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                  <text>Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio

Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

'o"'edneedey, June12, 1981

.Documents sho~ fBI was tipped ofT to police wrongdoing
ulna·

Milk Prices

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
woman charged with hiring police
to protect a gambling opentiori
complained to a detecuve who
issued a citation against a ll)pless
dancer while he solicited a gam·
blin
yoff government affidavits
alle:c~ '
The affidavits unsealed Tuesday
outlined infonnation from various
informants alleging that Shirley

Carta'·Schmidt of Nortb Olms~
routinely hired Cle.veland vtce
De~tive ROIIIl~ Chtsmw. to pro·
~~illegal gambling opc:nllOIIS.
Tbe investigation led to the
indictment May 29 of 30 current
and former Cleveland police offi·
cers and. 17 ot~er people. The
charges mv~lvmg alleged. pay.
.ments .to J!OI!~ .to overlook ~gal
gambling acuvtttes. .
Ms. Carter-Schmtdt, 45, was

indicted OD cJwses of coospiracy home pboae number, could not be
and obatruction of laws 10 aid an reacbcd fer CQIIIIIICIII. An otr~cer in
illegal gam~ling operation. Ms. the. 2nd District vice squa.d said
Carta'-Sebmidt. who has an ~b- Ch~S~JW would be on vacallOn for
lished telephone, could not be at least 10 days.
reached for commenL
FBI spokesman Roben Hawk
Chismar. !12, of Middleburg 8lid Assistant U.S. Allomey Robert
!Ie~ghts, was !101. name~ in the . E. ~uUCrd dec~ 10 CO!'JDIC'l~ on
mdiCliiiC!'L He, IS still a police offi· ~ISmar's .status m the mvestJgacer and ~ asstaned to the depart· . lion.
mont's viCe squad.
U.S. Attorney Joyce 1. Oeor,ac
Chismar, who has an unlisted has said the inve,stiprion is cooun-

Police CliefEdward Kovxic
has said more illdictments were
possible.
. .
•
The government said m aaldng
10 wiretap the home phone of Ms.
Carter-Schmidt that informants told
the FBI chismlr "has been llllcing.
money from gamblers in the Cleve-:
land ~ to all.ow those gi!JIIblm
and theJr l~uons ~ ~unue to
operate without pohce mterrer-,
coce."

Ohio Lottery

Bulls claim
1991 NBA

Pick 3:873
Pick 4:0196
Cards : 4-H, 10-C
7-D; Q-S
Super Lotto:
14-16-21-32-43·44
Kicker:6243SS

championship
Page4

BIG BEND .............. Your Community Minded
Locally Owned Supermarket

•

e

'

-

' '

2S.Ct1on912 P"tiJ• 25 cenla
A llultlmedlo Inc. N-1p1per

AP

Shelly CO. awarded bids for road projects

.Milk prices drop ·

Dairymen

slow to cut
production
I

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
sharD drop in milk prices is laking
a tofi on dairy producers, but Agri·
culture Department economists say
farmers have been slow to reduce

ENRICHED FOODLAND

SWEET WESTERN

WHITE BREAD

CANT.ALOUPES

OUIP,Ul.

. 'Milk prices are dramatically
lower than a year earlier and arc
expected to erode the expansion in
millc output as 1991 progresses,"
the department's Economic
Research Service said. "However,
the adjustment probably will be
gradual"
'
Accordina to the agency. dairy
rarmers "entered 1991 in a
suon,aer financial position than at
any ume" in the last decade_
"The relative lack of immediate
debt problems wm tend to slow
producers • responses to lower
reUifns," it said. "Ample supplies
or replacement
improved
forage
suppliesheifers,
and relatively
UIU\ttractive ofr.farm employment
opportunities will help sustain milk
production powth.''
Millc OUtput per COW in the ftrst
quarter of 1991 was up 2 percent
froin a year earlier, but high feed
· costs relative to milk prices are
expected to· trim this produciion
rate of gain in the second half or
·the year.
The lower reUifns are discoUraging dairy expansion and are
"aecelerating farm exits from the
dairy industry," said the report in
the June issue of Agricultural Out·
look magazine.
"Early this year, milk cow numbers 'slipped below a year earlier
and are expected to continue slid·
ing," the report said. "By late
1991, cow numbers are projected 10
be about 1 percent below last
year!'
ReUtms to dairy farmers above
feed-concentrate costs are expected
. to drop more than 20 percent to the
lowest level since the late 1970s.
· One indicator is the milk-reed
price ratio, which expresses in
pounds the amount of mixed 'dairy
feed equal in value to one pound of
milk. Last year. the ratio averaged
1.72 pounds.
But in 1991, according to the
report. one J)OUIId of milk will buy
less than 1.5 pounds oUeed.
"At year end, millc production
is expected to be barely higher than
a year earlier," the report said.
"However, gains early in 1991 will
result in the annual total rising 1·2
percent to a record."
Faced with growing pressure in
Congress to do something about
the crunch on dairy farmers, USDA
is expected to make recommends·
lions by mid-month on a ~
for "inventory management • of
nsing inilk surpluses and to ease
price declines.
The National Milk Producers
Federation said the depanment's
recent study of several options
showed that an all-milk price of
$11.28 to $11.70 per hundred·
weight would stabilize dairy mar·
kets and assure consumers adequale supplies.
In May. the all-milk market
price was about $11.30 per hundredweight, compared with $13.50
ayewewlier.
But the federation said that at
such levels "milk prices will be
below the costs of production ror a
sianlficant proportion" of the
nation's dairy rarmcrs.
The federation said dairy farmers in 1989 averaged $13.SS per
hundredweight of milk. It said
USDA economists reported that
nearly 44 percent or all dairy farms
in 1989 received insufficient
incolne 10 cover all their rarm and
family expenses and debt repayment.

FIND IT.

By CHARLENJi; HOEFLICH
at a cost qf$29,333.04
Selltlnel News Staff
·
-County Road 15, Hysell Run
Bida on four resurfacing pro· Road, 2.55 miles, at a cost or
jects covering 11.14 miles of coun- $39.943.20
ty roads at a total cost of
-County Ro~d 345, Story's
$251,016.58 were aw~dcd to the .Run, .95 of a mtle, at a cost of
Shelly Co. of Thomvtlle by the $14,490.58.
All of the I08ds slated r~ resur·
Meigs County Commissioners at
Wednesday's meeting.
racmg now .hav~ a cold mt.~ sur·
The )/IOjects funded with Issue 2 face. H~t mtx will be used 1D the
monies InClude:
resurfacmg.
-County Road 31, Stiversville,
~t the request of Howard Frank,
!he fulllenRtb of 6.41 miles. at a Metgs Co1111ty ~r. th~ Board
COlt of $167,249.72 .
. . · approved the cxtens1~ of umc ~or
-County road 53, Whtpple the tax books 10 remaJD open. Orig·
Road. the full leawh of 1.23 miles. mally scheduled to close on June,

20, they will remain open until July
10.
.
Commissioner Richard Jones
pr:esenlcd a copy of the court entry
filed this week releasing the Mc~s ·
&lt;;oumy BOIIitl of County CommtS·
stoners fronun action filed by students and ~nts of the Carleton
School/Met~ Industries. .
That action which pertained to
operational fund deficits was ftled
against the Meigs County Board of
~en.~ .~elllrdation/0\lvclopmen~
Dtsabtli~ and the. Stile of Ohio,
both. of which remam a party 10 the
suit. as well as the Commissioners.

It was filed rollowing announce- students.
.
ment of personnellayofrs due to
No action was taken on a
budget restraints.
'
· . req~t from Mary Powell, director ·
Remodelin$ and renovation of of the Park Disuict. to transrer
offices occuptcd by the Probalil· funds from a salary account to an
Juvenile Counand the county audi- account set up to handle expenses
tor slated ror this summer was dis· incurred on the old Sugar Run
cuss¢ Commissioner Jones nolcd School building. At .the request or
that Bill Diao of Burgess and Nip· the Park District, a meeting
pie Architects bas comeleted plans between the Commissioners and
for the jlro~t which will be adver- Park District representatives was
tised for b1ds notlaler than July l.
set up for next WedneSday.
Engin~r ~il Roberts advised · The Board passed a resolution
the c;:ommtsstoners that plans are authorizing the Meigs County Pros· ·
movmg ahead for the summer work ecutor to advertise 45.5 acres local·
program for six to eight college ed in the western section or the

county ror sale. The property was
forfeited 10 the county on a drug
case. Proceeds from the sale will
go into the Jaw enforcement trust
fund to be divided equally between
the sheriff's department and the
prosecutor's office. The right to
reject any aild all bids was reserved
by the Commissioners.
A carr·y-over of $1,247.26 in
Litter Conuol funds from last year
was appropriated by the Commis·
sioners inio the budget of that
agency ror this year's work.
The Board approved payment of
Continued on page 3

·Smith·guilty of tax fraud, perjury
and making a false document
LOAVES

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) • public housing. The investigation, the Charleston newspaper, and .
The former director of West Vir· by the FBI, the Charleston Police apologized for delays in the trial.
ginia's rederal housing program Department and the Internal ReyFonhe rirst time, he told the
will be ~nlilnced on Aug. 19 ror enue Service resulted in the con Vic- jurors the delays were caused by
laking a $50,000 bri!le from a con- . lions of .three.housing officials and hearin~s convened to address the
several people doing business with issue of whether Smith's immunitv
tractor.
Carl Smith also was convicted housing authorities.
"reemcnt precluded his subseSmith declined to comment fol- quentP'Qsecution.
by a U.S. District Court jury
.
Wednesday of tax fraud, perjury lowing the verdict.
· Smilh did not testify during the: .·
Copenhaver thanked the jury trial.
and malcing a false document
Smith faces up to 28 years in following the verdict, according to
prison and more than $1.2 million
tn rines when he's .sentenced by
l11dge John T. Copenhaver Jr.
The judge set a $100,000' unsecur011 bond for Smith, sayina he
can usc his Winfield house as col·

EA.

I-----------U. GOVT. INSPE CTED

s
(HI (KEN LEG QuARTER

ASSORTED COLOR

s~

NORTHERN BATH TISSUE

·

.

·

.' . ·. · . .
. .....,._

Merchants discuss
plans for future events

. bond .IK;iiiUig,
~---'- AssiS·.
.
./ ~·
~ the ,
tant U.S. A~ M~ Feinl!erg
By JULIE E. DILLON
qf t~e businesses
the Pomeroy
asked that bond -.., set With !Ievere
Merchlints Association during the
Seadnel News Starr
limitations, accor!ling ~ today 's
remainder or the week.
Charleston Gazelle.
Plans for upcoming events of
Susan Clark, president of the
Prosecutors said Smith, who the Pomeroy Merchants· Associ a- . Association, reponed the Christmas
headed the state off'ICC of the U.S. lion were diSCussed at the group's banners, brackets, garland and
Department of Housing and Urban regular meeting on Wednesday.
lights, ordered rrom Sullivan DisDevelopment, demanded the
The Ohio University Communi· plays, have arrived. A work session
money from Ohio contractor Mau- versity Band Concert, sponsored by wiJI be scheduled to rework the
rice Toler, Gallipolis, who wanted Bank One, will be held Thursday, existing decorations will! the new
to keep a contract 10 build federally June 27, at 7 p.m..on Court Street so all will be ready for the Christin Pomeroy. In conjunction with mas season.
subsidized housing in Nitro.
Smith also demanded Toler give the concert the Pomeroy Men:hants
Elimbetb Schaad, Meigs County .
him a uuck and a rarm combine ~ociation will again sponsor "Art Economic Development Director,
and remodel his Mason County in the Park" in the mini park under contacled the Association and sugfannhouse, prosecutors said.
the direction of Annie Chapman. ~ested that a ~ebe created to
business disSmith's attorney. Dina Mohler, The Pomeroy United Methodist mclude a map or
Church will be selling homemade trict and items av · lc from each
said she will appeal.
She said Smith was given ice cream during the event and in member of the Merchants Associaimmunity· from prosecution when the lobby or Bank One cold drinks . lion to distribute to the people
camping at Royal Oak Resort.
he agreed in 1989 10 testify against will be available to the public.
Frank Vinson, the former director
The Oldies But Goodies Car . ~gements are in proaress.with
of the Kanawha County Housing Club will ·sponsor a show 10 Wilham Stuckey, v1ce prestdent
and Redevelopment Autltority.
Pomeroy on July 20 and the Asso- and manager of Royal Oalt, 10 proVinson was convicted of receiv- . ciation is plannina special sales for vide such a package.
ing illegal payments, perjury and that event. The car show will be
The possibility of implementing
placing an illegal listening device held on the upper parking lot in the use of a Merchants Employee
ma co-worker's office.
Pomeroy and on Court Street there Discount Card was discussed. The
. Mohler said the immunity will be an antiQ.ue tractor show.
c.ard, w~tch W?'Jid rescmb!e a plasagreement bars federal prosecutors
The Association is presently uc c~t card, would be assued to
from using evidence in the Vinson sponsorin$ a Father's Day promo· employees of businesses who have
trial against Smith. The U.S. auor- uoo in whtch tickets to a Cincinnati membership in the: Pomeroy Merney's otTICC said it found evidence Reds ball game and one night's chants Association. The card would
against Smith after the Vinson stay at the Clarion Hotel will be entitle the holder to a ssvings of up
prosecution, and that is not covered awarded. Farme{S Bank has donal· to 10 percent on re~ularly priced
by the agreement.
ed the ball game tickets and merchandise at p8rticipating busi·
Followina the verdict. Feinberg WMPO Radio has donated the nesses. The Association would like
said Smith's conviction marks the hotel sccommodations. To register to have this program in place by
end of a four-year investigation of for the prize packa!le stop by any
Continued on page 3

'in

s liS.
OR MORE

HUDSON CREAM .·

YUBI YOGURT

3

FLOUR
S LB. BAG

.

~RMOUR

311$.

ASSORTED FLAVORS &amp;

.SHORTENING

RC COLA

99

,!~.$499

48 OZ. CAN

. DIET -RITE ......$599
FULl CASE

ARMOUR

VIENNA SAUSAGE
6

oz.

CANS

MT. DEW, PEPSI-FREE
DIET or REGULAR

PEPSI-COLA
OPEN MON.-SAT.

7 AM- 11

PM

$

99
12 PACK

12 oz..
CANS

.'·1 HOUll\

SUNDAY 8 AM-10 PM

--·-1-lllrv

MT. DEW, DIET PEPSI

PEPSI-COLA .....LY'.P....
•UIDA•-

FOI$1

· CRISCO
$699

CANNED HAM .....................

tiHIO Vi\lt!l' flll){lJ/\NO ()f'!N

BUY IT.
SELL IT.

"'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO, Thureclly, June 13, 1991
Souroo: USDA

Partly cloudy tonight.
Low in mid 60s. Friday,
high in mid-80s.

99C
lftdWIC

CITRUS HILL FROZEN

ORANGE JUICE.

~~

99.~

PRESIDENT SPEAKS OUT • President
Bush speaks on the South Lawa of the White
no·use Wedaesday eveninr. He ridiculed

&lt;;onpess IIi a hopeless bottleHck blocklna solutions for the nation's domestic problems. (AP)

Bush, Democrat.s argue over policies .
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi·
dent Bush and congressional
Democrats are blaming each other
for sucb naggina problems as crime
and education in a fight that sets
butle lines ror the coming presidenlial campaign.
Amid a fading afterglow of vic' tory at war in (he Persian Gulf,
·Bush took the orfensivc against
majority Democrats in an address
Wednesday night that decried "the
complications, the inaction, the
bickering" on Capitol Hill.
Democrats refused to stay on the
defensive. Even before the president delivered the sunset speech 10
a White House Rose Garden
crowd, they charged he was only
trying to obscure a poor record in
solving domestic problems.
"President George Bush rotlowed up the !()().hour ground war
in the gulf with 100 days of ignoring the economic problems of
America's middle class," said
Democratic National Chairman
Ronald Brown.

lin Fitzwater ack"nowledged as
much, sayi.ng the speech ~e "in
the begmmng throes ~f the kind of
de~ate that wtll defme the cam p81gn."
Bush's latest broadside came
just days after he joined Demqcrats
in a bipartisan celebration of the
allied victory in the gulf. And it
happened .on the same day his
Operation Desert Stonn commander, Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf,
was being congratulated on Capitol
Hill by, among others. some of the
Senate Democrats who refused to
autltorize the war five months ago.
The president specifically casti·
gated Congress for moving too
slowly on his domestic agenda,
although he did not single out
Democrats 'in his speech. He said
the clock !tad run down 10 48 hours
on his request that the Congress
pass crime and lransportation legis·
lation in a hujldred days.
"And I tliought a hundred days
was fairly reasonable.'' he said.
"And I WBS'I't asking the Congress

~to~alv~~flew~m
todehera~~min~~
both
ends of Pennsylvania Avenue 30
minutes."
on
WednesdayBush's
67th ed Congressional
Democrats wast·
birthday
- in the sort
of partisan
litde time in responding.
statements that would be echoed
"The president's phony 100many times over in the looming day challenge to Congress to enact
race for the White House.
' his lepslation on crime and trans·
Bush lias never said he will run portauon amounts 10 nothing more
for a second term in 1992, but than political gimmickry and really
therc's little doubt that he will. marks the opening salvo of his
Chief presidential SJ)Oitesman Mar· 1992 campai11n," said Rep. Vic

Mason County School Board ·
names Sheppard superintendent
Gallipolis City Schools Superin·
lilndont Grant Sheppard was hired
by the Mason Count,Y Board of
aducatlon. in • unantmous vott
Wednesday evening to replace
Rick Powell, who will be leaving
the position June 30.
Sheppanl, who bas been super.lnlendent of the OaUipolil school
,system for three years. was offered
. a three-year contrac:t with a salary
of $S2,SOO per year. · Although
Sheppard - unavailable ror com·
meat this morning. his wife said he
· has accePted the position.
·
. He will officially take over July
l. Powell bas accepted the superin.
ltlldent's job in Fayette Counly.
School Board President Nick
Wright called the special session
last nighL Immediately after calling
.tJ!e meeting ~order, ~right vacat·

.,

ed the president's chair 10 nominate
1. Brooks Smith ror the position of
superintendeD~ which died ror lack
of a second.
Board member Harry Siders
then asked fot an executive session
for personnel matlilrs, with Wright
voting no. The board president stat·
cd he felt an executive session
would be deception IQ the public.
Paul Doeffinger, board member,
said he felt an executive session
was necessary to discuss the superinlelldent position, including length
of rerm 8lid salary.
Wright claimed those items
should a1ao be discussed in public,
but was outvoted. He did not attend
the executive sesSion.
Upon reUJrning from the session
seven minutCS later, board member
Coadauecl oa paae 3

•

Fazioorailir&lt;imia.
House Majority Leader Richard
Gephardt of Missouri panned
Bush's "Polaroid presidency ....
The ·real stoey is, of course, that
this president has only a calendar,
not a domestic agenda."
Nearly 1,000 people many
involved in community action programs nationwide, gave the president a warm welcome when he
entered the Rose Garden to the
. strains of "Happy Birthday" by a
mililary band.
.
"I am disapPOinted, but franldy
I am not surprised," Bush said of
the imminent passing or the I 00day deadline.
"I cannot fully explain this
inaction 10 the American people,"
he said. "But I can say this as a
partial consolation: America's
problem solving docs not be~in or
end with the Congress, nor wtth the
Whilil House."
Bush for two years has been
mired in an ideological fight with
congressional liberals over crime

l"_c;o;n;d;•:~~o;n~p:•~3~----------~~----~-----~---------~~--,
·

Mo· unt Pz"natubo conti"nues to erurnt
'1:"

"l(l•cllor of

~:J&amp;O.{ava flow

P-

MANILA, Philippines (AP)
The latest eruption occurred
- Mount Pinatubo spewed a
at 8:41 am. today and lasted ror
deadly cloud of ash and $as
a half hour. It unleashed giant
more than 15 1/2 miles htgh
mudflows down the jagged, ash·
today after a turbulent nigh! in
covered western slppes of the
which the volcano shook with
4,795-foot mountam and into
the most intense fury since it
the Marella River.
L
f
·
·
r
The erupt1·00 sent a gray
awo.e rom stx centuncs o
sleeP,.
avalanche of deadly ash, gases
' What we are seeing now
and molten rock down the
are phenomenal eruptions,'' said slopes. The billowing !ISh cloud
·Raymundo Punongbayan, dircc·
above turned day to dusk.
tor of the Philippine Institute of
Associated Press reporter
Volcanology and Seismology.
Claro Cortes. who was 10 miles
"The story of Mount Pinatubo
west of the crater when the
is not quile over yet."
eruption occurred, said residents
Two deaths have been reportfled on foot in panic, some
ed from the eruptions, which
clulehing chickens 8lid holding
began Sunday.
handkerchiefs berore their faces.
About40 reporters and plioA Filipinb serving in the U.S.
Navy was killed Wednesday
tographcrs ran ror their cars,
when his car skidded on an ash·
taking in as many residents as ·
slickened road north of the
they could.
Subic Bay naval base, llbout 30
Ash fell as rar as Olongapo,
miles southwest of the volcano, · 2S miles to the southwest.
8lid crashed into a bus.
Aviation authorities warned
airline pilots to avoid flying
A member of the Acta tribe
that lives on the slopes of
ncar the volcano slter a Saudi
•·
Airlin•• 747 developed ....nne
Pinatubo ....d he sa his
die in sti eruption
troub;; Wednesday wii;;i it
There was no otTteial conf~·
passed near the ash cloud en
route 10 Manila from Dhahran.
lion, but the man was himself
badly burned.
The plane' landed lllfely and

WeW;.

