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Pige 11• The Dally Sentinel

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 5, 1tll

Ohio Lottery

•

•

~ Suspension

Suw-Lotto:

12-fl-17·20-34

Klc ....:
0+2-5 81

·is possible·
.for Schott

•

Pick 3:
9-2·1
Pick 4:
2·7·7-4

S~onPage4
' (

•

TO THE

Occasional ahowera •
tonight, ....

llld ltornll

In the 101. Frl~_r •. oocaalonal aho-1'11. High , _ .
10.

•'

•

•

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•

•

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, June 8, 1996

.; 2 Slictlcin&amp;, 11 P-v-

'

·-·
.

· ~47,N0.21

•

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AGinMIICo. NIL:Ipaplr"

~~A

slow.sta.rt.to spring
:-.plays havoc with farms
.

HAMILTON BADIN (20·1 0)
vs AVON LAKE (15·7)FRIDAY, 11 AM

TALLMADGE (17·5)
vs MEIGS (17·8) FRIDAY, 3 PM

ALL Gt\MES AT THURMAN MUNSON STADRJM IN CANTON.

..

Williams and Associates
Insurance
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

9H·6611

Dairy Queen Brazier

Sheriff James Soulsby
992·3371

K &amp; CJewelers
Home National Bank
SYRACUSE

··' RACINE

·. 949·2210

992·6533

Ingels Furniture and Jewelry
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.992·2635

.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 992·5627

Quality Print Shop

POMEROY, OHIO 992·3345.

. 992·3785

Ridenour Supply
992·3308

Ewing Funeral Home
992·2121

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

Middleport Trophies &amp; Tee
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·6128

992·2104

POMEROY, OHIO

Baum Lumber Co.
985•3301

CHESTER, OHIO

(row's Family Restaurant Birchfield Funeral Home
992·2432

.

POMEROY, OHIO 742·2333

Ridenour TV &amp;·Appliance

Farmers Ban·k
'

"YOUR BANK FOR UFE"

TUPPERS PLAINS

"MElOY

RUTLAND, OHIO

985·3307

POMEROY, OHIO

-:~Leo's

Cruise and Travel

992·4233

POMEROY, OHIO

Hartwell He»us•
992·7696

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

King Hardware
.

Sugar Run Mills _
992·211 5

POMEROY, OHIO

McDonald's
992·5600

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Downing-Childs-Mullen-Musser
Insurance

992·2342

POMEROY, OHIO

Meigs
Athletic Boosters

'

992·6~17

POMEROY, OHIO

Fruth Pharmacy ·
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·6491

Crow and Crow
· Attorneys at .Law
·

POMEROY OHIO

Western Auto
MIDDLEPORT,.OHIO

992·5$15

Vaughan's IGA
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·3471
(,

Above, workers ·push In tomato 1teke1 It I
letlrt Fells farm - work thllt 11 usually clone
by now but .hea. been postponed clue to the

weather.

"We're not seeing the ·wild bee . good yields on grasses," he said.
' the good stuff for later.
popu!ation," he said, adding that he
The problem lies in gcuing the hay
"It has reached a crisis point for
went out looking for bees and did not out of the field and into the barn.
some people." Knccn said. "Agriculsee a single one.
"A lot of hay that has been cut has ture is a risky business; so much of
On the other hand, the weather has been rained on," he said, adding that it is in the hands of weather."
·
been almost ideal (or grass growing, fanners should keep cutting until they
"You can be a -good manager but
Knc.en said.
. get what they need - feeding the you can only do so much if the
.· ".It's perfect weather for' getting · poorer quali~y hay earl n~ keeping . weather i.:; against you,:· he added:
'.

"

·''

.,. ..-_;• ....,Hoo-,.1:,..

... ~~~~

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.

'05
0
-$100
·$200

..' '

: :wASHINGTON (AP)- Repub: lions. Reptiblican,s, knowing .that
lic,ilns hope another Senate rejection polls show 80 percent public support
ol: a balanced-budget· constitutional · for the amendment, think even a
ahiendment will brand President · ~efeat will strengthen their bid forth~
CI;nton and fellow Demoi:rats as White House • and continued coninsincere about battling persistenl gressional control by embarrassing
fe~eral deficits.
Democrats, most of whom will vote
·Five days before he quits the Sen- no.
ate to campaign full time for presiSenate Judiciary Committee
dell!, Majority Leader Bob Dole, R- Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, one
Kan., is bringing the amendment to of the measure's chief champions,
a vote today. The proposal would sounded his party's theme Wednesrequire a balanced federal budget by day by accusing Clinton and Democ2002, but would leave decisions rats of finding it "tough to stop
about how to do it for later- by the spending other people's money."
vo;:r.y politicians who have be~n stale- Republicans say the .amendment is
mated over the issue for years.
needed because there is not enough
Dole .has conceded the measure pressure on lawmakers 10 solve the
will fall just short of the two-thirds problem.
. majority amendments to the Consti- . . "Last year, President Clinton won
tution require, as it did when it failed and the American people lost," Hatcll
narrowly in March· 1995. ·At the. said. "The American people.will lose
time, he promised to bring the mea- again if President Clinton has his way
sure up again during this year's this year...
political campaign. .
, Democrats say that with RepubliThough the vote is preordained, cans and Clinton havinf proposed
the political fallout is up for grabs, competiJII plans for halung deficjts
anll both plkties are vying to claim it · by 2002, what is needed i~ a bipartias 'an issue for the November elec·

.,

$250

$200

.,

$150

-$300

$100

$100

$50

-$400
·$500 .

w

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

.

0

'05

'00

~

1 - rellects the Intermediate estimates provided by trustees. Figures are for calender
years and differ slighdy from esumates for fiscal years. (This corresponds to calender·
year figures cited above from 1995 report.)

'95

'00

'05

Sources: 1996 annual reports o(Jile Board of Trustees of the Federaf
Hospital Insurance Trust Fund and the Board of Trustees of the Federal ,
Supplementary Medical insurance Trust Fuod.

'

·ing 5ome Social Security assets from Treasury bonds to stocks is significant.
"That hasn't happened in 60 years," says council Chairman·Edward Gramlich, Jean of the University of !.1ichigan's School of Public Policy.
The Social Security Administration collects 12.4 percent of every workers' pay up to $62,700. Employers and employees each pay half the tax, called
FICA for Federal Insurance Contributions Act.
·
Most of the money is used immediately to pay benefits to retired or disabled workers and families of workers wh.o've died. Your payroll taxes don't
go into a personal account at the Social Security Administration . What's not
spent on benefits is used to buy Treasury bonds. That means the Social Secu-

Dole makes new attempt to pass First-time
~mendment for balanced budget jobless

Brogan Warner Insurance

992·6059

9 • 1 1

By ANNE WILLETTE
U$ATodey
· Social Security will be broke by 2029, the government said Wednesday,
drruned by some 80 million beneficiaries who will have had fewer children,
s!Valler pay increases and have lived longer. than their parents.
:The annual insolvency prediction comes amid a cotTosive cynicism ab9ut
the 61-year-old Social Security program. Less than a quaner of Americans
exP«:ct to get benefits equal in value to what today's retirees $et, according
to :a poll by Mathew Greenwald &amp; Associates for the Employee Benefit
Research Institute. That's do'!"n from one-third in 1992.
:And few people expect politicians to fix the system. Congress's inaction
isrl't surprising, given the choices: raise taxes,· cut benefits or· both. After
explaining the alternatives to voters, "you try to get out of town before dark,"
says Sen. Alan Simpson, R· Wyo.
:Restoring Soci:tl Security to solid financial footing - and resioring public:faith in the system -· will take radical action, a presidential advisory eoun·
cil·is expected to say later this month. The answer, the coun~il will conclude.
lies not in the beleaguered federal government but in the soaring stock mar·
ket.
·For the first time, the Social Security Advisory Council will recommend
that a pOrtion of Social Security payroll taxes be invested in stocks. And a
majority of tbe panel believes individuals should control some kind of Social
S~u~ty savings account, much as they do company 40l(k) retirement plans.
.Congress would hive to approve stock investing, and that's not likely to
happen in an election year. President Clinton and Sen . Bob Dole, the Republicim presidential candidate, have nol'proposcd ways to fix Social Security
an~ did not respond to questions about the council's recommendations. But
thefactthat the council, which meets every four years, is united behind shift·

Fisher Funeral Home

CHESTER, OHIO 992·5020

· WEATHER WOES- RICet'lt 1;001, wet WMther hat resulted In a late start for many Meigs
County farmers, 11111nlng tomatoes and other
produce will be late hilling the market thle year.

attends projection
SS_will go broke-

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 9U·5144

Adolph's Dairy Valley Veterans Memorial Hospital
992·2556

POMEROY, OHIO

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply The Shoe Place and Locker 219

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO . 992·6611

992·3322

In ad~ 1n, farmers attempting to farmers - not just produce and
cultivate or spray their crops can flower farmers.
quickly find their _tra,tors mired in ·
For instance, livestock and dairy .
wet fields .:... meaning weeds and farmers are having a hard lime getbugs have more opportunity to grow. ting com planted - or hay cut and
"We are seeing some insect dam- baled. Like their produce-growing
age," Kneen said. "There seems to be counterpans, they are unable to use
more insects outthere, including Col- · their tractors due to waterlogged
fields.
·
orado potato beetles and aphids."
According to Kneen, most farmFanners can't get their tractors out
in the fields to spray, he explained. ers are just now getting field com
We are recommending they hand planted.
Statewide, as of June 2, fanners
spray the hotter infestations until a
more thorough spraying can be done, reponed being 65 percent completi:d
· in the planting of field com- comKneen added.
· Meanwhile farmers like Max Hill pared to the average completion perJr. of Lelart Falls just keep pushing centage of 95 percent., Kneen
on, knowing that their crops will be explained.
late this year.
· .
In addition, lower yields are also
Workers on his farm were busy anticipated, he said.
"The • question is 'Can we get
Wednesday pushing in tomato stakes
- work that would usually be done enough yield out of the corn?'" Kneen
already.
said.
Hill noted that farmers across the
Some fanners may soon have to
state and in other pans of the coun- decide if they should plant com or
try were experiencing similar condi- soybeans for silage. ·
tions, making him confident there
In addition, many fanners can't get
will be a market·for his tomatoes.
out to cut annual weeds before they
Greenhouse florer farmers are ,go to seed. Due to this, farmers may
also being affected by the weather; encounter infestations of curly dock,
finding large . heating bills in 'heir mus1ard weed, multiflora rose and
. mailboxes. To make matters worse, thistle.
people tend to,plant fewer flowers in
Kneen is also concerned about a
cool, · wet weather, according to lack of honeybee$ this year. Disease,
fanner Paul HilL
mites and.the harsll, cold winter hav,c,
So far, the weather has affected all !aken their toll o~ the bee pop~lation. :
,. .
' ' .

tirOwtng ·cynlcfsln·

Cleland Realty

POMEROY, OHIO 992·2259

.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
,·: : Although area residents may be
saving money on their air condition'lftg bills, recent cool, damp weather
is proving to be a big headache for
·· the local agricultural scene.
Meigs · County farmers, · often
accustomed to hot weather accom, panied by little rainfall, are having a
hard time coping with recent cool
climes and seemingly endl~ss showers.
· · The weather has resulted in late
planting - in a business where get. ting an early crop to market can make
the difference between a good or bad
· year. .
· · Tom~toes and other produce are
about two-to-three weeks behind,
· according to Hal Kncen •. Meigs
· County Ohio State University exten- ·
. sion agent.
. · . "Titere is plenty of moisture, but
we need some wanner temperat~res
· over the 70 degree mark," Kneen
. added.
. Wet fields and cooler temperatures
liave resulted in a later-than-usual
planting, Kneen noted.
. · For instance, fresh Meigs County
. ·cabbage usually 'hits . the market
around Memorial Day. This year,
· •fanners anticipate harvesting cabbage
.. next week - two weeks later than
· usual.

STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
SATURDAY 3 PM

•

san agreement, not a change in the
Constit~tion. Tiley say Dole's insistence on a vote is designed to hurt
tlinton, and they say it is inconsistent for Dole to pursue the amendmcnt while also considering big lax
' cuts and an expensive anti-missile
system.
.
"It's madness," said Sen. James
Exon, D-Neb. "It's unconscionahle.
It's the biggest flim(lamin histm y."
In his final week in the Senate,
Dole is hoping the amendment's
defeat andia Democratic vote to block
consideration of a missile-defense
· system will boos! his presidential hid
and GOP congressional prospects by.
de(ining differences with Democrats:
On the balanced-budget amend·
ment vote, some Democrats are try·
ing to blunt GOP attacks by advancing an alternative that would remove
Social Security from· the fonnula
used to measw-e whether the budget
is balanced.
•
The jlroposal has stron11 political
appeal because,ofthc,program'spopularity with senior citizens.
,

c!aims up
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
number of American workers filing
first-time claims for jobless benefits rose by 9,000 last week but
remained in a range that analysts
maintain suggests modest employment growth.
· The Labor Depanment said
today that new applications for
unemployment insurance totaled a
seasonally adjusted 354,000,'. up
from a revised 345,000 a week earlier. The initial estimate for the
week ending May ~S was 346,000.
The June. I total of new cl'aims
was the highest since 372,000
were filed during the week· ended
April 20. Many analysts had
expected an increase of only 4,000.
The four-week moving average
·of weekly claims also rose, up
·J,SQO to 349,000, the first increase
in nine weeks. It was the highest
since the averaac reached 353,000
during the period ended May II.

'

'I

rity surplus is being loaned to

t~c

federal government to cover its other

expenses .

The rationale for investing the surplus in stocks is simple: Stocks historically have outpcrfonned Trensury bonds. The past 50 years, the average annu- .
al return on Treasury bonds is 5.5 percent, vs. 11 .8 percent for stocks.
'
'
Wall Street loves tbe notion of lcning every worker.set up a retirement' '
account with payroll taxes. That would have pumped up to $150 billion into
stocks, bonds and other investments last year. Proponents also express a deep ;
faith in the efficiency of private markets over government.
:,

.

ODOT plans .to open
bids on u.s. 50 jo,b ·.·:
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Ohio Depanment of Transportation officials should know within the
next month who the contractor will
be for construction of the first segment of the 16mile four-lane widening of I:J.S . 50 between Athens and
Coolville .
The bid opening for the first
phase of the .project is scheduled for
next Wednesday, with an alternate
date set for June 26, according to
Nancy Yoacham, public information.
offiCer for Ohio Department of Trans·
ponation District I()..Marietta.
At that time, slate officials will
announce the complete list of contractors submitting bids and the low
bid figure. Each bid proposal will
then be evaluated by ODOT, with a
final decision on a contractor expected before mid-July. according · to
Yoacham. ·
Tlte project, which has been in the
dii!Cussion phasC for mtlfl; than 20
·years. is Ions overdue in the minds of
area residents and motorists along the

.

J

dangerous road.
Traffic enforcement has been
stepped up in recent months by tflc , ,
State Highway Patrol, due to the high
number of fatal accidents on the busy
two-lane highway.
"The process has been long and
frustrjlting, with funding delays and
environmental problems. There have
been several contractors showing
interest showing interest. I expect the
project to be an active sale," said John
Dowler. deputy director of Ohio
Depanmcnt o{ Transportation Distri~t- , ,
IQ

Excavation work on the first phase
oftbe project. a 2.7-milc section from·
the intersection of U.S, SO and State··
Route '1 at Cool ville to Vanderhoof '"
Road and Fought's Used Cars, · i( •
expected to he gin by the end of sum•
mer, according to Yoacham.
Work on the second section, stan: •
ina at Athens, is to begin in 1997. The
final phases are two middle sections,:•
which are expected to be under con:
tract by 1998. Officials hope to have
the project compl~ted b~ 1999.
~

.

�....·-•

Commentary
The Daily Se~tin~l
'EsbUIGslrd in 1948
111 Court St., P-Oif, Ohio

614-992-2156 • Fex: 1192·2157

.2.

I

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGm
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

Lofton to the «&lt;lttK w. "'""'"""
oy 1hould I» than 300 - · AR /e.,.,.
.,. IUD/«t to edir'rf.::,muar be ~&gt;•itllld Mil Include Mk1t'fiU Md M'ftphol,. num- · No unoign«&lt;
will be publlth«&lt;. L - 1hould be In gOGd tHie,

•ddrn•lnt ,,..,, not ,.,..ona~m.a.

Perot standing fast
on austerity themes

t

'

•

BvTOMRAUM
Associated Preas Writer
WASHINGTON - Pres•dent Clinton and Bob Dole may be ratcheting
up tbe1r tax-cut biddmg war to curry voter favor but Ross Perot isn't having
any of it
No tax cuts here. Perot's m-your-face platfonrl continues the deficJt-cutung austemy themes he sounded m 1992.
·
Lost m the commotion over whether Perot w1ll run again himself or pass
1hc halOn to another- perhaps former Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm- is
the 1ssue of Perot's inflexible platform.
The irasc•ble Texan sniffs at the ongoing tax-cut dance between Democrat Chnton and Repubhcan Dole
Chnton raised the stakes agam on Tuesday, proposing a $1,500 tax credIt for the first two years of a college education, at a cost of about $8 billion.
Dole, who two weeks ago proposed'a $500-per-person, $17 bilhon tax credIt for donat1ons to charities, 1s weighmg an even more ambitious across-theboard tax cut
Both Dole and Clm1on came together on repealing- at least to year's
end - the 4 3 ce nt-a-gallon gas tax increase that was part of Clinlon's 1993
economic package.
" If you're gomg to sell your vote, get more than that for 1!," Perot told a
wee~end conference of the Cahforma branch of h1s new Reform Party.
The founder and likely nommee of the party has his own platform. And
you won 't find a smgle tax cut mit. The key planks:
• No negat1ve campaigning, no spec1al interest money.
• A balanced budget, both by law and by constitutional amendment, and
a " plam language" annual report to the nation on how 11 IS bemg met.
~ D1rec1 elecuon of the pres1dent and aboht1on of the Electoral College.
a campa1gn sea,on of no more than four months, elections on weekends
• Term II mils. three two-year terms for House members and two s1x-year
tenns for senators.
~All future tax increases must be ratified by the electorate m a national
refciendum
•:Stiff restnet10ns on lobby mg. mcludmg proh1bitmg any former federal
employee from working as a lobbyist for a forc•gn in&lt;Crest.
Pcr01 rellerated these points. slowly, one by one, m a speech last weekend at the California conference - lest anyone forget
These are not minor reforms. And Perot's insistence on them, and h•s clear
desrre that any nominee of hiS new party pay fealty to them, 1s JUSt one more
rea.On why 11 Will be d1fficult for h1s party to field anyone other than Perot
as 1is candidate
Not all party members. or would-be party members, can toe the Perqt hne
on ~ II these pomts and other pos1110ns held by Perot
Lamm. for mstance, 1ssued a tougher call for scaling back Medicare and
Soc •al Secunty than Perot ha' suggested And he was in favor of the Mex1can:free trade agreement of 1993, which Perot vehemently opposed.
Although Perot invited others to aud1tion for h1s party's nomination, the
Texan was noncommittal toward Lamm afterwards- neither encouragmg
hm1 nor discouraging him from running, even m a pnvate meetmg between
the two, according to Lamm.
Later. Lamm, back in Denver, sa1d. "Amenca's ripe for a new political
force. I would love to bnng that about m whatever way I can." But, the Democratlc former governor and reform activist added that he would not "wrestle for the party nommation'' with Perot: nor would he support Perot if the
Texan runs for president. ·
Therc.1s also the prolilem of money
" I don 't have a billion dollars .... I cjon't see where these people who are
trymg to draft me would begm to get the money, " s~id Lamm, now director
of the Umversity of Denver's Center for Pubhc Pohcy.
Sull, Perot lieutenants ms1st they can make it happen- with or without
Perot's cash.
"This 1s the begmmng of a political party that will take years to bec6me
fully competitive, " sa1d Russell Verney, national coordmator.

Letters to the editor
Rusher'~

free trade thoughts 'rubbish'

Dear Ed1tor
1 respond to W1lham Rusher's column "Free Trade - The Antidote to
Globahsm." wh1ch appeared 1n The Daily Sentinel's May 31 ed1tion.
Ru sher states that "It would be fatal to reject the principles of free trade,
wh1ch alone can msure that no international regulatory regime w1ll become
the b1ggest brother of all "
Rubbish' Far from bemg an antidote to globalism, free trade •s the very
propellant behind it 1
Free trade by defimuon means a world without economiC borders, and
when econom•c mtegrat10n occurs, political integration is sure to follow.
The World Trade Orgamzation, designed to operate as the head of the "federalist free tradmg system" that Rusher so admires, cuts the Constitution to
shreds w1th brutal rapier thrusts and slashes.
It IS an illcgmmate supranational body whose deliberations are cloaked
1n secrecy TI1e nation-state withers away wh1le the founding fathers writhe
m their graves.
Jeffrey Fielcl1
Middleport

•I

Here's a possible use for extra cash
Dear Editor:
Governor Vomovich has his pen out in readiness for a possible veto of a
tax cut that the Ohio House and Senate JOyfully passed recently:
Esnmates of the total values of the cuts range from $52 to $60 for indiv1dualtaxpayers over four years. That's about $15 a year for an mdividunl
ta&gt;payer
Remember that they have a surplys m the Ohio budge!.
What to do with that $15 causes one to work .up a sweat. To get the mosl
"bang for the buck," fixing lh_al ~oad o~ Route 124 between Lon.g Bottom
and Reedsville looks hke a pnonty opt10n.
As soon as the $15 comes lhrough, donating it to a fund to fi~ that road,
the worst road in Ohio, would be real nic~ of all of us.
.
If we don't get the SIS. forming a bucket brigade to carry gravel from Lauck's
Run to the affected road would be anolher option.
Keep your fingers crossed.
Gayle Price
Portland

t

.

Thul1ldly, June •~

P•l• 2:j

D··-ft

Under
for a wobbly
record
Istael au.:t
D-·bli
_,....,
.
on .
• ._,... can ... ~~nu 11
cand!Jale Bob Dole has selecled a
hard-line Mideast advisory group
sympllhetic to the election ofLikud's
Be ·
N
ahu Is I'
85 rae 1pnme
.nJamm etany
m•~ste~~ b ~
U . ed N .
ea
Y ormer nu
auons
Ambassador Jeane Kukpatnck,
members of the group helped d ft
~ Dol
ra a
statement or
e recently suggestmg hthat
hawkish
Netanyahu
be the.. ff
.
1
m•~
: ; Riec~•ardve peNacemakMer"
1H e mo o
c
1xon, en:che~ ~~~'" ;'d Ron:IRd Reagan
ow
•na. gyp! an ~ss1a.
~e
~tat:~~nt
also :n~:;!•gs
1
1010
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nt~m:cM'n'
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nt Perc ~~y
5 Hafas
lried 1 1 •s e~ . mo~.
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As d ~
ynan ICtator
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sal 10 0 a peace agreement WI!

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sr~le sa'd th 1 d

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:ot

1

the .......... ~. and
. Bush. adm·
. 1"''stralions
.
•
but oo the Mideast IllS conspiCuousI I' .ted t tr I
I I' R
fa;~ os ong Y pro- srac • ea·

Morton Kondracke
Dole's M1deast statement was
d~afted by his Senate foreign policy
d R d S h
a• e, an Y c eunemann, with
mput from Kirkpatrick and Wash· 1on Jawyer Do ug 1as Fe1th, a for- '
mg
mer Reagan· White House and Pentagon official.
Kirkpatnck and Netanyahu were
both ambassadors to the UN. when
Israel was unde( constant attack from
Arab nations and the Reagan administration was Israel's lone dependable
defender. She regards him as being
far less Ideological and more flexible
on peace and security 1ssues than others m his party or h1s portrayal in the
U.S. media.
Feith is an ouispoken cri11c of the
Labor party's peace policy, chargmg
''constitutes " unilateral withdrawal"
by Israel desp1te failure on the part of
Palestm1an leader Yasser Arafat to
comply with prom1ses to control terronsm and fully recogn1ze Israel 's
nght to exist.
Other members of the Kirkpatrick-p1cked M1deast panel include
scholar Daniel Pipes, who questiOns
whether Islamic societies are cultutally prepared for peaceful democra-

,

diplomacy.' As~' .. ~:•
;;:::~n~
strated ac~ul intentions" and that
us fo~ign policy h d 1 be ba d
00 U.S. interests and :alu~s "nots~n
individuals" or "personal 'relationshl ..
~at's a theme Dol 's
led 1
repeat soon in a spe~c'll :':iRussJ:
where the Clinton admmistration is
doing all it can to encourage the reelection of President Bans Yeltsin.
Dole's overall foreign pohcy advJsory team includes veterans of both
.

Dol' on -Israeli. policy

·
Reagan defense officy, and fonner
c1al Richard Perle.
De
I'
sp1\e ~l_e ·s~l~ooofahard•ne Pro-k srae • ~~~ .o addVIsers •. he·
•s un 1• e1Y to mau: mroa s agamst
Chnton among Jewish voters, who
voted SO percent for the Democrat in
1992 to II percent for George Bush
and 9 percent for Ross Perot.
.
Clinton has a chance to push
toward 90 percent in 1996 011 the
bas1s
· of h'•s record
·
of support for
Israel, the strong Democratic tilt of
U.S Jewry, and worry among Jews
abo111 1he influence of-the .Chnstmn
nght on the GOP.
Though Netanyahu's victory over
Peres was .a blow to Clinton 's
M1deast peace policy, Clinton has
mvned Netanyahu to VISit Washintton as early as next mo.nth and will
treat h1m with def~rence - at least
through the U.S presjdential election.
Polls md1catc that American Jews
strongly ~upported Peres and the
peace process, but Chnton has to be
consciOus of the fact that Israel's
Jews reJeCted Peres. ~6 percent to 44
percent. The election was close
because Peres won •overwhelming
suppon from Israel's mmority Arab
populatiOn.
,
'
If Dole can t cut mto Clinton s
lead ~mong Jews, h1s selectiOn of
hard -hne M1deast adv1sers seems
~_eSJgned to.. erase his reputatJPn as
unrchable toward Israel.

Paul J. Blosser

For most of his 26 years in Con- .
gress Dole had what one adviser'
'
'
deS&lt;:ribedas a. "conven!ionally pro- ,
lsr~l posmon," but dur•ng t!le. Bush :
adm•mstrauon he became a cnuc of '
foreign a1d levels to Israel, accused
Amcncan Jews ofbemg "selfish" on
fore 1gn aid, and advocated accom·
odat
t ard 1 · d' t 1 Sadm
•on ow
raq• IC a or
dam Hussein prior to the Gulf War,
h hh
rt d
'
w Jew1sh
IC e suppo
e
·
.
Democrats are circulating
1
a paper on Dole's record descnbing . •
l}im as a "summer soldier for Israel" 1'
.and the currenl issue of !lie Washington Monthly cont:a1os an article on
Dole subtitled, "Saddam Hussem
had at least one friend in 1990."
·J
A Clinton White House aide called :
Dole "at times, an apologist for the :
Arabs" and "fawmng" toward Sad- ~
dam Hussein.
•
Dole aides blame Dole's .,.,avenng :'
on bad advice from a pred{cessor of~.
Scheunemann, but other Jew 1sh •
actiVIsts say he was m1ffed that lead-' '
1~g Jewish Republicans s 1 d~d w1th· •
nvals Jack Kemp and Blish m· 1992, ~
and that, on a tnp to Armema w1th the,
doctor who t~:,cat,ed his World War II·
wounds, h~ became convinced that'
aid to Israel and Egypt prevented, t:
asSistance to d1sastcr v1ct1ms there
Dole also felt that, as GOP Senate, ;,,
leader, he had to back up Bush poh-. , J
cy. wh•ch mvolved getlmg along w•th . •' '
Saddam Hussem and puttmg pressure 1 • •
on Israel's previous L1kud government, headed by Y1tzhak Shamir, to . .
· engage m peace diplomacy.
,· ~
Bush admmistratwn veterans , ;;
rcmam leery of L1kud One of them
recentl y called Nctanyahu a "no-,
holds-barred· SOB" and wondered ,
aloud 1fChnton "had the guts" to put_ ,
pressure on the new government
"and risk takmg endless crap like we
d1d to push peace "
What happens to U.S -Israeli rela-::;.
t1ons after the election IS up for grabs, ' ·•
dcpendmg m part on whether the: ~
peace process collapses and, if it · •
docs,' whose fault that seems to be.
Cooperation is enurcly possible," • I l
even hkcly, 1f Nctanyahu emerges as· '
a tough peacemaker like Bcgm. But 'T'
trouble IS posSible 1f he follows the ·" ~
hardest-line clements m h•s party and' ··•··
resembles Sham1r
- ' ";

t

To preserve good rclaus:ms wuh ... ul

Arab nations. Clmton m1ght find 11
necessary to lean on Israel. as Bush' :1
d1d So might Dole, although whether ·"
he docs so seems to depend on ' '.J"
~ whom

he p1cks to advise Him '

' fu l1•

(Morton Kondracke is execu-' to:
live edilor of Roll Call, the news·'·;,;
paper of Sapilol Hill.}
'
' -:.. :II

Clinton can'.t escape Whitewater-tarred
brush ··:::~L'"'
,

Guilty. Guilty. Gu11ty.
]ltose were the verdicts of the Littie Rock, Ark .. Jury that was asked to
deCIC!e whether two erstwh1le business partners and one close assOCiate
of Pres1dent Clinton committed bank
fraud and other related crimes.
Clmton expressed sympathy "on
a personal level " for J1m and Susan
~cDougal, who respectively face 84
and 17 years m the slammer. The
president also was kind of bummed
about Arkansas Gov J1m Guy Tucker. his handpicked successor, who
faces 10 years m the jomt.
The president's Wh1te House handlers were spmning at rammmg speed
following the Whllewater convicliOns Among other defenses, they
noted that th1s was not the first ume
IR Amencan history that presJdent1al
fnends have been found guilty on
felony counts.
They note, for mstance, that one of
Lyndon Johnson's closest cronies,
Bobby Baker, was convicted of fraud,
theft and Income-tax evasion back 10
1967, And hardly anyone drew any
guilt by association between President Johnson and Baker, who had
served as secretary to the Senate's
Democrat majonty.
But there IS a b1g difference

Baker and Chnton's relauonsh1p wllh
the McDougals. LBJ was neither the
knowmg or unknowmg henefic1ary of
Baker's fraud and theft. And the 36th

testified that then-governor Clinton
pressured him to make' the loan and
later benefited from 1t
So Clinton cannot diSassociate
h1mself from his felonious fnends
Joseph PerkinS
But the While House damage-control
team •s allcasttrymg to put some d1spres1dent cenamly d1d not fill out h1s tancc between them. That's why they
best pal's income tax returns.
were handmg out the statements of
By contrast, Chnton and first wife certain jurors that cast ·the preSident
Hillary were actual co-owners of 1n a sccmmgly favorable hght
Whitewater Development Corp., a
For •nSJance, RJSa Gayle Briggs,
real estate venture, With convicted the 41 -ycar-old school teacher, who
felons J1m and Susan McDougal
vol~ntcercd that Cl1nton was "a very
And while the Cllntons d1d not credible Witness" for the defense,
prepare the McDougals ' tax returns. even though hiS Vldeolapcd appearthe first family d1d claim Whitewater- anee d1d not stop her and her fellow
related tax deducuons to wh1ch they Jurors from sending hJS friends to the
were not enutled (an innocent m1s- hoosegow
take, they ms1s1) The Internal RevBut Clm1nn Jesuficd on one matcnue Service assessed them more tcr and one rna ncr alone And that
than $45.000 m back iaxes and mter- was whether he actually pressured
est
Hale to prov1de Susan McDougal
J1m McDougal is gomg te J8ll for with the unlawful $300.000 Joan. •
diverting funds from the federally
It was Chnton 's word agamst
insured bank he previOusly owned, Hale's And smcc the president was
Mad1son Guaranty, to several other not on ~rial (nor was Hale) and since
busmess ventures, mcludmg his real the JUry could put away the
estate partnership with the Chntons
McDougals and Gov, Tucker w1th or
Susan is headed up the nver for W1thou1 lhe tcst1mony of either Clmreceiving an Illegal $300,000 feder- ton or Hale, why shouldn't they have
ally backed loan from a lendmg g1ven the benefit of the doubt to thc1r
company owned by DaVId Hale (a homeboy '"the White House?

