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.P..ga

Pomeroy-MI~dleport-Galllpollt,

Sunclly llme.-Santlnel

July 19, 1992

QH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Agriculture officials say Ohio still too dry in spots despite rain
~. TOU!DO, Ohio (AP)- John
larivl.. likes what he sees this
l'lltrilc-. His &lt;Uil,IIDYbeans
IIIII fn:lb procb:cuie ~g tmellilnb IOmcent heavy rains.
• ·
.

Farm
Flashes
,

But 1101 all areas of die Sllle can cry fiollllast yeu wben blisltring • Slate offieials say heavy rains
eX)ieet to ldwmd qllk:kly from 1as1 hellllld alaelt of rain withered his bave helped aqJS in some pans of
summer's drough~ agricullwe om- cror.! in die fields.
die re but have done liUIC to end
cals say.
'Last year wu a eatasttojlhe. a drc!u&amp;hL
Kurivial said this year is a far But riablnow '1\'C'~ in &amp;ood shape.
"Despite aU Ibis rain we've had
Exeefienl. The best in a long ... it's not going to change the
time," said ·Kurivial. who openlleS dr~ughl condition very much,"
a 6IJO.aae Wm and flesb poduce satd Walter Schmidt, an
mamt near die village of Swanton, agronomist with the Ohio Stale
about20milesweslofTolcdo.
University Extension Service in
"We've had over 3 inches of F'Uidlay
rainindlelaslfewdays. Too much
S,ome areas ofth~ Stale ha~e
.
of a ~ thing could be ttouble. rccetved IIIORI than 6 inches of ram
M · H' h But nRht now, everything looks since S"""•y. While the rain was
·
a I p.m. sesston at etgs tg
JIIQI.'rhe Slid.
good f~ps, not eilough water
School and a 7 p.m. sessioa at Rae·
coon Creek County Padt in GaUia
County. Dr. Steve Boyles, newly
appointed Slate Extension Beef
Specialist may also be in atten·
dance at die ~ session. No
pre-regisllation or enrollJilent fee,
JUSI show-up and learn.
Local dairymen may want lo
attend die 1992 West Virginia
Holslein F'teld Day on July 23 at
the Bumgarner Farm near Letart.
West v· · · The r.m kiW' will
start II ~(Fa! with die spel'km at
I p.m. Lunch reservlli0111 should
be mllde inuneclialely by ealllnJ die
Bumgamcn at 304-882·2066. Special youth activities are also
planned.
. ~ your c:alent!&amp;" to spend a
lot of time atrendtng the 43rd
Annual Gallia County Junior Falr
the week of August 3-8. After 43
years die ~ is still in die arowth
mode. Exhibtl.l by 4·H andF.F.A.
ACCEPJ'S DONADON • ContiDIIIDillll c:ommltment lo C1JID•
members alone are expected to DIDDily IIUvlct, ScMitlen O.m Coal CODipaay'a Melga Dlvlllon
exc~ the 2:600 m~. The fair· rectally donalecl $200 10 the Albany Volaleer Fin DeputmenL
board IB entcrtng die third yeu of a Neboa Kidder (left), eaaiaeerillcsuperlntfldeat for the Meigs
liveyearimiJI,OielllentJl]an.Onc~
DIYisloD, praealed tile c•eclt to Jim Fer,_ (rlabt), volunteer
the most noueeable changes thts flrt11111. Tlte
will be llled to purdWe aew eqalpmml for
year is a new roof for die Cammer· lbe departllleDL
cial Building.
B&lt;llld President Gary Roach, in
the president's m~e i~side a
front cover of this years fair booksays, "The volunteer usisl,ance 8l)d
CHESHIRE • Mark A, Simpson
community support put !nto thts
has
been promoted fiolll opentlions
event are tmmeasurable. Plan to
engineer to senior opaalions engi·
enjoy die fair!
neer in the operations de~ent
'
effeclive June I, Bl die Ottio ~
Elec!ric Cctlpontion's Kyger
Plant, according to Norman H.
Tm, plant m811ger.
Simpson joined OVBC in 1985
as an MMICiale engineer in the per·
formance department, and a year
later he wu promoted 10 perfor·mance engineer. In 1989 he was
appointed to aeting assistant chief
oerfmnance engineer, and in 1990
he was promoted to operations
engineer in the operations depart·
sta
.

'!"FL-.!J"
· ht ,...,.aObacco producer
1 WI Ig
·

·meetingscheduled July 21
ly EDWARD VOLLBORN,
Galla

c-t,.

Emulall AJe•t,
~

. " GAUJPOLIS • Hot 11111 humid
weather toatinues with severe
. . . doin&amp; wind IIIII hail damage
-~~~ IIlii¥ ol GaDia County last
-weetead. Muc:~ of the Gallia
·. c-1'1 ·- ....v. is in the 14·18

-A
-....
~=' =~.:',.,i::S:i:'W::

;&lt;da•a•ed by early season wet
:;, t i or ~ece~~t SIOl'IIIS JJII)bably
;)ave lite best potential (or good
:1ieJc1 lllat we have seen in ~nt
_,.._
~ A reminder of the Twilight
~TaMc:co producer meeting to be
:llelcl Tllelilay evening, July 21 at 7
a~_ne eVCilK'wilL\Il bOsled by
!djii'!Ci:My
family. Field
)i!iQ will st~~t' • die location near
:Jiit ' 1 iiiiCibi ol Slllle Roule 218
,ltitlllockr. Fork, one mile south of
;)o(ercervtlle. Mr. Bill Peterson,
itcMiaty Aaent from Maysville
:J , ty will lea!~ the dlscussioli
« tile bam 111eeUng later in the
Cold.IIOft drinb will be
5
' ided c:oarlesy of the local
' obac:co Association. Plan to
,
;; no lint in a series of special
lvea~~ thlll foeus on ForaJe pro·~tuc:llon and efficient utihzation
:,.m be lhiiThunday, July 23. The
:iopic: will be "Fescue Manage_.,, We a honoled to have Dr.
:Doe Bill from Auburn Univenity
jo vilit IOIIIhem Ohio and conduct

Jooefie

:o.em..,.

fdlered into ihe subsoil to relieve
the problem.
"When you get that much rain,
you get a lot of runoff. That runoff
helps some of die reservoirs. But as
far as buildlng up die subsoil, that
takes continued rain for several
days. You don'tlose· it overnight
and you don't pick it up
overn•$ht," said Terry King, a
statisticlllll with the Ohio Agricul·
rural Statistics Service.
The National Weather Serviee
said seven of die stare's 10 climate
regions were in sevm or extreme
drought. Three regions were in
mild droughl Extreme is die most
sevm eateg~ as measwed by die
Palmer Drought Severity Index.
The index did not take into
acrount this week's storms. They
will be refleeted in next week's

Agriculwre,_said hea.vy rains will
heln some drought-stricken areas.
1'11 is really. going to help tile
crops. But we still doil:t ~ hoW
much of the water ts gomg to
replenish the subsoil_... If Ibis rain·
fall - 5 and 6 inches - had been
spread over a period of time, it
·COIIkl have been a litde better ~
having il all come down at once,
he said,
oL:J'recipitation across the state ~""
year is about normal, Benedtct
said. The problem is that Oh~o
hasn't recovered from last year s
drought, when Skecipitation was 50
percent below normal tn some
areas. he said.

Amerlean Built Slnee 1946

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

•
•

employee of Cheesebrew's Veal
Farm and Bob Evans Farms. He is
presently enrolled at ATI in Woost.·
er.
Lambert, son of Eli and Ella
Lambert of Centerpoint, is president of die Southweatem FFA. He
was also active in football and
choir. His agrk:ultural experience
program includes farrow to fmish
hogs, beef cows and tobaceo. He
was an employee of Cbeesebrew's
Veal Farm, Altizer Farm Supply
and Spwloc:k Farms. Tom will be a
senior at River Valley High School.

GILUPOUS, OH.

ARNETI FORD

One Of The Oldest.Ford Dealers
Is Now The Newest!!!
I

Areal Stihl. Rui!!!ed. Dur11ble.
Long-Ltsung. Yet lightweight and
easy to handle.
Features Include,

ETTFORD

• Llfeume w~rranty on electroni c
Ignition
• Dual-line cutting head with auto·
matlc "bump" line adv.lnce.
• Powerful )0.2 cc engln e that runs cool
• Flow-through primer for easy starts.
All the qu.1l1ty that has made suhl the most
respected n•meln out·
door power tools at an
unbehevably low price!

.

.

....STIHC.
....,,....,_
O'DELL LUMBER
,,. ••••• $1.
.p••HAIIMIDICE

.

Has Moved To Their New Location At The Comer
o1 Mayhew R"d and St. Rt. JZ,
. Jackson, Ohio

,
129 5

$

POMIIOY,OI.
992·5500

Page4

Low lonlghlln mid&amp;.

Tuesda,,·, chanct or rain 60 per~
cent. High near 80.

1 Secllon, 10 Pogoo 25 '*'II
AMuiUmodlo Inc. Newoooaer

Some protest
prison plans

LOADING TOMATOES • Tony Rood, 1 worker on the Buck·
ley farm Ia Reedsville, loads tresbly picked lom1tues onto a trac·
tor, drivta by George Buckley.

614 446·1'"

Neal, Lambert receive
State Farmer's Degree

10-11-14-25-37-41
Kicker:
102682

DOES MORE
COSTS LESS

240 UJiiiiR RIVER RD.

MARK NEAL

Super Lotto:

t .......,. ....

ihe Ohio Depanment of

I

Saeet, Middlepon.

COI.lJ)GIUS -!Utner South·
...., Hillt Sc:hool SllldeniS Marie
Neal aad fom ~bert received
die Stile ~~ Degree on June
19 al the Sl&amp;le Future Farmers of
A-a (FFA) eonvention on die
Ohio Still: Univasity cantpUS.
Neal, 1011 of Mark and Adra
Neal or Centerpoint, served as
:soathweslerD FFA chapter vice
presideat ia addition to being
active ia twttmeJI and choir. His
aJfkultural cxperienee program
·iacl•ded market steers, Angus
eow1 and tobacco. He was an

nator with

drough ___.,

Plows, Tills,
Cultivates, Rakes Hay,
Cuts Grass, Dozes, Harrows, Plants,
Grades, Furrows, Thatches, Lifts
Heavy Loads, a!"d Removes Snow.

,menL

TOM LAMBERT

.

Bruce Benedict.

Pick 3:
8%
Pick 4:
4598

POWER KING™

••e,

Simpson and his wife, Reaina,
are die piRIIts of one son and one
dat&amp;hrtr, and they live at ~ Prarl

report.

0 hio Lottery

Kyger Creek
LL tourney
resumes

FRESH PRODUCE • Clifford Hill, owner of Clifford Hill
Farms in Letart Palls, •aids a bo• of tomatoes just picked from his
144-acre farm.

Farmers'
produce
ready for
markets·
By JIM GLAUNER
Sentinel NeW8 Staff
Tomatoes. cabbage, sweet com,
green peppers, cantaloupe, water·
melon • these prod~~:e crops are an
annual $2.5 million dollar Meigs
County ~iness. c~tin$ summer
jobs at a time when work IS scarce.
Meigs County farmers have
begun picking and packing their
produee, readying it for marlcets in
l&gt;etroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh,
Indiana 811d other wholesale mar·
kets.
Produce farming is good for
both the Meigs economy and Ohio
eonsumers who want Ohio prod·
ucts, according to Hal Kneen of the
Meigs County Agricultural Exten·
sion Service.
"Local people want Ohio-grown
stuff," he said.
Kneen said farmers are benefit·
ing tram a small upl!J111 in the produec market, a result of drougb•
li conditions in California. However,
Jeff Harris of Harris Farms and
Greenhouses in Portland said the
California drought only helped
farmers last year, and he has
noticed.a decrease in area produce
farming.
"There used to be hundreds of
small growers, and they're just not
around anymore," he said.
When produce farmers die or
retire, few people stan new farms
to take thetr place, acoording to
Harris, because the business is
labor inlenSive and difficult to get
off die ground. Also, it is hard for
small farmm to oompere with larg·
er farms in places like California,
where produce can sometimes
grow rear-round.
This year, however, Ty Brinager
of the 144-acre Ty Brinager and

~shonfall.

'the ne!"spaper said the Coury

the community that the majority
definitely favors the prison and the
expected boost in the economy that
it will bring to the area," John
Meyer, spokesman for Gov .
George Vomovich, said Sunday.
He said he did not want to speculate on whether state officials
would change their minds about the
prison if they determine most of the
residents opposed iL
Rodney Rohrbough, 42, owner
of a trucking company, said he has
mixed feelings about the plan.
"More jobs would be good, if
that really happens like they say it
will," Rohrbough said. :·aut you
know how these things go, seldom
like it's supposed to."
Jeff Braden, 23, said the area
needs the economic boost the
prison would give 10 Noble Coon·
ly.

"I've heard the pros and cons
on both sides," he said. "I feel this
county needs all die help it can get
when it comes to jobs.''
He said he does not think plans
for the prison can be stopped.
"From what I've heard it's a cutand-dry deal"

Road work underway
on SR 7 at Chester
four miles of joint repair and
shoulder paving on State Roore 7·
beginning at the intersection of
State Route 248 at Chester is
underway by the Ohio Department
of Transportation.
The Shelly Company of
Thornville is the prime contractor
on the $511,503 project. John
Dowler, deputy director of
ODOT's District 10, Marietta, said
that there will not be an asphalt
overlay on the road .
Completion date on the project
is Sept. 30. Traffic will be maintained throughout construction. The
project subcontractors include Tom
Mayle and Sons, Construetion,
Bartle!~ and Eawn Asphalt Paving
Co., Covington, Ky.

The Ohio Line, Inc. Awora, has
been awarded a contract for paint,

ing lines on VS,SO in Athens
County, and on various routes in
Gallia, Hocking and Meigs Coon·
ties. The contract price for the
painting is $590,057 and the eompletion date is Sept. 15, Dowler
said.
Guardrail on Stare Route 32 in
Athens County, along with various
sections of guardrail in Meigs and
Vinton Counties, will be reeon·
structed later this summer.
Dowler reports that the Lake
Erie Construction Co. of Norwalk,
plans to begin worlc by mid,AugiiSI
on the $472,750 projecL The date
set for completion is OcL 30. All(),
gether, approximately 10 miles of
guardrail will be reconstructed.

Clinton, Gore visit Ohio
PICKING 11ME. Sieve Jenldu or Clifford
Hill Farms plucks 1 tom110 from one of thou·
Sons Farm in Reedsville is starting
his own produce busineJS after
being a pattner a1 Harris Farms foc
four years. He is employing more
than 40 people this swnmer to pick
aboutlO,OOO tomato plants.
The produce busmess is tough
for beginners, but Brinager said
there are three keys to successful
farming: healthy crops, good labor
management and favorable market
prices.
"You have to have two out of
three of these things to have any
success at all," he said.
One of Brinager's keys to suc:·
cess, healthy crops, has been hard
to come by this year. At Harris
Farms, a recent hail storm seriously
damaged dleir tomato erop. Unseasonably cold weather in late April

sands or tomato plants on tbe 144 acre farm.

banter by weather than we have,"
County farms to begin picking sev- said O'Brien.
Some fanners hold other jobs to
eral weeks late.
"Last year, we picked 10,000 supplement their farming income.
baskets before the Fourth of July, They would not be totally devastat·
and this year we didn't pick one," ed by poor crops or low prices. But
said James Adams, owner of Steve Jenkins of Clifford Hill
Farms in Letart Falls is a full-time
Adams Produce in Letart Falls.
"This is what
Harris said the unexpectedly farmer.
chilly spring weather does not bode I've got," he said. "If I don't make
well for any farmer. "It was overall it, what am I going to do?"
Jenlcins said good labor is vital
cold all over the country this
to a produce farm's success.
spring," he said.
"If you don't have people in to
But Adams said the drought that
plagued the Columbus area recent- pick, you're hlll1in' ,"he said.
O'Brien said he found it diffi·
ly has not affected Meigs farmers.
Neither his farm nor Adams and cult this year to get the help he
O'Brien Produce in Letan Falls. needs, but Jenkins said he gets by
owned by Jim O'Brien, were dam- with less pickers, because he
recruits good help. Pickers some,
aged by hail.
'
"A lot of areas have been hit
Continued on page 3
and early May lorted other Meigs

High salaries come from subsidized centers, report says
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - At least
71 operators of Ohio nursing
homes ·that receive much of their
income from the government insur·
ance program b the poor are earning $100,000 a year or more, a
newspaper repQrted.
The Akron Beacon Journal
reported Sunday that a computer
analysis of Medicaid cost records
for W'subsidized nursing homes in
Ohio found that th.e operators had
!!Bid themselves or telatives die sill·
figwe salaries in 1990.
Gov. George Voinovich has said
Medicaid, which is estimated to
cost Ohioans more than $4.3 billion
over the next {ear, is one of the
main causes o die state's current

CALDWELL, Ohio (AP) State and local officials say a new
state prison in this southeastern
Ohio community would boost the
economy, but some residents are
questioning how many local jobs it
will genelllte.
Jodi Carter, with Concerned Cit,
izens for a Safe Community, said
the medium-see urity prison was
supposed to bring about300 jobs to
the area.
"Then, later, it was revealed
that about a third of the positions
would bt. filled by llained people
from out of this area," Ms. Carter
said. "Then they told us that a third
will have to be fdled by minorities,
and this area has no minorities.
"So how many jobs does that
actually leave for this area?''
Ms. Carter said the group has
collected about I ,200 signatures IQ
protest plans for the stare prison in
the village of I ,800 ~sidents.
"We don't want it, period," she
said. "The governor stated that he
wouldn't put the prison anywhere it
wasn't wanted. Now they're trying
to force it down our throats.''
"We've been assured by the
commissionerl! and other leaders in

family of l:uyahoga County paid iiS versity Hospitals of Cleveland at
various members mm than $2 mil- the time. He was paid $272,000 in
lion in 1990 from die operation of that year to run the 947-bed, DOD·
live nursing homes with a total of profit complex with operating rev155 beds, 60 peltetll of which wm enue of $307 million.
occupied by Medieaid patients.
Nursing home owners said it
1990 is latest year for which isn't fair to compare them with
computerized m:ords are available. · hospital administrators because
Stale reconb showed that in thai most hospitals operate on a non·
year, Coury brothers John, 'l'hoolas profit basis. They said most nursing
and Robert paid . themselves homes are profil·making ventures
~5.00&gt;, $500,797 and $512,625,
and their opc:rators deserve a fair
reward basks dley assume.
respectively.
Revenue from the Courys' nursThomas Coury told the newspa·
ing homes totaled $22.6 million, per he can't sptat for his_brothers,
including $13.8 million from Medi· but defended bis own 1990 salary.
"Whatever salary I'm paid is
eaid.
The newspaper said each of the well-eimed," he said. "It's by no
Coury brothers earned more in means a cakewalk. It's absolutely
1990 than Dr. James Block, who hi1h risk."
"1 don't need Medicaid," he
was chief executive offteer ol Uni-

said, adding that he had altruistic
reasons for retaining niiiSin~ home
residents who end up ~lymg on
government help to pay their bills.
"You can ' t kick people out
when their money runs out," he
said. "lt!s not the humanitarian
thin todo."
.
JI haven't seen the story yet, so
I can't comment on it," Robert
~ said Sunday. '• As far as our
salaries, though, that's all public
mcord and anyone can ... check for
themselves."
The newspaper said nursing
home interests have given more
than $62S,&lt;XX&gt; in campaign contributions dumg die last live years to
politieians who have been in a
~lion to pmerve Cl' enhance die
indiiSiry's standing with Medicaid.

UTICA, Ohio (AP) - Demo·
Clinton said it was the biggest
cratic presidential nominee Bill crowd since the campaign left the
Clinton brought the promise of bet· convention in New Yorlc on Friday.
ter times to this farm community Police Dispatcher Ken St. John
that gave him his biggest reception estimated today that 5,000 to 6,000
since leaving the party's national people attended.
conventiou on a six-day bus tour.
Clinton criticized the economic
"We have got a plan, AI Gore policies of the Reagan and Bush
and I do. A real plan to imrtement administrations.
our vision of an America in which
''For the first time since the
every man and woman ean earn a Roaring '20s, the top I percent of
decent livin~ from working hard, Americans control more wealth
support theu children and every than the bottom 90 percent. And
child can grow up w their fullest, what has happened? We've lost
Go&lt;J-given abilities," Clinton told jobs .... We've lost our position in
a crowd of at least 5,000 people ' the world economy. We're in deep
Sunday nighl
trouble today because we have
The candidates planned to speak gone on with an idea that has failed
at a health care rally this morning and failed and failed and failed,"
in downtown Columbus and at the he said.
Earlier in the evening , Clinton
Clinton County Courthouse in
Wilmington at noon.
chewed on a piece of straw as he
People stood on lawn chairs in and Gore sat on hay bales tallcing
the village of 2,000 to catch a to 50 local farmers at the fann of
glimpse of Clinton and Gore, his Ohio Democratic Party Chainnan
runnmg mate, and their wives. The Eugene Branstool, about 30 miles
candidates wore blue jeans and east of Columbus.
sport shins.

,..---Local briefs--..
Bridge to open in another week
The bridge on US-33 approximately midway between Athens
and Shade will not reopen until July 27 atleasL The bridge was to
have reopened Tuesday. However, last week's rain has caused at
least a week'sdelay in reopening.
The bridge was closed to traffic July 6. The closure is necessary
so workm can connect existing pavement with a new bridge whieh
has been built at the site.
DJM, Inc., Beaver, is the contraCtor on the $812,457 projecL
Another project, the resurfacing of 8.7 miles of US-33 from die
south Athens og;~ugh Shade to the Meigs County line is
also underway.
· for the murfacing began in late June.
Shelly and Sands, (nc., Zanesville, is the contractor on this
$619,246 job. Completion dsre·on die project is Aug. 31. Traffie is
to be maintained as the project pro~sses .
·
Coadnued on page 3

�i

l

Commentary

'

•I

t•
'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Coart street

Pomeror, Ohio

DIVOTZD TO TBit llrlUII8TI or TBit IDICIS-IIAIOI!I AREA

ROBERT L. WJNGE'IT
Publilller

PATWffilEHEAD
Allllt111t Publisher/Controller

'''

CHARLENE HOEJUCB
Genenl Man11ger

U!Tl1!R.S OF OP!NION ""' welcome. They sbould be less tban 300
• word&amp;. All !etten ue aubj«t to ediliD&amp; and mwt be signed witb name,
; lddms and tclepllooe number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Leuen
: lbould be in plOd tutc, lddmJin&amp; iJJue&amp;, not personalities.
•

When will there be more jobs?
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP BuiJHss Analyst
NEW YORK- For !hose who seek signals about the fUIUie economy,
the employment picture is gradually 88suming more imponance than
inlmlllllleS, which bad beeu the mos1 WitChed Pldicalor.
The change rctleets Dill just a feeling dial die Federal Restzve has done
allJt c:an for the limo being to lower borrowing costs, but a growing belief
thai iob opporlullilies must improve if the ecooomy is to recover at all.
l'be c:oacem about die em~t picture is the same regardless of
the prti&lt;:ular vested inraat mvolved. The White House is Slildying the
figures, die Democratic party ss well, retai1cn and the stock market roo.
So far Ibis year lhi unbeallby condition of job markets h88 been
explained away 88 a temparmy phenomenon lbat would soon be corrected, the ralionale being lbat wortm are automatically recalled 88 the economy impovcs.
So far, it hasn't happened tbat way, and concern is widespread and
growinJ tbat lbc condition might persisL Businesses bave learned to produce WJib leaner staffs. Many companies needing workers lack the confidence to bire.
Meanwhile, die Bush administration's repealed promises of better
times to come has induced more people 10 en~« die labor fmce in the mistaken belief tbat jobs are available or 10011 will be:
·
The result is a worse~i:employment me. In June alone, about
389,000 job seekers were
to die labor force, but die number of people actually employed feU by 82.000. pushing die jobless ra1e to 7.8 percenL
Analysts bave read various ciplanations into the slatislics, but all agree
on one lbing: No expansion has sucCHded without an increase in jobs.
The unemployed are, of cowse, poor consumers; poor consumption
means poor .etail sales; poor .erail sales meait less manufacturing. In an.
the employment pictun: is one of erosion rather than improvemenL
The next job repon, therefore, becomes a critical signal of things to
come.
One economist. Edward Yardeni or the CJ. Lawrence securities firm ,
has told clients not to plat golf on Friday, August 7, because dl8l is the
date on which the Labor Department will release die employment numbels.
He believes lbat if payroll employment is down, it will sharply
incrwe the odds of a triple dip I"CCSSion (die first was the onac1 of I"CCS·
sion in late 1989 or early 1990,the second dip was early 1sst year).
If, however, die report shows an incresse of 100,000 to 200,000 in
payroll employment, Yardeni lbinks we Clll breath a lillie eaSier. While it
wouldn't eliminate fears of a triple dip, it would suggest an improving
trend.

. l

.,
I

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Monday, July 20,dle 202nd day of 1992. There are 164 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago, on July 20, 1942,the fliSt detachment of die Women's
Army Auxiliary Corps - later known 88 WACs - began basic training
at Fon Des Moines, Iowa.
On this date:
In 1810, Colombia declared its independence from Spain.
. In 1861 , the Congress of the Confederale States began holding sessions
in Richmond, Va
In 1871 , British Columbia entered Confederation as a Canadian

PR?~I . Sioux Indian leader Sitting Bull, a fugitive since the Ballle of

'

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Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, July 20,1992

Tuesday, July 21

die Little Big Hom, surrendered to federal troops.
In 1917, 75 years ago, die draft lottery in World War I went into operation.
In 1944. an attempt by a group of German officials to asssssinate
Adolf Hi~er failed.
-In 1944, President Franklin D. Roosevelt was nominated for an
unj!recedented founh term of offtce at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
In 1951 , Jordan 's King Abdullah Ibn Hussein was 88sassinated in
Jerusalem.
.
..
In 1969 Apollo II 88tronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwm "Buzz
Aldrin bec~e die fUSI men to walk on the moon. afr« their lunar module
separated from die command module and landed on die lunar surface.
. In 1976, America's Viking One robot spacecraft made a successful,
fliSt.ever landing on Mars.
In 1984 Vanessa Williams, Miss America 1984, w88 asked by pageant
offiCials oo resign beca~. ofnu~ JIIM?tograpba ~f her lbat turned up in
Penthouse magazine. (WiJiiaJris relinqwshed her nile three days later.)
. In 1990, SIIJ."'O'll Court Justice William!· Brennan, one of the court's
most liberal voJCCS, ~he w88 steppmg down.

