four-plus &lt;;hevy, extending his winless streak
. seasons on the Winston Cup circuit to 40 races. A loss next Sunday at
Gordon said he was rearful Jell Michigan would make it the worst
Burton mig ht dose on him late in the run of his career.
·Ward Burton . . who eventually
rm; ~ .
"I knew that if he could get to my blew an engine in his Pontiac, led the
rear bumper. he'd get me loose," most laps·with 60.
Gordon said . " But I had some time
Gordon remained the only Chevy
nod some room ... to kind of stop that , driver to have won this year. Fords
gap from closing ...
have taken the other seven races.
What Gordon didn't .realize was
Gord~n also joined Bobby Allison
that Burton has a chassis problem and the late Tim Richmond as the
only repeat winners of the event.
that couldn't he fixed.

By The Bend

HAPPY
FATHER'S DAY
(YOUR FATHER'S
NAME)

lOVE, JOHN, JOE AND
. SUSAN

LOVE, JOHN, JOE AND
SUSAN

Deadlirw For This Special Father's Day Tribute 13 Tuesday; June 10, 12noon.

Fill Out The Form Below And Drop Off With Payment To

The Daily. Sentinel "Father's Day"
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

1

fI --~-----------------------------------------------~--,
CIRCLE ONE:
A.1X3 GREETING... $10.00 8. 1X4 GREETING AND PICTURE...$13.00
1
. '
I
(PLEASE PRINT OR TYPE)

IFATHER's NAME
I
1YOUR

r
II

NAME(S)

--------~~~----------~--~------~----------1

I
-~~~------------------------~-----------------------1I

_______________________

ZIP----------~------~1

I
I

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

�•
'
.
Pomeroy •lliddllport, Ohio

Pqe I • The Ddy S1nllnel

The Dally S1ntlnel • P81Je.t -;

~.June 8, 1817

llondly, June .. 1817

110 Help'Wiallf

What to do about misleading Social Security ads
BY ED PETERSON

Social Security
Manager, Athens
Because Social Security touches
. the lives of everyone, direcdy or indirecdy, it has generated a number of
scams from those who recognize that
many people simply are not aware of
their rights and responsibilities under
the program. They become prime targets for those who pitch convenience
and economic security to sell them
services they can obtain free from
Social Security.

'!Ypical scams are those that use
"official" letterhead stationary offering to provide a replacement for a lost
or stolen Social Security card, have
a name changed on a Social Security record, or get a Social Security
number for a child for a fee. 1bese
services are not only free from Social
Security, but they can generally be
obtained just as easily from Social
Security as they can from the advertiser.
·
·A number of these misleading ads
are aimed specifically at the elderly

and cause great conslemation and
hardship. Many older jleople end up
sending money in response to appeals
to keep Social Security and Medicare
afloat or to protect their benefits.
What they don't realize is that they
are being deceived if they think the
appeal is coming from an official
body of the government.
Individuals or- groups who purposefully mislead the public about
Social Security or Medicare services
are subject to stronger penalties under
cunent legislation that became effec-

tive in 199S. The law makes such
misrepresentations more difficult to
carry out and increases fines that can
be imposed.
The Social Security Administralion responds to consumer complaints and inquiries from Congress
· about mail icceived by members of
the public that. appears to be misleading advertising. If it finds that
such mailings violate the Social
Security Act, the senders may face
prosecution by the Inspector Oeneral's Office.
'

""1:

· tabacco memorabilia.
Specializing in
. matcbbox cais.

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

614-741-3513

Stick/MIG· Aluminum Welding

R. ·L. HOtlON

Godfrey, Statesboro, Ga., .1944; Joe
Stanley, Shade, · Marrianna Thockmorton Whitlock, Columbus, 194S;
Garnet Henderson Swisher, Ashville,
LenaAlkireHewitt,Columbus,l946;
Richard parsons and Dena Chase Parsons, Dayton, Deloris Wand King,
Pomeroy, 1947; Ester Ross McKinley, Amesville; LeRay Lambert. Worthington.
·
Helen Alkire Pickens, Racine,
1948; Jean Wyatt Wood, Pomeroy,
1949; Kasella Dorgan Birchfield.
Albany. Virginia Welch Douglas,
Athens, 1950; Pansy Turner Jordan.
. Pomeroy, Genrude McMurray Monroe, Albany, 1951 ; ~ussell Mason,
Chillicothe, Pauline Birchfield Parker, Pomeroy. Mary Maples Pickens,
Magnolia, 1953; Hallie Ross, Alexan• .

TRUCKING

der,' 1955; Larry Clark, Pomeroy, Jan- purple and white l!lble clOII\cs and
ice Wyllllt DeBord, Pomeroy, 1956. balloons with vases of Dowers on
'
Gary Dorgan, Reynoldsburg, Con- ·each table.
Three
members
who
died
this
past
nie Carsey Chapman, Pomeroy, Anna
King Shuler. Pomeroy, Phyllis Ross year were: William Knapp, New
Dea11, Athens, Pauline,Welch StOll!, Carlisle, class of 1940; Sun Haning
Albany, Carolyn Welsh Collins, Dennison, Alaniagordo,, N.M., class
Ridgeway,. Rae heal Burbridge of 1958; Dena Haning Raymond,
Lefebre, Pomeroy, 1957; Virgil Lancaster, class of 1942.
Mrs. Stella Diehl Atkins, class of
Reeves, Albany, 1959; Jay Wiseman .
Clark, Harold Graham, Pomeroy, 1928. was presented a hanging bas1960, the last graduating class from ket for being oldest graduate, while
Mary Ellen Jewell Godfrey, class of
Harrisonville-Scipio.
Alumni classes honored .were. 1944, received a hapging basket for
with numbers attendins.: 1937, nine; the fanhest traveled.
The benediction was given by Jay
1947, three; 19S7, seven. Si~ty year
Clark.
New officers arc Harold Graand 50 year classes were presented
ham,
president;
Carolyn Collins,
plaques while 40 year alumni were .
vicc,president;
Virgil
Reeves, treagiven key chains. The auditorium was
decorated in purple and white with surer; Racheal Lefebre. secretary.
.
.
.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE ·
Umeatone • Gravel
Dirt • Send

Dear Ann: My hat is off to you for
hostages stabbed the wounded robber from . the gay man whose panner's
with a pocket knife. hit an artery and sister was getting married touched . your immensely reasonable and
me. The mother of the bride didn't humane suggestion to "Gay Son's
Ann
killed him.
You'd think this would be the end · want her son's partner to attend the Partner... After he finishes his dance
Landers
of it, but apparently not. An atto~ney wedding even though the bride had with the bride's mother, a lot of us
IY'J ~ . Los A.n1t' l~1
sued the bar on behalf of the dead invited him. You advised him to go gay men would be willing to cut in
Timcll Syndic~~e and Cre·
.aton Sylldin~r
robber's family. alleging it didn"t pro- anyway and to be sure to ask the 1
vide a ··safe environment. .. He also mother to dance.
I am a 61 -year-old man who has. lr~---------------.,
sued the City of Hayward, saying the
To phlce aa ad, call
By ANN LANDERS
.
police were rough in their handling of had a same-sex partner for II years. FIH ....... ..,.. ...
. .. Dear Ann Landers: Thanks for the situation.
a relationship I expect to last for the
992·2156
·
cutting us in on all those crazy lawThe lawy'er eventually dropped rest of my life.
•uits. They made my day. Here's the suit against the bar when he disMy 90-year-old mother passed
another one I read about in the Hay- covered it was a patron who stabbed away last year after a long struggle
110 Help Wanted
ward. Calif.. Daily Review. I hope the robber, but the bar's insurance with Alzheimer's. Although she ,and
my
older
unmarried
sister
were
both
you ;.,ill share it with your readers. will still have to pay about $2,500 to
k"s too good to keep to yourself. -- A · cover the legal fees. And that does- "old-fashioned," they accepted
San Leandro Reader
·
n't include the legal fees for defend- "Bob, .. as did my former wife and
Dear San Leandro: You're right ing the police department of Hayward my wonderful children. Bob loved
'!bout sharing. Here's what happened: -- which arc picked up by the tax- my mother and insisted on paying for
. the blanket of roses atop the coffin.
. According to the Hayward Daily payer.
Review, ·four robbers in ski. masks,
The lawsuit against the city was He was welcomed to the funeral, as
O'(•rb~ok Center has Immediate
brandishing weapons, dasbed into a finally dropped when the assistant was m)l ex-wife .. N!' ore. raised any
openrngs tor'
time or part time
local bar, hassled the patrons and city attorney offered to show the questions as to who he was, at least
.RN's. Salary to $14.00 plus per hour
' robbed the place. When the robbers lawyer the surveillance videotape of not in my presence.
. Your advice was c0 rrect, and I
ttied to escape in a van, two police the robber actually robbing the bar
based on experience. A . variety of
&lt;!fficers shot at them, wounding one _ and stuffing money into his pockets. thank you for it. -- Texas
benefits
are available.
Dear Texas: Your support in espe.
of the gunmen. One robber escaped, the city is considering asking the
Submit your appllc,tlon at:
and the others ran back into the bar. courts to make the lawyer pay the . cially appreciated. Not everyone
agreed
with
me.
Here's
another
one
lll attempting another escape. the 'rob- city"s legal costs.
·
Overbrook Center
·
bers took hostages. One of the
Dear Ann Landers: ~ letter whl&gt; did:

'

tun

'

-· ---Society scrapbook--STARCHER BIRTH
Michael and Jay Zirkle of Nitro,
Edward and Michele Starcher of · W.Va. Great-grandparents are
West Columbia, W.Va. announce the Gaynell McAbee and the late Bert
birth of their McAbee of West Columbia; Mary
second
son. Starcher and the · late George
Jacob Edw;u'd.
Starcher ol' Pomeroy; Lennie HapBorn
tonstall and the late Paul Haptonstall
. Thursday. May of Middlepon; the late Perry Zirkle
22, at Cabell of Clifton; and the late Ruth Zirkle
Huntington
of Middleport.
·
he
COLLEGEGRADUATE
Hospital,
weighed
8
Charlotte Ann Gibson of Gallipo&gt;&lt;:i·
pounds and 10 lis received a bachelor of science
, , ..-.
ounces.
He degree from Arkansas Stale Univ~r~....,-_ _
.. _. - - - ' measured 20 · sity during commencement exerctsJacob·Starcher · inches in length. es May 9 in the university's convoJacob's
cation center. She attended the unigrandparents arc George and Judith . versity's center at Westark CommuStarcher of West Columbia and nity College in Fort Sniith, Ark.
,.:...------------..;..__

,.&lt;:lit of the 'Bend ...