But all that can and will change if ;, "
cJthcr·J1m or Susan McDougal starti ·,,;·
smgmg to Whilewater special prose- ·
cutor Kenneth Starr. They hct their i ~~
freedom that having Prcs1dcnt Clmton tesufy on their behalf would spare , ,
them from prison terms. But now that ,,.. ,
J1mbo IS stanng at 84 years behind ...~
bars and Susan 17 years, they may .- .;
feel less mchned to stonewall for the 1: , 1
president and first lady
,_;, 1
ThiS has to be B11J and Hillary ·
Clinton 's greatest fear - that thCif •''. '
former business partners w111 turn on -,., ,,
them and fully disclose what actdal- '''"
Jy happened w11h Whitewater It very · ")
well could prove as devastating to the :,,;/
Clinton presidency as John Dean's ,.:.1
Watergate revelations proved to the. ' ~ 1•
Nixon presFdcncy.
. ·~'L
But whether or not the McDougals
cooperate With Starr's Whncwatcr """
mvcstJgatJon, whether or not the .,. ,
president and 'firsllady arc ult•malc- ~ ly indicted on Whitewater-related J,;,
charges and force~ to stand trial the ' "
convJcllons'" Linle Rock have done '""
nreparable damage to their already 1 ,- .
sullied reputations.
, '~
Bill and H1llary Clmton may not :~·:
be crooks But they keep the compa- • ;:·.
ny of crooks
· (Joseph Perkins is a columni 1

li~~~·~·j;g·t~t·h";;";;;·d~;s better than..;;;;~hi~~··:1
By MICHAEL GARTNER ·
AMES, Iowa - This column IS
not about culture and the arts. So I
know you are still reading.
•
Or about celebrities. So I' m pretty sure you 're still with me.
Or about busmess and finance Or
consumernews. Orentertamment · So
I' , . 1
,
m •air Y certam you re still here.
It's not even aboul pohncal figures
. "' .
or events m "ashmgton.
So
. ht surpnse
.. the
. ;- an d th IS m1g
nation s eduors and TV news_ d1rectors,and Washmgton bure~u ch•efsyou re proba~Jy st1ll readmg. Maybe
even With a stgh of relref.
For most n~wspaper co 1umns,
newspaper stones. and tel~vJSwn
pteces are about thmgs that Interest
you the least. According to the Pew
Research Center for lhe People and
the Press, only 16pereen!ofusclosely follow ~ws abo~! pohltcal figures
and events m Washmg~n. Yet look at
the newsll!lper, tum o~ ibe TV or f11p
on th~ rad1o, ~you 11.~ bombarded With Washmgton stones.
Even fewer of us - 9 percentclosely foll,ow news of cullure and

The O.lly Sentinel • P8ge 3

OHIO \'/·~illho1

Thursd8y,-June 6, 1918· 1~

Hawkish group advising-

1•

the arts, yet newspapers have pages
1
or sec tions devoted to that once o ~ o ogy or nhewsprmt pnces or the
twice a week sometimes every dayr ,;~~~n~t ~~ c ;'"Iowners o~ ~ lack of
The same go~s for news of famou~ h' d. u cc no ogy IS a e p. not a
people (13 percent), consumer news f~~.:;n~:l ~ew~~nnt f~JCcs_ .arc
(14 percent), and cntertammcnt news go on line ~v: :a~ ~o ~~e~c~ns
( 15 percent)
c~
y g
e s
oam
owners
arc
no
better
or
worse
What we're mterested m Is local th f 'I
an am1 y owners And newspapers
news and cnme news and health and networks and Joe 1TV
news. Half again as many people db bo 80
a fA. arc .truste y a ut percent o mcncans
want to read about local government
No maybe the reas
·
bo
'
on
we
are
tumas a ut national government. TwJce mg the news off IS because the news
as many people are as mterested In 15 tummg us ofT_ turning us ofT With
SCience as m bus mess and four limes stories on thmgs we arcn'tmterested
as m~ny in health as m the arts. More in.
of us are interested m mlernational
Maybe the answer Isn't 0 - . •
· than in cntertamment and nahsm or mvolvedjournahsm
•v•cJouraffairs
or any
more of us in religion news than 10 . of.those other thmgs professors are
Washinaton doin~s.
professmg about and editors and
Is it any wonder lhat the number news duectors are meeting about
of us who uy we regularly watch'the Maybe the answer is JUst th•s· Mo~
network evening news shows has local news. More religiOn ·news
dropped by more than 25 percenl in More health news. And, yes, mar~
lbe past three years? That only half of cnme news.
us say we read a newspaper yesterMaylie the answer isn't in semiday? Thai fewer and fewer of us are nars and studies and Ph.D. theses.
readmg ncwsmagazmes?
Maybe editors and news directors
It's fashionable in Journalistic cir- should jusl transfer a few reporters
clcs to blame today's woes on tech- from Washington to city hall, tell
I
I

1,, 1
some sportswriters tO cover rchgJOil, . '3 j
and switch a movie reviewer ,lo the ~·i ~
health beat. Maybe that's the answer •
to dechning readership and falling :~~
VIewership. ,
.
. - •I
Maybe II s as Simple as hstcnmg ,., •
to readcrs an d VIewers mstcad or .·"''" '•
preaching 10 th
o
em.
I
Footnote. Accotdmg to the Pew
j
d
1
stu y, about half the people m Amer- . ,., 1
1ca ber1eve "the government shou ld _,
··" I1
do more to help ri~dy Americ~ns,
:
even .:f II means gomg deeper mto • •' l
debt Among listeners of Rush Lim- -- ~
baugh, the number 1s l'l percent. Dit- . ""'
toh ead s are n' Oih mg''f not_se If'IS h. ·•,'"'
,;"
(Michael Gar_tner, ~d1tor ?f the ·. ;.
Ames (Iowa) Daily Tr1bune, IS for· . . 1
mercditorofTheLouisvilleCouri· ; ,.;;,; 1
er-Joumal and The Des Moines
Register .and former pruklent of
NBC News.)
: '' t
· : f~
Composites, pound for pound the .,
strongGsl or all materials, pave ~.
jumped beyond pricey tennis rackets 1
and golf clubs into aircraft and In issiles.

Paul J. Blosier, 66, fon.ly ofMeip County, died 'I'uesdlly, J~~~~e 4, 1996
residenc:e in Flat Rock. Mich.
.
Born Jtu~e 20, 1929 ill Racine, he w111he son oflhe.late Ivan Blosser and
Roxie Weiner Blosser.
He wu a truck driver for Ptwl W. Wills, deveiMd, from 19S2 unlil his
retirement due 10 ill health in 1986. He was a member of Teamsters Local
299, Detroil, Mich., servin1 u ateward of tire union for many years. ~
He is survived by hiJ wife, Joenne Blosset: five sons, Palll Blosser, Jay
Blosser, John Blosser. Michael Blosser llld Robert Blosser, all of Aat Rock;
two daughters, Lisa Shemrd of Monroe, Mich .. and Lori Bondy of Carleton,
-Mich.; one brother, Charles Fencll Cozart of South Rockwood, Mich.; three
sisters, Mabel Brace of Racine, Wanda Brewer of Kentucky, and Linda Ward
of Portland; llld seven grandchildren and four step-grandchildren.
Services will be II a.m. Friday in the Arthur Bobeean Funeral Home,
26307 E. Huron River, Flat Rock. Burial will follow in the Riverside Cemelery, South Rockwood.
11 his

,,,,,

Clinton 's·choice for Navy
chief ditches corporate job

W.VA.

WASHINGTON (AP) - ,The
man chosen by President Clinton 10
lead the troubled Navy sough! 10
avoid some trouble of his own, optmg IQ nosign a $33,000 corpomle post
ralher lhan face qwslions from senators who musl approve the nominalion.
Adm. Jay Johnson said Wednesday that Pentagon rules allow him to
this date at the Columbus weather serve as d•reclor for an insurance
station was 95 degrees in 1925 while company that deals largely with milthe record low was 39 in 1945. Sun- itary service members. Bul Johnson
set tonight will be at 8:57 p.m. and wanted no glitches to slow his confinnatJOn .
sunrise Friday at 6:03 a.m.
Hours after President Clinton
Weather foreciiSI:
Tonight...Occas1onal showers and - named Johnson as the Navy's ne\V
thunderslonns. Ram possibly heavy top officer, and after a semor senator
at times northwest. Lows in the 60s. questioned the outside work, the 50Friday...Occasional showers and year-old admiral resigned from his
thunderstonns. Highs from the mid corporale position.
Johnson's paid position on the
60s northwest to near 80 south.
board
of directors of USAA, an
Extended forecll!lt:
insurance,
banking and financial serSatunday through Monday...Showvices
firm
based
in San Antonio, has
ers possible each day Highs in the
been reported on the admiral's finan70s. Lows m the 50s
cial diS&lt;:losure forms lor the past five
years. But only under the spotlight of
his promotion to chief of naval operations following the suicide of Adm.
Jeremy Roorda was it noted by the
Senate Armed Serv1ces Committee,
m connection with 11 of the trips, which must approve h1s appointment.
includmg $523,634 for the four trade
"Although my service in a privale
missions.
capacity as a USAA board member
The report concludes a s1x-month was appropriately reported in all
investigation by the IG's office into financial disclosure statements,
O'Leary's overseas travel. She had reviewed by Navy and Department of
requested the internal review after Defense ethics counsellors, and deterqueslions, were raised late last ye~ mined to be fully in compliance with
abo11t her·overseas travel, particular- applicable DoD regulations, I would
ly the trade trips.
not want it to remain an issue or conSince then. Rep. Joe Barton, R- cern for the Armed Services ComTe~as., has held a series.of hearings
mittee," Johnson said. "Therefore, I
in wh1ch he and other GOP lawmak- am resignmg from the USAA board
ers have qucslioned whether the trips and from those of ils lwo affiliate
were of any benefit. Barton could not companies."
he reached Wednesday for comment
In nominating Johnson, Clinlon
on the findings.
said it was a "crucial time" for the
' The IG report said while the trade Navy, which has been hit by a string
trips may have been of some value,
of incidents, includmg Boorda 's sui"the department cannot quantify the
cide
on May 16, the Tailhook scanvalue" in either breaking down bardal,
a rash of F-14 fighter plane
ners for U.S. companies or bringing
~:rashes and crimmal activilies atlhe
business agreements to fruition. It
U.S. Naval Academy.
said there was no basis to conclude
By late afternoon, Johnson's nomthat the trips crealed U.S. JObs.
ination
appeared to have hit a snag.
O'Leary, although acknowledgmg

Chance for rain persists
througtlout the weekend
By The AIIOCiated Preaa
A flood watch was in effect for the
northwestern half of Ohio lomghl
because of predicted rainfall which
the National Weather Service said
could be heavy at times.
And forecasters smd the chance of
showers and thunderstorms would
continue for the entire state through
Friday and posSibly into the weekend.
Temperatures the next few days
Will be unseasonably cool, the NWS
saia. Highs on Friday w•ll be in the
70s.
The record-high temperature for

Energy Department report
finds money wasted O{' trips
WASHINGTON (AP)- Tens of
thousands of dollars were mismanaged in connection with four overseas
trade missions headed by Energy
Secretary Hazel O'Leary, an internal
mvestigation by the Energy Depart. menl concludes.
O'Leary called it a "professional
review" and said in a statemenl, "I
accept responsibility for the ...
accounting and administrative problems" surroundins the 1994-95 tnps
to India. Pakistan, China and South
Africa.
·
While a final report bythe department's inspector general on
O'Leary's 16 overseas lrips, includmg four trade m1ssions, IS nOI expccled to be completed for several weeks,
a draft of the findings was obtained
Wednesday by The Associated Press
The draft concluded thai lhe
O'Leary trade trips were marked by
such poor management and sloppy
record-keeping that thousands of dollars may have been needlessly paid
for recep11ons, air travel, dinners and
even lodgmg for embassy workers
who hved in the ci11es that were visIted.
According to the IG findings,
O'Leary's four trade trips, plus a
dozen other business trips abroad,
cost the government $4.57 million
or that, $3.42 million was spent on
the four trade miSSIOns, each of
wh1ch involved groups of between 59
and 67 people, including government
officials and busmess executives.
The total cost for the trade missions, as descnbed by the IG repoJ1,
was about $600,000 more than the
$2.8 million previously estimated by
t~e department m congressionallestJmony and various documents.
The IG also queslioned the nearly I 5,000 hours of _overtime connected with the lrips, most of it for
security, and an estimated $800,000
m support costs Jogged by embassies

department miscues, reiterated that
the m1ssions helped U.S. businessmen who participated and "advanced
their efforts 10 secure business deals
and bring jobs home 10 Amencan
workers."
Thomas Grumbly, the department's No. 2 offiCial, said in an interview that "the benefits outweighed
the cost" although he said the IG
report "makes il clear (the trade missions) could have been conducted m
a more cosl-effective way."
The IG report deS&lt;:nbed numerous
"internal deficiencies" in how executives and others were selecled to
participale on the lrips and bow
money was spenl.
Among e~amples of spending cit'ed m lbe report:
• In India, a locallelephone compllly received $6,609 lo install eight
lei-phOnes at a hotel where the U.S.
trade delegation was working, and lhe
embassy put in for $4,706 worth of
overtime.

The Daily Sentinel

Stocks

tUSPSliHMl
PubH1hed every afternoon, Mondly dvoqb
Fnday, J.K Coo" Sl , Potperoy, Ohio, by lhe
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Ohio Y1lley Bin ..................32l'.
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'

-·-·-

tock reporta ... the 10:30

=-~~byAIMat

52-·-· .....................................SIOII.n : . ._ _ _iJiit
.. .._
. ,_ _ _ _. .
·.

.

....•.•.
~

'
FAA piecing together
remains tJf fatal ValuJet &lt;~·

Meigs EMS runs

percent fewer passengers m May d1ati ~&lt;.~
a year before. Analysts had predict' · • •
cd worse after the crash and said the
tr~ffic shows the discoun1 ai rline may · '·

••

survive

The plane \ WleCkage, With plCCeS :
no larger than 5 01 6 teet. has come~· ·
m by the truckload to a hangar at ' _
Tam1am1 Airport &gt;OUthwcst of IvJia: ' •'
m1 Ea'h p1ecc Lagged with a num - ' : ·
ber, "J"'d ou l "' Ihe shape olthe Jet.
1

...

Announcements
Plow day planned
B1g Bend Farm Antiques club will •
hold ·a plow day Sunday. 2 p.m ... 10
Portland, 949-2656 for directi ons.•
Bring fam•ly, fncnds. and picmc ,
lunch The cl ub w1ll hold thw regular mectmg Mnndoy. 7:30 p m atthi!'
Me1gs H1 gh L1brary
Support group to meel
Home School Support Group for
parents and child re n at the Pomeroy •
L•brary mcctmg roo m, Tuesday, 10
a.m For more mformat10n call Tarn-·
my Jones, 992-6743

STARTS
TOMORROW

Hospital .news

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
FRI., SAT., SUN.
ROBIN TUNNEY JN

YOUTH
REVIVAL

sanc:o:, ....._..........

-1111!'

remit in ldvuce dlrec:r 10 n. Dilly ._...I
on a ttwee. aix or 12 moadl bMIL Cndt win be

26 -

Recenlly, ·companies claiming to
represent l~c Me1gs County Sheriffs
Departmenl have been calling residents seeking dona11ons, Sheriff
James M. Soulsby reported this
morning.
. The solicitors are appaCenUy seekmg money for substance abuse education and for youth programs, Soulsby explained.
Soulsby noted that tbe sheriffs
department is not doing any solicitation al this time, adding that the only
organizatiOns it endorses are the
]luckeye Stale Sheriffs' AssociatiOn
and the Meigs Counly Drug Abuse
Resistance Education (DARE) Program.

Fedentl Mogul ........................ 18~
0Mrwlt .................................71 'J.
Gooc:tre-" T&amp;R .......................5014
K-m~rt ..............~•.•••••..•••...••••11 \

Sli'IGLB COPY PRICB
Doily ................................................!$C...

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Sheriff's office
not soliciting
funds: Soulsby

Cttv tlolclng ............................23

One MO!IIb .............................................18.10
One y..,, ... ... .. ................ ..... $104.00

.....

COLUMB(Js (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog pnces at selected
buying points Thursday by the U.S.
Departmenl of ·Agnculturc Market
News: ·
Barrows and gtlts: mostly steady;
demand moderate on a light lo moderate movement.
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. 56.00-

Cheinplon Incl .......................18).

a,c.n~er
- ..............
- $2.00
One-..
. .. .................

Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., chairman of the Armed Services Commiltee, said he was concerned about
Johnson 's role as a director of USAA.
"I am going to withhold my opinIon of the norrunation until I have had
the opportumty to review the documentation," Thurmond said. "I have
serious concerns about the DoD pol:
ICY that allow,3 Admiral Johnson and
MIAMI (AP) - Thousands of
other flag officers to be pwd members
pieces
of tw1sted, burned metal he m
of the board of the United Services
an
airport
hangar. la1d out roughly m
Automobile Association ."
Thurmond added that he had no the shape of a ValuJet DC-9.
Investigators don't know how
indication that Johnson had broken
many more p1eccs they Will need to
any rule.
~
Wh1te House aides satd the Navy find out what went wrong on the
had known about his position fer plane that ,nosc-dJVcd m the Everyears and had cleared him of any con- glades on May II. k•lhng all 110 peoflicts. "We were not blinds1ded by ple aboard
"It's hkc punmg together a comthis," one Wh1te House aide said.
plicated
puzzle." Nat10nal TransAnd an Armed Services Commitportation
Safety Board spokesman
tee aide who spoke on condition of
anonymity said that while members Michael Benson sa1d Wednesday.
The hangar now holds 70 percent
have questions, Johnson's nominaof
the
wreckage from Fhght 592, and
tion did not appear to be in 1eopardy.
federal
officials may dec1de by
The armed semces panel w1ll make
its crucial recommendatiOn on John- · week's end to stop recovery efforts
" We would II ke tO get every posson's nommation to the full Senate
sible
piece It remains to be seen how
after holding pubhc hearings.
muc~
we' II be able It&gt;," Benson said
Johnson, a 1968 graduate of the
Meanwhile.
ValuJct A1rhnes
Naval Academy, is one of the fastest
reported
in
Atlanta
that they flew 7.4
rismg stars 10 the Navy. He IS
described by colleagues as a smart,
mnovat!Ve officer. He won w1de
pra1se as commander of the U.S. 2nd
Umts of the Meigs County EmerFleet in the U.S. in1ervent1on in gency Medical Service recorded 13
, Haiti. The Senate easily approved his calls for assiStance Wednesday,
nomination as v1ce chief of naval includmg three transfer calls Units
operalions just three months ago.
respondmg included.
Johnson 1s pa1d $33,000 a year for
MIDDLEPORT
semrig on the USAA board, ;t post
2·11 a.m .. Mill Street. Crystal
that involves attendance at ope annu- " Myers, Holzer Medical Center
al meeiing and five board meetmgs
POMEROY ·
each year. He is p81d $118,145 annu· '
II 25 a.m., State Street, A'usun
ally as a four-star admiral Johnson Philhps, Veterans Mcmonal Hospital:
has served on the board since 1991
9:17p.m., G1lkey R1dge, RobCrt
and has mcluded the compensation Franklin Dickens, VMH,
on required fmancial d•sclosure
I0:44 p m., Peach Fork Road,
reports.
Charlotte Crank, Pleasant Valley
Johnson is not the only active-duty Hosp1tal.
officer on USAA's board. Others are
RACINE
Air Force Maj Gen. Marcclite Har,
7:08p.m., Front Street, Greg Petris, Army MaJ . Gen. Randolph roski, VMH.
House, Army MaJ. Gen. Fred Gordon
RUTLAND
and Army Lt. Gen. Dame I Chnstman.
7 46 am , Dexter Road , Shawna
accordmg to John Cook.
Bare, VMH ,
II: 19 a.m.. Me1gs Mmc 31, Denver Hill, HMC.
SYRACUSE
I O·JRam , Rocksprings Rchabii 57.50, few 55.50 and 58.00; plants JtatiOn Center, Luc•llc Kmg , VMH:
57.00-58.50.
8:18p.m .. motor vehicle accident
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 48.50- on State Route 124. Scooter Fryar,
55.50.
VMH
Sows' under 500 lbs. steady to 50
TUPPERS PLAINS
cents lower: over 500 lbs 50 cents to
9.32 p.m , Tuppers Plams. Eliza1.50 lower
beth Sh1clds. refused treatment.
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 40 0041.50: 500-650 lbs. 41.50-46 00.
Boat'S: 34.00-36.00.
Velerans Memorial
Esumatcd receipts: 36,000.
Wednesday
admisSions - none.
Prices from The Producers
Wednesday
discharges - none.
Livestock Association:
Holzer Medical Center
Cattle . I .00 to 2.00 h1ghcr
Discharges
Jllhe S - Delphw
Slaughter steers. cho1ce 57.00McDamel.
Mandc
Cox, Norcna
63 50: select 52.00-57.00
Montgomery,
Rcgma
Russell , HarSlaughter hc1fcrs: ch01cc 56.00ry Hcndncks, Lindsey Icard.
62.50; select 51.50-56.00
Births - Mr and Mrs Howard
Cows: 1.00 to 3.00 lower, all cows
Myers,
daughter, Hartford, W Va. ,
· 36.00 and down.
Mr.
and
Mrs. T1mothy Potter, son,
Bulls: steady: all bulls 55.50 and
Pomt Pleasant, W.Va., Mr. and Mrs .
down.
Gary
Strauch. daughter, Bidwell
Vcnl calves: h1gher, choice 155.00
(Published
with permission)
and down
Sheep and lambs: ,3 00 to 5 00
COLONY THEATRE
higher, choice wools 115.00- 120.00,
choice clips 119.00- 124.00: feeder
TONIGHT
CHARLIE SHEEN IN
Jambs 95.00 and down, aged sheep
THE ARRIVAL
30.00 and down

Today's livestock report

Ctw'mlrla Shot»······-·•••••••••••• 7n,J.

SUISCRIPTION RA'ID

Subtoriben not detiri.,. ., Pl1 lht

lob .,._ ....••..... ,................1C\

~WIIf118r ••..•.•••..•••......••••••. 41

The Ooil7 Sentinel, Ill Court Sl, - . , ,
Oblo.f$769.

'•

AT,I T .....................................821,/.
Bank Orle ................................37\

SPONSOR·A·DAY SIGNS ON - Vaughan's IGA has made H
poaelble for all senior cltlzene to attend the Meigs County Fair : •
at no coet on Thurlday otfalr week, Aug. 11-17. Vaughan's signed
on to the new progrem, which eliminates gate fees lor anyone
over 65 yeara of age that day. Addalou Lewis, lreasurer of the
•
Meigs County Agriculture. Society, accepts the sponsor fee from
•
0011 Vaughan. Others participating in the sponsor·a·day for
'
eenlora elgnlng _,., from left, Dan Smith, fair board president, ~
Ken Buckley, board member, and Richard Vaughan. Several days
of tha fair will be "sponsor daya,•providing either no admission
or reduced gate fees for fair patrons.
•• •

MI. HERMON U.B.
'

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CHURCH
JUNE~' 8, 9
FRI., SIT., $UII.
. 7:00 IIIGIILY

AU Meigl Co. Youth
Are Invited
•

THE CRAFT

R

AND
CHARUE SHEEN
IN

.

.

PG1:1
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARnNG FRIDAY
PAUL HOGAN IN

FLIPPER

PG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446-0923

J IM ("_AftRt:Y ln

,.{'A RL~;

GJ PT CEitTJPICATES

GU W"

~VAILABLEt

A memomilshould tell a
story to future
generations.

...
•
•

-.
..
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Let us help you
tell your story
to your great

&amp;P.,,...eat;llt~

....,

THE ARRIVAL PG-13

Closeout Special&amp;
AI Fltds Reg. $6.50 liOW $5 •
AI H•gllalasllets
Reg. $5.75 &amp; $8.75

NOW $5.00
4• 0. I II Reg. $1
,lfOW soc
Slalh&amp;'hts!fttff
Open DeilY 9-5, Cloled Sundly

. •••••uGne•••.. ·
·~ Oli.

IIN77I

...
POMEROY
Near Po(ileroy·MIIon Bridge

992·2588
VINTON
G.HII County Dtaplly Yard
1$5 Mlln St.

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Sports

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In the Division II state tourney,

-· ~

Meigs .to face
Tallmage Friday
IJ .DAVE HARRIS

lentlnel Cornspondent

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For the first time i~ 20 years (sec
related story) the Meigs Marauders
have advanced to the SU!te baseball
finals. The Marauders will meet
· Tallmadge this Friday in the Division
II semifinals at Thunnan Munson
Stadium at 3:00.
The winners will advance to the
championship game on Saturday
afternoon at 3 p.m. against the winners of Friday's first game between
Avon Lake (16-7) and Hamilton
Badin (20.1 0)
Meigs is 17-8 on the season,
which is the best record in the
Khools history, Tallmadge is 17-5.
This is the seventh time in history
that a Meigs County team ha.s
advanced to the stale final s. In 1933,
1934 and 1935, Pomeroy advanced
to the tournament with a runner-up
finish in 1933. Middleport advanced
the the tournament in 1930, 1931,
1950 and 1957. The Yellow Jackets
were runners-up in 1950 and won the
state championship in 1957.
Other Marauder varsity teams
that have advanced to the state tournaments were coach Rita Slavin's
1980 Marauder softball team and
coaeh John Krawsczyn 's 1992 golf
team. Several individuals have

5.

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By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)
The
brawny San Francisco Giants have
finally broken out or their offensive
slump by going small.
The National League's secondbest home run team scored a seasonhigh 15 runs Wednesday night without hitting even one ball over the
waiL The Giants' 15-4 victory over
the Cincinnati Reds was a good
example of how a lot of little strokes
are better than one grand stroke.
"Everybody likes to see home
runs," manager Dusty Baker said.
" When you don't have home runs,
you have· to do like San Diego has
done most of the year - get a lot of
hits .
" It doesn't matter )low you do it,
it just matters how you get it done. "
They got it done Friday by piling
up a season-hig~ 17 hits: 12 singles,
four doubles and a triple . Matt
Williams and Marvin . Benard drove
in four runs apiece as the Giants
scored in each .of the first seven
innings.
Add three early Cincinnati errors
and the makings were there for one
of those . s lump-ending outbursts.
Every starter except Steve Scarso ne
had at least one hit. Even starter
Mark Gardner (7-1) had a basesloaded single.
.
"Usually when you aren't scoring
a lot of runs, a game like this hapns here everyone breaks Out "
pe w
•
Will~ms said.
The Giants arrived in Cincinnati
in ar. offensive sluJllp, managing just
17 runs during a nine-game span that
ended last Saturday. They have ·
scored 22 runs while taking two o f
three from the reeling Reds.
" We haven 't had this many hits in
a long time, " Baker said. " In the last
week, outside of a couple of games,
you'd look up and we' d have three
or fcur hits the whole. game. Tonight.
a couple times we had three or four
hits in o ne inning and we batted
a[ound in one inning. We hadn ' t
done that in like a month."
: Ttiey did it all - except hit a
homer- even though the Reds had
tl(eir gond-luck charm on the bench
again.
, Slugger the stuffed gorilla, a gift
f rom
· owner M arge Schott , was next
tQ the water cooler again. On Tuesday night, the gorilla in a Reds cap
made its debut and the team won .
This time, 'it was the team's most
· lopsided loSs of the season.
: "He had nothing to do with it,"
infielder Lenny Harris said. " He was
j~tsittingthere. We'rejusttryingto

advanced over the years to the state
in track, cross country and wrestling.
This is Tallmadse's third trip to
the big dance with the last trip in
1966, when it was a runner-up.
Meigs advanced to the tournament coming off a 6-5 victory over
Warsaw River View last Saturday at
Beavers Field in Lancaster. Meigs
held a 5-1 lead heading into the bOltom of the seventh but Ban Barringer
hit a grand slam to tie the game at 5But in the bottom of the seventh
Gary Stanley walked with one out.
Rick Hoover then launched a rocket into left-center for a double , scoring Stanley all the way from first
base with the winning run.
Meigs coach Scott Gheen will go
with junior Scott George on the
mound. George has been outstanding
this season for the maroon and gold .
He has an 11-2 record with five of
those wins · coming ·on the tournament trail, including picking up the
win in both of last weeks games.
In the tournament, George has .
pitched a no hit'ter, two four hitters
and a one hitter last Friday. He came
into Saturday's game with one out in
the seventh and the bases loaded.
Despite giving up the game-tyin g
(See MEIGS on Page 5)

·6 AIRPORT

AKRON CANTON

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271, 10

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11arlelgt~

11101

seemed unlikely to be in the running
for the crown. The Marauders finished the regular season with a 8- 11
record and played all but the first
seven games without star o utfielder
Mike Magnotta who suffered a season end injury in an outfield collision. The Marauders fini shed the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
season in sixth place.
But the Marauders put it together along the tournament trail behind
good team play and the strong right
arm of senior fireballer Jeff McKinney.
In the Marauders' first game, the
maroon and gold drew the always
tough Ironton Tigers. The two teams

split the two games in the regular
season, but in the scctionals, the
Marauders jumped out to a 3-0 lead
and rolled to a 6-2 win over the
Tigcrs.McKinney pitched a four-h.ittcr in picking up the win, with 10
strike outs and six walks .
Next in line was archrival Gallia
Academy. Like the Tigers , the Blue
be viis and Meigs split their two r~g · ular season games. Meigs trailed in
the contest 2-1 in the fourth inning
and erupted for five runs in the
inning en route for a 8-5 win and the
secti onal crown.
McKinney pitched a four hitter,
struck out four and walked one. :
McKinney helped . himse lf with a

double and a single. Mick Davenpon.
and Pat Souls by added two hit• each.
Charlie Marshall scored the win ning run in the district game in the
bottom of the seventh inning for a 32 win. Marshall stroked a line drive
to center field and after a long run the
center fielder managed to knock the
ball down. Marshall never stopped
running as the right fielder picked up'
the ball and made a had throw to the
relay man. Trying to .throw Marshan
out at third the relay man made a bad
throw and over the fence arid out of
the ball park giving Meigs the win.
Marshall collected three hits, two
singles and a double and scored alt
(See 1976 on Page 5)

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~ DRESSLER RD.

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By DAVE HARRIS
As the 1996 edition of.the Meigs
Marauders continue their dream for
the Division II Ohio high school
baseball c hampi onship, another
Meigs baseball team caiJle all so
close to winning the state crown 20
years ago.
The 1976 Mar~uders, under firstyear head coach Dale Harrison,

TO ot.KRON

1

enport, Brian Hamilton, Jeff McKinney, Dick Ow.en, Pay Willford, Jeff : .
Miller, Ricky George and Stan Starcher. Not pictured ware pl!lyare .
Tim Ebersbl!ch, Mike Magnotta and Homer SmHh, haad coach Dale :
Harrison and assistant coach John Arnott (Picture courtesy of Pat ·
Soulsby)

Marauders recall 1976 club's exploits

OHIO TURNPIKE

0

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1976 STATE SEMI·FINALIST- The 1976 Meigs baseball team lost
a 1-0 game to eventual state champion Elida in the Class AA semi·
final&amp;. In front are (L·R) Kenny Mankin, Dale Browning, Jim Howard,
Pat Soulsby, Carl Carmlchaal, Crenson Pratt, Steve Bachner and
Greg Smith. Standing are Charlie Marahail, Kenny Wyatt, Mlck Dav·

~

..LLIANCE

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Mon.· Thurs. 9to 5; Frt Blo 6; Sat. 9 to 4
St. Rt. 71n Tuppera Plains acroas .street from Farmers Bank

EVERHARD AD.

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STARTING AT

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By RONALD BLUM

I

PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Marge
Schott has one week to either give up
day' to-day operation of the Cincinnati Reds or face a suspension of
more than one year.
The 10-man executive council,
whiCh runs bas~ball in place of a
commissioner, didn ' t announce any
action against Schott after Wednesddy!s 5 1/2-hour meeting, but acting
cQtiJmissioner Bud Selig - who is
. retll:ent to. criticize any owner spoke out strongly against her.
"The executive council co ndemns in the strongest possihle
tcrins the recent comments attributed ·
to -Mrs. Schott," Selig said.
Selig said the council will make
a 4C(;ision.ijbout Schott no later than
next Wednesday. He declined to disdose what Schott said to the council' and what was. said to her.
'A person familiar with the meetins said Schott defended her right to
speak as she pleased and said she
didn't deserve punishment. After
Scl)ott met with the council for
about an hour,' she was asked to wait
in i nearby room .
the council then rleliberated for
an hour, Schott returned and Selig
read her the same statement he later
galie reporters, the source said.
Baseball's lawyers will contact
Scllott's lawyers Thursday to make
SUIJ they understand she will be suspended unless sl)e gives up day-toda)Z control by next Wednesday, a
baseball source said.
SeliB confinned rhe deadline was
the.council's, not Schott's. ·
!.'This is the national pastime. ~e
the responsibility or Jeade~­
lhie " said National League president' Len Coleman, who joined Selis

ha"'

=&lt;See SCHott on J&gt;aae 5)

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In The

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. ~imtt '* - ~entmt
~ntibl\1
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In other NL action,

Padres top Cards;
Braves beat Mets
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
A lready mired in a rare slump, he
was coming off one of his worst atbats of the season. His bruised right
heel was hurting. and he was facing
a pitcher known to be tough on leftlCS.

StilL with only one out left and
the game on the line, is there any hitter who ' d be better at the plate than
To•ly Gwynn?
Gwyun picked the perfect time to
hit hi s first home run of the year,
connecting for a three-run drive
.with two outs in the bottom of the
ninth inning that sent the San Diego
Padres past St. Louis 6-4 Wednesday
night.
Gwynn , the six-time NL batting
champion , capped a four-nin . rally
with his first home run since la·st
Aug . 22, a span of 327 at-bats . He
was in a 7-for-38 skid, having
· k Honground ed back to pitcher Rtc
eycutt in a key spot' in the eighth,
before homehng off Tony Fossas.
" To tell you the truth, I hadn't
been swinging worth a darn in the
last two weeks," Gwynn said. "To
ground out 10 Honeycutt in that situation-was probably the low point of
my rut. 1 was just glad to be able to

come back and contribute. "
Gwynn 's shot stopped San
Diego's longest losing streak of the
season at three games and ended the
Cardinals' six-game winning string .
It also ended a day in baschall that
began with Sammy Sosa hitting
three home run s for Chicago in a 96 win over Philadelphia.
.
Gwynn has been having trouble
with his heel , which has left him
wearing a c ushioned soft shoe for
comfort instead of regular cleats. But
for his last two at-bats, he went back
to the cleats.
"C leats irritate the heck out of
me. I just said l was going back to
· cleats when I batted ," he said .
·
Gwynn hit an 0-1 pitch from Fossas (0-4) over the right-field waiL
Fossas said the last home run he'd
allowed to a lcft-handcr washy Ken
Griffey Jr. in ·1994.
"I made a perfect (lirst) pitch to
Gwynn," Fossas said . " But I came
back with a terrible pitch . That 's the .
way my season has been going."
In other NL games, Atlanta beat
New York 8-6, Houston downed
Colorado ·4-1, Pittsburgh beat Los
Angeles 7-3 and Montreal defeated
Florida 2- I.

What was happening was runslots and lots of runs - as scoreboards were jumping in the American League on Wednesday night.
The Indians and Mariners combined for I 0 runs off seven pitchers
-on seven waiks , six singles and n hit
batsman - all in the seventh inning,
which took 61 minutes to play.
" It wasn't your typical inning,"
Indians manager Mike Hargrove
said in an understatement.
·
"Yeah, it was a long inning," said
Piniella, whose Mariners ended up
on the short end of a 13-5 score.
" One lo ng, ugly inning. A.six-pack
inning, one that I don't want to talk
any more about."
They weren' l alone.
Minnesota clobbered California ·
14-3 .
"Mark Langston was at 86 pitches in three-plus innings, so he was
grinding it out, " Angels manager
Marcel Lachemann said. "The next
thing yoo know the inning's over and
it's 13-2, and you just can't do that"
. Toronto defeated the New York
Yankees 12-7.
"Clearly today the hitters were
the stars of the game," said Pat Hcntgcn (6-4), the Blue Jays' starter who
won the game despite allowing live
runs on seven hits and three walks in
six innings.
In other AL games, Chicago outlasted Boston 8-6 in 12 innings, Bal- .
timore downed Detroit 6-4, Milwaukee dcl"eatcd Texas 6-4 and
Kansas City stopped Oakland 5-2.
Indians 13, Marine"' 5
Cleveland got the better of the big
inning, outscoring the visiting
Mariners 7-3 to break a 3-3 tic, ·
"They kept bringing in pitcher
after. pitcher and somebody had to
pay, " · Cleveland's Omar V.izqucl
said. "We . were very patient and
looked for our pitch, then got aggres-

sive."
Alhert Belle hit his major lca~uc ­
lcading 23rd home run and drew . a
bases-loaded walk to force home the
go-ahead run. The homer w:t' Belle's
217th, pa..sing Hal Trosky for second

their last seven.

