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                  <text>0 hio Lottery

Reds win
sixth in
a row

Pick 3:

4-5-2
Pick 4:

4-9-5-7

Toolght, .,.,.uy cloudy with
sc:attued showers, thunder-

BuckeyeS:
19-26-27-32-35

Page4

storms. Low near 70.

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Vol. 43, No. 47
Copyflghlld 1992

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PAGE SIYI!'fn-TIJO

2 Sectlona, 14 P•gea 2S OOtilo

• Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Wednesday, July a, 1992

Alluhlmodll Ina. ~pojler

Administrative law judge
approves RAC settlement
By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
ABsoc~ted Press Wrl,tu
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.
must notify its employees that it
"will not lock out, permanently
replace or othetwise discriminate"
against union arembers, Ill\ adminisuative law judge has ruled.
Judge Bernard Ries, who pmided over an unfair labor practice
hearing against Ravensw\)0(1 Alu·
minum, has approved the company's settlement with the United
Steelworkers union, including ari
agreement to drop all outstanding
legal disputes.
That includes the dismissal of
National Labor Re~tions Board
charges that Ravenswood illegally
locked out the 1,700 members of
Steelworkers Local 5668. Ries
presided over a hearing into the
chl!fges which was held.. in
Charleston last year.
Ries signed the order on Friday.
It was released Tuesday. '
"I feel quite confident in coneluding that the proposed settle-

\

'

ment serves the ends of justice,"
Ries said. "Only the passage of
time- a very long time, I believe
-and review by several levels of
decision making authority would
determine with finality the legal
consequences of the facts presented."
"Given the magnitude of the
issues, a decision favo111ble to one
side could be devastating to the
other," il.ies concluded.
The order requires Ravenswood
to post for 60 days a two-page
notice in which the company
promises that "we will not lock
out, permanently replace or otherwise discriminate against our
employees becal!se of their union
acuvities or in furtherance of our
alleged unlawful bargaining con. duct calculated to frustrate the bargaining rights of employees."
The Steelworkers returned to
wort on June 29, 20 months after
their contract expired and
Ravenswood brought in replace·
ment workers.

Negotiations for a new con1111Ct
resumed in April after a shakeup on
the Ravenswood board of directors.
A newly constiblted board of direc·
tors fued Ravenswood Chief Executive Officer R. Emmeu Boyle and
hired former NLRB general counsel Peter Nash to negotiate a new
contract with the Steelworkers.
A tentative settlement was
announced May 29. The union's
members voted by more'than 80
percent to accept the agreement,
~hich included a modest wage ·
mcrease and a guarantee that all
union members who could pass the
company's physical would return
to wort.

The replacement workers were
fired, although the company said it
would place them on a preferential
hiring list for vacancies that opened
after all Steelworkers had returned
to work. Other replacement workers were promoted to salaried positions and remained in the plant
when union members returned to
work.

.

or

Jim Hill
Pleasers, selected tbe 199!-U - :
Employer or the Year.

PRESENTED TROPHY - Carol Brewer
work-study coordinator, presented a trophy t~

Hill named Employer of the Year \
He was selected for the ·award, vides practical work experience:
Jim Hill of Pleasers Restau111nt,
has been selected as the according to Carol Brewer, work- and enc0U111ges sbldents to do well.·
.of the Year by study coordinator, because he is and he coope111tes with the prog111ffi
Schools Work- willing to hire students and wort requiremeniS which enable students
with their individllli'lleeds~l!e pro- to earn high school credit.
•.

By KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondent

Cdi•rM Nlltiooal is proud to be a pan of the Mason County Fair Schol"rship program. Our commitm~nt to education in
our COIIIJIIunity has helped result in S4 5, 800 in scholanhip moni~ over the past 27 years.. We. are dedicate~ to he_lp fulfil
the edualiooal aspirations of our youth. We salute the Fair, its pamcipants and our scholarshtp wmnen for thetr constderable

roouibutioas ro our community.
t9 76, O.nis&lt; McDonid, Juli&lt; Sommer

J-&gt; William Dunn

Dol&lt; "Mw:dn
1967, Maria Williamaon Arritt1nd

""' V"I1JDU•
MdalllSnpi
Croolham
""'
'"'' c.ta
. . . Rain&lt;y

1977,

Lr-is Berenel

..

ltlelo
1971 ,
1912, Did -

1971,
1979,

Gaopaoaa Sommer

1971o

UK

1910,

S&lt;holarsbip

Jamco MiKha&lt;l Bomcm: and

P.-la Somal Simpkins ..
o;...
M&lt;Coy. Tmsa McDemtin and
ltR
Wp' . Sd..to
.JoU
Mt:Coy. Titn ComiU and
197J,
KoaMrior SIUrl&lt;y

{

'""
1912,
198J ,

Bibb« and Jcny Costo
Kyk McCausland, Clrolyn Ri&lt;kard and
john McCauslaJ\d
George C. Sommer II. Charlet Z111pm. Jr. and
David McCrumb
Terry Cull&lt;n, Tina Sayer. Gale Willianuon and
Olarkl McCulloc:h
Lisa Hill, San&lt;ln Hickman, James Hendenon and
Brian Dan&lt;
Mark Phillipo. Christine McDaniel and
MHBar&lt;t Butler
Mark Willlanu. Sharon Yaug&lt;r and
lydia Thomas
.
Mark H0...t, floyd Baker and Keith Stewart

1984, Marvin Lo:g. Billy Cronk and

O.Rooa Sttphens
Randall
K~cr, james Wilson and
19U,
O.bbi&lt; SheU
1916, Rhonda McCoy. R.,..Ua Langdon and
David Crank
1987 , Scon: Hovtr. Ryan Bumgarner and

1918,
1919·
1990,
1991 '

•

Syracuse council passes resolution
to place renewal levy on ballot

Citizens National of Point Pleasant
Salutes 27 Years of Scholarship Winners

I"J'

~.

Doug Johnson
Valerie McCoy. Timothy Kidwell and
Michoel Wilson
Lisa Kay. Kelly Conrad and Patricia Bing
Annette Gibbl. Charl&lt;1 Hagley and
Ambtr I..Dttg
Bren1 John5011. Daniel Crank.
Chris Thomas and Marla Roush

Symcuse Village Council Wring
iiS Tuesday night meeting passed a
resolution to place a one mill
renewal levy on the November bal·
lot for current expenses. Funds
from the current expense levy are
used for street lighting.
At the meeting a complaint was
lodged againn emergency and rue
department members who drive at
excessive speeds on village streets
when responding to calls. The com·
plaint will be investigated by
Police Chief Jim Connolly.
ciiils ltave been cootllded by several residents
Mayor James Pape reported that
NOT A PRETTY PICTURE • Nearly three
about
the
sltuatloa
wb!U
thty
tOIISider
a
bealtb
London
Pool is in full operation
dozen rats lulve been killed on Unl011 Avenue,
bazard.
As
of
Tuesday
there
wu
no
ram
word
after
being
closed for repairs. He
PotDeroy, Ill tile put coaple ol weeks near an
on
bow
tbe
matter
will
be
resolved
wltb
tbe
also stated that the baby pool is
f!~ty botale wltidl allepdly bas prbage IIOred
property OWDers. Here's Ed Diddle of 2l0 Union
functional and the entire operation
e. Tile H!pbors wlao lulve killed the nts
Avenue with aome of tbe rats be killed earlier
is in good shape. The mayor also
IIJ thll DO loaaer DID their dllldren play in tht
this week.
noted that the flag pole has arrived.
yard becaule rl the roclents. Tile Melp County
Kenneth Bucldey1 councilman, is in
Ht~~ltb Departmeutand Pome.roy village oMcharge of placing the pole at the
ball field. When completed,
Feeney-Bennett Post, American
Legion, of Middlepon will hold a
. dedication ceremony.
Mayor Pape was given authoBoth Republican Congressional and Lawrence Counties from the date lost a single vote. The final rization by council to purchase the
candidates in the June 2 primary lOth Congressional District, repre- tally: McEwen,. I, 190; Miller,
election lost a vote following Tues· _sented by Miller, into Mct:;wen's 3,166.
Witnesses for both candidates
'day's state-mandated recount in Sixth DistricL A small portion of
Meigs County.
Athens County was already in were present at the recoun~ along
Eddie J. Smathers, 41, Albany,
with Smith, Deputy Director Jane
The disuict-wide recount McEwen'sdistricL
entered
a guilty plea on Wednesday
between veteiBII Congressmen Bob
The "new" Sixth District con- Frymyer and .the foot members of to a count of cultivation of marijuaMcEwen {R-Hillsboro) and sifts of Athens, Washington, Gal- the board of elections. Patty Pick· na in the secood day of a jury trial
Clarence Miller {R·Lancaster) waa lia, Meigs, Jac):son, Hocking, ens and Carleton Drummer were at in Meigs County Common Pleas
mandated·under slate law because Lawrence, Scioto, Highland, Clin· the recount of behalf of McEwen, Court, before Judge Fred W. Crow
of a differei)CC of less than .5 per- ton, Pike and portions of Ross, and and Jon Perrin for Miller.
The winner of the primary dis- m. The trial began on Tuesday and
cent in the final vote. ·
Wan:en.
saw six witnesseS on behalf of the
Redistricting last year moved a
Mei11s County Board of Elec· trict-wide will face Democ111t Ted State take the stand.
IarKe portion of Athens County, aa lions Director Rita Smith reported Strickland of Lucasville in NovemSmathers was charged with one
welllL'I Washington, Gallia, Meigs "no signficant changes" following ber.
count of cultivation of marijuana
the recount, although each candiand one count of possession of
marijuana, resulting from discovery
of the marijuana growing in the
vicinity of Smathers' residence in
COLUMBU~ (AP) - A bill checks, and would not Affect banks, a delinquent's photo in lineups as August, 1991.
regulating busmesses that cash. which already are regulated by the panoffelony investigations. EffecThe state's witnesses,, represent, g!'vernrnent checks for a fee was ' state.
live in 90 days.
. ing the Ohio Bureau of Criminal .
stsnod Into law by Gov. Georse • Businesaea that violate prohibi·
-AUow library boards to buy • lnvesligatlon, the Ohio Department
VOinovicb. •
tiona in licenses could be lined up buildinas or other propeny by issu- of Natural Resources and the
SpcliiiCnd by Rep. !UY. Miller, to $1,000, and sentcnced to six ing JIOIIII.mrY notes, using install- Meigs County Sheriff's DepanD-&lt;;olumbus, the law 11 8Imed at months in jail. Those who exceed ment sales, or making lease-pur- ment, testified that more than 700
busmeases that may charge poor the fee limit \VOuld have to pay chale agreements. Effective imme- plants were seized and later
peoplc up to 20 percent of the we(- cll8llimcn twice lhe amount of the diately.·
desii"Oyed.
' - Require the refrigeration of
fare or other checks that ·are ~·
Jn a plea agreement, the state
CBihed.
.
.
The bill vias one of five signed eggs at 45 ~ or lower to ward qreed ID dismiss the possession
The la!f,; which takes effect m by Voinovich on Tuesday. The off salmonella. Effective in 90 cfiarge in exchan.e for a plea of
90 dayl, lirmta the fee to 3 percenL other m - would:
days.
guilty to tho culuvation charge.
It IIIIo ~cbect ~ ID be • -Penni( fingerprints and pho- Modify the homestead tax Cultivllion is a felony of the fourth
~ the Supenntendent of tographs of delinquent c,hildren to exemption law to make .eligiblc delno.ICCOidina the court's crimi·
....,....,..,.
.
be uiiCd in arreating and bringing propeny held in certain kinds of nafbliliff, Piul Oerarcl
Supporters aatd the measure · them into custody, and allow use of legal trustS. Effective in 90 days.
Judge Crow accepted the plea
would IJIPIY only to government
,
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I
•
. ·~

Local Miller, McEwen recount results
announced; no significant changes

necessary material to repair the
lights at the tennis courts. The
mayor and council extended sincere thanks and g111tiblde to David
Deem, James McDaniel, Charles
Canter, and Bob Deemer for their
work in repairing lhe pool.
Councibnan Bill Roush reported
that lhe ditch on Second Street near
the Don Hubbard residence will be
cleaned. Councilman Dennis Wolfe
proposed that council consider
passing an ordinance regulating the
placing of election signs in the village and Cquncil agreed that was a
good idea. It was noted that many
of the signs put up this spring have
not been removed.
Police Chief Connolly reported
that members of the Nazarene
Church have requested that a sign
be erected on State Route 124
marking the entrance to the driveway to the church parking lot.
Councilman Buckley reported that
a contact would have to be made
with the Ohio Department of
T!11Rspcnation since ODOT has the
jurisdiction.
The need for adopting a wning
or building ordinance was dis-

cussed by council with May&lt;I Pape
agreemg that such an ordinance is
badly needed.
.
. Council agreed to accept sealed
bids for the old police cruiser. Bids
rust be submiued by noon on Aug.
Council ~ccepted the mayor's
report showmg $1,716 in receipts
and the re)XI"I from Chief Connolly
w~ich showed that he received 15
miSC~II~eous calls, issued 32 tlaf.
fie ~!latiOn s, drove 1,130 miles,
morutored lraffiC and SlOp signs on
Second Street and issued two warn- ,
ings for stop sign violations.
The cleik-treasurer's report presented by Janice Lawson showed
balances in funds as follows: general fund, $5,997; street construction, S19, 195.80; highway,
$3 ,662.45 ; fue department,
$5,161.74; water, $7,292.90; pool
$1,728.09 defici~ guaranty meter'
$2,575.66; cemetery, $71.81, for
total of$42,229.27.
Attending were the mayor
clerk-treas~rcr, Chief Cqnnolly:
and council J!!Cmbers, Buckley,
Roush, Denms Wolfe and Katie
Crow.

a

Plea bargain ends Smathers trial

(

~••••• •• • ••• ••• • •• • • •. •••·~•• • ••••••''''''''

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1

• , , , • • • • , 1 • , r • • • • • 1 1 ' • • • •. • • • • • • • • • ' • • • ' • J r • • • • • •
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GoverDOf sign~ check-cashing bill

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and semenced Smalhers to a term
Assislanl Prosec ulo rs Linda
of 18 months in prison, the maxi- Warner and George McCarthy repmum permitted by taw, and ordeted resented I he s1a1e and Smalhers
him to pay a fine of $1 ,000. He was was represemed by Pomeroy attor·
also ordered 10 pay coslS. The jury . neys Charles Knighl and Christowas then released with !hanks.
. pher Tenaglia.
·

--Local briefs-___;,
Departure times announced

'A bus caravan for the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio hear- •
ing in Canton on Thursday, regarding AEP' s environmental compli- :
ance plan, will depart from the Park:et Run Portal al Soulhem Ohio :
Coal Company at 10 a.m. The ca111van will pick up additional min- :ers and concerned citizens at II a.m. at the Big Bear store in •
Alhcns.
.
:
The hearings will be, held at 3 and 6.p.m., at City Hall Council,:: .
Charn)lecs, 218 Cleveland Avenue S.W. mCanton.
.
:.
Area business owners, concerned citizens and local miners are:encouraged to attend the hearing, and testify if possible.
.: ·'
Reservations can be made by calling the Meigs County Chamber. :
of Commerce at 992-5005.
•·
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EMS units answer calls

Four calls for assistance were answered on Tuesday and·::
Wednesday by units of Meigs Emergency Services.
,•:
On Tuesday 81 10:21 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Munay Road.: •.
Elizabeth Munay was taken to Vcterans Memorial H~ttal. At&gt; :
11:40 a.m., Middleport unit went to Race SueeL Virginl8 Hindy.•'
was transported to Holzer Medical Center. At 2:40 p.m., Rutlanil•:
(CODtlaaetl on l'lge 3)

,,

�·Commentary
.·

The Daily Sentinel

.'

111 Coart Street

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Pome101, Ohio
DIVOftD TO TIIIIN'I'IIti8TI or TIU MBI08-IIASON AREA

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ROBERT L WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

•
:

CIIAJlLENE HOEH.ICB
Gener11l Mamq;er

LETIERS OF OPINlON ..., welcome. They should be less thaD 300
words. All !otters ""' subject to oditin&amp; and must be signed with name,
addleso and lelepbone number. No IIDD&amp;nod lotl011 will be publisbed. LeU...
should be in good IUIO, llddmtin&amp; issuu, noCpe110nalities.

:Will Moammar
:.Gadhafi go quietly?
•"

; .~ By Tom Tiede
.·' WASIUNGTON (NEA) - Those who remember all the' way back to
the 1980s will recall when Moammar Gadhafi was Public Enemy No. I.
The Libyan strongman enslaved his subjects with the chains of tolalilarilinism, financed political terrorists in the Middle Eas~ and trashed the
qrderly conventio9s of international Slatecraft
·
· But then his dark star was eclipsed by other plane~a!r pariahs. Including Saddam Hussein of Iraq. The Onired Slates tried to kilf Gadhafi with a
!!Peale air strike in 1986, and thereafler turned its attention 10 other adver'saries. Gadhafi has not been so newsworthy since, and today he's only
Public Enemy No. 3 or 4.
. Yet there are those in America who still hate him as much as ever. And
:t(JI)y remain obsessed with an evergreen hope of bringing him down. They
Libyan refugees who have taken temporary sanctuary here, and who
have crganiz.ed a handful of liberation groups that practice either violent
or non-violent.opposition.
One of the non-violent parties is the Libyan Human Rights Commission. It's direcled by A. Omar Turbi, who mailllains an office in the diplomatic district of Washington. Tiubi believes Gadhafi has proven 10 be too
elusive and insulaled to be wiped away physically, hence he must be elimirlaled more peacefully:
· "We look at the problem from the perspective of human ri$.hts. If we
1\eep trying to go to war with Gadhafi, the losers wiD be the Ltbyan people. We want to get the Free World to confront him diplomatically, to
force him to restore the rights of the citizens, and then.he will wither away
·ill the climate of democracy."
_: · Turbi admiiS the notion is more easily imagi~ed than done. And there
..~an assortment of reasons. The rebel movement is quite small, for one
: tjling; Turbi says there are only 2,500 Libyans in the Unired States, and
'w)lereas most of them are highly educared and personally motivated, only
· ( few of them are politically active.
· The movement is not very noisy, either. Turbi says those who are orga,nized tend to be circumspect. They say that Gadhafi does notiOlerate mal' ~nleniS, ~d murders tllem regularly both inside and ouiSide his North
: Afncan nat•on, so they habitually operate m secret and do not reach out
:for vilal public support
·,: The result is that Washington has, in the 1{\llin, left the matter alone.
· Turb• clatms the Umted States has more or less abandoned the struggle to
(ree Libya. He says the Bush administration and Congress still call for
human rights reforms over there, but they have not sent a sufficiently
; l!luscular message of the son to Col. Gadluifi.
:: .; Not that the message· would be any guarantee. Turbi admits America
.-Oliled even when it was posting missives. The United States isolaled Gad;:Jdlfi diplomatically in tile 1980s, it also imposed trade sanctions, and apart
the air strike it may have given assistance to at least one rebel raid;
:.oadhafi slipped out of every squeeze.
·
·: The rebel raid was in t984. The Libyan regime said it was engineered
;.6y the CIA. The rebels attacked a military post that served as Gadhafi's
~part-time residence. They fought for several hours and got nowhere. Most
•: or the commandos were killed, a few were put on public display, and
:-some survivors now live in the Uniled Slates.
;: The survivors say Gadhafi became particularly vengeful and brutal
•;atter that. And human rights have sunk to zero in the desert country. Turbi
:-says the legal system in Libya follows sUite orders, there is no popular
~ voice or political liberty, and Gadhafi keeps between 500 and 5 500 politi··cal prisoners at a time.
'
~ So Omar Turbi says the force of arms hasn' t worked. Isolation hasn't
:=worked. Trade censure hasn't worked. And perhaps it's time to tum
::Instead to non-violent collective action. He says he dislikes Gadhafi as
.-much as anyone, but reality and history suggest tllat he must be persuaded
:=rather than pushed from power.
•; . Turbi says the Libyan Human Rig hiS Commission was created in 1985,
following one of Gadhafi 's domestic rampages. The colonel arrested
thousands that year whom he thought were involved in an assassination
r aucmpt. Two of Turbi 's brothers were jailed; one because he had enter~ tained friends with a Gadhafi impersonation.
~ : The commission is small and funded by private donations. It collects
; data concerning human rights transgressions in Tripoli, and works with
~ Ol'ganizations such as Amnesty International. Turbi says he also lobbies
~ Congress and the United Nations, trying to get the West to maintain diplo,. matic pressure on Gadhali:
~
"The U.S. has a good record of s1anding up for human righiS in most
~ places. The old Soviet Union, for instance. But it hasn't done the same
' thing in the Arab world. We want Americans to tell Moammar Gadhafi
~ that he must treat people right, that he must install a constitutional govern:: ment - and that would be his•undoing."
.; Maybe. The more militant Libyan refugees here are not so convinced.
:; They note that ?adha~. 50, has been.entrenched in. off!ce for nearly 23
:. years, he doesn t. care tf the commumues at large like tt or not, and the
~ only w~y to get nd of htm would be to launch another air strike on Libya:
,. The Umred Slates would not miss a second time.
·: . (C)l992 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
:; ; : 'We want Americans to tell him that he must inslall a constitutional
:•llovernment - and that would be his undoing.'
.; Moammar Gadhafi
.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Page-2-Tbe Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 8, 1992

on who suffered a stro~ that might
have been prevented by a $1,200
magnetic reso.nance imaging scan.
It was a test her doctors thought