Berry•s World

«&gt;

1992 by NE.A , Inc

Gingrich struggles to find footing
COBB COUN'l'V, Ga. - Rep.
Newt Gingricb's decade-long
insurgeacy against WsshingtOR is
being tempered temporarily while
he sects re-nomination in the Julv
21 GOP primary in Georgia. Until
lhen, Ibis insurjent has gone insider.
From pork-buster to pork-meister, from political basher to political name-dropper, and from union
foe to union -mend, Gingrich has
changed his lOne more than his true
colors. In the fortnight leading up
to die primary showdown, be IS
running bard and scared, despite
the fact his new hand-picked district is a Republican'llnlllghold.
To be sure, Gingrich hu not
defected to the Democqts, Or, 88
he is Wont to put it, lbc •"cocaine·
selling, check-bouncing, big-spend,
ing, left-wing petty dictalmhip in
die Democratic leadership." This
is the same Gingrich who is now
complaining lbat his opponent is
runrung a "mean and nasty" campaign.
A recent candidales' fOTUll) provided a candid snapshot of one of
die most closely watched races in
die oountry.

MI CH.

sively fence-mending among diose like right._, him. Occasionally Ginunion workers who never forgave grich would grimace and ~eat
him for deserting them during lbc his wife when Clade's needling got
1989 Eastern Airlines strike.
1.100 nsstY· ,
He concluded by saying tbat his
Afterward, a clearly burdened
,
enemies were trial lawyers, Ralph Gingrich solicited die views of a
Nader (whose group hss been lllf· total stranger he encountered in the
ing attack ads against him), Teddy men 's room. Gin~rich lamented
M,ost of the candidates were Kennedy and the machinists • lbat 35 percent wtll vote ~ainst
runmng for school board or the union. (Curiously, die next mom- him just because he's an meumstate ~. and each W88 allotted . ing, Gingrich changed his tune bent, but lbat still left it 65 to 35
three !ftD1Utes.to ~followed by while addressing ~hin~. warn- percent in his favor. It boiled down,
quesuons. Gmgnch mbbled on a ing lbat a vote ag&amp;~nst h1m would he said, to a one-man I3CC - Gm~e until it W88 his tum, .scrib- be a vote against their own pocket- grich against Gingrich. Either lbey
bling notes 88 he sat alone m die book because he could deliver con- liked him or not. '"They could put a
front row. He offered a warm and tracts)
mule up against me and it wouldn't
fuzzy. talk- no fire-breathing
Gi~grich's primary opponent, get any less votes," Gingrich said
rftet?rlc·
· .
. Herman Clark, was next to spealt. plaintively. He to~ Ibis person lbat
As he h88 been cnss-cro~smg Clark's rhetoric w88 vintage Gin- a vote for, Clark IS really a vote
"!e newly f?MI~ 6th congreSS!~ grich - only Newt was on the against Congress, wheress a vote
dutn~t. G!ngnch has ~en bill- receiving end.
.
cast for himself is a VOle for so~­
!XJardmg h1s power and mfluence
"When I go to Washington to one w.ho can .mate a diffe~ m
1D die O!!Ce loathsoll\e back;rooms represent you, I'm not going to
W88hmgton 1n tenns of bnngmg
of.Washmgtotl. On ';his evenmg, he bounce checks, including one 10 die home federal contracts.
"
~d he ~ad flown m from W88h- IRS for over $9,000," said·C)juk.
Gingrich realizes he's on top of
mgron With the head of Lockheed, "I'm not going to raise my pay by the Democrats' hit list, and told us
a local defense frrm. He ~1ted a $40,000, and I'm not going to coast earlier lbat he "walks down the
VOle he cast a f~. days C!!flier that around Washington in a chaufhall knowing that a si$nificant
saved Delta ~rimes mllho.ns of feured limo at your expense."
number of Democrats d1slike me
10
d~la!'· .Deltas employee~ hv~
A tense silence ~ripped the
intensely because I represent a
his '!~strtct.but ~mmute to jobs JUS! room. Gingrich stood m back next force lbat will end their career."
outside. Gmgnch has been aggres- to his wife, as Clark stared laser- ·
Some of tbat sentiment is apparently shared by at least a few members of his own pany. Clart told
our 88sociates Andrew Coale and
Ed Henry tbat he bad received two
phone calls recently from RepubliHouse members who volun' can
teered advice on how to beat Gingrich. Clark quoted one 88 saying
lbat "a number of my Republican
coUeagues in powerful places want
10 see you beat Newt"
He claims anolber admonished
him, "Don't get down- fight like
the dickens. Do whatever you can
to see to it that he doesn't return.' '
Perhaps the strangest encouragement came in the form of a fundraising pitch from a top Republican
leader to challengers across the

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

I

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...

country:

" In the past monlbs you undertook a great risk by running for
Congress in an effort to bring your
leadership to Washington, and I
want to commend you for doing so.
... This year is 1 once-in-a-genaation opportunity to change the
Congress."
II w88 signed Newt Gingrich.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blnstein are columnists forUniled Feature Syndicate, Inc.

A rainbow
CHAPEL HD.L, N.C. - Judy
Garland would have loved diem.
"Somewhere over the rainbow," way up on a multiculuual
high, 15 American high-school
seniors came together for three
weeks and blew away every stereotype ever dumped on our tender
sens~bilities.

You would bave been proud of
diem.

Unlike Cyrano, who walked
"caparisoned in gems unseen;' '
lbese 15 future journalists arrived
on the University of Norlb Carolina's Chapel Hill campus •. open~y
weanng. ~splen~oftheu~c
an~ rebg1ous he.ntages: Afnc.an,
C~. Co.sta ~· Irish, I~.
Je~l.sh •. L11huan1an, Mex1can,
P~1hpp1~e. Portuguese, Puerto
R1can, VIetnam~ - and at l~t
SIX .of those are mterracial comblnallons.
.
The name of the P.rogram 1s
a~ost shamelessly obvious - the
Rainbow lnslitute.
. For: the past three w~. die 15
mmonty h!Jh-school semors fr~m
Akron, Oh10; Ashland, Ore.; B~stol , Conn.; Long ,Beach, C~1f. ;
Pueblo, Colo.; ~pokane. Wash., ~1:
Petenburg, Fla., Santa Ana, Calif.,

and so aii-Am.erican
Chuck Stone

Chicago; Dallas; Detroit; Los
Angeles; Miami; Philadelphia; and
Utica, N.Y., covered the joumalistic waterfront
They were given intensive classroom exercises in writing and editing, they allended die governor's
press conference on the state's
prison crisis, lbey visited a youlb
correctional center, they polled
people at malls on major 1ssues,
they interviewed the speaker or the
North Carolina House, Dan Blue
Jr. (one of two black state house
speakers in America) and woman
· mayor, ("Very knowledgeable
questions," marveled Carrboro,
N.C., Mayor Eleanor Kinnaird),
Their curiosity w88 insatiable,
their style disarming. "Gov. Martin " said scholarly, soft-spoken
Miamian Sean Lopez, ''I'm only
17. Could you break some of those
statistics down for me in more
unde!Siandabte·terms'l"
Their youthful irreverence even
challenged some or lbeir own elbnic sacred cows. At a warm-hearted
and educational meeting wilb lnterim Chancellor Donna Benson of

a

historically black North Carolina
Central University, one of her aides
criticized alle~ed racism in local
newspaper stones about NCCU.
He was right. But he did not
document his esse. Diffident Darlene Harper, right out of Detroit's
ghetto, raised her band and 88ked
wilb disarming gentility, "But are
lbc stories 8CCUillte?"
·
They attended classes on Saturday and worked 8l nighL Foc those
who did not go to church, a couple
of Sunday writing sessions also
were offered.
Audaciously, lbey questioned
one of Northwestern University's
best writing coaches, John Kupetz,
on cerl8in do's and don'ts of newspapering; "! wouldn't advise running tbat kind of gossip column,"
he cautioned.
Kanita Jelks, of SL Pemburg,
wiry, brainy and black, smilingly
demurred. "It carries important
news items. The students like it,
and we do iL"
"What is news7" I ~ diem
in a lecture. There were several
good definitions, but the one by
Chicago's Sheila Calamba had a
Thucydidean ring to it "News is
the first draft of history," she

wrote.
This fust Rainbow Institute is
already history.
Just 88 rainbows are die benedictions of color afr« a rain, so did
a benediction of good will make
this extraOrdinary venture possible.
David Hawpe, editor of the
Louisville Courier-Journal, conceived it The American Society of
Newspaper Editors supported it.
The Freedom FMIRI funded it wilb
a $51,000 granl And the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill's
School of Journalism and Mass
Communication provided all of the
facilities, instruction and an 88sistant director, Professor Jan Elliou,
who smolher-henncd the students
88 if they were all her own.
Best of all, the lcids bad an educational ball!
At die end of the rainbow, lbere
is a mythical pot of ~old. This
Rainbow Institute provided a real
one - a $1,000 scholarship for
each studenL
But journalism also will be
enriched by their enthusiasm, idealism and, best of all, lbeir professionalism.
Chuck Stone is a syndicated
dllumalsl for Ne:wspaper Enterprise Association.

What should government do for us?
This national election should be
contested on die two basic questions facing the nation. The (irst:
What should the social contract
between government and the peopie include? The second: What is
the nation's proper role in a postCold War world?
The second qoestion wiD be the
subject of a future column. The
first is a threshold issue about
which the three presidential candidates should be ellllllined closely.
Is the central stale friend or foe? If
friend, whal are its responsibilities
to the people? If foe, wbat minimal
duties must it nevenheless sssume
fyr the sake of the nation's collectlve weU-beillll and security?
Whether the government i.s
regarded u barely tolmled policeman and garbage collector, or
viewed more benevolenlly 88 part·
ner and proteCtor, whal are the peopic's responsibilities to it? Who
should pay for its suvices and oh
whal kind of ICalc - flat or grado"
ated? If graduated by income, how
steeply?
From the advent qf the New
Deal untillbc election of Ronald
Reagan as prt8ident in 1980, dlere
was a rou~ consensus on these
questions. 1&lt;epublicans pulled on
die margins to the right and some
Democrats tugged to the left, but
neither Dwight Eisenhower nor
Richard Nixon actually disturbed

Hod4ing Carter III
die underlying arrd.tg~ents. of the
social welfare state. NIXon, m fact,
promoted or tolerated substantial
expansions of several Great Society
programs. The Democrats, from
Franklin Roosevelt to Jimmy
Carter, were basically pragmatic
centrists. Often accused of "socialist" persuasions, they were at most
mildly social democratic in ou~oot
and petfonnance.
·
The Reagan Revolution
promised to change all that. It
didn'~ but 11 did change the terms
. of debate and the political frame of
reference. If the old idea W88 that
W88hing10n had an obligation to
try to fill whalever seemed broken,
whether in the worlcplace, the envi· ronment or die schools, die new
one was that Washington was
incompe1en1 to fix much of anything. Further, government had no
business inttuding in most of these
fields in the fust place.
Concurrently, die international
economy and America's place in it
changed radically. We were still
No. 1, but lbere was now a ciUICh
of very inteme compelitm nipping
at our heels. Whole induslries, like
consumer electronics, were Ill but
obliterated. Others, like die auto. mobile makers, losl their primacy.

It bad been fat city for 30 years, but Public education has serious problbe good times were over.
lems in the big cities and signifiThe result of die Reagan cut- cant ones in most places. For roo
backs in die social safety net and many yOIDlg families home ownerdiscretionary spending f~ non-mil- ship, ~ accurale ~ symbol o~ die
itary purposes , plus mdustry's Amencan way of life 88any,IS no
severe cost-cuiting in its drive to longer wilbin reach. Personal safebecome lean and mean enough to ty cannot be taken for granted,
survive in die world economy, has whether in the blighted inner city
been measured in unbli{IJ?Y statis- or in seemingly placid small towns
lies and fri&amp;hlenillll headlines, The and suburbs."rhC very, real achicvepoor.bave becane poorer, relative· ments of black and brown Arnerily speaking. The very rich have cans cannot disgliise die difficulties
become very much richer, abso- that many minorities face simply
.lutely and relatively. Most of those becaWJC of their race.
who lead a comfortable middleWhat do we owe each other?
and upper-middle class existence Whal does die stale owe us? What
do su because bolb husband and are our obligations as citizens of •
wife work, a necessity previously Ibis democratic .epublic7 What are
reserved for die poor.
the basic attributes of a civilized
Old assulllptions have been nation at die end ofthe 20th centuabandoned. Pensions and health . ry? How do we achieve them?
plans once considered inviolate
:rttese Jre the broad questions
commiunents by management 10 which should be at die cenr« of the
dleir former WIXkers are sluugged DOiitical ·debate betWUQ now and
off as casually 88 a snake abandons November. The single-Issue aaenlts old st1n. Ufetime loyalty to an dss are imponant, bot ooly u pan
enterprise is no proteeuon against · of die whole. They must not be
layoffs and plant closures. Plants allowed to dominate '!te stage.
comolidate, move offshore or close
HoCidln1 Carter Ill, former
doWII wilb overni.ht speed. Own- State Department spokesman
ership Is a iomeume thing: You and award-winning reporter, edi·
need a scm:card to know the play- lor aad publlsber, is president of
ers, and you need a new one every MalnStreet, a Wublngton, D.c .•
few weeks just to keep up with based television production ~­
who owns what.
t
pany and a syndicated columnist
Other certainties arc under for Newspaper Enterprise Assoassault or are being re-examined. dation.
'j

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IMansfield In' I•

PA.

IND.

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W.VA.

Showers T-srorms Rain

Flurrlu

Wa Associated Prtss Grsp/'JcsNer

SUMy Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
C1992Accu-Wea ther, Inc.

------Weather----Extended forecast:
Wedne&amp;day tbroup Friday:
Fair Wlllnesday, A chance of
showers and lbunderstorms Thursday and Friday. Highs 75 tri.80
norlb and 80 to 85 south. Lows
upper 50s to mid 60s.
South-Central Oblo

Tonight, showers and lbunderstorms likely. LOw in the mid-60s.
Southwest winds 5 to 15 mph,
becoming north. c~ of rain is
60 percenL Tuesday, mostly cloudy
and not as warm. A chance of
showers early. High near 80.
Cbance of rain IS 50 percent

--Area deaths-Kathleen Anthony

Pauline Jeffers

Kathleen "Katy" Anlbony, 85,
Middleport, died Sunday, July 19,
1992 8l Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Born Nov, 22, 1906 in Tontogany; she was a daughter of the late
Rev. E.A. and Adda Rainey Tovey.
She w88 a bookkeePer and a business panncr wilb lier husband in
the former Anthony Plumbing
Business in Middleport. She W88 an
active member of die Middlepon
Flist Baptist Church when: sbe was
a high school Sunday school teach·
er and psst president of die B.H.
Sanborn Soc1ety. 88 well 88 holding
various olber church offices. She
wss also il past matron of die Evangeline Cha~. Order of the Eastem Star. Middleport.
She is survived by a son and
daughter-in-law, Gerald "PeeWee"
and Dorothy Anthony, Middleporl;
a granddaughter, ~ Stev~ (B~­
bsra) White, Ft. Laudc.rdale, Fla.; a
grandson, Joe Anlbony, Middleport; a half-brother, John Tovey,
Bradenton, Ra.; and a brother-inlaw, Charles Anthony, Midd1epon.
Besides her parents she wss preceded in death by her husband,
Willis in 1988, one half-sister and
two half-brothcn.
Services will be Tuesday at I
p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport with Rev. Clifford
Coleman offtciating. Bll'ial will be
in Gravel Hill Cemetery in
Cheshire.
Friends may call at die funeral
home toda~~:day) rrom 6-9
p.m. or on
y until the time
of die service.

Pauline Jeffers, 74, of 3865 State
RL 218, Gallipolis, formerly of
New Haven, died Sunday. July 19,
1992, 11 the home of her daughter,
Alicia Tucker of Gallipolis.
.
A homemaker, she wss a member of the St Joseph Catholic
Church in Mason.
Boril May 12, 1918, in Hogsett,
W.Va., she was a daughter of the
late Sheridan and Nellie (ErreU)
RusseU. She W88 also preceded in
dealb by her husband, George A.
Jeffers, who died in 1986; and two
brothers, Elmer Russell and
Sheridan Russell, Jr.
Surviving are three daughters,
Georgann and Roger Fink of. New
Haven, Jane Staley of Gallipolis
Fef!Y, and Alicia and Michael
TuCker of Gallipolii; one brother,
Roger RusseU, Mason; seven
grandchildren and three great-

Paul Arthurs
Paul Kenneth (Keil) Arthurs, 57,
of 30790 Barringer Road, Pordand,
died Sunday, July 19, 1992, at the
Jackson General Hospital in Ripley, W.Va.
.. rap.QII.,~A.J~~.-hc w88
the
of OOiclli '~ Altli '
Por:r.'nd, aad the laic Ja~
Artlnirt. He was a mechanic wilb
T~ Diesel at Belpre. and a veteran of the Air Force. He was a
member of the Porlland Nazarene
Church and the FJ:IIt:rnal Order of
the Eagles 2071.
Besides his mother he is survived by his wife, Louise Allen
Arthurs, Portland; five ~htcrs,
Judy Wilson of Little W88hington,
Pa., Cynlbia Rowson of Stratton,
Kim Liule of Wellsville, Paula
Jean Arthtn of Buffalo, N.Y., and
Jacqueline Anhura of Tampa, Fla.;
a son, Robert Arthtn of Portland; a
sister, Joyce Allen of Portland, a
brOther. Jamt.1 Arthm of Pordand;
three stepsons, Jeff DeLona and
Robert DeLong of Ravenswood,
W. Va., and Charles Shasteen of
Bsst Uvapool; and a su:pdaughr«,
KeUey Hawkins of Middleport; 10
grandchildren, and three greatgrandcbildreli.
In lddilioo to his falber, he wss
preceded in dealb by a daughter,
Diana Arthun.
Funeral services will be held
Wednelday at 11 a.m. lithe Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. WUiiam
.Justice will oftlcialo and burial will
· be in Stivera¥ille ~ where
miliwy rites will be conclucled.
call at the funeral
Frlendl
home T
y from 6to 9 p.m.

:J.Y

Hospital new$

Vetel'llll MtiiOrlal .
SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS None.
SAnJRDAY DISCHARGES •
floyd Farra.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS IWen Oibbt. Pomeroy,~ J~

Glbbe,l'llt!ta'OY•

SUNDAY DISCHARGES -

None.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--:J
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Ohio to get more showers, thunderstor~s

OHIO Weather
Accu-Wcathcr• forecast for daytime oondilions and high temperatures

'.
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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 20,1992.

~~=
;.nu be wednest!ay.
11 a.m., at die SL Joseph Calhohc

Chwth wilb Father Andrew Hohman officialillll. Burial wiU be in
the SL Joseph Catholic Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Foglesong Funeral Home Tuesday,
2 to 4 and 7 10 9 p.m. A rosary service will be held at die funeral
horne Tuesday at 7:30p.m.

Physicals Saturday
Holzer Clinic of Meigs County
will be doing sports physicals on
Saturday for Meigs and Eastern
students.
All Meigs Dhtrict students
should plan to llrive 11 7 a.m. All
Eastern District students at 9 a.m.
Bring a signed sports physical
card to die clinic located on the 'T'
in Middleport at ISO Mill Street.
Holzer Clinic physicians have
donated lbeir lime to provide Ibis
service to the community.
Further information may be
oblalnCd by Calling 992-2188.

By The Associated Press
More showers and thunderstorms are on the way to Ohio
tonighL
A cold front will reach northern
Ohio late this afternoon and move
through die remainder of die stale
tonight. Showers and thunderstorms are expected to accompany
die front
Showers and lbundersrorms will
.emain likely over tile soulbern half
of die state tonight but die showers
will gradually end over die north.
OvemiRhtlows will range from the
upper 5os in the northwest to the
middle 60s soulb.
Cooler air will invade the region
Tuesday behind the cold front.
Some showers could linger over the

soulbem portion of the slate early
in die day. Olberwise, it will be
mostly cloudy wilb high tempera·
titres mostly in the 70s.
The Columbus weather station
said die record high for Ibis date
was 101 in 1934. The record low
w8849 in 1947.
Sunset tonight will be 8:56 p.m.
Sunrise Tuesday wiU be 6:20am.
Around the nation
Cool air plunged into the
nation:s midsection today, and
showers and lbunderstorms were
forecast from die central Plains 10
the Great Basin. Humid air also
brought the threat of thundershowers to the Gulf CoasL
l:Jnseasonably hot wealber setlied over die NOI'\IIy;est, wilh tern· .

destroyed a barn near Stratford,
Wis., the National Weslber Service
said. No one wss hurt.
Another touched town near '
Gainesville, Fla., but no serious
damage w88 reported, the weather
service said.

.;

Temperatures today were forec88t to be in the 70s in norlbern
New England; in the 80s from the
Noctheast through the Ohio Valley
and central Plains; and in die 90s
from the Mid-Atlantic region
through the Southesst and in much
of die far WesL
The high temperature for the
nation Sunday was 115 at Palm
Springs, Calif.

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Farmers'
...
Continued from page 1
times work from 5:30 a.m. to as
late 88 4 or 5 p.m. 11 Clifford Hill
Farms, and Jenkins said die work is
tough.
"You won't find a job harder
than Ibis," he said. "Everylbing you
do out here in the field, you'.e bent

over."

Jenlcins and olber farmers work
wilb both experienced farm bane!~
and teenagers looking for some
summer money. Meigs County produce farmers bire hundreds of summer wuters, though only for about
a month.
Jaime Counts, 16, has been
picking produce for three years and
said the work is hard but wuth the
pay. This year is her first on the
Clifford HiU Farm.
"Green face, green hands," she
said, her outsln:lched arms covered
wilb lOllllllO-stains.
Fanners bave grown produce in
Meigs County since the turn of the
century, arid some farms span three
generations, according to Kneen.
Clifford Hill is 78, and he said he
has worked on farms since he was
five or six. 0 'Brien said his farm
has been in his family since the
early 1900s.
Farming hss cbanged since then,
involving considerably less work.
Adams noted the introduction of
herbicides and improved planting
techniques as major farming
improvements. "There isn't as
much manual labor used in raising
plants," he said, " but lbere is still a
lot used in harvesting the plants."
O'Brien a~ thai harvesting
produce is still tough, something
lbat has not changed over die years.
"It's hard work," he said. "I know
thaL"

li""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"ii

·Stocks

Am Elc Power ................... 33 3/8
Ashland Oil ....................... 24 5/8
AT&amp;T...............................44 1/8
Bank One...........................44 1/8
Bob Evans ...................... ...18 3/8
Charming Shop..................29 518
City Holding ...................... l91{2
Federal Mogu1.. ......... ........ 16
GoodyearT&amp;R .................. 64 1/2
Key Cenwrion ................... 19 3/4
Lands End .......................... 32
Limited Inc ....................... 20 1/4
Multimedia Inc.................. 27
Rax Restaurant ..................9/16
Reliance Electric ................ 16 3/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ................16 3/4
Shoney's lnc...................... 20 7/8
Star Bank ........................... 32 518
Wendy lnt'l.. ...................... tl 1/4
Worthington Ind . ............... 23 1/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.

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CLINTON TOURS PLANT - Democratic
presidential nominee Bill Clinton, rigbt, tours
the Weirton Stell Corp. in Weirton, W:Va, Suaday with West Virginia Senator Jay Rockefeller.

. •.'

Clinton hopes to use spotlight to define attacks
WEIRlON, W.Va. (AP) - Bill
Clinton looked over at the bust of
John F. Kennedy and couldn't
resist
" In 1960, that man right there,
John Kennedy, came to West Virginia and said, 'It's time to
change,"' Clinton said Sunday.
Wilb running mate AI Gore nodding at his side, Clinton went on:
"That's what we say 10 you - it's
time to change."

Physicals slated
Sports physicals for the students
in die Soulbem Local District wiD
be given at the office of Dr. Douglas Hunter on Wednesday for
boys in grades 7-9 from 8 a.m. to
10 a.m. and for boys in grades 1012 from 10 am. to noon ; girls'
physicals will be July 29 for grades .
7-9, 8-10 a.m. and for grades 1012, 10 a.m. to noon.
The physicals will be provided
free of charge during these times
only. Students must bave a sigoed
physical card which may be
obtained at Dr. Hunter's office or
the high school.

The Kennedy comparison was
no accident.
As the Democrats' fresh-faced
presidential ticket weaves lbrou8.h
~lue'i:ollar towns on a 1,000-mile
bus tour, Ctinron and Gore are tryin~ to sustain the momentum they
gamed with last week's convention
by presenting themselves as energetic, homespWl agents of change.
Mindful of the summertime mistakes of Michael Dukakis four
years ago, Clinton and Gore are
campaigning at a busy pace roday's stops are in Ohio and Kentucky - 88 they try to define diemselves to voters. before Republicans can do it for them.
"In the weeks and months
ahead, America will be put to the
test," Clinton told the overflow
crowd at Weirton's Thomas E.
MiUsop Communicy Center, a campaign slop for John Kennedy in
1960 and brother Robert in 1968.
"AI Gore and I will teU you to
work for die future," the Arkansas
governor said. President Bush and
Republicans, Clinton said, "are
going to teU you we're too liberal

Meigs announcements

,_,_-Local briefs... -.....,
· Continued from pa&amp;e 1

Patrol investigates accident
A motorcycle accident early Sunday morning has resulted in the
hospitalization of a Pomeroy couple. According to the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol, James Gibbs, 27. and Karen Gibbs,
29, both of S.R. 143 Pomeroy, were east bound on County Road 25 in
Pomeroy when the motoiCycle went off the right side of die road into a
ditch and slntck two mailboxes.
The couple was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital where Mrs.
Gibbs is reported in stable condition foUowing surgery for numaous
fractures. Mr. Gibbs is ~ported in satisfactory condition after being
treated for multiple lacerations and abrasions.
The JIIIII'O) cited Mr. Gibbs for D.U.I. and failure to control. The
accident Ia still undet investigation.