_,,:"" '

California 's Tim Salmon hit il- ~ •
solo homer, the third straight game:&gt;~
he has hit one out.
.:••:
Scott Aldred (1-4) won hi' lir~ - '
start since Minnesota claimed hirll•' 'l
off waivers fr\lm Detroit last week ,-~J
while Langston (3-2) took the loS&gt;': "' !
"You're seei ng what we're capa.a'u '
ble of, I guess ," Knohlauch sa id of•J,
the up and down season. "St~m~
days it's great. other days it's terri ~ ••~
blc, some days it's mediocre . You 'v@'&lt;: '
seen it all . The good, the bad and th'l!'·• i
·~ ~ · ;

ugly ..,

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Blue Jays 12, Yankees 7
- ··
·In New York, &amp;I Sprague's three- :·
run homer capped a four-run sixt h :
inning and Alex Gonzalez added a •
two-run shot as Toronto ovcrpow - )
crcd the Yankees and halted its 13- j·
game losing streak against New •
York .
: :
Key (2 -6) gave up eight runs oh :
nine hits, while Pat Hentgen (6-4) l
got the win.
•
White SoK 8, Red Sox 6
In Boston , a sacri fice ily by · t
Frank Thomas snapped a 12th- . ~

i

inning tic ant.llctl Chic ago to its sixth _:
straight victory. It was C hicago's
15th victory in 17 games .
Thomas, with his 17th. and Rohin
Ventura homered for Chicago, while
Tim Nachring hit two hmncrs and
Reggie JcfiCrsnn ami JtlSC . Canscc&lt;&gt;
nne cad for the Red Sm .
·
. Brian . Keyser ( 1-0) pitched two
innings for the win .
(Su NL on Page 6)

0

•
:
C

:

•••

-.

- I

~

&lt;continued from Page 4)

~

spot in Canton . They won the game
in the sevent h inning on a two-run
triple by sop homore catc her Scott
Brownlec .
. •
Brain Dumler is the ace of the
staff with a 6-1 record with a 1.64
ERA. Jo ining him ror the mound
duties is Matt V~umit who owns a 50 record with a 3.65 ERA. .
Vrumit also swings·a big bat with
a .508 avcn1gc and nine home runs ,
he is joined by Mike Anderson who
owns a .403 average and live home
runs. Tallmadge is coached by first
year head coach Dan Seeker.
"We must haye good pitching perfo rmanccs," Marauder coach Scott

t

J

Scoreboard
( Wakclid~ + .~ ). 7 :05p . m .

Baseball

New Yurk IMcnduza 1- 1)
( W II Iinm s0-4).7:05 p.m.

'

·

'

£a~1rrn

, Iwn

.

' Nl!'w York .

Di"lsion

ll' L

I'J:L

..12

..'li9J

22

liJI

B•hinnoce .. " ......... JI 2.\ ..174
• r,)f'l.lnt{l
.. 26 -' 1 ....~()
1 Bt,.~lon ............ 22 .l 4 ..'\9.1

I
7'·:
II

; J:ktmil...

21

......... IJ
C~ntral

,

45

.224

Dl"l!!ioo ·

• CLEVELAND .... ... .17 19

.661

• Chicn~n

~

20

.MJ

. ' Minnesotn .......... .... 2H

28

.500

• Kansas City .......... 26

~J

A41

•¥

..

....

.. ..

: Milwaukec ............. 26 ~ •.464
,

.

Wutem Dlvillkm

•T.:x;ts :.. ........ ......... JS 23
•scrmlc: .................. JO 2tl
"'Culifnmi:a ........... 27 .10

.603

:oakL• nLI ........ ....... 26

.456

I

. ~J6

:u

Milwaulu.-e 6, Te~tru&gt; 4
Chil::atto !( Do~ u n 6 ( 12)

. CLEVELA:ND IJ. Scaulc :'i
• Toron1o 12, New York: 7
Ballimon: 6. Del~.' 4

MinneiOI:a 14, California-'
K:m~:u Cii.X ~- 0:1~land

2

Tonl1ht'sgames

' Chh:·agn (Mu~rnnc 1- l) nl Boston (Es)tclmnn 0..2). 7:05 (l.m.
• Seaule (We-lls .... I) at CLEVElAND .

.,

~ Manintz 1'·21. 7:05p.m.
~

Toronto

(~ormill

2-5) :ll New York

'(Penine K·J). 7 :.\~ p.m.
~

Detroit (Li ra 3·4) nl Bnllimnre

')Haynes :'·:'I), 7:3:'1 p.m.

'

Frlday'spmes

1

• J ·Milw~k~c: (Miranda :\·3) n1 Boa1on

I

"

ChiL:ngo {f('fnandcz ~ -.~) :11 Oal unwrc
{Eri.·kmn .1 - •l).7 · J ~ Jl m
OaklantJ (Chou in;trJ 0-2 ) :11 Mlmi.:M•! ;t
{R;uJkt 4- ~ 1- H :O~ Jl.lll
Scanh: !W I&gt;h:otr 4·51 :u K :ms a~ C11y
( lldch~r fl -il. M :O~ p.m.
Toro111o (Jantcn J- I).OJ! Tcx:• ~ (Pavlik
7- I), tU:'i p.m.

NL standings
E11s1rrn Di,· i~lon

Iwn

ll' L

f&lt;L

,\thlflllL .............. . JK

19

Mootn::~l.. .............. l)

25 .569
29 .!100

Florida ................ ... 29
Phil3dtlpb it~ .... ....... 2H

New Yorl: ...... ........ 24

.474

Wednesday's seores

,

.u l&gt;l!uoil

Ca lif~&gt;rn ia (Bosk i ~· 7- 1) ,., CL EVELAND (McDowe ll .~-4). 7:05pm .

· AL standings

~"'

.

inning."

place on
career list./.
Cleveland'sAiex Rodri3ueZ.
reached base five times, hit his I
homer, a two-run shot, in the ejJh .
Bob Milacki ( 1-3) took the loss,
while Eric Plunk (2-0) got the win.
Cleveland starter Charles Nadfi
failed in his bid to become the fi~"i
10-aamc winner in the AL.
'
"I'm not happy," Nagy said'.•'
"They say if you stay around lont"i
enough, you can win, but I couiiJO':
n tt. 11
Jl !.-.~'
Twins 14; Angels 3
• l•
In
Minneapoli s,
Chuck"' ·
Knoblauch 's grand slam was the blg-_
blow in the Twins' nine -run luurtfl•1
inning as Minnesota swe pt the thrile'Jt.
game series.
..1 ·•
Paul Molitor homered for the see~ i.
and straight game and drove tft· ~
three runs for Minnesota, which r:fn
its season-best winning streak tulivt! '..;
·g ames. The Twins have won si .~ of~

, ]l .,.!,;

Tele"iston
Area _.
·nd
Listings a . ~ ·tl
· · It's,...,
C'eatures..
&amp;"
•
wee....
FreeTbi.S .· ·
· tnThe.l
.•
....-·.......
.
'ibttt~ ,. ifenttnt
.- ..----··-...::----..........
-:::-- ..-··
~unball

In New York, Jimmy Key blamed
a couple of bad pitches.
In Minneapolis, Ron Coomer said
things snowballed.
In Cleveland, the Mariners and
ln.dians played what Seattle manager Lou Piniella called "a six-pack

BENARD SCORES- San Franclsco'a Marvin Benard slldas Into
the plate In front of Cincinnati catcher Eddie Taubensee as
Taubensee drops the ball between his legs In the first inning of
Wednesday night's National League game in Cincinnati, where tha
Giants won 15· 4. (AP)

r

Clevel~nd's

By BOB GREENE
AP Sport8 Wwllw

Schott... _

. . ' MissYour n
Don 't
TV- Times••.•
.
·
n
ol
EdlttO .
Every week
.

Loog inning helps ~Tribe top M-arinersn'

Gheen said . "We have to hold down
three runs. McKinney gave up four a :i;d pitch.
our errors and play good defense and
singles. fanned eight and walked
Despite the fact that McKinney
put the bat on the ball in tough situonly two.
.
pitched the one hitter against WchrL~
ations, if we do that we will be all
The next stop for Meigs on the the day heforc it didn't seemed to
right. ,
tournament trail was Whetstone faze the senior. McKinney went th10-~
Thunnan Munson Stadium is the
High School with Columbus Wehrle distance on a five hitter, fanni~t:::;
home of the Cleveland Indians Class
as the opponent. McKinney !ired a three and walking none.
AA farm team . The stadium is locat- · one-hitter and struck o~t 10 as the
In the state semi-finals, t!:!'}1
cd two miles. south or dow ntown
Maral!dcrs ended We hrle's season Marauders drew Elida o ut of the'
Canton right ne•t to 1-77 , Directions
with a 23 - 11 mark .
Lima area ._ Th~ game was an ol~; ;
to the stadium from the south take
Meigs roughed up Wehrle starter , fash10ned pnchmg due l between E~i• ' •
Exit I 03 at Cleveland Ave . and
Paul Dot son who for the entire sea- da's Rick Rumer 'and McKinocy ...
Route 800. Turn right at the light , get
son held the best earned run average
McKinney fired a one-hitter, allow: .:
into the left hand lane, at light turn
in Franklin County. The Marauders
ing a fifth inning lfiple to Jim Van-·
left on to MilL At stop sign, turn left ·
pounded out eight hits and jumped demark. Vandemark later scored dtfit
the stadium is 200 yards on·the left .
out to a 3-0 third inning lead. Meigs Tim Purdy 's sacrifice lly.
' ·•
added a pair of runs in thcfourth and
Not only was 11 the run the onl,Y.·.
three more in the sixth en route to till: one in the game, Vandemark's trip~!·
was the only hit of the game by
_J!(C~o~ntt~·nu!!::e:!!.d.!!fro:::m::.:.:Pa~ge:..4.;.:.l_ _ _ _ _- ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 8-0 win .
In the finals , Martins Ferry held either team. McKinney, in firing the •
" We're going to get back to
ccrncd hy this si tuati on." Selig said.
at :a news conference after the meet: did not speak with reporters and leli
a 1-0 lead heading into the top·ofthc one-hitter, struck out 10 and walkc.r'\
" This is not something we just put
ing. "Clearly, ;~sa sport, we have to through the rear exit of the Four Sea- everybody June 12," she said. "They
seventh inning . Jim Howard opened only one. Rick Rumer fired the no~
ofT. We' re on a spccilic course."
have sorne big problems they 're tryc!lndcmn ethnic intolerance. Any - sons HoteL
the seve nth with a single , Steve hitter, striking out six and walking' : ·
Later
Wednesday
in
Cincinnati,
In February 1993. the council susing to solve right now, so we leli and
thing that goes against that grain
Bachner sacrificed Howard ·to sec- one.
·
• •
pended Schott for one year and lined
Schou told WCPO-TV that "we had came back homc ·again."
can't be condoned ."
ond and was safe at first on the play
Elida wcni on the next day u/'-~
her $25,000 for bringing "disrepute 'on an error. Greg Smith then singled defeat Orrville for the 1976 Cia~;•~
Selig said he hasn't decided -if the
; Schou, accompanied by lawyer a very good meeting, very producnod embarrassment" to baschall with
Robert Martin and Reds controller tive meeting explaining to them council will meet again before makin Howard with the tying run. Bach-. AA title. But one thing is for cci1ai
her
repeated usc of racial and ethnic
91 1'•
John Allen, met with the council sev- what all of this meant and what I felt ing its decision next week .
ncr then scored the winning run on the boys wearing the maroon anct'
slurs.
" It is obvious we nrc dcoply cone.;.l times throughout the day. She and so forth and so on ."
gold made Meigs County· proud. '' ·' ''

gtand slam, he pi cked up the win in will be behind the plate , Cleland batrelief'. He has given up only tbree ted .274 with two home run s.
earned runs in his 29 tournament
If the Marauders win, Stanley (2it~ntngs . ·
,
4) wi II toe the rubb~r Saturday.
Around the inlield the Marauders Stanley, who pitched well in the
will have junior Rick Hoover (.373) game against River View last Saturat first base. At second will be day, seems to he coming around
junior Brad Whitlatch (.295) with fr9m a serious arm injury. When
Chris ·Roush at third base (.419) . Stanley pitches, Co llin Roush wi ll
Shortstop Gary Stanley, a qJ-MVP in play shvnstop and George moves out
.the TVC this season, is batting ·.365 to center field .
Rounding out the ros ter for the
and led tne team with three home
:maroon and gold is Ca leb. Shuler,
runs.
In the outfield, it will be Brent Matt Atilt , Chad Hanson and Jason
Hanson (.277) in left; Robert Qualls Mull en.
The Blue Devi ls defeated
in center (.143) and in right will be
Chad Burton (.282) . Cass Cleland Youngstown Chaney 5-4 to earn a

DRIVE A LITTLE, SAVE A LOT! 667-7388

Schott
must give
up control
of Reds
or face
suspension

gel some life around here ."
The Reds made three errors in the
first lhRe innings and were out of the
game after the Giants' five-run fifth .
They got 13 hits off Gardner in seven innings, but it hardly mattered .
"That was tough," manager Ray
Knight said. "It was a hard night. It
started out ugly and gol uglier and
became a relentless onslaught of
ugliness ."
Cincinnati has the second-highest
payroll iri the National League and
its worst record al21'31 .
Schon arrived and left through a
different entrance and didnot appear
in public. She was in Philadelphia
during the afternoon for que stioning
by baseball 's executive council,
which is considering a suspension.
The game WQuldn ' t have made
her feel any beuer.
Kevin Jarvis (0- 1·), called up
before the game from Triple-A Jndianapolis, set the tone by throwing
away Benard's comebacker to open
the ganie . Left fielder Eric Owens
then dropped Barry Bonds' lly ball
for a run-scoring error, and William s
had the first of his three run-scoring
singles.
"I have no idea what happened ."
Jarvis said of his throwing error.
"I've never done that before in my
life. That's prel!y much typical of the
way the night went "
Aftor sitting out Sunday for the
first time tht's se· ason because of a
sore left wrist. Williams has gone 7for-14 with eight RBi s in three
games.
" I feel better phy s ica ll y,"
Williams said. "Sometimes you need
.
I
a day (off) . Somcumes it he ps you
out a little bit."
Leading 6-2, the Giants put the
game away by sending II bauers to
the plate for five runs in the fifth .
Gardner 's bases-loaded s ingl e
knocked in thi: first run, Benard doubled hom e two more and Williams '
hases -loaded single made it 11 -2.
Gardner cruised behind the big
lead·. He trai ls, only Athinta's John
Smeltz (Il-l) for best winning perccntagc in the NL
Notes : Benard's four RBJs were
a career high . He extended his hitting
streak to a career-hi gh eight games .
... The a· 'tants arc 4-5 on their ro:id
trip, which ends with a game today
at Riverfront Stadium. 'The Giants
have not had a losing road trip thts
seaso n.... San Francisco has scored
30 runs in the last four games, ...
Cincinnati's Jeff Branson tied his
career high with three hits. He came
.i nto the. game in an 0-for- 18 slump.

.A

In theAL,

~~------~--------~-------------------------- 1976 Maraud~rS
~~;~~···----~(~C~o~nt~in~u~ed~lr~on~J~P~ag~e~4~)------------------~------------------------~~~--~~~---

5269 95

Visa • Mastercard • Discover accpeted. On Spot Financing • Approved Cred~
Family Owned and Operated- Your Pe.Sonal Satisfaction Is' Our #1 Concern

NEW PHILAOELPtiA

The Dally
. Sentinel• P9 \

Giants notch 15-4
victory over Reds

Page4

,

Pomeroy • Mlddlepott, Ohio

I

The Daily Sentinel
-·

Thurwday, June 11, 1996

29
JJ

lilt

.667

.491

CINCINNATI IPortu j!;l l 1-4). 12· \5 p m
Culvrado ( R ill 6-·0 at Huu ~ tun

1Drubck 2-4). S:05 r1.1n .
P rtt~bu r'h

{W:t@.lltf 4-~) lll lu s 1\rtgl'·

lo:s (R. Marlilk· t 4-0), I 0 :0~ p rn.

Friday's games
Monlrc:aiiFauero 4-:i) 011 Chil:ngn
(CJsllllo 1·7).J :20(Mll.

Florida (Lc:j1er 7-4) at New York. (H;unis~:h 4-J). 1:40 p.m.
Philaddphiu (Crawfol\l 0-01 m Hous tnfl (Reynolds V \J. 8 :0.~ p.m.
At'ianta (MadduJI 5-ol ) al CuloraJn
(frCcm :m J-J) , 9 :0~ p.m.
CINCINN ATI tSmil t:y 1 !'1 1 ut L11~
An~dcs (Candw/11 J.,';;J, 10·05 p.m
Piusburgh (Smith J- J) 011 Sun Di ego
(Bergm:m J-;'i), 10:0!1 p.m.
St . Louis cAndy Benes 2-71 :u Sun
FranciSco (Leiter -~-51. 10:0~ p.m.

Basketball

.4'2 1

Ctntral Division
HQU~Ion

................ 29 JO

.492

SL l..ouis ............... 28

JO

.41U

Chit.:ago ................. 25

H

.4.11

Piusbur(l.h ........ ,..... ZS
CINCINNATI.. ... :.ll

H All
J I .404

. NBA Finals

-.

Wednesday's score
Cttkago 107, Se01Uic JO:
1

lt,•;II.Js

scr ic ~

C h h::t~ n

1-0

Friday 's ~arne
Scuulc ul Chi cago, 9 J•.m. tNBCJ

Sunday's game
Chkugu ul Scullk, 7:JO p.mlNB C I

Cl£VEJ...ANJ) INL&gt;IANS. Sir,ncd OF
Gary RfK.Iri!Ut.'Z. RHP l\lbcr1 Gam~ . at td
LH~

Mike Spci ~d .
KANSAS CrrY ROYAL'i · Si.~,..._.._1 C
h.'rcmy Hill . 01-' Rmndon Bcr~ c r allll SS

-~09

Los Angelrl ........... :\0 29 .6()6 •
Colomdo .... ............~ 29 .478

Sitttll"C.. WR l'hns J)._JI.'ri n~
NI ~ Yt'
ENGLAND 11 /\TIHOTS .
Signed S L1wycr Mlll "y h• a lnur·ycar

Baseball
American I.UKUI'
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Sent RHP
An:hie Corbin to Roclle~ ler of Ihe lmernational Lt:ague.
BOSTON RED SOX : S1gnell INI;
kllfrye .
·

TORONTO HLUE JAY S: W;tlvc..J

If

'r l'

,,

·~;

..

'•l

t•

~~

. ......

PHll.i\I)ELI,H IA EAGI.[S . SIJ.!IICI.I "I I • :.•
S Barry W1lhurn 111 a onc ·)'•'m .:Cmlr:.1c1.
Rdcascd S llill M•Mll j!ntncry
'"
· · PI'ITSHURGH STI : t~.ER S ll.xtcn..J - , 1!
-~-d II~ cnnl r.M:t ur on Jun Miller lllr lh rL'C

•

NatiunwliAIIKUC'
CINCINNAT I RI: OS · Rcc:tll cd I'

r-;::::;:::::::::::~===========~·..~:-··

}' ~

GOOD LUCK

CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Ac1i":ned
INF Norbeno t.bnin from the 60--tki) diliablcd lisl. Tnnsferrcd RHP J11~on Here
from lhe l ."·d.t~y 1~ lhe 60·day disubled
lis•

TO THE

MEIGS
UDER

6
6

8

Wednesilay 's scores
Chicago 9. Phlllldelphio6
Mo r~CJta l 2. Anridll I
San Frnn~;isco l:t CINCINNATI4
I\!IAnUl8, New York 6
Houston 4. Cok&gt;t'ado I
Pinsbur&amp;h 7, Los AnJeles 3
San Die&amp;o 6, St. !ftns 4

· Tonlchr's games
Snn Frandtco (Fernandez 3· 4) nt

•

cunlr:ll:t.

LHP Fmnl:. VIUia 1'111 11'11.· IIUI')){)SC uf gtY·
i n ~ him his unc4J•diti ullul n:k;asc.
I

ul Ihe

NYIKmalt"ooch.aiiiAIIKUt

flH-•Ia~ Ji~thlc..J h ~l

Transactions

lndwnH po lt ~

UUI·l-'1\1.0 IU,I L~ · Si~n~'tl WK Ku~ .
iit:ll (u)'ll.·land ;md t&lt;ll ·run TuMJak lo i•nc·
~c:tr l'IMltra.:h
.
J hCKSON VILLE
J AGUA RS :

F.ric St.'\."S.
SEI\Tfl.J : MhRINERS : l'urd~:1 s..: t.l
the conl ra~,; l ol' RHI' h-1:!11 W"~tlt.'r Irum
Ta..:unm nl lhc PC'L. Oput•ncll ltHI 1 Scull
l&gt;&lt;tvison tn T:u.;unm ttcca llct.J OF 1\lcJ.
U1:.Z lmm Tm:nm.a anti pl:tn'1l him om lhc

Western Division
San Oiego ............... ;\6 23 .610

S:.n Fmncisco ........ l9 28

Kev in J:.rvi.s from

1\nterk;tn 1\ .'i'i!'Ctlllum . ()JIIInn.....t ,\ll f:d .
u:mJ.n l'cro tu lnah .. n;tpt•ll~

.·:

BASEBALL TEAM IN
STATE COMPETITION
•

FROM THE ALEDNDER SPARTAN
AND StiFF·

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By IIIKI NADI!L

hand.SuperSonics 107-90 loss
I

.

OUCAGO (AP)-As usual, the

.

-

boost from Kultoc, Harper and Lonpey. Kulcoc scored 18 points inc:ludinJ 12 in the fOIII'Ih ·quuter.
when Cbicaao outs&lt;:ored Seattle 28·
13. n.per scored IS and held Pay101110_6-of-17 shooting. Lon1ley had
12 of his 14 points in the first half.
Shlwn Kemp scored 32,points for
the Sonic•. But he also committed
·seven turnovers before fouling out
3
but now we

Chieqo Bulls did what they had to
do exactly when they had to do it. As
usual, lheir opponent .left the game
with hope, howev.er mis&amp;l!ided tlw
might be.
Chicago got just enough production from Michael Jordan, Scotlie
Pippen and Dennis Rodman, 11ot
major contributions from role players Toni Kultoc, Ron Harper and Luc
Longley and got away with playing havetorealizethatwehavetoplay
at less than its best in taking the to win instead of trying just to stay
(close)," Seattle's Sam Perkins said.
opener of the NBA Finals.
"The first ·game is always !he "There is no way to play just to look
'
hardest," said Jordan, who scored 28 good."
Neither
'
team
looked
good for
points. but was quiet for most of the
most
of
the
game.
second half when the Bulls pulled
Playing for the first time since
· away for a 107-90 victory over the
Seattle SuperSonics. "I think·Game · completing. their sweep or Orlando
nine days earlier, the Bulls seemed
I , to win it and know you didn't play
out
of sync offensively. They made
great offense but played great defensively, it's a plus. Hopefully, we can only 43 percent of their shots ond
were 7-of-26 from three-point range.
build on this."
But they found the range in the
The Sonics go into Game 2 Friday night believing that ifthey don't founh quaner, when Kukoc scored
commit 18 turnovers, if they get 10 straight Chicago points' and Harpmore out of Gary Payton. iflhey con- · er .energized an already-tight defense .
tain the Bulls' role players - if, if. that turned steals into fast-break
if- they still can win this best-of- · baskets.
seven series against a Chicago team
The Sonics had their moments, .
that has lost only II of95 games this like their 13-4 run that made it 75season.
75 late in the third quaner. But with
"We were in the game alllhe way the Bulls' defense improving as the
into the founh quaner," said Payton, game went on, Seattle had too many who scored 13 points, nine below his turnovers and shot too poorly (40 1.
post-season average . "If we would- percent) to stay in the game. And
" 't have turned the ball over, we when Kemp got into foul trouble, tbe
would've had a good chance of win- Sonics lost their only effective
ning. We can play with this team and option.
we can beat this team."
"We're the kind of team that conIt's been a familiar refrain this tinually builds up pressure, " Pippen
post-season.
said. "Late in the game, our pressure
Even after New York lost the was a big.factor. I thought that they
Eastern Conference semifinals in felt we were going to be back on our
. five games, Patrick Ewing said he heels, bur we stepped up the presfelt the Knicks were better than the sure, gor more aggressive and guys
Bulls. Even after Orlando was swept started to play the passing lanes."
out of the conference finals by
Rodman played aggressively. But
Chicago, the Magic felt they could he couldn't prevent the Sanies from
have won the series.
outrebounding lhe Bulls 41 -40, only
Opponents always think they can the second time this post-season
win, but it's Chicago that has a 12-1 Chicago hasn't won the hoard battle.·
Aside from his interesting new
playoff record, it's Chicago that is
just three ,victories away from its hairdo- with a kind of multicolored
founh title in six years, it's Chicago graffiti motif -' Rodm1111 's main
that is on the verge of successfully contribution was keeping his cool
capping the greatest season in NBA . when Frank Brickowski tried to
goad him into a technical foul in the
history.
Jordan, constantly double- second quarter. Instead, Brickowski
teamed, had only four second-half committed a flagrant foul on Rodpoints until scoring six late when the man and was ejectec! for .talkAng trash
game was already decided. Pippen to Bulls bench jockey Jack Haley.
"I was telling Jack to sit down
had 21 points, but was only 5-of-15
from the floor. Rodman had 13 and got a technical. Then I turned to
rebounds, but missed much of the (referee) Joey Crawford and looked
second half due to foul trouble.
at him and he gave me a second techThe Bulls' big three got a major nical,:· Brickowski said_ "I told.

wi~~: :y:-c,ost,

iveS ON THE PRIZE- With Seattle's Detlel Schrempl (11) and
GaJ!Y Payton looking on In the distance, Chicago guard Michael Jor·
dell kftPI hi1 eyel on the hoop during this layup In the third quarter~ the NBA Finals opener Wednesday night in Chicago, where
the'Sullil won 107·90. (AP) .
.
•

.1~· Calipari leaving
UMass for N.J. Nets?
~EW YORK (AP).- John Cali-

pari; who has insisted ihat he is hapPY 'I'd not looking to leave the Univer,;ty of Massachusetts, reportedly
is h;ading to the New Jersey Nets.
l{adio station WFAN reponed
Wednesday night that Calipllfi, who
led Massachusetts to the Final Four
lastieason. has agreed with the Nets
on (five-year deal to coach the team.
1'hc all-sports station, dting !wo
und;sclosed sources, said the
announcement is to come today or
Fridjly. ·
'Rte· repon comes six days after
Kentucky coach Rick Pitino reject. ed tlie Nets' offer of around $25 milliorl)o become coach, genernl managel' and pan-owner.
Galipari,• who has not ruled out
coai!hing in the NBA someday,
repcttedly would get about $3 million' per season to lure him away
fror$ UMass.
'Ole New York Daily' News also
rep&lt;(!Cd in today's editions that the
Net!' have contacted former coach
Ch~k Daly about their vacant general Snanager position.
&lt;)Iipari, 37, is in Chicago for the
NBA's pre&lt;lraft camp. He has said he
is ttiere strictly to see his UMass
pla~rs.

'l ' m not here to tal.k tQ teams,"
he teld The New York Times.
~aig Fenech, Calipari 's agent,
said: he has spoken to both the
Phii.Oelphia 76ers aqd the Nets on

..'

behalf of his client
The Neb. perhaps the NBA's
mostiuckiess team. were spumed by
Pitino during his golfing trip to Ireland with Kentucky boosters. In
landing Calipari, they would be
snaring a high-profile coach they
hope can bring some luster to the
franchise.
New Jersey has been· without a
coach since Butch Beard was fired in
April after posting a 30-52 record in
each of the last two seasons.
Calipari's departure from UMass
would corne as his star player last
year. Marcus Camby. is being
accused of accepting gifts and cash
from an agent while playing in college.
The unive~sity has begun an
investigation. Severe sanctions are

likely only if it is found the university knew of the violations. A range
of sanctions could be applied, including suspension of the program.
It was Pitino, a UMass alumnus,
who recommended Calipari for the
UMass job. He became coach of the
Minutemen in 1988 and began
rebuilding a program that endured 10
consecutive losing seasons.

Under Calipari, the Minutemen
have gone 193-7 1 and won the last
live straight Atlantic I0 regular season and conference championships.
Last season, UMass wen1'35-2, losing to Kentucky' and Pitino in the
NCAA semifinals.

My Flag heading
toward history ,
at Belmont Stakes

Cubs 9, PhUiies 6
~mmy Sosa ·produced the 27th
thre(.homer day in Cubs history and
dro.le in five runs as Chicago overcam!i an early 4-0 deficit
SOsa hit a two-run homer in the
fourih inning, a solo shot in the sixth
and '"othenwo-run drive in the scventh;. He has 20 home runs this season. •:
~fter Sosa's third homer, the
ble~er fans at Wrigley Field threw
hats:on the field - just the way
hoctoey fans salute players who
recold hat tricks. Sosa said teammate
Luis:Oon1.alez explained the gesture
to hilfi.
111e last Cubs player to homer
three' times was Tuffy Rhodes on
opcn~g day in 1994 against Dwight
G~n .

~Sandberg also c&lt;,mnected for
the '::\lb,s and Mike Benjamin homered for Philadelphia.
:: Pirates 7, Dodgers 3
R!l&lt;&gt;kie Marc Wilkins, pressed
into a-starting role when Denny Neagle Was bothered by liack spasms,
pitchOd five shutout innings that
helpcia Pittsburgh win at Dodger Stadiuoi:
w,ilkins ( 1-0). who had never
starte4 above Double-A, began the
game)with a 4.0S ERA in nine relief
appearances for the Pirates. He limited LOs Angeles to two hits, walked
one a1id struck out four.
W"dkins, 25, also got his first
.majo~league hit and RBI. AI Manin
homeied and drove in three runs as
Pitlstiugh won its season-high
founlt in a row.
~ Dodgers stopped a string of
29 innings without an earned run and e'ded lhe Pirates' string of 23
scoreless innings - on Eric:.Karros'
home. in the seventh.
: Braves 8, Meb 6
Pill:h-hitter TYler Hou~ton delivered Cbases-loaded triple with two
outs '! lhe seventh inning, rallying
Atlanf past visiting ~ew Yort.

•

High

•

. -

Kanawha Valley Dragway in
Southside, W.Va. featured a Quick 8
Street Car Shootout last Saturday.
The ~ class has street-legal
cars that~runsome very impressive·
elapsecl times. Neal Vance of West
Hamlin, W.Va. took the win in his
1972 Vega running the eigth in.
6.253 seconds at 112.07 mph.
Markis Burdette of Sissonville,
W.Va. was runner-up. Mitchell Craddock of South Charleston, W.Va. and
John Good of Sissonville were semi·
final isis.
In the 1\:!odified Division, Greg
Fowler of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
took the- win in his 1966 Chevelle:
Duane Weber of Middlepon took
second i.n his 1982 Chevrolet S-I0.
Mike Moore of South Webster was
third.

In the Pro Division, Don Pewey
of Piketon took first in his Corvette
with Tim Jayne of Lucasville taking
second in his 19'68 Camaro. Larry
White of Pinch, W.Va. and Billie
Marcum of Thurman were semifinalists.
In the Street Division, Jeff' John·
son of Reedsville finished first in his
Dodge pickup. Wayne Pearson of
Henderson. W.Va. took finisng second :n his 1980 Monte Carlo. Donna Snyder of Waverly finished third
In the Junior Dragster class, Ciji
Casto of Mason, W.Va. took the win.
Tyler ~gar of Logan took second.
T.J.Snodgrass of Gallipolis and Chad
Smith or St Albans,' W.Va. were
semi-finalists.

- By HAL -sPENCER
'
Asaoclated Preas Writer
JORDAN, Mont (AP)- A member of the anti-government Freemen ·
left the compound to meet with FBI
agents for the first time in more than
two weeks, while residents -pressured authorities to use "reasonable
force" to end the 74-day standoff.
The government is reponedly consideling funher measures to isolate
the Freemen, in ~ luding disrupting the
group's satellite television, cellular
telephone and radio.communications
Many area residents say the FBI
has not been aggressive enough in
trying to end the standoff, which
began March 25 at the remote, 960- ·
acr~ compound on the eastern Mon- .
lana plains.
The Ft;n did not cut off electricity until Monday, has kept its SWAT
teams several miles from tlie farm ,
and until recently, allowed family
members to visit the complex.
The FBI has cut off yisits from
outsiders. but has continued to ·make
an exception for Janet Clark, whose
husband, Edwin. and son Casey are
in the compound. She has been
allowed to bring medicine to her son,
who suffers from an undisclosed
mediCal c ondition.
On Wednesday, Mrs. Clark slayed
at the fi!nch for about two hours. then
ldt with another person in the passenger seat of her car. The person met
at the FBI checkpoint known as
"The .Church" for two hours before
returning to the compound.

A Few Of Our Home Standard Features
• Ande..en Tilt Windows
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• Stanley Doors
• 2x6 Exterior Walls,. 16 In. On Center
• Armstrons solarian Floor Tile
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•
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• 2Xt0 Floor Joint, 161n. On Center.
• 52 Gallon Water Heater
• Shaw Carpets ·
COMFURT ASSURED~
. • Della Faucets
• MasterT-lock Vinyl Siding With Lifetime Warranty
• 25 Year Warranty Asphalt Shingles
• 10 Year Structural Warranty On The Home

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Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.

FAMILY HOMES INC.