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein
she should have, but her insurer
declined to cover.
David· White, a spokesperson
for the Health Insurance A~y of
America, nonnally champtons the
cause of health insurance industry.
But he was visibly shaken after a
recent day of hearings before the
Senate Labor and Human
Resources Commiuee.
... It ~as a draining hearing. It
was tragiC, absolutely tragic. It was
gut wrenching," White told our
reporter Andrew Conte.
There was the story of a mother
of four who was denied a routine
bone marrow transplant because
her health insurer claimed it was

experimental. Before she could
appeal, the cancer spread. She
,lamented to senators that her health
insurer was telling her, in essence,
that ''saving your life would be too
expensive. It felt as if they had the
power of life and death over me
and they chose deatll."
Another mother of a diabetic
child testified that she was forced
to seU her home in order to pay for
her son's health costs, which now
outstrip her income. She grimly
suggested that her son might be
best off if h\s .condition worsened
so Medicare would foot the bill.
Such s10ries are echoin~ across
the country with too much frequen·
cy. Looking toward tile convention ,
Democrats sense a window of
opportunity to seize health care on
the national level as Wofford did in
Pennsylvania. First they have to
mend the political nfts within their
own party, which has so far failed
to reach the kind of consensus on
health care that Republicans
reached on economics in the early
1980s.
Little (XOgress is expected until

*

·:from

~Today
in
• ••
....
••

:

history

By The Amclated Press
Today is Wednesday, July 8, the !90th day of 1992. There are 176
! 4ays left in the year:
~- Today's Highlight in History:
.
: On July 8, 1896, William Jennings Bryan, the presidential nominee: apparent of the DemoCratic national convention in Chicago, captivated
• listeners with his famous speech denouncing supporters of the gold sian: dard, saying, "You shall not crucifY. mankind upon a cross of gold."
• On thil dale'
; ln'l663, K~1 Charles n ofEnaland Kmtled acharter to RIKlde Island.
: · In 1776, a Col. John Nixon pve the lirst public reading of the Declara• lion of Independence to a crowd gathered at Independence Square in
: Philaddpllia.
.
; In 1889, The Wall Street Journal was first published.
• In 1891, future president Warren 0. Harding married Florence K.
: DeWolfe in Marion, Ohio.
~
In 1907. Fknnz Ziegfeld staged his fnt "Follies," on the roof of the
~ New York Theater.
~
In 1919, Prelident Wilaon m:eived a tumultuous welcome in New
;: Vork City after his return from the V~es Peace Conference in France.
'• In 1947, danolilion work began in New York City to ntake way f&lt;r the
~ new pt1111anellt heldqaanm of the United Nationa.
.
~
In 1950, Gen. Dou~ MacArthur was named commandet•in-chief of.
"' .Unlllld Nationl' fon:a tn Korea.
~

Tropical storm Darby off California '·

Democrats wise - to seize health-care issue
WASHINGTON - Democraqc
Sen. Harris Wofford's war cry m
Pennsylvania's special election last
fall was health insurance. Wofford
actually had much more to lose
than just a Senate seat- his wife's
health insurance was in jeopardy.
"My own wife was worried that
if I lost tile election, her pre-exist·
ing condition that she gets costly
treatment for at the. University of
Pennsylvania hospital would keep
us from getting health insurance,"
he recently told us.
By engineering a stunning upset
over former Auorney General
Richard Thornburgh, Woffcnl was
eligible foc the Federal Employees
Health Plan. He was allowed to
choose from several health-care
programs that, unlike most insurance policies, do not preclude
clients with pre-existing conditions.
Wofford's wife is covered.
Increasingly, being "covered"
is not enough: Loopholes can be
big enough to drive a truck
through. That proved true in the
case of Nancy Biddison, a Maryland woman we recently reported

"Betcha that Perot kid will be elected hall monitor by a landslide If his
probe uncovers his opponent's dirt."
·

. Congress-can ~et past the log jam
posed by polibcal action committees - medical, pharmaceutical
and insurance industry-related -;that showered more than $60 million on congressional candidates
between 1980 and the fnt half of
1991.
· One .Democratic snte~st called
a consensus a "hypothebcal situation that was not going to happen.
You're not going to have all the_
DemocraiS agree on one program
for comprehensive refonn of health
care. My guess is ~at you will not
see the Democrauc Convenuon
take a vote on a specific health-care
proposal because there won't be
one present"
.
Wofford told us that even
though Bush would probably veto
any health-care legislation passed
by Congress, the Democrats coula
win.by losing. "It will just become
all the mon: an,!ssue in .the presidenual elecuon, he predicts.
SKINNE~ 011! . BUSH George Bush s pohucal fortunes
may be flagging, but his popularity
witll his beleaguered chief of slaff
couldn't be sironger. Sam Skinner
recently told White House visitors
how George Bush was the highest
quality human being he had ever
worked foc.
The example he ciled took place
in Kennebunkport last year. Skinner and his wife stayed with the
first family overnight. Skinner
explained tllat Bush wanted to play
a round of golf the next morning,
but Skinner didn't have an alarm
clock, and couldn't run the risk of
oversleeping for an appointment
with the president. Bush went to
his own room and presented Skinner with a clock embossed with the
presidential seal.
Skinner set it for 5:59 a.m. At
6:00, there was a knock on his
door. As Skinner rubbed the sleep
out of his eyes, he was astonished
to see the commander-in-chief
slanding in his bathrobe that was
monogrammed with "President of
the United Slates." He was even
more surprised when he saw Bush
holding a tray with coffee, milk
and sugar. "I didn't know whether
you wanled cream or sugar," Bush
thotightfully explained.
Copyright, 1992, Unired Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

issue, bashing Congress at every
tum. But Perot's sudden emergence
pula hold on this approach.

De!Jiocrauc convention nears, It
stems from the fact .that all .!~!~
camps .have now dec1ded on trutial
HI
camplllgn strategies.
Wi~ut Ross ~~ it would all
be. so stmple. If tt were Bush vs. · Furious polling by the GOP has
Clmton, th~ pres•dent .could ru~ an shown that Perot's biggest Stren$th
all -o~t anu-Democ~uc, camp8lgn, is that he is viewed as a non-polttiblammg all the nauon s woes on cian. The GOP fears thal if Bush
the .Democrat-controlled &lt;:ongress, centers his campaign on an antiaskmg how much worse tt would Congress theme, it will be viewed
be if there was a Democrat in the by voters as a typical inside-theWhite House.
beltway feud, and they will turn
~lin10n, in tum, could make a away from both parties to pull the
maJor push for the moderate, mtd- Perot lever.
die-class vote, assuming that the
Although a number of higherDemocraiS' traditional base would ups in the Bush camp- including
remain loyal out of its intense dis- Vice President Dan Quayle and
like for Bush. That push for the GOP Chairman Rich Bond .:... still
mid~le-class ~ould center on an favor this sttategy, it is on a back
ouiSid.er campa1gn that would stress burner until it is clear whether or
bringing a fresh apprtiBCh to Wash- not Perot will fade come the fall.
ington and Clinton's ability the
However, this limits Bush.
work with, and tame, Congress. In Polling shows that voters want an
other words, Jimmy Carter's win- outsider, but, as the incumbent,
ning formula from 1976.
Bush clearly cannot slage an outBut with Perot in the contest and sider campaign. This really leaves
near the top of the polls, nothing in him with only one choice - the
this campaign will be simple.
GOP strategy of the moment- to
Perot has given the Bush camp argue, using surrogates, tha~ while
the biggest headaches so far. For a Bush may not be perfect, he at least
long time, Bush strategists toyed . is better than the other guys.
with an all-out anti-congressional
This strategy worlced so well for
strategy. In fact, in many of his Bush in 1988 against Masearly campaign appearances in the sachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis.

Robert J, u"a:gman

your oppone~t (i.e.; the Willie Horton commercials). So, over the past
few weeks, the!'C has been an allout push to "bring up Perot's negatiyes" as_~ White Ho~ strate·
giSt puts IL Once the pubtic cools
to Pero~" he says, "and they will,
then w~. can turn our sights on
Cltnton.
.
The Perot camp8lgn -now led
by ~ormer GOP operative _Ed
Rollins, former Caner campa1gn
~hief Hamilton Jordan and a growmg number of ex-Carter hands has as its top priority holding onto
the gains the Texas businessman
has already made, while turning an
all-volunteer campaign into a professional force that has a chance to
capture the White House.
·
Perot's immediate task is to
meet and blunt the Bush attack
Over tile coming weelcs, Perot will
fight back against charges coming
from tile GOP. He will also try to
keep himself in the public spotlight
in order to minimize the traditional
"bounce" - the upsurge in the
polls - that major party candidates
usually receive from their national
conventions. His new team sees
Bush as the real competition, reasoning that Clinton can't win
unless Perot first loses. So the
Perot team's aim is to prevent the
negatives.
Perot's strength is also his
wealcness. Polls show him doing

Return of the ~ovie morality code?
A cardinal in the Roman
Catholic Church is making the
movie and television industri~s
stan to sweat the way Ross Perot IS
making the Republican and Democratic parties sweat
What the cardinal has done is to
brins up the name of tile dreaded
Mouon Picture Production Code.
That was the code that gov~med
every movie turned out by the Hoilyw~40s.film studios in the 1930s

and

It would be called censorship
today. The movie makers haled tt
back then but, ironically, that era
became known as Hollywood's
"Oolden Age."
·
Cardinal Roger Mahony of the
archdiocese of Los Angeles, in
mentioning the dreaded Motion
Picture Production Code to the
entertainment industry, said, •'I
don't say this is the only possible
mean's of reforming movies and
TV, but ...." He didn't have to say
any more. The beads of perspiration were beainning to fonn on the
moguls' foreheads.
The cardinal could have m~de
,
the same warnmg 10 years ago for movies and TV were almost as
bad then - but. it would have had

no noticeable effect. Things are different now . The "Perot phenomenon_" in politics is encouragtog tile dtsaffectcd in oJ,her areas to

George R. Plagenz
step up and be heard. Perot is giving America back its voice.
The " cultural elite" - including the media and enterlllinment
industry - may have to back off in
the face of the new assertiveness of
iiS critics.
Take the "Murphy Brown"
flap. When the fictional TV
anchorwoman had a baby out of
wedlock, columnist Ellen Goodman addressed herself to "the
Quayle types." "Hey, it's just tetevision,' • she wrote in scornful wonderment thai anyone would take
· any of it seriously.
This time her critics responded.
"Her,. we know it's jusl television, • they said. ''Most of the v~
1
b I'
1 ·
en e, ruta 11 Yand vu garity we
have to watch every night is 'just
telev.ls•.· on' - and. fiction£, .at that.
B
n:~ ~o less harmful or being

c

. ..

'"''"""':""''"'

ABC newsman Sam Donaldson
added his own mocking tones to
Ellen Goodman's . "You would
think this was the first time a
woman had a baby out of wedlock," he said in speaking of the
public outcry.
Donaldson's critics, who in the
past may have been too timid to
reply, now found their voices. No,
they said, we know it's not the first
time. What do you take us for?
Wha~ we are saying is that by portraytng the unwed mother as a
glamorous TV personality, " Murphy Brown" had the effect of
glamorizing unwed motherhood.
These sUddenly vocal dissenters
- how large a group do ihey reprelent? An Associaled Preas survey
showed that 82 percent of those
polled said movies contain too
much .violence, 80 percent found
too much profanity and 72 percent
complained of too much nudity.
(Footnote: Variety reports that
movie allendance hit a 15-year low
· in 1991.)
'
"Hofiywood no longer reflects,
or even respecu, the Vlilues of most
American families," says Michael
MedvedJ co-host of "Sneak P.re-

views," the public television
series. "The entetlainment media
celebrate vulgar behavior and
obscene language. We have
enshrined ugliness as a new slandard. The problem is a sickness of
tile soul."
··
Speaking of the soul, where is
the church fitting in here? In his
new bo.ok "The Devaluing o'I
America,' ' former Secretary of
Education William Bennett says
"ln. the IJ4ttle roc preserving sound
S\'Cial ~d. m?raJ norms, many reli;
g.ous Institutions can no longer be
~ounted on as allies. In some
mstances they have even hun these
efforts.''
:
. Could have been thinking
a d~ument issued.by a group of .
Umted Methodists in California?
"Too often," said tlie writers iO
~greeing with a church declara•
uon calling for a Christian sexual
mora)ity, "older people. tend 19
sancufy the dominant social atti·
tudes of the time when they were
young."
But aside from the liberal
churches, things may be lDf~king
up . .
' (C)1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASS~.
.

he

of

• IColumbusI87" I

•

les, it was expected to bring scatterct) afternoon thundershowers to
Across the nation
Tropical storm Darby remained the mountains and deserts of the
offshore but blanketed Southern Southwest.
Forecasters also predicted scatCalifornia with clouds early today.
Overcast skies greered much of the tered showers throughout the Midwest and the Appalachian region.
rest of the nation at dawn.
Darby, which was downgraded Hot, sunny weather was expected
from a hurricane to a tropical storm to stretch from southern Rorida to
on Tuesday, brought light rain and the southern Plains.
Temperatures today were
5-[oot swells to the region Tuesday. Swells up to 7 feet were expected to be in the 70s in New
England and New York, the northexpected today.
Although the system was about ern Rockies and the Northwest
7(~) miles southwest of Los Ange- coast. Readings in the 80s were

6:II.

'

Voinovich taken to hospital
W. VA.

~S~ho~w,•;.;rs.,r.~-·~tom~;;;;;;•~Riiial~n~,;.;;;;;;;;..-;,;,;;,_.;;lce;;.....;;S;;;;un,;;;n:.,y.,;Pt.,;·;,;C;:;Ioudy~...;;C;Ioc;:;;.Jd•y
VioAsSO&lt;~Iodl'rouGtlpliCIN.r

C19i2Ac&lt;u-WM!ho&lt;,lnc.

----Weather---By The Assoriated Press
South Centr~l
Tonight, mostly cloudy with
scattered showers and thunderstorms. Low near 70. Chance of
rain 50 percent Thursd"Y, variable
·cloudiness witll a chance of show·
ers or thunderstorms. High in the

upper 80s. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Extended rorerast
Friday through Sunday:
A chance of showers and thunderstorms Friday and Sunday and
fair Saturday. Highs mainly in the
80s and lows in the 60s.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov .
George v.oinovich became ill early
thtS mommg and was taken 10 University Hospitals. His doctor deter·
mined he was suffering from
intestinal flu, and he was sent
home.
Douglas Brandt, hospital administrative associate, said Voinovich,
55, was released at 7:12 a.m., about
. three hours after he was brought in.
Vo~novich returned to the governor s mans10n.
yoinovich aide John Meyer said
Vomov1ch woke up sick to his
sto~ch . When the nausea persisted, •t was deculed to take him to
the hospital.
"The real problem was persistent stomach discomf&lt;rt," he said.
Voinovich was taken to the hospital by his doctor, Manuel
Tzagournis.
Meyer said he didn't know what
caused the illness. The governor
had been feeling nne earlier.

Details on the tests and whether
Voinovich was treated were not
immediately available, hospital
spokesman David Irwin said.
Voinovich was resting at the
governor's mansion and awaiting
the results of tests, his office said.
Meyer said he didn't know what
tesiS were taken.
Voinovich probably would not
attend appointments or business
meetings today, Meyer said.
A news conference at 9:30 a.m.
at the governor's mansion still
would be held, but the governor
probably would not attend, Meyer
said . Mike Dawson , executive
assistant, will handle the session
which was called to discus;
expenses of Voinovich's office and
residence.
It had not been determined
whether Voinovich still would
spealc at a conference of Job Training Partnership Act officials in
Columbus later this morning.

Russian visit to nuclear
.weapons plant sparks protest Witnesses say future
· By JAMES HANNAH
has been lost from the slacks into
Associated Press Writer
MIAMISBURG - Some residents say the Mound nuclear
weapons plant has enough pluiOnium withoul the federal government
having IIi buy more from Russia.
The residents on Tuesday
protested a scheduled visit to the
plant by Russian scientists.
· Fourteen protesters demonstrated outside the plant carrying signs
that read: "Plutonium Kills" and
"Ruasia: Keep Your Plu10nium."
"We feel like the Mound
doesn't need any more plutonium," said Sharon Cowdrey, one of
the protesters. "The truth is the
Mound can ' t handle plutonium.
They've already contaminated a
park, a mile-long canal, ponds. We
have no idea how much plUtonium

a; ainst both Bush·
and Clinton, and in most income,
age and class divisions. He is under
growing pressure 10 come forward
with much more specific positions
on the major issues of the day.
However, his support CUIS so completely across all lines that no matter whal position he eitds up laking
on any issue, he will probably disillusion some supporters. His
quandary: He must answer critics
who say he has no positions yet
stay general enough not to offend
too many of his supporters.

For Clinton, it is a time to duck.
His strategists believe the growing
Bush-Perot feud is working in his
favor. If Clin10n simply stays out
of the line of fire, the escalating
war works to his advanlage. For the
time being, his almost-broke campaign can wait until federal funds
stan flowing after the convention.
Meanwhile, he can tend to the
Democrats' traditional constituencies while also broadening his base
through the Democratic Platfonn
which his people have written, and
his new economic plan, which is
considerably more conservative
than earlier versions.
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
For Clinton, it is a time to duck.
His stnUegists believe the growing
Bush-Perot feud is working in his
favor.

By Ass9ciated Press
Across Ohio
Showers and thunderstorms will
linger across much of Ohio 10night.
Low temperatures will be in the
upper 60s and lower 70s.
A chance of showers remains
for Thursday, though mainly over
the southern part of the state. Highs
will be in the 80s.
The record high on this date in
Columbus was 102 in 1936. The
record low was 49 in 1984.
Sunset tonight will be at 9:03
p.m. Sunrise Thursday will be a1

IND.

~A~I!!~~)a!ep~m:rie~B!s~~edt!~i~~dea~!~~!~id ~~!~~w~

~ you ~ve ~n perple~d by
the mcre~stnB!Y bttter !'hetoric from
the prestd~ntial cand~dates as th_e

The Dally SentlneJ-Pag&amp;--4

Connict in scheduling
delays negotiations

1

PIKETON (AP) - Officials at a
federally owned uranium plant
have delayed contract negotiations
with a union because of scheduling
·problems.
Several Martin Marietla Energy
Systems officials involved in talks
witll the Oil, Chemical and Atomic
'Workers Union Local 3-689 are
· unable 10 attend the July 29 meeting, company spokesman Tim
Matchett said Monday.
The meeling has not been
rescheduled.
Martin Marietta operates the
.Portsmouth Gaseou s Diffusion
Plant for the Department of Energy.
Union employees are working
under terms of the company's latest
contract proposal, issued in February.
· About 1,000 union members
struck the plant June II, 1991.
They offered on March 27 to return
,10 work and were back at the plant
· April6.
The last contract lalks were held
]UJIC

s.

The main contract issues to be
resolved included seniority rights
and overtime assignments.
·
. The plant, about 70 miles south
of Columbus, reprocesses fuel for
commercial nuclear reactors and
the military. .