MOODY BIRTH
Jim and Lisa Moody of West
Columbia,
W.Va. announce ·
the birth of their
first
child,
Robert Gregory.
Born
at
Cabell Huntington
Hospital
Tuesday, May·
13, he weighed l~~~ .,
8 pounds and S ll'
ounces.
He LW&amp;.--..........J
measured ' 21 Robert Moody
inches long.
His grandparents are George and
Judith Starcher of West Columbia
and George and Mmjorie Moody or
Chcsirc. · Great-grandparents arc
Gaynell McAbee and the. late Bert
McAbee ol' West Columbia and
Mary Starcher and the late George
Starcher of Pomeroy.

333 Page Street
Middleport, OH. 4S760 or
Call61.-992-6472 for Immediate
consideration.
. E.O.E • .

Your Message Can ·
Be Seen Here!
For As Uttle As
$7.00 Per Inch Per Day

.

Meigs County that you might want to
know about. .
It's .called Chester-Shade Days
and will be staged on July I Sand 19.
One special feature of~ observance
will be the Ohio State Harmonica
Championship and this will be held
The three Rice brothers have held at 7 p.m. Friday evening, July 18.
There will be live entertainment, •·
their annual reunion and this year did
that on their old homefield which is tours of the Chester Courthouse
. which is being restored, 'period
Middleport.
Harold and his wife. Beuy. of·Las demonstrations, square dancing,
Vegas. Nev.• and'Chester and his wife games and · food. The celebration
Sylvia of Union City, Ga., joined will be held in Chester, of course, in
Denver, Nora and their son, Bill. in the area of the courthouse. SponsorMiddleport this year. ChCster and ins organization is the Chester-Shade
Sylvia. both graduates of Middleport Historical Association.
High School. came in time to attend·
Of cllllfSe, ·yau are aware that the
the Middlepl&gt;n Alumni Reunion. The Chester Counhou.se was built in
families had a great visit and now · 1823 and is Ohio's oldest standins
everyone has returned home.
courthouse structure.

.

"

,.

~--

. Don"t forget the local diabetes supMy friend, James Scott of
port group will be meeting at 7 p.m. Pomeroy sent alonJ to me a gift cerTuesday. tomorrow nigh!, in the cafe- " tificate for the office of Jack Kerteria of Veterans Memorial Hospital. vorkian, M. D.• Jood for .one busiAJiyone with the disease as well as ness. The cenifacate is a joke, of
members of their suppon Jroup is course. but one never knows maybe
welcome.
some day 111 ,..;sh it were vllicl. But
Jet's just say for riJhl now thinp are
Another event is coming up in Jood. Hope they are for you too. And.
· by the way, do keep snlilin&amp;:

,

'

.

I

•

Athens, OhiO

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling ·
Stop &amp; Compe~•
FREE
ESTIMATEES

Free Estimates

PUBLIC
AUCTION

'

THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1997
5:30P.M.

31113.

113 W. 2ND ST.

Trailer &amp;

POMEROY, Ott

. 614·992·5479

,

Savre
Trv~r.... t'o•.
,.
'~"I"

.

ROI'I
NB'riBLI
WEJ.DIII
McCumber Rd.
Rutland, OH
•Small Jobs

•Large Jobs
Reaeonable Rate•
Experlent*l

.......

(614) 742·3100 .

61 4o-7~2"21l!;t:,

•!9'99'

DlllECf
PBias~~

Quality Window Systems

.

110

9/25/52-6/9/96
· Peacefully sleeping;
rest~g at last, His
weary lrials and ·
. troubles past; In

'

· sUcnce he suffered,

•

•••

in patience·he bore
'rill God c11led him
home
to suffer
no
I
•
.
more
Sadly missed D!ld,

,.

'•

'

.tJamlo

.ALI.--&amp;VIcinity

IaPIIdlnAnlnco.
pmM:UDp.m.
tlledlr ....... thud
11 to run• ......,.
odlllaol· 2;00 p.m.

W¥1023477

Air Coldlioners Installed 128" amonlh
.· Pumps lnslalled 131P a month
(Payfnonio blood on lpp!OY!Id crodlt)

Heat Pump.

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranly
•Free Digital Thermostat

(814) 992·7434 .

MOIJILE D'VIO
HEATING &amp; COOLING

FREE ESnMATf!S

D. Gea17's

Serving sOutheaStern OH &amp; WV
814 448 11411
1-80C);e72-5917 1391 Salford $cho!ll Rd., Gllllpo118, OH

Quality Work It
a Fair ~rtcel

·. BBDILI

·Middleport, Oh. 45780 . ·
HomaPh• .
61~-3120

.........
-

Don 011ry, Ortnlfr

1111 au..
992·7074

QUALITY ROOFING

Grevef, Umettone,

304 882-35t11
, Frte E1tlmlt,!8

· Sand. No Ml,.lnum.

.KINGS' .
.... lnpMI•••ah
3:151 Hippy Hollow"-!
Mld111!1DI1, Ohio 411780
Naw ~
Roollng, Siding, Poll
· lllml, Dtck1. Plllnll1..
Gngati,l'aldw.
Cllf Ut I'Gr A l'iw M••

Topaoll, Fll Dirt,
~).

'

.

YOUNG'S . .

==:· ;

! .,PIPENIER SERVICE
I

·o~~ulrloel ~

Adtlltloi..

814-7~-3080
814-742.-3324.
814-742-3078

..

DRIVERS WNOED

By Company tDanUtl, Eye, Prt·
ocripUon) 40tf&lt;Rollroment Pton, •
Flr11 In · Flrll Oul Dlljii1Ch. u W"
Model Conv. Trac tors Wittl "
Flatbed Trailers CompoUdve Pay •
- Petcenraga 01 Gtotl.
._

•

ORAHTTRUCKING,IIC.
5488SRH

,_ ,
-

OAK HILL. OHIO 411118

----~~~a2~·~~
. 8=3~--- ~
' Driwtr~

.
WE CAN GET'IOU HOitiEtll , •
We're Hi1lng Roglonat DriWrl ~
For Our \/an And Flatbed
Dlvlliona.
Hon» Weekends And MOREl
Benefila Include: o
• $34.000 + FlnnYoor A..,.
• Foni~ lledicallllonlll Plan
• 40tK. PllidVoootlanl
• AuiQned
8CHILLI TRANBPOATATIOH
tal Nowlt-8()0.248-8305 '

eo._._,

Earn $1,000 Weekly Swftlne Enr
velopea At Home. Start Now. No
Experience. Frat Suppt111, lnfa.
No Obligation . .Send LSASE To:
ACE. Oapr. 1351. Box 5137, Dill=
monel Bar, CA 91185.
Eoay Workl Excollont Port Assemble Produc11 ar Home. Cal
Toll Free 1·800·487·5588 EXT:
12110.
Experienced Halr Sl)'llll " • (
For Joann't Kut &amp; Kurt 014·,..._
IN96, 81 .. 448-G214.

....,..:,:::::::.::;:~::::::::!::....~
~

PomtrOy,

Middleport

PUblic Sale
and AuctiOn

Rick Pearson Auclion Companv.

20 Yra. Exp. • Ins. Owner: R.cinnte Jones

tull time auclioneer, complete

auction service. Licensed
ltl8.0hio &amp; West Virginia. 304·
7)3.5785 Or :.14-713-5447.

~aneral

Conauuction Helpef ·

Must Have

Experience. Trant·

P.ortation, 6 OWn Hand Tools,
614-388 .9385. Aller 1 P.M.
,
Hair Styllot Wanted Rant Your
Own Station, or Mal&lt;o $10 To $1&amp;
An Hour. Call Carol King , 8 14;..S-8922.

HELP WANTED • Bookkeoper •
Knowledge 01 Job Colling • Par
Roll - And Alia ted Oudett A Must:
Computer Experience Required,
References A Must. R'e eumei
Aocepled II • F AEt Chrlodon''
Construction. 1403 111ern Ave.,
Gallipolis. DH 9 A.M. To 5 P.M,
814,.4lH514or814-448-3103.
HOME BUSINESS ChHp Slert;
Send SASE + $5 To C. Roooenl
P.O. Box 7429, Canton, OH
.. 105.