, I

an inspection showed volcanic
ash in the engines, according to
air conlroller Roserene Reyes.
Today's eruption rollowed a
violent night in which the volcano exploded with a fury, first
atlO:S2 p.m., then AO'ain a short
·
1ater an d a I h~trd ume
time
at
04
IOda
12:.. T~~· is a1~eady the bi~
..
.
bang, Punongbayan satd ...
can't see any other eruption that
will exceed this ··· What we are
seeing now are phenomenal
eruptions."
Another seismologist with
the institute, Delfin Garcia, said
the volcano was entering "an
episode of big eruptions" that
..,ouud continue indefinitely.
Wednesday's eruptions
beaan at 8:40 a.m. with a
tremendous blast that sent forth
a mushroom cloud. It was followed by a second explosion a
few minutes later and a third,
smslJer blast II 11:49 a.m.
After the nigbuime erupdons,
the troops that remained at nearby Clark Air Base, rrom which
most personnel were. evacuated
on Monday, prepared to evacuate.

•

�Commentary

•

Warm front on way; temperatures going up :·
1•...,,.._

Belgium must examine stand .on arms trade

Th·e Daily Sentinel

By Joek A.lulerson
and Dale Vt~~~ Atta

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

:Ul ~:IINit
J'iPW I , , . . ,.

~9JD·--···

•. . .. , .....1111Gf;ft'
r ~••
rM WMJi!l

.4ir 1 '

~

peal. c~ was doing
.$1.5 billimaiu 1 t · ••
PretiM« Va:lav HPd IOid us
in an elflier • •ie 1 dlalle wanted ID ,et- lli ....J . IJ, but
bil 01 LS_ . .
I tlt&gt;right
1)()'1(. 1'1W"' ol rk • 1 clown !he
weapon• Ulde, 1fawillaslllowed it
down. The sJowdiMoD- Jlllbably
incvilablc anyway,
or wiibout
Havel's direclioa. Tile Cz.ecb
weaponry utel SOYiet designs,

tafUI!Mf: JIOt8ft.aW
c .... p:r
.JD

tP lltpt ft' . · .,

'"*
•r.::larity
even ·bef~nlr.Jq *'JkWCd1;Oaws
whidJMR M fi -

of thole w 4101is iD llle&lt;lulf War,
CIRCl.E OF l'OJSON- Wben
the Uniled $-.. ' - I pcslicide
. that iln't die clo&amp; aft . ""' f~
lhe ;um,C•••er. SOllie ol tbc peslicidel are ch!m" +dill- be
sold at home, but .-e ebeedully
exponed. Eovi:n
•a!• call it
die ci.Jt:le of pm... U.S. COOJpa, .
nies export ISO millioo .,..,..,. of
banned pesticidea a Yell 10 devel,
oping COIIIIIriea. 1'1ro1e c'hemicals
are dumped on food ~~~. and
sane: of dlOIC aqtt are •Wd 10
die United Sra~t~ Cor (OuA••Jllim.
Thm: is a danp 10 Amllli:a! con,
sumers, but the bigger risk is lb
Third World fanl!crs. Hlaln:ds of
Cosla Rican faunas have AJed pes..
ticide manuf&amp;:nuas in die United
Sll!feS, aiJesiug dial die &amp;no won:,
ers were made Jll:riJe by 1 pealicide
used on die Colla Ric:aD banana
crop. Ea\'iaUIUDO•Ieli. . ay it will
take more than laWIIIiiiiD srop !he
cirtle of poisoll. n willllkellricll:r
regalalions by die r 1J II govern,
menl and more tesiJ of food
impous to make IAR they are safe.
MINI-EDITORIAL -Com,
men:e Secmary Robert Mostecller
bas furiher ad\'IRCCd die ,image of
1be United Sra~t~ beius Jmsbt and
paid for by the Kuwaiti JOVem,
menL 1'bele is a linReriD&amp; 1•
in
this country that 1(-.Ji bind the
U.S. miliwy 10 do its ditty work.
Mosblcher dido't belp 10 put that
IJiousbt 10 JeSt when he .nowed 1be
Kuwaiti 1ovemment to pay his
expenses, and those or his
entourage 1111 a trip to Kuwait 10
survey the damaiM done by the
war. On die Sllllllllrip. die expeuses
or 12 members or Congress were
~ by an American ......,.ny that
IS nqoriating to do hr± ess with
Kuwait. The federal. treasury is
·~ tu not so mijJjlild 11w it
can~over a IMW!SS!!ry trip to do
critical government business. We
question whether this one met the
criteria.

Letters to the editor
Scrubber lludge not a hnwdortl waste
'

Bill Oiler k Jim Shinn
m{WAl,.cQJ

18116

COMPAC

: Shaking up government
;. from the inside
1

1

Br MIU JEJNBILIER
AMICiltecl , _ Wrtkr
W.UHJN010N -l!wry OIIU in I wbiJe, tOOieOIIC romet info JPV·
: .....,. wllo ""1M 10 ·ww the~ lllllnellllit ar .-It die tiiY flan.
IICI wcdl. He c.et widJ 1 ,_Of million. He lllllket wav,_,
Tile qrr'm • ~ if wily tbelle pbenomt ll'rive liD inlrequendy.
• 0r II lU !!IX' 'tiiiUIIor. llriVUIIII?
·
,
1'lwf n 110 • • • Ill WllhlaJIDII of die C. Evmu Xoops,1oan
; ClaJb:ICiakt 1114 MIAD... Ioh IIDIIt, llut people llill tpat of 1bcm bec•u:re
• IIIey mMeae- while Jhey- hue,
;
When ICoap, I billy cb:lar, Cllltlt4 die Rr'l., adllliniJIJalion as sur·
lfOII ,....,, Itt pua oo a JOid.lnlde4 while uniform 8lld became a public
,
;
•

~.

.

Where'• Waldo? the next leader of India.

Women break science's gender barrier _

..There'
.:;A£~~n;!i. ~&lt;:~~..17
pto be ny,''
Dr.
I

Sander~

1

Ayt

rr:-lrsGs

~.. a:::;:-,~=·~!:;! 1 r!~~:r.::'
MUW EMCUllve Director Anne Wubington, D.C., headquarters,

L. B')'IIIL
lhe poup't II!CIIIben are mating a
ladeed, a survey or 3,000 delamiued efl'ort 10 deal wilb those
younsllen commissioned by i - . SomeeXIIIQIIes:
AAUW found that &amp;iris emerge
PUT ASTBRfSK HERE In
~ r. !umxz willi far lea COl!' Iowa. the ~es brallch has protifle and Ulehnicalearee~t.
f1~~ce 1n tllem:relvet and thear duced a v1deotape ~O::!!:fAn cntomoJoaill who apecial· abihtlellhan boys of die same qe. fOUDI women ro mnsidrr · · ,
izes in studyins the relationship Their JC!f~IK it bi&amp;b. their :rdf'. JC, easimerin&amp; and Qlher lledlnical
between insecll and crop• esleenl II low and tliey embi'ICC careers, while the Port Dodge
McCuu:heon says many younj only ~~expectations or whal · l!nnch 1p011111n -1111 wrltii!Ojd
women do not even understand life will briDa lbem.
on non·lrlditional vocational
bow the country's food is proMoreover, die girls' aspiluions cfloiccsfarWiliiiCII.
duced. ''Too llillly of them know for the future~ especially lo.w
PU! ASTERISK HERE In
only that it COIIICI rmm lhe jii'OCery when they c0111ider prospec11 1n Wubmston, AAUW branches
Btore," she MJS.
scientific and technicalareu from Spokane in. the east to the
Determined 10 help remedy lhe even thou&amp;h many of die OCCUJJa· Puget Sound reJIOD in the west
situation, she turned 10 die Ameri· lions expected 10 experience the have conducted conferences
can Anociation of University most rapid future 1rowth are in designed 10 make lll8lhematics ll!d
Women, wiiO:re m,OOO membeu thole fields 111!1 die f~ COII)JIO- science man: apjitchable to teen·
arc female coUese Jl'ldua!a !lfT!li· nent oldie woddorce w;D continue aae girls, In Delaware, the Dover
ated with I ,800 I tate and local ID ~pand. ~-'.
bnllch has launched a similar iui,
branches lhrousflout lhe counrry.
Our IC•"""" are systematically iiadve.
Por lhe putlluu years, AAUW sleering Pr1J away CriJm lbe areas
PUT ASTERISK HERE In
has conducu:d an ambitioua pro· or Jtudy where their talenu are dell- Pennsylvania, 4S MUW hmnches
gram designed u1 enhance lhe con· r.erately needed,'' says AAUW. art participalinJ in a swewide PRl'
fidonce ol pre-teen and tcen·age 'By die tenth .,a,,lluu d.mes as snm. In Ohio, a statewide effort
sills in dleir ability 10 SIICCeed, par, !"'"Y boyJ ~ Prb sbow ~ m~ focuses on a summer camp at
ticularly In die fields of ICience and m natunl ~ae~ ~ enameenns. which ISO junior high sehoollirls
madlematics.
Gender d!Jcnmanauo~ preve~ts enpae in everythinjl from tndi,
"We need 10 launch early inter- &amp;iris from JU:hlng !hear polelltial tionai vacl'lion 1Cliville8to ICientifvenlion JIIOJillml La 111pport &amp;irll and deprives our country of the ic experiments.
·
in math and science before gender contributions they could mate.'"
PUT ASTERISK HERE In Min-

Glor_.

McCuu:hcon, an

He C*IIP'Jinecl releniiM!y aain.« elJirlllla. He said dw wbile nar- agiculturalre~C~~Cher coacemed
CO!b ki1112,000 J1!0P1e • ,...;r.al). raemy lrillf 350.000." He btcd die about die llllion'slinilted Sll(:(aJ
Willie HQuN liY ~. IIIII mlllln&amp; 10 ewry houtehold in lhe counrry, a in convincinJ ill youDIItetl , Jllllllplllt4 ..,.-.leally dllcriblnt AIDS, but IIIII IIIDI'IIizinS about flolno.. especiaUy pu - 10 punue tcien·
•

• Mluallty.
:
I Dill Cllybiocllt lCD clwp olal!nf ~ IJtftCY, lhe National
• lfillwtay Tlllllk: Wtly ~ - 796 empiOYm - during lhe
Calw ldlllJ!It' 'W
die IIIID indll-')' lllCD relucrant compli·
' 111C1 on fuel ~ICIIIIY Md
undardl.
CMnalrell Cllledller "811 lair,'' but die air blp dw Deuoit fous111
• whln lllle Willa aCIIce ltnowiOUII in Jlotay llltpUne lldl.
; . L~ Johllton put a YDDnl lawyer lllmr4 Nldlolal Johnton on lhe
• Pediral Conlmun~ Commilllon. He charpd his fellow commis·
·: 1!onm wltll1101lecdn1 10 ltk bnladculm whedirr IIIey were servina ~
: pu!:llll: in._ lit any rncanlnlflll way.
• Now
Dlvlci!Cenf«, 39, lhe commiuioner of the Pood and
r
.~ Admlnillnlloa, Which C)VUietl tile Ufety and efCectivenett of
.
word!• &lt;jlrm•r of lht llllion'1 JlOM national producL
He II btardU, llU Koop. He is a PediJiric:ian, lib Koop. And be may
, 11!111 011110 llf 1111 Koop ol the Blllh ldmlnlall'llion.
'
Kofller lilzed 12,000 piJonl of oran1e juice 011 the 81'01fndiiJlal When
~ lllo labi!MYJ "W" die jllice can't bo milde from conunlrllc. He went
; afw mlalahlld "fllah" 1*11 llllllC. He nabbod veJCI.Ible oll.l labeled
: "no c:haltJh ut," aclalrp 11111 Wll flUe but ml.lleading tlnce cholcJterol is

111115

•

eom•

"*

• foulld ...., llllliltllal PIQiuell.
*-IY-I'W)' Olkl
IM hit appointment, he hu announced a
NW, IIJir..tl)' tnlon:ement action. And rooc1 proceiiDtl have srarted 10
Qlllllplf wldi till law wldloul bollll uked.
•

Aai¥illl of lllo ICoop and Ketsler ilk arc all lhe more Jurprising in

• ~llcan adnJinltcraliOnt. Denlol:,.dc pretldenta, leu tympalhetic 10
. 1110 ertH cltllt fii!Pialed, are e~pocl¢ to name bolt·rock&amp;n.
Whal_~ lho JCooPt, Claybrook~ and Kmlert II a willin1·
ll(llllto malle full .,.. or lho moral authOrity of aoveiiiiiiCnt.
·•
Thoy uM dlelr tonauca. They caU 111endon 10 lhemselves - face it,
IIIey pab publicity - 10 advance a cauae.
BDITOR 'S NOTB: Mlko Pelnallber haf covered event~ In Washington

Iince 1P611.

·

.; Today in history
., Tilt "-claltd ......

TodaY II 'l'llundly, J111e 13. lhe 16Ctll day oll991. There arc 201 days

·. It!\ In lllo ~·

·

~ Tadl1'1 tlllllllahtln HIIID')':
·
• TwtliiY·ftv. ylll'l_go, 1111 June 13, 1966, lhc u.s. Supreme Court
: iaMd ill Uclllllrll "MirllldJ Yl. Arilol!l" deciJion, nJiinl Criminal IUS•
• ~ 11111111 llf llllariiiOd of dlolr COIIII.IIUdonal rilhll prior 10 questioning

.=-:

'

1111116, KinJ Ludwilll of Bavlria drowned In Lake SIAmbera.
In 1111, CoalrtM cNIIed die Oarlm
. cent of Labor,
, 1111191 lilt Yullolt Territory ot Canida wu orpnizcd.
Cldla'l llo~or Robolllon ..alnlt forelanera and Clllnese
..
....S¥iallnL
'
lft1, 1 dol ••.,.,.... welcomed avllll01t hero Charlea Lind·
1111111111 New YCIIII City.
fn IM4r0tmlllw llttM llillehin1 ftyilll·bomb IIIICitlaplnst Brilaln

:a:z-...:.0·

durlnl Woild W• Jl.

,,

Robert Walters
nesota, the St: Paul branch has
launched an ambitious effort that
includes. a science fair IIIII a men·
lOring program in which AAUW
memben provide indiviWal ldvicc
10 60 rlfth, and sixth-grade girls
who are members or poor minority
families and auend inner-city
scllools.

·

Here in South Carolina's "low
country," McCutcheon has
received assisJanCe from AAUW
dwlaslyearenabledhcrtolake40
Jirls, most ·o r tbem from JowtDCOme families, on a seience-ori,
ented trip 10 Washingum, D.C., tl!at
included visits to lhe Smithsonian
Institution and 1be National Zoo·
logical Park.
In addition, die YIIWIISters par·

ticipau:d In a week-long summer
science ~ram at Clemson University's Edisto Resean:h and Edu,
cation center, an BJriculwral facili,
ty where McCuiChcon ra:ruiled fel·
low professionals to aid in the
effort.
''Whea I was growing up,,I
never bad' an opportunity to mc:et a
scientist," she says. "'rbelc tids
had that chance - and mar,be it'D
make a diffmnc:e for them. '

The things some folks do in their cars
A couple weeltlqo I wu driv·
ing alon&amp;lhe windin&amp; counrry road
from my hou:re 10 town, a lillie late
for an appointment, when I glanced
up into my rear, view mirror and
nodced somcthin• disturbing:
The banp whu:h I had so care. fully arranged over my forehead,
and then sprayed with enough
Al}ua Net 10 remove IIIIOCher llyer
or the ozone, were nipping in die
wrong direction! I lulled at the
offending hair with one hand and
steered with the other, thinking 1
was distributing my gaze evenly
between the rear-view miJTOr and
the road. A milli1econd later I
lookocl over to see I'd veered
acrou tho center line, just far
CIIDIIIh 10 slice lho btampef off the
car com in• towllil me 111 dkln 't
quickly leave the
zone and
re~!Ot lhe tlllrd ell
•
I fell J1ft1UY Jtupld. If we badn 'I
all diod and takOn my JfOOmlnl
Indiscretion to our 1ravea, the
hcldJM could have read, "Way·
ward bana• lead to waywant ·

':::on

sways" ar '"Womai! rakes fingers
throuJh bangJ and fenders throug~
Brill or oncoming car."
Then I read an interview with
Peter O'Rourke, chief of the Cali·
fom• Office of TraffiC Safety. He
claims a lot of Ul aren't paying
enoup altellioo 10 our driviDJ, in
favor of doinJ other thin11 like
reading, puaing on malrenp, cban1·
ins clolhes and even (and I'm 11111

malring~s~)fuing~men~

and fl6ulng our tcolh.

flossing? Yep, O'Rourke 10ld
St. Louis Post· Dispatch reporter
Vir1U Tipton he witneAed lhiJ one
with his own eye~: "The woman
was ateerina with her knees and
bad tho mlrrilr canted IOWird her.'' ·
EYe')' ooce In 1 wb1lll she'd lip !he
braJrOI and like a look II'DUIId, but
"dlen she'd r.' ri&amp;bt biCk to flou·
ina her IIOib. '
O'Roullre runJ I JIIOPWIIIimed
II . . . . . IIIlO J11Y 111ft lllelldon
to our .clrlvlna. a.ecs 011 a ...at!c
dial 92 plllllllt of aD accldellla are
c:"l'd by drlwr error. Tbll bas 10

Sarah Overstreet

mean we aren't paying all that
much attention.
swears dley ay.
My greatest 4ownfall in the butIhenever
change clothes in my
attention department hu been the Cit, but I have
become pmty cava·
advent of drive-through ~IS.
ller
about
lhe
101
~ngs 1 do
I bought into die tystem as soon as while I'm trying olhcr
to
drive:
Swig
it was available because I'm some soda from my right hand,
always in a buny, and I dlousbt if llllllsfer !he CIIIIO my left hand ind
the law allowed them 10 sell food steer with my little finger curl6d
you could drive~ and buy without around
1be wheel, shift to seconll.
RCUlnt out ol yow car, then il mUll putlhe can
my 1mees aRc!
6e acelden111roof. Silly me. Your steady tbe belwccn
wheel
so
I can dig
mind tends 10 wander from 1be road around in my punc for my~­
when you've splayed pipin&amp;·hol ment bool:: to fmd die clinlclions to
layera of Bil Mac down die front lhe addreSI wbae I'm going ... ·
of yCIIIr blou:re, or made a allb at
"You cannot drive a car in
your Wendy's bllllld po11111 only 10 heavy traffic: with leas than 100
have it IIIli Off tile ICilllld onto the pen:entiUeltdon and be anythi'R
floor, Add 1 five-speed manual but I collision ~ 10 bt;zJpen""'.'1
llllllmiUion 10 die mix, -ad yau'ae
MJS. 1 dori I know wJiat
plll:li:aDy I rol1lnJ ~~-pileup. O'Rourto
perr;enJqe of that 112 percent of
O'Rourke saya he's eapec:lllly drlllll'-at.-d accidenll tl!IC·
piqued II the people who chilli" - CltMI
~ by f!dcQinJ wilb uar I N
c:IO!bol wblle drivlnJ - a lot of acdvlliel, bul ] )IOvtd llllllelhilll
thelll IIDitblll pfayeri wbo pt off to myaelf wileD 1be tl:cmt I CIIIC
wort too late to 10 home aad to 111 IICCident ill a WI')' long lime
.before pme. I wa due to nothing more dian an
c:lll'l
how lhey IIIIDI&amp;C it, ernt11 balllt of hair.