Mrs. Clark left · the compound
alone ·an hour later. Federal officials
refused to comment on the meeting.
Negotiations broke down May 21
when Colqrado state Sen. Charl~s
Duke gave up in frustration. Duke,
one of many failed negotiators, said
the Freemen were not negotiating in
good faith and that some were merely criminals trying to avoid prosecution .
At least 21 people, including three
children, remain at the ranch. More
than a dozen adults are wanted on
charges that include circulating millions of dollars in_bogus checks and
threatening to kill a federal judge.
The FBI is considering putting
more pressure on the Freemen, The
New York Times reponed today.
Besides disrupting TV and communications signals, officials may
also block the group's access to fishing ponds, fields planted with crops
and buildings used to store food, the
newspaper said, quoting sources it
didn' t identify.

Model Home Located at
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33

Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478

really believes he can win .it."
Model Home Viewing Hours 1:00-5:00 p.m.
By JENNIE REES
If
ever
a
horse
was
bred
to
thrive
·
Louisville Courier-Journal
The.- Sat. or by appointment.
at Belmont, it is My Flag. Personal
ELMONT, N.Y. - From the
Ensign won 10 races here. ·
time she was born, the filly My Aag
carried the baggage of living up to
her famous parents: champi.ons Easy
Goer and Personal Ensign. Easy
&lt;:. ;c;.;.o; ;• ;.;.in;.;.u~: . ;d;. ;f.;. ;ro; ;m.;. ;P;. ;•;:;:ge:. .s;.:)_ __ Goer won nine Grade I races; Personal Ensign never lost in 13 career
The Mets chased Steve Avery in starts_
the sixth. taking a 6-51ead on Butch
My Flag already has matched
Huskey's three-run double. But in mother Personal Ensign as a Breedthe seventh, following an intention- ers' Cup winner, having won last
at walk to Ryan Klesko. Houston
fall 's Breeders'·Cup Juvenile Fillies.
tripled down the first base line past
Now she' ll try to duplicate her
a diving Huskey.
deceased father's 1989 Belmont
Chipper Jones, who went4-for·4,
Stakes triumph Saturday.
Jeff Blauser and Klesko homered for
While My Flag has not shown lhe
the Braves.
brilliant consistency of her parents,
a Belmont triumph would create her
1. Exclusive, patented HoUand
Astros 4; Rockies I
own niche in racing history. The last
System with its drip pan enhances the
Donne Wall, for the second time (and only second) filly to win the
in 2 't/2 weeks, came within one out Belmont was Tanya in 1905.
flavor and prevents flare-up.
of his first major league shutout This
My Flag will be only the 20th fil2. On-off gas valve, preset by the manufacturer,
time, though,lhe Houston rookie fin, l&gt;: to contest the Belmont in 128 runmeans efficient, one-temperature cooking with no
ished for his complete game.
nings.
Wall (2-0) pitched a five-hiuer,
adjustiJlf necessary. It's simply a matter of cooking
The 1.5-mile Belmont, not the
struck out nine and walked two. Col- Kentucky Derby. was on trainer
by lime.
orado did not score until Dante Shug McGaughey's mind when he
3. The side boards are made of high-density
Bicheue's RBI single with two OUIS nominated Ogden Phipps' filly to the
polyethylene, a material approved· for direct food
in the ninth inning. On May 19. Wall Triple Crown in January.
took a one-hit shutout into the ninth, .
contact.
"Mr. Phipps and I have talked
but wound up with a no-decision about this for a while," he said
4. Heavy-duty cast iron burner is guaranteed for the
against Piusburgh. .
Wednesday at Belmont Park.
life of the grill.
Wall also singled and scored a
" ... She worked really well here
5. Stainless steel grid (guaranteed for the life of the
run. Craig Biggio drove in two as Memorial Day; and I was trying to
· Houston won its fifth straight home get a feel for what he wanted 10 do.
grill) does not rust, cleans easily and prevents small
game and evened its record at the In our conversation, he said, 'Do you
food particles from falling through.
Astrodome ( 14-14) (or the first time think she'd have a chance?' I said,
6. Large cooking area will hold twr turkeys or four
since April 5.
'Yes, Mr. Phipps.' He said. 'If you
chickens.
'
think she has a chance, I would like
to run.'
7. Fabricated from heavy stainless and cold roUed
Expos l, Marlins 1
I.
No
flare-up
warranty
"I
haven't
seen
a
standout
yet.
Montreal manager Felipe Alou,
steel for long life,
2. Long term limited warranty on all materials
unhappy with his team's recent 3-7 Might be one to coming out of the
8. Smoke drawer, simply add your favorite wood
and workmanship
skid, held a pregame m~ting and Belmont Maybe it would be her,
chips and enjoy distinctive smoked flavors.
then watched the Expos win on the who knows?"
3. 100% refund of suggested retail price during
Running
fillies
against
colts
isn't
9. Simply dose drain valve, add water to the drip
road.
the fust 30 days if the Holland Grill does not
something McGaughey does lightly.
pan, and the Ho:Jand Grill becomes a steamer. Add
perform as advertised.
In fact, he can't recall running a fil.
Rhea! Cormier (3-3) shul out ly against males since 1988, when
wood chips to'the smo~ drawer, and it's a smoker.
Rorida for 7 113 innings. Dave Personal Ensign beatlhe colt Gulch
Veres escaped a bases-loaded jam in and gelding King's SWI!l in Saratothe eighth by retiring Greg Colbrunn ga's Whitney Handicap.
·
on a popup and, after giving up Ter·
"He isn't doing it just for kicks,"
. 742·2511
. "FAMILY OWNED"
797-4092
ry Pendleton's leadoff horner in the said jockey Mike Smith, who picked
1-800-837...217
1-80G-382-5657
ninth,. closed for his third save.
up the mollnt because Jerry Bailey,
Mike Lansing hit two doubles, the filly's rider in her IOprior starts,
incfeasing his NL-Ieading total to 20, is committed to Kentucky Derby
St. At.124
St.At.32
St. At. 7
St. At. eoN
St. RUII
and drove in a run. He also made a third-place finisher Prince of
diving catch at second base that pre- Thieves. "He's doing it because he
RuiiMd,OH
JICIIR'&lt;, 0H
Torch OH
~Ott GlllpDII, OH
·'
vente~! a run from scoring.

Introducing the only
grill GUARANTEED
not to flare up!

Exclusive Patented
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The only grill with a
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RITLIID ruu••i•--•u a BO'J•r•·• us
Six LOcations To Serve You Better/

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2,000 permanent homes, weekend
cabiRJ and trailers set back from dirt
roads.
It's AIISka 's fastesl growina area,
attracting homesteaders and refuaees
from Anchorage. •
"These are lhe folks people in the
Lower 48 think of when they think of
Alaskans," said state Rep. Vic
Kohring, a local contractor. "They've
carved out their own niche in lhe
wilderness."
Manin Buser, two-time winner of
the lditarod Trail Sled Dog Race, ferried as many as 80 dogs to the safety of an island in the middle of Big
Lake, then returned to his home to

.

pnpi:i{

-

~

beat back flames.
On the Alaska Railrotld, .
.: ,
widt tourists, southbound trains out, ••• :
Fairbanks were halted beclllle w; ·
fire burned risht up to the tracka; •
railroad spoil;eswoman said.
tii ;
Early Wednesday, the 1
'
Department of Corrections e.vacUIII$:;
ed the ,74 inmates of tbe Poilt! •
MacKenzie farm , a minimum sec:~l
ty work farm located in the path '~"
tbe fire.
• • ''
The blaze started as a 6Q--,.:
brushfire. Firefighters nearly lllld:. tC.,.
controlled Monday before wi
•
picked up and fanned names tow
~.::

the south.

MOTION FURNITURE

~.

' .,

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• I'
&gt;

'

•

'"

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.

"I '

-

. ~biplllent

ouc:r/FtancJers

· ·r ...

NeW v

Ali-Weafh.er Wicker

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Summer-Furniture Sale
Reg. '11900 Lo-Back Chair
Reg. s12900 Hi-Back Chair
Reg. s24900 Lounger
Reg. s289 Glider
00

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.,.·'

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·

.

Dining Room SetS
·Oak or Hackberry
• Farm Tables, trestle tables, drop-1eaf tables and
more

SALE S8900

s9900
SAKE SJ9900
. SALE $229°0

.. r·

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SAKE

' "

-THIS WEEK-END

I

LAS VEGAS (AP)- A man who
threatened to blow up a bank unless
he got $500,000 surrendered peacefully after a 3-112 hour standoff with
police.
Wallace Lavonn Grenner, 57,
walked into the bank, handed an
employee a note demanding the cash
and said he had explosives strapped '
I
to his body, police said.
After negotiating with authorities
by telephone. Grellner walked out of
the 17-story Bank of America build- :
ing Tuesqay afternoon with his shin '
off and his hands up. Authorities said
they recovered a fake.device but no
explosives.
.
About 1,500 workers in the building were evacuated along with peo- ·
pie in other ·nearby buildings, including tlu: federal counhouse.
Although Grenner did not attempt
to take hos tages, heavily armed
SWAT officers took up positio~s
around the bank .as the ordeal wore
on.
Authorities wouldn't say what
persl!aded Grettner to end the standoff.
The FBI was consulting with the
U.S, Anorney's office on charges
against Grenner, who told authorities'
, he was from Las Vegas.

,

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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..1-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;..l ,v··
. .

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·n

Sculptures,
Plushes,
Trackless Carpets, and
Carpets.

Flexsteel
~

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FREE- Removal of old carpet
FREE· furniture moving

All In-Stock
--~-.;...,_

CARPET .. .
FREE- No obligation Quotes SALE
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Take 25o/o off
'

. ~S Styles
on sale

'.

Recliners • Motion Ensembles

· ONE-Of-A-KIND'
YJ Price CLEARANCE SALE
SALE
5604 11
'1209 ltdfet w/Balter's Raclt
'2109 Oalt T~ w/4i!pltolsterttl Cllalrs 5105410
51709 Trftlle TaWt, ltttdt, 4 cWrs
s85411

Berkline
Recliner Sale

REG.

'539 c.!. Otest w /,.Htd top
. '469" Cedar Cl.st
'209" Upllolstertd cltalr.
'589" Reclntr Greett l'laitl
'649" RediMr llelp/Mawe.
'99" Chiltl's lecher
'359" lr1ssltd Klttg SIJe

I

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EXSTEEL

Suspect gives
up after attempt 1
to hold up bank ·

.

••

and lhe forest was shrouded in thick
smoke that drifted down to Anchol:age and prompted offiCials 10 issue an
air quality alen.
Airplanes and helicopters dropped
water and fire retardant, but officials
say !he chemical hun't been effective
on the burning moss on the forest
floor.
As many as a third of lhe homes
in lhe Big Lake area were damaged
or destroyed, but the fire was spotty.
Some houses were intact even though
scorched ground extended right up to
the ir doors.
The community, popular with dog
musher5, is a mi~ture of more than

INTRODUCING

signals.

. _..

through dense black spuce and birch.
Late Wednesday, troopers -' were
forced to close a stretch of lhe only
highway between Anchorase and
Faillbanks.lhe state's largest citie5.
Fire Commander Dave Liebersbach conceded more homes could be
lost if the fire jumps eastward across
lhe Parks Highway and makes the I 0mile trip to Wasilla. a town of 4,800.
The SOO firefighters on the scene
included experienced reinforcements
from the Lower 48 states, and some
were posted along the highway today
to keep the names from jumping
across.
Plumes of flame shot 200 feet high

Extremists
break ban
on meeting
with agents

Homes To Fit Vour Lifestyle

L

..

wind· ·dry moss hinder' efforts to check Alaskan wild.f ir :~~ -

pump to pour wate,' on his cedar:
AIIOC!atecl Prua Wrlt,er
shingle home· IS protection. " When
BIG LAKE, Alaska. - Fed by the ftre got going preuy good, I had
strong winds and tinder-dry moss on my son on the garage tqof and I was
the forest floor, a raging wildfire on top of lhe house.
. ·
tripled in size in a day,forcing at least
" As soon IS this is done;" Nau
700 people to evacuate wilderness mann said, "I'm getting rid of every
homes and shutting down pan of a spruce tree around here."
major highway.
With rain not expected before
The fire, which also forced the Sunday, lhere was no end in sight to .
evacuation of a prison fann Wednes- the 37,000-acre blaze that investigaday, has burned across 56 square tors suspect was caused by fire-,
miles and destroyed at least 150 works over the weekend. The fire
buildings.
tripled in size from dawn to afternoon
Despite door-to"door warnings Wednesday:
·
from state troopers to get out, many
Pushed by gusts of up to 25 mph,
in the Big Lake area 60 miles nonh the fi.re was burning east and south .
of Anchorage stayed behind to beat
back. the names.
" We haven't slept in SO hours,"
Michael Naumann said Wednesday
as he and his teen-age son used a well

Fowler, Johnson and Casto
among Iatest KVD WI·nners
.

.-

Pomeroy .• Middleport, Ohio

By Jll8 CCARKE

Haley he's a professional baby-sitter. and b«ause they were able 10 aet
111at's what he is, isn't he?"
.outstanding performances from se¥Haley, who played in just one eral players.
game for Chica,1o this year, is reput"Our team has a lot of auys who
edly kept around only because he's . know their roles." .. Harper said.
a calming influence on the com- "Every once in a while, one of us
bustible Rodman.
role players turns it up a notch.
In ll)e end, the Bulls won because Than!&gt; goodness, (Wednesday) was a
they committed only seven turnover5 nigbtthat a few of us did."
·

H;L games•.. ___
:

.. ,.

Thurtlday, June 6, 19SII

NBA.Flna/a begin

B~:~lls

.... The Deily -SanUtieJ • Pefiel. •-

Thur8day, June 6, 1 • ,.

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'269"
'23411
510411
'29411
5324"
54911
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Wall away Recliners, Rocker/Recliners ·
and Recliners
Vinyl, Leather and Cloth upholstery

'~.

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Sale Prices
Start at
Only

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$

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BUIJ FOR COMFOI'II

•
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STORE HOURS

MON. 1:30 • 1:00 ,
TUE. • SAT.I:30 • 5:00 .

'ro Quelllled Applicantl
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rson's

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Plge 8 • The O.lly Sentinel

Grant helps
students
·study
math,
•
sc1ence

Thu~,June8,1111

Health club to mark 60th anniversary
Plans for the observance of the

60th anniversary of the Rock Sprinas

•

Betta' Health Club wefC tiiCIIsscd
when club members met recently It
the home df Phyllis Skinner.
Nancy Gruescr was hosless for the
meeting. The anniversary celebntion
was set for July 18 at noon at the

Students in Carol Evans' fourth

~eofFranc:is Goegl~in.Apotluck

grade class at Rutland Elementary

wtll be held and an ·anntversary cake
served. . .
c::;oealem w.'lltake refreshments to
the tnfinnary tn June.

New officers elected were Bll!bara
Fry, president; Phyllis Skinner, vic:e
president; OoeJlcin, treasurer; and
. Nancy Morris, secretary, news
reporter, and ~istorian.
Nanc:y Grueser will have the progtarn for the June meeting and Marris will hii'Je the conteSt.
.Amn&amp;eincnts were made to purchase a new scrapbook to replace the
one destroyed in the flood earlier this
month at the Rock Springs Church.
Devotions were given by Morris

h•ve been studying math and science
101ilh the help of specialized materi!1 purchiscd with a $2,400 grant
from the Martha Holden Jennings
FI&gt;UJldation of Cleveland.
HANDS.ON
- Specialized k1tt purehaHCI with
. · Materials included specialized
funding from the Martha Holden Jenning• Foundll,lon hllve prokits for the study of color and light,
vlclecl Rutland fourth g111de atudantl with an opportunity tor 1110111
magnets, electricity, the five senses,
dtpth In their study of aclenea and 1111111• ....._ TI'UIIIIn Hlrmsn,
The Raeine/Southem Alumni
weather, buoyancy, seashells, fossils,
Jaaon Peckham, Matt
1111d Randy Hudlon work with CarBanquet
and meeting 101ere held May
rocks and minerals, the human body,
ol Evanaon 1
25,
at
Southern High School's .
insects and spiders, dinosaurs, tiM:
Charles
Hayman
gymnasium, with
solar system, and the food pyramid.
over 240 guest attending.
According to Evans, the materials
The invocation was given by Paul
have provided a much-needed depth
Beegle,
and the dinnerwas served by
to the fourth grade science and math
the
Southern
· High School junior
cumculum by enabling each student
·
class.
ID develop skills in problem solving,
t;&gt;uring the business session,
reasoning, and communication in a
Roger
Birch and Joan Crisp were
hands-on fashion .
·
elected
to serve on the Alumni Board,
Additional materials included:
joining
members Tonya Salser
rechargeable batteries, a big screen
Hunter, Shirley Johnson, and Gordon
microscope, thermometers, test tubes,
Fisher. .
·
30 calculators. balances, and teacher
It was announced that the
reference materials.
Racine/Southern
AI umni list is now
Evans said that students have
. SCIENCE
- Here Carol Evans Rutland fourth
computerized,
wiih.
everyone asked
used a variety of strategies to verify g111de teacher, W9fkl with Jo1h1111 HyHII and Jenny Cacle on a
to assist in updating addresses.
and interpret the results of scientific science project. The specialized mllterllls tor the project Work Wll
Updates can be sent to Shirley Johnexperiments and exercises, and to purchaHCI with a $2,400 grant from the Martha Holden Jennlnga
son
at 55590 State Route 124, Pongeneralize and ·apply the results to Foundltlon.
land.
Ohio 45770.
•
other problem~ in science and math.
The
Alumni Board now has.
Tile materials were used in a vari- . compiled a portfolio that chronicles
· vation. They were totally engaged by Christmas ornaments for sale with
ety of formats including large group their work throughout the school
this first-hand approach to studying : proceeds to go to the alumni scholdiscussions, small group projects. year.
math and science," commented arship fund. The ornaments are purteacher-led demonstrations, and one"All students have had a fantastic Evans.
ple with gold drawings of the current
on-one exploration. Each student time learning math and science con"If anyone doubts the excitement Southern High School and former
cepts with these materials. Science and interest engendered in students Racine Hi,11h School buildin,11s on
has been, by far, their favorite subject by the activities these materials sup- opposite sides. The ornaments may
this year. The science textbook port, they are welcome to come and be purchased by ~ontacting Johnson
became a reference while they tack- observe my students next year, said or the high school.
led more difficult ideas and concepts Evans.
Reunion classes were recognized
through experimentation-and obser-

•

··Tburay, June I, 1881

"

'Wha/e'ot'i project~~-...---. .....,._.-....;Poet's
Corner---~
·
:
:
a..

.

Tile IJft Win

who used scripture from Luke, had a
reading. "YIIull's Wrona with Cl)'illl" '
and a poem,. "You're Not Alone."
The program "Drive Alive" by Morris, "Buckle UP for Safety" by Goe·
glein, "Speed Limit 33: by Helen
Blackston. "Exit Sleepy Hollow" by
Fry, "Rest Stop, 33 Miles" and "Caution Medicine Working" by I;&gt;oror.hy
Jeffers, and "Visibility" by Phyllis
Skinner.
The contest was won by Fry and
Agnes Dixon. Tile hoste$5 for June
will be announced later.

---Community calendar---

SHANNON JENKINS

Jenkins
named Miss
Junior Teen .
Shannon M. Jenkins.was the winner ofthe Miss Junior Teen title in her
age category in a pageant ·held at
Capitol Theater in Columbus over the
weekend.
The Meigs High School student
woq over 38 contestants in her division. Selection was based on personal intervie~s by a panel of judges and
the modeling casual and formal wear.
As a winner she was presented a
modeling scholarship, gifts of jewelry,· a crown and banner, and an
ex!Jense paid trip to Disney World in
February to·compete for the national
· title.
.
·
At Meigs High she is a varsity
ch'eerleader, class secretary, a memher of the Meigs Marauder band, and
is in the flag corps. She is also active
in reserve and varsity softball, and is
a gymnastic student at Willpower
Tumbling in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Slje attends the Zion Church of
Cllrist. She has took several classes
at the Columbus Convention Center
on training and modeling in preparation for the pageant.
She is the daughter .of Tim and
Diane Wamsley ·of Middlepon and
Steve and Elizabeth Jenkins ofLetan.
She Is the granddaughter of Dr. John
and Jeanie Ridgway of Nalcrest,
Fla., formerly of Pomeroy and Gary
and·Charlotte Harper of Middleport.

~EORC

golf
tournament
scheduled
. The an nual Southeastern Ohio
~egional Council (SEORC) summer
meeting and golftournament will be
held on July 18 at the Fairgreens
Country Club in Jackson County.
Golfers from throughout southeastern Ohio will compete for prizes
in a Callaway Handicap System
Tournament.
Sam Crawfprd, executive director
nf SEORC. said the golf tournament
will begin at · 8 a.m. and continue
throughout the day. Refreshments
will be served at 5 p.m. and dinner at
6:30p. m. There will be an after dinnet speaker.
Crawford said that tickets for the
mid-summer meeting may be purchased from local Chambers of Commerce or the SEORC, 837 £ , Main
St., Oak Hill, OH 45656, 6146827896. Banquet tickets are $18.
Golfers wishing to play may send ·
their entries to SEORC. The entry fee
for golf is $50 for the entire package ·
of-golf, can, refreshments ano;l banqu~ .
.
'•

THURSDAY
RUlLAND -- Rutland Township
Trustees will meet in regular session,
Thursday, 6:15 p.m. at the Rutland
Fire Station.
POMEROY -- PERSIPERI, noon
luncheon, Senior Citizens Center.
Dr. Coven will speak concerning
mail-in prescriptions.
POMEROY-- Pomeroy Group of
Alcoholics Anonymous, open discussion meting, Thursday, 7 p.m.,
basement of the Sacred Hean

Right to Life, Monday, 7:30 p.m.,
Monday.

SATURDAY
POMEROY-- Burlingham Camp,
Modem Woodmen of America, cookout, 7 p.m. Saturday at the hall. Sandwiches, desserts, beverages provided.
Take.a fOVered dish.

RUTLAND -- Homecoming,
Believers Fellowship Ministry, formerly Rutland Community Church,
2:30p.m. Sunday. Covered dish dinner. Day-long event. Pastor Margaret
Robinson.

1995 PONTIAC
GRANDAM
2 Dr Coupe, auto, air, stereo

5

MIDDLEPORT ., Middleport
Masonic Lodge, F&amp;AM, special
meeting, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Temple. Work in the Master Mason
degree.

1996 OLDS
CIERA
4 Dr V6, auto, air, PW,PL,

1995 CHEVY
CORSICA
Auto, air, S1ereo

10,995 10,995

5

92 GMC Ji•y 4x4- Hurry. SJ0,995
94 Chevy 5·1 0 P/U Auto, air '9999
94 GMC Jt.y
.
4Dr, loaded, ltalher .....__•• SJ8,995
94 Chevy C1500 P/U 350 VI, lllo, ·
slverado, low •Its-...........SJ6,995 '

•

Alice Saxon is a saint
i
Who lone His path hai trod, · •,
With us she can no longer meet
But she is prepared to meet her God.

The teacher of this class, ·
And I have tried three years or more On business we meet once a 'month
·Happy and full of laughier.
To prove worthy of the task.
1
I always hope with us to see
The Savior called and two wciit
Jolly Freda Krautter.
horne
•
Tile first dear one for you to meet
Now
our
chain
is
broken,
;
Her name is always hallowed,
It's Aunt Jennie Arnold on Rose Hill Here comes two and they are sister- Geof1!ia Shoemaker and Ida Thmill
in-laws
An example for all to follow.
For it was their names He had st)OEmma and Margaret Davis.
ken.
They believe if in the light we walk
Now here comes three
His love is sure to save us.
Jessie Griffiths you all know well ;
Andyou will agree
Are walking in th~ light,
•;
IsJust one more dear sister,
There isEmma Mitch
When from the class she is detainOd
Aunt. Ella and Susie Pullins, two,
And she is not rich
The third Aunt Cinda White . .
Oh ho101 mucli we miss her.
:
But a mighty cheerful giver.
,•
From her store of gifts, she never Just about two years ago
Let me tell of Edna Bartels
::
refused
My friend since in my YOI!th,
Another mate we won
••
I will remember her forever.
In her I always !=Ould confide ·
My neighbor dear. she lives quite
ncar
·
•• 1t
Her name to me spells truth.
On down the road lives Edna Stiles
Her name is Mable Kesterson. •!
'•t
How dear to me she was,
Annie Shiveler joined this class
Another one is coming now
In time of need .she kep11he books
A long, long time ago,
•• •
But through ill health she cannot Of our class for a good cause.
. That I am glad to ~c.
'•..
Lizzie Davis from Rose Hill
come
-· "
Her face looks good to me.
On Sunday morn at half past nine,
As oft she would like I know.
•
You will find this faithful one
Here·is Ella Arnold, folks
Here i~ Tillie Carman, my dear friend Her name is Lillie Smith, dear folks
Her name let us not forget.
And true to me she has heen,
· In Sunday School on time.
Through
rain or sno101 she alwns
For oft times when my hean was sad
Clara Cunis is another friend
came
,
••
Her love, my trial would end.
Kind thoughts still linger yet.
And I know you will all agree,
••'
My Aunt Soph Shivelet, bless her life Slic loves the Lond with all her heart ·
.
I will love her to the last,
The last dear one to join- our cia$~ :
So does her girls all three.
It warms my heart, her face to see
And we arc all prepared to love her,
And so faithful to her class.
On Halloween she gave her nante
Hattie Mcintosh you know
·
And it was Kathryn Hoover.
•:
On her I could depend,
' .
.Callie Campbell lives quite near
She -always tried to do her part
To this dear churth of ours.
The Live Wire Class at Enterprise•'
And helped until the end.
So let me say to you today
You liave met them one by one,_:
She is a Live Wire hour by hour.
My prayer is that when life is o'er
Maud Weeks and Bcnha Bruch
A crown of life they have won. · •.· ,;1,! ·
Dear friends in days of yore.
Annie Shoemaker, a child of God
Bertha keeps our class books fine ·
•
But now she has moved awl\y,
As Maud has done before.
By the late Alice Frick,
•
And this dear class all miss her so
formerly of Pom~y
For us oh how she would pray.
Her~ is one I won't forget
•
Clara Oruescr is her name:
Cyrus H. McCormick received;a
0 dear me, I must not forget
She always willingly took her pan
patent in 1834 for his reaping
As oe'r these lines !·pause,
No matter how hard the game.
machine.
•

...
..

..

tic, held together with duct tapa, Smlitt Hid the
project wu to glva thll cllll an ldel of a
whala'l ICtUIII llze. The project -S conducteel over Hveralllfllrnoona and tha whale wa1
Inflated WeclnHday, on the atudenta' last day
of school.

INFLATABLE WHALE - How large II 1 tin
whllle? Carolyn Smith's alxlh grade elisa at
SallabufY Elementary could.tell you. As part of
the cla11' language arts unit on dlacoverlng the
ocun, the youngster• con!itt'uc~ 1 70.toot
leviathan with piece• of black and clear pial·

V-8, auto, llr concl, PS, PB, PW, POL, tilt, crulae, AM/FM

1994 MAZDA
84000 4X4

4.0L, 5 apd, elr cond, PS,
PB, PW, PDL, tilt, cruise, ·. · · PB, PW, PDL, AMJFM
AM/Fill Clla.
Clls, Supe~lb

1995 BUICK
LESABRE .

V-6, auto, air cond, PS,
PB, PW, PDL, Pwr
. tilt, cruise, casa,
milea.

LOW MILES

•••n,f

V·&amp;, auto, air cond,
PB, PW, PDL, tilt, cru11e,
dual pwr seats,
keyless. "

The Folks ·a t Bob~ Market Would like To Show Their Appreciation To Their Many Wonderful
Customers With Savings .of 20o/o to 33o/o Off Their Top Quality Plants~ Hanging Baskets and More!
OUR PLANTS ARE OF ONLY TOP QUALITY. NO OVERGROWN, U.NDERFED OR STRAGGLY PLANTS
THERE IS STILL PLENTY OF TIIOIE TO PLANT FLOWERS AND ENJOY THEN TILL FROST.

20.o/o OFF

20o/o ·OFF

Bedding
. PlAnt Flats
.,....-.. All items rrom blue A'geratium

BASKETS
Reg. $9.95 SALE '7 .95

to Zinnias, Especially all major.
~ems Including:
• Marigolds • Impatiens •
Begonias • Petunias • Vinca •
Salvia • And Much More

BUCKET SEATS

Reg. $9.95

INCL,UDES ... ·

• New Guinea Hybrid
Impatiens
• Non-Stop Begonias

SALE *7.95

··Boston Ferns .
• And Many llnr'A1

Matket Peck Reg. $1.50

1994 FORD
CROWN VICTORIA
V-8, auto, air cond,
PB, PW, PDL, Pwr
tilt, crulae, AMIFM ells.

NOW'1.

1991 FORD
MUSTANG
S.OL V·6, auto, air cond, ·
PS, PB, PW, PDL, tilt, :•. •
crulae, AMJFM CBII.

rebates to dealer.
Taxea&amp;feainot

30o/o OFF
...--..a Good Selection!

33o/o OFF
~Selected

Trees

Including:
• Flowering Crab Apple
• Flowering Peach
• Flowering Plum
• Bradford.Pear

."Plant now and
enjoy for years
to come"
Reg. $1 .99

All F'rult Trees

NOW'1.39

Reduced! .

.

Produce Prlcls

In Effec:t ThN

LOW MILES

Sunday, June t.
Plant Prices
good thN end of
aeatonorWhlle
Supplies last
' .

TOMATOES
(Taste Uke Homegrown)

All pr1Ces lndudt

OPEtl
SUtJDAY 1·5

lives quite near our church !il
dear
:
Her name is Bessie Hartung.
•

1995 FORD WINDSTAR

1995 FORD
TAURUS SE

5

Included

Here is Edith Batey. folks
Of work she is not afraid,
For each Thursday at the church
She cooks for the Ladies Aid.

Sh~

.

V-6, auto, dual A/C, PS, .•...•••·
PB, PW, POL, Pwr •••,,,
tilt, crulae, CO, Leather.

POWER SUNROOF

4 Dr ,auto, air, S1ereo

4 Dr, V6, auto, air, cass,

IrS WORTH YOUR DRIVEl

V-6, auto, air cond,' PS,
PB, tilt, cruise, AMIFM
ca.S,Iowmn...

SPORT PACKAGE

5

1995 BUICK
· CENTURY

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

through I grant from the Southern Ohio Coal
·company. tter. fourth grllderi Nikki Butcher,
Joy Still and' Jordln Stotll, ._.., tend the liar·
· den In front olth.e echool building.

1994 MERCURY
VILLAGER LS

1995 BUICK
.SKYLARK

l1,495 13,995 11,495

All UHCI Car• I Trucks Must Go.
Taxee and tilte lee not incfuded.
All payments subject to credit approval

1994 FORD
AEROSTAR

V-6, auto, air cond, PS,
1·992-8614 •1-800-837-10114

94 Mitsubishi Echpse ••••••• =8995
93 Olds Achieva ............. 58995
•
.93 Cadllac Sedan Deville
.
va, leather, Whhe..~..........5U,49S
93 Olds Ciera ·low mles,
1·0\¥111'······~..........~•••••~••$«)999

The writer is Alice Frick, my friends

Eva Moore on Buckeye Hill
And oh, my land, it's steep,
But often to our Sunday Schwl
Comes to this dear class to.meet.

!'

No"' away do101n around the bel\d
Lives one! named Myrtle Hicks; i
The Savior she has served so lona !
In her hean His love is fixed .
:
•
A late addition to our class
I hear her praises sunj!,
l'

-.

1994 FORD
EXPLORER

tiJiJ

5

1995 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX OR
1995 BUICK REGAL

Molly Wilson is a pearl
I will tell you the reason why,
Each Thursday at the Ladies Aid
She makes her needle fly.

MIDDLEPORT-- Hobson Christian Fellowship Church, revival,
Monday · through Sunday. John
Elswick, evangelist. Special singing.

MONDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County

308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

Come liste11 my friends and let me
teD
Of a class that meets
At the U.B. Chwch
Of whom you all know well.

Dear Della Mcintosh, my frielldt i
Her health is not the best.
Not often can she meet with 111 • •
But her heart is there with the ~

•

TUESDAY
POMEROY --l:lome School Suppon Group for parents ·and children
at the Pomeroy Library meeting
room, Tuesday, 10 a.m. For more
information call Tammy Jones, 992·
6743.
r

DANVILLE-.- Weekend services
at the Danville Church of Christ, 7
p.m. Saturday; 10:30 a.m. anf16 p.m
Sunday. Denver Hill, Foster, W.Va.,
speaker.

Brown
.
Are my de¥ siscen-in·law.

It's the Live W'n class
And you will find
A class of lively women, .
They are always anxious to do their
pan
And are known by their freely giving .

YOUNG GARDENERS - Slllabury Elamentlry ·eclence teacher ICAINn Walklr HCurecl
funding tor thla butterfly/hummingbird ga~

Dear Mauie Brown and CIIOiy~

(of liM Ulliled lndarell Suaclay
SdM Ill, 'KII'npalw, Ollio)

.

POMEROY-- Meigs Local Board
of Education regular meeting Monday, 7 p.m. in the central office.

DON TATE MOTORS,
Ge&amp;•

and special recognition given to Irene Steve and Wanda Shuler, Letart.
Miller Hayman, class of )924~ the
Door prizes of flowers from many
earliest graduate attending, and Joy local greenhouses were given.
Foster Ellis of Simi Valley. Califor- Donors of the prizes included Karens
nia, class of 1959, who had traveled Greenhouses. Tyrone Brinegar, Marthe fanhest.
shall Roush, Art Hill. Darrell Norris,
Receiving the three alumni schol- Hubbards, Sue's, Down to Eanh
arships were Jason Barnett, Jay McK- Farms. Jeff Harris, Stobarts . .and Per-·
elvey, and Sammi Sisson.
ry Hill. Other donations were by
Southern High School seniors Jyl Nancy Campbell, Medical Claims
Matthews and Jason Shuler were Service. and Home National Bank.
crowned Alumni queen and king by
The evening closed with . the
the Alumni Association. Jyl is the singins of the school alma matter, led
daughter of Charlie and - Rita by Lee Codner, Robin Porter, Nancy
Matthews, Racine. Jason is the son of Circle, and played by Carla Shuler. ·

The o.uy Senllnll• Page-'.