HOIIETYPISTS,

.

PC users needed. $45.000 In•
come potenllal. Call 1·800·513'
4343 Ext B·93e8.
HVAC Knowledge Of Service I
Installation RSES Certlfi..:l EPA
Corliliod 814 ·441 ·5531 For Appointment
'
Individual tCompanr Noeded To
C""n Olfoco On ·s.R. 180, Gallipolis On Oailt Basis. Calle1•··U&amp;··
8840 For Information And Submit ·
Bids To SEOEIIS Ola:rlct. P.O..
eois21. ~~on. OH 45843 8J 111171· .
97.

Easy ... Financing

Freedom

.6000flm's

Frldoy. llotldorldlllon
- "10:00 •·~ a.tuni~Y..

MEDIANte

THE MAPLES

41ooft!"'

•Small Englnee
•LewnM~r•

oChilnSawa
•WHdEIItlrl
2 mi. GffAt 7
Leiding Creek Rei.

742·2925

......,.

........y..
.

HARTWELL
. HOUSE

IPWIIIII'II

.

AIIO CDilllllll Win

(PRIIIITIIATI8)
v.c. YOUNG•
. . U:l.l
. PcJIIIenl¥, Ohio

•

.....~~

Greenwood t.tolor Linea, one ol
the nationa 1arg11t famltw-·owntd
LTL motor freight cauktra, It 1~.

in Pomeroy, Oh.io
Rents are c()mputed according to your
income. Lovely apartments featuring
wall-to-wall carpeting, with all
appliances.
ALL PRIMARY unL.ITIES PAID
Must be 62 years of age or handicapped.
Must meet HUD eligibility requirements
~For further details call today

cepling appllcatlana for a 3rd
shift (11pm-7:30am) prwentalfve
maintenance mec:.hanlc . M.uiJ
have exp in heavy engine repair, '
paid, Ri~erp knowledge ol Cumlna &amp;' Mack •
Pomeroy, OMo, , engines a plua. We offer TOP ~ ·
_owner. 6,4-992- PAY· with comprehensive benelll
pkg to include 401(k) . Apply 11 '
Routt 1 Bo• 448 Gallrpolis Ferri
WI/ 255t5. Mtf!VtD.
MEO. IOENTAL SALES
• Additiorellnconirt •
Are You Calling On Medical &amp;
Dental Businesses? Would You
Like To Continue What You Art
Doing And Hove Additional $500
-$2,000 Per Mon1h? Profit From
't'oor Exporiance.
8t4·888-51122

'(it

-~

1·614·992·7022
.

111m1-

-~

$t,OOO RIWARDII

LINDA'S
PAINTING

For lnfonnatlon
...dlngtothe
.,..t•nd ·
conviction of

A pod prailll jo6 on
,. ony £1oudy dlly,
"""'•• il 1eem

....,.....

...,one Involved In
etMIInt • prope•tr
tilT
Crose lt., RHine.O
J.D.c.IIMI
Contact· Ron Miller

Wanted Ia buy used

Home. ca1111••.us.ons or

875-5885
Wanted: UIOd Hardwood Floo1ing
In Good Condition. Colt 814·245·
5887.

line,._ ...

lntariOJ
Betore&amp;p.m.
I81Vemeae~ge.

After 8 p.m.
814-815-4180

E f.1PL0Yf,1ENT
SERV ICES
'

81J.4011

111111-

EVENING MEAL
AT

MEIGS C01JNTY SENIOR CENTER

Plllltlllno

. ......... ll!idtoitur

.'

f

Ohla

N . .........._

____. . . . ___ . .:'------=.. . ______

, Mike,' Nancy, Jeremy
•

St.

Computer Usera Needed. WOfk,~·
own houn. S20k to 150k/yr I
8()0..348-718611:1508. .
""':

Will Your Utilities Put You
In The Poor House?
Consider:

· Middleport
Sales Service
. Installation
American Standard

550Page8t.

DAVE BUSKIRK

Gllllpolls

Lemley's Auction Sorvlce, Leslie
Lomloy; Auctloneel'. Household.
Eatato, Farm Solos. Phone 814·
3118-11443.

3198. 2ndAve.

budglll will biiVIIIIIIII·for

In Loving Memory of

Yard Sale

80

&amp;(OOUIIG

....,••••

(I) I; 1TC

70

All Yonl Solei ilust le Pold In
Ad¥1nCa. 0 - : t:OOpm lhe
doy lteloro ·.1 h• ad 11 fo rue,
llundoy I Monday odlllon·
1-F.ur
•..,.... ·-•·
"
··

"FAcrOBY

MORRISON'S HEARIIG

Public Notice
PUIIUC HEARING
The Vlllllll af SynauH
will hold Ita itnnull Budget
Hearing et the llunlolpfl
Building an June tt, 111117,
It 7:00 p.m. All .lnMI'IIIeCI
raaklenta era lflVItecl. Tile

JaniOI Zwllllna
CU!RK·TREAIUIIIII

..,,_

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

Joe N. Sayre

1

..'

Pomeroy, OK
Call992·9045
for all your
transmlsalon RMCia.

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Reao,.b~ R•••.

.•

ACADEMIC: Engll"' lnotru-.
•
SPECIAL EO: llutli-Handl·
capped lna~uctor; B-lor Dli' ·
ordlt hlltUC10f.
VOCAnONAL: PracUcal NuriiiiQ
lnsuuctor (Experienced B.S.N.);
Patient Core Toc:hnlcion lno1ruc1
.., (Experienced R.N.)
CONTACT: Oallil •Jackson ,
Vin:on JVSD Atl14·245-5334,
Ext ;101 For Appllcallon lnfarmF,
tlott E.E.O.
DEADUNE: 1!11 11117.

l VlcJrllty

Houee Sit~

eu-eu-•

POSI'JlON!I OPEN:

- Fre•
. .... .. .

UULIII I
i'CIIIftlll

training bonus. call

74«1.

Full-Twno TEAallNO

20 Vra .. Exp. • lrw. Owner:·Rick Johnlon

992-mz
a:oo •. m.-3:30 p.m.

!jlqlldlng.

FrH Kin- 1 Black &amp; While. I
Block. 2 Champaign. 814·448·
1131,814-446-7431l

Puppl11 to give away. 304·875-

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

Lll11ftlone &amp; Gravel .
Septic Syaten\s

public lnepfctlon June I,
10, 1117, at 1114·'Munlolpel

Adorable, olloCiionole malo kl12 -Ito old, . - loll of room
to ploy. CIU 181411112-eeae otter
8 p.m.- Fro• to good and caring
homo ontr,

123 Pleeurit Ridge ·

PLACE
'. MIDDLEPORT

_,

had shalt 1 bMn wormed. to
good- '.104 41511515.

..........

..
a...::::::.:::::::;::::;..;_,.... ....----=:::..;::.~

Residence: 304 773.-5785 or
Auction Center 304-773-5447
Terms: Cash or Check w/ID
Not Responlllble For Accidents or Loss ol Property

Giveaway

218monlh old ~lcolorod Boagloo
1 mole 1 f...to, gooclsiO&lt;k. has

NowOp•••for

•Replacement Windows.

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearaoo Auction Co.·l66
Mason, W.VA.

40

DHn'a
Trana., Albany)

537 BRYAN

•Bultl Garag•s
eSiarm Doers &amp;
Windows
•Roam Adcllllans

lnlolllgont WF 22.- Sttks Wll
With Sporll Cor And WaitT Toys
F01
Summar
Funl

{fOnnel1y 01

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

ltemllt IUctlon. ·
Hooaler D.R. . Suite- Table-4 chairs &amp; matching
kitchen cabinet w/left &amp; rlghl hand cabinets, walnut
Queen Ann D.R. suite, 9 pc. walnut D.R. Suite, 3
matching press back chairs, drassar, oak drop front
desk, beautiful king size water bed waveless
mattress &amp; reg. King size mattress Insert, 1 Cuery
electric organ, Th!lmas electric organ; recliner, 25"
Sharp col!lr TV, 25" RCA color TV, dlnet sat, 30'
Whl!lpool electric range like new; Whirlpool
microwave oven, Maytag Dryer, 4 pc Redwood set,
lg. selection of glassware, antique glassware. food
procesaor, blander, can opener, Norelco express- 1-4
cup coffee maker, Tupperware, fans, suitcases, 24
d..-r wooden tool cabinet- tool boxes, lg. amount
of hand tools, wen 1/'Z' 4 speed reveraible drill, rnHer
box, B&amp;D compact circular saw. air master 3 In 1 air
compressor, lever action grease gun, 40 pc.. Ratchet
sockat set, bug lites, kero sun heater still In box,
garden tools, Home Ute weedeater. Lawn Boy lawn
mower &amp; much mora.

Girls Girls Glrlo, Talk To Thom
Uvell 1-.110().4711-115115 ElL gg10.
13.88 llolin. 18+ S..V·U 818-&amp;CS.
1434.

Killen 8 Wooko Old, Free To
Good Home Only 814-44HI197.

992·1056

UY'S
TUNSMISSION

Foundatlona,
Drfv.W1ys,
Sldewllka, Pltlot,
. ;tkage.ttnd
Basement Floors.
Free Eltlm1tes.
lnauracl
SAYRE CONCRETE
SERVICES
742..Q304

I.Ocllled It the Auction Center on Rt. 331n Mlteon,
W.YI wiD be Nlllng 3 partllllltltel plua other

14111.