Shrine club to meet
The Athens County Shrine Club
will hold its annual Green Corn
Dinner on Thursday at6:30 p.m. at
the Shrine Clubhouse in The
Plains. All members and guests are
welcome.
Gilkey-HudnaU reunion
The descendants of Tommy
Gilkey and Milda Jane Hudnall
wiU hold dleir annual reunion Sunday at the roadside pari on Route
33 soulb of Darwin. A potluck dinner will be served at noon. Those
au.ending are asked to bring a covered dish, table service and folding

Le~ion

chairs.

Packets available
All students in grades 7-12
interested in playing football or
volleyball in the Eastern Local District should pick up an athletic
packet al the main office of die
high school through Wednesday
between the hours of 9 a.m. and 2
p.m. All cheerleaders should do the
same.
Pbyslcals set
Physicals for Eastern High
School athletes will bo held at
Holzer Clinic in Middleport on Saturday at 9 a.m. All students should
take a signed physical card which
may be obtained allhe office at the
high school between the hours of 9
.
a.m. and 2 p.m.

Library board to meet •
The regular meeting of the
board of trustees of the Meigs
County Public Library will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. atlbe libraty in
Pomeror.
Pic:nK: plaaned
The Racine Legion Auxiliary
wiD hold a picnic Thursday at 6:30
p.m. at the BiU Cozart's campsile.
omcen to be lastaUed
Officers for the American

EMS answers weekend calls

Hospital news

Meigs Emergency Services units answmcl 14 calls for sssistance
over the weekend.
On SIIUrday at 10:24 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Welchtown
Hill. Herman Redman wss flkelltoJ'Ieasant Valley Hospital.
At 12:14 p.m., Middleport scruad went to Overbrook Cenr« and
root John CoQper to Holzer Meclical Cenr«. Atl:l6 p.m., Syracuse
unit went to Buhan Road and root George Roberts to SL Joseph
Hospital. At 3:59 p.m., Racine squad went to Stivenvillc Road and
toOk Violet Brower to Plelsant Valley. At 5:34 p.m., Racine unit
went 10 Rowe ROid. Ronnie Bakina was taken to Velerlns Memori·
at Ho2ital· Atii:OS p.m., Pomeroy squad rook Don Ward from
Smilt)' 1 Bar to Vetenna.
On Sunday 11 12:51 Lm., Pomeroy and Chester units went to
Pomeroy Pike for a motorcycle ICCidenL. Karen Gibbs and Jim
Oibbe were taken lQ Velliia. At 8:34a.m., Rutland squad went to
Laurel Road for Laverne Jordan, who w88 taken to O'Bieness
MemOrial Hospital. AtlO: IS a.m .. Syracuse squad was dispatched
to Sllte Route 124. Homer'Proflllt wss taken'10 Holzer.
At 2:41 p.m., Racine squad went to Barringer,Rld&amp;o R~ Paul
Arthur was treated 11 die IICCIIC. At 3:S2 p.m., Midd~ urut took
Dewey Lflll\a from Ovmbrook 'Cenitr to Plcaant Va!leY. At 8:41
p.m., Mlildleport squad went to Beech Street for Melinda LaudermiiL She wss taken to VeiCIIDI. A19:34 p.m., Pomeroy aquid went
to Spring A~ Audrey Arnold was taken to Pleaanl Vllley.
1t.t 12:S9 a.m. on Mooday, Racine unit went 10 111 111to rue on
Front Street. Allen Euler was the vebiclo owner.

\

peratures expected·IO reach die 90s
in areas.
Slcies were clear over much of
die Southwest, and the mercury
w88 expected 10 top 110 degrees in
soulbern Arizons and the Soulbern
California desen.
A cold air mass pushed soulb,
and temperatures were forecsst to
remain in the 70s from die Great
Basin through the Great Lakes
region, and in the 60s in some
areas. Forecasters said thunderstorms and showen would develop
along the leading edge of the cold
air.
On Sunday , thunderstorms
developed across die Plains, dumping large hail in areas. A tornado

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
July 17 discharges - Imogene
Borden, Evelyn Duncan , Robin
Greene, Belly Hess, Mrs . John
McCoy and son, Mrs . Edward
Mess and son, Daniel Salisbury,
and Mrs. Donald Wray and son.
July 17 birth - Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Gilbert, son, New Haven,
W.Va.
July 18 dlsebar111 - Paul
Houdashelt and Thomas Phillips
July 18 birth - Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Fetty, son, Middlepoct
July 19 dlsc:har1es -'Mrs.. Eric
Arbaugh and daughter, Cathy
Erwin, Mrs. Russell Oilben and
son, Mrs. Jeffrey Rathburn and
daughter. Iva Roush and Ralph
Wiseman.
July 19 births - Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Crow, son, Ravenswood,
W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. David Linton,
son, &lt;::oalton. Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Willet, daughter. Point Pleasant.W.Va.

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AUAiliary Unit No. 39 will
be mstalled during the picnic meeting on Tuesday at !he home of Julia
Hysell at 6 p.m. Meat will be furnished.
Women's feUowsblp to meet
The Meigs County Women's
Fellowship ~eel Thursday at
the Middlep(l{ Church of Christ.
Everyone welcome.
VFW{omeet
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 will meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. at the post home. All
members urged 10 an.end.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA ,..,,
446

4~/4

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and too young and roo Ibis and too' ~·
that. I'll tell you what. we're too '
much for the American people fQr ,
their tastes."
· ·
Halfway through their New, ,
York to St. Louis " crusade for ·
change," 88 Clinton likes to call it;: •:
the reception has been enlhll'&gt;iastic. "
People have lined streets for .
miles to wave at the bps caravan; '.':
wailed for hours in rain, often ···
squealing and screaming 88 if at a .
rock concen.
, ''
"1 baven't seen a surge like this
since 1960," said Pennsylvania '•
Sen. Harris Wofford, who worked
for Kennedy then.

Allstate invests
$125,000 in
Meigs County
The Allstate Insurance Group,
hss invested more dian $125.000 in
bonds in Meigs County, accordirlg '·

to BiD Quickel, Allstate sales agent
in Meigs County.
Meigs County invesunents ~ .
part of $347,635,000 in bonds held
by Allstate in 52 counties in Ohio.
The companies' investments in.'
Meigs County include Pomeroy•.
S-125,000.
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Olber Allstate investments in
Ohio include Ohio Water Devdop:· ·
ment Authority Pure Water, Series
I, $4,210,000; and Ohio Housirig
Finance Agency Single Family
Mortgage 1983, A, $7,920,000. .":
"It continues 10 be Allstate poli··
cy to support die development of .
areas in which we do business by investing in local communities,"
Quickel said. "We are a corporate ·
citizen in each of the communities ·
in which our officers are located.
Like all citizens, we will share ill ·
die progress of these communities
and the surrounding areas."
·:
Among Ohio's other counties in ·
which Allstate has invested in local
bonds are: Adlens and Jackson.

The Daily Seotinel
(I]IPIII1WIOI
Publi•hed " er{ afternoon , Monday

Lhf'OUih Frida~ 11 Court St., Pvuwoy,

Ohio by lho Ohio Volley Pobllohlnr ·
Company/Muhimedia Jnc., Pomtny,
Ohio 46769, Ph. 992·2166. Socond .. _
poetace paia at Pm:wacy, ~MembeT: The A.oda'-ed Prut, aM &amp;he
Ohta NeW1pa_pu AIHdaUon, NatiOM.l
Adnriilint Repreeen\a\i.,., Branham
Neonpoper Saleo, 133 Thtnl Aftn-,
New Yorll. Now York 10011.
POSTMAST&amp;R: 8eDd thonloa Ia
The Doily Seotinet, Ill Coort SL.,
l'omelo!l Olllo-18769.

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The Daily Sentinel

Sports

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Monday, July 20, 1992
Page 4

In Kyger Creek.U Tou11Ulment,

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Green No. 1 slips past
Tuppers Plains Giants in 6-4 nail-biter
.

By G. SPENCER OSiiORIIIE
OVl' Stdf Writer
On lhc heels of Saturday's sixprnc nwalhoa 1hat was oomplctcd·
m spile of laiC-afternoon showm,
Sunday's four-game mini-festival

at the l{yger Cieck Little League
Tournament at the Kyger Creek
Employees Club field saw Mason
VFW, Green No. I, the Rutland
Reds and the Gallipolis Indians win
to compleiC lhc second-round pic-

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tore and put the fust paintbrushes
On the quancrtinal picture.
In S"aturday's action, it was
Pomeroy Dodgers 11, Point Pleasant's Village PizZa lnn Il-0; Syracuse's Hubbard's Greenhouse 8,
Mason County Bar Assn. (B) 0;
Pomeroy KFC .10, Gallipolis Royals S; Nelsonville Yankees 17,
Point Pleasant Fruth's Pl1annacy 4;
and Bidwell No. I 10, Gallipolis
YankeesO.
Green Nil.l-6
Tappers PlaiDs Giallts4
A ~less first inninB preceded
the Tuppers Plains Giants' first
scoring frame of die day's second
contest, which gave them a lead
into the middle of the game.
The GianiS' second·begsn when
cleanup hitter Sleven Whitlock's
popup was dropped by Green
shortstop Joey Sanders- Green's
only error of the game. After Josh
Hager was called out on Slriltcs following a wild pitch that got Whitlock to second base, Abe Rach
sttuck out swinginJto cast a long
shadow on the begmnings of a rally. BufJeremy Coleman singled an
0-1 pitch to center field to get
Whitlock home with the game's
fliSt run.
Alisha Rojas, a last-minute addition to the starting lineup when
center fielder Bill Stalberry didn't

arrive in time (he eventually
showed up.and was put in right
field to replace Shane Moodispaugh in the fourth), drove an 0-2
pitch through the middle to keep
the mlly alive and move Coleman
to second.
Then the first pitch to Moodispaugh went wild, allowing Coleman and Rojas to move to third and
second, respectively. Moodispaugh
eventually walked, as did leadoff
hitter Billy Schultz, but riot befoo:
another wild pitch set UJJ a situation
at first where catcher Matthew
While's pickoff throw to firSt failed
to nail Moodispaugh while allowing Coleman to score and Rnjas to
anive at third But No. 2 hitter J.T.
White - he and Matthew White
had more in common than the same
last name in al.!o havin' the same
position in their tespcebve lelm's
batting orders -took a called lbird
strilce to end the rally.
Green scored in the bottom cf
the second to cut the GianiS' .Iead
in half, but a scoreless third frame
preceded a Tuppers Plains fourth
1hat saw Green hurler Andrew Niben (12Ks, five walks, com.Plete
game) notch two strikcouiS (Rojas
and Moodispaugh) Jfter getting
Coleman at third - be got there on
the strength of a single to right
field, hustling to second on the re-

turn throw to the infidel and aniving It third on a wild pi-=!110 Rojas
-on bis retum 10 the bq.
Grem staned it.s c:ome-from.bc..
hind lilly ia iu llalf of the founb
when two throwing cnon - one
on a pickoff attempt by pitcher
Whitlock 1nc1 one by lint I
,...,
Nick Spurlock - allowed No. 3
hitter Cbris Lewis. the Jeeipieot of
a walk, to - · Nibert, walk !llcipic:nt, sand on a siDaJe by No. S
hitter Setll Fagusoa, who scored
on a bases-loaded walk to No. 9
hiaer Joe Walta'.
A wild pitcb to leadoff bitter
Nate Drummond SCORd Sanden,
who got on bale by Wq GUl an
infJCid hit, befii'C Lewis' grounder
in front of the mound allowed
Whitlock 10 throw 10 lfl&amp;rt 11 the
piale to record the ill!ting.auling
force ouL But GRC:D, lllead S-2,
couldn't affool to rest 011 its laurels.
Why? because Jftcr the T.P.
fifth staned with a single by
Schultz and a walk Ill J.T. While,
S]R!rlock got t11iJ1is 011 ~for the
east Meigs nine with a single to
right fiCid dB SCORd Scbultz. But
the fWP for the Giants wan't over,
because an olf-lll!ld throw to !bini
from firSt sacker Matt Preston allowed J.T. Wbite to score and
Spurlock to reach second. Wbit-

lock's single to center field on a it pitch, which got Spurlock to
third, set the stage for Whitlock's
getting to second when Matthew
White held the ball too long after
~:tf..the return throw from the
But Hager's stili-life strikeout
didn't Green out of the woods, because Rach's grounder to third on a
ball that rolled back into fair
grocmd along the third base line became a bases-loading single. But
Nibert got Coleman to pop out to
rii'St base and Rojas to strike out
swinging to get out of the jam.
Gn:en scored once again in the
fifth to give Nibert some breathing
room, and Nibert faced five hitfl:lll
in the GlaDIS' sixth, getting Whitlock to popup to fii'St to end the
clostst pme of the day.
Whitlock chalked up 10 Ks and
f!~e up six walks in taking lhe
Green's hitiCls were Sander.~ (22), Fergmon and White (both 1-3).

KEEPS RALLY ALIVE - The Tappers Plaills GlaDIS' Allsha
Roju sprlDIS orr to ftnt .,_ after drlvtD&amp; u ~l pitch oiJ Green
No. 1's ADdreW Nibert (upper 1'12111) Into cmter fleld In tH secoad
IDnlna of SUDC1a7's Kner Creek Little Leque Toumameat &amp;IDle at
the Kyger Creek Employees Club r~eld, wlticb Greta came From
hebind to wla 6-4. Rnjas, oae oftbree girls rCIIIeied Ia !be 26-tealll
tOUI'IIIIIItDt field, kept tbe GlaDIS' raUy aU'e loag e110111• to aUow
them to aet aaodaer rua iD !be rr...e. (OVP photo by G. Speacer
Osbonle)

. TIES GAME- The Rutland Reda' Joe D' Aupstino (left) slides
:u to score la front of Mason Westmoreland pitcher Josh Yoan~,
::....0 threw !be wild pitch takes the late arvw tnJm catcher David
Reed, In the third Ianing of Suaday's Kypr Crt!'k Little League
Toumameat g11111e, wbicll tbe Reds woa 9-4. D' Aagustlno's run,
·
.wu scored dariD1 Natbal HallbiD's at-bat, tied the pme at
preceded HalfhW'• RBI ll•&amp;le 01 tbe am piU:b tbat got
.~~~ D' AUJUJtiao wi" ae neatuaiJame-wlaniaa run. (OVP
:1 by G. Speacer Osbonle)

ily G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Slalf W1·iter
Like the beansprout in Jack aJtd o~ wild pitch by Slarttr J.R. KinIM Bean.sralk, Masoa VFW's lead nison. But Reds catcher Ashley
crecped toward the hC!Ivens little Miller, who would succeed Kinniby lillie·until a final growth spun in son on the hill taler in the Mason
the sixth put a game on ice that was first, fired to Kinnison to nail
already out of the reach of Shields. Never mind that Josh
Young, one of three batters KinniCochran's Exxon in the opener.
son
walked, scored on a sacrifice
Mason hurler J.R. Varian, one
fly
to
center field by Ryan RusseD,
of the returners from last year's
runner-up squad, fanned IS, gave the second batlcr Miller faced beup three hits - singles to Jeremy fon: fanning Ricky Johnson to end
Burris (2-3) and Ryan RusseU (1-3) the Mason mlly. .
-and walked two to post the comRutland stayed behind until the
piele-game win. Burris, who ab- third, when three Mason wild
sorbed the loss, whiffed nine and pitches (out of four total in tbe
walked five, but VFW's double- fraine), two hits (singles by Waydigit hit parade and numerous wild ion McKinney and Nathan HalfhiU)
pitches put him in the hole early and two walks (to Miller and Joe
and often.
D' Augustino) proved instrumental
VFW's offense was propelled in the Reds' come-from-bdtind ralby Josh Jeffers, whose two-run ly that put lhcm ahead 4-3.
homer to left center field in the
However, Shields redeemed
third highiighled his 2-for-S day, as himself in the Westmoreland
well as by Aaron Staats (2-4, fourth, when he beatouta grounder
uiple), BJ. Davis (also 2-4), Keith to~ shortstop 1ha1 allowed Joe
Cundiff (2-S, double), Roger Wood Finnicum, sprinting from third
and Jeremy Van Meter (also 2- S), base, to beat the relay throw from
Varian (1-4, double} and Cameron first to the plate and create a 4-4
Smith (1-4).
tie. But Shields was thrown out at
lnniac totals
fii'St by catcher Chris D' Augustino
Mason VFW .... 112 S(1}- 18-14-0 as Shields was trying to get back to
Coctmm's ........001 000- 1- 3-3 the bag. Young ended the Mason
WP-Varian
threat by =ding
out to flrSI.
LP-Burris
Mason, ving retired Rutland
-in order in the
of the fourth,
Rutland Reds 9
couidn 't get past second base in its
Mason Westmoreland 4
half of the fifth or get Jeff Harris
Mason Westmoreland, laking on home from third in the sixth after
the Rutland Reds in the lhird game his double to center f~eid. But Rutof the day, had to wait until the land broke lhc ice in the bottom of
third inning to see the impact Ster- the fifth with a five-hit altack !hat
ling Shields' first-inning dash to made A.J. Vaughan's two-run
the plate had on the game.
homer to right cenlcr field the cenMason had two runs in the terpiece (his shot was lhc third Rutbooks when Shields, who got on land hit of the frame) of the gamebase as a result of a throwing enor winning mlly.
by Rutland third sacker Charles
Miller had ali of the Reds' seven
Searles that allowed him to get to strilceouiS and gave up four walks

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Big
tl!pectltions awaited Bip Robens
when he became a Cincirmati Red.
''I !Old Bi[l in sprin~ training
that the ball carries well m Cincinnati and he'll ,bit eight to 10
homers," manager Lou Pinielb\
said.
That's expecting a lot from a
goy who bit three last year - a
111110 winner against Montreal and
two in a pme Aug. 11 against tbc
Reds. Piniella realized it when
Roberts failed 10 hit one out by the
Ali-Siar bleak.
"I was begioniag to wonder,"
Piniella said.
Roberts finally got No. I on
Sunday, and it was w0!1h Piniella's
wait. His two-run homer off Cris
Carpenter completed a five-run
nUy in the sevenlh inning and gave
the Reds a S-4 victory over the SL
Louis Cardinals.
Roberu got ahead 2-0 in the
count and looked for a fasthall over
lhe plate. He got one chest-high
and gave it his best home-run

~hen I get my 16S pounds

llllilla totals

CINCINNATI (AP)- Fonner Enquirer reported.
NFL and Ohio State quarterback
Shiverdecker indicated that
Art Schlichter has been charged Schlichter would make restitution
with passing a bad check for for the $31000 check, which was
$3,000 after his Arena Football returned by a bank because the
account on which it drawn was
~ 1e1m reportedly bailed him
closed.
out mApril for a SSOO check.
"Often times when the comSchlichter, quarterback of the
plaining
witness is not iniCreSled in
Arena Football League Cincinnati
pursuing
the charges, the prosecuRockers expansion team , was
arresled Friday and charged with tor will take that into considerapassing a bad check at an tion,'' Shiverdecker said.
The maJtimum penalty for the
Ameristop convenience store.
Attorney Merlyn Shiverdecker fourth-degree felony is five years
filed a plea of innocent SalUniay in in jail and a fine of $2,500.
Schlichter, 32, of Fairfield, has
Hamilton County Municipal Court.
"I have no comment at this an unpublished lelephone number
time," Rockers general manager and could not be reached for comKeith Sprunk told The Cincinnati . ment · Sunday. A . man who
Enquirer in a story published Sa!ur- answered the phone at the Rockers
day. "We will have a press confer- offiCe said no one was available for
ence Monday at 4 p.m., and we'll commenL Sprunk did nor return a
explain it ali then.' '
phone message left at his !lome.
Sprunk signed the repayment
Schlichter played for Ohio State
check for the SSOO, according to between 1978 and 1981 before
the former Ameristop clerk who joining the NFL's Baltimore and
casbed Schlichter's check, The Indianapolis Colts.

to get the win. YOUDg, wbo took when Gn:en touched him for their
the loss, struck cu fi&gt;e and walked runs in the fourth, Davis settled
IWO.
.
down somewhat, allowing orily
Rutland's offcnie was·IJ(JWCRd Clwlie McBrayer to see.second in
by Chris D'Augp!Slioo (2-3), Sieve the next two frames en route to the
HyseU (I· I~ double), VauaJian (1- win.
3, homer), Joe D'Auaustino,
Green pitcher Jeremy Griffith
HaUhill, Kinnison, McKinney and struck out eight and walked three in
Adam Moodi!(l"lgb (allt-3). ~ absolbing the defeaL
son's bittm were Brilll Coomolly
The Indians' hillers were Ben
(2-3), Hillis (2-4, two doubles) and Shein! (2-3, double). Davis (2-3),
David Reed (1-3).
Adam Bush, Dn:w Dunkle and AJ.
The Reds will filce 1be Gallipo- Jam- (aU 1-3).
lis WiMIS I 6-2 vieD 0\U lbe luia&amp; totals
Green Senaton in the Suaday fl. Gn:en Senators ...000 200- 2- I-4
na1e - in tbc rn pne of Thurs- Gal. Indians ....... .320 !Ox- 6-7-1
day's doubldJCadcr • 6 p.m.
WP-·Davis
· Janina tota11
LP- Griffith
Masoo W'land-..300 IOO- 4-S.O
Rutland .... -........004 OSx ~ 9-9-3
The future
WP - Miller ("lll ldicf of Kin1'oaight - Pomeroy Dodgers
nison)
vs. Middlepon Dodgers, 6 p.m.;
LP-Young
Hubbard's Greenhouse vs. Racine
Hustlers, 7:30p.m.
Gallipolis ladiUPs'
Twesd•y - Pomeroy KFC vs.
GreeaS-,_,2
Gallipolis
A's, 6 p.m.; Nelsonville
Doing bis best imitation of Yankees vs.
Point Pleasant Home
Boston Red Sox flteballcr Roaer CIRi Medical, 7:30 p.m.
Clemens, Galli~lis Hills Indians
WedBesday - BidweU No. I
hurler Seih Davis belched fire IPPd ¥ll. Masoo VFW,6p.m.; Green No.
brimstOne 11 Greco's Senators in I vs. Olcshire, 7:30p.m.
the nightcap by striting Ci!lt 11 hitSaturday notes
ters - eight straiJbt in a period
In the Middleport Cardinals'
spanning the second, third and win over the Gallipolis Whire Sox,
fourth innin while WOiting 011 a Cardinal pitcher Gary Acree ruled
no-hiaer at time - while walk- at the plate as well as on the
ing six and giving up ooe hit - a mound.
fourth-inning single to Jeff BurHis 3-for-4 performance includnette that set the stage for lelm- ed two consecutive homers - a
matc Bobby Angdls lilly (tbc Sen- third-inning solo shot and a two8Ullll' fust) following a late relay nm blast in die fourth - and a sinthrow to the plare.
gle. On the bill, his no-hitter inGetting DO help from the Sena· cluded 10 Slrikeout victims and no
lOili in the form of wild pitcbes or walks surrendered in a compieleenors, the Indians squeezed three gamc effort.
runs out of four singles in t!leir half
Also tossing a no-hitter was
of the fust before taclring 011 two Bidwell No. l's CJ. Johnson. He
PllOie insursnc:e RIIS in tbc second.
fanned nine IIPd walked three in a
After Davis' episode of success complete-game effort. At the plare,
against the Senators !'llll aground he was I for 3.

Rockers bail out Schlichter

STAYING COOL II· tile ob,ltdlve of Galli~ ladiaDJ •arler

b=

· Setll DIYII,IiltiDIIInt lo ICOI'ekftper J- Bus• (riabt), durl•l tH
fiiiiJe of SaiiiiiiJrl KJ&amp;er Creek Utde Lape Tou1111111eat actiol

•

aaalult•• Gree• Suatori. Da•il raned 17, lacludl•l elabt
atrala•l al oae polal, lo
HUIMpoDJOI'ed team WID '·l.
(OVf P'* b7 G. Spncer
)
{

THANA

·GARAGE-Fill
OF STUFF

~

--

T-

-..il .............-46 ...
...

.lOll

5

.49l

5.5

New Y..t .•..•..... -45 47

.o419
.-162
.41'

U

s. LooiJ •..............45

g.;e...,.._.c············4l 49

l'l&gt;ilodolp;hio ........•.•39 53

-

J6

.~

37

.589

44

.l%1
.44
.446

47

...............AI 5I

t...Aqoloi •.....•. AO 51

11

A35

I

u

IO.S
!4

15

Satunlay'a IICOrll
Alhllu3.-D
CPIICINIIATI 3, SL LaUo l
"""""'P 4, Qbao D
NowYod&lt;3,S.P-D
I

•

Teau (R)'UII4-3) at. )GJ.WII.lkoo CWes·
,... 1-7), I:G!.p.m.
Bllti ,... (SIMiilfe 10-9) at auc.,ao
(MoCuk!IP ~7), I:QS p.m.
a.YlVP!LAND (Mila 3-9) ~~­

s..D~op9.-l

.. (T•poaiiG-5),1:05 ....
8aiiiGil (HIIII:Mh .U) at lanu• City
(Pichanlo .....,, l :lS p.m.
New Yort (PerU 1-1) u Oak.llnd

-~13.

~il
·o,

lUNS -

Hollilla, Philatlcl

TonJcbt'opma

M011trMI, Sf;

(hloJaahdJ O'G).I:!l ~.._

a,-. (lho*lo U) II CINCPIPIPATI
(hhlkMr ~-~~ 7:!5.J"'L
S. Prp dn (lliC:t 1-2) 11 Maatal

(IllY! !IJ.4).7:~c
.. ~
1-6) " PhilldolpiU

Now ·

J!13-l),1:40p.m.
Piuabtlgil (Dnbek 1-7) tt Huultoa
(Willi.- :I'!~ 1:!5 1':"'.wu.. '"'"" 1'1) .. So. LouiJ (Oo·

hl&lt;ne1·5l. J:ll PJII.