The Daily Senlinel
~111411)

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Area death

Stocks

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depends on math, science

the air."
Ms. Cowdrey, a member of the
citizens' group Miamisburg llnviBy RICH HARRIS
Schools must "be selective and
ronmental Safety and Health, also
Associate Press Writer
decide what is of value to teach and
said tritium is in the city's drinking
CLEVELAND - The nation what is of value to learn," she said.
water. Tritium is another radioac- needs a renewed emphasis on math
Ms. Parrish also recommended
tive material used at Mound.
and science if it is going to lead the that the programs tap into youngFour scientists and administra- world in technology, says Sen. sters' curiosity rather than bore
tors from Russia's nuclear agency John Glenn, a former astronaut
them with dry facts.
were scheduled to visit the plant
Glenn, the first American to
One such program is the World
today and Thursday to see Mound- orbit the earth, on Tuesday held a in Motion ktt, developed by the
produced shipping con1ainers that Governmental Affairs Committee Sociely of Automotive Engineers,
wiU be used to move tile plutonium hearing on math and science educa- Salkind told the panel. He said the
from Russia to tile United States.
tion at NASA's Lewis Research kit lets young children use toy cars
Alan Jones, acting manager for Center.
and boats to learn the principles of
the Deparunent of Energy's Day"If we're going 10 be competi- physics and mathematics.
ton-anea office, said the five kilo- tive in10 the future, it's goin~ 10 be
Sal kind also cited a program
grams of Russian plutonium-238 because we got with it agarn and that brought 150 Girl Scouts to the
will be used to supplement U.S. out-compete anybody else in these
Cleveland Children's Museum.
~pplies. H~ said it will be shipped
areas,'' said Glenn, D-Oh[o.
Members of the Society of Women
m the contamers from Russia 10 the
"We're going to be No.I, and Engineers
also participated in that
department's plant in Savannah not just in the way you'd wave a
program.
River, s.c.
big foam fmger at a ball game and
"We need more such programs
say,
'We're No.I! We're No.I I"'
"That material is not coming
to counter the socielal stereotypes
from Russia to Miamisburg " he said.
that
discourage women and minori"Being No.I as a nation means ties from
Iooes said.
'
pursuing mathematics and
The visit will mark the ftrst time we determine our own future . science,' ' he said.
We're not beholding to somebody
~ossian officials have ever been to
· Mound: The plant, about 10 miles else. We're the ones who determine
southwest of Dayton, makes deto- what the future of tllis country will
be.• ,
nators for naclear weapons.
Among the witnesses were Ohio David Darst
William Lancaster, an Energy
Depanment security officer, said Board of Regents Chancellor
David William Darst, 82, of
there are special measures to Elaine Hairston and Ohio
Middlepo~
died on Tuesday, July
ensure that the Russians don't have Aerospace Institute President
7,
1992
at
Veterans
Memorial HosMichael Salkind. The institute is a
access to classified infonnation.
Mound currently is using pluto- private group of nine universities, pital's extended care unit
He was born on June 26, 1910
nium shipped from Savannah River two federal research laboratories
in Middleport, son of the late
10 build power sources for satellites and several companies.
Ms. Hairston said Ohio's Pro- David Ernest and Bertha
and space probes. But the federal
government has not ordered any ject Discovery is helping create Gennheimer Darst.
He was a retired employee of
new power sources and has pro- better students and better teachers
posed shutting down the Mound in the state's primary and sec- Imperial Electric of Middleport and
was a partner in the Dairy Queen in
ondary schools.
plant)lv 1996.
Project Discovery is aimed at Point Pleasant, W.Va. He was a
Jones said that if new orders
come in llrld the plant is still open, prepartng middle-school students member of Middleport First Baplisl
the R~ian plutonium eventually for advanced and science classes Church and was on tile 1929 chamcould be used at Mound. He said· by developing their ability to ana- pionship Middleport football team.
He is survived by his wife,
all of the plutonium-238 used at the lyze and solve problems, using sciClara
Mae Hamilton Darst, Midplant is encapsulated in steel cas- entifiC principles.
. "If we are to truly shape the dleport; a son, Bill (Mary Ann)
mgs.
Ms. Cowdrey siid sne wants to future and prepare today's studeniS Darst, Lima, Ohio; a brother,
see the plant cleaned up, "Nith the for tomorrow 's workplace chal - Robert Darst, Columbus; a sister,
workers employed in the cleanup lenges, we must reach young minds Dorothy Davis, Middleport; three
efforts. About 2,100 people work at early ... and transform the way stu- grandchildren and three great·
dents - and teachers - approach grandchildren.
Mound.
Services will be held on Friday
math and science education," Ms.
at II a.m. at Fisher Funeral Home
Hairston said.
Sammie Campbell Parrish, who in Middleport with Rev. James
took over as Cleveland schools Seddon officiating. Burial will· be
superintendent last week, said in Middlepon Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
schools will have 10 reconsider tile
home
on Thursday from 2 to 4 p.m.
content and struCture of their math
Am Ele Power .................. .33 1(2
and 7 to 9 p.m.
and science programs.
Aahland Oil ....................... 26 3/8

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Bob Ev- ......................... 17 1/4
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Goodyo.-TlR ..................66

Key CeniUJion ...................20 l.andl Ellcl~.........................33 318
Limiled Inc....................... 20 5/8
Multimedia Inc. :................28 1/4
Rax ReatatnnL ..................l/2
Reliance Elecaie................ 18 1/8
Robbins&amp;:Myers ................ 16 1/4
Sboney'slnc...................... 21 3/8

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.10

The Meigs County Bikers Association wiU,hold a hog roast Saturday at Hawgholler .on Sllte Route
681 as a benefit for the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center and
the Meigs County Inrtrrnary. The
meeting to be held there Friday
night is a cleanup and planning session for the roast

------Meigs announcements - - - - other local talent. Pastor Steve
Reed inviies the public. Fellowship
will follow .
Artists' work displayed
. The Meigs County Public
Ltbrary will be featuring local
artists' work throughout the summer. Works currently on display' at
Legion dance slated
the library belong to Juanila LodThere will be a dance at the Rut- wtck.
land American Legion Hall on SatTractor pull
urday from 8 p.m. to midnight.
The Scipio Township Fire
Music will be provided by Whites Department will hold a tractor pull
Saturday with weigh-in at 5 p.m .
Hill Band. The public is inviled.
and pull at 6 p.m. Classes for children, 800; and adults, 900, 1,000
Blood pressure dinic
and
1,1 00. There is a 50 percent
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
will hold a blood pressure clinic at payback.
Program to be presented
the town house on Tuesday from
"Dare to Dream" will be pre·
10 to noon. All members are urged
to attend and bring a covered dish.
senred br the Youtll of United Pentecosts Church and the Kent
Christian
College Drama Team on
Dance scheduled
Belles and Beaus Western Style Sunday at 2 p.m. at the United PenDance Club will sponsor an open tecostal Church in Middleport nie
dance at the senior citizens center public is invired.
in Pomeroy on July 18 from 8 to II
Lodge to meet
p.m. Caller will be Homer Magnet
The Shade River Lodge No. 453
of Minford . All Western style will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. There
square dancers are invited. will be work in the E.A. degree.
Refreshments will be served.
RefreshmeniS will be served.
Hymn sing
T~ Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom will have a hymn
st~g Fnday at 7:30 p.m. with Doug
Veteraas Memorial Hospital
Ctrcle, The Dailey Family and
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS •
Cecil King, Bidwell.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES None.
Eleven were fined and three othHOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
ers forfeiled bonds injple court of
Discharges, July 7 ·Myrtle J:raMiddleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
ley,
Mrs. Thomas Hodge a11d
Tuesday night
daughter,
Donna Lalhey, Robrn
Fined were Mark W. Schartiger,
Middleport, S25 and costs, con - Reiber, Eileen Searls, Mrs. Hoben
suming alcohol under age 21, and Tackett and son, Pribble Wilson,
$25 and costs, disorderly manner; Robin Wooldrigde.
Births, luly 7 - Mr. and Mrs.
_Stephen R. Brumfield, Middleport,
Robert
Bonecutter, a son , Oak Hill.
$25 and costs, consuming alcohol
Mr.
and
Mrs . Charles Bowen, a
under age 21, and $25 and costs,
Vinton.
Mr. and Mrs . Ned
son,
expired operator's license; John
Salla, Vin10n, $25 and costs, con- Hall, a son, Jackson. Mr. and Mrs.
suming alcohol under age 21; James Smith, a daughlcr, Jackson.
Christopher T. McKinney, Middleport, S100 and costs, resisting
arrest, and $50 and costs, disorderSPRING VALLEY CINEMA
ly manner.
446 4524
. :. '
Others fined were Richard E.
Sayre. Racine, $10 and costs,
expired operator's license; Walter
Schartiger, Middleport, $25 and
costs, disorderly manner; Phillip
M. Hood, Middleport, S25 and
costs, open container; Christopher
Rayburn, Middleport, $25 and
costs, disorderly manner, and $100
and costs, and 10 days in jail, menacing threats; Michael H. Tabor,
Gallipolis, $10 and costs, squealing
tires; Darlene S. Milam, Cheshire,
$16 fine only on speeding; Harry
R. Butcher, Rutland, $25 and costs
disorderly manner, and coun costs
only on a con1empt of coun charge.
Forfeiting bonds were Richard
CCIIIIIi 50011 1
L. Thornton, New Haven, W. Va.,
JEM ClAUD( W"" 0NM: lfl •UftJr[ISAl SOI.DJU •
$210, driving under sus~nsion;
James D. Council, Langsville, $61,
speeding; and Frances Whittington,
Middleport, $60, following too
closely.
Craft classes orrered
Children's craft classes, for ages
3-9, will begin on Saturday, and
will continue July 18 and July 25
from 10 to 11 :30 a.m. Each class
wiD cost $4. Shirin Nuggud will be
the instrue10r.

Hospital news

Court news

7

Store to reopen
Lawrence's Grocery Store,
Long Bottom , which has been
closed since the death of Howard
Lawrence has been reopened by his
wife, Joan, and will operate from 9
a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Mrs. Lawrence said that
nei~hbors and friends assisted in
the mventocy which made it possible for her to open this week.

CAPTURE YOUR MEMORIES IN GOLD!

.

Offer ends Augu sl16, 1992 .

'

Lottery

C..... 1'eA
, ........ , ....U"'

Pick 3 Numbers
4-5-2
(four, five, two)
Pick 4 Numbers
4-9-S-7
(four, nine, five, seven)
BuckeyeS
19-26-27-32-35
(nineteen, lwenty-six, twentyseven, dtlrty-two, thirty-five)

- -·Local briefs---

.14

.II
. .11

Correction

I

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

INTREPID

Custom futuresA Total \lalue Of pver $120.

Plus,

Price &amp;ood on Minuet and lnfrtpid stylri only,
1 SOfl'lt ''"lrk 1iol'll ll'lrf tpply. Sft drMr lof . .....,

Sl9950

UTUUAY, JULY II

JIRTQl~Q

IUnGIS11diOWS

(lwlityh•+-·

lOK GOLD HIGH SCHOOL CLASS RINGS
IRING THIS AD

n .... 'iRe,..,

..•....,.

.

1001......

...fLO.:
Sl-Y, liLY 12
12 ..... '111 ....

FlatH PIIIMICY
716 ••, ........ ....

. (Coatlaued from Pqe 1)

unit wel)t to Meigs Mine 2. BlU Crlbtree went to Holzer.
On Wednesday at 1:46 Lm., ~utland squad went to Meigs·Mine
31. Daft Lewis was takeilto Veterans.

expecled foc the rest or the Nonheast, the northern Midwest, northern Plains and most of Oregon,
Nevada and Utah.
Highs in the 90s were forecaSt
for the southern Rockies and 111011t
of California, the Squtheast, the
Mississippi Valley and southern
Midwest. Highs in the IOOs were
expected for the southern Plains
and the Southwest.
The high for the nation Tuesday
was 107 degrees at El Paso, TCXll$,
a reading that broke the city's 41 year-old record of 104 .

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

8751883

'

.,

.I

�)

1992

. The Daily Sentinel

Sports

·

Wednesday, July 8, 1992

Page 4.

Cincinnati beats Chicago 3-2 to collect sixth straight·vlctory
Press

By The Associated
Rob Dibble g.ets suspe~ded!
Jose Rijo gets a wm and Cincmnau
geU farther and fllllher in front of
the Nllional League WesL
Things look quite nonnal for the
Reds again.
Cincinnati, which three weeks

ago looked like it was ready to be lead over the Bmves.
chopped up by the surging Atlanta
The Reds • game with Chicago
Braves, apjlears ready to make was typical of the way Cincinnali's
mincemeat of the NL West. The
Reds won their sixth straight game
- and 50th of the year -with a 32 victory over the Chicago Cubs on
Tuesday and grabbed a six-game

been going lately.
.
Minus shortstop 8arry Larkin,
who's out with a toothache, backup
~e Benavides bit an RBI double in the ninth for what pro&gt;ed to

be the winning run.

With the Reds ahead 3-1, Ryne
Sandberg led off the bottom of the
ninth with a double and scored on a
single by Mad&lt; Grace. Andre Dawson's line drive to Bill Doran at
second base doubled off Grace.
Then Kal Daniels beat out an
infteld hit but was thrown out tl)'ing to reach second, ending the
game.
"That run in the ninth was a big
run for us," Piniella said. "That
was a wild finish."
Things might not be so wild if
Rijo (6-6) can continue to m:over
from injures and pitch like he did
against the Cubs.

Rijo allowed four hits through
seven innings. The only run he
allowed came in the seventh when
Andre Dawson hit his 13th homer.
N0t111 Charlton pitched the last
two innings for his 20th save.
Dibble, along with outfielder
Glenn Braggs, was suspended
Tuesday by NL president Bill
. While for four games each because
of their June 24 fight with the
Houston Astros. Both have
appealed.
Houston coach Ed Ott, whose
picture was taken Iinder a pile of
players with his a.nn around Dibble's neck, was suspended for
seven days and pitcher Pete Har-

FOP, Syracuse notch wins
in Hartford LL Tournament
By Rex A. Young

comes down in tbe third inning or Tuesday's
National League game in Cblcago, wblcb tbe
Reds - 3-1. (AP)

BACK IN TIME - Chicago's Doug Dascen. zo (riCht) gets back to llrst base In dme before
- the late tag of CinCinnati rnt sacker Hal Morris

.'

In the majors.•.

C.Uiomili (Blyl"• 3·2) • Deuob
'·ll. ''"~ l·l)ltMiJWIU·
k•
. 6-4 :0.5 p.m.

cr.....

NATIONAL LEAGUE
E.llern DIYisloft

TWL
Plu•b•qh ..............46 31

Pet.
.llol

(R,.,. 2-3).1'" p.m.

Major league leaders

.soo

NewYort ..- ..........40 43

.Gl

4.5
4.5
6

Chic:qo.......•.... ...... 39

43

.416

PkilaielP,ia ......:-... 36 47

6.5

.434

10

WllterftDIYIIioll

CINCINNATI ....... .SO
Allanra ...................44
S..llloto ..............43
Sao Fnncilco ........40
Hciw:t.M ................. 38
IM ....... ........... 36

31
37
41
42
-45
46

.617
.543
..ll2
.o411
.43il
.439

6

l.l
J()j

13

l&lt;l

Tuesday's scom

ONONNATI 3, Chicago 2
Montreal 4, Los AnaeJe. 1, la pmc
Mon~te~l4, l..cl Angelca 0, 2nd game
S1n Fnneitco 3, Philadelphia 1, hi

"s.n FnnciiCO 10, Philadelphia 6. llld

.....
1

PiulburJ)\ 5, Houmrt 3
NeoN Yott. .5, Atlanu 4
SL Louk 6. San OiCJO 3
QNONNATI (llclchu &amp;-6)

It Otie~·

New YOO: (Whiaehurn 1-3) • Atlanul
(Olivine 12-3), 7:40p.m.
SL Loui1 (01ivanll 4--4) II San Diceo
(Sanirlln 4-2), !t:OS p.m.

Thursday's games
Philadelphi1 (MulhoU1nd 9-4) u Sift
~Mao (EU."d 0.2), 4~p.m .
Montreal (N1hht'IIZ S-6) at San FranciJco (Otivcn•ll-0), 4 :05p.m.
Piru~rah 0/. Cnlc 0.2) at ONCIN·
NATI (Swindell 1-2). 7:)5 p.m.
Atllnu (leibrandt 7-3) at Chic•&amp;o
(JKtton ...9). s:o5 r.m.
New YGfl (Gondcn 6-1) at Howton

O'l&gt;nu&amp;d l·l), , ,35 p m.
SL l.nuil (Tewkabury 9-2) al l.Cf An·
aclel (Cirldiotli 6-7), 10:35 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
[llltrn Oh•l•lon

o.rou. ...................19
~ro..u .......l4

Pd.
.622
..513
.:531
.500

CD
4
7j
10
12

_..,s

45

.464

13

49

.410

17.!i

Wr~~l ~rn

OIYii lnn
MiMaMU ..............49 3l
.591

Oak1and .................4 ~ l 4
T.a• ............... .... ..AS 40

Cblcaao ..................42 39

IC.tnlu Ciay ...........14 48
Se&amp;rtle .... -............. ..33 51
c.Jifomii .............. .J2 50

•.
•.•

•

.58S
.S29
.SI9
.415
.393

.390

1
S.S

6.S

U
17
17

Tut$11ny'!li scores
New York 2, MinnetoU I
Toronto -4, Scl1lle J
Cl.BVEL.ANO3, C•lifoml• I
01Goil3, O.kl~r.d 2
BOIIM 3, KlntuCiay 2. 11 inninas
Olcalto l . lhllimm 4
Milwaukee4, Tcu• l

Tonlghf's gc.mes
Minnesntc (.Smi ley S-4) 1l New York
(Pwa 1-6), 7:30p.m.

O..kJ•nd (Neli1011 1·1) It Detroit (I.C~

,_..,,7:35p.m.
ltmalt City (Nch1rdo ~) It Botton
(V'""' 1·5), ' '" p.m.
Chle~p fflo•lh -4-&lt;1) ll 811]timore
(MMOoa 1-3), 7:lS..
Sooa11 (lll'...lf&lt;i) 111 T..,.to ~~

5~:e:3lp.m.
1-6) "CLIM!UNI)INW
WilW•iW•

mo 9·6) U Tau•

~ 7-6),1:" p.m.

ntnc~o;•apmes

SNidl (Jolauoa S·i) '-' New Yolk
(I · 'rtu-e.?=-p.m.
Cbloop ()loDowoll'll-4).~

..l),=;31 6o~) .. S.Bodlltl
. ........

(IJIM S.2;), :l! .....

.
0Uito4 (Don• 0·1) at Toroa.to
~10.3),7:11 .....

r

.322; Onoc. Chicota. .321; Shcfficl4.

Di..... l17.

RUNs-a·.

IGIJl,

Mantnll.l,

s.n

-.S6;GN·

1:r'DeSiliaLk.. ~.

l!; T. """"""" Suo !Mao,l~ GwyM,
S.n ~Mao, 53; Roblru,l:INciNNATI,
l~ Knolo.,Phihdolollio,ll.
ltBI - Sher!ieht, San Die,o, .51;
D1ul1m1, Philldelphil, :51; McOriff, S.n
Dieao, 55; Mumy, New Ycd. 54; L.
WdltO',- 5 1 ; - AlW&lt;o,
51; DIWICIII.,Chielp. 50.
HITS - Krui., Philadelphia, 101;
PtndlltM, Atlanta, 101; V.d'ifb. Pillll·
burah. 99: Owyoa. Sto Dseao. 99:
~Mao.

(Tumlin 16-5), 7:JS p.m.

NewYcd: ..............41 41
Ba~kJn ................... JJt 42

SID fmiCI&amp;CO,

T.-DOUBLESS..- I&gt;unc.n.96.Plriladalphi.t,

Fnne1100 {Burkcst 6-5), 3:35p.m.
Hawton (Willi•m• 3-0) .t Piu..WtJh

Toronto .. ................ SI 31
8ahim~ ...............47 35
Mi]waui.ee .............43 38

0

Sheffield, Sua Dioao. '7: DeShiold•.

to (BoWc 5-S), 2:20p.m.
Mmtn:1l (Nabholl 5·6 and Barna I·
2) at loa Ansda (Ojeda 5..oi and Aaucio
1.0), 2., l :OS p.m.
Ph_iladc~phia (Schilling 6-6) ll San

WL

BATTINO - Ktuk, Phildelphi1,
.354; Vust,.h, PiuabwJh, .339; M~
G~ff, S•n Di•J~ .321; o.,,nn,_ S•.n

'f. Ullk

2l; V..SI,U. Piouburzb, ll; W. Clo&lt;k,
San fnncft(o, 20; Murny, New York,
20; Bi.... H&lt;u.... 19;
I': Pendleton. AlliMI, l 9: Sarulbcra.

lkll,"""""""

Chi01JO.I9: Wallleh,Montz811.19.
TRJPU!S - D. s.Mea, Allanu, II ;
Finle1, Hmaaa!, ~0; BulW, lAI Anpl.,
7; Alicea, SL l..aW&amp;, 6; Ofl't:rmln,l.Cf An JtiiCI, 5: O.Shielda. Monu-a&amp;l, 5;

VanSiyi:a, PI~. 5.
HOME RUNS- M&lt;Oril!, Su!MJo,
II; Shetlleld, S•n fMao, 17; L. W•iter,
Montre1l, IS; Bond1, Pin1bu~l~· IS;

Pond-.
A.W... t3; O.uhon.
phio, 13; o.-. CU..ao. 13.