Pomeroy • 8 lddlepo11, Ohio

Racine/Southern alumni hold dinner

Catholic Church.

•••

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Community Calendar is
·published as a rree service to nonproRt groups wishing to announce
meeting and special, events; The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or rund raisers or any type.
Items are printed as space permits
and cannot·be guaranteed to run a
spedfic number of days.

,

.LOCATIONS:

'TWOCONVE
· 2400 Eell8rn Ave.

1/4 mi. Rt. 33
(t/4 mi. """" of Pomeroy/ -

(Aaolt from I&lt;·M811)

-

A "tr ~~~~e. tlH

~1;7:11

Illidge),- · WI/

{

'173-5721

Ho1n: M-S 8111,8; Sun.10 1117

Houri: M-S a11e; Sun. 1111 a

'r

'

."

99¢1b.
3 ~ lb. Basket

.10 lb. bag

New White·

Georgia
Jumbo v'""
Go,den,
Yelllow
. .

.

POTATOES CANTALOUPE

$:1.79

�.
P'Ge10 • The O.tty. Sentinel

••,
Thursday, June 6, f996 ·:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1llurlcMy, JuM , 1818

ColoradO -dogs have bites much worse than their bark;:
II

Ann
Landers

I

-·-

' ' " '· lM Alllt._

n.u SyadicJK: lfld ea.

''

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: The leuer
from the Colorado reader who wondered if there were any cities that
outlawed dogs piqued my interest.
Colorado has lots of dogs. and the
problems go far beyond barking.
In March. a 5-year-old boy · was
nearly killed when a neighbor's Rottweiler broke thr9ugh a fence and

attacked him. I, too, have been bitten cull to approach because a great
several times, IIJid the dog ownen many people feel that anydling negalways try·to figure out what I might alive said about dogs is somehow
have done to provoke their beloved "un-American." Here's part of the
pets. Too few people seem to enjoy Denver Posr article:
or spend time with them. The dogs
In April 199S, a 2-year-old girl
are ignored and lreated like anack was killed by her grandmother's
dogs, encouraged to "protect" tbe mixed-breed dog after playing on
family, but too often end up mauling swings nearby. Bites from the 120children.
pound dog punctured the 25-pound
The Denver Post published a list girl's internal organs.
.
In March 199S, a wolf-hybrid
of other vicious dog attacks in the
Colorado area in the past 10 years. I belonging to a house guest mauled a
hope you.will print it. People need to 4-year-old !Joy in an unincorporated
know how dangerous some pets can county. The boy survived.
be. •• No Dog-Free Environment in •
December 1994: A 3-year-old girl
Colorado
was rescued by a friend from an
Dear Colorado: Thank you for a allack by the family Rottweiler. The
letter of value. This subject is diffi- girl was silting on the floor. putting

Friend inducted into
National Honor Society

•

on 1 shoe, when the dog began was killed by a neiJhbor's malamute
maulinc her.
as the child ran down a road trying
May 1994: A 2-year-old boy sur- to catch up to his mOiher.
vived near-scalpina, gashes and a
May 1990: A West Denver boy, 6,
crushed arm after four Rottweil~rs was mauled by a wolf-hybrid twice
draJged him across the street.
his weight as he crossed a bridge on
October 1991 : A neighbor's chow his way to scbool.
A fellow who passes
crossed the street and tore part of a
May 1989: A, Denver man, S8 ,
J•yeat-old girl 's face off as she sustained two broken legs and 70
On hills· and curves
played on her front porch. The dog bites after being set upon by a pit
Is not a fellow ·
was killed by police after a chase.
'
bull terrier. To rescue him. a neigh·
February 1991: Two pit bull terri- bor shot the dog.
With lots of nerve.
ers attacked a 6-year-Qid girl as she
· Dear Readers: This i~ Ann. again.
He's crazy.
was walking to a friend 's house. The The lady with all the answers does•I
girl survived. Owners of the dogs n't have any answer to this one. PQg
had been cited a dozen times earlier lovers, unite, and give me a clue.
Send questions to Ann ·Lao·
for allowing the vicious dogs to run
Dear Ann: I love your revival of ders, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W.
free.
those old Burma Shave signs. Can Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los ;
. October 1990: A 4-year-old boy you print one more? •• Sybil in Old Angeles, Calif. 90045

.

By DIRK BEVERIDGI
APIIualneuW.Iw
VIENNA, Austria - The stakes
are high u OPEC seeks a lllliOOih
way to let Iraq blck into the oilllllrket But so far. the cam! has shown
plenty of meiOtic IIJid little ICtion,
openina its long-awaited meelina
only to adjourn within minutes . .
Iraq is preparing to expon oil for
the 6nt time since the United Nllions
imposed a six-year emt.rgo on Iraq's
oil expons to punish it for i~ading
Kuwait in 1990.
.!lefore the embargo, Iraq was
producing 3.4 million barrels a day,
and its long absence has given O!her
OPEC memben -.' particularly Sau-

By TOM STUCKEY
Auocllltwd Prna Writer
ANNAPOLIS, Md. - Relatives
of John Wilkes Booth wiD not be
allowed to open his grave 10 determine if soldiers who tracked down
President Lincoln 's assassin shot the
wrong man.
.
Marylan&lt;l's second highest eourt
ruled Thesday that Green Mount
Cemetery in Baltimore ~ the right
to keep Booth's grave from being disturbed by family memben who wanted to lest an old theory that someone
else was buried there.
"I'm very disappointed," said

Valley Artist Series drive begins

1.,

,I

The Daily s·enlinel • Page 1.1, -·

OPEC ponders how to .ease
into cartel
. Iraq back
.
tli Arabia- room to increue JIUIIIP'

ina.

,

Easiaa Iraq blck into the lllllbt
could hammer prices that have
recently been better than OPEC
expected. And it remains unclear
wbetber OPEC can tuOivc ill internal !qlllbblinJ and come up with a
deal that convinces traden it can
restrain itself from flooding the market over the next few months.
The market has not been
impressed. Prices plunged about 70
cents a barrel Wed¥sdaY on the New
York futures market.
OPEC ministen meet again this
afternoon, following a strange opening to their traditional summer ses-

.

sion: They broke up within minutes ductipn by about 2. 7 million barrels
of plheriaa to discuss Iraq's return.
b' d' . .
"The only lolical explanation is • day.
'Ibis underscores a
tVISIOn

they need more lime to put some
ideas together," said Leo Drollas,
chief economist at the London-based
Center for Global Enerzy Studies.
OPEC ministers say there are a
number of possible ways to accommodate Iraq under the United
Nation's limited-sale agreement
allowing Iraqis to export crude to buy
food and drugs for their suffering
masses.
.
Iran's oil minister, Gholamreza
Aghazadeh, says one possibility is a
retum to old, pre-Gulf War quotaswhich would cut Saudi Arabia's pro-

Court rejects move to exhume Booth remains

r-~~--~~--------------------~~----------------------------------------~~ ·1

The Valley Artists Series, now in· its 12th
scholastic attainment in institutes of
season, is launching its annual season subscrip- ·
higher learning and requires a 3.5 or
tion campaign, for the 1996-97 performance
better grade point average.
season. The series was formed·in 1984. by joinFriend has also been selected in
ing the Rio Grande Family Artists Series and
the United States Achievement Acadthe Tri-County Community Concert Associaemy's All-American Scholar protion. All performances are at the University
gram, and was sponsored for the
Fine and Performing Arts Center, located for
award by the assistant dean of the
Gallia, Jackson, Mason, Meigs and Vinton
College of Arts and Sciences at
counties.
Shawnee State.
"Through careful management, the support
Eddie has been elected to serve as . of the University of Ri o-Grande .and the Ohio
treasurer of the Tau Kappa Eplison
Arts Council, the series offers top quality, live
fraternity and serves on the Shawnee
family entertainment at a fraction of the price,
State Greek Council , which governs
that tickets for the same event would cost in
all campus fraternities and sororities.
any
major city," Jan Thaler, general chairperHe was elected as a member of the
.,son
for
the drive said. "An aduk subscription is
college's Student Senate and Univeri
just
$45
for five events, approximately the
EDDIE FRIEND
sity Senate, and has lleen active in
same as the cost of one similar event in Columseveral charity projects in the
Eddie Friend, son of Rick and Lin- Portsmouth community.
bus. There are discounts for seniors, children
and university students."
da Friend of Syracuse, has been
Friend is working toward Social
Worker$ in Jackson, Wellston , Oak Hill,
inducted into the Phi Eta Sigma Science and Psychology degrees at
Pomeroy, Middleport, Gallipolis and Point
National Honor Society at Shawnee Shawnee State, and plans to auend
Pleasant, W.Va. attended a brunch, catered by
State University. Phi Eta Sigma is a law school with emphasis in the area
Holzer Medical Center, at the home of Mary ·
honor program that rewards high of environmental issues.
Warehime in Gallipolis May 19. The event
helped workers learn about the attractions,
share ideas about future programs and receive
their assignments. Dr. Greg Miller. director of
the Fine and Performing Arts Center at the uni·
versity and Thaler highlighted the attractions
and
answered P..ocedural questions.
p-he Rotary Student Exchange Myca Haynes talked about her destiThe season will open Sunday, Sept 29, with
pregram was explained and students nation in Denmark noting that it is a
Tony award winning singer, actress and lecturwifo are participating in it were intro- small fishing village of 3,000 people
er, Anna Maria Alberghetti. She debuted at
dui:cd al Monday night's meeting of in the northern pan of Denmark. She
Carnegie Hall at the age of 13. Alberghelli was
th~ Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club will be leaving in July ·and is required
born in Italy, the daughter of a concert master
at Heath Church.
to attend a two week language oriC father and pianist mother. Her father sang with
;Jennifer Sheets, district'chailman, entation session before her depanure..
a number of opera .companies and was her
in'loduced Caroline Magne. who has
Valadymyr also spoke and
voice teacher. Her performances on Broadway
been in Meigs County for the past answered question about his native
included "Carnival," "West Side Story,"
vcar and will be leaving on June 12; country, the Ukraine, noting that it
"Cabaret," "The Sound of Music," "Fanny''
G.Zna Semana of the Philippines, . became an independent country in
and "The Most Happy Fella." Her selections
hoSted by the Gallipolis .Rotary Club; 1991 with the breakup of the Soviet
"will include Broadway favorites, opera and a
ano Valadymyr Stcfanovych. an Union. The most recently elected
medley of Italian classics.
ex¢hange student here as a part of the president, which is the country's
On Saturday, Oct. 12. Toni Gillman and
Fr~edom Support Act.
third had to learn the Ukrainian Jan·
Gordon Davis will star in the "JYetticofit Presi.She also introduced Myca Haynes, guage before taking office. Nearly
dent,'' directed by Harvey Jordan. 'It is the story
a Meigs High School student, who sixty percent of the people in the
of Woodrow Wilson, who became President,
wi~ be spending the next year in Ukraine are Russian, she said.
with only two years of political experience. He .
Denmark as pan of the Rotary Stu·
Valadymyr talked about the high
was a Nobel Prize winner, an educator and
dein Exchange Program.
inflation with gasoline costing close . scholar, Yel with his wife, Ed~h. participated in
;Thi s year's exchange students to $3 per gallon and the average
one of the most outrageous cover ups and conah9u1 their experiences here.
worker earning a monthly salary of
spiracies in White House hi story. Gillman
&lt;:arolinc thanked the R()tarians for $50 to $70. The small country,
Anna Maria Alberghetti
made her Broadway debut in "Let Freedom
thdir support and stated "this has been approximately the size of Texas, is
arc exquisite, colorful and changed frequently throughout
Ring." She has a long list of TV, radio, film and stage performances in her the"Costumes
th~bestyearof my life." She will be
afternoon."
Thaler said.
"officially in a recession, bu"l would
credits. Gordon Davis. who portrays Wilson, wrote the story, and has had
returning to her home country of call it a deep depression," he said.
Accompanying
musicrans play i'nstrumcnts associated with eacl\
a varied career as writer, director and actor.
France next montli after a three week
Sheets said that so far there have
Choosing to avoid the "bad weather" months, the next performance will region, representing centuries old tradition. The group won the internabul tour of the United States.
been no applicants for Rotary Student
be The Black Mountain Male Chorus of Wales March 7. 1997. The 40- tional folk Dance Coriipctition in Barcelona, Spain in 1994.
· •Gccna told about her family who· exchange panicipants to leave in
To complete the series, classic pianist Sally Chiistian will pcrfonn·su 0 mcmbcr male choir will perform a repertoire from the classics, opera. folk
ha; hosted six American exchange August of 1997. Any .interested studay,
May 4. Christian hjts appeared as a solo rerfprmcr with several symtradition, popular music and hymns.
st~ents in previous years. She pre- dent should contact her or.any other
Wales is known for its male choirs and choral excellence. said Thaler. phony orchestras. Because of her interest in Spanish music; Jose Greco
sented a banner froin her father's Rotary Club member.
invited her to perform' as soloist with the Jose Greco Dance Company, at
The tradition began with the Celtic bards in pre-Roman days. .
Rolary Club in the ~hilippines.
Carnegie
in 1988. She is currently listed on the California Arts CounDinner was served by women Of
Directed by Alun John, internationally recognized choral ·and orchestral cil TouringHall
: The outbound students from the church preceding the meeting
Roster.
.
.
conductor, the choir was hand-picked and auditioned from choirs throughMei gs County will be leaving in July conducted by Lloyd Blackwood,
~or information about season subscriptions. in Gallipolis contact Jan
out Wales.
and· August of this year. Mike Park- president. He reminded Rotarians of
Thaler,
446-4425 or Saundra Koby 446-9356; in Jackson, contact Helen
In April, Zabava. the folk ballet of Russia, will appear on a Sunday
er :unable to auend the meeting, will next weeks ABLE banquet sponsored
Anderson
at 286-1025: in Oak Hill, Pat Tope at 682- 6586;. in Wellston,
hd~caving for San Jose. Costa Rica. by Rotary to be held at the Meigs afternoon. The 23-member troupe of dancers a~d instrumentalists will pre- .contact Jane Chevalier at384'2919: in Point Pleasant, Terry Casto at 675sent an overview of folk dances in the acrobatic style, from various
.
•
3491; and in Meigs County. Lee Lee at 949-2454.
High School 6 p.m., Monday.
regions in Russia.
•
Season subscriptions
, . will be sold through June 18.

Pomeroy • llldcl-.port. Ohio

Lois Rathbun of Hepkinton, R.I., .
Booth's
great-great-grandniece.
"Being the family, I think we should
have a right to know that the proper ·
penon is in the grave."
.
The Court of Special Appeals
opinion, by Chief Judge Alan Wilner,
·said there is little doubt Booth was
buried in Green Mount Cemetery.
Booth shot Lincoln in 186S as lhci
president watched a perfonnance in
Ford's Thealre ill. Washington.
According to the official account,
Booth was tracked to a Virginia farm
12 days after the ·assassination and
shot in the neck as be tried to escape

a burning bam.
Another theory has it that Booth
escaped the barn and lived under the
aliases David E. George and John St.
Helen. In the early 1900s, a body
alleged to be that of Booth was mummified at\d exhibited throughout the
United States as the remains of Lincoln's assassin.
Lawyen for the cemetery had said
it would be difficult to find the
remains, since wet, acidic soil would
have !lone serious · damage. They
also said it was highly unlikely that
scientific tests could establish the.
identity. .

•a

within OPEC. Saudi Arabia, which
now pumps about one-third of OPEC
oil, is understood to have told the others that creater world demand will
allow Iraq to resume limited oil sales
without requiring big sacrifices from
the others.
Not even OPEC's staff economists
buy this argument.
Iran apparently has taken ,the line
thai Saudi Arabia, which benefited
the most from Iraq's six-year
absence, should make the biggest cuts
now. Saudi Arabia 'increased its pro. duction from 5.3 million barrels to 8
million with Iraq gone.
"Now that Iraqi is coming back in
the ·market, somebody't asking f!!r
the countries producing more from
that time to reduce their production
and give it to Iraq," Aghazadeh said.
He did not specify who that "somebody" was.
Analysts called Iran's suggestion
ridiculous.
Some ministers · have recommended increasing the cartel's total
production ceiling from 24.52 million
barrels a day to 25.2 ~ill ion, providing Iraq wtth the esttmated 700,000
barrels a day it needs in the U.N. deal.
But Iraqi oil minister Amer
Mohammed Rasheed insists he will
begin exponing 800,000 barrels a day

.

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Eight fifth and sixth graders and
their teachers of the Rutland Elementary School were in Columbus
recently forthe Ohio NEED (National Energy Education Development)
vou th awards ce.remony held at the
Aladdin Temple.
The Meigs students were among
1.000 students from 110 schools
over Ohio rewarded for their work on
energy pmjects.
Going from here were lenni Priddy. Melissa Cremeans, Mallory King
and 1\lison Williamson, fifth graders;
Melissa Richmond. Kara Musser,
Amber Ellis and Aaron Bowersock,
sixth graders. and Betty Ann Wolfe,
Donna Jenkins, teachers , and Anthony Perry, principal.
,
Recognizing students for their
leadership and activities related to

)

ENERGY STARS •In COlumbus recently for Ohio NEED rec:ognltion were these Rutland atudenta, lett to right, front, Jennl Priddy, Melissa Cremeans, Mallory King and Allison Williamson, fifth
grader&amp;, and beck !'Ow; Melissa Richmond, Kara Musser, Amber
Ellis, and Aaron Bowersock. The program rewarda·atuanla Who
participate In 1he natlonel education program aalgned to promote
energy education and atudent lellderahlp.

Whooping cough, a dangerous
disease of infancy, may be far more
common in adults than health experts
realize, a new report says.
Adult whooping cough, or pertussis, could pose a serious public health
risk, report researchers at Kaiser
Permanente Medical Center, San
Francisc!J, in Wednesday's Journal of
the American Medical Association.
They estimate an incidence rate of

Anending a cookou1 were her
brother, Steven, grandparents, Burpel! and Kathryn MCKinney, Dan and

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which go undiagnosed, · said lead
res~archer Mary E.:Nennig. Only .2
cases per I 00,000 arc reported i)l people over age 20.
Nennig and colleagues studied
mcqical records of 307 patients.
Among them, I53 sought treatment
for coughs that lasted two weeks or
longer, and the rest had no cough.
Blood tests of the patients with p~o­
longed coughs confirmed 19, or 12
percent, had pertu~sis . ·

.

energy education is extremely important to the Ohio NE.ED project," said
Ohio NEED Director Shauni Nix.
"Fortunately we have outstanding
educators in Ohio who are commit·
ted to teaching about energy and the
environment using the philosophy of
'kids teaching kids:," which is the
foundation of the NEED Project."
The director went on to say that

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Bill and Missy Frazer, ~yan and Brit-

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HOWARD.E. FUNK
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and Beth, Cathy Erwin, Amy Pemn
and Emma, Arron Hockman, Craig
Hanman, Drema and'Stephanie Pickens.
·The honored guest plans to allend
Hocking College to stay a program in
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CLOSING DATE IS JUNE 28, .1996
TUIL~R TAX DEADliNE iS JULY. 3l I 1996. .'

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FOR THE HUNTER WE HAVE GUNS.

MEIGS COUNTY.REAL ESTATE OWNERS·.....

Ohio NEED teaches elementary, mid·
die and high school students about
the I0 sources of energy and the
importance of resource conservation
through materials and leaderShip
training workshops. NEED. also
encourages students to learn and.
work cooperat4vely in Jroups to '
achieve improved community aware·
ness about energy, said Nix .

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While the disease is less severe in J
adults, Ncnnig said, there is a danger • ;
they could pass it on to babies.
"People descri be il as the worst
cough of their life. " Nennig said. In
infants it can cause pneumonia, shortness of breath and even death .
Babies get DTP shots, which combine the pertussis vaccine with vaccines for diphtheria and tetanus, in
months 2, 4, 6 and 12, with a booster just before entering school.

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Graduation celebration held for Woods
- man.

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Thursday, Friday, Saturday

Whooping cough in adults may be
more common than at first believed

.

A party was given Saturday at the
Cheshire Par~ for Stephanie Wood,
graduate of Meigs High School, by
her parents, Brian and Peggy Han-

HERitAGE
SAVINGS

·-i.

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By ANITA MANNING
USA TODAY

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Exchange students
speak at Rotary meeting.

S·tudents
recognized
for energy
projects

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lftrBUIUIJftll1111, AID1m OOUIIOOt
PRQl.IDLY PARTICIPATING IN POMEROY'S

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Thursday, June 6, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport; Ohio

"ige12 • The Dally Sentinel

The Pally Sentinel• P-oe ~

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

Thursday, June 6, 1996 .•

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':""'

G_
ingrich draws .fire for 'disg·usting'-Brown rumor-s

llr LAURA MYERS

A•u' ' d PrHa Wrtw

WASHINGTON- House Speaker Newt Gingrich is ~tiling RepubliRIIII that Commerce Deputment
Wolbn might have shredded incrimilillinJ documents after the fatal
alii! of Ron Brown's plane.
Clinton administration officials
said Gingrich is "out of line" for
spreading "disgusting" election-year
rumors.
In a private meeting with fellow
Republicans on Tuesday, Gingrich
alluded to reports the administration
delayed disclosing the April 3 crash
tn 'Croatia to allow time to destroy
Commerce ·Secretary Brown 's
~n .
,
The allegations were ftrSt made by
the American Spectator, a conservative publication. Gingrich, R-Ga.,
repeated them during a closed meeting:with several hundred GOP direc~ of congressional districts who
were in Washington, the New York
Post reported in Wednesday's ·editions.
·

He said such allegations and
Whitewater and Travel Office scandals could bring down President
Clioton, said Gingrich spokesman
Tony Blankley, who did not ancnd
the meeting.
"( think they are serious allegations if subsequent facts support
them," Blankley told The Associated
Press Wednesday. "I think it's something other news outlets ought to look
at and other agencies."
White House press secretary Mike
McCurry called the remarks attributed'lo Gingrich "an outrageous
sugges tion " and urged him to clarify
what he said about the crash.
Asked about Gingrich's comments
on "CBS This Morning" Wednesday,
White House Chief of Staff Leon
Panetta said it didn 't surprise him that
the speaker, would make such wild
auacks in an election year. "That's
the kind of thing he does,'' Panetta
said.
"This is tragic. And I think that
the speaker, who did not attend Sec-

Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Ca lif, nity, then proposed .that the panel go
AIIOCt.t.d Preas Writer
repeatedly called Hale a "convicied to federal court for a ruling on Hale's
WASHINGTON - President felon " and said he has "a past that . cons titutional right agai nst selfCligton 's chief accuser in the Whit~- I' m sure his mother would be incrimination.
water affair has been ordered to ashamed of."
The panel decided to subpoena
appear for questioning by a Senate
Democrats maintained they, too, Hale for a deposition on Friday by
commitlee and the panel is.headed to · want Hale to testify but argued that committee attorneys. If Hale assens
court for a decision on whether he giving him immunity wou ld allow a Fifth Amendment claim as expectcan be forced to testify without a him to manipulate the committee and ed, the committee then would seek a
ll'llllt of immunity.
escape further prosecutions. They vote by the full Senate 10 go to U.S.
·:]be Senate Whitewater Commit- said the problem could be solved by District Court in Washington and ask
tOe:V.Oted Wednesday to seek a court compelling Hale to appear, but avoid- for an expedited hearing o~ Monday,
ruling on whether former Arkansas ing questioning him about a separate 0' Amato said,
banker and municipal Judge David Arkansas case in which he is expectIf the court upholds Hale's claim,
Hale, now imprisoned for fraud, can ed to be charged.
the committee would vote Tuesday
lejally refuse to answer the panel's
" It is an absolute certainty that the on whether to grant him immunity,
questions by invoking the Fifth course of justice will be affected " by D' Amato said. Hale would be able to
Amendment right against self-incrim- Hale's testimony, because "ro lawyer appeal the court's ruling.
ination.
worth his salt" would miss the chance
0 ' Amato wants Hale to testify
· I~ the meantime, Hale was to appeal Hale's conviction as a about an illegal $300,000 loan made
ordired to appear Friday for ques- result, said Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass. by his government-backed lending
tioning in a closed session.. Hale preThe Republicans were adamant, company. Hale , Starr's main witness
vil)usly has said he would invoke the accusing ihe Democrats of tryin g to at the Arkansas trial of Clinton's
Fifth Amendment and has asked for shield Clinton from Hale's testimony. Whitewater part ners, James and
iii)IRUnity so his Senate testimoni
"There's a cloud over this admin- Susan McDougal, has said that thencould not be used against him in oth- istration caused by Whitewater," said Gov. C:li nton pressured him in 1'986
er cases.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, a panel to make the loan to Mrs. McDougal
The voice vote came after a rau- member who also is chairman of the - a claim the president denied in
cOilS panisan debate over whether Senate Judiciary Committee. "It's a vide9taped testimony.
Hale should be granted limited big cloud and it 's ·never goi ng to go
Limi ted immunity would have no
immuni)y, . for which ·committee away" unless Hale testifies, he said. bearing on Hale's current prison
ReJll!blicans have been pushing. SpeLed by Curr.mittec Chairman Sen. tenn for defrauding the government,
cia!.Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Alfonse D' Amato, R-N.Y. , the and he wou ld still be subject to perStarr last week gave his approval for Republicans insisted that they would . jury charges if he lied to the com· such a grant.
· not be able to hear from Hale, whose mittee. Moreover, any existing eviCommittee Democrats assailed allegations triggered the Whitewater dence already accumulated against
the character and credibility of Hale, in'vestigation, without granting him him or any evidence gathered withwho' is serving a 28-month prison immunity.
.
out a.;sistance from his testimony also~
term for defrauding the federal govD' Amato, unable to line up ·at sti ll could be used - most notably in
ernihent through his lending compa- least two Democratic votes needed to a state case involving alleged fraud in
ny.
_ secure two-thirds approval for immu- a burial insurance plan.

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who passed away
Junes, 1989.
Gone, dear aon, ao1~e I
,forever,
How we miss hearing
:your voice, seeing
iyour smiling lace,
Qut you left us to
;remember that none
'011 earth · can take
¥our place.
A: happy home we
pnce enjoyed;
How
sweet
the
'!llemory st1!l;
But death has left a
loneliness
The world can never

••••••

992·3607
5121196 1 mo.

11411 mo.

'
•
40 Gal. Propane
Water Heater
• The only charge is $5.00 per month lease
for 5 years.
• Rutland Bottle Gas will install gas line at
no charge.
·
• Water Heaters are propane only.
• Propane must be purchased from -Rutland
Bottle Gas to qualify for this offer.
• Must be property owner to qualify for this
offer.
.; Plumbing and venting 6f water heater is
the·obligation of the property owner.

fill.

-

.

him a Carlton card this

742-2511
1-80CJ..837-8217

"FAMILY OWNED"

..

•'

.

'

rq:Mtn, .
0• I
• I

797-4092
1·800-382-5657

'

.'

Six Locations To Serve You Better/
St. Rt.124

St. Rt. 32
Jackson, OH

St. Rt. 33 &amp; 682

St Rt. 7
.Tarch,OH

The Plaine, OH

St. At. liON
' llcConne!lvlle. 011

Your spirit has fled
find your suffering
Is over,
Attd,
as
dawns
llnother year,
Tttou9hts of you
· always near.
Days of sadness'
come over us,
F~iends · may thi1nk I
lhe
wound
is
healed.
BUt . little they kno&gt;w I
fte sorrow
That lies within our
ltearta ccincealed.
Tjjne may heal the
ttroken hearted;
..,ny years may
make the wound
litss sore,
Wllo Ays the grief Is
lpsaened,
Though the smile
rhay hide the titars.
O~r memories
~"'e . wound
Delplte the
of another yeer.
Forever In our hearts.
Loved and mined
:. Mom, Gram, Aunt I

: Kathy,

St. At. 568
Galllpolle, Ott

.'

Uncle::~
'F,

· Adam,

ind

I

FRAGRANT
FIELDS

1-900-988-6988

Ext. 1449
$2.9g per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

Thur.·Sat. 10·5
· Hemlock Grove Rd
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7573 5122/1
. mo. ~ -

ROBERT BISSELL

I

'

1-900-446-1414
Ext. 4309
$3.99 per min.
Mus~ be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 645-6434

Limestone • Gravel

•Garages

•

•Complete
Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
614-992·2n2
8:30 A.M.-3:30P.M.

•Replacement Windows
&lt;Build Garages
•Storm Doors &amp; windows
•Room Additioas

LEEBUSK
WILDING
SERVICE
Quality Work
Competitive Rates
Res.:

614,992-2524
Truck:

614·441·7558
51911

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

mo. pd.

FREE
Pick-up discarded
batteries, appllan,cea &amp;
many metals.

614-992·4025
8am·8p,m

·Summer Images
New Location
Middleport, Ohio
With 3 Beds to
Serve You Better.

12-$20.00
16-$25.00

DATE
LINE
Your Sweetheart as
close as your phone

1-900-988-8988
Ext. 6733
$2.99 per minute
Must be 18 yrs old
Service U
61 645-8434
Need Direction'?
.love
Business
Family Matters
Allow Your
Piraonal Psychic to
Aaalst You
1·900.988·8600

Eict. 1277

lll:mmo. pd.

3 Family: Mens IPlus -Size Wom ens !Baby' C.om~uter Desk, T+res.
Tools, Books &amp; Much More, 1263
Watson Road, On Corner Of 850
.4 Watson , Thurs. Fri. Sat, Rat n-1
Shtne.
· ·

HYDRAUliC REPAIR
(Lime StoneLow Rates)

Limestone,

Dirt• Sand

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

985s4422
Chester, Ohio

614~992-3470

Howard L. Wrltesel

New24 hr.

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

Dateline

CALL NOW
'

.

5J16/St TFN

1;900-988-6003
ExU021
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (614) 645-8434

Mln1118
Muet be 18 yra.
Touch·Tona Requlr~
· S.rv·u (619) 645-8434
"'~-

FIND TOTAL
SATISFACTION!
Through Live
Personal Psychic! ·

a

1-900-255-0500
Ext. 4009
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619)

645-8434

AnRACTIYE .
&amp; WILLING
TO TALIIII
1·900·99D-3737
Ext. 2261
$2.1111 per min.
Mualbe18yrw.

Serv..lJ (6111) 145 8434

.,_,_

H&amp;H
SAWMILL
Portable
Bfllllls11w MiN
32124 Happy'Hollow Ad.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

614·742,2193
TFN

CHAT LINE
Live 24 Hrs a day
Talk to Beautiful
Girls

Route' 141, Clothes, All Sizes, Numerous Of'let' Items!

Jure 7th, 8th, 9-5. 1'333 State .Ro ute 7 N , Between Skyl•ne L-anes
And l&lt;ana.u ga Or tve- ln lo o~ For
S•gns . lawn Mowers, Clothes,
Otshes. And LOIS Moret
Large Sate : Cheshue, Across
From Food Shop, Nice Clothing,
Ba~ Items, Toys, June 7th, 8t h.
Tools , Au to mobi les. Household
Goods, June 7th. 8th. Benson's
Mov1ng Sale : 5459 Stale Ro ut e

218, 6t4-2S6-0075,

1·900,446-1414
Ext. 6445
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yra old.
Service U
(619) 654-8434 .

,,

Top Pric es Pa1d: Old U.S. C ·
Stiver, Gold, D•amonds. AU
Collec 11 bles . Paperweights , Etc.
U _T S. Cotn Shop; 151 Se~o
Avenue. Gallipolis. 614 ·4~6-2&amp;a

9-

);;rl:1

2543,

Want ed To Buy : Auto ' s &amp; Tra.!IUP
Any Cond•t•on , 614 -388 -9062, 160r._,
614 -446_:..._:...
-PART.
:-f'
:__

_______,....,...,

_

Wamed To [.luy : J~1"1k Autos ~Jl\-,

Or Wtthout Motors Ca ll lar~y •
~l'.,Oiy.

614-388:9303.

,..,. .....

;:
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

•

--------~·,.

11 o

Help Wanted .•:..•:

D •'
S-WANTEO-S
·•,.;!.,.,
10 peop le wh o need to ID.t&amp;tt
we•ghl &amp; make money, tO try -P"W ,parented we1ght -loss prodl.f~\~:
30-1 -773-5083 :?4hrSiday
J' fi." J

-

call ·

j708i906 -2 350E• L 3~1-Q .n

.

t All Ar~as
Spears, 304 -675-1429.
.

AVON

I'

;.

Abte Avon RepresentaiWaa.n :
needed. Earn money for Ch~i
1,. }I
mas bills ill horttelat work . 1
:··
9Q2 -6356 or 304 - 882 - 26._~ , rn .:.J

· -· •

::C:-h,:-ist:-ia-n7ba-;by-~-,-1e-r,-,n-o-.u-rR=-a-'i:""~ ~ ~ ·
home , call 61"1 ·949- 2940

aU~r

6pm.,

•

. :'1

•r-1

moon root, get 35 to 38 mpg, cal!

ound The World! G 1l ts Ot· Ho~ll.l.

614·992·2906.

01 lloyd. Woul d you like a tree
'
Chnstmas and earn extra ca~1. ~
can Carol. 614-949 -3301 .
• ••

::--:--:--.,.----~
· ~'
Domino's Pizza ol Ponl4:trow- n~
hiring drivers.

- - - - - - - -1.:......:~.:....::.-,-------:""'l
· • ·!
6 tamtlw-. one -da~ only, June 7, Rl. Dr ivers
D i sPatchers Needn.4. - ,
t

325 , one m 11e h om At . 124,
clo thes. Home Interior, cur ta ms.
.
1

3 California Doe rabbils. 304 -6753864 .
3 Dogs , 1black , 3yrs old, part
cocker spaniel, good wlchfldren .
1blw Terrier, spaded, all shots. 1'
9mo. old mimd Beagle, must go ro
a good home. 304-6 7S-4650

Cai1A-1 Ta.:i,614·441 -1449.

E

arn up to $1000's weekly

. t•.
'&lt; 1
!llutlino ,
1

-,'w_on.:.g•_•c..
•· c-m-•sc_.,_
ra_,n_ca
_nc:::-e-s::-.:---:-I envelopes at hOme. Start now, ~ 1 , _IY
Advance . Oeacl lme . 1:00pm the
day belore the a'a •s to run , Sun day ed•liOn - 1:OOpm Fri da~. Mon -

etpenence, tree supplies. lnhr~ .. l~
matlon. no obligation, send SA~'
Budl Oepl. 77, -3208 -C, E. Colofua~ ,
Or . 13J8. OrlandO. Fl 32003. · .... 1 ·'

day ediiiOn 10:00a.m Saturday

Easy Work! Excellent Pay!