Klnena pan .Siamue, long
holred. lltor trained. 304-&amp;75·
5043.

CONCRhE
SERVICES

PubHc Sale a Auction

992-905701"

.,._ !

347 Lcicust A....e. Washington.
PA 111301. DEADLINE JUNE

JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Dlvl$16n on Nichols Metal, INc.
Fax: 304-773a!61
Phone: 614: 992-2406

7122/tln

...............
Qtulllt~

TO

conteatantt. lnforma.llen write: 500 Mila Radiua - Homa EVar1•
Trl-8- ~uiiiMI. Dopt to; WHkand, family lniUf&amp;llCI Paid •

Gt••""'' .

Rooting, Paln,ing
Guaranteed

·•

stona, bonuaet, bttWfill, tnctt...:
holllh ptUI 401K. $500 flit liAR •

FEMALES·IIIII - t Virginia
T - USA ...pont MI&lt;Ch for

S Mot11. 2 Fomolo Killona. To
el ..258-tt25.

Ll9· W¥011030
!

en.

360• Communications

Big Bi-nd Fabrication,
·Machine &amp;Welding Shop

985·4473

.--------'"11
Jc

'

w...

E....:ARES@SIIREilfiET.NET

CELLULAR PHONES

ComPlete )'tfacblne Shop Servil:e Fabrication
Steel Sales, WelclinJ Suppliel, ladus~ Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
• Monday-Friday- 8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m.
Saturday; 8:00a.m.- 12 noon

•New Homes

.....,.,.

•

-~-.d'

'•

COHSIRUCTION

Caurthauu. .
PUBUC NOTICE
..... County Budget
Purauant to Btctlon
Colllmle,ton
121.22 01 1ht OhiO RmHCI
Code, 1h• Melgl county
Nancy Plrker Cllmplltll,
Budget Commlellon will
Howard Frank
mHt at 3:00 on June 12,
John LiniN
111117, In U. Auditor'• OIIIGe
(8) 11; 1TC
of the Melge Caul)t,.

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

Attorney At Law

(614) 592-5025

ROBERI BISSELL

~,;....

'

Attorney William Safranef(
'

Attention Advertisers
Middleport Is Observing ·
Its Bi~entennial This Summer.
_The Daily Sentinel will publish a .
commemorative edition for its
July 2nd issue.
You can be a part of this
historic edition.
For More Information
Contact The Dally Sentinel
at 992-2155
Dave Harris Ext. 104
Don RifDe Ext. 105

keep •exempr property for their personill use.
This may include ~· car, a house, clothas, and
household goods. " .
For Information Regarding Qankruptcy contact:

AuctiDnHrl .
· Rhett llllh1111n

Public Notice

New HOIJIII • VInyl Siding New
·Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
. COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

distribution of assets. Debtors in bankn.iptcy may

985 4489 or U11 149-2052

Hu 'lbur lolllnlap Or Rolotlon·
otip Got Up '
IIIDp In ·Vidla And Rant
Of Our
Adult-L 50 Now R-ltll
1310 E.-n lwfmJt, Gallipolis,
&lt;lrCIIl8U UIID22.

992·9200

'/

'

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

2ND ANNUAL
BANKRUPTCY" can relieve a debtor of
TACK AUCIIOI ·· financial obligations and arrange a · lafr

by Bob Hoeflich
Rita ·Jo Hill of the Racine area
entered McGee's Women's Hospital
in. Pittsburgh, Pa. , Saturday and is
expected to undergo surgery' there
tomorrow. I'm sure she would apprec,late cards and your prayers.

Porileroy, Ohio 4578t

. Sal, June 7, 1897
&amp;P.M.
Meigs Co.
Fairgrounds
Sponaored by
Melga Co. 4-H Hone
Committee
FDr mDre lri!D call Pam

ATTEIIIICJN

plzapl•c•. ·
C1ll Itt Ott ·speelel•

JoeWIIIOn
(814) 9112-4277

1998 Martin Street

cau PIMIL 10LI.1 • az.nJI

f f.H IHS

Comotory llloo? Ill fto ..,..
IKrltl In AmeriCa. High comrmiF"

RTe 7 PIZZA .
EXPRESS

. 992-2826

Middleport, OH

'

-------------------..,...------_;_r-------'---

Senll'ntl Classifieds

· NOW OPEN

Remodeling

t012-

Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

,__.!;.=~~~-

614-992·3470

·~ '.flOcJ"Jr

Wagnerune
Pomeroy
Delivery or Dine ln.
. lllolw ttr•n jwt •

Chester, OhiQ

writing.

Public Notice

25.2tO

II

985..4422

City considers asking lawyer to pay legal costs on -crazy lawsuit
'
and show her we are decent, civili1.cd
people. We appreciate. your courageous stand. -- C.H., St. Paul, Minn. ·
Dear St. Paul: I received a lot of
Oak from the gay basl1ers. but rm not
laking back a word of it. Thanks for

Custom Homes

ELE
ladle riaaeK Dealer

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli; Fill Dirt

'MIIDn, WV

No!wMt Flnlnclll

092-5583

Mon-Sun

WI CIS
HAULING

FAMILY DENTISTRY
304-773-5822 At. 1, Box 44-C
lf•l• L ........ CDPJL\

CAIIUI TY 0110111 TMIM

Eorn ItS ·I l l " - &lt; - • C..
mlolllono. Extromely HWt Cll&amp;tomor Domon&lt;li No Overnltht
Trevel. lmm~ ate Opeftil'le&amp;.
Candi*tea Mull le tihHe 'ft
Slott i'lld Tlllnir9 Preutam- •

Low ......)

.......,li. ....... JJ.D...

A/C Condenllrs/HOII A111mblln

New LA~cJt~on: 2 miles off At. 7 on At. '4.!4

9am-9

' (Lime . . .

IISOI 'IEITIL CARE

lnduat1'11l • Automollve
'New A1dltto,. • Re Corn

sportscarda, lpOfiS
memoraJ¥lla, tabaa:o
tins, cigl6- boliCS, ud

'

Thor Carsey, Pom~roy, 1934; Eleanor
Gilkey Updegraff, Birmingham, Ala.,
1936; Ivan Cotterill, Columbus,
Alpha Douglas Bailey, Pomeroy, Ola
Douglas Sinclair, Pomeroy; Juanita
Hull Richards, Dayton.
Cecil Morris, Cimton, Granville
Reeves, Albany, Margaret Whaley
Kosteval, Athens, Margaret Lambert
Haning, Pomeroy, Frances Marshall
Miller, Belpre, 1937; Clinton Gilkey,
. Albany, Virginia Hull Gibson,
Pomeroy, . Loedell
Davidson,
Poineroy, Alice Gilkey Whaley, Palm
Harbor, Fla., 1938; Lennie Jewell,
Pomeroy, Elimbeth Lambert Wardle.
Hilliard, 1940; Joan Fin law Sorden,
Rutland, 1941 .
Gladis Hull Cumings, Pomeroy,
·1942; Virginia Alkire Burke,
Pomeroy,l943; Mary Ellen Jewell

m
poii.OH4SISI.

Buyers of Viaii&amp;C·toya,

112 attend 68th .Harrisonville-Scipio Alumni banquet ·
University. Athens. Any student with
a parent or grandparent who is a Harrisonville-Scipio alumnus may apply.
Mr. 'Harold Graham, an alumnus
and teachCr. reponed the need for a
laminator for the school. It was voted to give $500 toward the project.
A '"thank you" letter was read from
Principal John Lisle, thanking the
alumni for·· the $500 donation for
fencing in 1996. The fencing has
been installed.
Special singing and music were
provided by Kathy McDaniel and Jan
Lavender.
Alumni attending were : Stella
Diehl Atkins, Pomeroy. 1928; Pauline
Halliday Atkins, Pomeroy, 1930;
Selah Morris Wyatt, Sandusky, Mary
Welch Woodyard, Columbus, 1933;

Brood An&lt;l P,llry law. ,..;t
Tlnw Paoidan. " ' - •
To: CLA 413, C10 0 7t Ill
Triburw.
Tlinf ·

..........

The ..w eonsidcn -=II piece ·of ingAdvatisil!l P.O. Box 17740Balntaillll individu.l ~on. It states ti~~~~n, MD 21235
·
that the use of a cliaclaima does ·1101
You can also like the material to
excuse such - · removes a preYious · your IOCII postlllllter or send it to:
penalty Clp unount of $100,000
Chief Postal Inspector United
annually, and requires wrilien •tho- States Postal Service 47S L'Enf•t
rization frQm the Jovernment for Plaza. SW Wullington, DC 20260printing and distributinJ any Social 2100
Security material for a fee.
You should also advise your
If you believe you have received Stale's AttiJmey General or Con- ·
· this type of misleading information, sumer Affairs Office and the Belter
you may repon it to:
Business Bureau in your area that you
Social Security Administration have received this offer and who sent
Office of Communicat.ions Mislead- • it.