clllnr...:::OI
,,

llala wu expecu:d in are,on, left behind cooler temperatureS as
stalion wu 95 ~srea Ia 1956.
UIJh, New Mexico, Ncbrasil:l, well u uprooted ttcet and other
The RIIXlllllllw 1111903.
•
Sanri" thi1 moniaJ wu 11 Iowa, l11inoi1, Kentucky, Ten· wiuddiii!IRC.
6:02 1.111. Suaset will be II 9:01 nessec, florida, Oeoraia, South
Carolina and Maine.
"' t~*,
Storms 1hlt moved throuah the
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Forecasten say a warm front • 4I'OIIIIIl till ......
Nonhcast
Tuesday
and
Wednesday
the
winnin&amp; numbers selected
A
lbt,niliorm
lli)ICt
NaliJasta
will bring IIIDf*IIUI8I in the .udWednesday
night .in the Ohio Lot·
early
today
wbjle
sklea
dawned
801 and pcllllblo .OO.ers and dlun·
PA.
tery:
clenlOlDI'- eapeclally in the IOIIIh mOldy clear ia die Nord IMI after·
•
IIIII MIL
..
Super Lotto
IIOfliiS inclndiD IOIIIIdoel, damll·
Mansfield
14·16-21·32-43-44
Saturday will be bot and dry, ing ·winds an1 bail battered the
Coaliaued from PIIF 1
(fourteen,
sixteen, lwenty,one,
but 1111me rain is pouible Sunday area.
Brian Billings made a motion 10
IND.
lhirly,lwo,
forty-three,
forty-four)
and Mlll!day. .
.
· PorecMte'1 Said paechcl or lhwt· llire Point Pleuanl High School
The
jackpot
is
$4
million.
The recOrd hlah laDpii:;IIURI far denronn ac.livity would dot tbe PrinCipal Michael Whalen for die .
this ,.., • the CoiUIIIbll - " « nadon dll'int the day.
position. Wrilht 111in vacalied lhe Kk:ker
6-2.,.-3,s,s
••
presidoat's chair, aec:ondin1 the
(six, two, four, three, five, five)
iuotion. BilliiiJI and Wright voced
1
Pick
3 Numbers
_"-____..,...~---~
. . fur Wbalen, liul Siden, Maxine
8r7•3
the .-d ili.tailmeat Ill !lie )flip wu an-.eecl. It is lleiq ·IJIOII- Nibert. 8lld Doefllnler voted 110.
(ei&amp;bt, seven, three)
Sidlln next m.- the IIIOiion 10
County a-JJer or c 1 no on 101'811 by lilt auo Vallay ..
Pick4Numbers
Sheppard, with Nibert addina
a pledp toward eapenpa of Comauaaioa aad tltt aucklye hire
Ia
lOCoed
10 the modon. Prior 10 . 0.1·9-6 ' .
elllpiOyiDJ atcwi'llpmaoltdclor.
Hills·Hockla{ ValleJ Jtqioul the VOII, Billinll
Jald he fell the . {zero, one, nine, six)
Appcoval
wu
s~-.
for
Linda
Coaualllloa.
Jona
·
M
id
tliat
lltW.VA.
board had an ex~cllent array of Cards
Bentx of die Mol&amp;l County Court pleu111 aaend. ·
' 4 (four) of Hearts
candldalel. 8lld lelt dtc baud
'to altlnd 1 recont. •IIIIJIDI•nt
Ho.•oi Oilronl, k4&amp;tlaw IIIIi· loc:al
I0 (ten) or Clubs
should
bave
cho:ren
from
II.
cour:re ill Columblll oaJuly 1.
- neer with tile OhiD D\f£11 IDI or Billina• added he fell Whalen
7 (seven) or Diamonds
11 wu votod to Increase the TriiiiiPOllllioa, Dblriet 10, IHl would have been IOOCI. although I)C
Q (queen) or Spades .
clireet lilbllity of the COUIIl)' ill ill with rhe ~ • dilcua dnlued 11e a1so reJt Shep)Nid will ·
self..Jnlunld '-ldiCII'e ~ 10 ICIVioea olllaa c.!FKJ!inl ftnl for
en ollhe $llldellll, tea:hcn, · The Daily Sentinel
.s~o.ooo. AfiOr lhll 11M ~-auur· wbicll lie ·now worta. Giffard is 1a1te
adlllinisuators, service. personnel
• anc:eviouatJftJiftlllly
·• .~ ~ A~Jiab·
Pre-ill..
asaoclalld
widt
Jlruk1ia
COIIIIII·
IIIII Muon County. He concluded
(V8PIIIUHII
IY die ur....,...1 ua ........
, 1an11 wbidl t)I!ICIIIiw in Jli&amp;bway, by aying he hopes die ~ will
A Dl"llla of Mullm.-la. Inc.
IY bad beell $25,000.
snet !llld bdaae dMp
toplhcr and malre. die schoOl
Publlahed every afternoon. Monday
A letter from the Oov1111or' •
A1lo 111011111 with die COIIJIIit. pull
syatom the strongest n hu ever
thrOII;PI Friday, Ul Court St .. Po·
offia: ofCri=imlJ~ ftiiiiclinl sioaen was Jean Canaau1h, been.
merO)', Ohio, b)' the Ohto Valley Pul&gt;
c....... , . .....
llthlnr Cornpany t Multtmedla, Inc.,
1ran11 a.;,ilabl.l ,{j)r altemalive Soulhenl lila, J+ 1 trtlll'l'l 1¥idl
Wri1ht
declared
he
echoed
Pomoroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21!16. ·Sedie Olriltmas ........
modiaa lflrlp withili 11M bulla~ss · bousin1 for IIQII·vlolent miado· !he Ohio 1• wlel Cot die ...,.. BlllinJ&amp;, adding he hoped peace
cond clast po11qe pild. at Pomeroy ,
· . To '-'loal·dllll c:mmiuuity dillricl will "' dlwlapDd. Aaodler meanor crlmlnala ·was read by c""*' Sill cxplllznl lilt roll of and lllbqllility will prevail from
Ohio.
,leader, Ted Roecf. a . . - . . - wort 1011108 OD &amp;bt = ' - I I Commlal •WI Jon. It Wll DOled the private, non-prolll COIIIIIIII)' II now on in die baud sessions, and
Member. Tile Aaaociatid Pres•, tn.
!leld to malte a 4olialioa In bia
tblllhe,.. bMI¥SIIIbll S50 alii· il 10''*- for IIIIIIIIIWII -':· promiainl to try "from here on
land Dally Prets Auoelatlon and the
y)
Ohio Newspaper Anoclatlon. National
·memoty to 11 oraaalaadon of =:=...~'p.m.
Uoe for COJIIIIIICiioll of flcllldu s11op1 lllll COIIIl)' ltld . . u'll •
Advertlllna Re;&gt;l'fMDtat!vi!, Branham
OU&amp;tid' till jilL (Jswtt NqGire a SO and cliaiiiiYed one tho CMIIDIIIilt· ouL"
.:cllolce
by=~
.
The meeting adjourned follow•
Nf'WJPI.Pfl' S.ltt. 7S3 Third Avenue,
Jiil\81 IIIIiCh. The Cl)lllmink en ina me Yarloua - . a\'1111s1Na. _
. Special
-~~ven to-:
New York, New York 10017.
inllho
5.() vote for s~
.
I
Kenny Utt, Diana LaWton, Anaie
itii'IICI
tlillD
COIIIIlY
il
111110
PDii·
.._...
~.jill'
11
I, COil,
. The next rcauJar meeang will be
Sodt CtaCral Oldo . . . '
POSTMASI'ER: Stnd adlhlt chanlft
Chapman and other volunlecn for
dia • COlli up wilb lbc 11111Cbin1 duc!ed the mllliq, aueadld by beldTUCiday,June 18,6:30'p.m.
to 'l11f Dolly Seml!!el, Ill COurt St.,
, Toallhli•pardy cloudy wi_th 1 · fullds.
Pomoroy, Ohio me.
CODlmisaion~ J•m IIIII David
their work 01 die
projeella
All!lldnltobebeld•dleHol· Kobleau, and Mary HobllctiOr,
the ~ b1Dc:t where lilt mediae low 65-'10. NtlttJ, valat" ckiudl·
S!IJII(:IIIPTION RATES
strip 11 being developed. The pro- nell whh I 1:111711 of IJIIIn:UI and Inn, t!!!!!lc:olhe. rial r-dly ....,.
Br Carrier or Mot• Roule
OneWeek .... ...... .... ...... ...... .........$UO
ject is a joint effort belwee&amp;~ lbc thuadontorlll- Hl&amp;h ill die mid· oe the cloliDI ol the Melp Mine
Onr Month ......... .... .. ... ... .... .... .. ..16.95
Lions Club and die l'omciloy Mer· 801. Cline fll'lil. &lt;10 jllleenl.
Coaliaued fnnn , ..e 1
One Year .... ..... .... ........ ,; ... ..... .. 183.20
lill
1
1
r.
rut:
chanll Association and the entire
9JNGLII COPY
11
legislation. Many Democrats
......,=MIM••!dl
1r.~
PIIICE
Sldll.....,
oppose his attempt 10 restore the O.ily ....................
Pair oa Sal
y. Chllll:c or
:.............. ~~ C.nts
.t.cw• _. tl I •ma by late
Sublcrtbera not dalrlng to pay the car·
,:•sJo~.;-and Junior
loan Tewksbary, i~ Will bo ::!.~lY for a holt or federal
SUIIday udinto Molldly. Hilhs,
rler 'may remlt In advance dtrect to
ADd Bush a life membei' of the
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, lior 12 month
JIIOIIIy Ill . . . Lowl ill the 601. Onnp will IIIMl for a full ni&amp;lll conc!a!Cdq taben:ulin lkin .... It
basll. Credit will be glvrn carrier each
.
.
and potluek on Saturday at 6:l0 lbc HnrtiiOII• Scilllo ToWIIIIllp , National Rifle Association, bas
, "A toll·bc c:meraency fllllllber
week.
011
p.m. atlbc hiD,.. Salem Ccallll. Fire Da!lrronent MOI!IfaJ
rcm•ed a push for a wailinl period
· has been established far CIIIIOIDCII Sberiff liiUel reminder
No subScrtpuona by mall permit tea In
All
membcll
and lmelulld per· 4:30-6:30 p.m.
for the purchase of handauns
in the I'Onlenly uea who !'elide ill
ireas
whtft hOME' carrier ~rvlce Is
"ReCord JCIUliiU'III aumbers," sou are .-.aed to IIIIIICL
unlea
it
comes
as
part
of
1
com,
avall~blt
.
- Meigs County and u:re the Albens ...... Meip ClilmiY Sbaifl Jlllles
phone ditectoty." Slid o.y B11u,
OAI'SIIDIMtl
'
~_!ll~=ebill
.. ,a
Mall !lo_I,!Ofti ·
Soulsby.
'
Tbl Slllall*'ll Local OAPSI!
No.
nu ,.T"''"'
lnolde Melp Ceotnty
'local manqer for GTE Tdephone M. The
lllerlft' IBid tbll in order 10 4S3 williiiMl Manda)' II 7 P~ at DlllollidoDIIIDU&amp;Ilt
five-year, SIOS billion package that ' 13 wret&lt;• ............ ...................... $21.114 .
~ Weeko ............................... ,.. S43.16
be - • alllld ol wl iuh, ,__ the bip lli:boOt. AD lllllllben are
Ac:tiona
for
illtoludOI'
lllve
Would
Create a new 15o,QOO..mlle
~.iirillcrit 1+99U663,and idaniJ should record the serial lrpd Ill illii'Dd
52 Weeka ........................ ,......... IU.76
been filed In thl Melp County Nllional Highway SySiem! is Jan.
O.....,eMelpC..Hiy
. though II IPIJCifl to be I toll ~ numbln ol t1ae1r (llDI. televillon
13 Weeka ........... ....... ..... .. ..... .... $23.40
11111111
1
•t
II"
•wl
·
Count
o1
CollalOII
Plell
by
Diane
pishinJ
in
die
Senate
amid
.,.,,
· cu110111011 will not be chlrpd for HIS, VCR'a lid alter Jiopiiltf so
............ ......... .................. S45.50 ·
iPIIIl'llinillll w!!'..!'!,felhrrod_ Kay Cbuey, Mldd1!J10n. aad monts over 1he distribution of 5226 w
w..u ...................... ............ Sll8.40
lollg ctim-. he llid.
·
that 11111111 Ia readilY availlble at Stir lt:IIIIPidl in ....,.. on.511.
Ste¥1 D. Qllney, Mlildllpllt; 8lld money 10 the various SlateS.
' ' Tbe AlbeJII directo~l, 1- sllollld 1111 .... "' . . . . 1111114
urday
at
Tbe
publ;c
IS
SliMII R. Qlil*l, MIIAipn.llld
. 800-211-7777 Ill c:aD fllr _lheast that WI)' the ltaall Clll be lllllllell
invilld
to
•
''
Lilidl D. Q11lllen, Shade.
' Ohio Emerpncy Medil:al SerVices. into tllo NCIC eomputor without
Cblp
WIIOIIen
to
aeet
,
.
Dhlllcnpaalld
· Meigs ar01 uson in the Albany, delay. •
!
The
chill
w~
srou~l
Divon:ea bavo been panted in
- Guysville, Shade IIIII WllkesviDe
As explalnld 'by S1leriff S!MJis, meet~ 2311 l p.m, II~ . , ~ 1 the Melp COUD'&gt;' Court ol Com·
exchanRel D01!1 can dial 1+992· by, alollilf ti•lltUally c • s
lide p1111 an 1t01111~~~- mon Pleas to tlrrl L. Yeau1er
' '6663 m;· 1
.
before"IUia1
._.,...of
aoJcn ed Ia
ae from ~ A. YCIUf.lr, and
"This wiD be In effect until die , _ -~~~ t .II ?Ill . . . . . ..
invlled to
•
bltwllll loilald L. Jloe'AI'lll and
'' n~ ~ dlleCII!tW. .U. dsllvpittlr
lldl··
....
6wiiln
.....
10
· s- D. DanaJdDJ,
.. ercd in lila 1991," •llid. ·
'
Marrlalt lh tUIJIIRI.
"Until-dy, PoMeroy eu·
Marr1qe nee...• have, been
. tomors in Mei11 County had to .
tile lial dop OWDII'I
issutd Ia Melli Coua~
resort 10 cai1in&amp; 1011111 be I iW, do""'
011 band
GaDipalla Slaclmrdl Co.
Coati ID Walllrlldwlld
Jr.,
" said Blla '!be m-6663 111111•
and
It
111!11
tliiM
~day•
to
.
. J-1,1H1
23, Pomeroy, and Deidra Dawn
• ber already appears ' iR· the p&amp;lkm. Tllll dell}' ca be die dlf.
Frame,_
:Z Sietrt:
Paiadyn, l8, Pomeroy~·
Dou11u
Pomeroy-Middleport dilectOry ·
rcrenca bolweell IIDIViaa and not Medi•m
250.300 lbs., 94.50-145.00;
Evweu Fraley, 24, Midd
and
solvilll crime. lhe shlriff c:onclud·
3()().500 lbs., 93.00.106.00;
Shannon
Lynn
Stewan,l,
Mid·
' ed.
.
500-7001bs., 74.00.103.00;
dl1port; LarrY Wayne Lavender,
7QO.Up 76.5().88.00.
48, Syracu11, and Cbriaay June
MediUDl Jlrule, l II l Heifers:
Caldwell, 38,.Syracuse; and Dttyl
VETERANS MEMORIAL
25().300 lbl., 85.00.104.00;
1M Owens Jr., 23, Pomeroy, and
: WI!DNliSDAY ADMISSIONS
3()().500 lbs., 80.00.96.00;
Mary Deann Ackerman, 24,
Depuliet of m. Melp County
, Curtis Jewell, Pomeroy
50().
700
lbs.,
7S.S0.89.00;
Waverly.
WI!DNBSDAY DIS'"CHARGES Shcrill's !Jei*anoat took a aepon
70Q.Up 68.()().81.00.
Wtdnesd•~r:;' Mn. R~
· ~l!1ial, Robert ~. llbeubech,
Butdlereowa:
· ville Hill
,
0
I
Utili~, S3.50-62.SO.
lhatlhonly'lfter 10 p.m. sbc heart
C8nncr,/Cuaen, 57.00-down.
what she believed to be two to
HOI ZD MEDICAL CENTD tbree IUD aholt.
Li&amp;bt wei1ht low ifade cow's,
Am Ele Power ..................l8 1/4
. · 'Discbaraet, June 12 - Tiffany
47.00-Down.
She aeoorted that sbe beard whal
Ashland Oil ,.;, ..................31 118
Bameu, Wanda Corvin, Russell ·SOUIIded fib 1 ll'lll:k alowing down,
HeifCJetteS. Up to 73.00.
ATAT
............................... .36.318
• EShelman, Jared Pc1111!ey, Mildred then tile ahou, lllen tho vehicle Hollfteln Steen aacl Bulla:
Bob
BVII'll
........................ l7 711
' Greer, Brandoa Roberts; Aana accellrllld 11lo JePOfl Jlated that
3()().100 lbl. SO.OO.lll.OO.
CblmliRa
Sb!Jp
.................21 311
Simpldill and Mk:h•l Y....
tile rahlda - P I IDWiitds Par- Butdltr 81111:
Oty
Holili111
.....................
14 1/2
Birllll; JURe 12 • Mr. and Mrs. e.« Rill.
Utilities, 66.()().70.75.
I
.
Pedorai
Mopl..
.................
17 3/4
. Glenn Hoselton, a daughter, Mur·
Canner/Cutter, S7.0Q.68.50.
No. damage was reported 10 _the
GoodyeaT.tR
.................
32
7/8
raysville, W.Va.
Veal Calves:
house.
Key Centurion .................. 13 1/2
Choice/prime, 92.5Q.IOS.OO.
Lands'. End .......................20
Medium, 85.!)0-94.00.
Limited Inc.......................27 718
Sprlnfltl' Cows:
Multimedia Inc . ...............;l8
600.00 .t down.
Rax Resl8urant ..................21/32
and Jennifer Grueser, Columbus; Cow/Calf C0111.:
Clarence Grueser
Robbins&amp;Myers ...............28 3/4
IOSO:OQ.dbwn; • , ·
two great grandchildren, Jenna
Shoney's lnc.................... .l6 3/4
Calves:
"'
Clarence P. Grueser, 87, 45602 Meyers, Cofumbus; and James Pos- , Baby
Star Bank ....,..................... 21 1/8
. 200.00 k down. •
Morning Star Road~ Racine, die;cl. ter, Grove City; and ~evcral nieces Bulebtr
Wendy int'l.................. ,....9 3/4
Sowl:
Wodnelday, J - 12, 1991 It hiS
WortbiJI&amp;ton Ind. ............. .25 liZ
400-600 lbs., 47.50-51.00.
Mr. o-r T H
·" ._.,.......l'ollowllll I -~lb.
! 801'11 Jata 21, I90S a Root wa
a 4tlda ' ' three . y~ lbs., -'9.50-5!.50. ·· s.,,~.,.tJNJi:lf...,
. Sprin11, he 'lVII I - of the late b:lotherllld&amp;wo ~~~~an.
prerll't,~., Bllll
l..n:
11Cob and Bublra Wells o-. ' Servil:el wil be held Pridly at I Bulcber
11114 LHwl of
Ill.
39
.OQ.41.SO.
He worked u 1 coal miner, saw p.m. al Bwin.l Funerl1 Home with Plas by Head:
miU worker IIIII fanner. He wu a Rev. Laura Leach SbreCflor and
18.00.38.00.
member of the St. Jolm Lutheran Rtv. Willilm Middlelwartb offici·
atin1. Burial will be in Gilmore
ChWt:h at Pine ()rove.
· Mr. Orueler is survived by his Cemetery.
II lbc funeral
wife, Clara Hamm Grueaer, 1 liOn . Friends may
homo
on
Tbundly
.from
2.,. p.m. .
' and daUihter· ln·IIW, Ro1er and
and7~pA.
.
Janel Grue:rer,
1 brodler.
In
lieu
of
f1owen
donations
may
· William Orueaer,
four
be made 10 thO SL John Lutheran
granddaupten, Ropaa
'
.
Cllwdl Mlmorill PtmcL
· Columbua; Lisa MCCoy,
Grow; • 0.0..