_.,.,..1)

,, I

it

6;

0

1

· ----·--·..43 ... ....,
New Yod&lt; ...........43 "
.413
-aEVBIAND
-···-····-·..4!•
50
.-162
.......37 55 .&lt;(!!
•

4

1.5

12
13
14

19.5

Die&amp;~

19; SMllltW, S.. Dil!ao. II; 1.. Walk•.
t.lonlttll, 16; Bocuh~ lti.wburah. 16:

Dnhan, PhUad.llpbia,
Phila~ 13; Prir'rt
O.WSCD. Clak:qg.t1

lfollint,
A\lanUI, 13;

w

I

M"*-11 1~, .114, 2.69; C1111.~ New
Y..t, 111-4, .114, 1.41; To .....bury, Sc
Loo1J. 9-4, .612, 1.91; Scoo!u, Adon11,
!1.6. .641, 1a:
Dlop, yy .

c- Now vom.

G. -go...,_ !Ill; lijo, ONc!N·
NA11, 1111; _ . Son. Dkp, 101; Coooliold, 1M Aop!oJ, POl.
SAVB.!- Cwlua, aNCPNNATI.
13; 1M St. Lou!o. 23; o.1-.
H - PI; W"'"""d, -~ II;
Niuh wma.., 'hd
tl; MYfd.
Soollkp,IS;-1! • F-14.

·y ';.

Alllorklll Leopt

IAmNO - hckeU, MilnNO\I,
.3361 B. lloAh ' .321: .......
a..IYILJ.ND, .334: J.. Alaur, TOIU'IIo,

Mil-

.IZI; - ·
.31~i.
·
Oolliod,
.!12; Kaoholmh,
......,&lt;J!',

""·

.

JUNI" ~ :;;·
€~,
6S:
,...._
all, 65:
. Dlaoll.
6S; I. . . . .,...... II;
J&amp;.
61; C..., T - 57; I. Alolllll'o T - . ~

56.

AldWIDII B•'d m,

RBI - - · Dlooil. 16: MoOwbo,
11, 61; 0.
P!oU, ~c.:· Tcoa11o, 61:
n..o.u.
59: ~ o-le
OakiiM, 'JO; ......... M

51·a-..

,51;11uo0oo-

uf-. 'f".U.., :51; B.U.. ClJMIJ.AND,

..

17.

q

BllketbaU
-

.1"

167; Smckl. Adlalao 133: S. F=rdn
Now YOII:,I:IO; nr-, PI- 101:

992-66,1

NEW YOlK MlrrS - Adi.VI\1111 Bm
Sabah1pa, piteher~ lhe clinblcd
1iiL PIICCit Dwiahl
a~, pitch•, en
1M l!i-day lllilt.bled lill, Ntmlcliva 1o 1111)'

tonY. s.. t.ow. 19: ~~o~oy, u-... 15:

6, ·"'·
3.5!.
STR!UOP1fl
-

Middleport

NaiiOIIILaaue

t•:

lAir...,""'

.
•

BasebaU

A-'&lt;aot.oopo
DEnOIT TIGBRS - Pl,..cl Rob
De., outfioldnr, on lha l!i-d9 dinblod
liJL 1\uehued the contrncl of ou,. PeW.,
outfielder, tn.n Tal,odo of lhl Imcmt.tiono! t...p
TIIXAS RANGERS - RocolPacP Mon1)' P.U., oulfinldar, fMm O&amp;IMama City
D( tho American ANOrialioa. Rcloasod
1oOo Canrlooi. ...r.......

oacan.n. Lui An•

....HOME
~ AH!.II. t.ow.'
RUNS - MoOdlf. Son
I

TransactionS

:

Roblrtl, CINC1NNATI, 2J; Biplo,
-ZI;0..,-:13.
Pllt:PPPIPO (I I - ) - cnm...
A~oo10, 14·3, ·.114, l.-44: Swindell.
CINCINNATI, 9-2.
2.15; !Yonkhlood.
CINCINNATI, 9-l. .Ill, !.15: L HiU,

.S1t
.533

koo, 19; ~Qb.... l9.

Su Dlop, I !:I; Sbotr..W. SID
~IJO, Ill; had'-toa, Allaau1, 110;
INk, Phi'
1 • • : o.sm.w.. Ma:l.•
"'"" 101; lluoiooo.IPdlodo!phio, lOS.
DOUIIJIS - o.-, Pbllldolpbil,
%7; VuSP!ke. Pl.......... 26; t.Wlon!,
Sc Lou!o, 13; OrlaGm, Moauuh. ll:
Mua:-y, New YCI'k. 22; W. Cluk, Sill
F-11; llaol!!o,New Yom, 11.
TRIPUS - DSoo...... Allonlo, 13;
Pillley, Hounaa, tOt V&amp;dlyb, Pitu·
...... 1; • • • 1M Aaoo!oJ. 1: Monn·
Ow)ml.

T -··········'···.56 !5

39

loll Lud!, T...., 22; PhauJ', Mihwou-

I

. srot.P!N BAlBI - Oziooooa. Moo·
tl'el1. 46: D , 'X,
~Lank·

41

. ...... 22: _,....,., 1twu cur. 22:

A&amp;llala. 53,
Hm - V..SI,to, Plttobo'Jhl, 113;

LEAGUE
.T-AMERICAN
-...DtWLMGI
•·~~··"~...J2

11_., .733, 3.19: N•IY· CLEVELAND,
II_., .733, 145.
STRIKEOUTS - Iu1n Ouama~t ,
Toronto, 131: Cleaton•. Boaton, 125;
Pw.. New Yml120; L Bmm, Tew.,
101; Appio', KanAt City, 100; McDow.n, a.u.aa, 93; Jc.Ouzmm, Tm.. 93.
S!aYHS --:- Ec.kenle)', OU:lud, ~
ApUon, Minae.ot~, 21: Olaon, Balli.-

w..... -54:a.Do.NowY...,

53; Po

I

Tutlday'a pma

Marria. T01mto, 11 ·:3, .'716, 4.31 ; MuuiI0.3, .7qj,123; K. Bmwn,
Tuu. l.t-!1, .7n, 3.11; fklminl, Soaalo,
M, 8&amp;llimoK.

, Moauul, !7;

Yd, U: MCOfif't Su Dieao, 51; L.

.

&lt;*C.:t1;:~J;:r~ 1-1) "

~,.~~~~Ji'ill'i.!t

Houtton, 60;

l l..
io
- 1-0)
....S
(M. ±
o.q,p,.,
p.m. .. ,_1M""-""' (htMo 0.0. 5-9).Y'*(WbMball-4). 7&gt;*1f"'·
Piuabu. (Sftlilb I· 7 at HIMlltOD

B·"

PIOME RUNS - M&lt;Ow;,., Ooklond,
Dooo. Dcuoi' 23; Teal«oo. o...;,
10; Ju1n Oonulcz, Toau, 19; Belle.
CLEVELAND, 19; Clllinco, Oa.kllnd,
19; P".eldcr, Deucat, 19; Carw, Tcwanto,
19.
SJ'OI.EN BASES - Uaacb, Mil wa~r
"'"' 3~ Lo&amp;a. ~. 32; h'olc&gt;
.... Ca!ilomio, 31 ; " - a.Jsimolo.
29; Raine~ , Orle~~p, 29; ~ Hcndcnon,
Oakland, 21; Knoblauch, ~. 21
PrTClDNO (II deciaion•j - Juan
Ou&amp;maa, Toronto, 12· 2, .I 7, 2.00;
Zl;

'a, 59: DeShlalds,

Rob.ru, CINCINNATI, 56; Kruk ,
pbi]c 1 \hi· 56;~ Sill Diet~ 56.
JlBJ"- Slt.affi&amp;ld, Su Diei:o, 63;
Dtulw., J'ltltdelpb,le 60; Mwray, New

WIP---·-..41

au..,...s.

" Sooulo (Jahln-

~JO (H.uk•f IJ:.O) 11 CINCINNATI- ~7,s5 P!'!L
(llpp 0&lt;1) • -

.615

TRIPLP..S - Andenon, Bd~ 6;
Dovct~~ua:, BAltimore. 6; LiAich, Mil"'ukoo. !i; R. Al«au, TOCUltO, 5; Sic:tn,
Tnun, !i ; While, Toronto, !i; Rainoa,

Sbolllohd. S.. Dio&amp;o. .311; a..,.., Son
Di• • •326; Mc:Ortti', 111ft Diqo, .318;
a...., a.;.... ~13; ldoOeo, f.m Fno-

New Yllidr:I,SIIlf..-4
aNilNIPATI 5, St. U.U. 4
Alhllul.-2.10 .....
Cllictp4.Pillobqhl

Y'*(

Cill,~23.

BATTPNO

~·6,Lm ........ l

:anoti

DOUBLES - P1o!1. Now YOII:, %1; E,
Seattle. 26; Joyner, ~lntu
Ci ty, 25; MallinJir,_Nnw York, 25 ;
Yount., MUw1ubo, 25; Reim•, Te111,
23; Puckca, Mi.nnCIOUI, 23: Brea. Xantu

TlltldiJ'IIImll

(Oowml·h~ 10:0! ~
c....;, (T..... ~
IGI 5-10), 10:3$ p.!IL

"""""'·Mil·

M~ttinez ,

Naliollll Leone
-ll:ml:, fblltdo!phio ,
.m; Vo.Slrko. Pintbarob • .:147:

Sunclay'IIC-

s.a .... ..._

!OS; M.a. - 1 0 4 :
104,.

WluiOD,

Major league leaders

hia 14,l.cll AaaUI3

(Bomoo h·l). 7,]$p.m.

ucaua, B&amp;Jtimore, 106; SiiCft'l , Tc~n,

Toroe&amp;o (Morris 11 ·3) at California
(Valin 5-I); !0:!5 p.m.

Sla,~YD,l!caJre&amp;!)

,..,

HITS - P'llcblt, MinnMota, 125;
" - · CLI!VELAND. lit, Flymon, c.
..... 109; E. MoniDco, ....... 101; Dov-

(l)u!lq 1-7). 10:05 p.m.
~ (t4mll J..l) at SMttle (Gnrlt
0.1~ IO:G!p.m.
Tcnma (Sa!lcmW.'"'M)rn•• U) at California
(Fodupo 11-0), 10:!5 p.m.

6

w..... ut-

CPNCINNAn......•.s.
A"'"" .•...•.......... .53
Son IMJo ..............49
San Fz 'me ........44

51.

Now Y'* ~0.3)" OUI.md

WLMGI
h'lllaboqb •.•........•JI ..
.ll4

ing combinatioo of the sport, the watcr skiers, the lllalities are 2S or
sun and the WliiCr c:an - a slrils less in any given year," he said.
out fast, he Slid.
However, be said, skiers and
The ISIOcialion put it ., tbc u
drivers mPIIt always look out for
trouble.
And 11111ticle in a medical magOund a II'CIIICPidous"loss of tim- aziDe, The .:Z:!ician and
iDJ and c:Cnuoi.
inc,
thst up with
The study showed 1hat skiers
iu:aU:aa "bizarre risk!'
who PIPC8Wd belr~eea .04 IIIII .OS
Ia the anicle, Toronto physion 1 breath aaalyzer - IWf of elus tell of a barefoot skier who
what it would take to be le~ fell into the water, releasing the
intoxicated - Plopped about
metal-reinfon:ed tow rope handle.
on slllom soorea lnd lbout a dlinl The Dying bandlc s1ruck the boat
driver in tile bead as he liYmed to
on tricks.
Overall. Cullimcwe o II •V.trs 1be loot It die lkier, blinding bim in
spM vuy safe. "Out of IS mUiion one eye, die doctors say.

555 .Park St.

Branson has become the Reds'
top pinch hitter. He's 6 for I4
(.429) with a ctub-higb six RBis.
"I just try not to strilce out, to
tell you the uuth," Branson said.
"I cut down my swing and try to
put the ball in play. That way
you've got a chance to make !Olliething happen.••
Roberts was nexL He hsdn 't hit
a horner since the two-homer game
last August against dYe Reds. When
Carpenter feU behind in lhc coun~
he looked for a faslball and got iL
He dropped the bat and watch
the ball soar over lhc wall in right·
center, then thrust his fist into the
air when he reached fust base.
" I knew it was out," Robens
said. "I don't hit many, but when I'
hit one llcnow."
He doesn't care if it's his only
trip around the bases, all expectations aside.
"if I hit one home run and we
win the World Series, I'll be the
happiest man in the clubhouse," he
said.
The homer tonk everything out
of St. Louis. The Cardinals failed
to get a baserunner in the last three
innings against Dwayne Henry (22), Scott Banlchead or Nona Charilon, who tied Lee Smith for the NL
lead with his 23rd save.
The three straight losses at
Riverfront Stadium made them
homesick.
"It seems like we've been on
the road for a month, which we
practically have," Clark said.

(8 df k•o..t).l:lS

NATIONAL LEAGUE

:f.!

VALLEY LUI1111 and
SUPPLY CO.

runs.

• (lloU 3-l). 1:0! p&gt;JIL
BOiloa (l)uwia 5-4) II ~~ City

In the majors...

AHANDFUL
OF CASH

IS BEllER

the fourth, a comfortable lead the
way Mark Clark was pitClting.
Clark gave up just two singles
over the firSt six innings. The 84degree heat finally started to wear
him down in·the sevc:nth, when singles by Paul O'Neill and Chris
Sabo and a double by BiU Doran
ended the shutout
"My arm slarted to get 'a little
tired and I slarted to ~tei the ball a
little high," Clark said
Tprre called on Cris Carpenter
(3-3}, who had allowed just one nm
in his last 14 appearances. He got
two strikes on pinch hitter Jeff
Bllll!son. but couldn't put the lid:
ie away. Branson fouled off a few
pitches and then singled through
the hole at second for two more

Scorehoar·d ,

--

s~==~=~

park," Roberts said. "It couldn't
have come at a belit:r time.''
The homer let Cincinnati maintain its one-game ltJ!d QVCt Atlanta
in the Natio!llll League West and
sent the road-weiU'y Cardinals
home on a discouraging nole.
SL Louis basn 't played a· bome
game since July I, but was handling i!Sclf quile Diceiy on lhc road.
The C8rdinals improved to 8-4 on
the grueling trip by beating the
Reds in the opener of their fourgame series Thumlay.
"We knew coming in here that
it was going to be lou~h because
those guys are playmg really
well," manager Joe Torre said.
"You win the lint one and you at
least want to come 0111 of here with
aspliLit's disappointing."
They looked like they were
going to get the split until the sevc:nth.
The Cardinals batted around for
three fir.~t-inning runs off Chris
Hlmmond, who basn 't won a game
since June 17. Todd Zcile singled
home two runs and Tom Pagnozzi
doubled in another.
Bernard Gilkey's RBI double,
one of bis three hits, made it 4-0 in

behind it, it can go oul of the

TJ'. Giants ..........020 020- 4-9-4 .
Green No. 1 ........010 41x - 6-4-1
WP-Nibert
LP- Whitlock

The Dally Sentinel-Page-s

Cincinnati comes from behind
to post 5-4 win over St. Louis

Water skiers must watch knees, Dr. DeLee says
The I()().foot rule also applies in
By IRA DREYFUSS
offshore
water- 100 feet on eilhcr
WASHINGTON (AP) - Give a
water skier enough rope, and he side of the boat is the safety corridor that must be clear for skiers,
can ~ct hung up.
' Water skiers must usc com- ·says the association's guide to safe
mon sense," said Dr. Jesse C. skiing.
Safe skiing requires you to be in
DeLee, an orthopedic surgeon and
shape
for the spon, CuDimoo: said.
associale clinical professor at the
Water
skiing strains the back
Uni&gt;ersity of Texas Health Science
and shoulder muscles, and slaloms
Center in San Antonio.
They especially have to watch put extra demands on !he legs e~iaUy lhc thighs and calves. he
their knees. he said.
The knee is a skier's most easily said.
A slalom run behind a boat
injured joint, the doctor said.
going
30 mph can speed the slrier
Injuries can range from tigament
up to 40-45 mph, and experienced
tears to dislocation.
skier can handle runs of 60 mph,
lmp!ICI with the water can put a
lot of pressure on the knee, he said. CuUimore said.
Hitting the water at slalom
Water has more resislllnce than you
might think, especially if you slam speeds can give the knee as much
into it hard enough - say, in a stress as an ahtlete would find ia
cootact spons, said Dr. DeLee.
high-speed fall.
However, ordinary weight trainYou can also bang your head,
ing
and endurance activities water ski expert Duke Cullimore
things you could do at a health club
lloinled OUL
"If you fall forward, you're - should give a skier the Sli'Cnath
'
likely to oome in contact with your he need.!.
Cullimore is more concerned
skis, and that could cause facial or
head injury," said Cullimore, exec- about skiers who drink. The fatiguutive director of the American
Water Ski Association.
'
The right way is to fall to the
side, leanin4 away from the skis,
CuUimore 111d.
Getting tangled in the tow pWe
also c:an hurt die knee, said Del ee,
who warns skiers to make sure all
the slack is 0111 of the rope before
· the bolllllrtllll pulL
Skicn lllould make IPR they're
far enou1h offshore to avoid an
acc:idental slalom onto the beach,
Cullimore said. Normal ski rope
lenalh is 75 feet, so the associalion
recommends keeping at least 100
feet offshore - and 200 feet would
be even better, he said.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Getting into GianiS' offensive flow
we~e Schultz (2-3, double), Cole111111 and Rach (also 2-3), Rojas,
Spmlock and Whitlock (alll-3).

Mason VFW, Rutland,
Indians
also
advance
.
second befii'C a wild pitch got him
to third, atiCmJ)Ied to score on an-

Monday, July 20, 1992

-bo!h~'••rdiCbllef....
..

PIOUSTON ROCPt!!TS - A...... "'
wi.&amp;h Robert Harry, fcrwazd, on •

1mm1

fi..., . . . . _

MINNESOTA TIMBBRWOLVBS Slpcd Muloa M.uey, Ccrwud, 1o 1 four,.., ...,...._ Plo!oooocl l"'7 Hollu ond
,

Hubllrl~fonrllda.

--

PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZP!RS SipedTI'IC)'lllua)', fanr1ft1,10a W.O.

BEATING THE TAG- Cildn.ti's Bip
RolleriS slides into secoad • - alltad ol SL
Louis calcller Tom Papoui's arvw ID sllart·
stop Jose Oquendo (lefl) Ia at lD'd iaail&amp; of

Sudlly's Natioaai League pme In Ciacianati,
nidi at Reds Clllllt froul btbind 1o win 5-4 01
at straP&amp;!' of Roberts' two-run homer ia tile
snatL(AP)

Baerga's heroics push Cleveland
.to 4-3 victory over Kansas City
By DOUG TUCKER
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Why didn't the Kansas City Royals
walk hot-hitting Carlos Bacrga
with the winning run on third base
in the ninlh?
And if they are going to pitch to
him, why have first~ Wally
Joyner so far off the line?
The Cleveland Indians, happy to
beat the Royals 4-3 Sunday and
avoid a four-pme sweep, were fuU
of questions nevertheless.
"Bacrga's a high-bail hitter.
Sieve Shifflett's a low ball pitcher," manager Hal McRae 581d "I
was sure we could gel a ground
ball.''

Stili, the stralegy seemed curious in light of Baerga's recent
streak. Hitting .460 over his last 23
games, Cleveland's All-Star second
baseman had hit a two-run home
run in lhe fust ioning, a single in
the third and a double in the seventh:
With lhe score tied 3-3, Sbilllett
(1-1) walked Kenny Lofton leading
off the ninth. One out later, Baerga
comes to the piale with Lofton on
third, courJcsy of Shifflett's wild
pickoff atlempt.
lnslcad of doing what the Indians expecled and giving Bacrga a
free pass to bring up Paul Sormuo.
Shifflett hore down and lhrew to
him.
"I was hitting the bail pretty
good, so I was surprised,' said
Baerga. who has I4 RBIS in bis last

14 games. "BUI Sorrtnto is hitting
lhe ball good. bl.
"Yeah, I was Sd(Wisr:d." Cleveland PIUIP8&amp;U Mitt Hargrove said
''J•m sure Hal bad his reasons.''
"I wanled 10 get a ground ball
from him. I've got a sinkcrbaii
pilehing going. •• McRae said.

Tbe cnunt went to 2-2 wb-.n
Bacrp slommed a shot down the
right-field line thai W2l jPPSI bardy
foul. But Joyner Slayed put- playiq se.aal feet off the bag and 1101
JI""'C'ing the lillr:.
AgaiD, lfal!rove - paplexed.
" It looked Iikc Hal was lrying
10 get Joyaer 10 PIIOVC closer 10 the
line,.. be said.
" WaUy looked at me,'' McRae

said. "Our charts sbow tllat's
where u play him. He toomlat me
and said what do you WIDI DIC to
do. I said US11: your gut feeling. Our
dats say that's where to play him,
and 1 play by the dwts. His renclency IS IlOilo hit tbc ball where he
hit it."
, Baerga, who had a four-bit
J11D1C JIIPIC 27...,. TomnlO, said
be was Clllirely UUCOPiteuied about
hittin&amp; a triple 10 get the qdc:.
"It Dever even entered my
mind," he said. "Net ca:e. Wbm
you 5lall Plying 10 bit triples. !hat'~
wbell you pop up...
DerU Lilliquisl (4-2), the fourth
of fi&gt;e Cievelaad pitchen. f.OI the
victory with two-thirds inning of
relief. Sieve Olin pikhed the ninth

for his 16th save.
"No oomplainls today," McRae

said. "We won three out of four.
This was not our besl game. But
you want to win three out offour."
Thomas Howard singled in the
fliSI before Baerga's 13lh home run
off Luis Aquino, who was coming
off the 60-day disabled list.
The Royals bounced back with
two in the bonom of the inning
when Brian McRae singled, Gregg
Jefferies doubled and George Brett
slapped an RBI single to righL
Rico Rossy drew a two-out walk
in the second, went to second on
McRae's walk and gave Kansas
City a 3-2 lead on Jefferies' RBI
single.
In the fourth, Mark Whiten singkd, was sacificed to second, lnd ·
sc&lt;red on a double !hat bounc:ed off
Rossy's face. Junior Ortiz lifled a
high popup behind frrsl base. As
Rossy and third baseman Jefferies
converged on the bali, it hit Rossy
on the side of the face and bounced
into foul territory for a double.
ruled a fair ball, and became an
RBI double.
Jefferies left in the fifth with a
laceration oo the nose and slighdy
biuned vision caused by a collision
in the third with catcher Brent
Mayne. Bolh were going for a foul
JIOP, bul Mayne caught Jefferies in
the oo;e with an elbow at the same
time Mayne was catching the ball.
Mler being attended to, Jefferies
stayed in the game and batled the
next ioning before leaving.
"I'Dbe all righ~" Jefferies said.
" I'D play tomorrow."

Jones sharp in Cowboys' scrimmage
By Tbe AssociPPted Press
When the Dallas Cowboys lost
Jack Del Rio to the Minnesota
Vikings via Plan B free 'agency,
there was concern they would be
hurting at middle linebacker in
1992.
After Sunday's performance i_)y
roolrie Robert Jones of East Caroltna, coach Jimmy Johnson isn't
worrying one biL
Jones, the Cowboys' second
pick in the f!l'St round of the Nf1.
draft, impressed Johnson and the
7,500 fans at SL Edward's University in Austin, Texas, watching the
aonual Blue-White scrimmage.
Jones returned an iolercepted
pass S8 yards for a touchdowD off
Troy Aikman. And be made seven!
other plays that had Johnson in a
buoyant mood after the 60-play
scrimmage.
"You can see why we drafted
him in the first round," Johnson
said. "He made plays a normal
player couidn 't make. He made a
great tackle on a screen pass and
made a tre!IIC1ldous play on a sideline sweep. Tbe only way you
make those plays is if you have
instinciS and speed."
Linebacker Maurice Crum
returned a Steve Bcucrlein inter·
ception SO yards for a touchdown
in the second defensive touchdown
of the day.
Jones came into camp lisled as
the starting linebacker but said he
(loesn't expect anyone to hand him
the~
'It's 1101 up to me to say that I
swt," he said. "It was an exciting
day. I showed the fans and the
coaches that] cari play the pass. ••
On offense. Tony Jordan a:on:d
on a 3-~ run, Darryl Jobaston
scored
a yard out and Kelvin
Manin caught a 62-yard scoring
from Beuerlein.
passBeucrlcin. who led the Cowboys
to five victoriea afiCr Aikman 80l
hun last year, hit 8 of I2 passe~ for
169 yards. Aikman was 10 of 18
for 81 yards.
OUers
Warren Moon, attempting to
resolve a dispute over bonus
money from 1990, officially
became a holdoui wbell be failed to
repon to Houston's camp by the
deadline.
49m
Safety Dana Hall, San Francisco's top draft choice, was siltned 1o
a three-year contract worih $2.7

million. Earlier, the club signed
second-round pick Amp Lee, a running back. and ninth-round pict
Darian Hagan,. m:civu.
The club has 10 PPI"igncxl veta·
ans, including aD-pro rca:iV~:rJerry
Rioe.

Rams

Jim Everett reponed two days
early and took pan in LA's second
practice.

The seventh-year quarterback
wanted to anive to start learning
the system

6 000/o 6.170/o

c.m.t Rial Rae Annu:il Pert(5!12ge Yield

5-Year -a.ssk JlJJte Changer" CD
($5,000.110 ......._ - 5ubst1Ddal penalr,
fhlr-tr al' I aN - ~ CIN!Ipolulded
....., • Ills I I Jed Ill Uaap 011 1\ursdays)

d'

OW CTemc,.., 0 I'll ~of Deposit lets YOU call
tile lilob. OacledtJmc tl!t Ilk of die a&gt;, YOU an tW
of li;Per 110 T gnra IIIII illaa5e die interest on your
Clediio * •jill cal as or 110p by any ol our convenient loaaions
wlalOO 6ilktk Iiiii: is !WIL 'fl1l3t could'lle more Iaibie?
r • . _ . Ptoplts BIYik Cltmk"*
u (II peasaal Gl!ll rmua, sa Baibillty.
proMigdlue'lf llw¥ M&gt;rlcia&amp; to exceed
,_rap-1•"•s

advan.

ftlr-•
a

Ole_..,.,
-

a....