1

, The Harrisonville-Scipio Alumni
Association met May 24 fpr its 68th
annual reunion banquet with 112
alumni and guests attending.
PresidentCarolynCollinsgavethe
welcome with Mrs. Pauline Atkins
givi ng the invocation.
.
Donations of $195 were given to
the scholarship fund. Three recipients
were given gifts of $100 each: Jeremy Jordan, grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton Gilkey, attending Northwestern College, Lima; Miss Persie
Bolling. granddaughter· of Carolyn
and Willie Collins, who will attend
Ohio Highpoint .career Center in
Ridgeway ; Miss Cheryl Jewell.
daughter of Robert and Sharon Jewell, Pomeroy, and granddaughter of
Pauline Atkins, who will attend Ohio
,

•

1CJal.llllln,P'OIIMoy
...l a

Mulberry HelP~ Pomeroy
'IUudayuad Thursdays
· Servlllg from 5:00 • 5:45
Dcm.,lon $4.00 for JDUI

rruhlic is invited
.
,,

�Juftei,1M7

Ohio

11
'

:NIA Cro••word Pufzle
PHJT.T.Ip
1

ALDBR

Me 'Ill\ lhrub

ICIGihed

12 C111 1 rW

11 ==:·::1

Milot.

o;c;,

1
Roclucod.- '

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

_........,_.,_

-on-. "'*"•

furMCurlty

Homo On

For Sole: 10170 Ualillt

no pals, 814·

48 Acru MIL South OJ Eureka
With An Additional llobilo Honw
Hook Up Ailcj Large Shop. Groot
Hunting, te5,ooo Call 810·258·

illglan.

GOOD

USED

vm.

1~~3411V.

e-nee,

No Ptto,
Uaecl Washlt I. Drrtr General
Eleck lc;
Both 814·44$-

•173.

.

uoo.

-a

VacaUon, Health lnaurance And
_ , RIIAinllol.

Coli

el4· &amp;85:4222 Or Send Ro·

8CIIart'r 1.,.,. ,.,, :"II•
. . .,• • t•onanequal

ll!!!~
"!·'~'~-·!··~~·~··~··~
·· ~·~,~~l~
310 Homes for Sale

sume
To:
-HealinG
&amp; Cooling, lni:.
P.O. Bol8
Clieotor, OH 45720.

111118 Modular, 2ca ~. oaraoo, Sa·
crH, S.ndliill Rood. Call Donna
Backut. ER~ Town &amp; Country
Raal Eatsie ~75:5548 onlco,

W01k From. Homo Etrn Lorge In-

3!J4.175:3073 home.

..,.CtiBiogBUL 81....et238.

180 Wantad To Do
ANY ODD JOBS: Ex1arlor pain~.
lng , shruba ., weeds trimmed,
landscaping, sidewalk• edged,
lawn care, etc. Call Bill 304·675·
7112. .
BlbrJitting At My Homo Ouality
Affordable After School Available
Fleuble Hours, Call 614· 387·

0157 Ask For Carol Or Leave
MHuge, Will Care For Children
Or Adults Wlfi Oiaabiitiaa.
Expertonced carponuy and remo·
dellng. Inside and outside,
deCks, vinyl siding, add-on additions, cab&amp;nel refacing
newly
rebuilt. References -Free Eatlmlltl. Jim 5hul304:615:'.1272.

or

Experienced .Carpentrw AndRemodeling Add·Ono, Decks, Walks
From Framing To Finish Wor k,
814:441.0124.
Farm Work $8.00 An Hour, 814·
258:1233.

211&amp;0 doubltwtdt, 3 bedroom, 2
bollia. large ivingtoom, dlnlnv:
room, btlwofut lclrchen with tohd
cher"'
., cablneta, extra inaulllion

'"'

pw:kag8. plywood floors, lnsulat·

ed wlndowt, heal pump, tllualtd

on 1 113 ~rtlevet lot near Au·

dand, 3 miles out Naw Lima Rd,

well out of llood plain, price rt·
ducod, 148,500, 614- 742·2728,
014'742·1085.
3 Bedroom Ranch Style Home
With Garage &amp; Barn, !lain·
1enonce FrH, Locttod: Addison
TOW!IIIilp, 614·«6,.1112:
3 Bedroom, 2 bath, garage,
ftncod In back yont, 512 Kaihnor

Lone. ~:875:3028.

Home1. New or used
purchalel: Rtfinonclng: BiN..,.
IOiidation: Lind con...._ No
lllP!Iceti.., foe;
of crediL
.. COl _ , lor a free analysis!
f100.1121·14C121f114:592-40011

All-•

Georoes Portable S:lwmill, don't In Mason, 1 112 story home lor
tw.ul your legs 10 the mi_ll just call sale. 30ol-773:5828.
.
301-875:1951.
New Haven. WV- three b&amp;droom,
House Cleaning Re~sonable C.A., -tric: hoe\ sfDnn windows,
Rates, Work Gauranteed, 81•- buement, 138,000, 814·992·
258:1233.
5841.
House painting: EJCterior and in- Newly r.,nodeled three bedroom.
. terlor painting, experienced, free ona and 112 ba1h home in Middlentirhales. reasonable rares. 30&lt;1- port, 81.,11112-3-IB!;ailtr 5pm.
173:5878. '
c

tla3 Ford Ranger, Block With

' I

.Cob Oliromo llor Mint Condition,

I

..._.

11, 200 , . tt4· 258· 1287, Loove

or
Oulck deliverr. Call
3238.
~"'""------"'""llmilltd Offerl1917 doublewide,
3br, 2bt1h, 117&amp;&amp; down. 127&amp;/
month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Onlr at Oakwood Homes, Nitro
WV. SCM-755:5885.