Phihd~­

STOLEN BASES - Grluom, MOll·
""" 43; lloShioldo, -~ 33; w..
(ord, St. LoWa, 16; Roberti, CINCINNATI. 23; 1.owd, $on FnnoiKo,ZI; lin·
ley. H~11.0n, 22: Garw.. AW.nu.. 22.
PITCHING (10 deciriorull - TewUbwy , SL LoW&amp;, 9-2. .&amp;II, U2;1tJlaYine,
Atlanta, 11-3, .100, 2 .61; Swindell,
CINONNATI. ~2. .100, 2.96; lHnkhud,
CINONNATI, 1-2. .100, 11»: N&lt;q&amp;n,
Chie.1o. 7-l, .100, 2.n: Leibrandt. At·
hnu, 1· 3, .700, 3.93; Mulholland,
Phil1d&amp;lphia, 9--4, .691, 153.
STRIKEOtrrs - Cme, New Yolk,
l&lt;l; SmGiu, A,.,.,, 116; S.
Now Yort, 111; 0 . Maddua, Chie114o,
100; Dnbd: , Phubutp, 96; PJJo,
CINCINNA TJ, 92; B. Hunt, S.n rne,o,

F-

92
SAVES- Ou.rllon, CINCINNATI,
20; Loc Smith, St. LoW., 20; D. Jona,

HOUlton, I'; Mitch William~, l'hiladel·
phil., 17; Wdleluld, Montn.l,l6( M)'lllft.
~an Dieso. 13; Belinda. Piuabu"flh, I 2.;

Dibble, CINCINNATI. 12.

American League
BATTING - h ckeu, MinnllOUI,
.34l: ll A&gt;omv. r....... .m, Motilor,

Milwaukee, .323; E. Man.inu., Seaule,
.31?; Dura•. CLEVELAND, .301;
Knoblauch, 'Mlnnc&amp;ot•, .306; Venl\ITI,

Chi"''·
.306.
RUNS - Puckeu, Minnaota, 63;
Koobhuch, Minnto..,, 6:1;

Phillip~, ))e.

"""· ~ E. - - - ..5l; MKk.
.....- . 5l; c...., r...,..,l:~; M«&gt;
win, Oakland. 51: Whi\0, ToronlO, !51;

lobtW.&amp;Iy, New Yod&lt;, ll; Moliom, .....
w•uk.ee. 51.
RBI - Fiol..,, DoooO, 10; Mc0m.
o.kllnd. 66; Puctea., Minnuou, 63: 0 .
B.U, Chicqo, 61; Cuter, Toronlo, 51;
Pryman, Deuoit, !.5: Thomu. Chicaao,

a-

5 4 ; - . B -·54.

HITS - hehu, MiM.,Oll, 1U;

a..p, CI.I!VFUND, 103;""""" ))e.

.... I~ Moldo&lt;, Mll-91; Siom,
T - 97; o..-•.
!6; R.
Alomu, TOIQIIO, 93; E. --~
93.

OOUBu;s - 11o11, Now Y..._ :!7; E.

Y-.

Martilla., Sattle, lS; )huinllJ, New
Y.., :M; 1-. ltwott Cloy, tl;

MUw--. %3; Plci.eCt, 16\lllf(U, 22;
lboa,·!Wou City, 22.
TRlPLI!S-

....-....a.!-

6;

n..--lll, B&amp;ltlmort,. 6: U.Ueb, Mil·

wautoo.5;R. .......,., T - , l ; s..,.,
Tn11, 5; While, Toror~lo, 3; Lofton,
Q.BVI!UND, 4; I.. I - ChieiiO. 4;
PbcUu. Ninnelou., -4; ltalnel. ClUc•ao.
4.
ROM!! RUNS - ~ Ookbnd,
" :17; Dow, Dotm• Zl; T""- Dotoa•
19: Jun Oonnte&amp;. ToUI, II; Culeco,

c., 17...., T010010, II; Bolio.

~lio

lfi'OU!N BASE.! - L&lt;tloft. CIJ!VB.

l'olonll. CalilonUa, 29; u.
tach, MUw111lee,ll; AttdeftOII, Ball.i.-

UN!), 3:1;

PITCHINO (10 d&amp;ei1i0n1) - Jutn
Gusm1n, Toronto, 11·1, .911, 2.01;
lnleaw. Minnoeote,l-2 •. 100.1.96:
fllmint, Se~~nla. 10.3, .769, 3.2'1; J•mi•
Morril, Tor011to, 10-3, .769, 4.Sl; X.
~H .750,13l : App;a,X..U

National League
Q~tJO, ,32-4;

- ., 2:1.

BIOW!l, TUM, 13-4, .765, 3.14; Mauina,

Mon..U, 96; llwlcon, Philldclphio, 96;

TOOay's games

Tuna

II T CUI

Gl

hloalm.l ................41 oil
St.l..ouil ................41 41

..500

~ (SCDdcltl- 6-1)

27: RU.O.. auc.ao. 26: R. Hen6mon. OU.lalld, 26: Knoblauch, Min·

rtiOI't.

Cloy, 9-3, .7l0. 2.3l.
STM.IUOUTS - Ju•n Ouzm•n,
Toronto, lU; Cl1tneru, Boaton, 112;
-.New
100; 1.
95; Appier, Klnu• City, 91: _1010_ Olu.rnan, t•u. 16; J. Abtloa. c.lii'OCftlJ, 13;
R . J - S..alo, 13.
SA VBS - Eekenle!, OU.land, 29;

v...,

a-. r....,

Aallilen, Minneaou, 2 ; Ollon. Balli·
.,..., 21; hlf
r ..... 20; Mew&amp;·
- · Kwu City, 19; Thipl. Chico·
JO, U: lteardon.Banm,l7_

-.u.

It was another beautiful day for
baseball in Hartford Monday as the
fans came out to enjoy the wonderful weather that the young men and
women would soon be playing.
The evening began as usual with
the ceremonial first pitch which
was thrown out by another vetemn
of the Anned Services. Ron Roush
serYed in the Air Forte as a sergeant and crew chief with the 'lllctical Fighter Squadron. His service
time was during the height of the
V'ICtnam War. He was also the past
American Legion Commander of
Post 140 in New Haven.
In the opening game of the evening, the Mason County Bar Association took a jump on the
Fmlelllal Order of Police for three
runs in the first inning. The F.O.P.
cam back in their half of ~t
inning with four runs of their own
to take the lead and they would
never relinquish iL F.O.P. would
cootinuc to score one in the accond
and six in the third and two in the
founh to end the game on the
mercy role, 13-3.
Adam Campbell 'was the lone
hitting hero for MCBA with two
hits for his team.
For F.O.P. Zach McCoy had two
hits, one a doublt, while Scott
ComeUy, JIISal Pyles, Bryan
Blairie, Travis Hoffman and Mike
Roacb each bad one hiL Roach's hit
was a triple.
MGBA hit the berbell good but
just as they did Sunday, it was at-

ways at someone. MCBA showed
great spMSI1IIIIship during their
stay of the tounuunent. F.O.P. will

play again Thursday, 5 p.m., and
wiD .play the loser between the
Middleport Cardinals and the New
Haven Orioles.
The second game of the evening
saw another mercy .role go into effect as Syracuse came out on top
over ViUage Pizza Inn, 23-0. It was
all Syracuse except for the play and
sportsmanship or "the players and
coaches of Village Pizza Inn. They
would continue to give it their all,
and by doing that that makes each
participant a winner.
For VPl, Josh Jones recorded
one hit
Symcuse Hubbard's Greenhouse
put together timely hitting along
with the base on balls that they
would receive.
The main hitting heroes for
Syracuse were Jack Day, Jason Allen, Ryan Nease, Aaron Pangia,
Matt Dill, Cory Williams who each
had two hits.
Pangio legged out an inside-thepark-homerun in the third inning
when Syracuse scored 16 runs to
ice the game. Syracuse will play
again Thursday at 7 p.m. against
the loser of the Rutland and Mason

nisch for three days 'for their part in•
the light
In other games, it was Pittsburgh 5, Houston 3; New York 5,
Atlanta 4; St. Louis 6, San Diego 3;
Montreal took a doubleheader at:
l..os Angeles 4-1 and 4-0; and San
Francisco swept a doubleheader
from Philadelphia, 8-7 and 10-6.
Pirates 5, Astros 3
Andy Van Slyke doubled in the
go-ahead run and made the majors'
first unassisted double play by an
outfielder in nearly 18 years at
Three Rivers Stadium.
·
Steve Buechele had three hits ·
and three RBis, including a badhop two-run single in a three-run.
seventh. Barry Bonds had a pair of
doubles and scored twice for the
PiraleS.
Bob walk (2-3) pitched three
innings for the victory.
Mets 5, Braves 4
Sid Fernandez (7-7) won his
third suaight game, allowing only:
(See NL on Page 5)

~-

lbday's games wiD see the
Green Scnaton take on the 'Hills
Indians at 5 p.m., while the Middleport Cardinals wiD face off
against the New Haven Oriole.! in
the nightcap.

Pickens'
Hardware
Mason, WV
&gt;~e~~

- ........
B.,.boll

MILWAUKEB BREWERS - Tndod
Jdf Xunkal, infaeld:u, to \he Chicaao
Cut. forCed Landrum, Olllfialar, IIMI•
dJ"Od Landnrn 10 Denvor ollhe American AllocUtion.
NEW YOlK YANXEES - OpOmod
ldl ! ....... '""""· .. ~ &lt;I the
ln~.cmllional Lelpe. Pwdwod the eontnet of Jeny NiebM, phchet, rrom Al bany or the Butem LAaue. Recalled
John Jt.un01, e~lc:hc, fmn Columbu1 and
p&amp;.l*l him e11 &amp;ho 60-cta.r diabled lilt
OAIU.A.ND Ann.JITICS -Placed
lUcker H•*am, out6tWcr, on w 15·
clay d.iNWed lilt,. ntl'OICCive tG J\lllc 30.
Called up Erie Poll, 0\lt(icldcr, from
.... tnillool ... s...hom t..po.
TBXAS RAN&lt;Jm!S- .......... the

'Uve.

;.. Lankford and Andres Gaiarmga,
:who finished' with three hits, had
.;consecutive RBI doubles in the
'fifth off starter Andy Benes (6-7).
Giants 8, Ph lilies 7
•
Giants 10, Phillies 6
.• At Candlestick Park, Robby
.Thompson had five RB!s, includ·
jng a game-winning two-run homer
in the ojJener, and Matt Williams
;had his li~t home run since May
.j!2 in the nightcap.
,• Thompson's fifth homer off
·Mike Hanley (4-2) overcame the
.Phi Dies 7-6 lead in the eighth and
:Bryan Hickerson (3-1~ worked
;!hree scoreleSs innings for the vic-

..;ption rl T.t OulltrW. llftiRl m~
-

olthe Cwloae ......

"'""Flori-

"' S..te!M.... Noned Tun t&amp;uphy Klina ICftlnf mt111er of \he Chulotto

IWI/c)lOPli'O BLUE JAYS - Placed
X.Uy Orublt, lhir4 bacman. on the IS~.~WM 1ia, ftiUOICUv. tG June 21.
up Tom Quinl•. third be~Cm~n ,
6om SrnCQNI rJl tha Amaican AuocilNllloMI Lea1•

NL - Sulpendld Cincinnati piu:.hcr
Rob Dibble and OUifaelder 0\mn BraJII
four .-mu; HDLIIIOIII pitther Pete Hu·
nileh three ,..,.. and Houlton COich l!d
()1 IOWIIl. dap Cor their piN in • bnwl
Cl\ IIWI:M.

CIUCAGO CUBS - Auigncd Icrf
Jtunll:el, infwlrlet, 10 low• of tho Ameri·

(Ory.

eM Au~1ti011 .

"""""

Roskdball

Nadan•l B•kdMH ....odatlol

r·rt

CHlCAOO RULLS- Trded the
to lhe Qr.

rifhiiiO Uuenal Green,

........

l•ndo M•aie fnr a 199 •ocm•·rou.nd

DALLAs MAVERICKS - Sianed

Doalld Hodp. t~r~ta, 101 four-yeu conPtSTONS "'"'DETROIT
••iNnt
SNbnidt

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Named Alan

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to~ch .

mU:il'tJ him tn unftl'lrictod r.... .... L
NEW JEI&lt;SEY NETS - A the nll.\rement. of F'riu: MllfmiM, bold
tniftw. Promowd Ted Anonico ftanl ...
~Wnt ninlt lG heN lnli_...

Foolho tl
,.-,tm..l Fnotb•lllaa-

BUFFALO RILLS - Sii!M4 lerrJ

c..n.. Dfl'-i¥0 tae~rte; San r.o... •--

'"" J)IIKI; •nd r-nnk Miodte11141 .....,...
Wllbt wide-~ -

PiBUDEU'IflA EAOLI!S- Slpol
Tam .Jewr tnd John ShanMIII, defatai¥t
linemen; William Rnuyu, ...W. teeli"ttr.·
Palridt Hirttm, linchacket.
TAMPA ~AY DIICCANEEIS Ap811 \D ~ with StnWII Douon, . .
f-i" tincm1n, on 1 t.,.yeetOCIW'Id.

Hockty

NttiMallkk•y _IM&amp;•

NEW IERSP.Y DEVILS - Slpod
Scott P•llerin 1nd Con J,eanior, l•ll
win.., .1n• l~e11an He11Ull, ""*1 to
I'Milli,-.r OOI'IQ'IICII.
NEW YORK RANGERS - Sipt4
bndyOOlwn .......

Sports shorts - -

::'

Footbali
~· MINNE.APOLIS (AP) - NFL
bwners pa1d themselves between
$50-$60 million in salaries from
:1987 ~90, money which could be
added to profit fig ures for each
~tub, according to testimony at the
league's antitrust trial.
: The owners could choose to
take money from their teams in ·
Profits or salaries.
1

GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS Tendered qu•lif)'ina cnnlnct offers to
Mario FJ;e., au.rd, and Jud Buecbklt rot-

wanl. AniiO&amp;Inted thlt lhe team 4id nl:aoffu a eonltiCt I t) Vincer~l AUew, pard,

.

:. Williams' 12th homer off Don
::llobinson (l-3) gave the Giants a 5·' lead and a four-run seventh
:inning sealed the win for Jim Pena,
•who won his major league debut.
'
Expos 4, Dodgers 1
~
Expos 4, Dodgers 0
;. Jonathan Hurst (l-1) held Los
;j\ngeles to five singles through 7 ·'

MOt&lt;I'REAL EXI'OS- PlK&lt;d Moilet Alou. autr;cldcr, on the IS·day dif·
tbrlod 1iL LeaUecl M•ll MtYICY. pUehct,
fmm lndianlp()lia of tht Ameriun A_,.

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Coming
August 14, 1992.
~dvertlslng

..

Is

:1

The players. are attempting to
Show that the league is more prof- ·
.itable than its financial statements
•·
;auggesL
,: Agent Raben Fraley, who repre:Jents several· head coaches, testi·fied that a successful coach usually
:gets a oonuact offer before his cur,rent conuact expiRs.
• The players have argued that
Y have no open market, and are
· mit~d ,"bY lea$ue rules in their
· gouahng.

August 3, ·1992.
CALL DIVE or P.J. TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

E

992·2155
••

"The Cubs bad threatened suit
even before I made the decision,"
Vinc~nt said.,,' 'I'm not surprised
there IS a smt
Under the NL constitution,
realignment must be approved by
nine of the 12 clubs, including all
teams involved in divisional
switches . On March 4, 10 clubs
voted in favor, but the Cubs used
their veto and the New York Mets
also voted no.
But Vincent, responding to the
request of several owners, decided
to review the issue. He has the
power to take action on any "ac~
transaction or practice" deemed
not in the best interests of baseball.
The Cubs challenged Vincent's
broad interpretation of this section.
"The commissioner's decision
does not explam how the Cubs'
longstanding presence in the Eastem Division is an 'act, transaction
or Pl1!Ctice,"' the lawsuit conlended.
"The commissioner's action
patently exceeds his authority
under the Major League Agreement, and the action is also arbitrary and capricious," the Cobs
said.

1

·NL QCtiO n •••(Continued from Page 4)
.)bree hits - two to David Justice
·-and striking out four in seven
innings at Atlanta. Anthony Young
·got his accond save.
' New Yorlc scored tluee times in
;)he second off Mike Bielecki (2-4)
.e,n consecutive RBI doubles by
~&gt;ddie Murray and Paryl Boston,
:;followed by Mackey Sasser's run•scoring single.
·
:·
Cardinals'· Padres 3
.
;. Ray Lankford had three RBis
.-with a pair of doubles as the St.
;;Louis Cardinals banded San Diego
")ts fourth straight loss.
;• Donovan Osborne (7-4) gave up
•three runs and eight hits over 5 1/3
. innings for the victory, while Lee
:Smith pitched the ninth for his 20th

THE 1992

"You don't want to blame it all
on hitting," Wathan said. "But for
the most pan, il has been. We lost a
lot of low-scoring games. h's the
same old story."
Cook credited his performance
to a pitch he just learned, a cut fastball that breaks in tpward righthanded batters. He picked il up a
week and a half ago wbile working
with bullpen coach .Dom Chili.
"It's a fairly easy pitch. You
don't have 10 be a brain surgeon 10
throw i~" Cook sllid. "!fell like it
could be a ~ood pitch for me."
The lnd1ans gave Cook an early
lead by scoring twice in the first off
Chuck Finley (2-9). Carlos Baerga
and Albert Belle hit RBI singles,
and it could have been worse if
Baerga hadn't been thrown out at
home trying to score from second
on Belle's single to center fielder
Chad Curtis.
Finley, however, didn't give up
another run unti I Glenallen Hill led
off the eighth with his eighlh home
run. h was Finley's first complete
game of the year.
To match last year's 1ecord (189), Finley now mus1 win his next
16 decisions.
"I got off to a rough start in the
first inning," he said. "Then
everything came 1ogethcr af1er that.

l found a little rhylhm and went
from there. From a personal slandpoint, it's nice Lo sec. But gccz,
sometimes you'd ralhcr go out
there, be rpcdiocrc, and we win,
than pitch a good game and lose.
We haven't been winning many
games lately." ·
,
The Angels, who were shut out
Monday at Toronto, scored their
only run in the tifth inning, when~
Rene Gonzales singled and scored
on a double by Mike Fitzgerald, his
frrst extra-~ hit since he homered May 24. Fitzgerald is 7 for 10
lifetime against Cook.
Belle returned to Cleveland' s
starting lineup for the game after
being benched Monday night for
loafing on defense in a loss to Oakland on Sunday. Hargrove was
forced to use Belle because two
other outfielders were sidelined:
Kenny Lofton missed the game
with a strained left elbow, and
Thomas Howard attended the
funeral of his grandmother earlier
in the day.
Elsewhere in lhe AL it was
Toronto 4, Seattle 3; New York 2,
Minnesota l; Deuoit 3, Oakland 2;
Boston 3, Kansas City 2 in 1 l
innings; Chicago 8, Baltimore 4
and Milwaukee 4, Texas 3.

Cubs file lawsuit against Vincent
CHlCAGO (AP)- The Chicago Cubs want a federal judge to
stop the baseball commissioner
.from moving the: team to the
:National League West next season.
· The lawsuit, which claims the
'commissioner does not have unlimited authority to act "in the best
interests of baseball " was scheduled for a hearing 'today before
·u.s. District Judge Suzanne B.
Conlon.
It came just one day after commissioner Fay Vincent realigned
the NL, sending the Cubs and St.
Louis Cardinals to the West and the
Atlanta Bmves and Cincinnati Reds
to the East in 1993.
·'The commissioner can no
·more order the Chicago Cubs to
play in the Western Division of the
National League than he could
order them to play in the American
League," the Cubs said in their 26page complaint.
The. Cubs contend the Major
League Agreement excludes the
commissioner from deciding issues
governed by the National League
constitution.

Transactions
.