...

.._.

!!HISS Bf.~l 41Hih' ·~

\

't''j I

MtJ

913~1

1SH95S

........

'197-4547

)

�•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 20, 1992

The Dally Sentinel;

ByTbeBend
' ,

,,

Bu iness Servi

Monday, July 20,1992 :

CHARLIE'S

'

Guitarist promises Ariel patrons
~ ,comfortable evening of variety
a,OKP~NVP.,_PJNS~!!N

rallys

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

to

·eli fDt11ist David Simms

, 0

qi!l if ·din IS I CIIIIIICC:inJ 1bemc
!It File a.lc; be pellOIIIIS, .It is :bat
die .... - COIIlbllble 5o t:YCrj·
oie, ewm diOie wlboll111 car fir

":"-*-

d

"'

· "J p: the ~·II 50wlnl DOt
far mlllicas IIIII proCesson IDd academia," be said. ui
511!* it'l I~~== PIJIII•n
IQ dae a
· · · c'assica•
IIIIJiic;"

I'·

· Si11111 Slicl be began playing
Ph- • age Mvea when bis par·
- . . hilll Fib lessons, but be
- qait ....... be llll7ed 5o pracFice.
., llill do," be Slid.
. A few ,an llllr, be dc~loped
IIi .._. 011 bis own and began
playjq pi:ar 1.1 I hobby. In his
lltli .-. Simms said be kame

tdiljazllllldcci"'"''
IlDdy masic ilnf 1
Sil!uls diOie ., lllldy t' . "
guillr aDd CII1ICd m ·Barloc:h ~
Music rFiorida Sla UMeniiJ ill
Tlllabasee. wbic••
Simms, bill die "11ig r IIIII
a__;.._•. •
-;......:...
most C._...
-. . m· .....
...,
world. • While ~ lie 1111dicd
unda I'CIIOWIICd guiw iDslnl:kJr
Bruce Rober.
"He's the best at what be lt:Jes,•
Simms said
While in college, S~ plaJed
wilb The Jm Fusion E• at«, a
college-rcia:cd llud dlit pia~
mginallllllllbels as well as c:own
by modem jazz's biaest • • es
The tweaty·six year old pillrist
also competed ~ ,_ die
round in :be Masic: Teac:llen
Nlllioual Associlliaa o•1prtiFi•
in 1991. This year lie WOIJ die
qioDa1 divisiolll.llul- 4Dq
ilic1 bccln,. bis pesfcauwe fer

IIXGnlial!

=-

t,c.;e
---

ilid.'.tmeei the

s· "· a '111M al ClladesloD,

SMALL DOZER
WORK, DRIVEWAY
WORia1d
LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
REISON.IU UTES

992·7553

bimoacortwovear~aftcrapedor-

maacealld ...o.J'fbiSiill p1a Tu
.
ys

CotlrWal. -

:CS:

MONDAY

• 7 poinl line type only uaed
• Tribune i1 nol mf)on•ible lor errora after Cir, l day (check
fol"' crrora firal day ad I"'Wll ir:l ptlpet). C,ll before 2:00 p.rn.
day aher publication lo nialr.e ~orreetioo
• Adslhal mual bl'! paid iD .d¥aoceare:

Happy Ado

In Memoriam

Yard Sale~

CLRSSIFIED RDS
You~// Come

Up Aces With
The Classifieds

Asbury UMW picnic held
Community calendar at Lisle home in ~yracuse Ohio University scholarship
ADrt
.;t:l
;
_
... e.. two.,.
eveat
recipients are announced
al
lifts
were
Md

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Codo.
~
Plano ond opecifi..Uono
. . on lla In tho Deplrllnanl
of Tronaporllllion ond the
offico ot lha Dlalrlct Deputy

DAVID SIMMS

w--

p.m. All Lcgionaires WJed to

-re

a5lelld.

tile U)''fl lbt tft'lt.IFelll
•ill lie reaiwed well • I41'111Ct
to
pablicatloa m die cal·
elldlr.

MONDAY
POMEROY • The Meigs Cross
Ollllllry TCIIII wiD meet at :he bigh
school Monday at9 a.m.

RACINE • The Soutllem Local
School Bo.-d will meet Monday at
7p.m.
SYRACUSE • The Syracuse
Presbrterian Church will hold
Vacauon Bible School Monday
throu1h Friday rrom 10 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. daily ror children aDd
youdl.
: SYRACUSE • Meigs County
Board of MenFII Retardation aad
DewlopiiiCIIFII Disabilities will be
hdd Monday • 7 {l.DI. at offiCe in
Syracuse. All meellllgs open :o the
public.
REEDS VILLE • All girls,
grades 7-12, in:created in playing
'VOilcyblll at EI Ill D Local should
aaenta meecinl Mooday at7 p.m.
at :he bigh schooL
RACINE • Bi1 Bend Farm IJid
A•tique Club will meet Monday at
8
at the Southern High
Sc . Eva,ODC welcome.

&amp;:·

y-

MJDDLBPORT • The Middle·
Iape will hold • picillc lllll pool )IItty Monday from 69 p.m. at :he Mi«&lt;i!k1m Park. Any

port

-.bcrol:hc bill :earn and family
manben arc ggc1to rtelld. Those
1175mding do not ncc1to bring anything.
•'

TUESDAY
POMEROY • United Mclhotist
Cu•tallli&lt;e Parish will hold Vaca$choot Tuesday Fhrough
TIDiidl/ from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. II
die 311 Condor Sttcet in Pomeroy.
Mlltet Place 20 AD is :he Fbemc.
· a sack lunch. Drinks PIOrid~ 992-7400 or 992-3317 far

:ioRBible

WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - Tile RuUaad
Friendlv Gardcncn willllave a
ramily lliallc at lbe F'a er's Pllk
in Ru:land on Wednesday with
Shirley VaaMela' as 11011css AD
meml!m are 10 brill&amp; ptlect ilr.ms
aDd a picoe of bcasoac:4 wood fer
roD call. Mlric Bildllicld wiD dlair
tbo program oa J&amp;lllena
·~~ aad
cleaning 'ftQI5bemd wood · e11cational information
. on. usiag

.
nawre s

tlaSIRI m*'*CWI

wiD

POMEROY • The Alzheimer's
Disease support pvup
meet
Wedaesdly at 1:30&amp;!;.!t the
Meigs County Senior . •
Cm:.er. All interested ~ may
a5lelld.

The-· • • aldie
Uniled tie*
bcld
m:ady at die bome Miry Lisle
iDSy1a
Man:ia Kllr pvc the
before die pthd: diDIIcr en·
by 16 -.1As8ltwo guaas.
A s11ort IMsiw.u meding was
lleld widl47 . . . . class lqJOIUd.

A letter from Sine Cera was
read thanking the unit for a visit
IJid
:hat
mlldc -tly.
Blessing boxes and freewill
offering were taken.
Rev. Newman played several
pieces 011 the piano.
Attending besides those named
Hope Moore, president, Har·
Tile aew 11iaistcr, Rev. Deron riet Sinclair, Elma Louks, Ann
Newmu, pla)'Cd die piano for Sauvqe, Jean SIOIII, Hallie Robert·
sin&amp;inl •A• • ""I Gncc."
son, Linda Ferrell, Ircnc Parker,
A leUer was read from Sbcp- Marie Boudasbclt, Katbleen Fry.-.
llcidess MD. Bemicc Carpen:.er April Harmon, Beulah Wan!, Helen
allllllllbe Tedty Be. pojcct IIIII it Teaford, Mary Cundiff, guest, Rose
Ann Jenkins and hostess Mary
- deo ...., 10 lite !*lin iL
Lisle.

bl=

Judy Laudermilt wins
honors for the week

POMEROY • Tile PomcroyJudy l.aadcrmilt was the best
Middlqnt. Lions OuiJ will bold I to. (or lbe week of Jaly 14 far
regular meetin~ Wednesday II Ollio TOPS Cab No. S10.
noon a: Pleucr s R.estalllllltil
Best KOPS loser wu Linnie
PlllnciOy.
AleUire IIICI Calistl Searls was
POMEROY • Cindy 01Mri al
the Meiga Couaty Caopcnlive
Ex:ensioo Service
oowle : 1
special cbi111al's popu, "Mat·
ing Banana Bre1111a Blil" at Fllc
Meigs County Public I.i1n1J 01
Wednesday at 2 l'.m. AD dUke~
arc illviiCd
ij ,. ill die program, wbicb will COil $1. Pn&gt;n:c·
istratkln is mqucs:c1.

wiD

to..,,.

Names in
the news

'lip. Heidi DeiOIIJ best
ta:aba'.
Nuc:J Muley won the fruit
basbl..tiJIIIil: A~ - :he
,.

al tile Jlld&amp;ct Jill.
A p'lb bq sale will be held
l'lllcsda)'IIICI 1 bale sale will be
beldAD&amp;-3.
.
Wei&amp;llt loa ple1g wcrc made
...

aatit-...Sihll~ Vining,
Olisa Scads ... IIOIImc Jobnsloo
lllll their p1odr

D of A group holds picnic

MENDHAM, N.J. (AP) Whitney Housoo has fouad "'llle
Greatest Love of All" ..t Wlic1
fcDow siJJ&amp;cr BobbY Bmn.
Sinscrs ou- w-ick, l'llli
LaBelle and Gloria E...,_: llurincaman Doaald Tnap; 81 bll!kctball IW laiall 'l1lomas were
amO~J the
at BolllOII's
IJIIIISIOII 011
.
About ISO p«qqle were ilvilc1
to the ceremony, and 600 ID a
reception, said Regina BroW.,

1:,.:,.

Houston's sP*enrcarra.

Tbc Dislrict IJepalies and Past

Councilors Club of Disuict 13,

!!: sot:A~~:!i:

enaac:ter~ iD Lo1111. Betty

Spcaa astl:d lbe Nrping
Enllll Cleland presided at the

mcetiag and read from the 13:h
dwpter of Hebrews. The Lord's

Player ... Jllcdlc 10 die American
tJac - pven iD uniWI. Mcm·
ben aasaaal roll c:al1 by saying ·
w11erc they would like to go this

.._ . . Betty Spcnc:cr liVe the
Members of the preu were sccra.,'s "4JC!!laa1 Bette Biggs
barred, and large bi!Jooos IL I 1
RACINE • 'I'hele wiD be a IIICd· high over the cs:a:c. ijijiWiilllly 10 p~diC b wa"s report.
New cfil:ers ias w were MilinJ ror girl• in gradel 7-12 in
discourage
aerial~
VI
died
Lowery, president; Faye
Sfllllllem LoCilll the high scboo1
Houston. 28. I 111M Crl _ . , TlowiJrid&amp;e,
vice-praidenl; Betty
fcir those d!CSFIXI in playing vol·
IJid Brown, 23, I JWn S{ICD~. secretary; aad Bette
::_ a: :he junior bigh and high NcWIIt,
na:iYC, da:e1 fer dRc yelll.
b
a.
Houston's bits include "Tile BJIIS,
Membcn
sipaiBet
well cards
GRa&amp;at Lo\'e or AD,.. "Haw Will far Faye HolciiDI, Belle
Prairie
POMEROY • The reJUiar meet· I Know?" and "Savin All My
Couc:iJ,
Belpre,
alld
Margare:
i11J of the Drew Weblla" Posl No. Love." Brown's iacludc T:M)' PleKiwr,l.opll a-:il, Lap!.
3?, AlllriUI Lecion.
be bcld rogalive" and "On 0. Owli."
n- •epcaFiid by Bcae Bigs,
Tuesday ID honor Buckeye Boys
District
13 Deputy,
wileD Beu·
sfate auendcel and :heir
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jcny
Dilllcr at 7 p.m. IIIIIIIICCUIIg r 8 Seinfcld's bit show 011 NBC is act
in New york. but :he ... is llrad-

inbmlllion.

wiD

"*

vuents.

Willing workers meet

, ne wmms wortcrs of SL Paul

Unilc1 M:lh&lt;dir Chun:h, ~

ptlias, met reccmiy 11 the chwch.
•EwlJI Spencer lc1 :he meeting
illbc
of :he paident and

.a-ce
4;:'~!:,~ :o givc$100 on

:til d:llda.,.eeper and lllll1e two
C'e11FJ 1D the church building

Cllilll were 1iJIICd for LorcaD
Gondl, Balab Maxcy aad Donna
ROed. nero were 20 sick calls

lcipa7:1
· Birllldayl celebrated in July

i«e Dciri1 Koenis and Bulah
Mlx07·
Rcldlwp were liven by Doris

=·
---·

·

JOIDDI Weaver, Hazel

. llid E"""' Spencet.

' Qulldnl wilf be1in again in

' Othln ..,.ti• were Pa: HaD,
~~ev. s• 011 a-an. MillY Jimi·
101, Mao Vlile)'ard, Mildred
llfoab, S.~ Zlillbacb llld I

~'==wiD
be Aug.
llatdle~.

ingWcst.

Seinfel1 hu bought 1 Bolly·
. wood Hills borne for $3 millioa,
the Los An&amp;clcs Times reported
Sunday.
Tbe 6,000-square-fOOl llome
was built in the 19601 for actor
George MIJIIliOIIICIY. It bouts 1
SS·foot pool and views of dontown IJid die OClCID.
"Scinfeld" has bccl .... a a
for 1D Bmmy this Jal' a bcS CCII·
c1y aeries.
MEMPHIS, Tean. (AP) Mike Carlin, edi:or of "Sapcrman'' comic boob, aya llbc ...,.
hero il coilfrOIItilla ioc:ial iuaa
such 1.1 wife b: nlw .. • he
driViiiJ whea be illl't
llbc
planet.
"I
...
_.. . • w;.,·
' ...... COI'DJ ...
·-· •
but ..• we're -ati~ 1111 lbe idea
:hat Supc~.- Clll be 1 nie llllJIId.
He- for.
iidl,
aDd we do Clll)'. t!7c .-;... al
. 'bility lilirlJ iliiiuuiiJ," lie

.maa

r

willa-- "*

'·Carlin, 33, rcpreseated DC
Comica at the Mempbil Fllltas)'
ConYCIIID. . . .
.
I

Tile Put Couacilon Club of

Couacil No. 323, Dlugh- ofA . I, lleld I picnic IIIII
'mead~ n:ccady u Forked Ran
Sla Plit
willa Betty llllalb llking
laaa:
the blelli&amp;l. Betty Y01111 and
IDa Cldlll4- the lul PI II.
. _ . . . Nice Jllaided • :he
7