B;rTileA•
Tbiqa wUlltlrl warmina IIJI
apia 01 Prldlly aftlr llldly'l ltrief
wte of eooler :and leu humid

*

p.m.

Lottery numbers ·

•

I

..

Mason ...

I 84·1·

-.Qa

•I eotumbull w I

•

Shelly ... _-e__..___,......

..-a

"i)

Merchants ...

Weather

*"'

Bush ... .

Meigs announcements
SIB
s..

Toll-free number
is established •

..

'"* -

court news

!i:J.·••

=!.-!..C::rca..:r.:a.
lllvt.... ...
...:1:7

Hospital news

diiC=- "'""':"'

Livestock report

1-

Gun shots probed

Stocks

SERTA
SALE

WHIRLPOOL
APPLIANCE
SALE

··METAL
CABINET
SALE

SYLVANIA

·- -Area deaths·-.o;....;.._

TELEVISION SALE

.ancl·itk:
em

CARPET
SALE

LIVING
ROOM

.....,

Just ·for Dad

LE

20°/o o·FF ALL MEN'S SHOES

SALE

YJNYL
FLOOR.
C.OYERING
SALE

OPEN STOCK

BERKLINE

BEDROOM. RECLINER

•

SALE

SALE

MU fl1'1B'S IAYI

~H-a."...

house

PLACE

I

I. liD lVL

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ttt-1617
I!MII'POII

,
' '

I'

�Sports

The D~ily Sentinel

.

;

1991

Eighth-inning walks help Expos top Reds in 10-9 comeback

Thuradliy, June 13, 119t
Page-4

'

Ohio

the eighth inning llld the pme tied
at 8. Oriaaom 100m! on Tim Wallacb's single, and Cllderon, wll(l
way be co aid properly explain wentiO lbird on tile bit, came home
what hid happened.
on Eric Bullock's ucrifa fly.
• "EverybOdy knows walks will
"It was an ugly end to an ugly
kill you, especlally when they ball
," PlnieUa said.
coine that late in the $ame," the
~one of the game, which
Cincilllllti JIIIDager saad aflel' the saw the Reds outhit Montreal 16Reds dropped a 10-9 decision 10 14, was set in the first inning.
11!0 ~treal Expos on Wednesday Calderon doubled in a run and
rughL ~ you put guys on for · Dave Martinez tripled home two
·free, the};, anev1tably come hack 10 . runs before sc!lring on Gilbeno
hlirt you.
Reyes's single as the Expos
Tbo free passes Piniella was jumped on Ciilciruwi slalter 11Ck
referrin8 10 were issuec! by ~Y Armstrong for four runs.
Myers {24) to ManJu1s Gnssom
Amlllrong singled home a run
and Ivan Calderon watb one out in and Billy Hatcher doubled home
MONTREAL (AP) -

Lou

Piniella flllli.,., he was fl1l0l'ting a
cliche, but he fek it was the only

Sc&lt;)rch&lt;)~tr&lt;l
p,6S.
DOUIILBS J'~~~~o St. Loldl, II; Ju·
16; ~1• 1~H i l6:
doa.O'HJ.!-*.c•~,
mCUIIIIu,
,; --.I)'DGI.d.l,

In the majors...
AMERICAN LEAGUE

N.,.Yadt,1S,

£ut DIYisiOD

r.......
-

w ' L Pd.
32 21 .5-42
. .......... 30 27 J24

•.......

GB

TRIPU!S-T, Ow- Saa pioso. 1:
fl!ldar. s.. Proodoeo, 6; L f'lonuJaa.

1

Houston, '; C'olem1a, New Yorlr:, 5:
Xmk.~4;Cend h~
4: Ill. 'l'bmopaim, SL U.U, 4l T. Fomaa·

' ...:....... 21 lO All3 3 1(.1
New Y&lt;G
....... 25 29 .4&lt;13 41(.1
Mllwo.W.. ...... 25 32 .439
6
Clnolla4
······- l2 34 .393 11(.1
Bollimore ........ :10 36 .3:17 10 1(.1

HOME RllNS-NcOrilf, Son Di...,.

14; O'Naill. Ciaoiooal!. 13; I - H.,.

Yo«, 13: Oi.nt: Atlanll, IJ; W. ewt,
11; 0. lleD,Coioop, 11.
STOU!N-BASBS--Cdeaa, New
York, :U: Griuom, Mootrul, 30;
DeSbill•• ~ 36; Nlaca, Adanu.,
26; 0. Sm;lb, SL L&lt;oil, 11.

s..

WtaiDMolon

By STANLEY D. MILLER
Allocllled Press Writer
'
;. . CHICAGO (AP) - Partying
• fans pecked down10wn sll'eeiS early
• today, hours after the Chicago,
• Bulls won the fii'St NBA champi·
, oilship in lheir 2~-year history.
· Cheering fans rzupled liom the
: homes and' taverns as the BJJIIS
: 100k the NBA Finals with a 108• 101 vic10ry over the Lakers in Los
: Angeles Wednesday niaht
· Traffac ground 10 a Dalt on sev·
cral major·city streets. Fans leaped
for joy on sidewallts, in die strccts,
e~~en on the can, shouting, waving ·
: and, shooting off flrCCI'IICkers and
' guns.
: "I couldn't miss this moment
• for anything," said Rich Polli of
: Milwaukee, a Chicago. native who
rewmcd for Game 5"of the F'tnals,
• ihe Bulls' first ~hance 10 win the
: title.
. 'Tile waited ~ years for some. thing like this. I've been through
: tliick and thin with the Bulls, and
• that makes you appreciate it even
; more," Pol1i said.
.
' . "It's a definite upper for the
TOSSES OVERHEAD PASS - Clllleno froatmu Scottie Pippen . . - oftr the ouiStreteled arm cl t.A. Laker fonnll'd A.C.
1eity. It sheds a new hght on the
Green (45) iD the fifth ud IIDaJ pme of tile NBA cbamploublp .
~ 1991-92 season," said one fan who
series Wednesday Dipt at the Forum Ia lapwood, Calli. Pippen
:. rushed off.io trade high-fives with
: people in passing cars without givled tile B~ wltll JZ poliltll to·pace the Z!·year-old team tn a 108·
101 vlciOry and liS llrst-ever NBA title. (AP)
,
-ing ber name.
·
; A IS-year-old girl was shot dur; inf cclebnlions on the.South s~.
~ Said Officer Simeon Frost of the _
• Chicago Police Department. The .
: girl was on the street outside her
: home celebrating with friends
~ when she was shot, apparently by
: stray gunftre, Frost said.
HIRAM, Obio (AP) - Denise one competition, and so I decided
• The girl, whom Frost would not Miller has he!~
Hinuit among 10 forgo the other sports and play
: identify, was in good condition the elite in Obio ~erence tennis. tennis this season. I'm so glad 1
. IOday at -ML Sinai Hos!Jital wilh a
The sophomore ·from Cuyahoga did. Everyone has been so supporti ; gunshot wound in her th1gh.
Falls couldn't help tbe Terriers sue- ive of my decision, which makes
· A welcome home rally for the cessfully defend their Ohio .Confer- me feel doubly good.''
; team was scheduled for noon Fri- ence tennis crown, but she keyed a
Miller said she wasn't con. day in downiOWR Grant Park, said runner-up finish by compilin~ a 20- cemed about .finishing unbeaten
: Terry Levin, a spokesman ' for 0 overall record and winnang an until the 16th match of the season.
OAC IOiiniament title with an 11-0
The streak and what it mean~
.i ~or Ric bard M. Daley. l,.evin
• · the rally would be preceded by · record at No. S linales.
dawned on her when she was traila short moUmldc.
.
' ITo D!Y ~ledge no one ever ing 14 in tile ftrst set of her match
; ~ Thll doesn't mean nothing was has compiled an unbeaten season i,n with Allegheny's Gayle Ishler.
lennis here 11 any level," said Pete
"I was j~ playing and hiving a
: ~for tOday.
• Vendon were flooding the city Brann, who recently fi(lished his , gqod time,': Miller said. ," I enjoy
; with chanipionsbip merchandise. 21st season as Hiram's coach.
my teammates and the game so
· And although the championship
Miller's success story is all the well and was having such a blast I
. 1r0phy was still in Los Angeles, more remarkable in that she never really didn 'I tliink about tile slreak
I another one was on hand for dis· has had a lesson, and didn't take up (IS-O at the·time) until tile Alleghe·
! 111ay in th~ Second - or is that the sport until she was a. high ny match.
school freshman.
"The· meaning of the streak
• F'ust? - Caty.
! : Tiffany's, the jewelry .company
And she gave up the sport to really didn't dawn on me until I fell
• t11at dellipJod and crealcd the NBA play basketball and softball at behind 14 and that woke me up,"
·
she said.
: woohy, made two. One was held Hiram as a freshman.
: aloh I»' MiChael Jordan and com"I was introduced .10 tennis at
She rallied 10 talce a 6-4 decision
l pany Wednesday night Tirf&amp;ny's Falls middle school by my gym and closed out tl)e match with a 6·2
i planned to display the oth~ at _its coach Ray Montgomery. but we 1 win in the second set From then
• Michigan Avenue store, Slid v1ce just hit balls off a wall," Miller on, Miller felt she was not only bat; president WaiiiiCC Slciner.
said. "Tennis always has surprised tling opponents, but the pressure of
: For the vicUlly-SIIrVed city, the me. I hid always put my expecta- maintaining tile streak as weU.
• Bulls bring the fant championship tlons on basketball and softball. I
In the Ohio Conference champi: in any professional sport since the never expected that much out of onships, things went weU until lhe
: Chica&amp;o Bears won tile Super Bowl lalnis beclluse I never played com- semiftnals.
; in 198ti.
·
petitively until I reached high
"1 sailed through the rliSl match
(beating Amanda Cook of MuskRed Kerr's, a spons bar west of IChool.
"Collch Brann sold me on com- ingum 6-0, 6-1 in the quarterfidowntown owned by the Bulls'
: rust coach, Jobnny "R;ed" K~, ing 10 Himm, but I liked b!'sl'elbal! nab) •. but·~ I reached t!'e semi~.
· was filled' to overflowang durang and softball better than tennis ·at I realiZed rd better getu m gear if
:· the game. Few in the audience that time and I decided to ~lay
: lhere saw the last seconds of. the thole SJl(XU rather than tennis ..'
game since patrons were Jeaeang, ·
As a basketball player, Miller
punchinJtile air, trsding high-fives averaged 8.9 l"linll, 2.9 rebounds
lnd toasting eicb olbcr.
and was crcdated with 42 assists
"You can't beat this!" patron and 24 steals.
David Tickner shouted over chants
"But I found I missed tennis,"
of "We're Number One!"
Milkl said. "I milled the one-an-

..•

.

'

-,~

ll am 'to Mid. Sun.-Thurs.
11 am 10 1 am Fri. 1: Sat.

LARGE

NBAFinals

Babimoft

I&amp;

(Best-of•NVen)

w-.,.-, '

Cb1caao n. LA. Lallen

LA.
93, lllicap 91
-~·=2

Cbica!o (Hibbtrd 4·4) n Tuu

(A 1n

llrl-1).1!35p.m.

o....u rr....u 3-6l "s..u (DoLucla

• 6-3), 10:0! p.m.

· Frlo,lay's1ames

~7t.A.toton 16
.

O!iCop 104. LA. Lot.. 96
s.diJ,JIIM'
OU...,91. LA. LWn 12

. w-.,,J... u

Califomi.a at&amp;ollm, '?:3S p.m.
- . . . .. a..oland.1:3Sp.m.

QJcqo 101, LA. LWn 101, OU..JIO

waa

~~ •• TGIODID, 7:35 p_.m.
IWIIu Ci1y II OU..p, I:«Q p.m.

1 · +ip4-1

I'nulsactions.

Oaklaod .. MiiWOI!lteo, 1:35 p.m.
NewYadtatT..... I:35p.m.
Doonois at s..aJo. 10:35 pm.

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1993 - ·
KANSAS CITY ROYALS--Sianed

Jeffrey Leonard, dtllipalld hhur. \0 •
contnc:t wilb Omaha dtbe.Amri'•a luIOIUD.

m~~~S 'ia 'Tcm· '

TORONI'O BLUE JAYS Pooed X..
Dtylay, - · ... oloo 15-day dlab1od
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the Reds narrowed the

Drabek has allowed 17 bits in . wiili a two-run single.
,
14 innings but only one run in his
It was the first victory since
last two starts, thsnks mostly 10 April '1:1 for Bosltie (3-~. woo lost
third and two more in the fourth, Pittsburgh's deCease. The Pirales his bid for a shutout and a complerc
including Wallacb's third bomer in turned a: succession of bighlisht game in the eighth inning when
four days, and the 1,500th bit of his film-type plays for him last Friday Tony Perezchica Jed off with a
career.
as they besl San Diego 1-0 cleBpi!c pinch double and scored on a paii
"I know it wasn't exactly a 13 Padres hits. Wednesday naght of infield outs.
pitcher's battle out there, but its was the~ SIOry.
Don Robinson (3·5) was the
nice 10 give the guys 10 runs for a
Orlando Merced's two-out sin· loser.
chan~e.'' Wallach said. "We've gl·e and Jay Bell's triple scored .
Astros 3, l'lllllies z
·certamly made them work with Pittsburgh runs in the third against
Steve Finley's bases-loaded sin·
only one or two runs enough . Miltc Mor-an (6-S), wbo is O-S gle with two out in die ninth inning
times.''
lifetime agamst the PirateS and has gave the Astros their fourth suaight ·
Chris Sabo hit a three-run • 6.46 ERA in Three Rivers Stadi· win.
homer to narrow Cincinnati's urn.
AI Osuna (3-2) pitched one and
defacit 10 8-6 in,the fifth, and the ·
Drabek, who allowed only a two-third innings. Joe Boever (3-5)
Reds tied it wilb two more runs off solo oomer to Kal Daniels in the was the loser.
Bill Sampen in the seventh.
fourth, has given up two earned .
Jim. Deshaies shut out the
After Monaear lOOk tile lesd in runs in his last 32 innings 10 lower Phillies until the eighth. Then Von
the eighth, Cincinnati got one back his ERA 10 a season's low 2.78.
Hayes and Jim Lindeman led off
when Billy Hatcher hit m RBI sinBraves II, Mell 1
with singles, moved up on a
gle off Barry Jones in tbe ninth.
Ste~~e A11ery did it all by piU:h·
jlCOilndout and scored on a sinj!le
Jones, who was designated as ing a five-bitter and going 4-for4.
!!)' einch·biu« Ron Jones, making
Montreal's closer when Tom Run·
Avery, Atlan
. ta's No. 1 pick in his fii'St at-bat of the sesson.
neUs became manager last week, the 1988 amateur draft, enten:d the
Padres 7, Cardlnals Z
.failed for the lhird saaight time tQ game with two hits in 21 at- bats
Tony Fernandez hit a lie·break· ·
capi~ on a save opporlilnity.
tbis season and 6-fcr·Sllifetlme. . . ing single 10 ipite a five-run rally ·
. "I don't know what it is," RunAvery (74) sparked a four-run in the. eighth anning, preserving a
nellS, said. "Maybe we'll have to fifth inning off Ron Darling (24) fane effort by Bruce Hurst as San
look at some new faces for that · with a single, and tripled and Diego beat St Louis.
.
job."
.
. scored on Jeff Blauser's sacrifice
Hurst (7-3) allowed four hits
One new face may be rookie fly in the sixth·. His fourth hit, a over eight innings. After allowing a
Jeff Passero, who retired Paul single leading off the eighth, also two-run single to opposing pitcher
O'Neill to earn his first major helped build a run.
Omar Olivares in the second
league save in support of Scott
Cubs 6, Giants 1
inning, Hurst retired 14 straijlht
Ruskin (2-1).
Shawn Boskie allowed seven batters before Rex Hudler hit a
· "I'm just glad ther had the con· hits over seven and two-third bunt single in the seventh. Hurst
fidence to put me 1n that situa- innings, and Ryne Sandberg struck out four and walked one.
tion,'' Passero said. "It was a wild capped a five-run founh inning
game, but I was just concenlrating
io avoid letting what was ~oing on
before hapPen again 10 me. '
In other NL games, it was Pinsburgh 2, Los Angeles 1; Atlanla 6,
New York Mets 1; Chicago 6, San
Francisco 1; Houston 3, Pbiladel~ 2; and San Diego 7, SL Louis

=1

For Plnttea
the mostz,part.
Drabek
has looted like anything t a Cy
Young winner this season. But with
a little ·belp from the Pittsburgh
defense recently, he's starting 10
round iniO form.
"Those are tile plays that make
the difference between winning and
losing," ·Piralu manager Jim Leyland said after his ~ Qred a
2-1 viciOry behind Drabek over
Los An~Jes on Wednesday night
Drabek, last year's National
League Cy YOUII$ winrler, allowed
one run in seven IDDings, thanks 10
the ~g Pirate dofense, as he
contmued bis comeback from a
dreailful 1-6 stlllt. The vic10ry pul
his record 11 ~-7.
"I can think of four key defensive plays they made .. , and thai
keeps you in ballgames," said
Drabek.' Who has allowed two hms
in bls. last four starts. "When
yOil'wpfit:b._..,,. 'Hilellff fth
three or four guys woo can knQck it
out. you lib the challeuge, but you
also like ,having I 100d defense
bobindyou.''
The game was the lim this season between the two NL division
leaders.
.

HOOVERe
Eat.TM
200Uprlght
C'e&amp;ner

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• PO :ermattc,. Nolde wtth headlight
and bNihed edge clau•ou

BENZINGER OUT - The Reds' Todd Bmzlapr (rlpt) biDgs
iniO Montreal e~teber GIIMrto Reyes 11 he elulraea the plate iD tile
second iDn1q cl Wednuday algllt'1 pme Ia Moatreal, wblc.h the
Expos woa 10.9. Benllqer, who tried to KOn from second base oa
a sla11e by Bill Doran, Will out 01 the play. (AP)

"·--.......
FootbaU

BUFFALO 81LLS-S= Bjom
N"dlmo, p' ' k:hr, Clala
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CARDINALS-Named

Ra1pb liawkina to their acoulina Nil.
T'"*'t Lamio Y-llfoly. ID lbe New
Yadr.S. form •..tledrd dl!d\pklk.

Scioto Downs results

AT LAST! - The Cbka10 ~ails' Michael Jordan (rlaht) holds
tbe NBA cllarnplon'• trophy tollowina tile Bullll' 108-101 win over
tbe L.A. Lakta:s Ia Game 5 clthe NBA Finals Wedaesday night at
the Forum in Inglewood, Caltr. The cbampkiiiBhlp 11'111 the first for
tbe Bulls. (AP)
.
-

FRI., SAT., SUN.

Sports briefs
College
FRESNO, Calif. (AP) - Fresno
Stale moved lo "a higher level of
competition" by joining the West·
em Athlel,ic Conference.

Fresno State naa expresseel
intereslcd in the WAC for several
years but had not been negotiating
for membership, athletic direciOr
Gary Cunningham said. Thus, Cunningham was "to'tally surprised"
I wanted 10 stay unbealen and win when the invil8tion came Monday,
a conference chall)pionsbip," she but die school's adminislration was
said. ''The Jli!ISI#C ally is some- quick 10 accept the offer.
Fresno State will join the conthing. Your stomach clop flips, and
ference
effective July 1992.
you feel like something's creeping
up the back of your neck."
However, Miller went on 10
NEW RED OR WHITE
defest Kristin Gielbaugh of John
Carroll, 6-1, 6-0 and won the OC
titl_e ~ilh a 6-)i ~-3 win·over Otter·
hem s Stacy 0Jan in the final.