U sad Air Condllioner &amp; Heat
Adjectnt Unllll150 St01m DoOit $50 ilt4:
R.l o Granda «8:3301, 81-3583
AVIIIIa&lt;•• 6/1/07. SU· , I==::.::~===--­
UHCI Furniture 130 Bulovl lt Pike,
Baby Bed, aook Shelvaa, good
Hoopltal Bod, Couches/Chal rt,
Outen Bed, Mirrors, Computer
Desk, .Chest of Orawera, Tabltll
~~~~~::.___ _
Chairo, Much ·llorol 1814)·..8·
1111114x10 thrH bechoom,
opts., total electric, a!&gt;' 4782 Hrs, ICH.

includea
8 montha
lot renL
Only $181.88
perFREE
month
with
11050 down. Coli 1·800·831·

I

!~~:~:~,i'"l~rniahed,
laundry lawn.
room
claM 10 tchoolln

avallab!t at Village •

Woodbun'Mtf Stove, Firtp..ce lri·
Strl $85, Aged Farm Wagon.
Well PreltrVtd; Uakt Olltr 114·
3711·2732.
'

550

· Building
Supplies

_

Now lank Repo'afl)nly 3 loft,
owner financing avaftable. 304·
755:71;,

330 Farms for Sala

I :-:-:----:--:~~;;.;,.::,,;,:;,......,
55 Acrat: 3 Bedroom Home, 2
Miles From Power Plants, 014 .
367 _77&amp;1

8 Year Old, Four .Bedroom, 2 , 5
Bath, SUnken Livlng Room OVer·
looking Raccoon Crook (High
4bow Flood Plain) . 2048 Square
Feel, Alao Newly Roofed Older
Five Room Farm Houle, Perfect
For Rental 0 ' Mo1htr·ln·Law, All
Thi s On Approx. tO Acral and
tOOO Foot Creek Frontage, with
Five Outbuildings, And One
Llrgo Barn. Clay Towneliip, 1 112
Miles Up Raccoon Road, Off Ro·
uta 7 Soulh. 814,..-48·7282

640

.....
.....

Weo&amp;

Tobtcco wale&lt; bed plants. 304·
ID5 '3 Kt.
.

Pus

YOU NEED TO GIT

TRANSPOfl i A TIOt~

Block. btick, sewer piptt, wind·
OWl, llntolt, OIC . Claude Winl8rl,
Grondt, OH Calll14· 245·

per
3 br. apt , 3td SL Racine, ••.,...
month plus·utiUiiel, depOSit &amp; ref-

erencoa, 01.,24H2Q2.

3br a-rJmtnt
In n''llpolll
ftrN
~
.,.
Rlilerencea &amp; depoaU required.
304·875:5421 .

77-7:.:,;;.;;:--~-::---:-,.,.

· tNOfiCEI

1988 Oakwood t4x70 2br, 2 ttaih,
8x12 deck, on ranttd lot: exc .
cond., aoking 113,900 080.
304 · 875·80$1 Leave menage.
Muat Sell I
.

OHIO VALlEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bull·

1888 Redman RlverYiaw 14x70 2
ne•• whh ptaple you know, and Bedroom Mobile Home, 1 112
NOT to lend monor II rough 11ie Balli' CaN 81 ... 4a.B231 .
lftlil until you hove lnvest[gated 11193 Spruc6 Ridge 16x70 mobile
h offering.
home, excellena condition, nuIE YDUR OWN BOSS Local mtroua upwrodta Including :
Vend Rte For Sale Big cash cathedral ceiltngt, new CIA, oar~
Wflil', Col Today fl00.350.e3113.
don tub, iWD full batht, and ~ch
more, $19,500 080 ctii614·11V2SIMI building deotorthip avail· 3335.
·
In open markat Deolort buy I~=-------~
factory dlrecL High prolil paton· New·1997 14 Wldt·l both, $8901
tlal, u1e1 or conatrucrlon. (303) down , $13Qimo~ wilh approved
7S3200 Ext 71150.
credit CaQ 1·801).801:8777.

&amp; Heat. S27&amp;Mo., +Utlliltea. 0...
posit &amp; Ralarencos, 814·U8·
2158·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Woa1wood Drive
from $260 10 1334. Walk to shop
&amp; moviea., Call 814-446-2518.
Equal Housing ()pport.Jnlty.
B.aech St Middleport 2br lur·
ft!shed apt, utilitie1 paid, deposit

,,

THE BORN LOSER
WAAT'U..IT

304~875·

..

,

et, f1K-?

r

...

WM\~1~~~
()I{I.ULTIE. -:r

a. Acreage

1.013 Acres 24185 trailer 5br, 2
bath, cable, city water, out build·
lnga. 304· 576· 2541. $27,000
090 $14,000/down will finance
rhe Jell

Gollla Co.: Gallipolis, Neighbor·
hood Rd., last 211 10 Acres
$19,000'0r 22 Acr•l With Rind,
Reduced, $24,000. Friendly Rdge,
Private 19 Acros $18,000, 8.5
Acres $7,500, 8.5 Acres 18,000.
Green Schools, County Water,
Tttns Run Rd . • (3) 10 Aero Ptr·
eels, $10,000 +.
Meigs Co.: Near Albi!"Y • Remote 10 Acres $D,OOO. Only $1 ,000
Down + $106 A Mo. Also, In
Same Area, Nice Home 'Si1e On 5

Professional

Services

1111 Ux70 2 or 3 Bedroom,
$885 down, 1195/mo. Only a1
Oakwood Hom... Nitro, WV. 304·

755:5885.

HARTS . UASONARY • Block,
bric$ &amp; s10ne work, 30 yM.rs ••· 1gg7 .14x80 3 or 4 Bedroom,
l22tllmo. Froe air,
perlence. ,.. tonabtt rates. ~ - 11,3511
115:3181 oher e:oopm, no JOb to alclrdn~ l dtliv•r· Only a1 Ook·
WY-021200
omtt Nltro,WV. 304· 755·

=

-n.

_or.,IIIG.

Uvlnglton's basement wettrproaflng, all biHmenl repaifs 1111 doublowtdo St445 down,
done, fru e1Umatea, lifetime 12211/mo. Free dtllvory &amp; letup.
,
QU11811tM. tOrr• on job oxperl· t.aoo.eat:&amp;777.
--3114:815:2145.

Hl/\1 f SfATf

310 Hamel for Silt

Home

fDr

•I•

-

.. -lol. a11own ltf ap.

about10 mllet

only.
4211,_..,.,.
fiOinlmtllt

on RL 2 North
frorn Pt. 5 bod;
Call 304· 372-

31 -Claire, Wil.
31 Preperecl

Counly, Scipio Township. SR 692
Oust 61 SA 143). OWnsr fintnclng,
Call for good map,. 1-614·593-

12 JFI{ lligltl

I Type o1 ehlrt

10

..,..~

lfMit8tlon

· 17 Pertelrilfl9 to

.

Eaa&amp;

2.
3•

Pass
Pass

Pass

Norwoy

21 Nearby

(2w9.)
23 Obey

eouncle

25 wrn.,

27-.n
28 Eyelid

North

zer=:'
.
flehee

'

'

30 MetAl
lu1ener

P8B8

'

31 TV pert
33 Smells

39 Pototable
41 AclecPike a
43

-m
Alwilllne

lromf45 Muflnl
aemlah

·48 Beer mug
48 Plalfonn
50 - macum
(hlridl!Ook)

'

'

51 Hou..

I

·adcllllon '

52 Clumoy one
·113 lnveallgallve

!9C:Y·

54 F11h port
55 Polalo

J
I

bud

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

·

·

.,
.

Clllbr1ty ClptlttftfYPtOgfwnl are crtaled !rom quotation• by famous people, past and present
.
EKtl fetlei 1n the cipher ltlndl lof aoocher. Toeflr 'l cW: z equals o

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to fonn fo"r almplo wordr.

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FELDYT

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION:
more a case of my life reflecting my movies than
my movies reflecting m)' life.' - Francis Ford _Coppola.
·

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If y.our conversations aren't
charming and witty, you should

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~=~~~ contented to • - , and
1"-T.I':-"11-..,,,--~,-.....;,b~
Com~l~te the chuckle quoted

I

SUTAST

.,. PRINf NUMBERED
9 LETTfRS

Small
Vorr
Stove.

bv f•ll•ng: .In the: missing ·words

yp~ da'tlalop

I' 1 1~
2

from step No. 3 below .

r 1 I'
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SCilAMslm ANSWERS

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RENTAL S

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7 Lime-

a Whole

,_..,_....,·_.l_.JL-....Ll--1

1154::::::;5·- - - - - - - - · I monr At 851
Gallipolis,
Real Estate
360
brary. No Poll .
Month, Aelerences
Required, Contact Debbie
Look ing For 5· 10 Acres To Pul Judy A111....e7323 (library).
' 4170 Trailer, In Jackson, Vinton.
Or Gall ia County, waul~ Likt
SepUc, ElectriC, 614:245:5883, Or
384:0034, Would Very Much To
LlndConlract
'

w ...... ,"'

ZHJ.3 Foal put
4 PltoMIIc
aymbol ·
5T1miol

24 lrrHited

Acres $7,500. Athens Schools.

.(MONDAY

II 11111.00

All Typu,
·
Access
Enda, ~

. Nipper- Tinge - Smack· Trempr • NAP TIME
I've found that you can easily g6ta child to run an
errand, especially if you ask them at NAP TIME. .

JUNE 91

-:
lr

,,

..•
•
n

tanksj 1 ton lfuck:"'
r&amp;diators. 0 &amp; R Aulo,
or 1· ,

.

~·

••
'

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VENDING: New, Exciting, Profti· New·111V7 •• l'iidt-1 bath, $68ar
oblal Call For FrH Brochure. 1. down, l13tlmo, with approved
crodiL Cell HI00·881:8771.
. IOD:II20.e7B2.

230

...,

lllrtl
84 Poellc lime ol

Periodically friends ask where 1
get the deals for my column. Some
. arise at the bridge lable and a few are
composed, but mostly they come ·
· from magazines and books. 1receive
13 magazines, ·10 in English. Most
issues furnish one or two suitable
deals, but Bridge Plus from England
. always seems 10 supply .several.
· This deal was·in an article by Mar·
. tin Hoffman, an English expert who
has lived in Florida for a few years.
. He wrote thai in a team-of-foitr
:.malch lhe NQrth-South pair for, let's
say, Team A reached six heaits. After .
a diamond lead, declarer drew trumps
, and play® for the spade ace to be
; onside. When it was, he scoted an ·
easy plus 980.
.
At the other table, lhe contract was
' only four hearts, perhaps after the
' given sequence. So, it looks like a
· 500-poinl swing lo Team A. Yet it
was a 1030-poinl swing because the
Team B Soulh went down in four
· ' hearts. How?
Well, West led 11ie spade queen.
· Thinking·this· was ·from· a suit head·
· ed by the qucen-juck, declarer played
low from lhe dummy. And when
' West conlinued with the spade four,
·' South again played low from the
dummy. After winning wilh the spade
. jack, Easl relumed his last spade to
West's ace. Now came the deadly
blow: West led his last spade, which
· East ruffed \vilh the heart jack. 'l'IJis
effecled an uppercul, promoting a
trump trick for West.
II made a good· story; even if it
probably never happened. •

821 Second Av.tnue, Central Air

cated next 10 PTI, Inc. near Ma-

Several 5-acn pan:ets
$7,500each
remote, beautiful land ; Meig•

1

32--lnllte

By Phillip Alder

814·775:8173

Business
Opportunity

• Noun TUI1bl

Monday, June 9, 1997

BRUNER LAND ·

210

s

From here, there
and almost
·everywhere ·

Antiques

FOR RENT: 50'x150' building, Jo.

Call For Free Maps + Own'r Financing Info. Toke tO% Off Ualtd
Prices On Cash Purcho-1

DOWN

.lllllrle ....

OpeniJI81ead: ??

YORESELF A NIW
DISHWASft&amp;R,
. MAW!!

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1871 12x65 Mobile Honia, U ..400,
Signs Made/Relurbished . Metal 614-448.e9S&amp;
root• painted, lawns mowed, 1974 Floe1WOOd 14~70. lOlBI iOec;