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Dennis
Coole, a pitcher .in need of a break,
had two big things going for him.
He was pitching against the California Angels, and he's left-handed.
Cook limited the Angels to four
hits in 7 1/3 innings Tuesday night
as the Cleveland Indians won 3-!,
sending California to its ninth
straight loss.
"The curse of the left-hander
got us again," said interim manager John Wathan, whose Angels are
2-16 against left-handed starters
this year. "[don't know what it is
about left-banded pitchers. h seems
that any left-bander that's out there,
we can't handle."
The timing was perfect for Cook
(2-5), making only his second start
since he was demoted to the
bullpen in mid-May. He responded
with his longest outing of the year,
walking none and striking out six.
Steve Olin then retired all five batters he faced and got his 15th save.
The Angels have been held to .
live or fewer hits 21 times, including seven of the last 10 games. The
losing streak is their worst since
they dropped a franchise-retard 13
in a row over two seasons, 198889.

By PAUL A. DRISCOLL

We have a
complete
stock of
Horse shoes
and Horse
shoe nails.

VFWgame.

·Cleveland beats California 3-1

l/3 innings for his first majorleague victory in the nightcap and
helped Monlreal to a doubleheader
sweep.
In the first game, Delino
DeShields' three-run homer off
Kevin Gross (4-9) led Montreal.
Mark Gardner (8-6) allowed a run
on six hits through six innings.
In 'the second game, Larry
Walker's two-run shot powered the
Expos. Tim Crews (0-l), a middle
reliever, worked a career-high six
innings.
John Wetteland got his 15th and
16th saves.

· The lawsuit challenges a series
of court cases over the past 60
years .that have :upheld the alm&lt;?st
unlimlled authonty of th.e commiSs10ner to act m the best mterests of
baseball.
.
This was ~lied out m 1977 by
U.S. District Judge Frank J.
McGarr of Chicago in a dispute
between Oakland Athleucs owner
Char.lie Finley and contrmss10ner
Bow1e Kuhn.
. "So broadand un[ette~ed ~as
h1s (the commiSsiOner s) discrenon
intended to be," McGarr ruled,
"that they (baseball owners) provided no right of appeal, and even
· took the extreme step of foreclosing their own access to the courts."
The NL voted 10-2 not to join
the suit, with the Cubs and the Los
Angeles Dodgers vobng m favor.
The Dodgers didn't sue, but the
Cubs did. Chicago denied the suit
was motivated by conce~about
an earnings decline beca e of
lower broadcast ratings fo late
night games on the West ~oast
The Tribune Co., whtch owm
the Cubs, also owns WON rad10
and television, which carry Cubs
games.
"The Cubs would have the
same opposition ... if the Cubs'
games were not carried on a superstation and if the Cubs and WONTV were not affiliated," the lawsuit contends.
"The Cubs are opposed to
realignment because tt destroys
their contract rights, because it
destroys traditional rivalries~ and
because it othCIWise can adversely
affect the Cubs' popularity in the
Chicago area."
The complaint said Atlanta,
Houston, Montreal, Pittsburgh, San
Diego and San Francisco were in
favor of intervention by Vincent,
with the other clubs opposed

NO THRILL FOR HILL - Cleveland's Glenallen Hill (left) finds himself in a rundown
between first and second In the fifth inning or
Tuesday night's American League game against

visiting California, which the Indians won 3-1. .
Angel rlrst baseman Lee Stevens makes the
throw to second to keep Hill rrom getting there.
(AP)

Tawney, Georgi deadlock:at end
of third round in junior linkfest
By Frank Capehart
OVP Correspondent
With now three weeks of the
four week tour passed, the TriCoonty Junior Golf action still has
wide open competition for the top
spot in at least three of the four age
divisions. Play on Monday at the
Cliffside course was spirited and
close as 53 players matched
strokes, and saw one division
decided as well as the leaders
change in others. ·
In the premier older age group of
15-17 year olds, division leader
Mark Georgi continued his fine
play and used a first place tie on
this day to wmp up the championship for the group.
Bill Tawney of Cliffside parted
the final hole, while Georgi
doubled it and the two sweet swingers finished deadlocked at 39 for
the third round play day, and were
the only one in the thirties. Three
players tied for third at41 as Adam
Krawsczyn of Meigs, Jay Harris of
Meigs and Bubby Austin of Hidden
Valley split the points.
One suoke back with 42 were
Brad Bameue and Chris Smalley of
HVCC and Jay Cremeans of
HVCC, just a bare suoke ahead of
Carl King and Jason Han of Riverside.
Following in that same close order Travis Grnte, Robbie Chase,

Corey Miller, David Bragg, Mason stands fourth at 16.
Fisher, Robbie Jackson, Brent
Depending on the order of finish
Sang, Todd Mitch, Andy Keams, on the final week, any one of the
Richie Gilkey and Jerod Cook.
first three could win the division
The tie for first place on this day crOwn and all kinds of possibilities
leaves Georgi in first place overnll exist for movement within the top
with some 27 points, which is in- spots.
In the ll-12 age group, Dave
surmountable on the final nexl
Monday at Riverside, so that age Anderson of Meigs finished in a
group crown is decided. However, second place tie at Cliffside, but
second spot shows some five or six earned sufficient points to give him
golfers in the chase. Currently tied the divisional crown. Sean O'Brien
for second at 12 each is Cremeans of Meigs came on strong to win tii
and Chase, while Krawsczyn and first place on this day of play with.)
Vickers rue knotted at I0 pcints, good 45, while Anderson, Natb$ii
Bill Tawney has nine and Chris Radford and Sieve McCullough, alt
Knight shows eight. Depending on of Meigs, tied for second right bethe order of finish in the final out- hind O'Brien.
:·
ing, any one of that grollp could
In close order behind them came
Clay Crow, Justin Roush, C.R;
wind up second.
The 13-14 age group had another ~tcwart. Adam Thomas. Trent Tot-:
· change in standings as Jeremy hver, and Wayne Barnhart
In lhe overnll poim standings;
Tucker of Riverside captured the
best fmish on this third outing and Anderson bas locked up the crow"
moved from third to second in the · with 26 points, Clay Crow hoi~
overall standings. Just behind by second at 16, O'Brien and Me;
one stroke on this day at Ctilfside Cullough are tied for third at 12;
was division leader Scott Hussell of and Stewan is jus1 behind them
:
HVCC and Jason King of Riverside with 10 points.
Again, depending on the order of
with a pair of 48 scores. Right on
their heels was James See of River- finish at Riverside next week, an~
side, J.R. Hysell and Chris Yonker of those final four could switch:
.
of Riverside, Luke Holman, Geolf positions for.second and lhinl.
Finally, in the 10-and-nnder age
Casto and Sam Stephens.
Current pcint total standings group, Zack Pullin of HVCC.
show HusseU in the lead with 25, fashioned a 46 to capture first spot'
while Tucker holds second at 19. on Monday at Cliffside and regai~
Kind is third at 18, and Hysell
(See TRI-COUNTY on Page 7) :

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992·5177

REJOICING LIFE
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MIDDLEPORT, OH.

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We're changing, expanding
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Since we're a little dusty you
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.NOW ACCEPTING
1992·93 REGISTRATION
GUDES: Kindergarten • Sii
7th Year In Operation
Reglllered with the State of Ohio
Meets All State Mlnlmu• Standards

For more informatlo• and a ·
school manual

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Thursday
Friday
Satunliy ·
&amp; Sunday!

July .9 thru 12
Shop 10 am·9 pm M-Sat. &amp;Sun. Noon

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Lee make~ comeback from team cuts, drugs

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WORKING HARDER, BECAUSE YOU DESERVE THE BEST.

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See Red This Summer
·· And Save At Foocllandl

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umphs.

L.ee didn't play his freshman
year at Ohio Slate when his academic record failed 10 meet NCAA
Proposition 48 guidelines . He
didn't do much as a sopllomole or
junior, starting four games and
averaging less than five points in
two seuons.
But he blossomed as a senior in
1990-91, averaging 11.2 poinrs llld
5.6 rebounds as a awter. Lee came
through in lhrec nationally tele·

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By Rex A. Young
Tuesday at the 'ole Hartfml ball
diamond pvc bueball fans two
great games as foor good teams battled 011 this ,e.'s IIVIual lillie
league rourrumenL Fans saw some
great pilcbing from Seth Davis of
the HiUs Indians llld also some
good defense from both Midd~
and New Haven leanls.
During lhe preliminaries fans
were hoiDed 10 have a ftirmer
P.O.W. for World Writ 0 10 throw

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the Miami Trqlics.
Lee is averaging 10 poinra and
5. 7 rebounds in 24 ininulcs I ~·
but thinks the real success lies in

The Green Senalors were a fiesty
bunch of ninen. They would never
give up. They would eventually
take advantage or S(lliC walks
coupled wilh some timely hitting.
The Senators scmd two runs in lhe
fifth and three runs in lhe sixd! inning.
The Senators' hitters were
Jeremy Griffith, Billy McBmyer,
Jeff Burnett and Charlie McBrsyer
aU had one hiL.
The Indians will play again
Saturday, 9 a.m., while the Green
Senators will take the field agsin
Friday at S p.m.
The scco:!fame or the evening
saw some g pitching, timely hit·
ling and good defense. The Mid·
dlepon Cardinals scored all their
runs in the second inning, taking
advantage of some fielding miscues
by lhe Orioles.
Tun McCIW'C had two RBis in
the inning 011 a single.
The New Haven Orioles scored
lheir two' runs in lhe ftflh inning
and would leave two runners on
base. Man Williams had 8 k's IIIJd
Jason Fields six. .
The hitting heroes for lhe Cardinals were nm McCIW'C, Brad
Davenpcxt. Justin Seyrt)our, Matt
Williams and Tooy Swartz, all with
one each.
For the Orioles the hitting heroes
wc.e David Mitchell with two hits,
Dana Gillispie, 1ason FJCids, Jrrod
Mankin, each with Olie hiL
The Middlepcxt Cardinals will
pta~ again Saturda)' at 9 a.m.
agatnSt lhe Hills Indians, whUe tile
New -Haven Oriolea will take lhe
field again Thursday at S p.m.
against F.O.P.
With fourteen games down, lhe
Hartford Ullle League 1'ollnament
has 16 more 10 go.

The Problem

,'

By SCOTI' WOLFE
Sentillel Cw•tijiOIIofeat

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. The Indians scored first pushing
three runs across the pla1e in the
second inning llld two in the third
and four in the fifth. They ended
with nine runs on seven hits. Seth
Davis was pretty much lhe story of
the evening, strilcing out 18 Senator
batters 10 reaKd the victory.
Hitting heroes for Hills were
Jimmy Gilmore with three hits, AJ.
Johnson with two hits. and Adam
Bush llld Justin Jones wilh one hit
each.

•,

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and Rio Orancie picked
up~ in the lint rouncfor the

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with the 1061h ln{antty diVISion
and was captured in Europe llld
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served as American Legion Post
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The fint ~ of tho evening
saw two Gallia CIJWIIY teams play·
ing each other. The llills Indians
from lhe city · leilgue face off
apinst tho county league team, the
Grten Senators.

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· CAN

-

"They had a chance 10 pick up
Alex English ind WIIIU Bary,"
Lee recalled. "And over there,
namea are very impcrtaN, whether
you're wiuning or losina."
Lee returned to the U.S. and
ended up signing a conlract with

administered while he was with
Grand Rapids, were announced,
and Lee was suspmded
"It - deYISIIting fu me," he
said. "This is something lhatl
IICYCI' got myself iniO. I've always
been a positive influeace."
Lee entered the John H. Lucas
Treatment aad RCCO'o'a): Centtn in
HooJton for a required 214ay 11ay.
He remained in Houston llild IS
playing for Lucas' team in the
Uniled States Basketball League,

his mind
'Tm more aware Of life," he
Slid. "I think everylhilig happens
he'
for a reason. ... It made me lock a
Lee was traded from Grand lot more clearly. In colleg'e things
Rapids 10 Fort Wayne on FebJ. On are a lot more tainted. Everybody
Feb. IS, the results of Lee's ran- praises you for playing Ohio State
dom drug test, which had been basketball. It's not always like
lhat.,.

% ·· •
GAL

•

'

cause.

..

'

'

honorable mention All·Aiiletic:an,
having been nO' IIIOR lhan honor·
able mention pick in All-Big 10
voling.
He - overlooked in lhe NBA
draftllld beaded IQ l!t}y, playing
for a team in Ntiplca. He lhouglit he
- playiiiJ weD, hopin_g.IO elm a
livinJ llld maybe SOilli:day mate
111e big bucks or 111e NBA. Then he
-.eleasccl
"It was a big leldown for me,
personally," Lee Slid "I'm ljui-.
cally &amp;"PP*;ting a family, tny riiOm
and my srandmolher. For something like that 10 happen wilh no

Grand Rapids of the Continental
Basketball AssoCiation. He also
began a habit of what he termed
reaulional drug use.
"It wisll'ta one-lime siiUalion,
but it wun 't anytbintl wlx:re I was
using it everyday," he said.
"Everybody dabbled in10 it a liU1e
bit in lheir careers. Ni far as Ohio
State, I never used any drugs. I
guess it's society, a liUie buildUp ol
things, maybe being rebsed from
Italy and C!lftling hcme.lo&lt;*ing for
an escape route at the qme. ''
Lee didn't find an escape route
as much as 1111 exit ramp from the
CBA.
··
·
"I diem 't realize as soon as I got
iniO lhe CBA and signed a comract
I w:J_Oing 10 be teslt.d" for drugs,

I

.

.·.......
••
.
•.•• '

vised james, llld thai may have led
to his somewlill ~ pick as

Hills Indians, Middleport Cardinals tournament victors

Or~nge

REGULAR OR
UNSCENTED

ASSORTED
4 ROLLPKG.

Master
Blend

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Treg Lee used to have goals of
being wealthy and playing in lhe
~BA . His new goals are more
tmponanc to him.
"Right now, I'm j111t trying 10
maintain sobriety llld stay in IOUch
with myself," the former Ohio
Stale siat said in an inleiview wilh
the Llncastcr Eagle-Gazette.
Since his success at Cleveland
St. Joseph High School, Lee bas
1 had his share of troubles and tri-

•

12PAK
120Z.
CANS

..

Bill Hubbard Memorial Little
Lea,ue Tournament Tuesday
everung at'King Field in Syr~CU~C.
Syracuse IDOl: an early 2-0 lead.
then rolled to a 1()...4 route of the
Gallipolis WbUe Sox.
· Petie Sisson shut out the White
Sox for lhe finl two frames, while
the tournament hoes put two lUDI
on the board in 1he fint inniDg as 1
result of a Day walk, a Siuon single, an RBI 1inslc by Allen and
another RBI single by ~gio.
Gallipolis pik:her Siden ICUied
down to fan two batters in the
inning, then came back the next
frame 10 strite out lhe side 10 set
the stage for a pal game.
SynJCUSC went up 4-0 in the top
of the third when Sisson singled,
Nease sinded and Panalo lingled.
Pangio anil Sision each had perfect
nights; Siuon aoinB 4-4 and l'lngio goina 3·3 with all singlea. Day
was2-3.
.
Gallia millie a game of It wilh
three runs in the third. Nickers
walked, Rodgers walked, Howen

Raehcd on a fielder's choice, and
Siders wllked wilh a'couple wild
pill:hes in belwCm.
Syr~CU~C scored two more in lhe
fourth as Day lmockcd in LiwmJce
and Williams for a 6-3 score. A
four-run fiflh put the gim,c out or
reach as Lawrence doubled, while
Pangio llld Day eaeh singled for
the big hilS of 1he fnllle.
Lawrence and YOIDig came on
to mop up on the mound for the
Syrac:use crew. Syracuao pitching
fanned 10 lrld walked ieven, while .
~l:J:her Siders fanned 11 Mid
jUit tllree.

Rio Orande blanked Chester 100 on a four-inniDg ~ nile COD·
fusion. RG went up 1-0 m the first.

3-0 in lhe second, then scored lbree
in lhe third and four in 1he fourth.
Castor picked up the win wilh
six strikcouil aDd one walk, while
Smith suffered the loss, despite
farming seven and walking seven.
The big .blow was a home run
by Hager, while Allison singled
twice, Miller singled and Skidmore
was perfect wilh a single and walk.
Ruftinan doubled for Chester, lheir
lone hit for 1he nilbL
Syracuse advances 10 the next
round to play the winner or
tonight's Nelsonville-Tuppers
Plains Tigers game, which begins
II 6:30 p.m. The 'Coolville Ttnni"
n~tora meet the ~upper~ Plains
o...ts at 7:45 p.m. m die mghlelp.

.,-

o.u. COACH - Tim HIDton, defensive tiDe coach for tbe Otiio
University Bobcats, is pictured with future Marauder Mick BtlTr
during 1 speech to the 1992 Marauder footbaU campers Monday.,:
'•

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••
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• .

~/6cK

IN
UNITS

HONDA CIVIC

Sl.OOO INU~~K
I.

HONDA PRELUDE

Sl,BOO
OFFER ENDS
JULY 31. 1992

~

ON DELIVERY ::

esc DEPOSIT
Will no1 stick or , _
.... Dllllldlr11RIUIIbetc: llj niJd by - L
WITH YOUR PACKAGE

HONDA ACCORD ~~4o~~or

Tri.County golf...

(Continued from l'aie 5)
his lead in the division. Jason .
Fraley or Rivenide and Matt 'IirbeU or HVCC tied for 111t:011d·
·. Monday, while Trenton Roush ol
·· Rivenide was right behind it
fourth .
Followina them .came Alliin
: Thomas, Garrett !Carr and Brudon
' Hankil13011.
·'
Going into the final competllion
rouild at Riverside, Pullin holds the
overall lead at 26 points, Roush Is
: second at 21, F~y third at 16,
Karr has 10 and lirbctt has nine•
The two leaders Still vie for the top .
11p01. while the final rouad could II·
• ter sewn! of the oth!r polidcn In
; .lfle cloiC stnJglea
.
The Olltinglll Riwnlde iiiCt b
8:30 LDI. llleOif Monday, Jlly 13,
~ all YQDIIJ lolfc:n 11e lqDd D
• join in, even tiiOIC who 11M ~
: )el ~cipated. After this 8nal
: competition round, .lhe 1992 11111r
will wind up 011 Monday, July 20,
at the. ~eigs County Course witb
the annual fun day and roundup
, where ~ics ·are (JRICIIICd and
special pnzes awlflled 10 ~( .
. the year. That event beJIIII II 8 ·
·-• a.m. in Pomeroy.

SPEAKS TO CAMPERS - Tim Hintou, ddeusive line
and stnnllh coach for Ohio University's rootbaU team, was the
lured speaker ror the 1992 Marauder football camp this week ,
Melp High SchooL Hinton is beginniDg his tbird year ou the BolHlllt
football staff. The camp wiD coutlnue u•til Friday.

OFF

IN STOCK
UNITS

ATHENSI:[e)~l•l:JCARS
..THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"
81 0 E. STAT.E ST., ATHENS, OHIO
NEW CAR DEPT. 594-8555 USED CAR DEPT. 594·2114
I

.'' .

�. WtdneiC!ay, J.uly 8, 1882

Ohio

Midkiffs hold
first reunion

CAKE DECORATING WINNER - This patriotic tbemed cake
made by Dorotby Leacb depicting lhe "Heart or America" took
first place In lhe decontln~test staged at the July 4 celebration
at Rutland. Sbe received a
prize.