•

BRUCE WILLIS
Ill

HUDSON HAWK .
. AND
JODIE FOSTER
Ill

•
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SILENCE OF THE

LAMBS
44·1011

RBI-F..W..

POMROY OHIO

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$

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lfwiiiiiiMIIJIIt/11:·

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DOIIILI!S--R. AJoaoat. r ........ 11:
PaJmeiro. r .... 17; Bogl, .....-. 16:
While, TaftldO, U; Can., T~ 15;
Ro,a~.

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c11111 tlnQ on bOlt lidtl

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Milwtu.kM, 6;
Pa1oaia. Collramla. S: Rtinol, OU..,..l:
1~ ... 1iod wilh l
HOME RUNS- D. llandonon. Oil!·
laad.15: llufidd. New Y&lt;G. I J; field.,,
DcaoJt. 12; v-. o.a.;.. 12, c. v..;.,
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SUNGLASSES ............ . 188

MEIGS FARM MARKET
300 WIST 'MAIN ST.

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SEEDLESS GRAPES ...L~.• $}l 9

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BAm~o-c:!.!C:"· B~ltimore,
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MaUl«, Milnutoo. 4:!: c-. Oil!·
land, 41; Palmeiro, Teua, -40; Sicm,
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two more as

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The Expos added a pair in the

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Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, June 13,1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..•

Indians waste Candiotti's gem in 1-0 loss to Blue Jays .
By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - Mike
Timlin took comfon in the deep
felll:es at Cleveland Stadium, even
though he never came close to
needing them.
The Toronto rookie, making his
first major-league start. allowed
only 0ne ball out of the infield in

six innings Wednesday night as the
Blue Jays beat the Indians 1~.
Timlin gave up one hit. a high
bouncer by Felix Fermin for an
infield single in the six\11.
"This is a great ballparlt to pirch
in," Timlin said. " You can give up
a deep fly ball and it's still goinjt to
be caught. (But) I'm a sinker-slider
pitcher who relies on the ground

i··'
t-~
.,,~

,

. I

.

"

-.,..

.

bali and the hitter swinging over
the baD."
Jerry Browne's fly to right for
tbe rmal out in the sixth was the
first baD Cleveland got to the outfield. He was ~ last biller Timlin
faced.
Bob MacDonald pitched one
scoreless inning, surrenderinjt the
second of Cleveland's two b1ts, a
bunt single by Carlos Baerga. Jim
Acker pitched two-thirds of an
inning, and Tom H • retired the
fmal four hittets for his ninth save ·
in nine opportunities.
.
· Timlin had the Indians beating
the ball into the pound au night.
He struck out s•x, and I 0 outs
against him came on routine
~· Cleveland's hillers were
unpressed.
" He's not the type of pitcher
you want to nm into when you're
trying to break out of something,"
Chris James said. "He went hard
for six innings, just mowing us
down. And we didn't exactly catch
him when we're swinging the bats

wen.''

The Indians have scored twC)
BASEBALL' ATHLETES HONORED- Membel-s of the Ulli·runs
or le8s in nine of the last 10
verslty or Rio Grande lwebaD team who received special awards
games,
and they've lost six of the
at the end of the season included, from left, Darren Marcum, 1JIOSt .
last
seven.
They've been limiled to
valuable player, outstanding pitcher and co-captain; Jason
two
runs
or
less in 30 games this
Wright, oulltaDdiaa outfielder; Brad Roser, pitchin&amp; record; Jon
year. Eight have been shutouts.
Gibson, outstanding infielder; Chad Carron, pitching record for
It's made life tough for starters
saves; Bob Yonng, co-captain; and James Lewis, highest batting
like Tom Candiotti (7-4), who lost
average.
despite yielding one run and three
hits in his third complete game. He
struck out nine, matching, his season high, arid his ERA dipped to
21

Redmen baseball team
honors its ton
pla"ers
.I:'
'J
Anumberofawanlsw~issued

. pie· ~·~~·sbeenlikethatthe~C&lt;lUof stana. When we're m a rut

Herb Sharfenaker (senior Colum- ' likeweareoffensively,asapitcher
to members of tl!e University of bus). Receiving their ihird:year let- b:a~e to~ down even.~.
Rio Grande baseball team at the ters were Lewis Gibson and
youg•veuparun,ltmight
end of the 1991 ~· with Dar- Shawn Haning QuniOr; Logan). The
reii Marcum, semor p1tch~r from second-year lettets went to Wright,
Hamilton, named the team s most Wes
Young
(sopbomor.e ,
valuable player.
Pomeroy), Andy Bulacb (sophoMarcum was also presented more flamilton) and Mike
with ~ p~ue fo~ being named an voorbeis (sophomore, Lucasville).
~1-D•stnct ~2 p11Ch~, and a cerFirst-year letters were awarded
tificate for h•s selecuon as an Ali- to the following: Roser: Carroll;
Mid-Ohio Conference hurler for Ted Thompson (freshman, New
the Redmen.
. .
Lebanon), Rob Meade (freshman,
Marcum Will! a!~ th~ retlp!Cnt Seaman), Kyle Schroer (freshman,
pf the Outstanding Pitchmg Award New Knoxville), Eric McLean ·
from the team. He posted a 7-4 (freshman Columbus) and Alien
record on the mound and ended his EUiott (fre~hman, Gallipolis).
collegiate playing career with a 2.~
earned run average.
The Redmen ended the season
at 28-16, its best showing in anumber of years, and hosted the District
22 Playoffs after earning flfSt seed
. in district competition during tbe
regular season. The team was also
the runnerup in !he MOC and broke
the school record for the most nuni' Mickey ll!:athews, Marshall ' ~
ber of wins in a .single season. The University's defensive coordinator,
old standard, 22. was set in 1980.
will he the special guest speaker at
Higb!Jahts of the soason 'l'ere the 1991 M4i&amp;s ~foolhl!ll
...
discussed and Coach Dave bglesby camp that Wilfbe held from Jlily 22
thanked the team for "an outstand- ·to July 26 at Meigs Higll School.
ing season that went far beyond my
Mathews joined the Thundering
expectations."
Herd staff in 1990 after coming
Sharing the award for the team from Southwest Texas State. The
pitching record were Brad Roser native of Andrew, Texas has also
(freshman, Delaware), who at 8-3 coached at Texas Christian, Housnetrcd the most wins for the season. ton, Teus EI-Paso, West Texas
and Chad Carroll (sophomore, swe and Kansas Swe.
.
Chillicothe) with eight saves. CarFundamentalS will be taught by
roll's record was 5-1. ·
the Meigs varsity staff in ball hanJames Lewis Ounior. Cincinnati) dling for backs. receiving, proper
received the award for the highest stance for linemen and backs, kickbatting average (.345). while Jon ing, punting and throwing drills for.
.
,Gibson Ounior, Chesapeake) was quarterbacks.
presented with the Outstanding
The camp is open for boys
- Infielder Award. Jason Wright entering grades 4-8. The cost of the
(sophomore, Carroll) received the camp is $30 for 15 hours of
Outstanding Outfielder Award.
insnuction and a maximum of $50
The co-captain awards went to per family.
Marcum and Bob Young (senior,
For more information you can
Utica).
contact Marauder head coach Mike
Four-year lettermen honored Staggs at Meigs High School at
were Marcum. Bob Young and 992-2158.

$7,295

MOTORS,

EAn MAIN

mer."

Mathews to speak
at ·Meigs football
camp in July

.4•

The American Legion Auxiliary group N best overaD report, first
Eighth District Summer Conven- place, Sonja Wayland, chairman:
tion was held at Lancaster recendy junior activities best in the district,
with Maxine Barnes, district presi- Etta Will, chairman; and veterans
dent, conducting the meeting.
affairs and rehabilimtion group N .
Allending from the Middlepon first place, best repon in the disFeeney Bennett Unit No. 128 were trict, Velsie Roush, cl)airman.
A special plaque was presented
Pauline Greathouse, Kimberly Fife,
Eileen Snyder, Dorothy Long, to the unit for the most done in the
Blondena Rainer and Geraldine . district in support of Operation
Desen Storm. A special certificate
Parsons.
Awards received by Unit 128 was awarded for the most outstandwere : Americanism Group JII · . ing unit in the district
Velsie Roush received a membest year round reP.M. flfSt elace,
chairman lCatie Glii110re; children bership award for helping the unit
and youth group ,IV best district to attain its membership goal by
report, first place. Becky Tyree, December 1990. There are 55
chairman; community service juniors and 167 seniors.
lCathervn Curl was endorsed for

Rutland prepares for July 4 activities
CLASSIC WINNERS - Southern Oblo C~
ComJ111ny's Meip No. 2 mine reseue team wu .
the winner of the "Kick-Off Clalllc" mine rescue contest held at tbe Perry County Fair·
grounds In New Lexington. Sta11ding (L to R)
are: Dave Peterson, team trainer; Paul Kidney,
chief or tbe Ohio Division or Mines; Chris Neece,

8!!-

A shower was held rece~tly at . Sterling, Ky ., were Miles was

the Pomeroy C~urc~ of Christ for

Andy and Debb•e Miles.
Pat Thoma conducted· games
and prizes were awarded t.o the
winners.
.
. .
The Evangeline MISSionary
Group presented the couple with a
comforter they had made and the
adult class presented them with an
ironingboard.
The Antioch Church of Mt.

ordained, his home church, sent
several gifts by his mother and
friend who also auended.
Attending were Roger, Charidine and Debbie Alkire, Eileen
Bowers, Betty Spencer, Melvin and
Olive Smith, Kathy Haley, Pat
Thoma, Genevieve Well, Elizabeth
Duffy, Jill Roessler, Elaine Kelly,
Sherri Might, Ed and Janet Venoy,
Faye Ferrell, Barbara Cecil, Marcia

Show Your Father How Much -.u Care on
Sunday, .June s•.

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The Eastern High School Class
of 1981 celebrarcd its lOth reunion
recently at the home or Rodney
Keller.
New class "tides" were awarded
and many mem.ories shared over
appetiZers and drinks and an outdoorfue:
Plans were' made for the 15th
class reunion in Florida.
Contributions were made for

flowers to be sent to the Putman
family in memory of classmate,
Gaiy Puunan.
Attending were Kathy Dyer,
Teresa Shamp, Robert Henderson,
Rodney Keller, Ray Werry, Judy
Mora. Terry Pooler, Tina Cozart,
Denise Arnold, Brett Matthews,
Cincinnati; Jim Bahr. Columbus;
Barbara Stover, Addison ; Greg

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Ken Buclcley, Vienna. W.Va.; Ken .
Newen, Elgin, S.C.; Laura Honon, : ·
Columbus: Dean Hawk, Buffalo,
N.Y.; Pebbles Sachs, Urbana; and
several guests.
.·
The group also attended the ·
Eastern Hi~h School Alumni the
following mght and were joined by·
other members of the class.

28V.,

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Wells, Polly Curtis, Bill and Rilla
Smith, Lester Lowery , Nedra
Skinn, Junior and Linda Landermilt, Martha Hoffman, Heidi
Caruthers, Elizabeth Ohlinger,
Naomi Ohling~. Craig, Brenda and
Megan Venoy and Pauline
Kennedy.
•
Sending a gift were Charles and
Frances Eskew.
Refreshments of cake, ice cream
and punch were served.

' ~HAMBURGER

""""'

I IIIII

Dairy Princess contestants will he
in the parade and crowning of this
year's princess will be in the park
direct1y after the parade.
All entries are welcome in the
parade and should be either on
Brick or Depot Street by 9:30 a.m.
in order to be registered. For fur· ther information contact Lilly
Kennedy at 742-2861 or Charlie at
742-2578.

'Beit-~te~

64°;. . . ..
A I PI

.1ern Kovach, Terry Staten, Dave Sblnn nd
Delcotto. Kneeling (L to R) are: Bill
Starkey, team captain; and Clarence "Tiny"
Wllllains. The large trophy at lett Is tile "Governor's Traveling Trophy" for the top Ohio team
in the contest, while the trophy 11t rlgbt Is ror
first place at the meet. ·

served in the Gulf War and who
would like to participate in the
parade, a unit has been reserved for
this purpose. CaD 742-2861 or 7422578 to make arrangements.
AU children are welcome in the
parade if they would like to ~mte their bikes, motorcycles or JUSt
participate by walking in the
parade.
As a special entiy this year. the

Shower held for Andy and Debbie Miles Eastern Class of '81 holds reunion

89¢ sale price
_2sc per piUO mtr's. rebate

I

The Fourth of July is quickly
approaching and plans are being
made by the Rutland Fire Department for activities there .
· A parade will begin at 10 a.m: at
Depot and Brick Street and continue to Sale.m Street
The theme of this year's parade
is to show pride and respect in the
American· soldier and to salute the
Desen Storm soldiers. Anyone who

·~~-

CIIINIIRMA

DadBladl

second vice president of Ohio.
Sharon Squires, Unit 371 , WeUston, was elected president of the
district for 1992-93. She was also
elected as the alternate to tile
National Convention to be held in
Arizona in August
Florence Richards, Unit 263 ,
and Geraldine Parsons, Unit 128,
both past district presidents, attended the convention.
The 1991 fall conference will be
held at the Feeney-Bennett Unit
128 in Middleport. The 1992 summer convention will be held at
Crooksville Unit 222. The 1992
Girls S~a~t. Tea will be held at Pick.
erington and Athens.

Ill

lil'lllllltllll ...,...., .

These6ifts

Bennett 128 attends summer convention

c:

be the ballgame, .. Ca!ldiotti said
· Elsewhere in the American their longest winning streak ever!
Toronto SCOied its run quicklr, League, it was Minnesota 6, New "We're scoring runs, getting
capitalizing on Devon White s Yori: 3; IJak:larut 3, Detroit!; Seat- pitching and the defense bas
:
leadoff walk in the first. White de 5, Boston 3; Milwaukee 8, Cali• outslai'Jding••'
..
moved to second on a ~ndout fornis 0; Kansas City 9, Baltimore
The latter hasn 'I been lost on .
and scored on Joe Caner s RBI sin- 8 in 10 innings: and Texas 4, second baseman Chuck KDoblaucll,
gle.
Chicago 2,
who had three bits as tbe Twins·
Carter, who was Candiotti 's
beat the New YlXk Yrieel 6-3. .
Twins 6, Vaakees 3
teammate in Cleveland until last
The Minnesota Twins aren 'I
"If you look back on these 11
y.ear, took: special pleasure in the wondering how they've managed games, I'll bet tl!ere's been 15 01'&lt;
RBI because Candiritti was wearing to wili 11 games in a row. They 20 great defensive plays," he lillid. ~
one of Caner's fielding gloves in know bow.
Minnesota will try tonight to·
the first inning. Carter hail left the
"We're playing gond l;!aseball · match its 1980 mark of 12 straighti
glove behind after making J charity in every aspect," Allan Anderson victories.
•
appearance before the game.
said Wednesday night after pitch- · Rookie Pedro Munoz hit a first- •
"I made sure he saw it," Can- ing the Twins within a victory of inning grand slam for the Twins. :.
diotti said. "It was funny. I wish
•
be' d wipe the smile off his face.
It's hard to concentrate."
Timlin had made 26 relief
appearances this year after jumping
from Class AA to the big leagues.
He was the ninth pi~ to start a
game for the Blue Jays.
• 'Right now, he has to pitch
himself out of the rotation," man- ·
ager Cito Gaston said; "Mike has
· an excellent fastball, sinker and
·slider."
"
Candiotti, who can be a free
agent at the epd of the year, has
been the subject of constant uade
speculation, much of it centered
around the Blue Jays. He has said
1988 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE LE 4 DR.
he'd like to .remain in Cleveland.
Tilt. Cruise. Air, Power Windows. Power Locks. Delay
but the Indians have not offered
·
Wipers, Split Saau.
him a satisfactory four-year deal.
Indians left-hander Greg
SHAIP- CHECI" OUTI . ONLY
Swindell also has been mentiOned
as a trade possibility'.
"It doesn't look like they (the
Indians) are going to comi_)Cte in
this market at today's pnces,' •
Candiotti said. ~ ·r don't know if
it'll be Toronto, but I expect a IJ8de
992-2174
will happen sometime this sum ~
POMEIOY, OHIO

The

Ohio

,._, .

~--~

-•- •

~ ·~··;,-

---·

·-~-

. .,. ,. -- -• n- . •

\

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•
Page-a.:..-The Dally Sentinel

Tuppers Plains VFw Building on
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. Tbe
building is air collditioned, reflesh.
ments will be served and the public
· grade. TIIJI.SI)Ortalion i~ available is in¥ited to aaend.
by calling Robert Wh1te at 6961077 or Joe Hoskins at 667~73.
POMEROY - Tbe Pomeroy
·
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
POMEROY - The Pomeroy have a dance Friday from 8-11 p.m.
United Melhodist. St Paul Luther- wilh music by the Happy Hollow
an and Trinity Congregational Boys of Athens. Those attending
Churches will. hold a joint VICation bring snacks for tbe snack table.
Bible School through Friday at The public is invited to auend.
Trinity Church, located at Second
and Lynn StreeiS. Classes will be
RIPLEY • The Liberty Mounoffered for children aged three taineers will perfoiDI at the Skatethrough sixth grade and all children land in Ripley, W.Va. on Friday.
are invited. The theme is "Share
God's Blessings." Sessions will be
LONG BOTTOM - There will
hell) from 9 a.m. to 11:30 p.m.
be a hymn sing at !he Faith Full
Gospel Chilrch in Long Bbllon\ i!11
GALLIPOLIS - The Diabetes . Friday. Dinner will begin at 6 p.m.
Support Group wiD meet Thursday · ·
in the Frencb 500 Room at Holzer
Medical Center. Denise Phelps, ET
Nurse, wiD spealc on . the topic of
skin care.

Community calendar
Commualty Caleadar Items
appelr two daJI Wore • eveut
iad tbe day 111 t11at neat. Items
must be received well Ia 811\'IUK,e
10 - r e pabllcatioa Ia tbe c:al·

endar.

THURSDAY
REEDSVll.LE- "Jesus and You
at Camp Can-Do" will be the
.theme for Riverview Community
Vacation Bible School through Fri. day at Riverview School. Classet
begin at 6:30 p.m. and continue
~ until 9 p.m. All ages, including
adults, are welcome to attend.
ROCK SPRINGS • Rock
.Springs United Methodist Church
.will hold Vacation Bible School
through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to

noon.

/

POMEROY • Enlttprise United
.Methodist Church wiD hold Vacation Bible Scbool through Friday
from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

'

. HEMLOCK GROVE - Vacation
Bible School will be beld at HemJ'ock Grove Vnited Methodist
:Ch~rch through Friday from 6:30
:p.m. to 8:30p.m. each evening.

'

......,.,Ohio

Thurac!ay, June 13, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

loiiCIWed by aingia&amp; at 7:30p.m.
with the Gabriel Quortet. Rev.
Steve Reed invites the public.
SATURDAY
LONG BOTTOM • There will
be a hymn sing at the Mt. Olive
Community Church in Long Bot·
tom on Saturday at 7 p.m. wilh
Russell Spencer and the Southern
Hill Gospel SingCJS. The public is
invited to attend.

DANVILLE -Weekend services
at tbe Danville Church of Christ
will be be1d Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
and Sunday at I 0:30 a.m. and 6
p.m. Denver Hill, Foster, W.Va.
will be tbe speaker. lbe public jj
in¥it.ed.
.

JACKSON - The Liberty Moun·
taineers will petform at tbe Skateland in Ripley, W.VL on Saturday.

SUNDAY
CHESHIIU! - A lamily reunion
of Elbert ll!d Della Oillilan wiD be
held Sunday at die Kyger C~eek
Plant Club House. Fricndl and ~la­
tives are invired. Bring a covered
dish.

POMEROY- There will be a
gospel concert lit tbe Laurel Cliff
Free Metbodist Church in Pomeroy
on Saturday at 7 p.m. featuring tbe
Gabriel Quartet. Pastor Williatn
Williams invites tbe public.

POMEROY • Rev. Eddie Buffington, Gallipolis, will be tbe guest
speaker at tbe Naomi Baptist
Church in Pomeroy on Slll!day at
11 a.m. The public is invited. Rev.
Satnuel Jackson is tbe prcacber.