B1g yard sate Fnday, June 7, 8-?.
ram or shme. t1 1 Pearl St.. M•d -

semble Product s at Home . C3tr ... ,
Toll Free 1- 800 - 467-5566 E~!'n"J
, 2170.
. '
•

All Yard Sates Mu st Be Pa td In

Ali·_i:-,

;:---:---;-:--:-:--:::---:--,':"-''~.- P
:;:m::;"':·:.-----:--:--::-:--:--:-1 Experienced Pan-Time Snack Q,!!,C.:,.
Commumty yard sa le. Fridav &amp; /Bar Tender, _Submit Appl ication ,I- ·
Saturday, June 7-8 , 9-5, Tuppers Resume: Cliflside GoU Club, tOO
dleporl, guns. too ts . toys, lots ol

Giveaway

;J.

Pla 1ns.
Ctt ll side Dr~v&amp;, Gallipoli s, OH::no
::-----:-::----:---:---:-1 .45631 , No Phone Cans!
. ~ ; 1 ; ;· 1 t
Fr1da)l 7th, 9 -Spm, adult &amp; Chtldren's cloth1ng, Eureka sweeper &amp; Five Po1nis Express now t'11rlrtgt~f.:
nou senotd ttl?ms. Knrr St.. Syra - one lull time an d one part ti~ 1 f. ~
cuse
cashier. Exper ience hclplu l. TA!t - '"
ing resumes at F1ve Points, Mo"-I'J'""
Fr iday - 133 Bunernut Aven ue. day, Wedno sda v and Thursd~'tl
porch swtng, btke, exerc1ser. type- 9am-nam.
tor:_
Chrts.
•t'JI:•
·::__ _ :_ask_
__ ~
wnter, stereo, sow mg machine. playpen, collecttbles.
Home Typ•sts, PC users need~c:t: ·:. t;
:_:_:__ _ _ _ _--'- I $115 ,000 mcome potential. Call1 - I
Garag·e sale , 7th &amp; 8th, 8-4pm, 800-":13-43&lt;13E•t.B-9368.
~ I · 11

.

==--------1·

gas gnlt. lawn mower. CJICtCtse
btke, super s•ngle water bed,
crafts. plus lots &amp; lots 01 m 1sc ..
Oenn 1s Wolle 's res •dence, Ve llowbush Road , Rac 1ne.
_::__::..;___;__:_ _:..._ _ _ ,
Garage sale- Fry residence nex t
to Sahsbury Elementary, Frtday,
' June 7, 1-9, Saturday, June 6, g.
4 . Baby to larger size clothmg ,
much m1sc
·

HousehOld Goods Van Operator(~ ·,.~~
..- ,., ..
Or tver Needed lmmedtarely Cu '' •..
&amp; Hou seh old Goods Etc. Re~&gt; '
qwed, Desire To Provide Qual ity r
Servtce A Must . We Have Th1. ... 1
Best loaders In The BusinesS' &amp;'
Plenty Of Work. Please Apply !fA ~. ;r,
180 Co lumbus Road,- In Athevs., ..
OH Or Call Man, t -800-646-6691 ·• • ·
For More lnlo.
" "ti~· v·

=:::.:....=:---:---:-::-=-:-::-1
,,..,,,,I
June 7-8, 9am -4pm, Oeryt Well 's local Supermarket Chatn seeking

5 Killen!/-. 614-446 -3595.
6 Froe Ktllens . 304-6 75-4860

• 7 Ktnens . :l:l4·fi75-6556

7 wk old,· black long-ha1red, male
ktlfM , very alfec!lona!e• Call 304 675-6022 alter Spm.
Cocker Spaniel. adult male, black,
to good home, needs room to
roam, 814 - 992~412.
Fire wood, ready cut. 304·675t 595. Leave message.
FlO P· Eared Female' Ra bbHS, 8
Months Old, 614 -388 -8577 Alter
6:Xl P.M.
Fret 6 PuppieS:, Part Collie, 614446-8202Anytime .
Klnens. 614 -367 7774 Alter

above Eastern . Computer des!\, appltcattohs or resumes, lor me'at' -..-• ,
dr es~mg tablo . mauress. boJts - depanme!lt managers and assif ·• ,,.
prings, bedspraad, lamps.
tants to update files. Send conft~ I!' ·
:.._.:.;:....:.:_~_:..._;_;
den!lally to Bo~ C-4 cloThe Poittt'1 ::,:.;
June 6-8. ftrst house past thurch Plea sam Reg1ster 200 Main St. P,,- ,t.1,u
1n Chester, barbells , htgh cha 1r, ::p'".:..'-:":-n_tWI!-::-,.:..25:.:_5.::.._50
. ::-----:-::-~'!
coffee, end tablea . lamps, 1nfanr
thru adult clothing,lots of misc.
Part·Ttme Summer FOod Servi ~ t 1 ~
Work~rs Needed , At um-.ersi.II., , ; .
617196 · 24 1 lincoln Stre-et. Mid - Of Rro Gr_ando , _App ly A t The- .· ;
dlepon , Anna Elli s. Curta ins , Food Serv1ce Olh'Ce, In Studel1f ,· f'.(
small rugs, apanment size relrig- Cen!er Annex , 9 A.M. -5 P.M. Qi ~ )');~
erator, small freezer, t9BO Kawa - Call614-245--5660.

_ _1

rt .. • d~

-c::....=::.:.__--:---:--:--:--~
=-Tuesday
thru Saturday, 300

Postal &amp; Gov ·1 Jobs $21 /Hr + .. :
8
I'
N E
W' ll T
·J ... IIo
ene tts, 0 .liP. 1 ra1n , !1r •
Wright Street, baby clothes ga - _Appl And lnlp 1-800 -536-3040. ' ··• ••

kHe, tots or misc.

A.N. poStllOn available lor pro- .

Va~d stue, T hursday and Friday,

Shelly Wood , 389 Beech Street, ,
Mtddleport, Kimball organ.

5 P.M

Pt. Pleasant

·

s·

Communlty rummage tale, leon

Green Iguana 2 11211 l on.g .~ 55
gallon tank goes with it. 304·875·

Baden fri -Sar g. 8 _ Oak table set,
W&amp;stern
books, bah..
items. stone
,
WJ

2906.
----------1
To Good Home In Country, 1

::'"::..'
· --::---:-::-----'-1· Rocksprings Rehabilitation Ceo.

Year Old Golden Retriever Fe male, Good With Children . 614·
3e7-7043. 614-367-7705.
rlandl._ ,

Pupploo, 814-441-0784.

p

If!

Garage

Salt: Tool a, largo

'-~1 ;r'
.,. .

a team memtror "'lh en e.cellonf·; -'
stall oi1,.,.!&gt;Sis and nursoslhat"l •'·I•
have a history ol 5 ~ears lfe'iltlout , , . :

&amp; VICinity

puppoes, 4

R h bil

gress+ve e a +lattOrt kllled :-- r. ... n 1
ICF factllfy. EJt~nence p(elerred. •• •1,r,-:
but will consider the right can- '
"
didate. Must be Willing m work as _

male, 1 lerrtalt, to good home
011•.
,. 304 ·57&amp;·2320.

f

.

! Shir1th.l

Babysllter N eeded In My Ho"l'l~., .
614-446-8595.
•• j

3 fam1 ty yard sale Friday, June 7,
on Flatwoods Road turn tell at
Ftve Potnls, 9 -5. watch fo r s1gns.
ram cance ls

Men's soflballlournamenl- June
15·16. Reedsville, rain Of shine .
Ftfst 10 teams- $65 plusrwo
balls. 6 14-667 -6122.614-3 786267. No alcohOlic beVerages.

~

1j

'ATTN : Po •nt Pleasant• Poa$4(~1
Positions_ Permanent lull timQ)Of..
1
clerk/s orte rs . Full Benelits .· Paru
elam, appltcatron and salary,l\lbJ J

1995 Ford Escort LX, am tm ster eo, CO player, cruise conlfo l, · Demonsli·ators- Christmas

SWM likes Church , Mov ies,
Outdoors. And Quiet Evenmgs At
Home Seeking SWF Age : 25 -35
Please Wr ite To : P.O. Bo x 262.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Very Cull Vary

e

·se

Personals

chow

Top dollar - ant•ques. lur'llllWiJ
glass. cnmjl. clocks . gold. s•I'Jifr,
co1ns , wat ches, esta tes . Osby
Marun. 614-992-74141 .

r 0 •~
Wed. Thur s, Fri, 1072 Seco nd Rep. ,
Avenue, Paper Wetghts, l a d• es . AVON •
-S151'tit r. No Ooor•Td 1J ~
Etg 1n Woitch, Fur1'uture, Po cket Do.or, No M inimum Order. Bolli!JKnives, Too ts. C lothing,' J.ewlery. es 1 · 800·827-~640 lndiSistRep,,
ff

ANNOUNCEMENTS

··

1238

8am-8pm.

,tc_

FREE : Beautllut

No n -Work mg Wuhera , Dr!t,lr
Stoves , Retngera tOn , Fred~i!,!
A•r Cond 111 0ners , Color T.'r.tl\:
VCR's. Also Jun~ Cars. 614; fr.¥ft

Garage Sate: Thurs. 6th, F11 7th. 9
AM . -4, 1\58 Second Ave nue,
Aa1n Or Shtne t

HOME IMPROVEMENT
Roofing, Room Additions
Siding, Concrete,
P.O. Box 220, Bidwell, Oh.
614 388-9865 S/1011 mo

Ffae

J &amp; D's 4uto Pans. 8uymg,.~-~t.
vage veh icles. setttng ottrts. 30.._..
773· 5033.
~ I fJ

Wan ted to b\ly- one acre lot
most ly level. Racine/ Syrae
letar t/ Por tland area , 6U -

Fr~day, &amp; Saturd a~. June 7th . &amp;
8th, 9 A.M. -4 P. ~ . 4509 State

28563 BASHAN RD.
Racine, ohio 45n1
(&amp;1~) 949-3013 Phone
(614) 949-2018 FAX
61 ~ 594·2008 NIGHT

4D

•••

Clean late Model Cat!"
Trucks, 1990 Models Or NeW•
Smuh Butc k PontiaC, HIOO fA~~
ern Avenue, GaHtpOhs.
•

Frt &amp; Sat, 3 112 Mttes Out 218,
Clot he~. Collee Ta'bte. End. Table,
Curta1ns &amp; Morel

3D Announcements

Meet the Man or Woman
of your Dreams Never
be lonely again.

7282 Evan•nos.

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

Fri, Sat, 2534 Georges Creek
Road , Storm Doors, Windows.
M ens, Boy s, Large Wo mens
Cloth ifl g, Cu tams. Disnes . Tovs.
Lots Of M1 sc Ratr'l Or Shine.

!149-2512

005

8ool!s: State And County
Guns. Hunt•ng, F•shing, B•o.Q~
phtes, Oeba tu . War. 61• -'l',.t •

Wamed To Buy Used U-lbi
Homes. CaH· 614 -446-0175

the day before the ad is to run .
Sunday edition - 2:00p.m. Friday.
Monday edition- 10 :00 am. Sat·
urday.

MANLEY'S

WICKS
.HAULING

DUMP TRUCK

Wanted to Buy:

3 Fam•ty : Saturday, 618th, Homewood Dr~•. Bktwell. ts1 Road Leh
After 554 Intersection.

5 Cute Killens. 614-388-8419.

$3.10 Per

Phone 992·2489

3 Miles Ou t 4ddiaon P1ke 011 Rt
1,

' Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

TRUCKING

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

12' Boat

Sweepet".

Ext. 3505
· $3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv- U (619) 645-8434

SERVICE

Anlt~ue_s.

8 1cyclea,

q1ore.
1-900-255-0500

YOU NOW!!!

Items.

Home Interior. Curta1ns. Clo thes,

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

·New Homes

1

'

mates, seH-help and

R.L. HOLLON

a., .. Cloches S1ze 3 &amp; 4, M•sc.
3 Family Garage: Ra in ! Shi n~t,
Juno 8th, 7th. 8th. 8-2. Household
Items Loll Of Toys like New. 2

1-800-889·3943

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

love, success, care, soul . 1

· MEN
BEAUTIFUl WOMEN
ARE WAITING TO
NEAR FROM

3121/t mo. pd

1·800·291·56.09

We will work w~hin your budget
Ph. n3-9173 .
FAX na:.sa&amp;1
108 Pomero Street
Mason, WV
'Talk line to our gifted
psychics on questions of

CONSTRUCTION

Window Fan Jeans. Play Pen ,

·"No Job Too Lsrge or Toe» Smill/"

$32.00/HR.

Herbs
Scented
Geraniums
Everlastings

229 Evergr11n Road . Fu. &amp; Sat.

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing ·• Ornamental
Steps ·Stairs, Raiiings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
Items, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff!!

TruckingLimestone
Bulldo?:ing and
Backhoe
Services
House Sites and
Utilities

-

A.....,o, Gatr;polo~

Garage Sale: June 7th. Bth. 1 Mile
On Vance, Boys Clothes, Dress
Clothes Size 7. Homemade Crafts.
Sweeper , Home lnlenor, Lqts
More!
'

No arguments!
No Nagging!
Juslthe mate of
your choice.

Psychic-Line

All Kinds of Earth Work
992-3838

01 Children• Clothel, 330 Th trd

Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
- Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding
35 Ye•rs Experience

' . ,..,. mo.

',.

!lio!a&lt;ti

BIB ROOnNG and
CONSTRUC,.ION

Howard Emvatin

~-----. ··

Yard Sale

Advance. DEADLIN E: 2:00 p.m.

WHITE PINE ROUGH
SAWED LUMBER .
1 x&amp;, 1xa, 2x4, 2x6
8'·1 0' 30~ a ft.
· 14'-16' 35~ a fl.
Also available
4x4's - 4x6's
614-985--4107
614-742-3337

R1ck Pe•rson 4uc:tion Co~
lull lllftt IUCIIOne•t , CO"VlJtJI
aucaion
. .rvice
Licanted
·na.onio &amp; Wa•r VirgiNa ,· - -

1980's tOJ'I, G. I. Joe, Slalr WN:I

Gallipolis
&amp; Y.lelnlty
2 Fomoy: 8:30 A.M. Juna 5th, lotS

Tuppers'Pialns, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 614-667..fl484
Plastic Culvert- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36'\
4" S&amp;D- perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
112" &amp; 3/4" C. PV.C pipe
I 112" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. wa)er pipe (100' roll's thru 1,000' roll'&lt;)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
8" &lt;Jraveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2" - Fittinl!s - Regulators- Risers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fitting• &amp; Water linings
Full line of Cistern. Septic &amp; Water.&gt;torage tanks.

614·915-4110

80 .

ect. Will pay lair price t.iel~
condit1on . 614-448-8830 lfl..._.
pm

tn.t-"e·t•98

70

~

'A
Public Sa.. :;·
and Auction , • ·~

90

Joanne Sheets

St. Rt. 7

VIIY REISOIIIU
IIIYE IEFEIIICIS

booko 10 lor IUlO, cto...,..
111011.0C&amp;•nc.
'

Ktren Burns

6 &amp; WIUSTICS AID SIPPI.Y

llrEIIOI·EITEIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pele ••I of
pelntl•l· Let es do It
for yev. ·

June 7th, 2115 Wt VerMft,

773-5785 Or-30•-&gt;n-54&lt;7.

Chuck McGuwe

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

LINDA'S
PAINTING

I VICinity

WELC~

Joanne's Ku1&amp; Kurl

Installed

Call today with your
window sizes tor a free
quote!

""" ,. ,n. • HMce Ill bat:lr If up

Loat two Walker coon dogJ,
Allrod , OH. SR 881 vi&lt;;Aity. At ward . c.lt Bt4·318·8287 01 814·

182·-·

•Tilt-In
•Double Hung
•Insulated
Limited Time Offer

•

BENN

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Rooting
COMMERCIAL and R~SIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

JONES' TREE SERVICE

.Autland,OH

........

7

EOE

Konneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charlo Riffle, R. Ph.
Ronald Henning, R. Ph.
Mon. thru s.t. 8:00a.m. to 9:00p.m.
Sundey 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 1192·2055
E. Main
Service Po..,...oy, Oh.

'

$19 500

Fu"'-. All equipment In stock
lor lmmedllte lnetalllllon.
a:;
···
-~•
~
Free Eltlmltes
.
l ' .
..
IW¥010212

LAUREL CLIFF
Yz MILE PAST PAM IDA
JUNE 7TH

REGISTERED NURSES
'

WINDOWS

NAir~Cot~!'ldl~~~n~~~~~:'=red Housing

~ew Homes • Vlny' Siding New

PUUtrURB &amp; BOTI'I.B GAS

conp-t:sswoman.
,
"I have read the J!lea agreement.

•Addltlone
•Hew Garages
•AemocMIInO
•Siding
•ROOftng
•Pitlndng

BISSELL a·UILDERS, INC.

Father's Day.'

Prosecutors stre~ Wednesday

..

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

~
•Hew Homes

R~PLICEMENT

(814) 1192-5535
114 182-2753

PICKS, SPREADS,
FINANCE
HOROSCOPE, SOAP
RESULTS
1-900-nS-2525 EXT.
5961
$2,99 per min
Must be t8 yr$.
SeN-U (619) 654-8434

.SYRACUSE
Open Mon. thru Sat.11 am to
7
Sun. 2:00 to 6:00

Memorial Hospi1al

Return the love Dad's always sent your

dill the charges to which Waldholtz
pleaded guilty ~o not implicate the

SMITII'S
COISTIUOIOI

YOUNG'S
SPORTS/
CARPENTER 5ERV1a
ENTERTAINMENT • •Room
Additions

IBIIi
!l!lilll.i
CARPORT SALE

CARLTON
C A R .D S

Oreene, who is not running for reelcctii!R, simply took her husband's
word on this matter, and never even
lilted to seethe securities cettlfacates,
l8id her attorney, Charles Roistach-

er.

SeN-U 819

FOUND: Ta, I whHe, letnal• ,
IMagMI. wit.. COler. I
DUt
At 82. 304~75-2... , or ~-e75·
17111.

mi..._

FREE ESTIMATES

Must be 18 yrs

UTILE BAER'S
ICE CREAM

EOE

RETURN TO SENDER

way-~ive

1·900·446·1414
Ext. 14n
$3.99 Per Min.

Hick's Residence
1508 Nye Ave., PornArrlv

45701.

Lawmaker's ex-h_~sband pleads to charges

'.

Chat,Une
Hey Guys! I! Your
special girl is waiting
to hear from you II
24 Hours A Dayll
Call now

YARD SALE and
SELLING OUT an estate.
June 7 &amp; a. 9:00-?

O'Bieneaa Memorial Hospital has an
Immediate, full-time, rotating 12 .hour shift
position available. We offer a v11ry
competitive Alary range aa well •• excellent
education and other health related benefits.
Supervisory experience preferi-ed. Five yean
of hospital nursing experience required.
Applications can be picked up In the Human
Resources Department, O'Bieneaa Memorial
Hospital, 55 Hospital Drive, Athena, Ohio

By MARCY GORDON

It in every way supP9rtSand validates
what I told the public last December, " Greene s ~id. at a news conference in her Capitol·offi ce. "I did not ·
know what Joe was doing."
Waldhohz also admitted making a
false statement and filing· a fa lse .
report to the Federal Election Commission in connection with more than
$1.8 million Greene spent on her
razor-thin victory in her 1994 House
race.

•

I

•

Chief Whitewater case witness
ordered to fit:tl~ Senate queries

By' RICHARD KEIL
Auoc~ Preas Writer
WASHINGTON- Joseph Waldholtz, the ex-husband of Rep. Enid
Greene, R-Utah,l)as pleaded guilty to
four ~riminal charges - three of
which involve Greene's taxes or conzressional campaign,
Waldholtz, 33, admitted in federal court Wednesday that he had providell his wife false information for
her taxes, confessect' to a prur of
clJaqes relating to his falsification of
speoding repons for her 1994 con·
p-essional campaign.
Waldhohz also pleaded guilty to
one count of bank fraud stemming
from a 27 -count indictment returned
a1ainst him in May. The other
charees are the result of prosecutors'
· work in recent weeks,
.
Under terms of the deal, Waldholtz is required to cooperate with
prosecutors in their ongoing probe,
which includes the tax and campaignspending investigations involving
Greene.
. Asenlencing date was set for Sept.
19.
"Obviously, Mr. Waldholtz, with
his involvement in some of these
matters, would be in a position to provide us information," Assistant U.S.
. Attorney William E. Lawler said after
lhe court proceeding. "He is facing
significant ·mandatory jail time, and
cooperation is the only way out from
under.that guideline."
Waldholtz admitted that he falsely told Greene he would give her
securities on which he had realized a
$5,,000 loss in order to help her offSCI $39,000 of capital-gains profits on
which she was required to pay
i~~~:othe taxes for 1993.
In fact, he never owned the securities,but she 11sed the information as .
the basis for filing her income-tax
returns.

FOUNO: la'llf -dog, -~
•eel collar. fa~t~nd on GrHr Rd.
SM-417S.U5Z.

retary Brown's funeral , frankly is out plete stale of shock," she said. "The after sharing the findings with the into proceeding in the storm, which'
of line by accusing- by making that last thing that was on people's minds victims' families and certain mem- kicked up quickly. Several planes had '·
kind of accusation." Panetta said. were any thought about papers or ben of Congress.
landed just before Brown's.
·
"Obviously, I don't think there's any files. We were thinking about
According to initial reports, a
"There is no evidence, zero evi- .
truth to what's being alleged here."
violent storm might have contributed dence. of that." Perry told reporters. :
whether these people were alive."
The American Spectator, quoting
"It's just disgllsting that people lo the crash in the mountains over earlier this week when asked if the •
unnamed sources, said that two sec- like Gingrich are trying to dredge up Dubrovnik, where the plane was try- pilot had been pressured, directly.or :
retaries shredded documents that ·something in the aftermath of a ing to land. Brown and his entourage implicitly. " In as much as the pnn- :
might have had something to do with tragedy. This is as low as you can were on a trade mission to the former cipal people who can testify to th~t :
an independent counsel investigation go."
Yugoslavia.
evidence - whtch are Ron and hiS .
of Brown's finances.
The U.S. Air Force, which is
Defense Secretary William Perry pany or the pilots -are not living,
The investigation of Brown was
investigating the cause of the crash, hits discounted reports. however, that. we ' ll probably never have any evidropped after the plane crash, which .::is:..;d:;u~e:..;t:::o..:re.:::l::e:ase::.,:i:,:ts.,:r,;::epa:;o::,:rt.:..:;on:.:,:F.:.;ri:::da:;,y~-'B~r~o:!w~n~p!!.re~s~s!!ured~_the AiE.force_ pilo~_-d;;e;,;,n:.;,cc;:,:.o;;,n_th_a_t_is_s_ue_._,_ _..;,_ _
killed 34 others including a dozen
Commerce employees and several
U.S, businessmen. The Justice
Department is continuing to investigate Brown associates and his son,
Michael.
.
Maria Ca.-dona, a Commerce
Department spokeswoman who was
at work the day Brown's plane
110 Help Wanted·
crashed, said the charges were outrageous and )hat nobody in the office
was concerned about paperwork tlie
day of the tragedy.
" Honestly, people were in a com-

NURSING SUPERVISOR

Pt.PIIHfnt)

80 Loat llld Found

men's

anv
.. , r-.ulaklrw
~.
' compliance iS· • r fJ ,'I
sues. Excellent bene~t package.11 '·~ ,..•'J
Rotal!f'VI shift.,equlred Call 8t4 '
--v
·
992-ti606
rx send resume
10 1• l , Utll

ter, 3G759 Rocksprings
Rd., Po-.\.,r
OH 5189 EOE

•'

"i

4
Clothing, women'a c:lo1hjng, book1,
meroy,
·
-· ...
7
251
mile. June I &amp; lh.
5 Mt Ver- Small local Firm Setklreg Pau~t:J.•
non Aft.
Time On Call Cleaning Pe-rsona.., ,. .. ~

Juno

7&amp; I At 82 14 loon-Biden Sind Resume To SCCS
r"'h't. 3 km'l•.
538 Kerr OH 45843

Rd, 1,.... on

~

~

•

'

·

·

•

P.O. Bm1• }'·
• "-

•

�* •

' -

Thurtdlly, June e. 1818

Pomeroy •llkldlepol't, Ohio

NJ:A Croa•word Puaale
PHJLIJP

ALDER
25 Acres, HaMan Trace School

Dolt"'"

wor lll- eny at'l ll t 1ncluclln; wet·
ktn4s. Must hive cltan pallet

......,, Rlghll, 61•

trio10-

roooiil. good wort&lt; t.sto&lt;y, trantpotl tt• on, dnvera license
1nd,..orrw phorte. Par ttarla at
Sc ~ ptr hour 32· '*0 hourt ptr
wetk , Call 6, 4 669 2874 Lfon oay :Friday, aam-•pm !of oppolrc-

--.gin

AI .... _

IIIUtljoc! IO

-0&lt;-

ll1o F - Flif - . g Act
oll968 whldt ,_._ Mlllogol
' any pnlleronce,

menL •

•

SOCIAL WORKER: The Ath~a
AIOt:rulil Force Ia Seekmg A
ltcenaed Soctal Worker (LSWI