*.a

IICCiiiNJi1J81
ftam Plalms.
Tile Lonl'l Prapr ... pledge to
die. A•elicM
~~~~- .nvea
"
- " in

.

... _..

* • ..,
II
AbU.IVII~
.., IIJial dleir faiCiile of as hot~ mer
die,.-. Betty YOIIIIIJ pve the aecAue!l1ina were Goldie Fredcr·
n:tllJ's JqiGil 81 Clllr1olle Grant lck, Mirgaret Amberger, JoAna
~ lbe •
a'• report.
Baum, Panllnc Ridenour, Laura
Offic:cn iutaUed were lnzy Mac Nice, May Jo Barrinp, Faye
Neil ell, pP'Ikl •• F:1lel Orr, vice- Kirtblrl, Olarlouo Grant, Thelma
•'. 11•. lllrJ Jo Baliap, ICC· White, Betty Y~un
, · Sadie
leiiiJ, 'I1Ielml Wlli:e, ~ Truuell, llettj ROIISb,
HolErilll a a' d, flower COJ!Imiucc; lon, B7be1 Orr,lnzy
Marcia
MIIQa Icier, • lFild; . . Mlly Keller, Brma Cltllild, l,fary K.
ltBolwir,-..... .
Bober,llld pelii, Opal B!cJililaa,
Ina 0 I 1 Nld "The Kimes Sandra 'tVIII&amp;e. Bverett Graat, and
ec.:r .. die Bill,",........ wriacn pulw"',SiilyneDavil.
.., die- Ra61'1der.

right to reject eny ond all

"'

Batey initiated into I
Phi Kappa Phi
l•
Shawn C. Batey, Middleport, a . :
senior at Purdue University in West :
Lafayctte, Ind., has been initiated 1
iniO :he honor society of Phi Kappa !
Phi.
I
Batey is a chemical engineering
major.
Phi Kapps Phi recognizes and
encourages superior scholarship in
an academic areas.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULUN MUSSEl

bide.

111 Stcoad St. P••oy '
YO.IIIDEPIIDEIII
AIEIITS SEIYIIG
. •liS COUIIY
SINCE 1161
l

I
i

l

•EAR, NOSE &amp; IHROAI •ALLERGY
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY .'·
C1rt Fer Your Ft
&amp;

SUITE 112 VAL~EV DRIVE. PT. PLEASANT

I
•

l

·I
j

•

I

•
•

I

JERRY WRAY

Diraclor of TrMoporFolion
(7) 13, 20, 2lc

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Tho Board ot Educallon
ol tho Molgo Local School
Dlotrlcl deolreo to receive
oealad bldolor the lol!owlng:
Gooollne, 011, and Anti·
tr...o • tor o flvo (5) year
period
In order lobe coneldored,
all oealod bide •hall be received In the Treasurer's
Olfice, 320 EJIIt Moln Street,
P.O. Bo•272, Pomeroy, Ohio,
on or belore 12:00 o'clock
noon on Tunday, Auguat 10,

1892.
ENVELOPES SHALL BE
PLAINLY MARKED "BID".
The Board of Educallon
"''""'' lhe right to occopt
or reject any and all bids.
Jane Fry, Trtaturer
Molg1 Local School District
320 Eaot Main Streel
.
P.O. Bo• 272
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(7) 20, 27; (8) 3; 3TC

WANT ADS bring

Vacation Money

.d

'-1111

35 LoPs &amp; Acreage

Estate General

COUNTRY LOTS
FOR WE
1·51CRES

.

Approved Townahlp
ROid (bllektop), 1/4
mile from Rt. 7,
loclttd . , . _
Cheeter 1nd Tuppers

PlaFRL

Each lot le partially
woodad with ucellant
drainage. ServiCe by:

T.P.C. water Co.;
Columbul &amp; Southern
Electric Co,

992·2259
608 llST_ MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

LOTS FROM 13,500
and up
OWner Financed

NEW UlnNG - AlloFne- Yllllowbrulh Rd. - VERY
NICE NEWER HOMEI 2111Dry !ramo wilh 41H1drooml. 211
betho, fu55 a..-~ 2840 oq. ft. ot living opoc41, drywoll,
carpet, Porm~~P~Y~~• windowa, 2 heot' pumpe, cam.nl
driveway .nd pallo, 30K40 ga~~ge will 3 boyt. Pley aru.
tatellite dllh &amp; oppllonceo negolilbt.. Thit io a lovely
home YOU REALLY MUST SEEI CALL FOR DETAILS!.

(6141tl5·3594 ...
915-3~

Services

NEW UBTFNG - lharrorr Hollow Ad. - Sacludlld
hunting cabi1 on opprox. 18 ocreo. 40x2ll cobin hu W.B.
IIOve, 10m11 fumllhingt and ClrpOit ThtN II a driveway
into cabin. Thll lo perfect dHr &amp; turby areal GNat
location tor the huntor or the lovai ot the outdoortl

Degrea1ed

COMMER(;IAJ. and RESmENTIAI.

FREE ESTIMATES
45765 F!a:Wooda Rood
P-.y, Ohio 45781

FREE ES11MATES

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

(&amp;14) . .·2411
(&amp;14) . .-4575

(llo Sunday Calls)
2112192

MICROWIYI OVEN
VCR REPAIR

'••cl IUMIIIS

lrl'1ll .. Or We

lEN'S ~R.ocE
SERVICE'
· 992·5335 or
915·3561

POMEROY - 1lllllory !rome home with 3·4 IHidroomo.
Artplloe.l.algllront polllh. ASKINQ 114.540.
COIAFEACIAL BU:LDFNQ - W. MIIFn Pomeroy - 380
oq. ft. wae one. a gaa lllo1lon lncludoo a one bedroom
ept. uplflliN. Laoolod in o hlovlly lrllvllled araol A g,..t
!ocolion to hevu b&lt;Jiinutllt7,ooo.

FOREVER
BRONZE
TINNING

l••lt• Rei., ltciae

30 VJSnS FOR '30
' Offer Good Thru
July 31,111t2
Call for Appolnlment

949·2794

RACINE - F,..... tann home will 80+ ecr... Older home
olltrt 3 bedn•onlt, ~. ll bomt, cillem walor with ·
'TPC ovolllbFe. lmmedi• pm111ionl ASKING S48,000.
PIOfMirly neediiD bo oolcll IUQ .. ohrl

WICK'S
HAULING SERVICE

'~ANTEDI •••UITFNG - AU.IHAPEI AND
' IIZEII WI!

36970WR•I...

HAVE IUYEAI IN EVIAY DAY. EACH OPE HAl
pPFFEAENT TAITEI AND FDEAI. FF YOU IIAVE
IOMETHING YOU NEVER REALLY THOUGHT OF
IELLJNQ...THINK AGAFN.••IOMEBODY OUT TFEAE
~AHTI10 BUYI CALL Ul 'IOOAY FOR ALL THE

hlint;OW.

~.

USTFfiQ !NFOIIIATIONI

HENRY ,E. ClELAND-----..·---·-·--•-11't ·
TRACY IIINAGEA...-....................................1 • 24M
.leAN 'Ji:IJIIELL...- -...............- ....................Iilo ·
'OFFICE'- ....-"'""-----·-----··.. --1211

•Headiiiiii'D
• Convartlble To.,.
• Cuatom Carpeta
•Cuatoms..t
Covers • Al10 Bolla

Ill
.........
..,.
...........
••• UMAns

TJrll'tft~N

7117/1 mo. pd.

'
&lt;

RAONf, OliO

(fw..ty~l.... s..l
£sjlltl

PARTS &amp; SiRVKE
Mowers • Cl:al:t Saws
• Weetleaters

614·949·2804

.,

•

•~ ...
!
• •
•• ·N·
'

Wt~lller

All•r

[!]

......,... •

I

'•

Announcements

---...,..----"''
3 Announcements
"Romonllc

dings•

Cflndlltlaht

•

Wflli:

llountolns'
Chopol
'Phorog11phs 'l'lollll 'Limoo
'Smoky

'CIO'IJY

"Eioaonl

"VIdoo

'Accommodlllont

'Modnl Pric:os! Choogo HI 'No
Wolllng.

No · Blood

Till

'Gatlinburg, TtnntiMt •1-100- ·

~

CUllER'S

STUCCO't(j
~ ..
&amp;

PLASTER

"'

1300 Vine Street
Middleport, Oh.
JH Ci)st•r , t
614·992-2213 j
Jerry Cust1r ~
614·992-3159 1::

WED-RING'.

RED HILL FARMS
PRODUCE
FRESH SWEET CORN
Now

$1.50 doz.

Lawn Mowing,
FertiFizlng, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; RemovaF
Aotklonllol &amp; COIMiorclol
Fr.. EIIImlt:M

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE SALES
Of Sweet Corn, String Beans,
Tomatoes and New Potatoes, Etc.

..26-'92-tln

r'-==:::::::::::::::::::::=~;:::=====-=:

&amp;CO.
"Tab Tlrt PrU Out Of Prinffng
- Lot Ur Do It FIH' r..•

&amp; EXTERIOR
WHALEY'S AUTO INnRIOR
.FlU ESnMATES
PARTS
HAVE REFERENCES
Specializing In Custom

FraN Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

992·7013or
992·5553
or TOLL FREE

1-100.141·0070
DAIWIN, OHIO

7131f911tfn

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
ond mACKHOE WORK
. AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITI:S ond
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE·mUCKING
FREE ESTFMATES

l,lws 6p•.l-• Mos'"l'
'"• 6 , ... 614·98~180
6/4/02fl

Andy &amp; Chris,
llo Y8 YOU.
They took away
my home '• they too'k
my money•,
they took ME
lavway from YOU. But
can't take away
for you.
Love,
Grandp11 Blnell
• - 1

'::;::;;;......,.~~mo~·~:

P'

&amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes
eGirtte•
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
l'lumblng
.,....

. . . \IICI

I

1 •• .Iron
38904 .....
,..
Creek Road i
Mi:ldleruut,
Olaio IiiS
I'""'·
WIJ. Dlvltls• ;a.

F.EE ESTIMirES

985·4473
667·6179

•.

A Wondorful Family Exporioncs,
ScandlniViln, EuropNn, Soulh

Amtr6ean,
Japanue
Hlah
School Elcho""'" Sludonlo l.r- ·
riving In Auvuet Become AHoll

Famlly!Americln lnlercuMut"tl
student Exchange. C.ll Kalhil
21~50-1611 Or 1-Sibtlng. -

Coli Your Data: Somoono
Sj&gt;ocloll Dial 1·11CJ0.737-4444 For
Dating, Romance Anct Fun.

St.:lllllin. All Lllollylos, Agq
18+ Galt Call 215-IM-HJI (Dial

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE · LOCATED CORNER OF RT. 7 &amp; 143
POMEROY BY·PASS
949·2391 or
71121'1211
992·5114
1·800·137·1460

Sy•erna OHict). ,

In

The
Valley:
Orlglf'lll Wedding
Chapoll F11o Parlclng, '!!&gt;ought• ··
lui S.rlico II Roncl ...d Tlvough

Chapel

(Gittlnbu~··

Muoio, Floworo, Pholographo,' '
Vlclooo And Rtcoptloni. 614-•.
436·1103, 1-8011-822-4573.

Dl-co $68' And Bonl!ouplcy
SMo• Covert ChUdrtn, Propttty
Ont Slgn1ture Divorce, MINtary'
Mittlng
SpouH,
Etc.;
-unconiHted And Exctudte '
Gov'1
F. .t . Call
Toll frtll
t!ll.m.·9r&gt;.m.J.
t-~oo.547-1101i

BURGLAR • FIRE
CLOSED CIRCUIT T.V.
Residential • Commercial

O!f!ct Pollct·Firt Conatct.
24 Yaan Ezptrfence
Slllta lkanutl
htiMDIII • Consulllltlon

FEMAL£5-Miu Wnl Vlrglnlo
THn USA Pagonl _,., tor ··
coniHianlt . For lnlormallon .

wrila: Toi-Siolo Hoodquo~'" '
Dept. 8, J 347 locult Ave:
W.ohlnglon, Po. 1!1301. O..drlno

Augull 1illh.
;::F'"-"-:s""lng::.,l-o-,Nows-..,.lol-::t-.,,- ,p,11
--.' :
10111r Arfs. wn•• To o.P. P.o. ·
Box 1M Masltllon, Ohio 44641. · ,

Good Parent•?? Thon Open ;

Your Home To A TNn. El·
Sludonll All Sludonli ·

"""""'"

~~.J,~Ir ~.n~:'ch~~':

Y0&lt;1r Studenl. P1N10 Call1-·

4-l.sho...
·
Booc:h Ro- VICitlon :

1Mynll

=~:""~:'-~

L=·

~0:,~~
S.un11,
Tennis Courts, Putting Gn-.

Goll PackagH Avlllolllo. Froo
Brochure : 1-800-448-1653.

Ov• 40 And Needing To Work. '
Read My Story, ..How -1 Retumtd
To Work AI 54", FEE. U To Mar· .
Iowa, 303 Edgowllar. Wlnchnlor, TN 37391.

Tlmo
Sho11
Unll•
And
campground Momborohlps, Oi•

trno Soln, c.._rr WOIIdwldo'

S.loc:llono, C.H Yaca11on Nol·
5

Nega1Jve Information, Qu.,.n- · -

ltod. Amazing F- Rocordoct ·
M1111ge
Re¥1111
Detalla.,.
(Manual FH). Cell 24

800-t:JI.ttU Ext. 31.

Hourt 1-

Why Not Host An ExchancW •
Sludtnl'? Stuct.nta From 20 Dli-~ .
1111111 CountolooL Scandinavlo.
South AIMrlca, e;uropt, Jap~n
Arriving Aug.... You Con Mou
A Dlft....,..l AYUSA lnlllllllionll1-715-4t13.
=~.;;.;;::::::..__. . .

Giveaway

Its-3m.

..

1 112 Year Old Malt Ma~mut• ·

Doa, Very Frlondry, - · Room, :,
To 11omo, 614-4 .. .0020.
Btaglt ;
·~r:~...·- lo good

USED RAILROAD TIES

INIER111817.

&amp;dull Tom cal -nil)"
homo nry good hunlor 304-

11247111
detlvlr.

SETmi 1ft ......

or

llt2·2421; wiN' '

.

BuH color llmall CocbJ :
Spaniol, 3 yrs old, good Wlkldo ,
304-182-3830 lfttr 1:00 PM.
"

OHiity HI Efflcle1cy
Air (OI.tlolers, Heat
P1:np1, f1n:aces &amp;
Now Water Heaters.

C.fJIOI &amp; Yard hams. 114--

1524.

Oul-

Cot, lnlldo Or
Trlllnod '
Lov11bte I Gtnlle, 114""46-teoi ·

Bennetts Mobile Home Heiiltb1g
1391 Saflw4 Sdllfllll. ~.
Gtlpell, Olrlo
c.ll (614) «6-941'. 1-1011-172·5967

Porollln &amp; Slo... oo Kill- Pluo
Molhor, Very Boautl!ut To '
OlvNwoy. 614-446-1621.
304.f75-U04.

•

While ro..11 klnon,

6

SIZED LIMESTONE
, FOR SALE •

Call 614·992·
6637
St, Rt. 7
Cltesltlre,

FOR SALE
Agriculture
Lime
VALLEY INC.
Rt, 2

· Mlllwootl, W. Va.

555
3·16·1 1110

AUTO RENTAL, INC.

*19e9§ A DAY AND UP
CALL (614) 446-9971 (Kelly)
KENNY'S AUTO CENTER
264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

ROOF·ING

WE DO
AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH
'

ADD ONS • REMODEUNG • KITCHENS
• BATHROOMS· SIDING· DECKS
20 YIARS EIPERIEICE

AL

742·2328

7·15-'t2·tln

;

TrMI tor firMiood, musl be cut
27lllorll2·2421.

Quali2
Stone o.

.. •

'14 V..lkowogon for PI~•. 304- ·

BILL SLACK
992·2269

PH. 614-992-5591

305-563-

W1mlng! Bod C11dh It Dova• •
lalina. LHrn How To Erllt

4

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARFNG
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

•

Budgll Dlvoreo .

Rent II · lntonuUon
5586.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
. REMOVAL

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

.

~====~=~1!:=6~1~4-~9~92~·~7~14~4~~~ ~~ o/~~~~f.!

W8211 mo.

12·5-tfn

SA 7 NEAA CHEITI:A - 187t &amp;orrington MobWe Home,
14x70 3 bed1001111, Ill boll, doci&lt;, oppWMCOI, contllll oir,
12x18 lloraga b&lt;JIIdlng on epprox. 111 acrto. Alicing
$18,000.
'

..

St. Rt. 588 West

446·2411 or 1·800.365·1229 Gallipolis, OH.

992·3838

ASKING 517.000,

INSURANCE

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.
.

Dlractor.
The Dlroelor ....-- tho

I

Chester D of A group
has annual picnic recently
01

-~

ship; James Jamxl Circle, Racine, a ~
sophomore majoring in electrical · '
engineering, :he Charles H. and
Evelyn Mauhews Scholarship, the :
C. Paul and Beth K. Stocker Schol·
arship and the Kibble Foun1atiori
Scholarship.
...
Jason Edward Circle, Racine, a
sophomore majoring in electrical '
cngincerin,, the Kibble Foundation ;,
Scholarship; Johnny B. Hoback, ,..
Racine, a sophomore ml\iaring in
finance, the Creed James Scholar- .
ship an1 :he Kibble Foun1ation
Sch~l8rsbip; ~ry~ I:oui~ Ihle, '
Racme, a Junior maJormg m psy· .
chology, tbe Ohio Academic ' '
Scholarships and the Dean's SchoJ.", ,
urship; Michaella Ann Jones,. Racine, a sophomore majoring in ...
accounting, :he Kibble Foundation •
Scholarship; Trevor Alan Petrel, ~'
Racine, a freshman majoring in. .;
biological science, the Kibble·:
Foundation Scholarship; Melanie "
Lynn Van Meter, Racine, a junior·
majoring in att, the"Ben Manley ';:
Scholarship and Kibble Foundation :,,
Scholarship.
Janelle Darlene Williams, '
Racine, a sophomore majoring in
:elecommunications, the Creed ·:
James Scholarship, Dave Diles ,
Scholarship and the Kibble Foun- .•
dation Scholarship; Mayla Deanne •. ,
Yoacham, Racine, a sophomore
majoring in theater, :he Ben Manley Scholarship and tbe Kibble· '·
Foundation Scholarship; Mark ,·
Allen Murphey, Reedsville, a '·
sophomore majoring in mechanical
en~inccring, :he Dean's Scholarship, C.Paul and Beth K. Stocker
Scholarship, the Dr. James H. and
Nellie Rowley Jewell Scholarship
and :he Kibble Foundation Scholar- - ·
ship; Shannon Nicole Counts, ,
Syracuse, a sophomore majoring in :
social wm:"· the Kibble Foundation :
Scholarship; Cheryl A. Pape, Syra· I
cuse, a sophomore majoring in :
chemistry, the James D. Euleru l
Memooal Scholarship and the Kib- ~ ;
ble Foundation Scholarship; and • •
Kristen Deanne Papc, Syracuse, a ; :
senior majoring in philosophy, the : :
Kibble Foundation Scholarship.
;

Ohio University has announced
the names of uppcrclass scholar-.
ship recipients for :he 1992-93
school year.
Rebecca VanMeter Zuspan,
Mason, W.Va., ajuniar majlxing in
pre-business has been awarded the
.Ben Manley Scholarship and the
Kibble Foundation Scholarship;
Jona:han Vance Merrill, New
Haven, W.Va., a junior majlxing in
music, bas been awartcd :he Torch
Circle Omlcroo Del. Kap. Scholarship, tbe Martha Harris Wurtz
Memorial Scholarship and the
Klinder Orchestra Performance
scholarship; Suzanne Gaul Clay,
C~cs:.er, a sophomore, has been
awarded the Dean's Scholarship
IJid :he Kibble Foundation Scholar·
ship.
Miss Swnriienimc was honored.
Andrew Alan Law, Coolville, a
Tern HiD wi:h a loss of 37 pounds junior majoring in chemical engircccivecla lift from each member. neering, has been awarded the
Debbie HiD pesentecl a program Charles H. and Evelyn Matthews
on ufll" aDd new foods.
Scholarship; Jennifer Marie
The new contest was started Stephilll, Coolville, a sophomore
cntidc1 ''Wingin' and Swimmin' majoring in chemistry, has been
for Summer Slimmin' .• Membcn awarded :he Helen Hoover Memocolor butterflies for pounds loss, rial Endowed Scholarsbip and the
:unics for lllaying the same, birds Dean's Scholanbip; Gina Suzzette
for exercising and fub for drinldng West, Coolville, a junior majoring
six gimes of water each.
in chemical ensmcering, has been
The group meets every Tuesday awarded the Ohio Academic Schol'
at :he Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy
arships; PeJgY J. Johoson
and information may be obtainc1 Marcmko, a JUnior majoring in
~Y calling 992-2234 or 992-5638.
crime justice, bas been aWanlc1 tbe
Kibble Foundation Scholarship.
Allen Glen AmoU. Middleport,
a senior majoring in mechanical
engineering, :he Charles H. and
Evelyn Matthews Scholarship;
lab Moyers, Marietta, died Feb. 10, Maunsa Dawn Nelson, Middleport,
:he club ..~ • "memorial lift" 5o a sophomore majoring in biological
bcr church and Mrs. Biggs rea1 a science, the Kibble Foun1ation
card rrorn Mrs. Moyer's 1aughtcr, Scholarship; Mary S:epbany Gard·
Lilly Mac, thanking the club for :he ncr, Pomeroy, a freshman m~ng
in biolo~ical science, the Kibble
gift.
The roDowing poems were read: Foundauon Scholarship; Audra
UI, Myself and Me" bv Eileen Marie Hamson, Pomeroy, 11 eenior
Clark, "Y
American~ by Opal majoring in psychology, the .Be:h
Memorial Scholarship;
Hollon,·~ Things" by Faye Clark
Kristin
M.
King, Pomeroy, a junior
Trowbridge, "Love America• by
majoring
in
biological science, tbe
Lora Damewood, "Things That
Will Destroy Us" by Janice Law- Dean's ScholarShip and Kibble
son, uGod Bless America" by F01111Clati&lt;11 Scholarship.
Michelle Malhoua, Pomeroy, a
Sylvia Bowens.
sophomore·
majoring in sociology,
The door prize was won by
the
Kibble
FoundaFion
Scholarship;
Margaret CoacriiL
Atten1in1 were Mildred Low· Leigh Anne R~. ~mcroy. a
ery, Evelyn McGlothlin, Edna sophomore mapmg m joumalism,
Edgar, Faye Bailey, Fare Trow- :he Dean's Scholarship and Kibble
bridge, Logan Counci ; Janice Foundation Scholarship; Amy
Lawson, Eiloon Clark, Guiding Star Michelle Wagner, Pomcroy,licsh·
Council; Bette Biggs, Beny man ~ng in heal:h aDd spons
s~.~~~.Eil~n sciences, :he Kibble Fou111ation
Clark, Guidint Star Council; Lora Scholarship; SUSIII Renee Young,
Damewood, Opal Hollon, Erma Pomeroy, a senior majorins in
Cleland, Marcia Keller, Mary K. aa:ounting, :he Delli's Scholarship
and Kibble Foun1atiop ScholarHoltt.r.
ship; Christine Nicole Harmon,
PorFiand, a rreshman majoring in
man.asemen: sys:.ems, tho Kibble
Foundltion Scholarship.
Charlene R. Christian Smith,
Portland, a senior majoring in eJe.
mentary ctucation, :he Julia F. JolMae McPeck was reported liffe-Woods Memorial Scbolanbip;
borne from the hospital but still Jennifer Jayne Arnold, Racine, a
remains in poor condilion.
senior majoring in physical theraGames were conducted by Ow- PY, the Dean's Scholarship•. Area
lotte Grant, Sadie Trussell and Six fleal:h Services Scholarship
Mary K. Hoi:cr. Charlotte Grant and :he ~le Foundati011 Scholar·
and Opal Hollon won the door ship; Nancy J. Parker CBI!Ipbell,
prizes.
Racine, a junior majoring in
acc:oun:ing, :he Dean's Scbqllnhip
The IICllt meeting will be Aug. ilild Kibble Foundation Scholar·
12 at :he lodge hall with Al:a Bal·
lanl, Mac ~ IJid Ada Bi81ell

Public Notice
Ia tho dolo HI for oponlng
bFda In accordance with

Chopter 5125 Ohio Aovt.od

'

Co••••ll)' Caleadar Items

Sales·Service-Estin:ates

Equipment CF11ned &amp;

Hou1..
Mobl!e Homea

lex194-Wrrlw Ally

loshiba • Drake
.
'
Uniden • Panasonic

New Homes • Viayl Sidiag
New Garages * Replacement Windows
Room Aclditioas * Roofiag

Tractor ·Trallera

Read the

• A d~~o~~ifaed adverti.emeol placed iD the Gallipolil Daily
Tribune (except Clutif..d Dilplay, BwiDu• Card or Lesal
:\oLic:ea) willal.o appear io t.be Point Pleuanl Ret~:ilter and
th e Daily Sanlinel, reaebi!J8 over 18,000 homu
'

.......-

Trucka

MOWER
CLINIC

Authorized Dtaltu for:

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

SATURDAY 8A.M. TO 5P.M.

CLOSED SUNDAY

s. a•i d

I

thru

run 3 daya at no thl.r'f!C• Price o£ ad for all capilallelleJ'I ia double price of ad coat

C..d of Tbuolu

6·26·'92·1 mo.

es.

SATELLITE T.V.

Call446-2342

• Ada ouuide the county your ad runa mUll be prepaid
• Re&lt;:ei'lle dilcount for ada paid in advance.
• Fr~e Ada: Giveaway an.d Found ad. under 15 words will be

soncS:':.:!: =~-

POMEROY, 01 •

To plac.e an ad

POLICIES .

W.VL, is -.
ll!ldliag ~. at
die Ul!i•lilt alltioGrlnde Wbae ~~
to make
K
ID bad! llllllr:a&amp;s
In Older to keep the audience's
..t JeODie ••s!+t die lllivenity. interest, Simms said he cb.ose a
Be bi se
. venl -··
-"'or~~~aac.es number of pieces from different
..........., 1llil Jal' • --IIIII
festMis ill Waa Viol U. Vqinil, ~think lhae is a Jot of variety
MasJ
'81 AWw .4
th' " he 'd ul' Ia •
•
•
• lJsirllllly. CIIC. . . 1 , 'cells-. Ill Ill IS,
S8l •
Ill p YIDJ
sical a :w: J11111r .fiolll Matil,
Simms wiD plaY lboat aa llour's cr numben tbat might have more
. m a l - widtm
'Wlf ill appeal to people not familiar wi:h
~ He said. be wiD play a classical muSic.
~ IIIIF of_IDIJ'iral,stylel, ~
u As a musician, my anention
14 • •. Sd*FI• Bll:b .s LIIM S~f!k span for nrusic might be longer
10 • piCCC by Aupsnae BIITIOS :han the avaqe Joe and even I get
Cllled nr CAIIItdnd. Simms
"'-Fiml of a 3(). or ~minute piece,•
lbe BMrioo JMc:e is one be 1eu a ~said.
b al.....,t!II!(Ws 011 wileD~Simms' pcrlcmance begins at8
funDs. Be Slid _... came up :o p.m. Saturday. .

om:.s' •

The Dally Sentlnet-Page-7

~- ·

Lost &amp; Found

81-.

Mift ·

Found:- Uncaln
dloport, _ . . •. atrl ....
don-blown
I!"~Y·
Canfoct
llolgo Caunly ""'' w........

7

Yard Sale

Galllpolll
&amp; VIcinity

·.

ALL Vard S.ln Mutt It Plld In
Adv1nco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. '
... day ........... ad It to ""' .
SUnday orlklon • 2!00 p,.:
Frlcl.ty. llondoy odkion • z;oo.
p.m. Soturdty.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Moving Solo, 1 day onlY, Wort,
July 22, 2t13 8prucO 81, fll. Pft.

8

· Public Sate
&amp; Auction

·,.,.

Rick Ptlroon Auction Com~
fuM tlrM ...-:tlonetr, ~~
auction
ooMct.
Llcoi!ood •
18t,()hlo a Wool 'ltrglnlro, 3047n-57U. -

•

�.. .(

PIG• · a 'nle o.Jiy Sentl.nel

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32 Mobile. Homes

44

Monday, July 20,1992

tor Sale

lr~Uit' lat I . 4 roam 1DI, GIIII- Fwry I Clifton, SO+i'IS32'11 Clf 171-41Jt.
L11o -

I

.

~·

::..=.-"'1&gt;

45

Rooms

~I' ft bod wHh - ·
171-

Nlw 1112 M" Wld1 .,0,115. Free

Dollvorr.
aut.

St1 1 l.ovol. :ro4-'IS7-

46

73 Vens &amp; 4 WD's

Counlry llollilo Homo Porte. Rl.

!01' , _

Plld: All Old U.S.
Colna, Gold Rings, Sllnr ~"'·
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,

UN., undlr new ll\lntQiment.
~ •• $85; horM rwnl111i, 1231;

1 1 1 -.Avenuo,QalllpoiiL

Employment Services
"Help! 1 didn't clea~ my room. My parents
are going to kill mel "

-

1111 Mobllo Homo,
14171 CornJ&gt;Iololy Fumlollod,
Uko - · WMh 401'1. Plllo. 614·11112·2117
Loclttd : John10n1 Mobllt
FOR RENT: 0000 LOCATION,
Homo Pork. 304-111:1-4311.
RIO GRANDE. 1114-441-3817.
'
Oftlco Spoco, 1100 oq. H., 2nd
fkKir, kty location In Pomeroy,
114-lt:I-MTT.
Aololl Or OHico Spoco Avolloblo.
L•taylttt Mill. 114-441-4222.

.f1
to 3Rent
Nic•. Wanted
cloon 2 or
bodroom
houoo, prolor privolo M111ng,
114·1m·2421, IMvt m - lt

1184 Fonl 4x4 ehan bid will
loU gun lor p«&lt;lll 11'ldo. 11174 .
Chovy 414 ohorl bod. 304-1'15-

74

Household
Goods
Air Conditione,., Aetriaer~tor.,
Dryer &amp; Wllhl!,'1 Color T.V.,
Mk:row•ve. 114-2~·1231.

l s.lvlngo On AU Vinyl &amp; C.~

In Stock. 15.00 Up. Mollohln
..... 614~46-71M4 .

Elactrlc r•nge M•vt•ll WISMI' I

dlltlwuhw. N..d mfnor rep~lr.
304-675--9011 altar 5pm.

USED

APPLIANCES

Waehtnl. dry1r1, retrigeretot'l,
rongn. okoggo Appllancos, 78.
Vine SIIMI, Coll614-441-7398, I·
800-4111-34119.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comploll homo tumllhlngo.
Houn: Mon-Sat, 0-5. &amp;14-4460322, 3 mll11 out Bua.vllle Rd.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Dob., Drivo.
to Siill lm·

l.ovol Building LolL

1001150. · NHd

modlololy. Prlco Aoducod. 814·
441·'1231 AHorlll.ll.

Rentals

FrH Dtllvtry.
New Olk Furnlturw: Chin•
Clbinttl, Wlll'lllandl, t1bl1 I
cllalra, Hcl'ltlryl, Larkin•
d11k,
114....C41-43t6.

.-c.

PICKENS FURNITURE

New/Uud
Houllhald tumlahlng. 112 mi.
Jtrrleho Rd. Pt. PINunt, WV,

call 30W75•M50.

41 Houses for Rent
3 Room HouH For Rent, Call
114 Ul 1114 Evanlng1.
4 Room Duptex Wilh 1 Car
Gll'lgt, P1tlo l V1rd.1 AI : 503

A'4enu.iil
uallipolll.
·1350/Mo, Llwn 1lnttn1nc. In·
cludtd for lntD S.nd N1m1, AdChll

Real Estate

Drinn Go To Work ln'lrftl'dllttly

ric•,

lonutEOE.
Dri\ltra NtH.dlllt
EIPI'ritnc:H MIA Drive,. .,.
Mtdld - '" llllbfllhed ..
11- Til · LTl Cont•. Dri_.
lnN'n thll .,.. will be blud In

lhl Hurrlclne, WY aru. Drivera
wfth 2 yr 11perilftce lllrl II

21112 conlo ""m W/Cooll) ond
21 eonlo por milo olnglo
E/Cooll. Elcollonl bonil~ pock·
ogo. 1-24~ .. 304-!162·
021. 1:00.1:00, Mon llvu F~.
EO£.
Eooy - 1 Excollonl Pay! AoWorn~.

..,.'blt Productl AI

31

Homes for Sale

Mobile Homes

For hi PolriCO Oflors Ouolilr
Truck Dri- Trotn~ Only 8 3bdrm. homt, m1ny , ..,.,, 22 2
lldroom
Dilhwnhlf,
Wookll C.ll I
11-1150. acrn, cion to Milas High.
Mlci'OWIV., SlttiO, Wllhlf
Flntnelll
An...tne.
Prlco mid $10'1, IM-112·2414.
Drror, Cornrol Air, On Krinor 0~
Oul!ln.ct AppUctnlt.
3br, Gll'lgl, Electric Hill, 114- Rl.21o 13011/mo. DopooH. 814441.01113.
441-13!11.
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Hillorlcol Aroo Cori10f Lo1 • 811
Moln Sl. Pl. P1Hunl1 W. Vo.
CompMIItly Renov1wa: :Z Full
Bolito, 3 Largo Bod....,., -

Call

HVAC, New Cll'pll:. Avallab&amp;ll

lmmodlolly. IM-4411-2201.

113.

FEDERAL. QOYERNIIENT IS
WIRING. $16,000 • $12/..000I'Ir. 1·
Gt~911

42

Reapontlble ra!Lible baby altttr S Newly Complell' Remodt_,,
lor 2 echool age &amp; an inflnt In 2br HornM, L.ocitM 4 Wll..
for Rent
our homt, nf.,.nee r.qull'ld, From CenttrVIIII, TOWird Olk
t.droom lr•lltr, nHr Akzo
304-612·3384 alter 1:00 PM.
Htll, On Rl.271, In Ook Hltl 2Pt1nl,
Clntl'll 1lr, prfv1t1, no
School
Dillricl,
124,100
Eoc/1.
Soo
Country And Gol Pold IM·:245-8315.
=~· 304-815-1221 der 5:00

TCOI FIM, 1-100_.17-11!16&amp;, Ell.

105 511 t500 EJt.

d,..o, Phone -bor To: P.O. Tr!Mldlt L thlpt bed W/3 bullt.tn
di'IWirt, $250. 304.e75-3131, '
8o1111, Choohlro, OH 415620.
VI'RA FURNITURE
Nlcl30r, 2 81ory Homo WHh Full
814-441-3118
8111mtnt, CMihlre Villlgt,

114-317-45M.

Inc. TN-1-III0-444-fl41.
TX·1.-.215-8211 Compllhivt

2br Mobile Horne For Aenl,
FurNahld moblll homu and
apt1, 304-175-1512 or 17.5-3100.

Lila model 2 bedroom mobile
home, bath and hilt, 304-675~It

lmmodllloRo--

Home Rt,.ll : $200/mo +

1100 SKuthJ Dopooll 12160 2
81!11oorn , VInton Arta. Call V.l .

PIIIIIoo

By Owntr: Clloohl11 AIM, Hint Smith IM 381 1826.
Aoomt, B1lh Urge F~ Lot Nlcl2br Trollor, Out St.RI. 218,8
114-446-1878 Days, Evenh'lgl Af.
,., 3:30p.m •14~41.042.5.

Mil.., Deposit I Atfllr8ncl R•
qulred. 1'14-2.51-e211.

Locolo4 On Cornor Lo1 In Trailer For Renl: C.U I14....CO.
Choot\111. Priced $30,000. Moro 1117 For More Info.
lnfotmltlon Call I14-367-G2U,

114-441-3481.

44

Apartment
for Rent

1bdrm. 1pt. tor rent, $22Simo.,
ucurh~ dlpoalt, no pete, 114·

lm-2211.
2 bedroom 1pt, $350. mon1h 111
uUilUM ptld, n0 HUD, 304-1712722.

a

lith, Oownltalrt,
Cloln, No Plio, Quill,
Roloronco And DopooH Ro2 Room•

qulrod. 114-4411-1511.

e

2 BA

JOBS AVAILABLE
orioo rongo ..n 1505 WNkly) "J'ull or Ptrt·Timt.
lo lho high oOII ol loclorr.
lniUI'Inct,

ipKI,

newl~

work11'1

2bdnn. aptl. , total tltc:trlc, applilnctl tumlthld, llundry

room lloMitlte cklll lo achool
In town. Apl)llcilktne IVIIIabfl

=

-lnolrucllonl
and
mattrlall
11'11 Mnl
lo you.
cornplllo wot1c, oond
M
for po,morll. Tho moro
w0111 y011 do, lho moro you 11m.
Ju .. 20-45 mlnulll 1 dty work·
ina 11 homt, you ctn Nm 101M
vory 'r:Jonlvo wogN. K10gor
Publil
hoo I filling of I
vorloly
dlftoronl 1J!01
lUll:• bath '"'" and women.
ol oil, , . . , _ - you

for Sale

.t: Vllllae Q,.., Apta. 141 or
coll614.fl:l-3711. EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 1531 JKkoon Pike
from ·1112/mo. Walk to ahop •
movloo. eon &amp;14-441-2HS. EOH.
s-h $1. lllddloporl, OH. 2 BR
tumWtld lptrtnwnt Utllllln
paid. Dopoolt .......,... 304·
182-2511.

'Mx70 111c cond, 3 bedrooms on

CtNn
2 MdrOO:,:a:· air cond,
,.,.,tnel
I d
, na pet1,

A'\:,[""

32 Mobile Homes

IH'IYIII IC:N, mljorlpllance•,
tol1 of extras, A.
Growe,

wlnl. (OM ooonpony lo poJing

~~~ - k t o _....