POMEROY- "Happy Prince"
and "Hoober-Bioob Highway" will
be shown at the Meiga County Pub-

RACINE • The T~ord Family
~union will be held Sunday It Star

.
_
_
.
.
.
.
=
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~ w~•.1

a1 2 p.m. and at !he Middleport

,
.
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Heallll ~- offieiala t11tJ boH piOIICII 1111 PIOIIIIJ
_._ llllaei"Hii.r.fnr.fn'• ilaJ.
advile dilt bllllt die CG&amp;I&amp;- ~ rl 2111'1 I -... plJIIii
- - lil
lion wort • a sill, a (llllllt 111111t ""'
't
:&amp;~.•wild
be oblaiaed to lllftDD a private
NiJar~ it ~ a requlnd lnr)qde ~ JeiiJ, lid t1a4 y, .
sowrpl)il •.
pcnnll befcri ialtallln&amp; a Jaome ll1ld wldl mllrN ..-.llld
By JIUICIIallna a permit to install sewa1e " : • II a ¥iolation of made: witb wlid ~
a home sowa1• sy1tom, a land .-e..S
llwi,..S ay.Wt
Linda McCoy Rport.ed on the
OWIICS is -eel of • alta visit by
in dle IJIIliiii\Y beiDa 'i""lfiiOYed succesaflal miai berb feat held
Healdl Deplnmcnt pen®nel for if die ow11or wishot to 1011 the - • y at Iii' __........._ loland
· recommendations resarding t.be property, and may •ubloquontly n•-•ou
.....,..,_ ·--All ==.;10 -filiAteD

h!

1

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type

or~ llllt:U...
plljllr • p - ~

""'* ill 1111111•
dance at tM TuudaJ MoraiDI

Tbe Mei11 County Hnltla

DepiaDIItllt has islued die follow.

-Pinal PiaU ._... :udo by die
1ft1111 bill iln'II•"-I 10 be held

SevCIIItiOJI Jldiel

Leap at iha Mlip Cca~y O.lf 1\liiiiiJ.
Club.
.
w-.. IW 1111 dly aftlr plaJ
One focmtr iiiiiiiiier IJid a pest were Ma..• ~..J"*
was pre1011t, Penay Comp~oa, IPdlow)IIIIII;..SJa......,_,klw
IlL
North CnliRL

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Iii Cldtaf 10 do dds you lllllllllnt
coatact tilt llnlth cle&amp;::.nt,
apply fora lliJ!IPOi•t
and

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1101

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Htlllth DeD1rt11MJU
992-6626
wrllhyshmi8J11.104'p.m.

...... ....,..., • ...,.
president in charge of 11181ketin11.
. The bus, nicknamed Bob the
. . .Wiplll, 1&amp;011 tluee rellen and

=q

:m-:=

~~=e:

011

hoL•es, parks aod other public
places. People don't know quite
wlllltto dlink.
''W,e had a IIUY come up and
onleracbeeseburaerand fries the
other day," said Mar~ Ward,
bead toller. "They will catch on

Inside Bob, lidding machines, a
mobile pbooe and a fax machine
are llllaCIIed 10 counters with· Velcro. A computer is linked to the
main office by microwave.
Two wiQdows on the side are
for walt-up transactions and a window at the back delivers drive-up
service. There's also an automauc
teller machine.

Loan applications are handled
on the upper deck, which has a
couch, two chairs, a kirchen and a
baihronm.
.
Joseph Burbridge, a bank exam·
incr in !he federal Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency in
Dallas, heiP.Cd approve First
National mobile branch.
"We bandle au types of applications, but I have never seen anylhillllikb tbia,'' be aailt
Jlirst National and a bank in
Te~u em e llil tbe only U.S. banks
with staffed mobile branches, he

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tft·l771•

....2161

DOta•
IACKHOE

,,,_,
•

742-2&amp;11

IEMOYAL

•FIREWOOD
BILL SUCK
992-2269

USED RAILIOAD TIES
1-12·10·tfn

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE .
•Sidewalka
•Petioa
•Driveways

•Sieba

IK IICI.RIO
Adl Uliil I
PRII lmMATII

tt2·7UO

N1w I•·
IIHil/1

IISSILL
hiLDIIS

,.,..,

INSULAnON
IIIIlS DiAl

,~ ·

smK TANI "'...I!G
POIT -A-JOHN RENTAl
4·U·1-. pd .

3 Announcements ·
IIMI...., .._ ly Cltoioo

Nil Clllnol. Ooifld1rAIII. Write:

~

• CCINDIIIONEIS • ..AT PUMPS·- '
FUINACIS FOI MOllE I DCXILIWIH HOlliES

......
............
.., .... BENNETT'S -==•'

HOIIS IIAU•s

"At Inn II ,._..

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

........1.1

.

NO Ill bit CAW

La rita• 0. s.Honl s•211 M elf 11. 141

1614) .......... , ......171·.Jt4~~

WI DO. ROOfiNG
ANI IYIIYTIIIG 111-NUTII

·1_.....~1111115_
rQunlltr tlomea 8nd

CUllOm Remodeling

742·2121

l/ll/tf11

..·-.Gal·

=:r--.. .

-.No-lo)torn.~on 1111 loft111 ....,.. l'lnn

C: .....,,

II:'......

Ad

WV.

...;h

Rod- oolo art41 ful
OoloM .... I•Yop 'WoiOr PMto"
ol Pllllh l'llonrlocj. ·

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......
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.......
.... alillra ... :
At ba&amp;l&amp;l• OM

4

Gltlllway

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131
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. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . tlt4r
..,.,.~

:w~ ~lia':r.n' ::Ia~
pm,

J&amp;L

orlol 1on

71 Autos lor Sahr
72 Trutlu for hie
73 · Vtms • 4 wo·s
7!4 MOtOIC~C:Itll
7rt Boats &amp; Moton l or Sillv
76 Alllo P•h &amp; Ac c•SOfiu.
77 Auto Rep•
78 C•mpmg Equ•pnwnt
79 C11ml)tf1 &amp; Motor Hom tts

Fauns tor ftent

47

13

Sufd • Fe,hlt•e•

T r~ns

Hou .., tOI' R~l
Hom" ha Rem

Mo~le

41

1I 11-. TV • Cl ll011aor
17 Mitc.el'""*l

.......

····2126

Save s7o 14915

• Tandy 2810 HD •1MB RAM
•16 MHZ BOC286 • 6.7 lbs.

•
•

...

c ......

JO SESSIONS

Reg.21U5

•

65

Li'&lt;lltti10Ck
Hay &amp; Gr1in

Business Services

On-Screen Programming
Cut S150 29995 ••1·Year/6·Event
Timer

S30CJ Off 5

· 63
64

lllijlll

, .......... r •..,_,.

676 Pt. Ple-.nt
058 loon
578 ilpploG&lt;173 Iii non
IU NewHewen
ltli
t37 lufllto

'

I'

6t ·· farm Et~u•pmttnl
62 Wan1.ed to Buy

~ l Busin•• 8uildings
35 lots • A~;:r•.-o~•
31 Rtal E111tt W'"ted

5 H~PPW Ads

z .....,..,. ......

G•UieCeuMy

BUU.)!:TIN BOARD DEADLINE
4: 30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Dual-cassette Stereo
Music System

Giwo-

e J,ott and Fo..ftd,
,
1 v ...........,"' ..,.""'
a. PuMc .... • Atte1i0n

.

'

VHS Hl·fl Stereo VCR-That's Entertll1111ent!
Aog. 44t.H

~

1
11 ' - · - ·

,,., ,,.,,,

Tone/pulse d ialing

31 - Homn tor Sltle
32 MolMI• Homes to• Sale
ll Ftrm1 tor Slle

a..neuc.-.-,

45

1M!

Low AIS15 Per Month•

1 C.tlol
2 ... Mermoty
l

Farn1 Su1Jplr&gt;~s
&amp; lrvestuck

41 Sp.ce lor R.nt

1101111
IAIIIIIIG

Fast 286 Notebook
PC Compatible

I
--.

dom:

eWIJllllally."

44 - Apartment lor Rent

iult-ln Answerer

·43·395

........

.~Bts wgathami~~.
f%~'N·~:th~

41
42
43

Speakerphone Wltll

IS

(across from the airport)

'h:...itll

fcwuptofiWCCII•ii•MIUidaJL
nil Is a JWnltidlr !lilt Ill food

jtillfiWilll{ lt•/f'#lhmlf' f'Xt"/ltllf#{I'S ....

OAV .EFOAE PUBLICATtON.,
· 11 .00 A.M. SATURDAY
2 .00 P.M. !o!QNOAY
z,oo P Iii , lUISOAY
, 2 .00 P Iii WEDNEil&gt;AY
2 ;00 P,M TI.URIO ... Y
2 00 P Iii. PIIIOAY.

'

• Tandy 1500 HD • 640K RAM
• 4-Hour BaUery Life • Under 61bs.

-$80-0f~f

,30
,·42

•

BULLETIN BOARD
.

Aog. 1Mt.IIO
Low Aol43 Por llonlh •
126·2848

l•••.n ..•
B_,
' .

..,.P•• "'

.· $1388

•

GALLIPOLIS
215 Upper River Rd.- Rt. 7

I tf ••I I

. IJ CIUP BROWN
·
. AMARILLO, Teus (AP)WKidaho ~•dalllador
a'"~ ridadol orllldaiidlsnolll!
-. "
""'
~
CCIII wile:! !bey 1111e the red doullledicta bus puB .., n oot of luck.
Thole who ask few money, though,

9 WentWte8uy

cepl · cl•a ..fl-t dtSpiWf .
Card •nd lug~ noUc.tl
w1n atau
thu Pt P'l11••n• R-ntatet and lhlt Q ..,
polts 0•ttv Tubunv. n~ac:h•ng
11.000 hornet.

125·145111043

Cut s160

...oo

'

for •IICh • ., •• ......... . ..

Y•d Slf-.

"A chiiwhlllll advert i •mt~tll pliiC~ m

• Tandy 1000 RL
• Includes 24 Home-Oriented
Software Applications

High-Performance
Notebook Computer

...oo .

.10 .
t13.00
.05/doy
.
'
t1
.30/day
Monthly
111M••• tOr cett•owtW. tuM. t~t0Wftupd1Yswtn H .m .....
10

·

In lhmor..m ·

Low Ao 130 Par Month•

Versatile, Triple-Mode
Personal Printer

•

t4.00

"'*•

12tt.IO

• Tandye 1000 TL/3 PC
SM $711 on TU3 8ylltm with
CM·S color monitor and 20MB
hard drive. ReQ . separate items
1799 85. 125·16031104311047.
Sllt101UO

• Word Processing, Draft
And Graphic Modes

j

,

.._ ba1

1

111d tn ware MrVed by Linda
~.Betty Na. and Olenna
Tucbr
get seMI!.
,.·July ml tina wiD be beldat
Th~ Fir~t National ~ank. of
the bame of Debbie Oibole, Sue- ·Amanllo bl! th~ road thiS spnng
~Road R-..... ~"Witb a fully mobile branch.
' .......,•....,.
"We can cash checU, COnduct

o..,•.,..,,

9991!1

Low AI 1120 ..., - ·

Low "" 115 Por llonlh.

Oller Vl1ld tluu 6/ 17/91

lllarb
..Sa
at 75 ,

·

o,..,•-•
.
.20

IIIlO

W..rclo
16
11
16
16
1 16

3

• Ads 'oubidn Metfll. GMH• or MelOn ceuMi• '"'"' be prw
p•d.
•ftocttftrt~ • · 50 dtscounl tor adl ~ Nt ~unce.
•free ads .
enil F.Und edt und• 16 worcll wdll:ttt
tt•n 3 d•s 1M no chwge. ·
"Puce ot Ml to• elf CIPilet •••••• doublu pttc.' of •d cost
'7 point ltne type ont, us.d .
'
'Set•l•t8t rs not r..,.onsible lOt err01s11her ttnt day tChedl.
lor ...,urs tiul d" 1111 fmtt 111 paputl . Call blrlore 2 .00 p "'·
diiW altat puttltcllion 10
c:orNctrun.
'Acll th• '"".a be flllltd '" IWancu • "
•
C•d of Th_.,
.. H•PV Aft

Save s3oo

HllrdDrlve

,

!)8yo

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSEt SUflDAY. · ·

The Home
Guarantees Success!

-·"

1991

$

e

h
Wlt'h mo bl'Ie b1"'anc
,

• .The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

: HEMLOCK GROVE • The
•lfemlock Grove· Christian Church
: will hold Vacation B'ible School
; from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. lhrouf. Fri• day. This year's tbeme is 'Jesus
:-and You at Camp Can-Do". Class:Cs will be held for ages two
'iJ)uougb hilh school. The closing
, ~ will ~ held June 16 at 7
· p.m. All children are invited to

Sirloin Steak Dinner

m

tf. ..,, J::ncr:=::
W

fruit salad.

•

........._

~~c~~- ..ll•broli't

•

•

-..

p· .

, . atzona
, / June JB
0 lf.tnvzt.
G
.

MIDOLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapt.et No. In, OES, Middleport,
will hold its annual inspection on
Thursday at 7:30p.m. Deputy
grand matton Betty Schenkel wiD
6e the inspecting officer. Officers
we31" chapter 'dresses. Members
bring sandwiches, relish plate or

POMEROY - There will be a
dinner 81 !he Meigs County Senior
Center on Thursday wilh serving
from 5-6:30 p.m. The cost for !he
meal is $3 wilh a menu of baked
chicken breMt, homemade noodles,
mashed poiiiiOeS, cole slaw, biscuit
and bevenge. Pie will be available
for 75 cents. Following dinner,
music will be played by Junior and
Rita
White, AI Windon and Ray
: aaend.
.
Ward. A free will offering will be
POMEROY • Laurel Cliff Free ·taken for lhe musicians. The public
: Methodist Church will hold vaca- is invited to attel1d.
~on Bible School through Friday
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup]'rom 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Classes will
:-be offered for ai.es four through 16. pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
•:rhe pogram will be on June 16 at will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. at the
: 7 p.m. The !heme is "Jesus and hall.
: You at Camp Can-Do."
.'
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
:: REEDSVILLE - Success Springs Grange will meet Thursday
~burch of Christ will hold Vaca- at 8 p.m. at the hall.
, lion Bible School at Tuppers Plains
FRIDAY
: ~entary School through Friday
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
·from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. with
: classes for nursery through sixlh be a round and SQuare dance at the
•,

-·-rr
be...:

,_..._...._

· ' - - 'o1
' '1111
,..-•IIIIINlb

;:!tThe:::..
"f IYitCm for I :'*.:..'~ Ktion bUll initialed : o'od
adv1" sory ~· Ssue·d. .
land owaer will also b11 ·
.

Mill Park in Racine. A basket
lunch will·be beld at 1 p.m: Bring a
gift for the door prize.

, -· -.,.""'...,..._
, . _,.A
~ ·-·m
" _
__,,- .,...........
*' 4.1"
.......
·
ruu-.ur_.,......'-7

WILKESVILLE- There will be

Health department advisory Herbalists hold meeting Texas bp,nk hits the road

Litnry on Monday at 7 p.m.

a Falher's Day Breakfast at !he
Wi1blviUe PYtbian Hall on Salllr·
day from 8-J.f a.m. Price is $3 and
inc:lucles aausage and pancakes.
Public is invited.

Ttle o.Jiy Sentlnei-Pigl 8

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel
6

44

32 Mobile Homes
for Sele

Loat&amp; Found

-

--~h!Col­

lor, ......, L.ociJ. LliOI 'llclnlly:
E•••---IM 4MIIU

7

BORN LOSER

_,....,._11¥1._.
Md
.... , . .

QNCiouo .......

Television
Viewing

t ond 2 -

- . .......... In MIMara rl Prom

=::m-=::ta.
i,~ ·=-~=-............ _..,_.

...

Vemon

Ave

•

'llalo.... OnAII

Homll.11ttti1MO.

· Upllllno .....
1231.c.ipol,
..... -AJC,·.
. 1.....
......

1171

~

Hloo21R,4VIOII. -Ool-

I. I I' I' I
SNIFI

- .,
- liolloo,
..10. And
11NI';
11111r1
Only 4,000 llloll lfot.m.2121

llpollo.
' relria.,
- 'No
'
pick-up
1!1111.
UJIImo.
1111&lt; Aloo, 2 IR ....,._ In
Rio

•

I!VINING

-....M m 1111 ::'MI. ::0. ... ,Zl.;, :.~~:
. orllo.--PIIploy,WV. ·

1211. ..... --

THU., JUNE 13

fun:Jwlad

-_,.,.....,cay_ ............................
. -,

CJ

PI=+

1991

.... Cllll--mt IOH.

All _ _ .......... _

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Ttiursclay, June

Aplllbl...,.

lUnar

•.

Yard sate

1991

for Rent

lbr, t 11:1 . ...,, I&amp; ulod Plno
• - . - To Hoktlul. 114-241-

Looi:M.--·-·

June1

-7p.01.

o.;.;e. 114 4tt 1031

-

Y.Twtn ~
brl¥.,
Wlllr

Yomohl 810

V8lvw, DOHC Shaft

c.w,

311-0111.

noo. ,,..

1122 1111o1,
'

•

• . . (J) Altcly Cllllllllt
7:GO ~. 11J Wltetl of Fortune

/)) I Dr.- 01 Jeannla

Rooms

.glo1aaGywr Q
=~
ID I c e - ancl Mra. ICing

?p.m.

Hondo

tiNI:I

Shadow.

114-~

For 9811

oftor 7p.m.

0 •llaiGr Ltague

.
BolllNIII Cincinnati Reds at

!lOW. t20 milo;.

Paid iies, will oolllor S371. lfll-

2454m.

61 Fann Equipment

Montrool

L.AJ'T NI~HT WA~ A N16HTMAftE! l PfliAMEP
ALL NitS/IT THAT EJ.;.Mfi~ FIII&gt;P
WAS' PDING MOIIIP
i
WiiiiiW.J' ON ALL f
THE woc~Y

COnclltlon, 11...2414441.

llolll!l L••

PHILLIP
ALDER

Tonlald Sino. Q
(J) • .._,, Painlly
Ill Wheat .. , _ Q

17&amp;-4235.
Hondo tll2 XR 200, Eaooliont

75 Boats &amp; Motors ,

tor sale

ANP WAMe'O

~ (L)

acnnrhe
Meta (L)
I:GO ~ • 0 Coa11J lltow Thto
is cn.trac:tacltrom hla final
exam wttan he ntHtl a

o

woman. (R) Stereo. Q

IJ) Dugout .._
III (J). llltMto .
Amatlca'a Pell Bob Hope,

lhllr_lov!!!ll petS. (1 :00)

Stereo. 1iJ .
(l) On iti w......,.
(!) 1r11e111tn on
Homtcamlng

•

·

a

Ill ID. Top Cope A
patrolman purauea a IUIPtCI
In a ~~ Cltall. (R)
Stereo.!:;~~

11J M.-tiM, She WIOie
IIIOn ..... SiereO.
Ill Prl 111aa1

·

0 IIIIOVtl: Tile o.m-t ..

P111111 Natollaz (2:00)
,1:30 ~ • 11J Dllltrent WOIIcl
Ron tries to dlclde on a
Clreer to pui'IUI. (R) Storeo.

iCltlcago
..............
,,.
White Sox at

T1111

'

Rangorw (L)

• AIMrlcan Mullc IMP
t:OO ~ • 11J Cltlora Sam
atrugglal under a pac:t wtlll
hla nemull. lancllord John

HIK.

(R)

S:C.5l

37 •• ~ cone!,
110, TV antenna, MW tlrea. Mn'
contllnod, 304471-2453.

tN7 Cooclwnln Ctnolc 30'

mi.._,
............ $32,000. wtll
trodi. :IOW-5.
1,000

~ MyatMyl Tho c:rlckat

mora titan
crlckat on their mlncl. (PI 2 of

players hova

WHY 00 n '!I:XlR
\AOICe ea.JNO
SOFUNNY"f

-

Supplies
71 . Autos tor sara
1171 GranHa, 4*, PI, PI, 1400,
1~1115, 114-4. .1244 Allor
lp.OI.

--

WATERPIIOOFINO
•
lllollftw guoroll-

110. 1 . - 1 1 - tumlollod.
Froo 111- Coli 1·
ltw37-0411, day or nltlfll.
" - ' a-mont
·llnj.
.

Wot--

----'-

CUIIII
,y..,.