-

DON'T GET WET! - Games or all kinds were available to cbH-

drtn attending Saturday's Fourth or July festivities at Star Mill

Park In Racine. Here, several youngsters attempt not to get wet
during tbe baUoon toss Saturday afternoon. \

The first reunion or lhe dcsun·
dants of Orlando and Della Midkiff
and Mr. and Mrs. Harley Midkiff
~ for a ~eunion June 28 at
lhe Cherry Ridge fann borne or lhe
Midkiff family.
A COQkout and potluck dinner
was hel\1 .00 'lames were enjoyed
during lhe afttrnoon, Viewing die
old fann sires and landmarks of lhe
property we~e enjoyed by lhe 32
family members aue_nding. The
next ~eunion was' planned for June
27 at lhe home of Billy Ray and
Bernice Midkiff.
Norman Midkiff was recognized
as the oldest member attending,
and Tyler Midkiff lis lhe youngest
Attending were Paul Huber,
Delores and Robbie Hawk of Long
Boaom; Robert and Mary Bowles
and grandhcildren, Nicklos and
Jenny Bowles, Pomeroy; David L.
Ross, Middleport; Charles and
Margaret Sinclair, Pomerily, Sumner Road; Billy Ray and Bernice
Midkiff, Langsville; Chris Midkiff,
Linda, Eve and Chelsea Mont·
gornery, Lan$sville; Jim and Mary
Agnes Midk1ff, Wellston; Wilma
Midkiff, Albany; Carl and Becky
Caudill, Tim, Kelly, Emily of
Albany: Melody Roberts, Long
Boaom; Eddie Ross, Hanford, W.
Va.; Chad Sinclair, Pomeroy: and
Chris Sellers, Pomerov,

Diet company
picks &gt;Wisconsin
town to go on diet
POUND, Wis. (AP) -Give
'em three months, they'll take off
lhe weight
·
On Wednesday, the 434 resi-'
dents of this small northern Wisconsin community are going on a
Slim-Fast diet
.
To "shape up America," SlimFast officials decided to select a
town and put the residents on a
diet, Ron Stern, president of the
company's Nutrition Division, said
Tuesday. "We picked Pound
because of the great name," he
said.
'
"I don't know how they knew
we needed to lose weight," said
Nancy Adamski. She her husband,
Village President Richard Adamski, both 52, are among the panicipants.
Stern said residents who take
pan will be given products free of
charge. The daily diet consists of
two flavored shakes at 200 calories
each; _three snacks each conlaining
100 calories, and a 500-calorie supper for a total of 1,200 calories, he
'
said.
Weight loss should be no more
lhan 2 pounds per week, Stem said,
adding that only people wi1h health
problems will be excluded.

Ann
LandefS

Pauline Atkins presented the
program "Grow 15 Herbs for One
Ki.Chen" a1 lhe ~teent meeting of
the Rutland Garden Club held at
lhe home of Neva Nicholson.
Mrs . Atkins stated growing
herbs takes only a small space
around home. They can ~w just
as well in conlainers on sills. Neva
Nicholson gave a description on
basil, a cared ~lants and its culrure
supposedly bnng happiness to lhe
household. Margaret Belle Weber
discussed catnip, a member of the
mint family. Binda Diehl spoke on
chives, a native of the East Pearl
Canaday discussed dill, which has
been used for years in culinary an.
Eva Robson described fennell,
which is closely related to dill.
Stella Atkins spoke about marjoram, which symbolizes sweetness,
and that Shakes.r:!': called in the
"herb of grace. Marcia Dennison
discussed mint herb including peppermint, apple mint and curly mint,
which can be used in gum, jelly
and liqueurs.
The hosress gave devotions by
reading from Psalms and "His
Mysterious Ways." The creed and
collect were given in unison and
roll call was answered with "I
planted an herb."
Pauline Atkins announced lhat
Harrisonville 4-H members helped
lhe garden club plant geraniums a1
lhe lodge haU and church.
A letter was read saying the club
had received superior ratings on lhe
flower show and a grade of 96 on
the publicity book. Awards may be
picked up at the Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs State Convention.
It was announced lhat Dorothy
Woodard, Binda DiehL and Neva
Nicholson had toured Ed's Greenhouse: Margaret Belle Weber
weCded the planters in lhe Memorial Mini Park on Depot Street and
Pearl Canaday the one in lower
Rutland; Quality Print Shop had
furnished flags for the mini-park;.
Pauline Atkins exchanged plants
during Heritage Day; and Eva RobIOIIIOUitd Wagnall's Herb Garden

ing prize furnished by Ruby Diehl.
Stella Atlcins and Pauline Atkins
fumished flowers for lhe churches.
Stella Atkins presented an arti·
cle "Add a Blaze of Glory With
Sun Blaze Roses." She stated no
matter how limited your outdoor
space you c:in always enjoy the
beauty and color of living plants.
Roses, especially the "sun blaze"
are well suited to conlainer gardening. They wiU thrive wilh sunshine
and proper drainage.
Margaret Belle Weber gave a

"I need to show~ I can go
beyond the action stuff, ' Lundgren

said.

--

ROMB (AP) - Salman Rushdie
says he is the "last Western
hostase" and will continue to
speak out against the 3-year-old
death threat against him even
thoulth it means be could be killed.
"If I remain in isolation, I run
the risk of. being forgotten. If I
appear in public, I rislt being killed.
"I choose the latter alternative," lhe auth&lt;ir of "The Satanic
Verses" said Tuesday in the newspaper La Repubblica. He was inrerviewed in biding.
Rushdic was sentenced to death
in 1989 by Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who deemed his
· book blasphemous to Islam.
The a11thor said he was
encouarged by recen1 signs that
Iran wpts to improve relations
wilh the West "By now it is time
even for me, the l&amp;St Western
hoslage, to be freed." he said.

Birth announced

-,

·Fresh

•II

eac

LAKB BUBNA VISTA, Fla .
(AP)- The Television-Academy

BRIANA WILUS

Hall of Fame has six new

inductees: Bill Cosby, Ted Ko!Jpd,
Ted Turner, Andy Griffith, Slitilon .

DOWIIII (IILDS
MUWIMUSSIR,

Leonard and Dinah Shore.
They wm announced Tuesday .
at Walt Dis.tey World by Milton ·
Serle, the Hall of Fame's first
member, and Academy President
Leo Chalouklan. They will be
inducted OI:L 3.
.
Cosb 's credill include "IS "
and
Cosby Show." ~th
starred in "The Andy Griffilh
Show" ·and "Matlock." Shore
headlined "The Dinah Shore
Sliow" and "The Dinah Shore
Chevy Show."
Leonard baa been an actor,
director, writer and producer for
-'Y 50 years. Koppel is anchorman of ABC's "NiJhtline." Turner Is head of Turner Broadcasting
System and founder of CNN.

INSUUNCE
111 Sec••• St., P•ny

l - ~IDEPIIIDEIIT
SJl¥1111

"i'ie

coum

SIIICIII61

..

CaiHo,.la

You•ve never seen so much
fighting and shooting in your life,"
lhe 66-ycar-old comedian said at a
Japing of "Now It Can Be Told."
11

I,

"l still have dreams about that
today."
The syndicated TV show airs
Thursday.

HlllSIIRE

5110ke41 Sa•sage

1.99 IL

5

99c

PLANTING FLOWERS- HarrisonvUJe 4-H -ben helped the
Rutland Garden Club recently plant aeranlumat tbe lodp ball aad
church. Here, garden club members and 4-H JDelllben are bnsy dJa·
ging and planting.

. IICIUGIIRIIfS

Dliry Ia• let en.
. ~GAL s1.09

Coca -Cola
'4 Q
.•

top-grouinf rock 'n' roll act in
Nilnh America In lhe fll'lt half of
tho year, an ind111try newsletter ·

"

· The Bn&amp;lish band, which

grtiiUlt $28 million~

die llx
moatha thai ended June·30, was

.
.•

••

*

..-.

We Reaerve The Bight To Umit Quantitiee

Pl. nz.zss•

followed by the OntefuJ Dead. The
Saa Fnncllco rock balid polled
$26.3 miDion•
. The liJUiheat tickets to get welt •
lir lltllllotn by
lOCken U2 .
and country . . Girth Broob, lhe
newaleaer l'oiJsra( said Tllelday.
Metalllca was the bulett act
atnoDJ the top 10 concert draws,
arouma $22 millioo while performing 89 dmea in 83 cilia .

•'
"• •

PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES WT

lrilllt"

89

.tar

elle

says.

$1.29 JOCW.20CI.·

ADOLPH'S DAllY YAlfEY

akes

Tissue

'ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)- Genesis, fealuring Phil CoUins, was lhe

'

IUmES
Traslltags

With Fries.....'2.09
I

Awn.
The funk-aoul group Bn v~
and hard rockcn Van Halen Ued
for lhe sec:ood-hivhest number of
lllllllinllioos wilh ilx each.
The IIOIIIineea
announced
Tueada.J by "Wayne's World"
Dana ca-vey,- who will be holt of
lhe Sept. 9 ceremony. Performers
will inel11de the rock groups U2
and Nirvana.

w*

2/99( 160..~

Knthrnnm

the 1992 M'I'V Video Music

:! OZ, /1 PACI( CMJI

White Bread

$1.39
ey'

•

.STORCK'S

CHUCK WAGON .

W ef tM P1
POmOY, OliO

(AP)- The Red Hot Chili Peppets
scooped up eiltht nominations for

•'

89( ...

LB.

Special of the Week!

"At 11oo

WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif.

Fresll Brotcol

Chopped Ham

Pauhne rtkins won the travel-

TIN! Ualted Natloas Educational,
Sclenilfle and Cultural Orpnlzatlon
alml to promote collaboration among
Mil- tllraulb edueallon, ICience
IIIII Clltun. Tile Ualled Statel With·
ftw from UNESCO In IHI, acclllin1
lbe orpalzallon of anti·Wettem btu.
'

·

KASEY ALEXIS TURLEY

SHELBY OHLINGER

•
'•

NEW YORK (AP) - Soupy
Sales says he still has nightmares
about fighting at Okinawa in the
closing daya of World Warn.

inLi~li

UNFSCO

Octa Ward was also present in
addition to memben mentioned.
Pauline Atkins closed lhe mt·
ing by reading ''Garden Memories"
a ooem
..and
June:"- -- by EcJaar Guest entitled

•

SchW~GC~~egger.

Steve and Amy Satterfield
Ohlinger, Long Bottom, announce
lhe birth of !heir fli'St child, Shelby
Nicole, on April 17.'
The infant weighed seven
pounds, 14 ounces and was 20
1nches long.
Maternal grandparents are Car·
olyn Collins an([ Jack Satterfield,
Jr., Pomeroy. Maternal great·
grandparents are Jack and Olive
Sauerfield, Middleport.
Paternal grandparents are Bill
and Donna Ohlin8er, Pomeroy.
Paternal great·graJI!Imother is Mil·
dred Ohlinger, Pomeroy.

prize,

•

SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) Dolph Lundgltn says he wants to
be taken IS seriously in Hollywood
as another muscle-bound, fOJtign,
born actor..
"People used to make fun of .
Arnold Scbwmene,ger," Lund·
gJtR said. "Now he s the biggest
thing in Hollywood and people
treat him exllllltice because lhey're
embammed about bow they treat,
eel him in the beginning.••
The Swedish-born Lundgren,
who played a Soviet boxer in
"Rocky IV,'' stars in the action
film "Universal Soldier" with
martial arts master Jean Claude
VanDamme.
The movie features electronic
warriors similar to lhe "Termina·
tor," played by lhe Austrian-born

Ohlinger birth
announced

hint for lhe month of June stating
chrysanlhemumi may be pinched
off to inCJtaSe ovmll bloom and
that roses lhou1d be mulched with
peat moss to conserve moisture and
PJtvent spread of powdery mildew.
Stella Atkins won the door

I

cnme.

Celebrates

4-H members help plant flowers

.

NBW YORK (AP) -Guardian
Angels founder Curtis Sliwa says
beinf ambt1shed for the le(:Ond
tune mmonth will not keep him off
lhesRets.
"Those gunmen have scaled my
fate, lir I will always be fcrted to
travel in an entourage, bu1 thai will
not stop the Guarilian Angels "
Sliwa said Tuesday as he left BeJie.
vue Hospital
The 38-year-old Sliwa was shot
June 19 in a cab outside lhe beadquarters of 'his anti-crime patrol.
No &amp;rltSlS bave been made.
A mcnth earlier, he Wll beaten
by men with baseball bats.
Sliwa, who started the civilian
patrol in 1979, blames the attacks
on lhugs sympalhetic to organized

Dear All•· LaDders; My cousin l ,....---the possibility of losing my son to
and his wife are well-educated
the Anny in two years.
.
people who move in high-level
1 have prayed about this and .
acadelllic cin:~. Their ~-year-old
cried many nights and have found .
daughter, "Betsy," Is unusually
no answers. What do you •JggCSI .
bri&amp;ht and attends a prestisious
ANN LANDIIIS
1 do about this siwatioa that is
p!WChool.
:
·on. LooA.pi.
tearing me apart?- TERRIFIED IN
lasl fall, they h8d a baby boy born , _ S; ' 1 _.
COLORADO SPRINGS.
wilh Down Syndrome. My cousin c.-s,, I '•
DEAR FRIEND: There is noth- :
and his wife were devaslaled. They
ing you can Oi' should do. If y~
an oonviilced that the liule guy wiD ........, tbey are~ Plcalc, Ann, son
has his heart set on a career m ·
never be able to do anything. Wane JOlt my 1eaer but oot my aarae. - the military, it would be unfair to
yet, they appear to be asluuned of ANONYMOUS BYSTANDER
attempt to change his mind. The
thechildandhavelhenotionthathe
DBAR BYSTANDER: Your decision should be his and his
will somehow damage Betsy.
letter showed a great deal of alone.
The woman they hired to cate c:omplllion IS well as insight. That
If you are to be ttuly oontcn~ dear,
for the boy sjleaks very little couple desperately needs some you must be willing to allow your
English. She keeps him clean and guidance. How llbout contacting son to live his life as he wishes and ·
fed, but that's about all. The parents Betsy's ttacber or the boy's pedialri- let him know he has your blessings.
virtually igll(llt this child. Betsy, cian?Theguidanccmustcomefrom
Gem or lhe Day (Credit Benjamin
however, is aazy about her lillie an outs~ w11ose prOfessionalism Franklin): The Constitution only
brother and he responds wcnderfully wiD be R~PCCted. Bless you for guarantees lhe American people lhe
to her.
beingao a1at and c.inJ. You've right to pursue happiness. You have
I realize that having a less-than- done your good deed for today.
to catch it yourself.
perfect child has been a biua piU . Dear Aaa Landers: 1Jta1izc that
Do you havt quutions aboMI su,
for my cousin and his wife, but I a pat many men and women have
bMt no OM tO raJk to? Ann Lo./lders'
b•y believe these two do no( · · Jost people they love in the many booklet, "Su IJIId 1M Teen-Ager,"
know whallhey m doing. They m wars 011' COUDlJy has fough~ but I
is fraN: IJIId to tht poilu. Send a
not intcJtstcd in comacting Qther have had more than my shan: of such
selftJildremd. long, biUiiiUs-si:e ;
parents of Down Syndrome children grief.
envelope
a check or mOM)'
mr do they wish to be identified
When I was a JitUe girl, my order forIJIId
$1.65 (this includes ·
wilh them.
falher died in the KQrean War. My postage and handling) to: Teens, ;
I'm afraid they are wasting older brolher was a pailDooper in
valuable time, allowing that baby to Vietnam and was ijlled wben be clo Ann lAnders, P.O. !Jo:r. JJ562,
Chicago, Ill. 606ll ·0562 . (In
lie in his cn'b for hours on end with was bln:ly 19. My husband died in Ccwufll, send $4.45.)
·
no intellectual stimulalion. It's easy the bamJcks dial wm bombed in
to see bow much he brightens up the l'elsian Gulf.
whenever Jletsy is around.
.I have a 1een-agc soo who tells
birthday
My patience· is wearing lhin. me he wants to 10 to West l'llint
Miss Briana Willis celebrated ·
Since they refuse to talk wilh other and be a commissioned offiCCl' in
her
first birthday Monday. She is
J11R1111, maybe IIOIIIelhing can be the Anny. I ... really friBhlened.
lhe
daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Brian
done to open their eyes to the Three wan ba-.e lllkca the tine 111111
Willis (Dee Matthews) of Rutland. ·
I loved most. aDd now·I ... facing

Keuny and Crystal (Hill) Turley, Racine, announce lhe birth of
their first child, a daughter, Kasey
Alexis, on April 22 at Holzer Medical Center. She weighed seven
fXH!Dds and 10 ounces and was 21
IIIChes long.
Maternal grandparents are Max
and Peggy Hill, Racine, and Patric•a HiiCtharleston, W.Va. Maternal great·grandpartnts an: Clifford
and Pauline Hill, Racine, and
~len Wallbrown, Gallipotis.
Palemal grandpareots are Kenny
and Karen T..-Jey, Racine. Paternal
great-grandparents an: Gladys Turley, Gallipolis, and Evelyn Russell,
Mason, W.Va.

The Dally Sentlnei--Page-1 .

Names in the news

Couple with Down's Syndrome
child need~ to·seek counse~ing

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

YOU CAN DO TIE BEST AT CROSS'

l

IN RACINE SINCE 1860

--·

-

••"

"•
•

...-.....

I:

I·~· .. ~ _ .z.., . .-----------------~--- .. --~·--·-- ·

'

·- ..··-

~--~ - ····· ~

..... .

- . ... ·-- --·
•

-··

., -- -- ----·---.. ----- -~------&gt;, --------····"-·-.,- '

�\

Wednellday, July

1992

To place an ad

ZESTA
CRACKERS

Call 992-2156
MON.

STO~E

HOURS ,Mo~tday ~ Sunday

CLOSED SUNDAY
• Ada ou\l)de the couty your ad ruftl m~l be prepaMI
• llec:eiftl dltcouat for ad. pUd ia •dwuce.
Ad. : Ci..aWa)' and Found ad. under 15 word. will be
rio 3 cloyt ol no cborp.
• Price olad for aU c.pi\alleta..n il doYble P rice of ad cotl

c

8 AM-10' PM

thru FRI. 8A.M.-3P.M . • SAT.B-12

POLICIES

POUND BOX

• 1 poiollino lypo oaly....d

• Ado lhot OIUIIiwo pold ... ..r ..... ""'
Cord ol Thaolu
Happy Ado

Yard Sol•
• A cluoillod od••U-eol placed inlhe CaiUpolio Dolly
Trilouoo (acopl Cluoiftodllioplay, BUiiauo Cord or Lopl
Nolie•) willallo.appUr ill Lhe Poiat Pleuant Ree;ilter ud

DEL MONTE

CATSUP

the Dally SmtiMI, r.ehiDS OYtll' 18,000 hom01

-

••

--·

28 OZ. SQUEEZE

~

.....

'

..
•

79(
Bolognct--12 oz.
s
99
69(
Sausage......-..........................
PRINGLES
99 POTATO CHIPS
SUPERIOR

·

Frankies.

USDA CHOICE BEEF

Round Ste

o..oo.12

..

: 20 loll. Wlclh: 20

Floor Jol1ta:
IMt

r x a•, 1&amp;"

245-Rio Crondo
256-Cuyoo Diol.
Dlt~

643-Arabio

379-'fo'ol..,l

Er;t,::r to be lnlt.lllect
ualng troated lumber on
lloulh WilL

SUpportiiOim(a): 4" •

CLOROX
-BLEACH
GALLON

(

773-Mooon

.

949-Ruine

89~-l.clul

742-Ruliand

937-Bulfolo

..

drly

.........

1

a.

(7) - 15· • 22. 3lc

To All My
Friends,
Thank You!
Dorothy
McGuffin

COONEY
July II, 111811

•

11

ch

0

....

hll blrtllday.

He t.11 ua eucldonly
Hllthoughte
unknown.
But Itt t.llua
ntlfiiOfiH

We 11'1 proud to own.
So nuure him, God,
In Your Glltden of

Rill;
For herl on •rill
He - lito belt.
Wile and Family

Help Wanted

Gl

2o/o

'

•

GROUND

2
$1
CHUCK
Med. Eggs.--DOL
q·9C $ 90

GRADE A

10 Ll. PACKAGE

FLAVORITE

Armour Treet..•120L 99, Ice Cream. -......Half Gal.
·
BORD!N'S Assr.
.
C
.JIFFY CORN
51
.
.
s
9
9
·
Tw111
Pops.-:····
.
m.¥-:.Muffin MIX
...a.soz.
---- ...
--II
--,11.-·--·---E

WITH llEAOI ONLY

TIDE DOERGENT 1:

II
136 oz. II
II
11

NORTHERN

TOILET TISSUE

$699

C:JJu~
At Powell'• Super Valua
&amp;tllru July 11,1882

GGod

orr.r

Um111 P., Cualo11111'

I

5 5

2 ~2PAK

FLAVORITE .SUGAR

$149

Good Only At Powell'• Super Valu
Ofler Good' July 5 thru July t1, 1M2
Umlt 1 Per Cullollllr

(

5LB.

BRAWNEY

PAPER TOWELS

2

5
.1

GoodaoO:~ A well'a Supar Valu
Ofler
'July 5 tllru July 11, 18112
.
Um111 'Pw Cultomar
·

(

.GROUND

BEEF

•

..
. .
•
•
•

.

. •
•

•
••
'

'1'1.._

•

s

•

90

''

Cell for Appolntmenl

3/W92J1In

r

POE ROY PIKE - Chllw - A ono otory homo with
·now liking, nower rool, doubla pant wtndowa.