$14,500. 304-171·21 .

~-!:i'r1~&amp;T:.;

Fu11-11mo or Po~·llmo 11173 Acodomy 12161, Porch,
poo-IJ WANTED;
LPN to wort1 tour (t) ttn hour Awning, UnderDtnnl, AC,

hlrtna. wrMo lo: Kregor Publ,._
N · "tot LolhroD 81., OHIIH,
Tooinoon. IIA. omo. Krogor
PI .. Hug dole ,.quirt $3:80
lor ·for
!Willig.
Oriloroond
con llindllna
na1 bo llllod

_s-4.,.:

doyo pw - k. To - " wllh
rool- In ICF 1oclll1r. Solory
c:ommen.ur~lt wMh erperilnce.
Erten~lw Mnefll
Con"-•I h~..
R "- DON •
1... ...,..,
•
·
ond ' hondilng. Lakin Holit1111, ~ ... mo.
all 31, .._,., I:OOAII,.:OIIPII.

- OM 01 Tho F111111 llnMlng Hoofth-Cm c-

•;r·

14

BUIIntll

16,500. 114-388-M:IS, 14·388NH.
1m PHrleu, 12xes, 2 bed~1r onc1 •3 •oo -·
""""'· •
c · • •" · 182~~oe
~·

·

2bd'"'·· furnlohod, dl.,_
ronlod loi'1'7';CJ~~t,~~~
~~

'* "''""'

-"
Tho' ~~
Training
· wllh 'h24 exptndo,
moblio3homo
14x10
_....,,_. ,..,..,..-....,,....,,.::..,-.,...btdrooml,
0111ro llolory PI,. Aolroln
HowiiiSoulhNIIorn largo bolh, oil-ric wlconlrol
Commlula_!!1• Wllk.,. And llotllntA Col., 8DI'Ina Vlll.y elr, underp6nnlng, 2 dtc:kl,

- ..
.
-

llol1dorO un. You 11001 8o PIIU. Coil Todoiy, li4'441-431711 -nice. 304-175-2!111.
l!riGhl, ~roootw. Hove Sol• Rotillorlllon IIHII-121111.
Rslnbaw Mom•
lxpo-,
And
91rong
monl AbiiMIH. Bpo, 18 Wanted to Do .
.1-t4.. Eih31
iM1 A PIUL Coil llro.
~olol

ar

114-441·11TT To WMI Bot&gt;voh In llr Homo. Fan- 1192 Mx72 1hr• Bedroom•
An
1111..-. Old In Ploy Aroo. AI ....IICH 11,!160 Ovor lnvolco Ptuo Tox
Phpiclono Wolghl iMI Con- Avoll-. Aocfnoy Am. Coli And Thlo. 304-717-3111.
,_ .
114-245-1117.
R1lnbow Homn
1-114 ExH 31
Job1 Awelllblt Wllh. Chflllmll CWI tot bed pil ...t In my
T01yt,WV
Af'OUNI Thl Woftd WOtll Now home, but of Dlrl, reuon11H1
"Spoc~l"
UMN
Chrlll. . _ ro1oo, IM-t4..2381.
~~- Aro: $14 To 811 JHII. 1- - ' - - - - - - - - 14170 Ju!Y 11'th-JUI~ 21th. FrH
pOO KM. FIH Trolnlng. No
houucloonlng In lho Rul· Wathtt, Drylt, FtM VInyl Skirt·
- · Apply ilmftiOitiJ.
om. Cloon ond honool lng, Fln1nclng Aw-1ll1blt, 304117-3111.
~ --11Ht:l-2131.
W.

In Mlddllpott,

do yo

PI"._

wtl- -

ap~.rtrnent1

remodllld, low utllltltt,
no pel•, $220 per month,
dtpotlt requlntd, 1514-112-2381

comptnMIIon, 1ncl other compiny • ..,..,..., many comctn uve thoul..,. of
_ , . In p~Gduollon limo w11h
• - n g vory olmplo
•Hlltl
11 11M'
- txperilnce
"" lhom.
not

ol -IG oomponln

Rent·2-0wn

AI

~~-

·-·~-··

(

Wutler And Dryw 117.88 WH_kJ
Bunk Bid Comp~•. S&amp;.n
WHk, 4 Or1w1r Chllt $3.12
WHk, Rtcllner $5.24 W11k,
Sal• And Chair $10.31 WHk.

CASH
AND
CARRY
Rotrigoroloro Starting AI $3111,
Rectrner. $141iJ, 2d Bunk hdt

$119, Dlnolll Sll Wllh 4 Poddid
Cholro 1121. OPEN: Mondor
Thru Solurdoy lUI. To 1111.11.
Cloood On Sundoy. LOCATED: 4
Mlln Off Route 7 On Aoull!l 141,
In C.nt1nuy, 1/~ Mill On Lin·
coin Pike.

Roioronct • Dopooll Roqulrod. 53
Antiques
611 146 0521.
.
::-----::-:::-'-:::--:-.:::-::-

3134.

For

SWAIN
FURNITURE. 12

Olive 91., Oalllpollt. New&amp; Uaed
lumhure, hut.,., Wlttem i
Work bootl. 114-441-3'111.

$321 Jllo. Retet.nc1, Dlpo1il.

RoodrunllOf Dlolributlon Sor·

Por Now Convtntlonolo lll&lt;llcot
IDinlat IV~e~tlon Etc.. Sign On

R. &amp; S. Fumlturw. New, uHd, In•
tlquea. Hou11hald fumtthlnga.
M•.on. WV. 304-773-5341,

AUCTION I

304-11711-8182.
Deluxe 1br, 2 Car Glrege, CA,
FIIOt Avo~ Qallipollo, 1281/Mo.,
Dopooh a Roferencoo, 114·2511121.
Com,aetly Fumllhld, 1br, next
IO Llbrory, porklll(l, hal, ' ''·
roloroncocd-H 10qulrod. 614·
441.0331 ..,.,. 7p.m.
Fumlohod Apt. lbrt $231/llo.
U111Mioo Paid, 10 Socond
Avonuo, Qalllpollo. 614 441 ~411
AHtrTp.m.
Fumlohod EHicloncy 1111/mo.
Ulllftloo Paid, 120 Fourth, a.•
llpollo, 114-44W411 Aft• 7p.m.
Full!l-: 21•3, 4 Roomo, lllh,
Downllatrl, up, C...n._No P1t1,
Reference, Dlpotlt Htqulred.
IM-441-1111.
GIICiouo living. I and 2 bodroom lpirtmtnll II Vlllaal
Minor
and
Alv~r~iil
Apo~monlo In lllddlooorl. From
till. Call 614-lt:l-7717. EOH.
N. Third lllddloport, Olllo, 1
bodooom furnlohod opt, dip •
roi,:J04.al2-2111.
Naw H•nn 2 bedroom fur·
nlohod opt, dop I ·rol, :ro4-112·
2561 .

Buy or ..11. Rlv•rlne lnUqutl,
1124 E. M•ln Streit, Pomeroy.
Hou,.: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00

p.m.,

Bunda~

614·H2·2521.

63

Livestock

WHAT DID 'I'OU I LEARNED
LEARN IN CAMP HOW TO i&lt;.ti-11.11
TODAV. CORMAC? A COMPASS

~~;;
gc
•1;1

SEE?IF I FOLLOW THE NEEDLE.
I CAN FIND MV WAV
AN~WHERE IN THE WOR LD~

DC11tck

Merchandise

1111 World Tocl8y

~~ld&lt;ll.=s'=.'!

1:00 to I:DO p.m.

54 Miscellaneous

Recent ...

On.....,...,., ·

eo....

76

Proltulon•ll~ luiH, Ll•

Thin

800 &amp;c1ull IIIIo~, Approlood AI
WATERLINE SALE
Ovor 116,000 Mlkl otlor or
3/4 Inch 200 PSI 11195 1 Inch 200 Trodo For ALolo llodol Full Slzo
PSI 133.50 Ran Enn1 En- Ton Longltd Pk:k.Up With
toopriOH, 1-100-537-8&amp;28.
, Alilo, A~.l14 446 0871.

55

Building
Supplies

l A/..vJAYS FEfL SOf/flY FO'
Ttlf /..OSffl.S".

• Atl

Ttlr TAXP AYffiS?

1111

B - Tronmloolono, IJoool l )
IObulM; llortlng Ol 1111'~,.!'••11

TtiAT'S

wtlttl drtn lllrllng It P~I.OO ~
114-24s-sen,a14-379-2211
'

~t-IAT

JVfT SAID.

~:t!:''At;oo.; ~..."t2!.
1111"1t PS. PB, Ac, e.Cond ion, Muot loll 13,2111:

ASCA

Rtgllt...-.d

Colan ~llllbte,

Au1trallan

Shophotd

Pupploo,
VOl
Checked, l Flr.c YIICcint OIQn,

1125. 114-441·1110
Auotrollon Shophtrd

Ill~ Small
Ta Medium Slud. Excellent Pet
Or W1tch Doa, 11t Shott, Wormod.l14-245-!533.

1171 Chevy lmpoll S.W. 350
Aulo.~c,Dt-bloCor, $500
Or OIIU, eM.SBI-8100.

Awning, Hoi Wolor ~"i
Now CorPII I Vir1Y1, Now
I Counlry Curl- Elc·

collonl CondMIOn,
U..l 114-245-11815.

1111 Okle lrouahlm, new
brown pelnl, V_,. motor I
lronornloolon,
,300, Rolloy

Rooclr To _.

,.

I.

•

B1

lllll'ltmiNtwl c

.

lllll!rtnce VaHaiif Stereo. Q
1:05 (3) MOVIE: DtnlpMy (3:30)
1:30 ())
g Blo._ Blossom

EEKANDMEEK

e

has a crush on a ctuamate
who has a j!!lous girlfriend.
(R) Stereo. _Ill

' 1I-1E- ll..t'A&lt;W
• FALI..ING AF¥\RT..

(I) •

Bulchtr Block Kltohtn Counter
Tap I

MW

C ID Mator Did
Casey's boyfriend is
lnteresled In her bul
impress~y the Major. (R)
Stereo.
1]]1. IU Looguo
lllllbltU Pittsburgh Pirates
at Houston Aalros (L)
llllllllcll Stallion S11reo. Q
8:011())1D iiJI MOVI!: 'TheHanoon Story' NBC Mondly
Nlflllt 1111 Movill (2:00)
IJl. IJIID Fit: The Untold

NOBODY IN IT

'W&amp;IR6 eARRINIS5 .

9:30 IJ). IJIID Clint E . -

-oro

AlniiiGn Molora, np1lred. Ntw~
I ...In IIDCI!, ROH
IY&amp;HS, JACKSON, 011. 1 - ,
mtl2l.

CAN YOU SHOOT

SOME MARBLES,
JUGHAID?

SllmM woad Cllrinll

IUT

F(tiST··

OF KINDLIN'
WOOD AN'··

I CON,I225 080,114-1117-3107.

'tZ:

Cru"t;," """

Aon'l TV Soi'Y1,., -iollzlna
IIIOOl
COhorbrondo.- .... .

..,,lcina

~~=

Soflllo Tonl1 P - 110 -

Co. R0H EVANS tllftRPNIES,
.....,,_,, Olll-.t!S1-ISow-Voo

'

441-0:194.

ASTRO-GBAPH

doll..,_ 114-

Will build polio ccmn, ~
ICirMnld roome, pue ~
or lrolt• ol11rtlng. 1
241-11&amp;2.
.

82

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
C1ner'l Ptuml?lng
Fc&gt;urlh and Plno
01111pollo, Olllo
114 4413. .

84

Electrical &amp;

'

.

Sollllll clth lor Nlo, ~
lncludod,IIOO,I14-It:l 3.

IIF Ill Good COr!cl11on, 114- """" vohicloo bv DEA. Fll
-7110
ond U8 Cuotomo. C... M $100.
c.dltllet, 011, IMWI, II.,_
Now llolllnd ~ 0111 - In cod!!, ~~ ..... Fordo. Cl11 I·
tlold good oond,

thlo - ·
:J1!4.171.-.

_63_ _L_Iv_e_st_oc:_k_ _

31&amp;.,.....,. Ell.-.

72

Trucks for Sale

1tB8 ~ 112 Ton PU Y-1
Two I Yoor Old Joroor 81ooro, Auto, Air, AIIIFII, L3 lltioo'
Groin Fod.l14-441-1720.
Rune Goodll14 111 1351.
'

e

~our

'Birthday
.

July 21, 1182

85 General Halling

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST
tiO 6 5
.AJ 532
t K7
. , 52

EAST
+KQ
• K 76 4
+Q 86543

+10
SOUTH
t AJ 7 2

Nail-biting finish
in the trial

.Q

tA 2
+AKQ9 86

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

By Phillip Alder
In Memphis last May lwo teams
won lhe right lo represent the United
States in the World Team Olympiad
nexl month in Salsomaggiore, Italy .
The open event was won by only
three international matchpoints
(IMPs) by Bob Hamman / Bobby Wolff,
Jeff Meekslroth/ Eric Rodwell and •
Michael Rosenberg/ Seymon Deutsch.
Meekstroth produced a beautiful
swindle on today's deal to make lhree
no-lrump.
South's one club was artificial and

Soulb

West

+
I+
3+
I

Pass

3 NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

Norlb

Pass
It
2+
3+
Pass

East

Pass
Obi.

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: t K

•'-----------...l

strong. North's one diamond was artificial and weak. East 's double was de·
batable with such a poor suit, but if the
oppooents reached four spades, a diamond-king lead (or a switch alter the
lead of the heart ace) would be needed
to deleat the game. West receives a
trump promolion lor his spade 10 .
South's one-spade rebid was natural
and forcing; it didn't exclude the possi·
bility of a longer minor.
Alter Meekstroth won the diamond·
king lead with the ace, he fell sure that
if he ••turned a diamond, East would
swit~ to hearts. Rather than settle

lor one down, at trick two Meckstroth :
audaciously led the heart queen !rom· ·
his hand .
West won with the ace and continued with his second diamond. East
won with the queen and played a third
diamond , so declarer immediately

claimed his contract.
At the other table, South made two
spades with an overtrick. This gave

the winners six IMPs, twice the eventual mar~in of vic lory.

1111• a
probe a little.· Know where to look tor

hours. II you have a critical task to per·

romance and you'll lind 11. The AstraGraph Matchmaker Instantly reveals

form , schedule
tlve time .

which signs are romanllcally perteel tor

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 18) It early
efforts today don't bring you the results

you . Mall $2 plus a long , self-ad-

tt tor your most produc·

dressed, stamped envelope to Match· . you've been hoping tor, don't quit. Ra-

maker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box ,group and try again. Two is the charm .
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO..Fob. 18) The ad·
LEO (Jul)' 23-Aut. 22) Adhere to pracll· vice your male may offer you today
cal procedures in all malters today that could be vastly superior to lhe counsel
directly affect your career. Experiment- you'll receive lrom outsiders, regard Ing with the unfamiliar could prove to be less of their credentials.
hazardous.
PISCES (Fe. 20-March 20) Doing
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) You mlghl lhlngs tor friends loday In Ihe hopei lhal
feel Inclined to warn · a friend today they'll do more lor you in return is a forabout someone who doesn't have this mula for frustration. Don't put a pr ice
p1l's best lnterests'at heart. Do so even · on favors.
It lhe adversary Is bound lo learn abOul

ARII8 (March 21·April 18) The most

it.

Important thing today Is ttlat you move

LIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Ther)l Is a In a poslllve dlrecllon. Be palleol wllh
chenoa you mlghl make an Impulsive small gains, provided lhey bring you
commitment loday.that you'll later re-

"

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Franklin and
Hur
5 Chatter tal.)
8 Nota12 Actor
Jannln91
13 Mtdlcol
suffix
14 Frnhwatar
tortol11
15 lrlllnd
te Famllr
17 Give olgnal
to
18 lloro
o.-otvhl
20- Riel
21 Buohy clump
22 Actor Alntalr

ea.,

23
(al.)
28 Torrlblt
30 Htwtl
31 - nolra
32 Btr Item
33 Covlllb
34 Unlll of

Anlwer to Prewloul Pvu..

sound
35 Storogo
bOXII

36 Embrace
38 Weight lor
gamo
38 Fnllirclalt
jabbr.)
40 Hobraw latter
41 Pennies
44 Softer and
fluffier

48 Allan •••
49 Actor
Brynntr
so Mlu Kott ol
tho comics
51 L111 then ion
521nqulrt
·
53 Surtaco
coating
54 Rip
55 Mountalno
(abbr.)
58 ~ralghter.
e.g.

DOWN

1 Honoy
producers
2 Rodloto
3 Actor Robtrt
Dt4 DotocUvtl

5 Pl~td
8 Moolom

I!) P.O.Y.

'

Ourgt~ Cr111k Ad. Plf'le, llip-

plloo, pickup, ond

+H 3

CD~IIIeWorld
S"tereo.

.
Somco,.

'=l

Robllfto AQ 81ZH I Coloro Aloo
Whllo Rook Hono I 2 R - IM-ti7.QI24,
Aiding lawn mowor, lrlggo
Stranon, 1hp englne.L. 42"' out,
oloclrlc 11orl, $311j oF Molino
,...... ,.,. ond, ljtl.
hhch, am; 114-UI-42010.
.

onWtlllenloA
behind·the-scenas look at
the making ol Clint
Eastwood's latesl W1stem,
Unlorglven, with Gena
Hackman, Morgan Freeman
and Rld Harris. (0:30) .
Stereo.
11111111 e Oqpevlne The
rocky marrllga between Kan
and Alii'!!!!' gets worsa.
Stereo. 1.,1
10:00 (I) • &lt;lle Hunoan Torvet
(Preview) Christopher
Chance fighls to save
innocent people. Stereo. Q

WE GOT TO
CHOP FIVE
AltMLDADS

SHDIEII

Wl'ltta Porclaln Double

=·H

a u"'
e

.lET

Diorio

SIOrltl An attorney helps her
client el1pe from prison. (R)
Stereo.
IIIID
Murpllr llrovm
Corky gals into a
compromising situation with
a newsman. (R) Stereo. Q
11J1 WWF P~one none
WNIIIng Texas Tornado VS .
Shawn Michaels.
QINtohvtlleKing Uvel
Sclreciow and Mrs. King

e

' . ,.,.

1ft Zanl1h OliO

Pollee investigala

&gt;10·11

IiiIll

YeS/ I3Ul" I
t:Q.J6r IF 'I'OW'VE
EVER SE'eN IT.

Bowl Sink. 614-441-0021.
C.r1mlc Kiln &amp; •bout 81 molde 58
Fruits &amp;
1200. 304-675-3044.
Vegetablea
Concrolo I Piolllo Soptlc
11111 Toyoto c.mrr u,
Tanka, Jet AeraUon T1nkl. Ron Holt Runnor I Frooh hlt~ki
~ cond. j . . .
Ev1n1 Ent1rpriMI, Jecklon, OH Honor, -Tlt-11:11.
111M, brokoo. 13.100. 114-4411-100-&amp;37-1521.
0717 1ft., 5:SO p.m.
For Sale : 250 Gal. FUll T1nk
IN7 Dodao, AT. PS. 111100. 1117
And Stand, $50. 1~4t-O'n8.
Norlzonl~c_. 42 mg. 11080. INS
El&lt;orl. ..... 304-1178-2440.
FREE INSTALLATION
F&lt;J;m Su pplieS
SWIIIIIING POOLS
IN7 MoJAio RX7, I - · Wllh
Only 17119.00 ...ullful Abovo
&amp; Liv estock
Air, Sun_, For Bolo Or
Ground 1113114 Pool lnciiHfoo:
Trodo.l14-211-12111.
Flftor Dock, Fonco, Loddoro,
Etc. iloii1 Bollovol1? Coli BPI
1t11 Pontlt.o Areblrd FormulA,
1-800-1145-1123
61 Farm Equipment
~~ lllloo, Loododl · Gtn~tll
Nutrhlon Prod~l 11148 Ollvor iO end oil piocN of 1111 .Block C1!ovr lr'.".l.T·Topo,
looluring Amino &amp;cld Boc:tr oqllip.-111, oll-orolilt, 11100 Kenwood Sterwo wnh CO
Building wliahl lou and 101 for Ill ot -111, llllao Co., Chongor, And Mony Ellrool
bunwr ~ormuf"u. Av•ll•b&amp;t u- · 211-315-2311 or 1-2-811.
11.1100 Or 112.100 Anol Toko oclullnly II Aile Akf Phlrm~oy. 6000 Ford Traotor &amp; Ylt'I'Mir ,,,,...,. Wll Conoldor Equot
Tho 1110 way lo dlol.
· Iaior lT.IIO: I N Ford Wllh Trodo For 414. 114 3111111.
Klngtlze aon ~• W•MII l&amp;tdle ~-M•Dhlnt a l'lakt 1111 Ford T - GL. 411r,
Wllo~jb~h Duol Conlroll 1 112,410. fiWiiUU2.
112,000 lllloo, Aul~o'\"d PI, PI,
1
Loovo -=~
T
11,IIO, lion,
. 114-31H221.Condt·.
~
- -~:~.:=Hog
: 114•
111111W• •
lilt Ford ,...... L. llondont,
Plolllo And Modol CutYoro llnc11 For Bolo: cOm Pick"" Scouoro
ea;ooo
- -... _,.,
112.100.
Thru 10 lnc11 1r1 81ook: Roo Bolon, - · Now Hollond Hor ....7Mi0r
rn~••••·
Ev•~!c Jockton, Olllo. , _ ~"'C;ln'::.'~
~1;
131'-1.
l!,qUI-1
Howo'o Fotrn 1111 Chevy C.vollor, Z:_2~
Mllel, Loldld, P.wu
Prine~~~ tty.. bedroom lUll' MaeNn1ry, Jaekaen, Ohio IMo ;lt.OOD
flnR, 114 Ul II~, Aft11 &amp;p.m.
lncludle bed . frame, canopr 281.fM4.
lromo, nlah101ondl chNI, hlllch, "Font-:-"'Tr_ICI
_ilt_w""tt:-h-:-br-u'"'
oh""'llog
-.;_
or PS,AC,nlco n ... , YOfY .tow
dnk onl choir, o:l50, o1H4t- wllllrodo tor riclng 1own - . mlloo, 11011 oondMion ool 114:1801
l14-ll2-1117.
. 441-l4311olltr lp01

I1J ID Arnellcoln

~

pu-.

Lilli

NQRTH
• 9843
• 10 9 8
• J 10 9

an eluslve extortionist
~nted lor rape. (R) .Stereo.

•lwl•

IS14·ii2·:Z428.

7:35 (3) Sanford l Son
1:011 ()) ID iiJI FNllh Prince Of

e...

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Bundy Clo~1111, Excollonl Conque roc:ker, 304-671S-454t.
dHionl SIIIO. Coli loloro 2p.m.
Boyo 20" Huffy blcyclo, hond 114-441-0711.
brake, exctlt.nt condition, 160, :-::---:'----:--.,-

(L)
1211 cro..tlro

I!) Columbuo end tile
AIJioof DIICOY81J Stareo. C
IIIID oe
lng Sllldi
Fontana calls the wedding
off. (Pt 2 of ~~§:ereo. Q
1]]1. Night
IIJI Muntor, She W Q
all Crooi1 lnd Clll..

Home
Improvements

Merchandise

B•by bed, etroller, hlghchllr, J75.m7 ••11'1 :00 PM.
pl1y pen, Wilker, car tNt, 1ntl·

a. a Star Stereo.

(1i

IIMU ll'llrnalllnd 1'9~R11 ,

HAPPY JACK !lANOE LOTlON:
pntmOIOo hNIIng and hllr
growth
lo In)' mange, hot 1pat
15x30
around pool, Mid•
om• repalra fo eldl goad llttar, ot tuna,. on I -"
wHhouf Corl'-f IOUTHERN
tollr blanktl I winllr covtr. STATES
304-11'1-2710.
1800. 304-773-11081.
22,000 BTU tlr condition. 304- HAPPY JACK IIANOE LOTlON:
hoollng and holr
882·22&amp;2.
grawlh to any MAnge, hat 1pat,
30" Montgam~ry W1rd 1111 ot tuna,. on I horooo
range lor naturll or prop1n1 wMhouf CorlloonofFIIO Ftod I
1111, like new, 1200; 30,000BTU Su!&gt;Pir,l14-1lt:l-2114.
air condlllontr, 1300; 114-196- Poodlo
loro and
1227.
...Cupo, &amp;KC; oloO odul dogo,
Air Conditioner, wtndow Un!~ 114-M7·3404.
25,000 BTU 1400. &amp;14-446-21i!&gt; S7
Musical
Doyo Ontr.
AntiqLIII Cllt Iron 11g blthtub.
· Instruments
s..,. auto w11hM', both 111c
3 -ric pl...... Rolond, En·
cond, 304-675..a?e.
oonlc I Cillo. Pr101d righl, 304-

BRIDGE

Q

llei·Air Will 's appearance on
a 1V game show seems
dOOmed. (R) Stereo. C
(I). 111e FBI: TheUntold
- . The skyjacking of a
1e1 alrHner by Richard Floyd
~y In 1972. (R) Stereo

se

.. 304-1'15-2410.
IH2 Blk a..1on111o C.mol&lt;t 310,
Babr Fa""•· I WNko Old, 114- V-1, 4 opood, T·Top. Rolloy
441.01'34.
.
whoolo, ti,IIOO. 304-I'IS-IS31.
Dro-nd C.Hory: CFA p.,. 1983 Buick LISabra, 4 dr, Air, 4
oil,. • SlomNO Klllono. 114- Now n~Exco11on1 Cond111on,
441 3144 Afttr 7:00 p.m.
114-317"
.
.
Floll Tonk, 2413 JKklon Avo.
Polnl Plol01nl, :IOU?S-2003,
full llno Troplool floll1 blrdo,

-

D Mator L11gue lllotbell

..