Homo

._,..,
Eapor~ On Oldor •

Foundlllon

t171 Novo. ...... body, ongiM, :IOUts-2441.

WI-

t171 Oi&lt;MCul-. - - ·
t171 Cocllllc. Condition.

SI,JIIII 0.1.0.114-2114271.

SIOroo.
DTop

Worll,

Rooii!'Q,

l Siding. Froo Ei'

llmiiMI .,.. .. ca1, No Job To
llg Or lmoiiiiM-441-112211.
'

'l':rr:r

E a R TREE SERVICI.
Trimming, Troo R_.l,
~· , _ lotlmotHI I ..

Bantamwelaht bOUt: JuniOr
(17-4; 11 KOs) va.

~

ELVINEY'S

· BISCUITS WAS
JEST FAIR TO
MID DUN'

HOW COME
YOU ET SIJt 1 ,

OH--I WAS
JEST BEIN'
HLITIII

AlalanclfO Sanabria (27-4· I,
13l&lt;Os), 10 rounds, !rom
Philltdalphla (L)
10:00~· IIJ L.A, Law
Brackman=,.on Whlll
of Fortune. ) SlereO. Q

I NOTICE 1fiU

YOU DIDN'T
NEED TO BE
ALL TIIAT

OUT-POl.ITED ME

BY Tllllltt

HLITIII

u...
ii:ilr

..........
...,od.l!l!
, .........._
_1:_.....
..
.liT

::=..
PubliC Sale

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

'

1111 Fonl loc«&lt; OLX, CIIIIMUI t4H altar lp.m.

c..tlor: Coli Aftor 7p.m
Collage tor ,.,.., tumlohld, AIC,
Cllrpll, aoocl nolghbor-. no

,_
With
..... -CNII ,_lion
........, a,aoo

.........
-

tll2 Cull- au- n.ooo
mllol, PW, cruloo, I'D. SOotot'ftl.

Buy or 1111. Pltvorlno &amp;.-lqwa,

polo, Pf. Pto100nt, WV 1·304- 11%4 E. Main 111011, -.ow.
Nou,.: II.T.W, 10:00 a.m. to I:CfO
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.

•-·

Dowrw111n Fwnlol!ol &amp;pon.

_,., Wllor Paid,~ sm

!.-.. ,.,., ,,...h Cly' llopollt. No Polo. 11 Cedar
........ Oolllpolo, Ol't ........ 11tiU-I.

........,.,.,
+I

IM-002-IIS2i.

54 MiscellaneOus

Marchandlu

•••

tll2 ~· corono, aooc1 trl•
on4
nom .,Iii.. -k,

MOO·

,IOW1Wf17.

_,..,...

till Alloo IC, IIIID, lllr, po, all.
.,..,
.......
114-112-ISG

(l)

111

1

•L

Oolllo
Co. EVAIIIIN'TIRPHISES,
Joo-.,OH1-.

-

....v..

;._ --~--------- year ahead.' Sand lor Gemini's Aatro••
Graph predictions today by mailing
$1.25 plus a long, IOif,eddriiiiOd.
ah!mped anvetopo to Aatr...Oraph, c/o
thlsntiWIIpaper, P.O. 8axll1428, C'--

.......

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

-vwt· .,..

Plumbing&amp;

''

Cl"!!.~::-""'"'~
'ourlh
··~ and no

1144··84

.......u'1:

~

~-&amp;~

'
Ettctrtcel
Rtfrlgal'ltlon

a.

. .1 U &amp; r i . •••;,jjj,..;;,.;i...i"~or~~.;.;::..~-·-;iiii
-........

•r::..
liOO. c

L1 utrd Hmtord.

Ulllltloo lnoludod
. . . . . ..._ .... II'OOirt

-·a

,....., ...._- noo.

wah WAJM
-•
tm.
ol;ld
... Iod.IQ4.Ia4121
.... •• 1:00 ... """ 1:00 pm

.., ,, .........
,~----

1tiO

Nlolln

!!ktnl. ,_ - o r _ . , . ,

ClniN

_.

~--·
72 Trucka tor Sale
......... ~ CIMih .Of. 1tiD .... c ''""" 1.100
~- Cio . . . . 8700. 114- - . luof--- ...... ""'
'IDI.
IIGOO,I14-Id....

lla8lir Uu
II llllctr1clen.
llldiMW Efoctrkllll, ~

1711.

rr

Upholstery
~..........!!!nl_

Inti"'-'.........

lond, OH 4&lt;1101-3428. Bo lUre to elate
yaur zodiac llgn.
CANCIIR (June 21....., 21) Fortunate
arethoM who arc _ , ond de.- to your
'-1. becauiO they could profit !rom
your generality today. Your c:ompeneatlon wtn "' the lOY 01 QMnQ.
LIO (.IUir D-Atil. 21) Projeetl that are
grand In ICOIM Will "' tile- yau han·
dil tile- allec111111y todtiY. Don't put
llmltatloM on yaur Hllnlclng or !*mil

othera to do 10, either.
YIIIQO (Alii. D-lepl. 21) Lady Luck
Will "' looking out lor your ln._llla to-

Gill$: alia. Ohio

•

u..... ,..

bod'

48 Uohl-llllltar
48 llacaronl,

horu

50 Scoundrel

1s Pnoltht

..,.

(2 Wdl.)

538trllflldln-

. .,.,

llruman1

54 A-worm

::.to
.,...,...

58 Acllwl

wten

58 UnciOII

22 Lontltah

(POtl)

23 loloraWed.

_,...