-wirinG. ond pUnbiJe. Hu·e IIIOina, 2boftuno,
lind ono cargnge on apprax. 11:2- d giiMIId.

PI,IOO

LDHG JIOTIOM - -a.hlln Road .,. H you're tired of
f!\Mg In town, you will :ant ID tau 1 loolc 11 thlo 3
becllgomt, 2 bath horne with large lamlly room, INP-,
tlnllhlld " - I ond glonNfln porch on -r&gt;f&gt;!':ll
J41.100
·DOmETURNER Brokor.................................,H2-1112
BRENDA JEFFEfhi:......... - ...............................182-1011

DARL*EITE'triART..........:-..................................5
, IAHIIYIUTCtiER...................... _ •. ,............. l''''''. . . .l71·
IHI!AYLW~~~Ciilohkt.........................,..317o0421
· J~RY 8PIUUILII'N ..............................~304) 18244N

992·7013 Or
992·5553

or TOLl FlEE
1·808-141·0070

Bas•• Rd.,Racite
6-28-'82-1

DARWtll, OHIO

71311'i1111

1110

HOWARD
EXCAVADNG

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949·2627 or
1·100·137·1460

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
ond TRACKHOE WORK

Lllwn Mowing.
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seldin g.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

HOlE SITES ond

AYAILASI.E.

SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
TRAILER SITES,

LANOCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTAU£0

UIIESTONE•lRIICKING
mEE ESTIMATES

R_.lol&amp; Comm.,.lal
frt1 Elllmat•
f.26-'112&lt;fft

EICAYIIING
BULLDOZING ·

992-3838

11111"11211 mo.

CLOSED CIRCUIT T.V.

PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING

--•

~

3 Annoui'ICIIMIU

&lt;

LIC.ENSED and BONDED

PH. 614·992·5591
12·5-tfn

Vocollon

-

o........ - .
z:,
t
==:'It,
T.....ro
Pullna Clriono.
_"""Couno,......
lnr:l

1

•

Sl Rl588 W•t •
44&amp;-11515 or

OH.

AtJtllorllad .....,. for:

:===~~~~::::::::::;:==~~

"W1 BeM 0111 Oll'tilli•sl

Toshiba • Drake
Uniden • Panasonic

-LIIU•Dolti•Y•'

Sales·Senice-lstitttates

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

AEOOcE: bum all Ill ,..,·
.... labOPAL-aEYap*-lc.Aw-FNh
Drug.

'limo

...

~·

. . . . ,a.
And

-

t,...; S... a.otf W0.1dalds
Solodlono. Col .,.._, .....

1--

-73W250
u.s.or- 3011•7!0!.
Conodo
Alnlll

~

,_

•s ••• .-. .

lntanMikMt

Loee
a..- 11111:
llapa: PMtb't,_, 11,.... E,..

!feWW

llcni~Ul--

Vlrillr Of Dill Pill A 5 71
Cllll
For ln-....._.
..: ' L Ptwmanrtnl
...........,,

c.o.o.~c:..· I 1 1
....._._. lnfolmlllou: 1~
712-!W'T. '1ltpo "'"' All ~

RoB. Wid' ••• ,......_
Whb w.t1r lnlamJI'&gt;cL P.O:

•NtwHo•s
oG1rt111
•Co!IIPltfe
Re1110deliag
Stop &amp; Com,.re
flEE uniWIS

985·4473
667·6179
2-1·92-tlo

~JAYMAR
QuaiiiJ

Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE

FOR SALE

112111

CHARLIE'S
~LL DOZER
WORK, DRIVEWAY
WORK a•ll
· LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SEIYICE

NEW USll~ Home under construction 'Falrviaw Subdi~lon~x. 1600 sq. ft. hll bel8fMI11 wl2 car gnge1
3 bedr--·'l.'ltlic room, I acre o! g_rouncl. (Buy now ana
chaole yOUr own color ocheme) $85,000

IIISOWLI UTES

LONGBOnoM· 1 IIG'O with RMtr Frontage! All excellenl

I ,___ _e-_26-_'92_·_1mo_
. _,

LETART· lllnulll Ad.· Ono.,.. land..,aped for mobie
homo or building 1111. $3,500 make an olllirl

MINERSVILLE Ad.· Large 2 1tary haflil 3-ol boaoomt,
pine wa0dwol1t, lhed bUilding. lnlnied1111 Pao-llooll THIS HOME IN DESPERATE'NEED OF
AH OWNERI $22,600 (COME SEE... MAKE AN OFFER)

992 •7553
POMIIOT, OH.

"
&gt;

11104:11 IIAFT. lllll..t..... tnc..
P.O. lox US, .,.,.... . ., WV

,,

•.

-.

..
&amp;

4

Giveaway

1 lang ...... ._.. All. ~
-.

....

..

=.~poJIII , IMo

....

_~

.... oldraaoloo: p o r t -

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

•

~:

:·
••

...,.
-·.."
-··
....
..
::-..

....

~

...

CALL (614) 446·9971 {KELLY)

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER
264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

Lost &amp; Found

GALLIPOliS, OHIO 6

IRIE ESTIMATES

_

: . . . loloclldog.S-o

NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp; -.lht
REMODELING

1 lolocllj
115 .. -

-

•we Ott llit Je~ De11 flew"
Call II Tromm

614-742·2321

' 20 ,.... ....

• ..._

.......1.

LOll

ajiCII on

so.

-

...

Aod

~--~~~~on Lick ltd, -

=·"""'·wv
Crilb

Clooll.

contiCI ""'
- . · - Lick ltd, (W.
2!1115. (No

-.--Call._

_
-.

-.
-.
-.
:;:
-.

-

.oC
~·

·!

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. ::.
-·
=._c:,.-:
=:•or='-"' ;:~
aid

New Ho•a • Vi•yl Sitli•1
New Gar1111 • leplaceN•t Wiadows
Roo•ldllitiotsa • R..r•l
COMMERCIAL IUid usmFNI'IAL
FllEE ESTIMA'IJ:S

614·949·2101 or 949·2860
llo S•••J C1ll1l

1..------r-------'

~-

Yard Sale

1

r

GaDipolls
&amp; VIcinity

•

oo1o ou1 11 lal:bwl

• lid.

Frldtr. .,..., 10. F....._

...... 2 ....

EECI..

150 -

--

••
-~

,.,,...,. -;.

. _ •h a -.

ITo II, -Tlme!loltf

-.

;_.
~

~ua~Wtil•Aiar

IAG=OHIO
llllpW

lfolw~

.I

PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowen• Oaltt Siws

•W.•••ters

614·949·2804

'

WE NEED UlllNOI FOR ALL AREAII'OP MEIG$
COUNTY I WHEN YOU'RE THII(INQ OF BUYING OR
SELLING ••• Ill! UII'IRST FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEED81

..•·

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

bellmont. -

· POFIEROY· .... mkA.._·11121IDiyheme3bectoomo,
""""18111~ ~.,.~.- Dlumblna. wiring &amp; ....,.,. payne
wlncbn. Sldt daddng, ~ . fUll blument on 4 lots. A
unique looldng heme.'$32.600

=~

r.

AUTO RIJrrAL, IIC•
$11•• A DAY liD UP

llr-------, ,....-----...:..------,

a

·,
-.

VIr-

ColT- Forfno-1-

LOST: Rod ......,
.. :roo. ............
black Tliloi

IIIDOLEPORT· 2 aIDly hmelshlngle houoe 2-3 boaooms,
~Mil, lllnll gulumiiKlll IWapl_a&lt;&gt;e beoement
· an paved 11reet. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION ( $25,500

~~

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

St. Rt. 7
Clltallire, OH.

-

.

'

hftrt 6 p.a. lolvo .,,..
All• 6p.a. 614·985-4110

Call 614·992·
6637

campng siWII $8,000

-

-

:.J: ~mr~s

Real Estate General

992"2259
608 fAST MAIN
POMERO't; OHIO

--

Brac:lan : 11100 441 SCI1

MINIJ,I"M M24W
~--·--.

SATELLITE T.V.

-.

. -.

____=_

llyttla
-....H=ri

ilalll!lo
- -'o-And
Cliulor

CONSOLIDATED SECURITY SYSTEMS

The Adult Education Center
Trt-c:oun1ty VciCitlonal School

The Adult Education Center
Tri.County Vocational School

·.

::-::--=-~::--,....,.......,..-

25140.

coaL

'MORE EMPL:OYMENT OPPORTUNmES
'HIGHER PAY
'MORE SECURITY

u... Ono On Clno.

24 THn E~IICI

CATERING

BROADEN YOUR HORIZONS
. ADD WELDING TO YOUR CURRENT
SKILLS!

...-

•

..-.1037

aa.--..wv...._

Stata lkauail
btf. .tll • C011111ltatlo!t

lllartyourowniM•Innl wlll•lnl... ln••••-tand

JOB OPPORTUNmES

F- Mull Tilt Uno.

Aeoldentlal • Commercial

Dlntet Polce.flre C.-ct.

WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Umeatone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

IWifluntnt8,acltoola,ltoepbla, nurwlng ~
un'-altlla.

POMEROY- Union Avo. - Lorge 1001111 end I boau.lul
llaiiWI)' _,. with thlt heme. II oloo hu H bedroomo
FA NG lumlce, and 1!ft batho.
$tt,IDO.

IIDOLEPOAT - Wolnut Streot - A ono otory homo In
IDwn. Thla e room 2-3 bedroom home lila on 2 loll end
hal a partlol be-nl Hu all now wiring end low
ulilldot.
.
PG,OOO

~

PARTS

,.------!.------.,
-------z
RIC
BURGLAR • FIRE

RUTLAND -You nood to - thl1 bellltilul 2 apartment
houoe with hugo brodcyard end gerden apot yotln town.
RM~t eM apamllnt to ~ witl paymenll.
Priced to ... Ill jult 126,1110.

.

lO U. PACKAGE

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

117L ..... It.
. . .lOY, OliO

TRAIN FOR FOOD SERVICE JOBS

The Adult Education Center
Tri.County Vocational School
Call1·800-637-6508

RACINE AREA- St. RL 124 - Alrnoll 4 ICIN of nlca
laying lawn ond garden area end 1 4 bodRJCm heme lilt
wlthlii lilt 1111 I yooro h11 had 1 now 1001, oldlng,
cablnots, lumace, winclowt, 11tllllto, olall garogo,
biuret, ond now plumbing In beth.
S42,100

.
.•

July 31, 11192

rk

ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN
COMPUTER REPAIR TECHNICIAN
COMMUNICATION ELECTRONICS
TECHNICIAN
BE JOB READY IN 12·18 MONTHS
ELECTRONIC SERVICING

a ~for 1 tlll'-r ho!&gt;IWP 10 you could have 1 Iiiia extra
w-nt.
$H,IOO

•
•

BILL SLACK

r------...:.------,·
1
----..,........,-----!
JOB OPPORTUNITIES

POMEROY - Rou till - Thlo home Ia juot whot the
r.m11y Wlllll and noodo. With Ill oplitentry brick fronl itt
1 g~~ttlooldng home. Hu loll al 11Pf1C1 lor .. tho kido
with 3 bodruomo up, a nlct big kiEhln, dining lrOI, with
a bla tMng IOCIII. The buamentjulllllldullttle 'MHk to
bt fnlthod that would rnab another bedroom, 1 f1111lly
room or whotovor you Willi for·II to be. The b1111Mnl
oliO IOidiiM to f1l two car garage oo you -get wet
when It lllnt. Of COUrM, we're rudy for f1l ounlhlno
with lltln-grwncl owlrnmlng pool outback that tho patio
owrlooko. Thlt heme till on oJ19ut an - thllllloo hat

-

- -·

Anno LJ r·c cne nt s

~1-.

Offer Good Thru

. .. .I . . . . . . . . Oftlc.

Cookl, worklrw, and ll'IUIIIIIIN n 11dad for

MIDDLEPORT- 8eietisii..t·- ThilliOmelojust Yttlat
the newlywldo nood to get ttaNd ln. H11 two bedroom•
uptlalno with nlca oiDCI kilchen and living room down.
.
AT JUST$11,100.

.

'-

•.:~

·• ::!•

' Grandpa 8111111

•FIREWOOD

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYICE
992·5335 or
915·3561

42% MORE COOKS NEEDED BY 2006

llddljtporl, OH

.

Love,

(114)111!-2411
(11.)111!-4575

30 VISITS FOR s30

JOB OPPORTUNmES

205 North &amp;.Cone~ Ave.

. "'
._,.
·-

c1n't blkAIIfflrt
for you.

FREE ES-,.,A'TES
45765 Fllllooodo Rood
Po.....,., Ohio 457111

•UGHT HAUUNG

I1':=====:::::::======~1
r

REESE'S
PEANUT
BUnER ..

laWIIY hom YOU. But

SpfcW!dlg II Ctlst011
F,_RIIIir
NEW &amp; USED PlRTS fOI
All MAKES &amp; MODILS

llliUIII
lllflllt Ill Or ••
Pkll u~

River Festival and at the Dave Diles Park
• Middleport
July 4th. ASpec!'al thankS
II
011
.L 1m
goes to AJ 0IJ..tfer
1111
&amp; lw
Gi ore.

OfFICE 982-21186

VALLEY BELL

Equlplllllll Cl•led &amp;
Degreaaad

UCIIE

3-16-1 Iiiii

pur asea GnJ Ovt-ln•IIIII"Da itemS at
the 2nd Annua I Paint PIeasant Regatta &amp;

forgotten by Chlldrwn,

In Loving Mlmory of
Wahar "BHI" Whlt8 on

J

..

'*

·z

I••••Y

WHALEY•S AUTO

MICROWAVE OVEN
••dVCIUPIIR

273•5 55.5

WOUld 1•1ke tO thank everyone WhO

Sadly mlaeed, but not ·

GrlriCichlldrwn,
Brotherland Slatera

Tntetor ·Trwlltra
HouMobllt Holllll

FOREVER BRONZ
TANNING

-==~:::::=:::~:..!::!

In Loving Memory of

PEARL H. VAN

They took IWIY
ho1111; they look
my money;
they took ME

TIIICkl

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
.
.

4-4-92-llll

Rt• 2
_. W u
..- 'l-.[ t. ] Millwoo.,

+.

,.1

. ~

I AIIIIIY &amp; Chris,
I love you.'

Phone 111-3011

• ... This Way

Brtnt Bolin, G.M. AlloNied
blda mutt ba ftlad II flte
olllce ol L•dlng Crnk
ConHIY-rDillrlolbylht
~~C::,d :.:To!k ~~~ ~=
win bt openect 11td rue~
llloud on "" 231d
or
July 111112 11 7:00 P.M. atlht
oHfca ol Ludlng Crlllt
Conurnnr:y Dlolrlct Thll
&amp;o.d
to
ocoepl miiVH
or r-Jocl thllrlght
any Mellor

ervtces.

:~

882- New Rena

Real Eilate General

18 OZ. JAR

UCINI, OH.

s7~plec .....

'3...

•

.

CLAS.SIF.IEDS

OcL 9, 1814

r

ondlor
''""'Lop:
buml•l
SU'!port
4" x4" and
4"lll lnolad poell.

LB.

.,

949·2671

667 .CooJ.IIle

(7) 111c

•l~;~l~n~~~;

OC.Fioor: plywood,
3/4" longue
groove
glued Md
nollld.
lnoulotlon, drywol Ea1t

1 card of Thanks

CAROLINA

458-Leon

No painting or wiring

34481 Corn Hollow Road,
Aulland Ohio will be
accepting nlled bide for
the hllowlng:
Loft Speclllcatlone·
Ouoiaa on matwlala and
11111or ror •"• ,....., ohould
:;_~rmlned rrom "'•••
Cur~ent Room Dlmenalone• 20'Wx30'LX 15,6"H.
Helghl ebove current
,_~
floor.. ::prox..Lin

c

39(
Leg Quarters. . . .
Pic·O·Chick___.La. 89c
89(
Ground Turkey_;..LB.

PoJDeroy
98S-Chooler
843- Porllood
24 7-Lolorl Folio

~::~n~~.~r~::'~i etc.
r-t~iurthar
quaatlon•.
AFTERGLOW DISTRIBUTING
ahould bo llrac'-'1 to

6.75 oz.

CHICKEN

36 7-Cheohire

PubliC Notice

PUBUC NOl!CE

C

oz. PKG.

6 7 3-P'l. Pleuant

.

SUMMER WEDDING
SPECIALS
Call992-7544 Even.
. 15.years experience.

:

20li.UG

LB. ROLL or 10 OZ. UNKS ·MOUNTAINEER

992~1iddloporll

--

Public Notice

BALLARD'S

~olllpoiM

1

•

DOG CHOW

va~mu

FOR. SALE
IULUftll lOUD DEIDUIIE
PUBUC NOTICE
'
A • It
4:30 '· a DIY BEFORE
Sllem townahlp TN•-·
griCU ure
Melaa County, will hold
l"lme
1lcl:noll
..
public hurlng on lht 1113
".
1---,--------..,---tJ~U=~.=
:::::.:.P.M. VALLEY INC·.
GATRELL PH~JTClGFIAPII-IYI
Bonnie Scott, Clllk

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......

PLU'Nii
WlifiH,
cun ... IIlLI

G.Wa County ~leij;o CoiUity Ma10n Co., WV
Al'f:a Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

Public Notice

"

PURINA

~·It

Bl LLETI\ BO.\RI&gt;

·•

BUCKET

IERWOODS
HO. UPIIR
•mcE

Ci(Jasifwd page• cover lhe
foUo_":lng lelephone ej changes ...

388-ViaiOa

lo M...Oriatn

•
USID

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Friday

COPY DEADLINE
MondiJI Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wedrlesdoy Paper
ThWiday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

• r,..

• SeaWtelil DOt ,..,...~Je for erron ala.er fltat day (check
for erron ftral day :-d runa ill paper}. C.U bt:forc 2:00p.m.
day afaer puhlac&amp;Uon &amp;o We eorr«tion

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. (tH.
WE RESEIYI THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., JULY 5 THRU JULY II, 1992

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SNAFU® bY Braee Bnttie

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The World Almanac:®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Building
Suppllel

Nortll

will find the right plays,
you jwrt pull cards, you will
many mistakes.
Today's deal Is a typical example. tempted to switch to a diamood: But
Cover the East and South cards. before doing that. stop and count out
North's response of two no-trump is South's hand. You know that he began
the Jacoby major-suit forcing raise. with five spades, three hearts and one
South precipitately bid what he hoped .club - therefore, lour diamonds.
he could make.
With most of South's possible diaYou lead the heart queen. Declarer mood holdings. it doesn't matter what
wins in hand with the ace, casbes the you lead. The critical positioo occun
club ace and draws two rounds of when South has the A·J of diamonds.
trumps, your partner following Then If you switch to a diamond, you
throughout. Next, Soutb rulfs dum- will save him a 8"ess for the queen. Inmy's club queen and plays a heart to stead, you mwrt break the habit of a
your 10 and dummy's king. Finally, lifetime and concede a ruff-and-disSouth exits with dummy's last heart, card: play a heart or a club. Tbis
everyone fallowing suit What do. you leaves deelarer having to guess who
lead now?
holds the diamond queen to malte his
Knowing that South is out of hearts slam.
,
and clubs, you might naturally be
Ill-,._.,... 110:wz -

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Werl

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Wlnted to Buy

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
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In "Don Quixote," Mi8"el de Cer- I +
Pass 2 NT
Pass
vantes wrote that "Diligence is the 6 +
Pass Pass
Pass
mother of good fortune, and idleness,
Opening lead: • Q
its oppooite, never led to good intention's goal." That certainly apj)lies at
the bridge table. U you do a lot of L..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____J

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II'MFO •
PREVIOUS SOLUTION• "A m111 .,., blllld h lmMII a lhrone al bayonets
but "" cannot tit on n." - William R. lnge .
8

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�Ohio University .
College of Osteopathic Medicine

we GlatJI'I
A~tYour

Hubbard
tournament
results

FetJerai ·FocHJ
Stamps

FamilY.

Medicine
'

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor ·
of Family Medicine

'

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11,tii!;IN l'a.IIDY

WE RESEIM THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
OUANTIT1ES. NONE SOLD TO I;IEALERS.

hwt . . . . . . . . I

I

Super Lollo:

9-12-14-15-27-44
Kicker:

5-2-4·7-9-5
Pick 3:
9-6-8

PageS

•

:

Pick 4:
6-1-7-6

3ildtwl- ~ ...