OOX-

bued on race. C060r. religion,
IIIIUIOfOIIgln, ot ..., Intention 10
mateo ony IUCI1 preferonce,

~~~~: ~~,~~~o~=~~:, F~~

Sou,..llern Ohio Tlia II A full
T•m• Poatllon Funded By The

-lion or dilcrlminlllon •

Oh10 Department 01 Heallh. The

Thlo n o - r wll rot

Successful Candldale W111 Be
LSW Cerllf ted In Ohto And W11l
Have A Mtn1mum 01 Two Yea r a
Professtonal b:p4tnence Expert·

knowingly accepl

advtrtlsernenrt tor reaj etlate
whldllo In violation o! tne law

ence In Wonung Wnh Persons

Our readerS are l'lefel&gt;y
lnlormed lltal 11 -!lingo
a&lt;lvortlaed In 11t1o no.._r
are avaNable on an equal

lnlecled With HIV I a Htghly Ot·
Slrtble ThiS Poal11 on lnvollfes
Moderate Travel Slarnno Date Is
Ju~ 1 199&amp; Salary II In The Mot
20's W11h E•cellent Funge Ben·
efu ,f leuer 01 Inter est And
Currtdint Resume Should Be D1
r tcted to
Case Manager
Search, Athens AIDS Task
Force. 18 North College Street.
Alt'ltnt OH 45701 Apphcnons
Wtll Be Rec:e1ved Unlll June t4,
1998 Tht Athens AIDS Task
Force Is An Equal Opponunny

OflPO'IUnlly basis

310 Homes for Sale
5 Rooms , Barn C1ty Forced A~t
Furnace, Central A1r Carpeted
Floors, Storm Wmdows, Doors,
Vtnyl S1d1ng Lot 66x, 50 Pr tced

E,..;oy.,

AJo-.

258·1611

Bowens E11a1t Ashton WV 2·112
ac:r••· ctty wate rtuble t seplfc f
3)140 gwagt 304 57!1·ggo7
8\llld•nfi! loti lor Hie on MldWIIy
Or 1n New Haven For 1nfo call

304-882-290&lt;

304 523 9540 or 1 800-894
95ol0

110 Miscellaneous
BAHAMA CRUISE ( 5 dayS!•
ntghts, Under booked' Must Sell 1
S2991Couple limned Tu;~ets 1
800·935-9999 ext 6589 Mon Sal
9am - 10pm
Campbell's cteanmg aerv•ces
Comerc1al-ReS1dent1al low Rates
Pager t 1 800 724 3 199 then
556 1807 Mon.5at8am to 9pm

Deep lreezer like new S1SO 304

675 1092
RadiO Shack top ol the 11ne 200
channel scanner hke new, reg
pr~ $319 Wil sale lor $125 ftrm.

304 675-3734

Used R·..O 01tch W1tch Trencher
can 61 ..-894-7842

180 Wanled To Do
Body work on cars &amp; trucks, rea
sonabla rates, mmor mechan•cal
repa11s 011 changes. cal! 614· 742
2935 ask lor K1p Rutland
Oon's lawn Care Res1dent1al ,
Churches &amp; Cemetanes Rea ·
sonable Aatesl614 379 2847

410 .Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom Houae, 2 Bedroom

quorld 304-882·2588

Tra1ler M;, In Galhpollt, 81..._.o4ft.
8849 For lnforrre110n

Moderen One Bedroom A pari

3bedroom, tiOve, refrigerator
S1 , New Haven $2951mo plut
deposn 304 -773-8171 leave
message

HOUSE FOR SALE

BVOWN~R
3 Bedroom Home Excellent Con
dttton New Vtnyl S•dmg, Cen!ral
A1r, Carport Double Garage W1th
New Apartment Above 614 446
1774 Home, 614·446 0374 Work
For Mark Paii'T'Ief'

In Point Pleasant exc cond
good neighborhOod 304 675

814·448.·92'78

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

3 bedroom 1n H~rtford $350mo.

Now accepung apphcattons for
one bedroom aparlmenta Applt
cattons can be ptcked up at Po·
meroy Chll Apartments Off1ce

No pats Call 30•-882-2016 or
30H75-3100

House 1n Cl1hon, 4 bedroom. living
room t.lth, kitchen run basement,
b•g tot &amp; carport 1275mo plut
ut•llltes Deposit &amp; reltrencea re·
qulfed :l&gt;-1·773-5054
N1ce three bedroom home 1n Pt
Pleasant no pe:ts, 614·992·5858
Roomate Wanted S2501Mo. Ut1h·
lies Patd, 614 446 8595
Small house on lewts Sr In Pr
Pleasant 2 bedroom, amall kttchen, S200mo. Cati61•-"6-19:'D
Unfurmshed 2 bedroom house,
ntce &amp; clean, no inslde peta, de·
poSII req..ured, 614-992-30:90

420 Mobile Homes
lor Renl
12x65 2 Bedrooms. AC, $2501
Mo Pius DeposiJ No Pets Refer·
ences 614 441.0318
14x70 3 bedroom, along matn
ht~hway '" Leon large k11ehen &amp;
Irving room $200mo $100 depotll
&amp; 2 refetences requ1red 614-

448 1930

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Unfur·
mshed, No Pets On Krlnor Road,

614 ·446-9589
2 13 Bedroom t.tobtle Homes In
Porter Area You Pa~ Utthties,
RelerericesJ Oepos1t Req. 614388 9162

Trail er for rent 1n Galllpchs area
614·446 8849

Sun Valley Nur sery School
ChlldC(\re M F 6am· 5 30pm Ages
2-K Young School Age Dunng
Summer 3 Days per Week M1n1

1985 Schull. 14 • 70 2 bedroom
excellem coMmon vmyt sk~r~~no
1ncluded, Will rent lot, prtced re
duced, 1 11 ,500. 304·173·0062

Trailer For Rent. 814-446 1279

1995 Clayton 14170 2 Bedrooms
2 Bathrooms, Garden Tub All
New Appliances, Washer /Dryer,
Bu11t In Hutch All New Furniture•
Oak Porch SltO'Butldmg, 614
-441.0179 Atl&amp;f 4
Two bedroom, one acre mil. Wfth
add on: '91 Patnol 14)170 3 bed
room , 2 bath heal pump, 614
992 7153

814-992-2065
W1il stt and care lor elderly, day
or n1 9t11 housecleanmg also,
have expertence and CPR tram lf'IQ $~r, 614-992· 4065

FREE CENTRAL AIR 16o80
Commodore 3 Bedroom and
14170 Commodore 3 bedroom
Offer good thru June 15. 1996

Would L1ke To Babys1t lnfam To
Any Age, large Playground References, 814-24S-5887

MOUNTAIN

STATE

HOIAES

::1)4-67~1400

FINANCIAL

FREE HEAT PUMP woth 1he pur-

chase ot any multi sect10n home
- - - - - - - - - - - l l t m l ! e d Ttme MOUNTAIN STATE

210

Business
Opporlunlly

____:,:,==-.:....--1
~OTICE

1

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re commends 1t1a1 ~ou ao bus1
ness wnh people you
NOT 10 send money
mat! unlll you ha11e onvoesri"9a1ed
the oJfenng.

2500 50,000
FAST APPROVAL
No Attv Fee, One Call

1 (80018~ 7687

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
1 112 story, 4 br , lr , dr , lr • base
mem &amp; sun porch, $36,000, call

614-992-4480

I

HOMEs 304 67S.t4oo
Lomned Ollor' 1996 doublewode,

3br 2bath. $1799 down $27St
month Ftee delivery &amp; setup
Only al Oakwood Homes, N11ro
wv 304· 755·5885

A,. $45 000 JO.H75 7482

.,.,

2·3 bedroom house. 50•100 lot,
located tn Syracuse appliances
1ncluded, call 814 992·5767 alter

2 · 3 bedrooms, briCk, OR, new
w.ndowJ, carpet , complete new
1t11tchen and bath, garage, full

basement, 61•·992·6389
3 BR, 2 bath rorich 2 car garage,
SprtnQ Valley area, ctose to Holz-

., Hos~UII 81•-••11- 7&amp;40

Two bedroom mobile home 1n
cou n!ri. depOSit and references
requtted 6,4 949-2833

440

992 2218
1 Bedroom, downsta1rs apatlment
m Gallipolis Large Ltv1ng, Fan11lyt
Dtntng and Knchen areas, also
has Uttll ty Room $325/month, In·
eludes water Oeposn and refer·
ences reqv1red 614·448 3963
New Haven, 1bedroom, unlurmshed apt does have stove, ra·
fng, washer &amp; dryer Depo111 &amp;
references. 304·882·2566
2 bedroom apartment, 1350 per
month, $200 depos11, u111t1tes pa~d,
no pets. 614·992·5724
2bdrm apts, total electric, appliances furntshed, laundry room
facli•t•es, close to school 1n town
Appl1cat1ons available at V11Jage
Green Apts 149 or call 614 992
311 1 EOH
35 West 2 Bedroom Br~ck Town·
houses 1261 Jackson Ptke, Gallipolis Aetoss From Ctnema.
S2951Mo + Oeposn, Renlai lnlormaiiOn, 614· 448 -0006, Or Wnte,

755 5885
- ---------- I

•sa

P.O Bo• 994, Galllpoto•. OH

New u · w1de 2bedroom, tbalh,
S6991down, $139/mo Free sk1r1
111Q Call1 800 691 -8777
New Bank Repos Onlv 3 teh SnH
,
111warranty 304 755-7191

112 Second Avenue, Up
118111, Furnished, Newly Decorat·
ed. Lwtng Room K11Chen, 1 8edroom , Bath. large Screened
Porch, Total Electrlc, $235/Mo ,
Oepo111, Reference Requ~red,
814 446·2581 Between 5 P.M g

OPEN HOUSE SPECIAL $2,000

P.M

RebaTe on New 1996 Noms
14~~:70 28R . 2 Bath, Plush Carpet.
Otshwasher, and Oak Cabtnets

S29Wo Ualotlft Paid, i20 Fourth

MOUNTAIN

Ahtr 7 P.M.

HOIAES

Pr~ce

Buster 1996 3bedroom
$825 down. $t59tmo Free deitY·
er'( &amp; setup Only a1 Oakwood

Ho._s, Nooo WV 304-755·5885

FurnJthtd Aperrrnent. 1 Bedroom

Avenue, GaHtpolll, 814 448 -3844,

An Arrracrivt Upata~rs Apart
ment. 3 Bedrooms In Poinr Plels·

8:00

Fully C•paled, AC, Depoal~
et•-••6·00•1 1\(ter

SPECIAL New 1996 1•180 Nor- BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Woatwood Drl•o
lrom 124• 10 1315 W.lk to ahop
STATE HOMES30H75-1•00
&amp; mov1e1 Call 6t .. ·446· 2568
E-1 Houling Oppor"'nll!&lt;
330 Farms for Sale
rts with Glamour Balh and Stereo
Includes Centrai·Air, Sk~rtmg , De·
livery and Set up MOUNTAIN

34 acres, 2 br mobile home. 6 8
acres IJUable, ultllng, $34,000.

61•·992-21122.

•
'.

Depollt, 61• 386-9946
Tw1n RtYers Tower, now actepbng
applications lor 1bl HUD subs1d
1zed apt for Blderly and hand1
capped EOH 304-675-UJ&amp;
Two apartments tn Middleport·
upaillrS has one bedroom, bath,
kitchen and LR, $300 plus utJ1ttes
and deposn, downstairS has 1 2
bedrooms, bath LA OR 1350
plus utlhltes and depos•t Avatl
able 1mmecttarety, relerences re

quelled, 81&lt; 992·7136
Upsra~rs

Furnished Apartment 1
Bedroom 61-4 446 4927 6U
446 8519
'Vary clean one bedroom fur ·
n11hed apanmenl m Mtddlepoft
call e 14-446·3091 preferably be
lore 10 30am or after 4:00pm
Wedge Apartments 508 Burdette
St 1bedroom No petS Furntshed
&amp; unfurnished 304-675 -2072
tMtrurigs.

450

Fumlshed
Rooms

'

Steeptng rooms wllh cooktng
Alto trader apace on nver AU
hook ups Call after 2 DO p m,
304 773 5651, Mason

wv

460 Space for Renl
Mobile home lot lor ren1 S,OO!rno

304·576-2683.
Tra11er Space For Rent On Ball
Run Road ltOOfMo References
Requ1rtd, 814·448-4111 Daytime.
Or EvBI"'Ings. 614-446-7157

MERCHANDISE
~1

Amana atr condmonet, complete
w1th A-cod l~nea, good cond111on.
$300, 614-992·36•1
Boots Bt Redwmg, Chtppewa ,
Tony Lama Guaranteed Lowest
Pnces At Shoe Cafe, Gantpohs

S tldtng Ooar, , ·3' Man Door,

Pounled SIMI Sid1ng, GIIYIIumo
S1HI Roof $6,••• Erected. Iron

Hay &amp; Grain

&amp;tO

25 Acrea HtlltDP Gran Clover

-

o

Household
Goods

Appliances
Recondt!loned
Washers, Dryers. Ranges Relr1 ·
gralors 90 Day Guarameel
French C1ty Maytag, 614 - 448 ·

1795

AKC

Pinscher&amp;, twO lematea.
S300 ... h. one male, $250, ready
June 15. accepltng depo11t1,
814·949·3026
m1n1

AKC Reg111ered Pomeranian
Puppy, UKC RegtSIOred "'PR'"
Amencan Esk1mo. Chow Chow.
lost Papers, Cockatiel, Grey
Wh1te S1ar110g To Talk 814-441!1·

"nd

6391
AKC Ron Willers , Talis Docked,
Dew Claws Removed: 1St Shlt' &amp;

Worme~ Have Parents On Prom
tseJ S300 Fwm 814 -386-9~20
Card tO glide S150 ioldtng drawmg AKC Ro!Uiar Pup~es, $300 Fetablt $50, twtn Stze manreu 120 male S35Q Male, Shots, Wormed,
30•-882-2755
Tatls Docked, Ready To Got 614·
37&amp;-21167

Concrete &amp; ptasbc SepttC Tanks.
300 Tt'lru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses, Jackson, OH

1-800 537 9528
Crattsman 10 HP R1d1ng lawn

Mower. S395614 2450134

Oynamark , 1 HP R t d l n~ Mower
$350. 12~ Band Saw Floor Model

S240 ltke NeW, 81H46-8588

Tak1ng Appltca110ns 2 Bedroom
Apartmenl R10 Grande, New Car
per All Utthttell Paid, S295Jt.1o

Aparlmenls
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
n1shed and unlurmshed, secur11y
depoSit requ~red no pets, 614·

•5631

~4-87!&gt;1400

1 bedroom collage. Jeflerson

Two and three bedroom mob1le
homes s1arung at $240·$300,
sewer water and trash mcluded,
614·992 2167

l1mtted Oller On!Y 1500 down on
any new s tn gle wtde m stock
Free delivery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes. Nitro WV 304

STATE

2827

Rooms for tent · week or month
Starttng at S1201mo Gallta Hotel
61 4·446·9580

1976 Oilue, 2 bedroom. new carpel, good cond $6 295 304-875

1995 14x52, 2 bedroom, heat
pump $14 ,995 Call 304 675
2642 or 304 615-n05
'

One bedroom apartment. very
rnce, 110~ &amp; refr~gerator Ullht•es
fuwushed, trash plck-up,cethng
fans. 811 COndiDCined, garbege diS·
posal No pete References re
quwed 304·773·5352 Of 304·882

Ctrcle Motel, Galhpohs, OH e t4
446·2501 or 614 367·0612 Effe·
c•ency Rooms, Cable, Atr Phone.
MICrowave &amp; Refngera10r

Aher8 ~M 61+245-1516

1991 Falfmonr 14x80. 3 bed
rooms. 2 bath, all eleclr1c 6'"
house walls, heal pump, 400 sq
h pressure trea18d deck 1nctuded
614 992 5044 Of 614 992 o 134

61•·992-7712

Bedroom To Rem In S~ngle Home
1 112 M11es To Gallipolis, Uae
K11c;;hen liv1ng Room, Washer &amp;
&amp; Dryer, 614·441 1291

s Ana s Home Improvement Wtll
Do Remodeling And New Con
struchon No Job Too Btg Or Too
Small• Free Estimates • 614 446
211150 Ask For Joe Saunders

5708

Pflvale Parktn8 . Water &amp; Gar
bage Pa1d Oepostl requtred
(614)-448-4345 aftilH' 5 PM

""""""" no pots, 614·992·5858

1000
New Homes For Sate Construe
t1on Near Compleuon 3997 Bula
vdle P1ke Call 614 379 2749

Ntce One BR
Unturnfshed
Apartment Range &amp; Reln9 pro·

&amp;1• 985-9829 or 614-992·2•18

Furn ished prtvale lot, porch,
yard, good c;;Jean c;;ondlllon , no
pels $275 Wtlh water, 304·882·
2466 anynme

Wilt do lawn mamtenance, clean
garages, gvtters. plant flowers
etc . lor more tnlormallon, call

Metsage

Etght room house Rac.ne. lour
bedrooms LR OR lam1ly room.
ltreplace large k1 tc hen lull atilt.
basement. new centra l h~at and
atr, room lor lhree cars 4 68 acr
es, could sell lots 575,000 nego
ttabte 614 99 2 2924 or 614 992
6971

1972 Homelte Uob1le Home 2
Bedrooms, 12•55, Re&lt;:ond1t1oned
Thru-Out Some Fur011ure $2 500

Wtll do housecleant ng tn sur
roundtng areas hawe references
614 992·51 t9

Midd ..port , &amp; 2 bedroom , fur·
n1shed aptl Also, 2 room afflclenct Dtpolll &amp; reterencea re

Cleantr, Gravely Mower, Lawn
Edgef /Drencher, Poll Hole O!g
ger, Atrless Pa1n1 Spraye,, Rammer Compactor, To111 Doll~, 614·
448-82t7 Evenings Or leave

N1ce two bedroom apanment tn

Four room cottage Syracuse
Ohto. good s1ze lot rwo garages
other outbudd.ngs a~r conditiOn
tng, dishwasher garbage d•spo
sat oak kitchen cabtnets utlltty
room, 614 992 3319

rid pottM IMIH,

Share Bath, ,,751Mo Utih ltll

3 bedroom hOuse. Flarwoodl Rd •

Three be(lroom home wt th ca ;.
port, cottage and outbUIIdmg tn PI
Pleasant Wtll sell on land con
tract, 6t4·992·5858

Wtll do all tntenor and extenor
pa 1nt ,plus some carpenter work
Free Est Call614 446.·2637

12 W1Mowa 1nc1ud1ng Slo rm

Wtndows: 2 Emronca Ooort, 6 Ft
Paoo 0.0., 61•·..6-24e7.

Country se11 1ng . 4 bedroom 2
bath, lt vmg room. eat •m kitchen,
lam•ty room walk m closets 2 car
garage 1acre 304 882 3326 at
ter6pm

Georges Porlable Sawm1ll, don' t
haul your Jogs to the mtll JUSt call
304·675 1957

Will care lor elderly '" Your home
or hosp• tal N1ghts Sun · Thurs.
Days Mon Fr1 Call 304 675 5795
ask lor linda

llopoail.l1.-.11523

·-

Three bedroom home 1n country
WhJtes H1ll Rd . Rutland one ba th
•11-grovnd pool 614 -992 5067

.,.,----:--:-:--:-:--:---:--1

Bedroom, No Pats, Secanct Avenu• Galltpoh, All Ubhtttt Patd.

2 bedroom 1n Harllord $22Smo
No pels 304 882 2106 or 304675 3100 after 4pm

9925858

rnum614-446 3657

. . . 8 14-"*-151D
Futnlthld Apattmanl, UPtllirl. 1

Don, $275, 61.·379-2100.

Genefal Mamtenance, Pamttng,
Yard Work Windows Washed
Guuers Cleaned L1ght Hauhng,
Commer~cal, Res1dent1al , Steve
814 388-0429

Prolesstonal TrH Serv1ce Stump
Removal Free Esumates I In
surance, 81dwell Oh1o 6 14 388
9648 614 367 7010

No.,.,., ~. Oepotit Ae-

6 Inch Jotnter Excel lenl Condt

One bedroom nome tn Pomeroy
W1ll sell on land contract 614

Lawns Mowed &amp; T11mmed, Have
EQUipment, Reasonable Rates,
Semor Clltzen Dtscount, For An
Esnmate, 614 245-5755

1750 and 1-tmo
Blocll, bflck, • - P!pao. wlnd- old yell""' polled !Mil ...50. Coli
FHd Horn Fot Ku Band And OWS.. linllll1. etc ClaucM Winllllf'l, :JIM-511-2216.
Regular Wl¥ol. Elc.llonl Condi- Roo Orondo. OH Call 114·2•5W111 board hoflet , 2SOacrts IO
bonl Allllng $800, eu-37a-2183 I ::51-:2_1 '::"~~=....,-,.,.-...,.., rldo on $150/mtl »H75-5e50
E-L
Polellldg sp , :IO'M5'd', I ·11'18'

rnent81~·441.()39[)

Jerry a Run Rd 11~rs ola, spill rait
fence, garage, breezeway, lar~
porch concrete drtve, Large barn,
fenced tn horse lot &amp; out bulld
tngs $65,000 304·576·2494

Want a rewardmg career? We
'are tooktng for carmg lf'IChv!Ouals
who want to JOi n the growtng
numbef of ProJess10na! Chtld Care
Provtdars T1a1mng and retenals
prO¥tded free Call Judy at Unk at

Rog GottMch Bulla, H Smo. old

Furrwlhool 3 Rooma &amp; Bat11, Up- 10 Ft Woo Moah Satollito Diall,
allira. Uilitlaa Furnllhtd. Clean, Hu 1 112 Yr. Old Board &amp; Arm

-red

12 Bedroom House. Jefferaon
Beauttlui 3 bedroom Rancher on Avenue, Point Pleai8Jll, S2751Mo.

•no

I~~~~~:-::':~':":~:-':'::"

Furnlahod EHicltncy 2 Rooma.
Hotaallldri1 -IOQ.352-1CM5.
~ 51..2•5-V3113.
18 Ft Camper Trailer Call After 5
uons. Countrt lan&amp; Mobile Home Po
Pl&gt;lt Building, 30x46d c.llno. 1Par k, Gl lhpohl Ferry Wv 304
td, 107 SKond Artlenue, Galll- P.M 61•"'*2163 •
TRANSPORTATION
675-5421
polil, ,,._.... . .16 Alter 7 ~M
3' -~ - , 1-I.,V allitng door,
1884 CheYy II 4 Daor Sedan , p•intad tlttl al&lt;Ma roof. I out·
Furrwlhod Effloci.,.y 1\porlmOn~ 75,000 Actual Milts. Old Cat 1er1, eract«t price $8000, PraciParce ls ava1Jablt for new home All Utllilltl Fu,ntshed, Ctntral Shoft Rud~ l Trucltl ToPP41,, F1t1
lion Past Frame Bldrs. Inc., 114· 71 0 Aulos for Sale
constructiOn on Rayburn Road 5 Heat &amp; Atr Cor.dltlontng, PrNala t;aa Ford Ranger $25, au U6· 992-e416or 1-800-388-3028.
parcels rang1ng from 1 84ac to Patklng, e14-44t·2e02.
1214- s P.M
I':""=--:~--:-':"'"~-- ·at Canw.ra, 350 &amp;ng~ne, e•cellem
5 32ac Paved road, gounry water,
Pets for Sale
cond 1t•on, rslly wheels, 61-4 ill2·
reasonable restncb ons Map and GraciOUs hvtng. , and 2 btdrootn 111118 Ford F-150 pick-up, full bOd 560
99111
1nto ava11 able on r~uet t No stn. aparun.nta at V1Uage aAanor and 1885 Oak wood tratler, 2 bedGroom SI'Dp Po• Groomlf1g" F10
gte w1de tnQU ifles please 304
Rwerside Apartments 1n M1dclle· room, 2 bath. 304-875-3538
tu rmg Hydro Balh Juhe Webb
'84 Ford Tempo, 4 door auiOrnal·
675·5253
port From $232-$355 Call 61•lc, tert reat tall hght damage,
C.ll 614·•46-0231
992·5084 Equal Hou11ng Oppor
117,000 mllu, $600 OBO, 614
Scen1c Vall ey , Al)ple Grove
1\JAIM
2 Weed eatera, cham nw, boat I Fe molt To( Poodle SISO; I ••9·2311 days or 61•·949·26••
beaU!tlul 2ac lots publ iC wate r
motor, water pump, el8fC.tM bike, Malo Pup Toy PoOdle 1175, 61•Clide 11owon J•, 30+576-~
large 1 Bedroom, large llv10g
aduU polly chair, pam1 spra~ar 408-3398
room, Bath Kitchen Apartment. so.. 7J'3.53!0
'89 Thunderl&gt;rd SO, 1WO d-. 3 a
S2S51Mo, Ultllltes Pa1d, 284
AKC G~rman Shepherd pups,
litre, v.e, ell le model tu rbo PS,
Fourth Avenue, Galltpohs 614· 2) Gao
Cut Off SIIWI, 2) 2ma1es ..,., ~~~ ahota a wormed PB, AC, 5 speed, power seats
RENTALS
D1tch Witch Orenc:hera• •carpet s150ea. 304"'75-11639
388-1708. F'" Sllowing
and locka. ·Grea1 Car · $5200
l Oll lor rent Now tailing apphea-

_A_t.:.$.:.34.:..900.:..:...6_1_•_•_&lt;18.:_,_4.;,5:.. 7.9:.._ _ ,

Soc1a1 Wortlets. Now H1nng S23 1
Hr • Benehls, On The Job Tram
To Apply In Your Area 1-800
XB·6150

•

Sma• Tobacco

•

ElectriC
Scooters
And
Wheelchalfs, New /Used 'v'an f
Car lirt Installed Stairgftdes, l1ll
Chatrs Call For Brochura 6U

4&lt;16-7283
Full S1ze Foundahon Mattress, &amp;

Frame $35, 614-4&lt;18-•525
Grain Fed Beef For Freezer Beef,

81. 2•5-5815
JET
AERATION MOTORS

Repalfed, New &amp; Rebu1lt In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 800 537-9528
Kerosene heater Ommy 230
23 000 BTU $140 Sears Ken
more small retngato r lor camper

$50 304 372 8480
K1mball Console Ptano Excellenl

Shapai81U46-8696

Kirby sweeper wl attachments
3:&gt;4·675-1726
L1ke New Murray 21 inch Push
Mower, 3 112 t-tP Bnggs And
Stranon Engme, With Grass
Catchef, $100, 614 446-1001
lots For Sale Gravel H11t Ce·
metery Cheshlfe. S200 per grave
tncluding Corner Stones and Per
poruaJ Care 814·387 0214

Beagle pupp1es for s8te. S20ea
304 576 4109
10gal tank set up specials F1sh
Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave Potnt P1euan1 304 · 6752063
Bustness For Sale Pet Shop
Fuly Equ1pped, Stocked, Grpat
locatton, Ser10v1 lnqumes Only,
61 ..· 441-0770, 614 446·7507
CFA Aeg1s1ered Htmaiayan &amp;
Pers1an l(fnens Wormed &amp; l•ller
Tra.ned, $150, 614·361· n05
Dog &amp; Cat Groomtng reasonable
pnces, t 5yrs expenence Call lor
app1s 304 675·8831
Full blooded Sheltte- mmtature
Co1t1e pups. $125 eacn, AKC
Registered three year old female
Cothe, Lus1e-cotor, $200, 614·

7•2·20!;0
Male Walher Coon Dog 2 Vears
Old, CB Equtpment, 614 245-5622
Eventngs
Now takmg ctepos1ts on AKC
While &amp; SliVer sable German
Shepherds ready 10 go 6 12 96
304 67~7495
Puppy .Palace Kennels, Boarding,
Sltld ServiCe Pupp1es Groomtnv.
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds
Payments Welcome 614-388

0429

Pure S1benan Husky fema le 1 11
2 Years Unregistered For Per
Only $75 Male 3 Years S75 614

448-11827

Re~tsted Female Bour One yr

old Ears , Ta11 Ftxec All Shots
New Gas Furnaces New Galvan
tZed Duct Work , New Hood Fans

(614)-2566155

814 379-2120 AFTER 6 ~M

Reg•stered Mmtalure Poodle
black 1yr old neutered all shot!

New Vlvttar Flash lor Canon
35mm camera $SO Several feet
of chatn firil. fenc1ng With post and
accessones, $125 Call 304·675
3423

twen•n9s

One on one stepper, With coun
ter, ttmer &amp; v1de0. hke new SBO
ftrm e 14 992 6949
Queen Size Ot~hoped i C Manress
Set And Frame Never Used Sttll
In Plas ttc Cost $800 Sell $250
614 7?5-2360
Qu een S1ze Waterbed Wtt h 6
Drawers $225 Enrertatnment
Center S150 Scga Genests Wnh

11 Games $125 614446 2221

:.:&gt;4-675-1725

1968 Plymouth, Excttllent Conch·
tion Call Alter 5 PM 6,4 -446

2163

1975 lincoln •e.ooa Actual Mttes
A· 1 White, Maroon lnl See Tom
Kessel, 814-446·7787
1978 Lmc:oln Mark 5, 460 ong,
76,000 ac1ual m1111, black on
black. gatage keprllll March of 95
14,000 l~rm 304 773-6170
1979 Cadtltac Sev1lle $500, runs
good 30+875 1092
1980 Chrysler le Baron, needs
work $600 304 675 2983
198 1 Olds CuJias&amp; SSOO 6Joll
448-6958

1983 Ooage Ar tes

l,o1 parts

$100 304-576·2802
1984 Chry11er New Yorker. runs
graa~

$850, 61•·992 7210

1987 BlaCk Chewy SS Monte Car·
lo 1 Owner 36 SOO Miles l1ke
New,614·256 t304
1990 Ford Tempo, 1988 N1ssan
Sentra, 1990 Chevy Cav1l1er Ail
Cars Equtpped With AC Au ·
tomauc fransm tss•ons Cooks
Moors 614 114&amp;-0103
1988 Che11y' Celebnty, ps, pb, ac,
4cyl eng1ne 4 door good gas
mtleage looks good . runs hne.
asktng $1 ,500 614 367· 7607 alter 5 OOpm

1991 Ford Tempo 52,000 m11es

$6,000 ltrm 304""75-4875 CaH al-

610 Farm Equipment
1 John Deere 160 1 Wheel
Horse 11 HP 2CiubCadet 614

94 Chevr olet Cavaher Turquo1se
2 Cr auto atr stereo cas sette,
antt loci'! Drakes POL new t•res,
43 735 mtles E XC cond se 795
614 3F9 296 7
Auto loans Oea•er will arrange ft.
nanctng even 1f you have been
turned down elsewhere Upton
Equ•pment Used Cars 304, 458·

er Ahtr 5 00, 614-448·2163

720 TruCks lor Sale'

Extra large Indoor pet cage, used
2mo S85. double oven, works
greal $50, Hunter green Queen
Anne tables Wl'glass tops S50patr,
dark walnut roll Top desk wrcMtr

Remddehng Sale Harvest Gold
30' Stove, Match1ng Range Hood
Good Condtuon, Also Sears

1995 2 Horse Stant load Goose
neck Horse Traile r Wtlh Rear
Tack With Dress-no Room 304

' 19

$35 30H7!&gt;8053

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

DIShwashe•, 6H 258 6647

Upnght Ron Evens Enterprtses

G E Washer, $200 G E Dryer,

Jackson, Ohu, 1 800 537 9528

GOOD

Ten 24 Foot Tresles $150, 8U·
446·2514

$75 30.-875-2747

USED APPLIANCES

Washers. dryers, ref n gerators
ranges Skaggs Appl•ances, 76
V1ne Stree1 Call 614 446 7398,

1 BOO 499 3499

Kanmore Dryer $25. Whutpool
Washer SSO Ma~tag Washer

$75,61•·446·384• Alter 7 ~M

l11es, 4 New F1reatone, 245 nS •

2 Row Tobacco Siller, 614 379

2254, 81•·319-2519
25 HP Shenntu Tractor, 614- 446·

39114

Twm Bed, Set, Excellent Cond1·
tton, 614-245-94.48.

p 011 type hay rakes J 0
case $300 3)4.5 75-2320

Twm Beds Mattress /Box Springs,

8118-7311
dudett:

Fut Reatonable Serv•ce 814·
Young Gtrll Bedroom Suite ln-

-•rd
2) 01&gt;1 Or.,oer With M"""
1) Full Size

s4oo

l,lsed 2300 Trencne r Call 6t4 -

6!M-71M2.
=~:-----620 Wanlad to Buy

GRADE LOG WANTED Deliv-

ered or Will ~.. P contact Harfy
GoldabenyiPaUi Mercer Sawmill,
Inc 2608 US At3S South stde
Wv, 25,87 Phone 304-875-7598
or 304·875 7882

3) Chell 01 DraworL
•l Cabinet/Hutch
630
Livestock
SJ Ntghlstara
All Wood, Excellenl Quality Must See To Apprec1atel Pr1ca I Alpl1on•Sanaon l&gt;lly goat, $50
7 large Ban1am ch1ckens, S10.for
S1,000 : 10 Speld Qtrla Schwlm eK
304-51'8-2802
Btcycle $35 , Anllque Draasv 1

Ford f250 4WO, $1200, 61•·
7•2 1100
89 F·250 automatic, slld•ng wtnd
ow m bac ~ 300 6 cyt
condl!ton great work ~ruck ,
$3850 takes tl home. 614 949
2311 days
1983 Ford Ranger ptck up 4cyl,
4spd, good cond 304·675·2074
t986 GUC good conditiOn 304

f&lt;Jng Cuner Bush H9 g, ltke New

$350, 814 245-0134

Used End Tables, Co !fee Tablet,
Apt S1ze Relflgerator, Omenes,
Couches 130 Bulavtlle P•ke Gal
hpoiiS 614·446·47,82

Free Oetivery Witltn 25 Mtles

882 2195

18 LT S80 Each, 61o0-381H)321

1238

Appl~rqo Graa1 Deals On
Call1 And C&amp;"JI REKT-2-0WN
And layaway AI!IO Ava~ollle

189.. 18 Fl Htllaboro Stock Trail

245-94•1 8 AM To 10 ~lA

$200, &amp;1+•48-7357 Altere P.M
WATER WELLS DRILLED

OuaMrv Household Furrwture And

t069

8'x16' TnAxle Tra1ler $1 250,614-

Refrigerator. W1111her, Dryer, 30•
ElaclfiC S1ove, 30"' Gas Stove,
Color TV $50 Each. Mtcrowave
$40 Au Condtltoners, 614· 258·

VI'RA FURNITURE
814-....0-3158

•48-9227

MY MAN

Two 1995 300 lour wheelers, .. x.t
wJ25 nr , 4x2 w120 hr , also 8•6
tra tler, all excellent condiuon, sell
all lor $8,500. call before noon ,
614-742 3153

675·5162

1987 Chevrolet S 10. Dark Blue,
87.000 Mtles 2 5 Four C~llf'\der,
Fuet lnJ&amp;c;;lad, 4 Speed Power
Brakes, AC. Alp1ne AMIFM Cas·
sene. Topper, Bedltner, Alumtnum

Toolbo• $4,200, &amp;1• ..6-8833

1988 C!'!evy 112 Ton V·&amp; Engtne,
PS PB, Atr, Auto Trans,. SS,495,
614 ·446·4225 Call Aher ~ P.M

1992 Block GMC 112 Ton PU • 3
V-6 Eng1ne, Auto, Ah. Bedhner
Goort Condition, 614·388·8488
1994 Fo rd Ranger XLT. 25 000
m11es, e•c cond $9,500 304·175·

7209

1D94 Ford RanQer XlT 17.000,

61 ...'\fi-6958 .

HE'S A
BEANBAG

SNUFFY'S

Opening

16 Fr Runabout Walk Thru , •
W1nshield, Tratler, 85 HP Mercury ' "'
Engine, 14 Ft Deep V Alum1num .. 1
20 HP Manner Eng1ne 6U·367·
1300
1991 Bran New 650 Kawa$8.kt Skt
J e- t 1995 Tr a1 1er $2 BOO 614
367 7912

I

'

AUIO Pans &amp;

"'

•

Accessories

•
.~

,

Ovemual Ki1' 614·245·58n
New ,gas tanks, one ton truck; :
whetils radtaiOrS. floor mals, etc
D &amp; A Auto, ~ploy, WV 30•·372·
3933 or 1 000 273-9329

-•
•

AfttAil&gt;, SIF,
i
YOU~( CLAPPf:F ;
•
If TOO JIG fOil
~

'

Campers &amp;
Molor Homes

1974 81t Oei · Ra~ lruck camper,
sell conramed wfturnace, good

lfl-L·JOTTOM

!!;

1

SLACI'~.

•

1977 Prowler 20Ft. 1973 Fl11et·
wood 17 Ft, 1978 BIIIZon 2~ Ft.,

•

24 F1 , Pantoon, 1899 McCormick

§

.
•

1979 Dod9e 23' Moror Home,
setr-Contamed Gas Stove, New
Fndge, uo Engine, A1r $8,500.
_6•_•_-2_•_s-_9•_eo.....c,_______~·!

•
,·

O l~!HibyN E A

•

\1

'\

~~~.

~'1',0\IU,

,.,_y

~VE.HE.W
~i:.

t

~..-

1614) 446-0870 Or (&amp;l•l 237·

ua
£1(f[lt It{

ow•-

For the fifth day of my teaching
tour, I went to the Surfer's Paradtse
Bndge Club, where almost 200 people
came to each of the two sessions· a
class, and a duplicate in wh1ch I
played wtth Margaret Millar
Th1s deal from the duplicate contains a few instrucltve aspects, espeCially for tournament players.
After East's one-diamond operung bid
and South's two-club overcall. West had
a perfect hand for a negative double:
length in both m111ors and diamond tolerance However, playing these doubles
only through one spade (misguidedly, I
feel), West had to b1d two diamonds.
When South continued with four
clubs, West made a matchpmnt double . He was hoptng for plus 300 to
outscore 110 in three diamonds Or as
was the actual case, plus 100 to
outscore all the East-West pairs getting 50 from four clubs undoubled
The heart-king lead should make
thmgs easy. But on this type of auction,
where you think the opponents are sacrificmg, 11 1s normally right to lead a
trump.
After wmning with the club ace, East
should swttch to a heart. but he selected the diamond king &lt;in case South
had a singleton queenl. Declarer won
with dummy's ace, and could have succeeded by playing a spade to his jack.
But he drew the last trumpJIIId contmued with the ace and jack of spades.
Not seeing the danger, East won
with the king and continued with a diamond. Declarer rulled. played a trump
to dummy's 10 and nin the spade 10,
discarding a heart A moment later
South's second heart loser disappeared on the spade nine: plus 5t0
East never asked himself what West
had for his double He had to have
heart values.

fl

_._

____,•...____
'f'=o..--'

21 Stubbatn

~ \ ·,~

lnlmll
- ,,..
31-vu
,,_:, i
32 Mild elptetiW,,., •
33 Qaya ol- ... "
31 Peppar'a
• :o·
1

• 11 ,

39 Through
" ', •
41 Longed
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Apphance Parts And Serv1ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E•·
penence All Work Guaranteed,
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Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncond1t1ona 1 llfeume guarantee
Local references lurntshed Call

t.rl VEEeLf.f'E'!i

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SERVICES

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23 LAt fell
25 AUihOt

By Phillip Alder

12t1 Alumtnum boat w / 3 Shp mo·
tor 1n real good shapa Reduced
,
lor qu tck sa le $350 304-173· , ~
9116
"1l

A&amp;J Home Improvements- room
addlllons, kitchen and bath remodehng, 1nstall and repalf windows, •
dec:k, porches and pados, roofing ...
and v1nyl •1d1ng, mstall exteuon
stucco stone and briC:k, damaged
sidewalks steps and -luck potnt- 1
tng For es11ma1e call 814·992 }

1. ':!..........

The biggest number

BEANBACI
KINCI It

lor Sale

810

.Ugh! brown
9 - .China
10-cut

companion

TESTER II

BAGLEY-- THE

750 Boals &amp; Motors

75 pop·vp camper, very good
condttton, $1200 080, 114·148~

11 Mextctn
... : :
aenclwlcftt .. ') l ::
17 SUrrou-' '!' I

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3.
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GOT HIM A .JOB
WITH BEANIE

C"""ld (614)·446 0109

Refnge1a tors. Sroves Washers
And Dryers All Recond1t1oned
And Gauranteedl I 100 And Up
Wtll Deiver 614·669·6441

Country Furntl\.tre 30•·875-6820
Rt 2 N, 6mt1es, Pt Pleasant, WV
lues Sat 9-6 Sun 11·5

1985 Vahama Blatter 200 4·
wheeler Real good condllion,
S2 400 Call al!er 5pm 304 -773·
5686

790

--

6 Worry
7

I •

1991 Olds Cutlass Calats, sun
defrost, 4 cyl, 5spd ac,
am fm cas sene $3 300 304 675·

88 Plymouth Sundance RS auto
ale 614·992 5085

• AJ
• J 64
• 5
•KQJ7543

39•5

Budget Transm1ss•ons, tJ._sed rAe
built, All Types, Access1ble To
Owet 10 000 TransmiSSIOn, Alao

MUon

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer East
South
West North East

~~--------------~-- " , )
Mtn1 ..moror nome, 198,. N111an
M1rage, dual rear wfteela, •cyl,, ~· •,
Sspd, 20mpg, aletpl 5. 12.800... . "'

86 Olds 442 T Tops Grey S11ver
l 1ke New One Owner 20,290
M1les Full Power. Garage Kept 1

•A
South

wl
Wtnc:h and Runn1ng Boards, Excellent CondtUQn $3700 614·441-

2344

2949

• K 4 3
• 9 3 z
+KJt09S2

or 304-523-2526
1995 Hondo 300 • Tra• 2 WD

ter Spm

root, rear

• Q. 52
• K Q 10 I

1994 COR 60 0 F2. 4200ml 1n
elu des helme ts canvas cove r,
etc Askmg $5,600 304·675·6541

Road,Gathpohs6t4 -446-1511.

20~

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,,

exc cond

12,000 304-875 1214

1990 ThunderoHd V 6 cha rcoal
gray avto ps pb cru 1se. ttll
wheel pw pi power seats. rear
defroster ac auto headlights &amp;
dtmmer $'5,900 nego 304·182

90 Ntssan Stanz a XE atr, cru tse
$4700 6 14 992 3395

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11100. &amp;1+••a.eesa

II

11 .......... 1,0111 ' 12 - 11 01 • Nor1lt
a FeM
Alilntlc netlon 114 AutiiUr WIMel
11 a.fuCidleCI
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20 AciOI' Allen
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21
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30 Mommy'• lillie 1 two34ActneaF- 2 Hatm-'al
3 Actur-35~W.
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37 Planlat , _ &amp;..wda.)
31 Hilt amement
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40 TYI* of biH?
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367-78V3.