Hlllnter

24 c., ot

eo ~~urge

t Shout of

~~~~~

82 Llrtll knlla

2 Frftltwlltr

IChool

3 C::::ot
hldel

am.,_t

81 Own•

83Eitlllh

35 AclraH

DOWN .

ul.~110

4 - Dlnarnore
5 Pled Ptpar'l
City

...

Quer.tr Q

a the
• 11a111n
Hoatl: '1'111
..... the Mo¥11

throuCih 111m Clips and

tt.tlng

32 Mobile Homn
for &amp;all

llleltltllll

4&lt;1 HawiAIII

211,..... Tho
In funiltUN UJ1110!1111111Q.
Col IIM47Io4!54 rlor froo •
..~

en

lnterVlaw wt111 Kavln Costner.

,........ Ct1•11e. '111'1112

82

unit
12 lncltgo dyt
13 01 alrcrelt
14 Balla,ar (II.)

Pierce Broanan axplorellhe

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1n1r1aue and tile romance 01
the Robin Hood legencl

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In Zan.., aloe llf1ltolna rnoo1
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litlllc Tonll .........

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20

a.. . to '••••••• ,_...

37 Rapture
40 U11 lllllrlnO
liquid on
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43 Canal IJIItllt
In nortltorn

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(J)Undlrl'lre

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d To lui: 2 11..,_ :lbr
c.- Lol In ClleoNo!.. Ohio.
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AeROIS

33 Flaroe

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The World Almanal Crossword Puzzle

17 Fleur*18 Out of tile

••1lkftrllncl
meanl~llrltncllltlp. (R)

Nortli
2NT

Weal

Sootli

II!•••--.

Badgeo and flncla hlmiOII
oCCUIICI of murder. Stareo.

Ill LMJ King Uvol
1:30 ~ • 11J IIIIi!.... Jerry and
hla
d l - tile

,.••3.

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

a•

~1;11111• llrltltan Badg ta·

IIINnhltlltNow

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Pass
Just wben you thoucht it wu safe to
Pass
swim back to lbe bridge table, you find
Pass
PBSI
that the sharks (bad sult·breakl) •re
still there, havin&amp; driven away tbe dolOpening lead: t K
phins (friendly distribution). But maybe It will be possible to swim safely to ;
shore if~ know what to do.
· '-,n-g. -Sou-::_,.-ih_r_u_lf_ed_a_l_ow_s;,..p_ad_e_iD_t-.Jhe
To.dectde If you are a budding Jac· I dummy but East continued the aood
ques Cousteau, cover the East-West work b). discarding again. Declarer
cardund decide on your line of play iD was down to two trumpl, the IIJile
six clubB, West leacjing the diamond number as East and he was stuck in
kl~ · th
• loet trump control
de
ld f hi ed
the dummy. He had
or ma an o - as on re- and flailbed two down.
sponoe of two no-trump, denoting 8
Declarer was too extravacant with
bal~nced 13-lb points. His three-heart his trumps. He should have drawn ooly
rebid ahowed values In the suit and one round with dummy's queen before
auaested weak diamonda. Tbla helped turning to tbe apa!let. Tben, II Eut deSouth to bid the slam.
fended as before, decllnln&amp; to over·
Wben the dummy came down, South ruff, declarer would still bave a trump
thouallt be bad misled a &amp;rand slam. to lead off the dummy. His apadea
He ruffed the diamond lead and drew would be bip and be would play on
two rounds of trumps endln&amp; Ia tbe that suit, happy for East to ~e bla
dummy. When West dllcarded, declar· trump trick whenever be liked.
er: cotttlaited with tbe ace and another
C&gt; - · - - ·
spade. East defended well by 'dlacard-

18 TV' I talking

g
MOYIE: Hanle,.IPO)
(2:301

.AK762

By Pllllllp Alder

Von Bork jolna tha Brolcan

Home
tmprovemams
Tr ,JIIsporldlron

....

The Jaws
syndrome

.

III (J).
a l'lre 81rd
and Duka'a aurwlllance of a
ganga1W tuma deadly. (R)
SlereO.Q
(l) Mv•rt At lonQiaat,
r~ Is In the alr lor
"lnapector MorN. (PI 1 of 2)

t171 -

Building

+AJU
.JI0.94

•• 4

Angle Dlcklnaon, Uly Tomlin

55

.3

rounc:t !rom Chaska, Minn.

· anc! ~lck Clark pay tribute to

Serv1ces

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SOUTH
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7:31 (J) Major Ia•• looobaH
Atlanta aravea at New York

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home,

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-a 1ro010r or worll hc!ne tll4 Hondo V-45 Soln olo
tllor, :104471-7114.
-d, 11'1,300. 30U7r;1ile or
f "'111 Supplrr•,
&amp; LIV(•otock

NORTH

7:30iU~Q

·

, _ illrtoy lponllor, low
ml...gt, ezc· cond, 304-812·

or Trade

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BRIDGE

7:01 (J) Tile ....... _.

5100

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111111. Liu _ , ~

ANSWER

ICIW I.ITI ANIWUS
c- r~
Wholly - Gamut - Brink - Heifer - FOR THEM
· Corl!ot'ata president to underlings, • Don't pay
attention to what your critics say. There will never be a
statue erectad FOR THEM." .

fortUne alter hll love
.
companion elias. (R) Stereo.

:111)1.7111.
·1m Yomoho 400, Now nroo •
lollory, f350. 814-37fl.2127 oltor

.

V

Rl,f.=OI~flalrQ
Granc:tpa Simpson lnherlta il

74 Motorcycles
tm Yamoho TX 500, $o450 ..,,..

I I I I I I I· I

·lft UNSCRAMBlE FOR

l.,!c"=="Q

FumiSheCI

o1une 14,1M1

dill': TMro ltOindk:alklnl you may benlilt lhfoualt the good IUIPIGU 01 othera
In waya you'd INit expect.
a..RA (lelltL -.oat. D) You are pt-.
ently In a .wy lawrlble cycle lor - ·
lng and making , _ lrilndl. Relation·

tmprtiSIIIvo r-11• ItO llkliy In lho yew
8hllllll In ..-woo• you pononaHy pro- mote. What yau to ollw wll "' IP"
proclaled by otller8 ancl the return 111tp1 you eetablllll It 11111 time could
could be quite large.
havoiOng-range benellta.
- l f l (Mar 2'1..,.,. Ill) 1"- you ICOIIIPIO (Ocl .......... D) Swwallm·
.ca~IClll&lt;e todtiY . . Mklly to be IUI)IriOr · portant traiiCN . . now lnleo wovon and
tot-OiyoutMIIIIetAHOutlwtr,lt aurg1ng In a poaltlvo direction. You
wtlltake a uttt. illllnO on your 1M1ta11 to could do 8lll.-dlntrlly wall both llnan·
make them nare 01 tltll fact. Get a c:lllly and - . your Ia
lump on 111e by . . . - . . . ... lholnftu. - n e d.
which 1r1 peo nlng you In the IAGITTAIIIIUI (Nov. 23-DeC. 11) Thla

&lt;

,.

a

gOOd time to get In touch With
friends whci no longer reside In your lm·
11

ID 700 Club Wltlt Pat
Rc-aneon

mediate vicinity. 11 could prove highly
advantageoua to keep these linea 01
communication

open.

CAI'IIICOIIN (1189.

aa....... 11) Try

.

10:10 (J) MOYIE: ~Popt-yree Doyle
(2:00)
.
10:30(!) Waat 'l1flllnla Raport

to

o•r"..-'"
Ill C10011

devoiO tho greator portion of yaur time
and -gy today to common:lal pur·
IUKothot could make or uvo you mon·
frY. You have the capabllltlel to engl·
near """"'thlnglmprenlvo.
AQUAIIIUI (....... »faal. 11) If yau
hevo an ImpOrtant arrangement you'd
llkato negollata with -ther. thll could
"' - 01 yaur bettor dtiYI lor Qllllntl II

anti Chaea

11:GO~· III (J)e Ill IDe

IIJ NeWII

(!) ..........

~ Al•tlo Hill Storeo. Q

I8.........

I I =Tonight

benlllclall}' reiOfved .

13

I n - anti lire. King

IIIICII (Peb. 20 I Ia roll Ill) Do not be
UIIII!Od with tho ltiiUI quo where your
lmblllona arc - n e d. Elevate your
lllghta; yau'ro much luckier In IIIII oroo
than you may roollzo.
(lllanlll 21·Aprll111 How oppor·
tunltlel could p r - ,.....,.._ et
title time that mill' IU ccanlully IICI*1d
an an._prile In whlc:ll yau'ro engaged.
The dlmlllllonl 01 your IUCC Ill will be
v- ned by tho 1C0P1 01 your

11:30 i:o~ Tonlglt111tow

lE =MDLII
....... Gila
One
on

CIIYC

IIIHIG

llfiiiHM

CliVI

CIIH

YMH

I

CIIIYC

il) lllllliil Vlaa

IIIIHMitfll.

~~':r.rr

TAUIIUI (April Ill Mar :II) YOU could
"' IUOIIIer than UIUIIIodtiY In reveo liltg
a ftnancill '-II that IIU bean cat111ng
yau concern. Cllptllllla on lltlftlntl
conditione.

IIYIXIt

(J)• u.s. ODin IKUIIIII*
~ IIIII SinO. !:1
• ....... Millie lllop
lpa II:Cinlll'

encleavor.

'C II H

l ..... Tonllhl
11:31(J)a-Q

GMYo ; ·

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I think maklnQ

- cary Grant.

M • 8 •

love

Ia

tr.

boot form of tlerelll."

13

ta:ao(J)••••••• a

1,~

IIIGit

I

I'

�.
Pa~12-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, June 13, 1991'

Pomeroy-ltllddl!~· Ohio-·
·~

Harrisonville community notes

Beat of the Bend ....
by Bob Hoeflich

I

l
I
I

'•

I probably would think a lot
more if I didn 't end up with my
head hurting everytime I try to
make some sense of the universe.
I'll bet you can figure it all out
without a problem - l envy you
that.
I don't dwell on Circleville .
where some 11 seniors were not
pennitted 10 take part in graduation
_ceremonies because they, along ·
with others, had ll'IIShed their high
school as a "senior prank". 'i'oung
people will be young people but
come ·on now aren't spreading cow
manure and spray painting obscenities on the waUsjiJSt a bit much?
During the reports on the students' acts and the ensuing legal
battles did I hear comment that
anyone was sorry for having
trashed a school building undoubtedly constructed with taxpayers'
money- now that's you and I,
: Buddy? Don't believe I .,tid. ·
Anyone can understand the
frustration of students and parents
when the students were not permitted to iake part in graduation.
However, isn't it about time· that
the "anything goes" attitude is
replaced with a few rules and a little 'discipline. .If you dance, you
• got!&amp; pay the fiddler ain' t really
• such a bad idea.
- Of course, none of us have to
waste much energy dwelling on the
. fact that the Ohio Lottery has won
approvaiiO spend up to $1.5 mil. lion 10 buy more Ohco built cars as
prizes on the Cash Explosion
· Show.
The lottery tickets - the ones
bearing three entries - apparently
aren'tiOO plentiful in Meigs County. Not a single Meigs Counlian ·
has appeared among the contpslants
on the show while those in other
areas of Ohio report having a number of tickets which they can send
in 10 qualify for participation. Has
anyone in Meigs .County ever gotten a ticket with the required three
entries on iL I ,certainly would like
IOknow.
And, by the way, the Savings
and Loan bail out is going 10 cost
about $130 billion - and in case
you didn't know, Bunky, that, 100,
1s taxpayer money. Let's get away
from this- my head hurts.

Music camp slated

Pomeroy, marked their 30th wedding anniversary on June 11 while
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James
CrisweU of Middlepon. observed
their 55th anniversary on the same
date . A family get-together at
Sebastian's in Parkersburg is
planned to celebrate the occasions.
By the way, if you an: wondeting about the pineapple flag flying
at the McCullough home, it was a
gift and it is from Colonial
Williamsburg. The flag is symbolic for welcome and hospilality.
Carol Jean and Jim Adqr:~s will
double the oleasure of ~olle5e
graduation Friday morning when
both of their children receive
degrees at Ohio State University.
Son, Todd, the eldest, will be
graduating from the College or
Engineering- his degree is in electricill enfineering - and daughter,
Kim wil be graduating frorn the
CoUege of Human Ecology, being
an education major. The relatives
of both Carol and Jim wiD be in
Columbus 10 attend the celelntion
of Todd and Kim finishing their
college work and both of the young
people will be taking shon vacations before they move onto the
employment scene.
A major solution tci lead in
drinking water is a very sirnple
one, according to the American
Warer Wollls Assn.
If you haven't used your tap
water for three hours or rnore, let
your faucet run two. to thtee minutes or until the water is cold
before you drink it or coot with iL
This easy act ean rid your water or
any harmful amounts or lead,
according 10 the association.
The Women's Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial Hospital invites
you to stQp by and browse a bit in
their gift shop in the hospital lobby
if you're looking for something a
bit unusual in the way of a gifL .

Oh, did I mention that your real
estate taxes are due the 20th of this
month? And on 10p of that there
were decent rains in some Ohio
locations Tuesday and Wednesday.
Carol and Ken McCullough, Do keep smiling.

Mr. and Mrs. Marty Foley and Mrs. Linda Jenkins, Kentucky,
family, Hairston, Texas; Francis over the weekend.
Foley, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Sicple, North
Gary Foley and Mrs. Deloris King Carolina, visited Sunday evening
were recent visitors of Mr. and with their aunt Mrs. Franc.es
Mrs. Bob Mahr.
Young.
Word was received of the dea1h
Mrs. Bn:nda Kennedy and chi!of Mrs. Cllllll Hull, Waldo, a former resident and Sister of Margarer
Douglas.
Mrs. Eleanor Updegraff; Birmingham, Ala .. spent a week with
"Jesus and_.You at Camp Can
her sister, Frances Alkire. While
Do"
was .tbt theme of Vacation
hen: they visited their cousin, EveBible
School at the Pomeroy
lyn Bresler and Edith Bresler in
Church-of
Christ
Lancaster.
A
wooded
camping area scene
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bisbop viswas
featured
at the front of the
ited his sisters, Mrs. Sue Ferro and church.
Missionaries were Vivek and
Angie Lall, frOm Mid-India Chris.
tian Mission. They showed slides
of India and dressed the children in
their native coscumes.
Andrew Miles, minister at the
Eighteen of the 31 members of chllfl:h, served as direc10r and co· the Chester H.ish School Class of direciOrs were Barblllll Fields and
1941 attended the annual alumni Pat Thoma. Charldene Alkire was
banquet and dance held June 1.at music director and Chris Alkire
the Chester Elementary School.
was the "bear" for. the wee!c at
The blue and silver colors of the Camp Can Do. Janet Venoy and
class were carried out in the table
decorations and the centerpiece
was a bouquet of red roses. On
Sunday class members went to the
Recent·guests of Nina Robinson
home of Mildred Morgan Gaul for and Clara Follrod were Norma Jean
a picnic.
and Gerald Swanz; Reno; Sherri
At the picnic were Bill Mered- and Larry Sheers, Emily and
ith, Beverly; Richard Fick, Mindy, Marietta; and Rose and Bill
Pomeroy; Clarence Dean, Colum- Follrod, Athens.
bus; Nelson Spencer, Racine;
Guests of Charlotte and Wam:n
Horner Parker, Long Bonom; Paul Van Meter were Charles and Carol
Baer, Chester; Mildred Morgan . VanMe1er ancl John, Bucyrus;
. Gaul, Pomeroy; Dorothy Hawk, Chris and Clara Wren and family,
Long Bottom; Eugene Buckley, Sabina .
Cheshire; Maxine Bahr Goeglein,
Nina Robinson attended the
Pomeroy; and Howard Parker, graduation of her grandson, Brian
Long Bouom; and Iris .Weber Wii- Robinson, Belpre High School.
son, Rochester, N. Y.. and John
Harold and Wilma Henderson
and Eloise Buckley Lochyick, West and Robert and Linda Burnem
Jefferson.
aaended the funeral of their uncle,
Other members of the class of Guy Bumem, Poca, W.Va.
1941 attending the banquet were
Osie Mae and Clair Follrod
Mae Frank Lynch, Athens; MillOn attended her 40th anniversary high
' Tuttle, Pomeroy; Clarice Barnhart school class reunion at Carroll.
Wilford, Rushville; and Don
Wilma and Lisa Henderson,
· Pullins, WilliamsiOwn, W.Va.
Sharon Gilligoly and Gay Ann
Burke attended the weddmg of
MelisSa Calaway and Christopher
Keith Brownstead in Huntington,
.
Two new members were wel- W.Va.
Bob
and
Martha
Jackson,
comed into the MiddleportHillard,
were
weekend
guests
of
Pomeroy Rotary Club at its regular Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Brooks and
meeting held recently.
family. .
~t another previous. meeting,
Ch.a rloue and Warren Van
Erme S1sson from OhiO Power Meter
·attended the graduation of
· Company, was welcomed as a
Staci
and
Traci Wren from Sabina
member.
High School.

PCC P. r_·esents program

Chester alumni
attend banquet
~ ·

Heidi Caruthers co-directed the
making of crafts.
Teachers were Debbie Miller,
nursery, with helpers BiD and Rilla
.Smith and Annette Tucker; Mindy
Young, beginner, with helper'Bn:nda Venoy; Kathy Haley and Belly
Spencer, middler, with helpers
Sharon Mattox and Chris Alkire;
and Andrew Miles taught the teen
class.
Eileen Bowers and Elaine Kelly
worked in the kitchen and Roger
Alkire worked 10 prepare the yard.

Flag

A Music Day Camp will·be held
the week ofJllftC 17,21 at the University of Rio Grande.
·
The camp is beiflll sponsored by
the Music Depannlent and the College or E&lt;klcalion, and will be held
each day frun II Lm. until l p.m.
on the stage of the Fine and Performin$ Arts Center.

drcn, and Mrs. Beverly Davis and
son, visited Wednesday evening
witb their granddaughter, Mrs.
Golda Hart, McArthur.
Shirley Roush and Branda, Mid·
dleport, visited Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Bishop over the weekend.

sin:=~~ti:.·i~p~:~~~~o~

playil!&amp; insuuments, dancing, and
· rhythmic dramatization. Parents
and friends will be invited to.an
. open house on Friday, June 21 at
noon to hear and see some of the
activities students have participated
in.
.
. Studen.ts entenng gra~es 2
through 5 an: mv~ted 10 paruc1pate
With no fees req~. A maxcmum
of 30 students weD be accepled for
the CB!fiP. so parents an: reques~
to register !herr studen~ by calhng •
the College of Educaaon at 245- .
5353, exte.nsion 328.

•
• YCIL 42, No. 2t
Capyrlgh!W 1801

.

and Dayton on Wednesday , and
LAKEWOOD, Ohio (AP) Gov. G~ Voinovich said a two- Toledo,. Ashtabula and Lakewood
. day, five-&lt;:lty swing to .-ornate his on Thursday to highlight his
state budget proposal shows he is administration's proposals on
issues including the environment,
willing 10 inake grassroots effort.
"I've got to get out and talllto . the elderly and turning over state
the people. That's pan of lead~r­ liquor stores 10 private business.
"If I lose, fine. But I don't think
ship," VoinoviCh said Thursday in
this Cleveland suburb. "I think I anyone would respect a governor
have an obligation 10 get out and that would hide out in h1s office
make my case to the citizens ' of · an·d believe in something and
Ohio in those insrances where the wasn't willin~ 10 srand up and be
Legislature is not in tuliC with some counted," Vomovich said.
In Lakewood, Voinovich met
of the things I am supporting."
Voinovich l(isited Cincinnati privately with an 81-year-old

a

FATALITY SCENE- State Hl1bway
Patrol and GaUia County EMS oiTiclals work at
· the scene of the Frlclay monln1 accident tbat
injurid tbree, one fatally. HoUis StoDings, 76, of

OR

2 FLATS FOR s10.00
7~ PACK

Bob's StUI Bas
A Wiele Selection Of
Mulches • Pottfnl SoDs • Top Soli
Cmnposted Cow Manure
And More!

t

I

HANG I

BASKETS

REG. *11.98; *14.98 EACH

.

Voinovich has proposed $22
million funding ·ror one year for the
PASSPORT program, a 32 percent
increase . .The program provides
assislallce for in-home care for the
elderly.
"This is a good program, we
.want to see ct expanded,"
Voinovich said after emerging
from the home of Genevieve and
Conrad Drlpppn,

$5,99 EACH
OR

2 FOR$11

SOUTH CAROLINA

FIRST OF SEASON

VINE RIPENED

SWEET &amp; JUICY

TOMATOES

PEACHES

SOUTH CAROLINA
CANTALOUPES &amp;

PRICES IN ·EFFECT FRIDAY, JUNE 141 H THRU END OF SEASON
2400 Eastern Avenue (across froin KMart)
Galllpolll, OH
Open: MondiY-Siturday, 81m-B pm; &amp;May, 10 11M pm
Phont
446-1711

, Robert E. Byer, Syrac1,1se, fuef'tghters and other organizations · It is the only organiZation to
Adminisuaror of the Meigs County 10 provide quality, practical educa- i!&gt;volve all Ohio EMS otganizato Emergency Medical Ser- lions and aUied health professionals
Emergency Medical Services, was
providers at an affordable in the provision of quality emerelected president of the Ohio Association of Emergency Medical Ser:oJI¥enie•ll! localion.
gency care. The associalio11 is the
sounding board for all EMTs in
vices when the statewide organizaOhio and provides representation .
tion met for its annual education
on EMS issues for all of Ohio's
conference in Columbus last weekEMTs and P81llmedics.
end.
Byer, a member of the Ohio
''This is a critical time for Emergency Medieal Services in Ohio,"
Association for 10 years, has
Byer said, noting that Ohio was
served the organization as Dislrict
once the nation's leader in EMS
Ill dim:tor and has represented the
but more recently has become
association on the Ohio EMS
stalemated in its efforts 10 progress,
Boanl for the pas&amp; five years.
Byer reports that new EMS legisla- ·
Ho has served on various assocition hBs 'passed the Senate and is
ation commi11n1 IIIICI 11M O.'I'Cr•30
now in the House of Representayeara of EMS experience to his
tives.
Although no funding is prorecord as he steJ!s in tO lead the
vided
by
the legislation, Byer feels
' state Ol'glltization in its 27th year.
it
is
a
step
in the right direction.
The Ohio Assoc:iatlon of EmerByer
expresses
pride in having the
gency Medical Services is the only
opportunity
10
lead
the state organiorganization in the Bl8te which
Conlinued
on
page 3
resents
and Panuncc~es
·,

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pic- the tall ship$ to New York harbor.
ture this: An American flag big
The 1976 flag was hung from
enough 10 cover a football f'ICld ~d the· Verrazmi? Narrows Bridge in
!IIOSt of i\S bt~. A flag so b1g .. New York City. What so proudly
roil coUld WIJIII two space·shuules they hailed at the twilight's last
m it or harvest 2SO bushels of com gleaming was tom to shreds by the .
A Chester man died early Friday
from under iL So big that its stripes wind.
are 16 feet broad and its stars 13
Undeterred, Silverfine began morning from injuries he suffered
feet bright.
· . anew, raised money and got .voi~- in a two-car accident on State
The "Great American Rag" cs · teers at Anchor Industnes m Route 7{35 in Kanauga.
10 be \mfurled IOday on the Wash- Evansville, Ind., 10 sew up anoth~r
Hallie D. SIOilings, 76, died at
Holzer Medical Center at4:44 a.m.
ington Monument grounds as an "Great American Flag."
observance of Flag Day.
. ''Big, colossal, gari.antuan after suffering massive chest
This is a humongous flaj!. the thmgs have a way of captunng pea- injuries in the accident 111 the interbiggest in the world, ac~ording 10 p~e's im~ginaqon the "!.ay no~al section of SR 7{35 and' Township
Guinness. To unfold It, by the Size obJeCts cannot, he sacd , Road 309.
dawn's early light, requires hun- pointing out that a one-eighth-scale
According to a repon from the
dreds of volunteers.
model of the Statue of Liberty Gallia-Meigs post of the State
But the supersale~man who stands ,on an .island in the Seine Highway Patrol, S101lings was a
ihought of the flll!l, fired up others Rever 10 Pans but that nobody p8$senger in a 1990 Ford Ranger
about it and· got ct made in 1980, knows it.
pickup truck driven by Ella J.
COLUMBUS - State Senators;
won't be there to see it.
·
He brought the flag 10 Washing- Stollings, 42, of Chester. Ella
Jan
Michael Long (Circleville) and ·
"l've really been pushed out of ton in 1980 for Flag Day and with Stailings was eastbound on SR
Robert
Burch (D-Dover) today :
this thing," said Len Silverfine, the help of ironworkers and IOurists 7/35 and approached the intersecquestioned
Governor Voinovich's :
who runs a ·public relations-adver- got it unfolded by the monumenL It tion of TR 309. A 1975 Ford 250
surprise
comments
in lhe June 13 ·
tising finn, the Big Idea Co., 10 . made a few more appe81llDces after pickup truck ttaveling on TR 309,
Columbus
Dispatch
concerning
northern Vermont. " I've never that and then was stored and for- driven by Ernie W. Workman, Jr.,
Senate
Bill
143,
the
complex
clean .
received an invitation, although I gotten by everyone but Silverfine.
ran a stop sign at the interseCtion
air
compromise.
was called the other morning and
He decided 10 present it 10 the and slammed into the Stollings'
In the article, Governor
told it was in the mail."
Un,ited States and at a White House vehicle. Hallie Stollings was
Voinovich stated that the state
Flag Day commemorates the ceremony in 1983 President Rea- crushed under the dashboard or the
should
not focus-solely on the
adoption by the Continental gan accepted it. "I rromise you truck, officials said.
plight of coal counlry in SoutheastCongress in 1777 of the Stars and your go~ernment ~il keep it and
· Hallie S101lings, Ella StoiUags
em
Ohio. Throughout the lengthy
Stripes as the United States flag. IJ'easure ct and use 1t ~ a rem~tJc;~ · and Workman were talten 10 Holzer
legislative
process, Voinovich has
Silverfme's flal! hi.siOry goes back of the ~mess thatts Amenca,
Medical Center by the Oallja
not
commented
on the bill's com10 the bicentenmal m 1976 when he Reagan sacd.
County EMS. Ella SIOIIings was
plicated
provisions.
treated for minor contusions and
wanted a big. big flag 10 welcome
"On April 3, in the Cleveland
was released, a hospital
Pain
Dealer, Voinovich said, 'Our
spokeswoman said. Workman was
goal
is
10 keep rates down and 10
treated for multiple contusions and
keep
miners
working', and that it
facial lacerations and was later
was important for him to provide
released.
leadership. But 10 the Dispatch he
Workman was charged with
said
we should instead look at the
A total of S8 units or blood was Steven R. Martin, Lloyd E. Black- aggravated vehicular homicide.
'
big
picture' what does that
donated during Wednesday's visit wood, Patricia J. Bar10n, Joan L. The State Highway PabOI is awaitmean?"
asked Senator Long.
of the American Red Cross blood-. Tuttle, Dan E. Fo.llrod, Betty J. ing blood test results 10 determine
PLYING OLD GLORY -Robert
1n employee of the
"Obviously
the Governor must
Melp Couaty Ma~eum, was out early friday morni111 ralslng .the
mobile to Meigs County.
Lowe, Deborah L. Orueser, if Worlanan was iniOxicated at the
be
confused.
I
would hope that at
Amerlcaa t1a1 at tbe Muaeam on Butternut Avenue. Today, June
The unit was stationed at the Edward M. Cozart, Lois J. Wyant, time or the accident. He currently
this
late
dale
in
the
coal biU process
Senior Citizens Center on Mulberry Donald R. Smilh, Timothy M. Hall, is being held in the GaUia County
14, Is IIWIIys celebrated as Fill Day aad many area residences and
that our Governor has not had a
Hellhts in Pomeroy with Dr. James Carolyn A. Charles, Gloria K. jail. .
buslneaaare proudly dlsplaylna Old Glory.
Continued A-3
Witflerell and Dr. Wilma Mansfield Kloes, and Harry L. Leffie.
as physicians in charge.
.
Racine: T. C. Ervin, Mary E.
· Beulah Ward, Lenora Leifheit, Cunis, Marie A. Bush, Orace E.
Jean Wright, and Jane Brown were Holter, Harry D. HOlter, Leanne S.
the nurses who assisted with Fisher, Frederick Thompson. Ann
Edward Cozart and Tracey O'Dell Zirlde, David H. Zirkle, Alma J.
what they were picking up: plastic hanging on logs, a glass Jar
as the donor a~dants.
A project that began as a 150-mile cleanup of the Ohio River has
Johnson, Linda L. Holter, Virginia
hanging on a twig, a plastic jug wedged in10 some driftwood."
RSVP volunteers assisting were M. Bland.
mushroomed two years later into a six-state effon that organizers
Tires were among the most common items. A hot water heater
Wanda I. Fetty, Helen Bodimer,
. hope will lure thousands or volunteers 10 help scour 1,962 miles of
Ponland: Stephen H. Nease.
was
the most unusual find, he said.
Mary Nease, Margaret Harris, Jean
shoreline.
Reedsville: Fonda Thomas, John
Daniels
hopes the Ohio River Swoop becomes extinct.
Nease, Jeaneue Lawrence, Joan L. C.Rice.
The Ohio River Sweep scheduled for Saturday is the largest
'
"It's
the
awareness that it causes in people's minds to hopefully
TuUle, .florence Richards, Evelyn
known river cleanup project in the nation, said Jeanne Ison, Jiroject
Lona Bonom: Laura L . Hawley,
avoid
littering,
to know that it's important 10 that the river is imporGilmore, Lula Hampton, Violet Bruce Hawley.
direc10r.
'
lallt
to
us,"
he
said. "If we learn not 10 litter the river, we won't
Morality, Gerald Wildermuth, and
"Improvements made in river water quality over the last 20
Minersville: Kenn.eth E. Wighave
to
have
these
events anymore.''
years have been responsible for an increase in recreational use of
Emma Clatwonhy.
gins. .
.
Several
scout
troops,
companies and civic groups are signed up
1be canteen was served by the
the Ohio River," !son said.
Rutland: Marta H. Blackwood,
10
help
this
year
in
the
county,
which encompasses Evansville, Ind.,
Racine Uniled Methodist Women.
"This increase in activity has subsequently led to a greater
Donnie R. Laudennilt, Tamlllll I.
Daniels said.
.
Alma Johnson was a fii'St time Nelson.
amount of litter on the banb, and thus 1 yearly clean~ program is
"People
are
ea~er
to
get
involved:"
he said. " The citizens of
donor and multiple gaUon donors
needed
10
keep
the
river
suitable
for
continued
public
use,"
she
Middleport: George L. Harris,
Evansville
are
behmd
it
100
percent.
Donations
have been extraorwere Ellis E. Myers, ll gallon; Jr., Joyce A. McCarthy, Sarah J.
said.
dinarily easy 10 come by."
.
Deborah Orueser, three gallon, Fowler, Thomas R. Harria, Gloria
The pilot project began in 1989 on a stretch of river from CincinThe event is bein~ coordinated by the Ohio River VaUey Water
David Ziltlc, two gallon. and Joan I . Peavley, ~ Chambcn, Judith
nati 10 Ashland, Ky. 1be project was expanded last year 10 cover the
Sanitation Commisscon, a Cincinnati-based interstate water polluTuttle, one gallon.
river from its origm in Pittsburgh to its mouth at Cairo,IU.. encom"
K. Hunter, Melvin R. Swisher,
tion conirol agency for the Ohio River VaUey.
passing
Pennsylvania,
West
VirJinia,
Ohio,
Kentucky,
Indiana
and
Donors by communities were as Sherry L. Swiller, Ronald L. Diles,
There will be at least one designated cleanup area for each of the
foUowa;
Illinois.
.
Sr., and Resa R. Hanis.
72
counties that border the river. Trash from the river's banks that
Last year's event atlniCted more than 14,000 volunteers who colPomeroy: Walter Couch,
Syrac:lise: Dlrla Thomas.
cannot.
be recycled will be disposed in an environmenlally acceptlected more than 8.000 tona of trash.
Lawrence D. Leonard, Janet M.
Malon, W. VL: Brian E. John- ,
able
manner,
organizers said.
One of the largest wmouts is expected in Vanderburg County,
Ambrose, Lenora J. Mc){nisbt, son.
Ind., where SSO voluntflelllhowed uo last year.
Deb1a D. Mora. VirJil K. WindOn,
l..lngsville, EUis E. Myen. Alva
Volunteers looiting for cleanup locations can call the event orga•
"We all had a preuy good time,'' Slii1Jim Daniels, the county's
Maralrel Hll1la, Howlld P. Lopn, B. Clat\.
nizcn
at 1-800-359-3977.
cleanup coordinator. "Everybody wu jo~g and laughing ~t
Aidliic 1. Bllter, David M. Kina. E.
Texas: Tom E. Hanis.
Jane Wal&amp;on, Jodi L. Manin,
\
I'

Meigs residents donate
units of blood Wednesday

NOW JUST

SOUTH CAROLINA

1/4 folie North ol PomeroyiMalon Bridge
Muon, WV
Open: Mondly-Siturdly, 81111-8 pm; Bundly, 9 am-9 pm
Phone .
773-5721 • 773-5900

gram.

Coal senators
ask Voinovich. ·
where he stands:

I

BOB'S HAS FRESH
1/2 RUNNER AND
TENDER SNAP BEANS

was crushed In a 1990 Ford Ra.:fer pickup
. trucll (foreground) after It was str
by another car. (Tribune pbolo by Keith WUson)

in Kanauga
accident

ALL NURSERY STOCK

NOW JUST
s5,99 FLAT

cilester, dlect at Holzer Medkal Ceatlrlfta' be

Washington ~isplays .Chester
giant American flag man ·killed

SAVINGS ON A.LL BEDDING PLANTS 8 BANGING BASKETS

REG. '1 0.00 FLAT • REG. '1.50 t'AI..il\.

bedriddeit woman who$C 78-yearold husband has been able 10 care
for her with the help of a state pro-

Byer to head Ohio Association
of Emergency Medical Services

New rotary mem'Qers

INCLUDES •••
.t ft.OWERING DECORATIVE TREES
.t FRUIT TREES
.t AND MORE!

-- ·-

A Muld..,.dlo Inc. Newopoper

Gov. Voinovich pushes
for budget proposals

rlae Fol•s At Boll's Market Would Li•e To ·s how Their Appreeiation
To Their Man, Wonderful Customers With A Sale Of All Sales!

PLANTS

2 S.Ctlone, 14 P•g" 25 cente

·Alfred activities

NOW 1./2 PRICE

Partly cloudy tonight.
Low in 70s. Saturday,
high r. ear 90.

1991

l.

BEDDING

Pick 3:567
Pick 4:9811
Cards : 8-H, A-C
8-D; 10-S .

Day

I

SPECTACUL~R

Ohio Lottery

'-..

Thousands expected to take part in River Sweep

--

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