-

. . lot

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por iloln- :
•

Vol. 43, No. 48
Copyrlghlld 1992
:

Paving project
bids accepted by
Meigs commission

GRADE A

Perdue
Pick of the Chicken
P-.1

'
Including The Best Variety Anywhere!

one

COMING DOWN - The old Betsy Ross building on Fifth
Aveaut in Middleport is coming down. Pullins F.xcavating began
tearlll1 down the building last week and the lot is expected to be

WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Past Councilor's Cub of Chester Council No.
323, D d. A. will hold iiS annual
DiCIIIc and meeting at Forl&lt;ed Run
!hate Park in Reedsville on
Wednedni11111dlaay at6 p.m. Officers will
be nominlled and installed. Guests
wclc0111e. Bring gifts for the

..-.

SYRACUSE · London Pool in
S)'IICUIC will hold a night swim
6olll7 10 9 p.m. on Wednesday. It
was abo •nounced that the baby
pool is now open, and dates are
Millllle for pool parties. fnfortna'
doe is available by calling Pool
Manaaer Shannon Slavin at 992-

Stew~ new director, will be p.esenL All students and parents are
urged to attend.

lliCDCL

tor.

POMEROY · A children's protee shins will be
preaented at the Meigs County
Public Library in Pomeroy on
Wettstlay at2 p.m. There is a $5
and all children are invited to

HARRISONVILLE • Harrisonville Masonic Lodge wiD hold
its regular meeting on Saturday.
Work in E.A. degree.

pam on tie-dyed

Dole
Bananas

.

'

~·

I'EPPERONI OR

I

Wilh , _ u., Tilll• • . Why Shop ...... - . &amp;ei

2 $3 White
Hair

Mama Rosa
Deklxe Pizzas.. :t::

Rain

Spray........ 7-oz.

I

79 C

POMEROY • Senior Citizens
Dance Club will hold a dance on
Friday from 8 to 11 p.m. Mosie by
Smokey Mountain Grifters. Bring
snacks for the snack Jable.

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Men:lwlts Association will meet
W~y at8:30 a.m. at the conference room of Bank One in
Pollleroy. All members urged to

9909.

GOLDEN RIPE

FRIDAY
POMEROY • Meigs County
Bikers wiD have a meeting .egsrding its hog roast fund raiser for the
County Home and senior citizens
center on Friday at 6 p.m. at
Hawgholler on Slate Route 681.

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Children's
craft classes, for ages 3-9, will
begin on Saturday, and will continue July 18 and July 25 from 10 to
II : 30 a.m. at Middleport Arts
Council. Each class will cost $4.
Shirin Nuggud wiD be the inslruc-

R...,.In S.... &amp;.25-oz
lft..l"

I

l28HEETSP£RROU2PLY

79 C

BOIIIty
s
Paper Towels ~
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
DIET COKE.

21DSHEETSPERROLL1PLY

Charmin

Bath TISSUe .. 4-Roll

9
8

r-

Racine residents will vote on a
1.4 mill renewal levy for current
expenses in lhc November General
Election:
.
.
Mcctmg at Star Mtll Park thos
week, Racine Village Council
approved a resolution to put the
renewal levy on lhc hallol
A hearing was held on the proposed 1993 village budget which is
now available for public v~wing 9
a.m. 10 l p.m. at the mayors office
through July 17. A special meeting
was set for 10 a.m. Monday._ July
20 for the purpose of adopung a
budgel for 1993.
.
Council acccp!Cd lhc S3.155 bod
from John Fisher, Pomeroy, for the
1978 Ford Olassis. It was the only
bid submitted and was above lhc

minimum bid of $3,000.
Approval was given by Council
to transfer money from lhc general
fund to.cover repairs on the police
crutscr. Thanks were extended to
Sheriff James Soulsby for the usc
of a cruiser while the village cruiser was in the repair shop.
Clerk Carolyn Cleland and
Councilman Henry Bentz were
authorizcd. lo attend a workman 's
compensatiOn hearing at Logan on
July 22. The clerk reported that she
had received word that the $1,000
check from the Dcpanmcnt of Nat·
ural Resources for the fire equipment grant with which to purchase
·1umoutgcar will be received SOOn.
A complaint from Tom Wolfe
regarding a drainage problem on
John's 1toad was discussed. Coun-

_,.,.
\
. .
cil authorized the pun:hakc of lraf·
fie paint for the school signs and
markings, a ~as water heater for the
annex buildmg, and the hiring of
Craton Wolfe to work whtle Glenn
Rizer is on vacation.
Sidewalk repair projects were
discussed and it was noted that the
ordinance requires propcny owners
to share in the eosl of the repair.
One project was discussed and if
the ~ropcrty owner agrees woth
sharong the cost, the mayor was
authorized to proceed.
Attending were Mayor Cleland,
Clerk Powell , Council members,
Robert Beegle, Henry Benu, Ron
Clark, and Scott Hill, Marshal Don
Dye, Fire Chief John Holman, and
firemen, David Neiglcr and Craton
Wolfe.

I

Coca Cola Classic
or Sprite

. By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News StafF

6-Pak 20-oL Btls..

71·
LIGHT ICE MII.K OR

Brayers

Ice Cream......

{

C
:&gt;

ATHENS (AP) - Cornmunily
leaders and officials from five
southeast Ohio counties llll!cd resi·
dents and supporters to attend the
last public hearing on whether
scrubbers should be used at Ohio
Power Co.'s Gavin PlanL
Paula Thacker, a spokeswoman
for the coalition of Athens. Gallia,
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton counties, said the group was trying 10
brmg as many people as possible 10
the hearing todsy_in Canton.
.
More than 100 coal miners and
supporters planned to travel to
Canton, said Gene Oiler, president
of Uniu:d Mine Worl&lt;CIS 1886.
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio is conducting the

hearing on American Electric
Power Co.'s clean air compliance
plan. The plan includes installing
scrubbers to clean the emissions of
high sulfur coal burned by its Ohio
Power subsidiary at the Galli a
County plant
The federal Clean Air Act
requires electric utilities to cut sul fur dioxide emissions by 40 percent
to SO percent on average over the
next 10 years to reduce environmental damage from acid rain.
If AEP's compliance plan isn't
approved by lhc PUCO, the company could switch to lower sulfur,
out-of-state coal, which could lead
to the loss of more than 1,000 coal
mining jobs in Meigs County.
Athens Mayor Sara Hendrickcr

said she would attend the hearing
because she cannot ignore the economic impact lhat could result if
scrubbers arc not installed at the
Gavin plant.
Previous hearings were held in. Athens and Columbus.
The Industrial Energy Con sumers. a group representing busine sses such as BP Oil and
Anheuser-Busch Inc., arc opposed
to the $800 million cost of the
scrubbers. They believe the cost
will be passed on through electric
rate increases.
Samuel Randazzo. IEC's attorney, said the group would present
us testimony at the Canton hearing.
The hearing was scheduled in
two sessions, at 3 p.m. and 6 p.m.

Merchants discuss summer.activities;
car show and sidewalk sales on tap

i
1

SALEM CENTER · Star
THURSDAY
1t778 and Star Junior
Grange
POMEROY· There will be an
oven bated chicken dinner at the G111np: 11878 will meet on Satunlay
senior citizens center in Pomeroy at 8JJ.m. at the G11Dge Hall located
C!n Thurlday from S-6:30 p.m. COst on County Road I near Salem Cen·
&amp; $3 per person. Entertainments ll&gt;'' ter.Judaina rJ the Art IIICH'holllg·
the Clusica will follow dinner. raphy contest will be held. Junior
craft judgina. Potluck supper folJlree will o«eriftg. !'llblic invited.
lowing the 'meeting.
POMEROY - Meigs County
MIDDLEPORT - Holzer Clinic
Solpbox Derby meeting at Pleas·
of
Meigs County, at ISO Mill
er'1, 7 p.m. on tb.y. Plans' will
S~
Will do sports physicals OD
llesin for next year's derby, and
1111yone interested in "saving" the Sat.urday for area schools. AI!
!ltrbY for Meigs County is urged 10 Me1gs l..ocal students should mive
at 7 a.m. and all Easran Local stuUlld lhe meeting.
dents at 9 a.m. Students should
RACINE • There will be an bring' signed sporlS physical cards.
~"'ioNI meeting for South· · Holzer Clinic phyaicians have
1111 HiP School B.-I OD tbunday donlted their time for this service.
il I P-11· illhe bind room. ~ilsa 992-2188 for information.

Township projects were approved
. by the board last fall when CDBG
projects were selected for 1992.
The Rutland project, on the other
hand , was chosen as a substitute
proJ.ect after the state rejected a
proJeCt submllted by Tuppers
Plaons-Chestcr Water district for a
water lone ex ten soon.
Metgs County Engineer Philip
M: Roberts announced that townshops and other political s.ubdivis•ons should begon consodcrong proJCCts and JOb estimates for Round
Stx of the Issue II program (1993). ·.
According lo Robens, a new
"pr~-application" form is being
revtsed and approved for submis-.
soon by thos~ boards, The new
form , accordong to Roberts, wil(
eliminate the risk of filing volumic
nous paperwork before a project is··
approved for Issue II funding.
:
The application procedure iS:
expected to get underway for nextyear 's proJects before the end oC
July.
The board alsoapprovcd thC:
(Continued on Page 3)

Southeast Ohioans go to Canton
for last Gavin Plant hearing

rec
....,_

RACINE • Charles and Fannie
Wolfe Beaver family reunion on
Saturday at Star Mill Park in
RACINE · Southern Athletic Racine. Meal at ooon. All ~elatives
Boa 1 s wiD meet Wednesday at 7 and friends m invited, and should
p.m. It lbe high school 10 discuss bring a covered dish and tible serihe Meiss County Fair and other vice.
rand rai!lm. Everyone welcome.
LONG BOTIOM • Old FashMIDDLEPORT • Pomeroy ioned tee Cream Social, be&amp;imina
IAdae 164 F&amp;AM will hold a spe· at 4 p.m., Long Bottom Communi~ill meeting on Wednesday at 7 ty BuildinJ. Several flavor• of
JIJil. in the MM degree a1 the Mid· homemade tee cream, sandwicbes,
desseRS, drinks, music, etc.
illepM Lodge Hall.

deared in another week. Eight houses for low incom~ families will
be constructed on the lot once streets and utilities are in place.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel New Staff
The Meigs County Commis sioncrs accepted bids for three road
paving projects, to be funded with
1992 Community Development
Block Grant funds at their regular
meeting on Wednesday.
Shelly Company of Thornville
was the sole bidder on the three
CDBG projects, and submitted bids
as follows: Middleport, widening
and pavong of a portion of First
Avenue, $22,932; Salisbury Township, paving of a portion of Naylor's Run Road , $30.039.90· and
Ru~and Village, paviog on Depot
Street, S8,466.
The bid was accepted by the
board, but no contract was awarded
pending completion of paperWork
from the state.
Little or no loeal matches will
be required for the projects, since
the CDBG grant amount and project estimateS met or cxcccdcd the
bids submitted from Shelly Campany .
The Mid~lcport and Salisbury

Racine council approves resolution
to put 1.4 mill renewal levy on. ballot.
-.
~

Community calendar

1 Secllon, 10 Pages 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio Thursday, July 9, 1992

.
U~S.

•·

VIlli"'....--

price ......

.

Tonight, mootly doudy with
:ilightchanu ofshowers . Low
around 70.

compttelllt
.
-• ·•
·rolocillna
tho - · IIVIr9
or.• .ro~n-:
c:hlcl&lt; wlilah ..
- -• ._....,., t :
thllctta'
,..,.

; Qol _lin: I'• _,. alleqic 10 ivy tends 10

turn up all over the
poi- ivy, but ay friend never body, even tllougb lbe plants gener. . il ~- . . . be grabs lbe ally only come in contact with
,._ illiis •
llllllls. Whal caus- exposed &amp;leiS d. the skin.
es me 10 breat out when he · Question: What can I do to prevent gelling poison ivy?
doesll'l.?
" A.uwer.l'llisoo ivy and its Jela.
AIIIWer: Avoiding the offendlives, poison oalt and poison ing plants is the only SIR way. If,
J111111C. have lbe polential to cause however, )'011 Suspect dlaf)'OU have
ia:lly bliJiers in lboul8S percent of been in contact with poison iY)' or
ll!ose who are exposecf it. Your its cousins, poison oak or poiJOn
friald is obYiolllly one oldie lucky sumac, lhe fiiSl dling 10 do u lhorIS pm:cnt wbo aren't affected by o~ghly wash the exposed areas
With soap snd Wiler. 1 f - than
IInt"~ mil is caused 20 minutes have lapsed since the
by a SIK:ky chemical, urushiol, that CXJM?S!Dl'• wubing may notl:eep
II f~ willlilldle plaM's leaves, the !mbal rash frOm developing,
- - _ _ _ Ill addjrioe 10 get- but 11 can prevent )'011 from splalddna uruslliol Cll die skin by direc:lly ing it further.
If your clothing has come in
IDucllillg 1be lllliSbiol can be
l1llried 011 die ' fur of pelS, garden contact with the ~ sap tontain·
IDOls, golf balls or u~ing ~lse ing the urushiol, tt sbould be
dill comes in \XMiaa With a broken washed promptly. Handle the
planL II is also ~elcased when lbe clothes caRfully, preferably with
plant is bum~ so the smote is as vinyl gloves, 10 prevent any DIOR
!llngerous as rubbing against the skin tootact with the sap.
.
QlltSIIoo: Wbal's the.bcstllellleaves.
: Once the chemical comes In ment for poison 'ivy? · .
ODIIIICI widllbe ~• .egardlcss of
Answer: Avoidlncel But once
the way it came in contact, it it is too laic fer avoiilance 10 work
lqias 10 peneua1e in a mauer of there 11e things that may sbCncli
m~ Bu~ it Illites 12 hours to
the coune of the rash and itclUng.
ievenl days for the allergic reae- Mil4 cases of poison ivy may
Jion, c:ommonly called poisoo ivy, reqwre no more than a wet com1P ...-. II devdopi wilh Rdncss press or soaking in cold water to
pd sweUing, followed by itchy relieve the itdling. Cilamjoe locion
blislm.
may be soothing, too, but avoid
Conlrary 10 myth, poison ivy other home remedies. They often
can't be !plead via die oozing liq- wonen the damage to die already '
uid in the blisten. This liquid is initalcd skin.
your body's own Duid, and 11 does . There ~ ~veral non-prescrip1101 contain III'U.!IIiol. IIISiead, it is uon medtcauons on the market,
Jill •· cd by the body as a reaction like calamine lotion, that Clll dry
ID wlllhiol. But as )'011 tnow, poi· ·UP blisiCrS. However, the
per• ivy Clll be spread, and bm's cat! hydroconisone creams m not
!low itlllllllly hQ ~Ill:
. stroll8 enough 10 be of any vllne.
· The ~ pu lii'IISIIiol on his
Your pharmacist Clll point you
or ~er haads, and by toucMng 10 the best products of this type.
Pliler~ of his or ber or another Severe cases of poison ivy - parperson s body the chemical is ticularly those involving tbe face,
hPrred 10 lhll area as well. The eyes, hancb, or geaitils ~ sbould
that has the ~- eXJlOSUIC be refcmd 10 a phYsician for Propto the urushiol will usually break er care.
out first.willla 18911 and blislers.
"Family Medicine" is a weeldy
Areas that have thick skin or column. To submit queslions, write
las uruslllDl on diem wiD become to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni~a day or two laler, giving versity College of Osteopathic
die ilnprcasion that die poison ivy Medicme, Grosvenor Hall; Athens
.
'
- lple.d rrom die first group of Ohio.~S701.
ijisterS. Tlw's die reasoo polson

•••a

111M Nl.icY..flcll
o1f'lldly
lei to be
Nllorllloln-'-15-.
IIICIIll • : r: •illlnollf In thlud. 11
wt do run out af 1ft llf;a I 1 f ltml, •
. . allor ""' cllolot of •

COPYRIGIIf 1112 . • T11E KROGiR CO.
mMS AND f'!IICES GOOD SUNDAY,
JULY 8, THROUOII SATURDAY, JULY

·Obio Lottery

2·
li-GII.

Activities for the remainder of
the summer were discussed at
Wednesday 's regular meeting of
lhe Pomeroy Merchants Association.
The Oldies But Goodies Car
Club will sponsor a car show July
18 on the parking lot in Pomeroy.
Jerry Tillis is organizing the event
which should provide something
for people of Ill ageS to enjoy.
Sidewalk sales on Aug. 1 were
pla,ncd ·and discussed. Susan
Clark, president of the group,
encourages all businesses to hang
balloons outside their stores to
enhance the shopping BlmOsphcro.
The possibili'ty of purchasing

flags for business storefronts to identify the village of Pomeroy to
create a more inviting environment passing river traffic. Installation of
and visual appcai_IO the shopping lhe sign should be completed by
district was discussed. No action Sternwheel Weekend, 1hc second
was lakcn on this matter but costs wcclcend of October.
Kenny Utt, reporting for the
and details will be investigated.
Lions
Club, slated the construction
The development of a logo for the
association was also discussed.
of a roof over the parking lot stage
Progress on the installation of is slowly .progressing. Plans for
the riverfront sign on the parking such a structure should be forth ·
lot wall was discussed and it was coming from a contractor which
stated the wood for the sign will was contacted to do this initial
soon be delivered. The initial work. Those plans will be shared
par.1.ory work will be done by with Pomeroy Village Council for
llanks, president of the Big approval after which work will
Stemwhcel Association. This begin.
project is an undertaking by the
Ut~ also reponing for the Meigs
merchants and the stcmwhccl asso- County Chamber of Commerce,
ciations. The mcn:hants association urged anyone whQ could 10 attend
is responsible for having the sign today's PUCO hearings in Canton
lettered. The sign will be hung to
(Cotltlautd on PaJif 3)

JUST GOINC': TO DINNER • Sen. Albert
Gore Jr., stops to talk with reporters outside his
home in Carthage, Tenn., as he drives his family
lo dinner Wednesday night. Gore repeatedly

said he has no commenl on the speculalion that
he might be the Democrals' vice presidential
candidate. Gore's wife, Tipper, is in the passenger seat, ten. (AP)

With Gore pick, Clinton forms an
all-Southern, baby-boomer ticket
'

By JOHN KING
AP Politlcal Writer
NEW YORK - Bill Clinton 's
choice of Tennessee Sen. Alben
Gore Jr. as his running mate shapes
an all -Southern, baby -boomer
Democratic ticket that Clinton
hopes will personify change and
break the Republican electoral lock
on the South.
Gore is a safe pick in many
ways. He's been through a presidential campaign and its accompanying scrutmy, has a picture-postcard family, and his dedication to
the cnvirQ)Iment and arms control
issues shlJrc up Clinton in those
areas.
But the pick is not without risk.
Gore, 44, is a year younger than
· Clinton, so voters worried that the
Arkansas governor is a bit young
for the presidency aren't likely to
be reassured by the Gore selection.
And in picking Gore, Clinton in
many ways chose a mirror image of
himself - a fellow small-state
Southerner, a moderate and 'a
politician known more for substance than style. That's a good
ma1ch for him but not necessarily a
selection that will excite the Democratic Party's liberal base.
"It is a fairly narrow ticket.''
said Jesse Jackson, who this spring

said his two previous presidential
bids made him a logical choice for
Clinton. "It takes two wings to ny.
and here you have two of the same
wing."
Jackson had assured Democratic
National Committee Chairman
Ronald H. .Brown that he would
endorse Clinton prior to nex t
week's convention, but he sounded
noncommittal during a morning

appearance on Fox Tclevi soon in
Washington.
" I must assess this ticket," he
said.
But in a race in whic h Ross
Perot 's Jok cly independent bid
throws conventional thinking awry,
other Dcm,ocrats - including
senior Clinton aides who were
Gore boosters throughout the sclcc(Continued on Puge 3)

r----Local briefs--..
Thefts under investigation

,

Several thefts of property are under investigation by the Meigs 1
County Shcrifrs Department
Carl Vanover, Minersville, ~eponcd that sometime between June
28 and July 3 a propeller was stolen from his boat.
Anhur Gibson, Albany, ~eported that a three-wheeler was stolen
from his fann on Haning Road, and John Marzocchi, Carpenter Hill
Road, reponed 10 the department that someone stole 200 fecr of
Romcx I0-2 copper wire from his garage.
.

Sports physicals 'July 25
Holzer Clinic of Meigs County will be doing sports physicals on ·
July 25 for 8le8 scbools.
All Meigs District students should plan 10 arrive at 7 a.m. All
Eastern District students at 9 a.m.
·
firing a signed spons physical card to the clinic located on lhc ·
(Continued on Page 3)

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