trimmed. Handyman work, wood- trlc, lhree bedroom, 1 I 112 balh.
. on ligno. SOU75:8825 Flick.
VflfY good condition, newly painted, includes alove, refrigeraror,
WIW care tor dlubktd peraon for heal
pump, garage disposal, IWO
nenlng ahltt', have retarencea,
814-1112·2805 8:00am·10:00am ceiling tans wllights; blinds,
valancaa, block underpinning,
llctndlr .... Frldty.
10JC12 por'h wilh roof, mull be
WIN do Bel!ftltllng In my homo in moved, $8000 OBO, 614 ·A&amp;2·
. UtrctrYilil. 8 Milts OU1 Rt. 218. 6096; leave mesaage.
Cll: (et•~258.e965
1987 Norwood 14170 3br, 21ull
Will heul junk or lrllh away. 1351 baths. all electric, range. refrig &amp;
dishwasher, porch &amp; deck.
fl!cliuP kad. 304:875:5035.
$12,000. 304:570.2201 .
Will take care of elderly and do
1987 Skyline U112 readw 10
houiiiCIIpiiQ, 814-~1302.
move In, lois of exrras, exc.
c,ond . Call JD 814· 448·9340 or
FINAN CI AL
304:87S.S8431eavo mossa~.

tl

2

....

Dealer: South

Cut and·lilf half of lay. t,.,w.
• r:n. liRe. CII3!J4.17S.2004.

340 Business and
Buildings

350 Lots

• Q 10 • 5

51 Adnlll

•• Vulnerable: Neither

Deer Hunters Paradise, 75 Acr· &amp; refentncas. 304-882·2588.
es, 2 Bedroom House Needs
Work, Locared : Wayne National
Fon111 Call 814·388:1704.
..

son Co Fairgr.our:-ds.
7141 lrOtn 9:5 M.f'.

•

• es 2

lnThe

,..,, g'

•KQ8

,.g or call 81.,11V2·

3238.

• J 5

J' tO

I ' I If

22A-Gifllte
' old lllook

•Jt5

Soulb
• 10 6 3
•AQ978
t K2

firm.,- ·

""*"' .-...,.hereby
llaned ._. a1 daA.,.
.

'

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-

56

lilrllltet•

EMt

West
. •AQI4
• 10 8 4
•• J • 4
• 10 54

Welller, 7
Dkl, IIIII lilf
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WANTED HYAC INSTALLERS

Reg, bleck Angua bul Ankony
3w3, $1,200. 2RUmoo, I hell·

111.304:1171WI241.

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Experience In HVAC lnstaUation
A Plus. EPA Refrig~rati on . And
RSES Corulication 4 Pin Over·
time Required When Nece&amp;sary.

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1ggo Scotsdalo Hall Ton Shqrt
Bod Chevy Pickup Elcelleot
Condi11on, 814...8:3$70 After 12
P.U. S7,000.
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CANCER (June
not, people wlio are usually easygDr
can't alleviate
, ing could be 1he lall:est source 9f
today, even if your
agsravation, · .
' ASTRO-OUPB
.
.•' .
.
nalure W'JC$ you to do so.
only · , CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
those who arc helping
· When pCrfonning critical !asks loday,
. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Limit \\:llel~ they be mundlir,w_or intricate,.
BERNICE
your social i11volvements today to do not lei your focus wander. CareBEDEOSOL . groups with whom you f~l comfort· lessness could breed foul-ups.
able. Do not artempt to impose your · . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Be
frescncc on cliques who are not . mind~ul of your demeanor hi soci~
.•.
receptive.
·
situatton!l today, so that you don 1
June 10, 1997
VIRGO (Aug. 23-8e)ll. 22) Others in.Jvertenlly do lhings that leave a
1 Do nol be impatient in lhe year will be analy~ina your behavior in ~poor impression.
ahead ifwhal you hope tD KCO!IIplish compeiitive deveiOJIInenu loday. '
PISCES (Feb. 20-Much 20)
is diirtCUIIIO aetofflhe ground. Once Reacl with peond style regudless Today you mutt be careful nol to per· .
you are tmder way, yoll'll pick up of whether you win or los,e.
sist in your pur.uit of a negative
t'cmarkable momenwm.
Lmltl! (Sept. 23,Qct. 23) Today course of oction lhlt worsens with .
OEMINI(May21-June20)Think . ifyOII wllk around with ac~p on , each51epyoullke. · .
lhinp lhrouah IOday, but try 10 make · your lhouldcr. you'll have no troubl~ 1 ARIES &lt;M-ch 21-April 19) 'Jake
perfOIT!lance. no1 illoll&amp;htJ, your lim. finding someone 10 k,noclt it olf. Why · ,care th•t ~ don't Ppend ~ lime
Do not be a viclim of pll'llysi• from · uk for IUIIIP' lnd bumps?·
. ·'~ enClJY loday Concocti!IJ elabooveranllysis. Trying 10 plldl up a " • SCORPIO (Oc1. 24-Nov. 22) 'ny , rate excuses why y011're no1 doing
broken rcimance? The Astro-Oraph • 10 now with events today inlleld of 'lhings instead of jllll ptting them
Matdunlkercan help YOII undenllnd l bucki111 lhe tide. Frul1ralionJ are · done.
whal10 do 10 . . . . the relatiol\sbip · likely if you ballle with fiiCtors
TAURUS .· (April 20-May 20)
work. Mail $2.7S 10 Matdlnutbr, do you're powerleA 10 chlnp. ·
Strive . 10 be ~ relliP1lc today
lhis~ewop.per,P.O.Bolli7S8,MIB', . SAGmARIUS (Nov, 2):Dic,. . repnlinlthecondibOIIofyouri!U·
ray Hill Slllion, New York. NY 21) Valued ...0Cilli0111 must be rial.
If you hove pnuing · ·
101~.
• 1111111f1C1 ~ lllliiOIC- today. If obliptions, don'l U"lnte new ones.

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�Ohio Lottery
Mete slide back ·
to beat Reds by
a pair of runs

Pick 3: ·
3-4-6

·Pick 4:
8-9-9-8
Buckeye 5:
9-16-25·31·33

Sports on Page 4

•

Clear tonight, lowe hi
, the mid and upper 501 .
Wedneedey, lnc:reeelng
c:loudlnell, chance ·of
rain. Hlghe near 80.

en

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''b. 41, NO. 38

.GOP promises rf!placement

Relief bill's delay will have no
impact on Ohio, EMA declares . ·

:.t o vetoed disaster relief bill

By The Aeeoclated Pre..
President Clinton's swift veto Monday of a bill to send $5.6 billion in
disaster reli~f to Midwest flood victims.is not a critical blow to Oh\o, a
state spokeswoman said Monday.
Individuals eligible for government assistance from the Ohio River
·flooding of early March received top Pfiority for help and will not be
affected by Clinton's veto, said Nancy Dragani, spokeswoman for the Ohio
Emergency Management Agency.
.
"People who need assistance and are eligible will still get the a.sistance," Ms. Dragani said. "Those projects that arc not critical to health
and safety might be delayed."
She said those could include projecis to rebuild eroded.stream banks
or to allow local governments to buy damaged floodplain proper!y so owners of those properties can relocate to safer, higher ground.
·
Ohio expects to receive $68 million in assistance through the Federal
Em~rgency Management Agency because of the Ohio River flooding. The
bill Clinton rejected Monday would have provided a portion of those funds.
Ms. Dragani said she did not know exactly how much the bill would have
provided to Ohio.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Congressional Republicans pledge
'prompt action . on . ·legislation to
· replace a vetoed disaster-aid bill, but
aren 'I ready to say whether they're
.willing to meet President Clinton's
.conditions.
. . Within a few hours of Monday's
:veto, House Speaker Newt Gingrich
·Issued a statement attacking the pres. ident, bUt saying Republicans "will
. :work quickly to get relief to those in
·.need."
:. Rep. Bob Livingston, R-La.,
: chairman of the House Appropria;
, lions Committee, said he would be
· happy to "directly engage the presi;pent in conversations" on how to
; avoid another veto.
::: Beyond those broad pledges,
·lhough, Republicans have yet to say
: whether they're willing to drop items
:.the White House found objectionable.

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•

..

Suer aim chQo8e
from. 3 door 1:

stock. \Wious
equipmenl and
rolors!
•Coole in for

')'0111" !lest cJme.

'

today!

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Added House Majority Leader
reached the White House until it was
vetoed and dispatched back to the .Dick Armey, R-Texas, "I am
Capitol.
extremely disappointed that•the presThere is no controversy over the ident would veto much-needed dismoney in the measure, which aster relief simply to preserve his
includes. $5 .6 billion for victims of ability to shut down the governdisasters in the Dakotas, Minnesota ment. " ·
and more than two dozen other states.
Countered the president, ·"The
Also in the measure is $1.9 billion to issue here is not about shutting down
replenish Pentagon accounts drawn · the government." He said accepting
down by operations in Bosnia and the Republican-backed spending levelsewhere.
' els would cut $18 billion from the
But Clinton and congressional amounts contained in the new balRepublicans have squared off over . anced-budget accord, reducing colwhat the president called "extraneous lege aid. by $1.7 billion, for example,
provisions.~·
and denying 56,000 children particiRepublicans attacked sharply over pation in Head Start. .
the veto.
A second contested provision
"I'd like for the president to . would ban the use of sampling in the
explain why he would like the abili- nation's census in 2000. "Without
ty to shut down .the government," sampling, the cost of the ·decennial
said Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R- census .will increase as its accuracy,
·Texas.
especially with regard to minorities ...

I

'

I

decreases substantially," Clinton
wrote.

everyone.
Beyond that, Republicans fear
that if sampling is used, their majorRepublicans argue that sampling ity in the House could be in jeopardy
is of dubious constitutionalily, and when .legislative district lines arc
they ·say they arc willing to provide redrawn in scv~ral slates bel&lt;nc the
enough money to physically count 2002 elections.

.----The goal is met·-..;....., Commission
gives its nod
....··· ~ """"' '.

to ·transfers
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newe. Staff