1989 Butck leSabre, excellent
runnmg condmon, V 6 PB , PS,
AC, power wm.tows $3800 et4
9119 2045 or 614 949 2302

580

Strawberrtes. P•ck Your Ownl Call
Claude W1nters, 614·245-512 1

Molorcycles

1983 Honda Shadow 750, Grnt •·
Cond1uon, A\k ing . 11 ,800, 614· ''

Parts• $1 000 «114 256-6109

1996 Jeep Grand Cherokee lar
edo 3 Months Old 126.000, May
Constder l rarot 6tfl 446 6t20

Strawbernes Taylor's Betry
Patch, Open Mon, Wed, Ft~, 9 8
Sat T1ll Noon. 614 245-9047

•

760

1992 lumtna Eurospon 3 11 hter
72 OOOm 304 6 75-2226

FruHs &amp;
Vegelables

Seen At Galtlpoltl 011ty Tribune, ·
825 Thud AvenlJe, Gelhpolls '

1986 Ponttac Sunbud New Tires

&amp; Exhaust And Man~ Other New

Solid black lemale Jap Chow
AKC parents, born 4 4 96, 614 ·

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• 10 9 7'
• A 75
+A 7 6
• 10 6 2

1986 Cetebr~ty, make good work
car S 1,000 al4 773-5284

s 100 304·576 24...
992-2232,$125

14 c.lebH ox

--------~------------ ·-~
Bass boat tra1ter. 40hp motor '~
$1 ,500 304 578 2883

1992 Chev~ Camara. 251h ann•
versary Full~ loaded Red With
black stnpes Asktng St2 500
Call614 245 5912

R &amp; S FurMure Mason wv 30-4·
713 5341 New Srore Hours
Mon-Fn
12noon 7pm
Sat
12noon· 5pm We Buy . Sell ·
Trade Ask lor ROCky

Aatnbow sweeper w1 anachments

neg . CS14·992· 7478 or 1!114 9411·

287&amp;

13Und- Sl=of-

9QO Oadge A•m Van B 250 , ..

1991 Honda 250X

110
113 Hollo

autllx

72 000 MtiOI, $6 ,000, Con Bo• •

740

. . . . . . . . ='
. . . . . __

12~

1814 Ford van. 302, automatic . ....
nw tires, extra tharp mslda
$3,500 flfm Sunny G1bb1 30•·
182-274,

ono.

-.ctor Eci _.Liftup
1 oae·a ~o~~-. 47 auaa;4 IliOn period
IIRicluc:t
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ACROSS

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JUNE 61 .-

• • • .I

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General Home ' Main·
tenence~ Pamttng, vlntl S1d1ng, • -.,
carpentry, doora, w•ndows. bll"s, 1 • ,
mob•le nome repa1r and more fOf ; , ~
hee estimate call Char, &amp;f4-992· ' ~
6323
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'
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Hang, flfllsh, repaw
"'~
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Call Tom 304 !75·4116 20 yeera .,. r .t
ellperlence
~

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E ar l s Home1Mamtenance, vmyl :~..::
s•d•ng. rool1ng exter1or and •nteu· ~,...
or patnttng power wa1h1ng, ruom ·;,;
addit+ons Free E•llmates, 814· •
992 4232

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Ron's TV Serv1ce, spectallz1ng In
:
Zent.lh also serv1c1ng most ather -~
twands t1ouse calls , 1·800· 117· -: -

0015, W1/ 304 576 23911.

Roofing &amp; guners complete home

, .... 1

'==~~~=====~~~==~thai govern you In the year ahead Send
for your Astra-Graph predictiOns tOday by
ASTRO·ORAPB
mathng $2 and SASE to Astro-Graph, do

remodeling decks &amp; siding, 35 o;---:yearl e.11pet~ence. 8 &amp; B Roofing ~~
and Construction 814 ·912·2384 ,.._

-.

or 1 800-889 39•3
(oo
~~~~~---- ~
Vthyl WOrks Vtny1 S1d1ng, Roofiryg,

BERNICE
BEDE OSClL

27 Years Exp Free Est Special
In Bnck Homes, e 14·387 0613

820

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

F1eeman s Heat~ng And Cooling
tnalallat JOn And ServiCe. EPA ~'
Certtfied Rta~ntllll, Commert 11 t 1 '
614·258· 1611
' '

GMC 112 ton. V 8, JUSt rebu1 Jt
Chest $200, 614·••6-1423 Ahor Angus Da1r~ Cross Calves su 80
eng•ne &amp; transtniSSton, new patnt
Vtnyl 8 .. Patterns large setec- 6~M OrlnvoMoa840 Eleclrlcal and
2•5-9557
JOb, all new Drakes many new
1101"11, KitChen Prints 1n Slcx:k Carpans ask •ng' S3995 6 14 -992
Refrigeration
pet S8 50 and up Mollohan Car- Zap Tho Fat Ill Loao Up To 301 Ch1cken1 lor sale- all types of
1ba , 30 Dey Money Gunn- rare breed 8antama and heavy · 5388
pata61.-444-7.. 4
RSES CERTifiED DEALER
teal 100% Natural, Dr Recom· breed Chlckens Hatched 314198,
', '
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
730
·vans
&amp;
4·WDs
mended.
No
Slo,.ol(onl
Atk
Whtrlpool dryor, good cond $1 oo .
.;.."'
have b•en vaoc1na.ted, would
Hear Pumps, Air Conditioning. It
About F-aa. 614~1(104.
30•-B75-ol085.
'
make good 4-H or fair ptojecta,
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tee• Che¥rolet Grandville Cua·
You Don I Call Ua WO Both LOMI
11...2-4531.
•
toml&lt;ld
lion,
AMIFM
Oloaal,
Go·
Free
Estmalas,
1
800·
2'81
·0011,
550
Building
530
Anllques
"'
raga Kept, Excellent Co11dhlon, 814·..8"'308. W1/ 002945
Supplies
610-379-2855.
~~~~~~-·
~
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·
Star
Livestock
5th
Wheal
Buy or sell R1verlne Ant1quos,
Raslden! .. l ar comrrwtrcill Wiring.
Troller 22'•8' f2,000. 8' Gil¥
1 t24 E Ma1n Street on At 12...
new MfV'tw or ,.,alra. ... ..., u.
11161
Chovy
Cargo
lion,
E.....,.
Truch Rack $225. 13 Ft 8u1h
•••
Pomero- Houra M T W 10 00
censed eleclrlctan. Rld•nour
~don, S2,000 DOD, 61•-m
~\Mower
11
.
200
6U
843
am I0600pm , Sunday 10010
Elocttlcol, WV000306, 30•·875- .
g141, 814-441-41g7
800p.m &amp;1•99201526
171111.

.

.-"'-

'

NEA

Friday, June 7, 1996
new, tnfluentiai friend could help you to
'imptrove your lot in Ute in the year ahead.
or she will wolf&lt; behind the acenM on
behaH.
G~=!~(M:•r 21·Jun• 20) Subtle
••
will be ... etlectMt leader·
toot toclly. Tllll lkill will - " " you
take command ot a devlllopm8nl wllll'
Sltrring up a oor4IOWIIIY· Get a lUmp
tHe by u)1dilrstandlng the 1~1

lhts newspaper, P 0 Box 1758, Murr~y
Hili StatiOn, New Yoll&lt;, NY t0156 ' Make
sure to slate your z0d1ac s•gn
CANCER (June 21-July 22) TOday , lry
to a(locate some ttme for mind-ennch1ng
pursuits You can deal w~h cont1ngenctes
more effecttvely ~ you exerciSe your brain
rather than your muscles
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) TOday, you Mil
have a special knack fo! helping others to
sort out complications they couldn't
unravel themselVes Volunteer on ao asneeded ba8is
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Bept. 22) Partnershtp
arrangemeniJI will be produclitrD for you
today Oo not attempt to accomplish a
ttlek Independently if K can be clone bel·
ter with a competent ally.
LIBRA (SIIpt. 23-0ol. 23) You will feel
good about youraell todty ~ Instead of
aervlng 'Jf1IJI inkH'elts, you make .,. effort
10 .,_ 1 P8f1011 who neede you
SCORPIO (Oct. 14 llov, 22) AI a aocial
gathering todlly, you will be the center of
altentiOII. Others will have a hard time
rellsttng your magnetism

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23•0ec. 21) You
wtll not have peace of mind tOday ij you

;

,,

'

. .r

r

1a11 to tulftll your domest1c duttes Put your
home affa~rs before your oulstde tnler·

ests
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen, 19) A
changj&gt; of venue could refurbtsh your outlook and splnts tOday Try to go to a new
place where you can part•c•pale 1n a new

divors10n
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) Ftnanctal
sttuaiiOil$ should work out more advantageously loday than they might tomorrow
Take advantage of every opportunity as
soon as posatble
PISCES (Filii. 2o.MIIrch 211) Today you
wiU want to be No 1 even more than
usual Th(s wtH be a worthwhtle ambition .
as long as you appear humble when you
cross the finish line
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 11) You can
achieve greater rewards by keeping a low
profile and le1t1ng the other guy be the
fronl-runner. Reme(T!bef that rewan:ll are
more important ll1ln applauae
TAURUI(Aprll 2o-MI1y 20) Today, you
can derive mora pleasure from dignified
acllviUea than you can lrom tun·filled
actMIIea. Try to avoid the hOt spott.

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Indians hit
with 5·2 loss
to Mariners

Political backbiting cools
in light of Medicare report
By LARRY WHEELER

o-tt Newa Service
WASHINGTON - The people
wllQ oversee Medicare said Wednesday that the program's hospital fund
will go bankrupt in five years olthough President Clinton insisted
he could keep it in the black another
I 0 years if Republicans cooperate.
Republicans said Clinton must
se~d Congress a new proposal that
re(jognizes the program's worsened
condition.
In its annual report. the Medicare
Board of Trustees predicted the hospital trust fund- which pays hospi1~1. nursing home and home health
c~re costs for 38 million elderly and
disabled Americans - wi II be
exhausted sometime during fiscal
year 2001, a year earlier than previously projected.
"We have the ability right now to
put I0 years on the life of that trust
f~nd, and .we ought to just do it,"
President Clinton said. "The differences in our numbers are not that dramatic."
·Clinton's 1997 budget request
anticipates Medicare savings of
approximately $116 billion and projects extending the .solvency of the
hospital insurance trust fund through
2006, said Donna Shalala, Health and
Human Services secretary and a
Medicare trustee.

But Rep. Bill Archer,· R-Texas,
chairman of the House Ways _and
Means Committee which will hold a
hearing on the Medicare hospital
fund Thursday, criticized Clinton,
although also calling for cooperation.

"I urge (Clinton) to send a new
bill to Congress that recogni z.es that
Medicare's condition has worsened
since he submittetl his last bill,"
Archer said . "It's time to put politics
behind us."
Both parties decried delay and
urged the other side to control partisanship.
Treasury seeretary Roben Rubin,
also a Medicare trustee, held out hope
that Republicans and Democrats
could resolve their differences even
during an election year.
" We can find enough common
ground on a policy basis to put in a
program now," he said.
Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., who
joined a number of Capitol Hill
Republicans at a press conference to
discuss_the repon, said, "The longer
we delay changes·and allow partisan
one-upmanship to rule the day, -the
more drastic and . painful these
changes will have to be."
Medicare is the nation's secondlargest social welfare program exceeded only by Social Security and has been the focus of intense disagreement between the Republicancontrolled Congress .and the White
House.
(ast year's balanced budget
debate ground to a stalemate when
Clinton vetoed a GOP bill that called
for an estimated $270 billion in savings from Medicare by spending less
than current law had projected
through 2002.
Stung by public reaction to the
changes they proposed, Republican
lawmakers are now seeking a more

modest $168 billion in savings from
Medicare without the increased pre- ·
miums, deductibles, eopayments and
some other controversial features of
last year's proposal.
The Medicare program, enacted in
1965, is divided in two pans: Part A
is the hospital trust fund; Part B pays
some of the costs of doctor and outpatient care.
It is the Part A program, funded by
a 1.4S percent payroll tax paid by
employers and workers, that is projected to go broke by 200 L
Because of its intensely emotional nature, Medicare is a potent polit·
ical issue.
For most Amcriclflls, getting seriously sick or injured can be an economic catastrophe. The impact is
even worse for seniors on fixed
incomes who are more likely than
other segments of the population to
face substantial medical bills.
In 1980, the average out-of-pocket year( y medical costs for people 65
or over was around $2,000; by 1995,
the figufl' was $S,OOO. That is on iop
of any medical insurance paid .
While Democrats have repeatedly accused Republicans of wanting to
"cut" Medicare. GOP lawmakers
have consistently portrayetl their proposals as "slowing the growth" of the
program.
··
House and Senate Republicans
point out that under their current budget proposal, per-beneficiary spending will in fact increase - evidence
Medicare spending is not being cut.
However, critics say the 90P
message is misleading.

'

NEW YORK(AP) -Bob Dole's cent-41 percent edge in mid-May and
association with an unpopular Repub- his 53 percent-42 percent margin iri'
Jican-controlled Congress - · even early April.
though he's leaving next week after
If Texas billionaire Ross Perot
35 years - seems to be huning him · were added to the race as an indewlth voters, according to the findings pendent, the poll showed Clinton get_-of a CBS-New York Times poll.
ting 48 percent, Dole 32 percent and
The poll, released Tuesday, found Perot 16 percent.
thr;. GOP-controlled Congress's
· Among the findings of the poll:
approval ratings approaching all·
• Only 19 percent said they
time lows . And Dole's standing approved of the job Congress is
appears slightly lower on a range of doing, while 71 percent disapproved.
poU questions since the Senate major- The lowest approval rating for Conity leader announced last month that gress in 20 years of CBS polling was ·
h·c. -rould quit 11\e Senate.
17 percent, during the House bank
· Last week's guilty verdicts in the scandal in. l992.
• Forty-tY!O percent said they
Whitewater trial of three former
associates of President Clinton don't approved of Dole's job as Senate
seem to have helped the presumptive majority leader, down from 54 perRepublican nominee, either.
cent in January during the federal
~mong registered voters, 5.7 per·
budget stalemate; 36 percent disapcent said they would back Clinton if . proved.
the election were today and 38 per• Forty-five percent said they
cent said they favored Dole. That was would vote for a ·Democrilt and 38
I' gain for Clinton from his 56 per- percent for a Republican if the U.S.

•
VoL 47, NO. 30
.1 Section,
., 10 P~~geS

the Medtc:.e ayatem. From left . . Soclllliecurlty Commlllloner Shlrllly Cl'llt8r, l'rellury Secretary Robert Rubin and Labor Secretary
Robert Retch. (AP) .
.
• Hospitals submitting bills more trust fund," the trustees stated. "Such
quickly and performing a greater action could avoid abrupt changes in·
number of more complex medical health care for the aged in the neil
procedures on older Americans.
several years and provide time to
• Slightly les~ revenue than devise and test stmtegies for furthej'
substantive rcfonns .."
:-,
expected .
The repon called for both shortThe tf)lstecs suggested a national
and long-term action.
advisory group to help develop rec';:
· "The most urgent priority now, ommendations for effective solu- ,
however, is 10 enact legislation that tions to Medicare's long-term financextends the.date of exhaustion of the ing problems.

MEDICARE· DISCUSSION - U.S. Health
Secretary Don1111 Shalela, right, led other Clinton admlnlatratlon offlclala after • news conterence In Waahlngton Wedneaday to d~~u11
The Republican numbers do not
adjust for medical inflation or growth
in the siz.e of the elderly. population,
according to the Center on Budget
and Policy Priorities.
Shalala cit~d three reasons the
hospital insufance trust fun&lt;! will dip
into the red sooner than expected:
• Unexpected cost growth for
home health care, skilled nursing
facilities and·hospite care.

~

plus costs, five days jail suspended.
last week in the Meigs County Court two years probation, restraining order
issued;
of Judg~ Patrick H. O'Brien.
; Fined were: Richard B. Bailey,
Ernest W. Dixon, Middleport ,
Middleport, scat belt, $25 plus costs: speed, $21 plus costs; Darrin K.
Gary W. Adams, Rutland, sent belt, . Johnston, Langsville. possession. $50
$2S plus costs; Charles L. Brown III, plus costs; Alexander J. Carvalha,
Gallipolis, speed, $30 plus costs; Guysville, hit-skip, $100 plus costs,
·Lewis K. Higgins, Parkersburg, three days jail suspended. one year
W.Va., overwidth, $20 plus costs; seat probation: failure to control, $35 plus
·oolt. $25 plus costs; failure to display costs: John Elliott, Pomeroy, disor. registration, $20 plus costs: Marvin deity conduct, $50 plus costs; Den. K. Gardner, Vinton, speed, $30 plus nis E. Boyd, Pomeroy, obstructing
cos)s; scat belt, $25 plus costs:
official business, $170 plus costs,
· · Wesley M. Smith, Middleport, three days jail suspended, one year
domestic violence, $100 plus costs, probation;
30 days jail suspended to two days,
Nick McKnight, Middleport,
'two years probation: Charles H. Bar- domestic violence, $50 plus costs,
· tel~. Pomeroy, driving under suspen- five days jail suspended, two year;
,siQn, $125 plus costs, 30 days jail sus- probation, restraining order issued:
P!"'rlded to live days, two years pro- Donald Graham, Middlepon, men'bation: scat belt. $25 plus costs: acin·g, $50 plus co·sts, five days jail
Charles A. Smith, Pomeroy, assault, suspended, one year probation,
'$'200 plus costs, 90 days jail sus- restraining order issued; Charles H.
Bancls, Pomeroy. driving under sus'pended. two years probation;
Kathy L. Vincent, Williamstown, pension, $200 plus costs, 30 days jail
W.Va., driving under the innuence. suspended to five days, one year pro$850 plus costs, 10 days jail sus- bation:
·
pendcd to three days, 90-day opera"John C. Sprouse Jr., Gallipolis,
tor·~ license suspension, one year pro- DUI, $500 plus costs, 10 days jail
bation, jail -and $450 of fine sus- suspended to three days, 90-day OL
pended upon completion of residen- suspension, one year probation: no
tial treatment program; Jeffrey A. OL, $100pluscosts, IOdaysjail sus-Dorsey, Pomeroy, DUI, $850 plus pendcd to three days concurrent. one
costs, IOdaysjail suspended to three year probation; open container, $25
clJtys, 90-day 01., suspension, one plus costs: Tina M. Romine, Rutland.
year probation, jail and $450 of fine expired OL, $100 plus costs. three
sUspended upon completion of resi- days jail and $75 suspended if valid
dential treatment program:
OL presented within 90 day; Jocelyn
. ::shannon W. ~'Hobart, Racine, DUI, Clatterbuck, Belpre, passing bad
'$830 plus costs, I 0 days jail sus- checks, $25 plus costs, restitution;
pended to three days, 90-day OL susDavid B. Baum, Albany, OUI,
pension, one year probation, jail and $850 plus costs, 10 days jail sus$4~0 of f1ne suspended upon com- pended to three days, 90-day OL suspletion of residential treatment pro- pension, one year probation, jail and
gram ; Ricky L. Yost, Rutland, DUI, $450 of fine suspended upon com$~50 plus costs, I 0 days jail sus- pletion of residential treatment P.ropcnded to three days, 90-day OL sus- gram; Steven N.Arnott, Rutland, failpension, one year probation, jail and . ure to control, $30 plus costs;
$450 of fine suspended upon comMichael T. Fetty, Langsville, DUI,
pletion of residential treatment pro- Sl .oq&lt;l plus costs, six months jail susgrntJl;
pended to 30 days, one year OL susMatthew M. Hart, Racine, no OL, · pension, two years probation; driving
sloo plus costs, three days jail and under financial responsibility action
$50. suspended ifvalidOLprescnted suspension, $100 plus costs, s.i~
wiihin 60 days; Mary Blanks, months jail suspended 10 30 days
Poweroy, domestic violence, $50 concurrent, two years probation; fleeplus costs, 10 days jail suspended, ing, c.,osts, two ye!II'S probation, six
one year probation; Brent A. Bailey, months jail suspended 10 30 days
Reedsville, criminal trespass, $SO concurrent.

elected president, but 32 percent saicl
he spends more time explaining; 54
percent said Clinton spends more
time explaining, 27 percent said he
focuses more on attacking Dole.
The survey ·found Dole had an

.

edge over Clinton on character issues.'
Fony percent said Dole has more
honesty and integrity than most people in public life; 31 percent said that
about Clinion, down slightly from 3S
.percent in March.

1

':1'

.

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Mason Furniture tor 3 DAYS ONLY. Many other In-store and
sidewalk specials too numerous to mentiGn ... Good Honest
Values Ill

The following cases were resolved

.

• Fifty-nine percent said Clinton
understands the needs and problems
of the average American family; 43
percent said Dole does.
• Forty-eight percent said Dole is
spending more time attacking Clinton
than explaining what he would do if

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35AGennett Co. Ne"IPII*

Heritage

S~:~nday

Ohio delegation backs
waivers _by 16-3 margin.

By The Associated Preas
·
·
Ohio members of the House voted 16-3 Thursday in favor·of federal•
waivers allowing Wisconsin to carry out welfare reforms.
House bill "has nothing to do with
Overall, the House approved with a 289· 136 roll call .
speeding up welfare reform."
A "yes" vote is a vote to approve the waivers.
Senate Democratic leader Tom
'
Voting yes were 3 Democrat' and 13 Republicans.
Daschle of South Dakota said this _
Voting no were 3 Democrats.
week that Senate Democrats saw no
X denotes those not voting,
•:.
need for the bill but wouldn't necesThere
are
no
vacancies
in
the
435-member
House.
:•;
sarily block it. "This is becoming
The delegation's vote was as follows:
·: ;
more and more a presidential politiRepublicans- Bochner, Y; Chabot. Y: Cremeans, Y; Gillmor, Y; H~ .
cal issue than it is a real welfare
son , Y; Hoke , Y; Kasich, Y: LaTourette, Y: Ney. Y: Oxley, Y: Portman.~
i~suc ."
Pryce, Y; Regula, Y.
: •:
The debate set the stage for the
Democrats - Brown, N: Hall. Y: Kaptur. N: Sawyer, Y: Stokes, I'{;
introduction in the next few weeks of
Traficant, Y.
::
another major Republican welfare
'
biW. Republicans want to link welfare
0
and Medicaid, providing block grants tives of federal assistance. The Cl in- recall no instance when it has dohc ,
to the states and letting them run the ton administration has granted vari- so
'
programs.
ous waivers to 38 states, including to
.Republicans said it wa.' timo j or
The Social Security Act gives fed· Wisconsin On three previous occa- Congress to intercede bccausCt")l
eral agencies the ·authority to ·waive saons.
·
sometimes takes years for WashiA-~,
·~ ~
federal rules· so states can devise
Congress can also legislate waiv- ton to rule on a waiver requcst.-lnd
innovatiVe approaches to welfare, as cr approvals, although congressional that federal bureaucrats often deni ild
long as the programs meet the objcc- and .HHS sources said they could, major changes in state proposal $~ :

celebrates

.

Increase in payroll job~~
vexes financial ma
·,
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON - A huge jump
in payroll jobs in May sent linancial
market~ reeling today as investors
feared that the Federal Reserve will
. soon be. forced to start mising interest rates to slow an overheated economy.

By JOHN NOLAN
UNEMPLOYMENT
Associated Preaa Writer
CINCINNATI - Joseph Daly
7.0'k
wept as he lhought about the accident
······················ ····- ·· ··· ··
that lielped to bring about a new Ohio
6.5
law to allow prQsecution of people
The Labor ~~~;~-~~~~~
who kill cr injure a viable, unborn
fetus.
·
last m~nth~ n~ore than double what
5.0
It took the Aug. 14 traffic deaths
had been e~pccted. led by strong
JJASONDJFMAM
of Daly's .pregnant wife and unborn
gains in employment at temporary
1995
1996
son to-galvanize the Legislature to
help lirms and department stores.
CHANGE IN PAYROU JOBS
enact the bill, which Gov. George
Despite the big payroll increase,
Monthly
increase in noo-tarm jobs.
Voinovich signed into law ThurSday.
the nation's unemployment rate crept
in thoosands.
"I was very happy. I thank you for
up to S.6 percent, compared to a 14·
her, and the time we spent together,"
month low of 5.4 percent in April.
5!\11 .......... .
Daly said as he acknowledged his
But linaneial markets focused on
400
.. .. ...... ......... ..
..... ,....,
wife Suzanne's parents, Larry and
.the surge in payroll jobs.-Within minJackie Fraley, standing nearby.
utes after release of the rcpon, yields
Da~. 33, of Middletown, cried
on
Treasury's benchmark 30-year
Lila of yeateryear In displays and de_monstrstlbns will be featured at Sunday's 25th Annual
before a crowd that gathered to
bond had climbed above 7 percent,
Heritage Sunday, to be ataged from noon to 5 p.m. at the Meigs Museum. VIsitors will see how
watch Voinovich sign the bill in the
compared to 6. 9 percent late Thursearfv s8ttlera made butter in wooden barrel-type bucketl with atlck beaters. Bread from •scratch"
courthouse where the underlying
day.
will''be made by Mra. JOhn Cook, and an old-faahloned lemonade stend will be In operation. A
cas~ was prosecuted. The governor
Private economists said investors
dlalli!ly of guns, including muzzleloaderslhown here by Martha Lee, will on exhibit; along with
100
•
used a pen that Daly had given him. ~
... . j j i.. si:ii.o·j;::·;..;-;.!.1
were
right to worry that the Federal
antlii\Je radios and recording equipment, toys and toola from the early 1900s, arrowheads col"One person can make a differ1996
Reserve would soon increase intcrcsl """'-'--· ___1995
lect~ in Meigs County, a home acene from early America, and gemstones, There will be a pet·
.. -- -·
ence. Joseph Daly and his family
Source. Oep;wnem Cl! Labor
ting ·zoo and games for tha kids, and a variety of other entertainment. VIsitors will be offered
rates
made a difference," Voinovich said,
encepsuletlng of old documents during the afternoon. The top of the 175th anniversary quilt
"The so fllandin g 1s over and now.
in referen·ce to the letter-writing and
with embroidered names of more than 500 Meigs County families will be on display. (Sentinel
we arc m a take oil th::ll is turn in£ oul holds.
The separate survey of busincs ~- :
lobbying by Daly an_d relatives that
photo by Charlene H91tfllch)
·
.
·
to be _more rapid than expected," said
cs
showed
that non-farm employment
helped bring ahout the legislation.
Robert Dederick. chief economic
rose
by
348,000
in May. This was far
· It defines a fetus as a person for
consultant :ll Northern Trust Co. in
higher
than
the
forecast of many
the first time in Ohio law, Voinovich
Chicago.
said d~ring the signing ceremony.
· Dederick &gt;aid the Fed could raise cconomisls for a gain of about
The law takes effect in.90 days.
rates as soon as its July 2-3 me etin g. 150.000' and represented th~ sharpest
The Legislature last week
" This is a group that prides itself jump since an increase or 509,000 in
approved the bill. It was introduced
on being pre-emptive and keeping February.
In addition, the government
after the accid~nt on Interstate 275 in
inflation in check."' he said. "The
revised
sharply higher the payroll
suburban Cincinnati that killed By KATHRYN CROW
ahead in order to conserve water.
year. revenue from the mct~rs had only thing that might deter them until growth in April to an increase of
Daly's wife and her fetus, which Sentinel Correspondent
Ebersbach noted in his evaluation . increased 45 percent. He added that August is a desire to wail for more
would have been the couple's first.
Installing water meters within of the placing of meters that council presently there arc approximately data to sec if this initial bounce wi ll 163,000. compared to ihc original
estimate a month ago or a tiny gai11
child.
Syracuse was discussed at length should consider what lies ahead, 250 taps for working residents with- slow to a more moderate pace ...
Hamilton County prosecutors tried Thursday night during the regular such as an extended well field if a in the village that generate $32.560
The 0.2 percentage poini _increase of 2.000.
For May, 52 percent of 't,lli:• .
to charge Krystal White, 16, whose meeting of Syracuse Village Council. new well is needed, water reservoir per year, and approximately 100 taps in the jobless rat.c occurred because
increase
in payroll jobs came from a ~
Meeting with council about and the purchase ·ofwater pumps.
car crashed into Suzanne Daly'scar,
.for retired persons that generate the labor market swelled by 549.000 gain of I g 1,000 workers in service i
with two counts of aggravated vehic- meters was Larry Ebersbach, a memPresently, there are 23 meters $12,000 a year.
.in May, bul onjy 367,000 of those job industries. This strength was led by :
ular homicide. But a common pleas . ber of the Board of Public Affairs. outside the village, he said.
He commented that the annual seekers found employment, accord- employment in temporary help li'"!s· ;
Coun judge threw out the charge Ebersbach said that council must look
Ebersbach also noted that, in one
ing to a survey of the nation's house- which rose by 48,000.
(Continued on Page 3)
• :
involving 'the fetus, saying Ohio law
1
did not recognize the fetus as a per••
••
son.
White, of Cincinnati, pleaded
••
guilty to one count and was sentenced
•'
10 three to I0 years in prison. .
'
Voinovich said he sympathized By TOM HUNTER
With the inconsistent spring
with Daly's loss. The governor lost a Sentinel News Staff
weather, the state-mandated comple9-year-old daughter, Molly, when
With each· day. construciion offi- tion date has now been bumped back
she was struck and killed by a driver cials on the site of the new 2.25-mile to Sept. 6, with the inclusion of the
who ran a red light. ·
section of the U.S. 33flnterstate. 77 17 to 18 compensated working days
. Daly said that when prosecutors connector bet.ween Rock Springs and granted to Kokosing by the state:
told him Ohio law would not allow Five Points look toward the sky, won'
Workers at the site have s_taned
•
him to file a charge for the death of dering when the next stretch of bad completing surface paving this week
his unborn son, he promised to work weather is going to hit.
on the westbound lanes, and are also
for a change in the law.
·
At the same time, crews are hus- paving the westbound ramp tie in.
"From that day until today, I set , tling to catch up on missed work with State Route 7 at Five Points,
out on a journey 10 change stale law before those next storms hit.
according to Tillis.
and the way they recognize unborn
"If we could just get two good
Tillis stated that excavation work
children," Daly said.
weeks of weather, we could have traf- is 96.9 tiercent complete on the proDaly said he hopes to ask his coil- fie on the two westbound lanes of the ject, whilc·cmbankment work is 92.3
gressman. Rep. John Boehner, R- road. The weather has really slowed percent complete. Base course
Ohio, 10 support legislation that . us down and created extra work for asphali work in continuing at ·this
would create similar rights nation- . us, pulling us further behind than we time and is closing in on the 90 perwide. Daly said 23 states do not rec- would .have liked," said Don Tillis, cent completion mark.
ognize the rights of fetuses.
Ohio Depanment of Transportation
It's the same story for officials
The Ohio law will allow prosecu- project supervisor on the connector· with Shelly &amp; Sands Construction, as
tors to file charges against people project. · ·
they htivc been forced to push back
who kill or injure a viable, ,unborn
The project, originally set for a completion _of slip, repair and new
human, including those who unlaw- June 1996 completion date, was road wortt on the closed ·section of SR
ROAD TO THE FINAL FQUR - Mambera of to the Ohio High School Dlvlalon H BaRbell
fully terminate a pregnancy regard- bumped back to an August comple- 7 ~Tuppers Plains until Aug. IS.
Champlonlhlps this morning. Melga r.ce. •
the Meigs Maraudera baaeball team (17.e)
less of the stage of development.
tion date last November.
Tallmadga
(17·51 at 5:30 thla afternoon.
atood
In
front
of
the
chaltsr
bus
that
took
them
(Contlnuad on Page 3)

Water meter installation tabled
for study by Syracuse Council

-

VAlUES TO $~99

accused Republicans of attempting to service for those who don't find
embarrass the presid~nt in rushing a work. There would be a two-year limdecision on the Wisconsin plan ; it, or five-year lifetime limit, for
Republicans said it was time Clinton receiving benefits.
showed that his promises to change
Republicans noted that Clinton
the face of welfare were real .
had twice vetoed welfare overhaul
The .House was moving on an bills and accused the president of tim"admittedly hurried timetable out of ing his statement on Wisconsin io
a sincere desire to accommodate the . undercut GOP presidential nominee·
president of the United States," Rep. to-be Sen. Bob Dole, who had schedGerald Solomon, R-N.Y., said ...
uled a major address on welfare in the
·
The Republican strategy, coun- · state.
. tions so Wisconsin can initiate its
The waiver bill must still be takwelfare overhaul plan. It came three tered Wisconsin. Democratic Rep.
'weeks after Clinton praised the plan Thomas Barrett, was .' 'let's .take the en up by the Senate and signed by the
and eight days after Wisconsin's olive branch that he (Clinton) has president.
White House press secretary Mike
Republican Gov. Tommy Thompson extended to us, let's break it in half
McCurry said ,the administration
formally presented it to Washington .. and let's shove it in his eye."
Clinton, in a May 18 radio already was examining the WisconThe measure sidestepped the usu·
· al process by which federal agencies address, lauded the Wisconsin plan, sin plan and "the president looks for.spend months reviewing state which woutd require welfare recipi- ward to making sure we can get on
requests for waivers lO try new ents to get a job while providing sub- with that reform because it's an ·
approaches on welfare. Democrats sidies to employers and community important one." But he said the
·By JIM ABRAMS
Assoclattid Press Writer
WASHINGTON - In a preliminary skirmish to the next battle over
welfare, the House has seized on Wisconsin's ·welfare-to-work plan as a
means to compel President Clinton to
prove . his commitment to broad
reform.
The 289-136 vote Thursday
approved waivers of federal regula-

Voinovich
·i.nks fetus
death bill

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 7, 1996

·House loo~~s to force Clinton's
hand on welfare reformation

.

Meigs County Court

Rain likely tonlg.._,
chance of a thundelstOI'fll.
Lows In the IIOa. Saturcla1;
rain. Hlghl ,_, 80.
.:

17-23-28-3~5

.

House elections were today.
• Fifty-one percent approved of
the way Clinton is handling his job,
compared with 48 percent in March;
37 percent disapproved. His handling
of foreign policy reached 52 percent
approval, up 9 percentage points.

Pick 3:
5-4-3
Pick 4:
G-0-9-6
Buckeye 5:

Sports on Page 4

New poll finds congressional support bottoming ~ut
'

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. Waoll DiteHt Cllairs (14 It stl)-$39
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· t-WtsllnpDISt S.C. Drjtr $299 I ,
Wltltt/Wtstflgltane .
lllt-11 Dlawaslter ................$249
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=

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'

RICO.

Crews hustle to recoup
time lost to bad. weather

:·n:

•

+

.....-..•.
'

"

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