.The Meigs County Commission- ··
ers approvelt several budgetary transfers and approprialions at their reguIILJ!llletiog.on.Monday a!ternooo..'thc board approved an appropriation request from the Meigs County Juvenile Court in !he amount of
$27,191.31, representing grant funds
received for a juvenile court program.
Those funds were.appropriated as
follows:
monitor/surveillance, .
$3,250; drug testing, $1 ,500; other
expenses, $2,500; out-of-home place-·
ment, $1 0,000; program admintstra!ion, $1 ,750; community service payroll, $7,332 .06; and community ser-

.

.BY JIM FREEMAN
erty and then raise the site out of the
Sentinel Newl Steff
flood plain, he said.
· Members 'of Middleix&gt;n Village
Alxiut three-fourths of Middleport
,
Council wereremindedduringTues- r~sts in the l~ye{ll;fllle?dpll!il! . .
.. · · ~blight!! reg'AIIIl' c9un~il· M!J~g ,, Jolinson was aavrse4,n,to. bting
that they need io beg1n en(o.rdng 1ts before council at its next ·meeting a
floodplain ordinance,
recommendation pn perwil,jlrices l!ld
Arnold Johnson, who serves as the his fee.
. .
'
village flQOdplain coordinator, said he
Johnson also suggested starting
has been meeting with officials from - condemnation procedures -· and
the Federal Emergency ll(lanagement subsequent demolition - of lwo
Agency, which is requiring flood dilapidated, vacanl houses; located at
plain ordinances be enforced.
305 N. Fourth Ave. and 469 Fisher St.
. Although the village has an exist- ·
He presented photographs of the
' .~ng flood plain ordinance, council two structures and said they are a
needs to es!ablish a price schedule for hazard tq neighborhood children.
·permits to build in the I 00-year
Clerk/treasurer Dennis Hockman
: ~oodplain and establish the percent- said the village has the money to
· a~c. or pay for the floodplain coor- demolish the two buildings by using
:ainator, Johnson said. ·
funds raised with landlord fees. Mon:: : If the ordinances are not enforced, ey from' the fees is supposed to be
:residents may n~t be abl~ w purchase used for purposes such as demolition,
. f~derally-suhsl\hzed flood msurancc. . he said,·
:he said.
Council instructed Johnson to
·. ·. , To build in the 100
. -year flood begin the condemnation and demoli:plain, or to conduct renovat.io~s tion process . . ·
.exccedmg 50 percent of a.bu1ldmg s
He also noted that several resi:yalue, people must have an engineer dences have yards cover~d with
·:determine the elevation of their prop(Contlnu~ on Page 3)

~Pomeroy
::ooor, w. va.
.,

.

·department look
:.a t major areas of
concern OVflr
~span project
'

·C HEVIIDLEI • OLDSMOBILE •

.

Among these are a provision to bar a
government shutdown ne.t fall, but
at spending levels bene~h what is
contemplated in a balanced-budget
agreement recently agreed to, and a
proposal to bar the Census Bureau
·· from using sampling techniques.
House aides, speaking on condition of anonymity, said it's likely to
be Wednesday at the earliest before
another measure is ready for a vote
on the floor. And in the meantime,
Senate Democtats plan .an aU-night
session- in a Capitol corridor if the
Senate formally votes to adjourn to dramatize the need for relief.
· Acting with remarkable speed,
Clinton vetoed the $8.6 billion bill
Monday and issued a wrinen statement that it was time to "stop playing politics with the lives of Americans in need." It took only 28 minutes from the time the measure

[Floodplain ·ordinance
:enforcement stressed
to Middleport Council

4 door: fnodels in

2 ~·· 12 Paa-, 35 cen,.
A o.nnen Co. Newapeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; TU.sday, June 10,1997

~117. Ohio Vllller Publlllhlng Compeny

vice

Then membera of the board of the United Fund of Meigs County met briefly to dlecuss the ·
IUCCHI of the 1997 fund-ralelng c:empelgn. The 1997 goal of $",000 hn been exceeded. From
·left ere &amp;ecretery Sunn Oliver, Treeeurer Tom Dooley end board member Vickie Morrow. Board
Pr11ldent Chloril Gaul, not pictured, hae expre..ed her gratitude to everyone who contributed
to the effort. The 1998 campaign .will begin thil fell end lncludee plena for an Oclober fishing
tournament.

'-------------------------------------1

Br-idge replacement meeting slated

A public meeting about a new
Pomeroy-to-Mason, W.Va., bridge
will be held on Thursday, June 19
from 4 to ?p.m. at the Wahama High
School in Mason. ·
Representatives of ·both Ohio
Department of Transportation and
· West Virginia Department of Highways will bC'at the meeting, and con- .

cerned citizens are urged to attend.
It is hoped !hat by gathering all
affected agencies together during the
initial planning stages, major areas of
concern might be handled now, rather
than when the project is years along
in development. Federal highway
ofl1cials have also been invited.
In January, the firm of Sverdrup

maintenance

and

repairs,

$859.25.
The commissioners also approvc'd
a request to appropriate additional
funds in the budget of Meigs County Litter Control. That amount ,
received from local recycling cfli1rts.
donations and the Gallia~Jackson­
Meigs- Vinton Solid Waste District,
were approprialcd inlo the followin g
accounts: special accnunt, $75; recy cling pr~cds, $339.69; and opecial
events (River Sweep), $1.100.
·Also approved was a reduction In
an appropriation to the county's real
estate a.lliriscssmcnt line item, rcqucst-

ed·by County Auditor Nancy Parker
.
Campbell . The · adjustment of
The study area; according to $13,137.56 was made because
~nd Associates was authorized by
ODOT to begin preparing environ- ODOT, runs three miles up and lhree expenses were less !han anticipated .
mental documentation necessary to miles down the river from the existA request for approval of the
seJect a site and replace the local ing bridge. The meeting on June 19 county's grant through the Commu· bridge, one of only four Ohio River · will' include information gathered 10 nity Corrections Act was approved.
bridge~ still owned by the state of date,
·
The grant"&lt;!f1l13,li31 will b&lt;: used to
ODOT has budgeted $25 mill,inn continue the program into 1998. That
· Qhio. As the bridges arc replaced,
West.Virginia will assume ownership for replacemcnl of the bridge in program addresses alternative, comto the Ollio banks. ·.
2002 . .
munity-based sentencing through
Common Pleas Court.
David Spencer of the County
Highway Department requested an
appropriation of $154,767, representing state and fcderal .grant funds
· and administrative fees for 1996 disBy CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Hemsley. Dana King, Katherine S. aster relief.
The funds were appropriated into
Lamb, Bonnie L. Lawson, Kimberly
Sentinel Newe Slllff
ac~ounts relating to individual proTWenty-eight men and women A. Lewis, Matthew C. Lewis, Tracy
who received their General Equiva- · Lockhart, Marjoriejo Manley, Bridget jects: Apple Grove Road, Flatwoods.
Ieney Diplomas (GED) during the MulhoHand, Christopher C. Neville, Road, Pomeroy Pike Road and
accounts for vario.us roads and
past year were honored at the Adult Timothy R. Priddy, Kcnda Reynolds.
BasicandLiteracyEducation'sannu- Adam W. Rime. Normal. Roberts, administration.
The boaJ'(j also' approved adver\I recognition dinner Monday night Rebecca L. Saxton, Brandy Stark,
al Meigs High School.
Amy L. Underwood, Shannon L. tisement for bids for AC-20 bitumi· For the past six years, the Mid- Walker and Traci Wilson Chapman. · nous liquid for use by the highway
department. The bid is specified as a
dleport-Rotary Club, as a part of i.ts
Recognized with attendance cer- Minority Business Enterprise conse..Vice program, has provided the tificlltes \VCre Freda Eakins, over 70Q
tract, meaning that the bid musl be
illnrier for the ABLE students and hours; Penny Dunkle, Sandra D&amp;111t awanlcd to a minority contractor, The
their families, as well as the plaques and Ronald Grimm; over 500 hours; bid must be a total tons bid, meaning
presented to the GED graduates. . Cy.nthia Call and Carmen Thorne, that the supplier must deliver total
That service was noted at last ove~ 400 · hours; Nellie Hatfield, tons of liquid at a fi•cd price of
pight's dinner, with the presentation Helen Hemsley, Katherine Lamb '$50,000.
of a plaque from ihe Ohio Associa- Garland Saxton, over 300 hours;
The commissioners also:
tion of Adult and Continuing Educa- Annette Cade, Lisa Collins, Marvin
• Met with Probate and Juvenile
tion to Rotary. H~l Kneen, president, · Edwards, Pam Shields, oyer 200 Court Judge Robert Buck to discuss
aceepted the plaque on behalf of the hours; ancl S.arail C111111en, Ra~~ll his budget request and a pending
Rowy.
Carpenter. Paul C~to, Linda Cns!1p, meeting regarding a juvenile facility
The) GED graduates given plaques Shirley Day, B011me Lawson, Kim- in Nelsonville;
were Aleta ·B. Billingsley, Annette bedy Lewis, Diane Milliron, Bridget
• Approved renewal of a mainteClde;Cypthia A. Call, William Cape- Mulholland, Lois Pooler, Norma nance
contracl with Mobbs Telecomhart, Sarah J. 'Carmen, Rl!ldall R. Roberts, Rebecca Saxton and V~ekie munications Service and Sales for .
Carpenter, Jr., Shirley Day, Angela Skidmore, 100 hours.
maintenance on the telephone system
Fields, )llellic E. Hatfield, Helen L.
(Continued on Page 3)
(Continued on Pllge 3)

.ABLE program grads
honored by Rotarians

..

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