Serv ices

PRINI NUMBERED tE11ERS
IN lHESE SQUARES

liZ ID EntertiiiMotnt Tonight
Stereo. C
IIJI MacGJytr

closer to your objecllve.

It mlghl be advanlageous lor you In the · gret. If lhls occurs, recllty 111mmedlala- TAURUS (Aprtl :ZO..M•r 20) Belore atVG§! ahead to carefully Investigate atl ly, rlther lhan lelanolher lhlnk II will be templlng lo defend an unfamiliar posl.
lion loday. be sure yO&lt;J have lhe tacls
dtvelopmenls that could prove lo be a honore&lt;f.
second source of earnings. Your SCORPIO lOci. 24-Nov. 22) Your llrsl r· and ligures to back you up. lllhay aren ·l
chances tor finding somelhlng worth· lhoughtl might no! be your best ooes al your disposal, wall unlll you have
loday. especially lri siluallons thai per- lhem.
whMe look good.
.
CANCER (Juno 21·July 22) S1rlve,lo be lain 10 your work. Don 'l be afraid 10 dis- GEMINI (May 21-JuM 201 You could be
card old Ideas for something better.
a bit rflore curious than usual today. Cu·
~t-auHiclent !oday. lnslead ol paying
toroervlceor advice you don't need , llg- SAQITTAIIIUI (Nov. 23-Qoc, 21) rloalty has Ita place, provided Ills used
ur• things OUI for yourself. You already You're Ukely to be more eHectlve later In constructively, but don't begin prying
haw the answers; all you need to do is lha day lhan you will be In the early Into areas where you aren't Invited.

,,

-..

E•pal&amp;n Joalil hlunted by
a . ghos~ Maurice meets his

Idol. (A) Stereo. C

a USO Clllbrftr~aur: K.T.

Ootln K.T. Oslin performs lor
u .S. serviceman throughout
the Carlbbtln, Including
stope In Cube. Honduras and
Panama. (1 :Oil) .
1111 World Ntwa
11!1 700 Ctub wtt11 Pit
Robelllon

10:301J)D 11-N Tonigln

=·

11:00())• (J)• 111e 1111•
(I) TheIIJlloneymaanera
CD--

IIJI Now Mike Hammer

1111 Crooi11nd Clll..
D .lpOIIICI-

IIIIIportll Tontgtot
lllllltman
11:30(J) ,..,11M...
CD~
Journll ·

'KZ

IOHUE

KZ

IIIIMonertlne
10 MOVI!: &lt;=-nclle

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I think lo lhls day when I'm singing I'm lhe
happlosl - portod." - Wynonna Judd.

Ttil'llory (1 :301

IDHUE

GON

1:=!:;·

AKQA '

KZ

OHAKVOC

AKYDtE

CtltM 1'11111 Alllf Prime
Tllne Stereo. Q

,.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
&gt;·•7
Bishop · Bossy· Unwed · Negate · SIDESTEP
·
Overheard at polilical rally: 'Have you heard about
the Politicians Polka? You take one step foreword, two
st~ps back then you SIDESTEP the issues."

1:;1

IJIID Mema'l Fomll)'
IIIID Wlleol of Fortune Q
liZ e Famll)' Ftud

Cam!*',

w

lhe .chockle quoted
~· -J..-.L._J...-.L._J.._.....J.
by Idling in the mis.sing word~
you de-~elop Irom step No. 3 below.

6 GET
UNS~RAMBtE tE11ERS 10 I
ANSWER
.

Stereo. ~;~

wtiAT Arovr

245-812t

116·211-1320.

.

i1]]1.
Ill C e CBS Ntwol:;l
Andr Grtffltl1

7:05 (3) lleverily HllbiUieo
7:30 ()) ID iiJI JeoplrdYI C
IJ) M1j0r LHgut tlooibotl
Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati
Reds (LJ
IJ) • EIJ!trtlllnrnent Tonight

ltock, brick, . . .., D1Dt1, win· 1171 Novo 350 High P.,_
doWI, Hnltll, wtc. C'ai.ldt Wln- monco Enalno, Aulo, PS. PI,
ttra, Rio Orlndt, OH Clll 114- AC, Runo GINII $815, 114-441-

'=•

.

r- T,-T,-T,,6;-.;;.1..;_"17:-I i--~~mplele

1111 Monaylne

''

79
Campers&amp;
81!11.
Motor Homes
1161' Ponlloc Gnond Prix, :ldt',
56 Pets for Slle
114-211-1317.
1tn Colch!Mf'l 2311. Motor ..,
Horne, Excehnl CandiUon, 114a....... ond Supply Shop-Pol 1m Chovollo. 12000 or wiN 211-1121.
Grooming. All brtodo, olylto. trtde for 4wd Chivy truck or
lamt Pat Food DNitr. Julll Oldo Cullooo. 304-112-2211.
1171 Coochmon llh Who4l •.
Woblt. Coli 114-448-0231.
1173 Olcto N Ono Fomn, Ownor,
Air, Loaded! $1.Sot.' ·.
' ;.
&amp;KC Labrodor Rllrio"r Pup- !11,000 Acluol lllloo, All p_. 114 446-0415.
Foelory
~
Excollonl
Condhlonl
oiH1 2 ChocoiOIO, I Block, 10
11H Holldoy Rornblor, AI...,_ :
Woooo, VII Chocked, Sholl, 114 4•wae.
Lite, 28 fl. Towed llu than
Wormed. 81'15 To 1300 614-682·
1m Chlv. Malibu 217, v.., tuto, 2,000 lniloo. Twin bodo, . . 11177, (Ook Hill).
~- PS, PB, 11.100. 30U78- btth with lhoww, mlcrow~ve, 1
AKC Rlaillerecl Doblnn1n
•3300.ond - · 304-llh:
I W..U Old, Tollo
Do-CI1W1 A1m0ved,
31 F1. Alrolroom: Now, c... ~rw ·

.

11!1 Tilt Wllilon1

;

Au1o Parts &amp;
Accessories

T I KC Ry

D SportiCanter

IOrill $1,500 114-441-8010,1114- \
31J.OSM
·:,

1152 110 Roodllor Ropllcl,
Auto, ·Air, Y-e, Show C..,

.

Two old friends were dis·
cussin9 the weather. "Last
w1nter,
the first friend
announced, "it was so cold 1
I had to break the smoke off the

8

l]]l.s::T'r:{

I"'

l

71 AutQS for Site

rl

~-111~-Ejl-~.,... Q

.

1111 Four Wlnn• BHI 180 ;.
llodot 17S HP 18 304·1'73-5111. /

.

CD I!) MICNtii/I.IIIN&lt;
NewaHourQ

fJf."'d·

T1~lor W11..S.oves, Oullktt
WOod Fired Hoi Wiler Fur·
nac:n. Hilt• Yaur Entlra Home
And Oomeltk: Hat Waler From A
Wood Fire Outtldt Your Home.
1-100.64&amp;.2213.

.

~:.~~=di,. Q

114-..2-2712.
SONN 00 TE 114 2111522.
JS.l.:
I
monlh old Poln1 CoH, nice I
S.ira V1rd Fence, Excellent
Condition, $21S0 C111 8tfON vory gonllo 12110. or lrodo tor 4
rnontfi or oldlr belt type hiller
2p.m.l14-441.0715
or 1111re 0111. 304-e71-78MI.
75 Boats &amp; Motors
Store Flxturn And Equlpmlnl
Hobort MHI Sow Mool Cubor 1
'·
for Sale
Yr. Old, leo c... m
2 11oo1 64
Hay &amp; Grain
::,I:::FI~
. -::F;;:-Ibo::rg~lo::u:-;:Fioh=lng::-;:-Boo:::l '·
Dolry
Food ~~~~=~=-=
Caa Ant. POD
r, Store H1y lor ull, round biiM S:tO. W\lh Now Tl/2 HP llolor, Now :
Shetylng, ICI Cheal AM In bell• tach, IqUiri blllt 12. up. 304· Sol1o,114-311-8513 Allor llp.m. :
lonl Ci&gt;ndlllonl 614-3188, 675-3110.
1177 Trofon lnBoord /Ouoboord, .:
114-446-TTBT.
Straw for Ult, .livery IVIIt- 25Fl. C1bln CruiHr, Fully Et:.•
Torlor Slnglo Hood Soft Sorvo lbll, Clll 614-9112·721'\ 114-112·
WMh Trotlor, 114·317:~
a.CrNm M•chl111.1.. Single IOtO, 114-812-1158.
- · · Air Cooled. ..oo. Will
1184 Bojo 20 Bowrtdor VI 10
o.Jivw. New London 41..121!nph piUI ........,., mtny ICCM- t1
33tl, Or 41i-12N885.
· Transportation

eon,
c.ooc:;.r:'"

I
.1"":...r.15-=rl,- I ~".~:
It--rl-,
'":::;~:;~~;:_~,.,
KR I N D

8:35 I3J Andy Grtffltl1
7:01111!• iiJI Wlleol of Fortuna

,_;• - · Ai:cl Glo-~ ~·
cludod. 114-441-_1371.
~
Yo
moho
·
H,_
,
4
225
,.
..., , . _ -ric llort. ~
OoOd condltJon. 11500. 301..
20111.

I

NO~/AM

'iflt 8qu1N One 1V Sllreo.
IIJI Scooby Doo
DUpCio..
11!1 New Zono Stereo.

0.

dM'-

Flllg

11!1 hlmln
1:06 (3) IL.ovt Lucy
1:30()). iiJI NBC- C
IJ) ~ C.n II TOicT"

Motorcycles

14-441-

I

11J. ille IIIG

IIJINt...
IJ) Clllrlllln Clll~ 1:;1

-=:7,Ho!,'-':""-=':::XR"'.zoo='",-=o-oo"'dc:Con-=

Diu!

5I

0000.

Miscellaneous

4 HorN Gaa11n1Ck TriNK,
$1,500: 1111 AQI1A More
S..ro Air Condlll-, 25,000 Gronddough1or 01 ZIPPO PINE
ITUJ.v.,., aood condlllon, 1400, IIAREY1181 AQHA.
hi" 01

Merchandise

S!

aze

:11185
:::::·-;:;;;==:::;-;==I~======:r======::i.
CR80 Excollonl Concillon. ·
1
711

no1n1Wer.

·

8:00 ()) e

11111 400 KDX Kowoooill .
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MON.. JULY 20

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KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wript

Apartment
for Rent

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9 .

Ohio

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.PII:.....-1G-·The Dally Sentinel

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Poet's Corner

No lllllier bow old I'D love him
"MOiher HeartBreaJtM
'I remember a onCe happy little still
My first born ... a treasure for
lloy
.. . ·

. That thOught ll)8llla was.special
· Until- -' die age of enlistmelit
to war he had gone
One brisk chilly m(KII, 4:3Q or
so.
Next to his car, away from his
Dad
We said our goodbyes and qui·
edy we stood
. .
I winted so , , . to hold htm
tight!
And say, "I love you. Hurry
b$:k home safe.M
But the voiCe ttained to be stiD,
could not say die words
With out tears to be seen
, But waited until he had gone out
of sight
Still sttJining to see, until he
made die tum
Tears were like rain on my
cheeks that morn.
. For my love, words could. not
express
I lost my liale boy, somewhae
along the way
Where I did wrong, I'll never
know.
I'll always remember his words
Wriuen m a letter one day
"You're the best mom in the
world.
No one can ever take your place,
you're the best eva.M
Mistakes, I'm sure I made
But fully, die price I feel I have
paid
For somewhere I did wrong and
lost that little boy.
Where ever he be, or whatever
he does

ocr

Tyler Circle celebrates
third birthday recently
Tyler Circle~ son of ieff and
Sonia Circle, celebrated his third
birlhday recendy at his horne.
Cake, cupcakes and ice cream,
coffee and pop were served 10 the
guests.

Attending were Jeff, Sonia,
Christa and I effrey Circle, Grover
and Elsie White, Harold and Becky
Circle, Woodrow Fortney, Sheila,
Dan, Kirt, Danielle, Tiffany
Spencer, Serena and BJ. Robinson,
Wilma and Ralph Ballard, Kanen,
Joe, Jessica, Melissa, Josiah Pauley
and Mike Jones.

sure
All I want now, that I've accept·
edmy fale
That he loves his own and never

Monday, July 20, 1992

·I

What's the difference between
Medicare and Medicaid?

By Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager in Athens
forgetsThese two similar-sounding
IT he loses their love, the price is
words are really two very different
too high.
When he calls another "Mom government health insurance pro·
grams-and a surprising number of
and Dad" and turns his bead
With a look of disguise when he people may not fully understand
those differences.
happens to see the woman
Medicare is our country's health
He onee knew as such
I'll treasure my memories of a insurance program for people 65 or
older, for certain disabled people
liale boy
under 65, and for people of any age
I'll love liD the day I die
who
have permanent kidney fail·
But I'D turn my head when I see
ure.
It
provides basic protection
him oo the sueet
against
the cost of health care, but
I don't want to embarrass him
So mucb time bas pa•wt, words doesn't cover all of your medical
expenses. To receive Medicare,
cannot heal the pain l have fek
I wished him a Happy Birthday, you must have worked in Snci•l
Security covered jobs-or pay for
one day not long ago.
He dropped his head, and I Medicare insurance.
While the Health Care Finane·
knew all hope was gone.
ing
Adminisiration is in charge of
-Josephine Tyree
runnin~ the Medicare program, we
MY DADDY
at Socwl Security are the people
who help you enroll in Medicare
My Daddy Was AGem,
and who"can give you general
.There Was Never Anything Too Hard infonnation about the program.
For Him.
Medicaid is a State-run program
He Raised Six Children On A Coal
designed
primarily to help those
Miner's Pay,
When $16.00 Was Lots To Make In with low income and few
resources. While the federal gov·
One Day.
He Worked With Ponies Pulling Coal emll)ent helps pay for Medicaid,
Up Out Of The Groimd,
each state has its own rules about
For That W"' Before Modem who is eligible and what is covered
Technology Ever Came Around.
I Remember Seeing His Face Covered
Wilh Black Coal Dust,
Blll Down Deep In The Ground To
Make ALiving He Must!i
lly DAVID "CHIP' HAGGF.R·
Yes, My Daddy Was AGem,
TY
For He Knew The Lord Was His
Associate Agent
Friend.
4·H Meigs County
He Trusted God His Needs To Provide
For He Knew The Lord Was Right By
Patrick Gibbs , son of Mr. and
His Side!
Mrs.
Robert Gibbs, Rcrosvillc and
He Worked Hard By Day In The Mines
a
member
of the Country BumpBut To See Him In Church You Knew
kins
Swine
Club has been selected
Everything Was Fine.
We Walked Two Miles Through Mud to aucnd the National Institute on
And Snow,
Bul II Was Churchtirne, So OfT We'd
Go.
He Would Walk Through Those Church
Doors !?raising The Lord.
For God And My Daddy Were In One
Accord.

Two Meigs
teams move
on in tourney

It is also imponant 10 know that
some aged, bhnd and/or disabled
persons can qualify for both Medi·
care and Medicaid.
If you would like to know more
about Medicare, caD our office at
614-592-4448. If you would like 10
know more ibout Medicaid, con·
uict your local social services or
welfare office.

under Medicaid. However, States
MUST provide Medicaid coverage
to certain groups of people (such as
recipients of Aid to Families with
Dependent Children) and MUST
provide certain basic medical ser ·
vices under the Medicaid program
(such as inpatienl/oulplltient hospi·
tal services and prenatal care.)

and King, on ~hoSe TV show Ross
Perot launched his abortive bid for
the presidency, says he's beginning
to a~ wilh them.
' I used to take less credit. I
used 10 say it could have happened
anywhere," King 10ld the current
issue of TV Guide. "But the more I
look at the transcriptS and rellec~
the more I believe I really worked
Perot that night. It was the first
question I asked bim." .
Perot said during CNN's "Larry
King Live" in February that he
would run for president as an independent if volunleers got his name
on the ballot in all SO states. Volun·
tcers promptly got to work across
the country, but the Texas billion·
aire wilhdrew from the race Thurs·
day.

Celebrates second
birthday recently
CluistOpha Laudermilt recently
celebrated his second birthday with
friends and fiiJ'!Iily. A McDonald's
lheme was earned out.
, Auending wac Misty and J~ob
Parsons, Brenda and Roben White,
Susan and Kayleigh Ward. Garry,
Carol, Rachel, Melissa Norman,
Sherry and Monte Cbapmail,Juanita and Tomorrow Dawn Norman;
and Del, Renee and Ashley LaudermilL

Meigs County 4-H news

Yes, My Daddy Was APre&lt;ious Gem
For He Lived His Life Far Above Sin.
He Was Meek, Kind, Tender-heartedfull Of Love For All Mankind.
Another Person Like My Daddy Would
Be So Hard To Find.
He Passed Away In 1981,
For His.Real Payday Had lusl Begun.
He Wcnl From Down On His Knees
Loading Coal
To Praising God With All Of His Soul.
While He Lay Dying, He Sang, "0
Lord, You've Been So Good To Me".

So I Have Thai Calm Assurance,
Someday His Face I'll See.
He Can '1 Come To Me. Bm I Can Go
To Him,

For God Knows "My Daddy Is A
Gem"!!
Wriuen by:
Alice l!anks Ellioll
Largo, Fla.

Ashley Rae Laudermilt

Pick 4:

Tyler Cir~

Vol. 43, No. 80
Copyrlghled 1i92

'

1 Section, 10 P~ge~ 25 centa
A Uulllmtdlll Inc. Newa1111-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, July 21, 1992

Pomeroy Council to Seek revitalization grant
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News starr
The Village qf Pomeroy took
the first step toward downtown
revitalization on Monday night,
when the village council agreed to
apply for grant monies on behalf of
the Pomeroy Merchants Assoc 1ation.
John Musser, Chairman of the
Revitalization Committee, dis·
cussed progress on the revitaliza·
tion efforts last night, stating that a
$2,000 survey of downtown build·
ing owners has been completed by

SBA Consultan~ of Jackson. That
survey, along wtth a.survey of 160
local c~msumers wtll ~ used to
determme what sort of t~prove·
ments ar.e needed or demed by
local business owners.
The Ioc.al merc~ants financed
the survey. m tts enurety, but MuS;Ser 10ld counal tbatthe village will
be approached laterin the year to
assist with ~e antiCipated $10,000
cost of a busmess plan .to ~compa·
ny the state grant applicauon. That
plan will be prepared by Consultant
Mike Suoth of SBA Consultants.

The grant will prov•de a dollarM~sser al~o bneny dt~cussed
for-dollflr match of money spent on the v1llage's msurance pohctes m
facade .li!'PfO_vements or on roo~ng .hghl of the posstble p~hase.of lhe
and wmn~ t.mpmvements whtch old Po!"eroy Jumor High Buildmg.
bnng a building mto code compli· No acuon was taken.
ance.
.
.
Mayor Bruce Reed reported that
"Wit~ the state momes avatl· signi~icant pro~ress was being
able, we II be able ~? do a lot .for made .m developmg basebiD fields
downtown Pomeror. Musser S31d. m vanous loeauons throughout lhe
The grant apphcauon must be village. Reed reported that the
filed by Pomeroy VIllage Council, romeroy Youth League ~as now
and although . no funds wer.e m the proce$S of plannmg two
pledged last ntght, the c~u~ctl ftelds, to be used for teams up to
agreed 10 apply for and ad101mster Ltttle League. !hose fields _are.IO
the funds.
be located behmd the old JUntor

htgh budding, and will be devcl-

oped regardless of whether the vii·

lage purchases the bulldmg.
Reed S31d lhat he was investigaung the poSSLb•hty of installing
lights at lhe new fields, as well.
Unspecified plans for Sugar Run
and Monkey Run arc also bemg
made.
Village Administrator John
And~rson report~d that g.rant
montes for extenston of .san•tary
sewer se.rvtce on West Main Street,
to accommodate a new conve·
mence store, should he fortbcom·

ing upon completion of the applica·
tion process•
Anderson also said that construction at lhe village's new
sewage treatment plant was expect·
ed 10 be completed in October
Councibnan John BiaetttW was
authorized to auend the I.S.O. rat·
ing seminar in Columbus on beltalf
of the village. The siminar is
designed for ftre offteerS and chiefs
responsible for planning commllli·
ty fire protection. It explains the
Insurance Service Office ftre supContinued on page 3

Middleport Council adopts $1.7
million operating.budget forl993

Darryl an4 Don Ellis

Darryl, Don Ellis will perform
at Meigs County fair Aug. 18
Contemporary country singers
Darryl and Don Ellis will be the
featured grandstand attraCtion for
two performances at the Meigs
County fair, Aug. 17·23, on the

Rock Springs fairgrounds.
The two wiD be perfonning at 7
and 9 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 18.
Now in their 20's the brothers
have been 'singing together since

Judge dismisses sex
suit against Ferguson

The Meigs County •Fair Tab Is Coming
August 14, 1992.
Advertising D
Is
.
August 3, 1992. .
•

CALL DAVE or P.J. TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEARtS EDITION
··

,9.92·2155

Other funds in the budget all
showing small surpluses, are as foJ.
lows: fire truck fund, $66,200;
street mainlenance fund, $102,100;
cemetery fund, $45,100; recreatio(t
fund, $41,750; public transport&amp;·
tion fund, $183,100; water system
improvement fund, $2,200; Art$
Council fund, $6,000; Issue 2 fund,
$35,000; water deposit fund,
$18,000; fire equipment fund,
$27 ,800; economic development
fund, $16,800; mini-golf fund,
$13,800; revolving loan fund,
$12,000; and refuse fund.
$114,000.

Southern board OKs changes
in high school's math program

THE 1992

Harrisonville
happenings

in January.
According to the budget the
major shortfall comes in three
funds, the general fund where the
estimated funds available total
$495,082 and the anticipated
expenditures total $632,900, a fund
deficit of $137,818; the water fund
where estimated funds available
total $172,569, while the budget
figure is $220,500, a shortfall of
$47,931; and the sewer fund where
estimated funds available total
$157,623 with budget expenditures
estimated at $185,700, a deficit of
$28,077.

A $1.7 million operating budget
for 1993 with proJected receipts
falling $198,397 short of being
enough 10 cover anticipated expenditures has been adopted by Middlepon Village Council.
Estimated receipts total
$1,483,300, with a carryover of
funds from 1992 of $41,253, making funds available of $1,52A,553.
Anticipated expenditures, bowever, total $1,722,950, creating a
deftcit of $198,397 for 1993. The
budget has been filed with the
Meigs County auditor. Appropriations 10 the various funds are made

BIRTHDAY CELEBRATED. Rachel Norman recently celebrated
her 14th birihday. Attending were: rront, 1-r, Melissa Norman,
Co~nie PIK&gt;Ier, Rachel Norman, Jessica •·redrick, Chris L~uder·
mill.llack Tasha Eddie, GingefNutter,Jared Vanlnwagen, Shelley
PIK&gt;Ier and II rook Beaker; La~agna and piua were served. They
also enjoyed skating at the Skate-Away in Chester.

Meigs property transfers
Compiled by
Emmogeae Holsteia Congo
Melli Clllllty Reatrder Sarah Snouffer and Gary Snouffer deed on dectee to Gary Snouf·
fer: Middleport Village.
Sarah R. Snouffa, by powa of
anomcy, parcels to Gary E. Snouffer, Pornmy and Middleport.
Lawrence G. Clarli: and La
Donna M. Clark. parceliO Deborah
Jones, William Michael Jones,
Raymond L. Andrews, Megan L.
Andrews and John H. Seidenable,
Pommy ViUagc.
James J. Crisp and Teresa Ann
Crisp by power of attorney to
Dorothy Barnes Woodard, Rutland.
Dorothy B. Woodard, parcels to
James J. Crisp and Teresa Ann
Crisp, Rudand.
Dwight R. Wallace and Lena
Faye Wallace, lot, to Alan Wallace,
Btuce Wallace and Nancy
·Woolard, Middleport Village.
James Lloyd, Mary Lfoyd, B.
Michl Lloyd, Jack Uo_yd, Jill Uoyd
and Patricia Bastiant, parcels, to
Paul Sigman and Janet Sigman,
Middleport ViUage.
Sarah Snouffa and Gary Snouffer deed on decree, to Gary Snouf·
fer: Pornmy Village.
Guy T. Hayman and Sue Hayman, 1.98 acres 10 Clellie Maddox,
Olive Township.
.. Janice Lisle and John Lisle, .290
acrei to Jean Ellen Allen, Syracuse
Village.
Donald Price and Linda Price,
~ to Linda Price, Rudand.
Donald E. Myers and Pauline
Myers, 24.354 acres to Nola Jane
Young, Olive Township.
Etll B. Payne, lot tQ Denver E.
Newell and R. Pauline Newell,
Middleport Village.
Clifford Stumbo, deceased, affi.
dlvit, to Elizabeth Stumbo and
Mirilyn Meia, Middleport Village.
Elizibedt Stebbins and Howard
Stebbins, loti, to Gail Hrovatter,
Marilyn Meier, Diana Williams,
and Darryl Stumbo, Middleport
Village.
David R. Huddleston aqd Mary
A. Huddleston, .28 acres to Jeffrey
Mark Harvey and Sharon Lorene

Low lonlghlln mid-60s.
Wednesday, partly cloudy. High
in mid 70s.

,e

Racine couple
Tooth decay still around anounce birth
Despite great strides in dental
care, almost half of all American of daughter
children have some tooth decay by

age 4, and many by the ago of 2,
Del and Renee Laudermilt,
according to dental authtrities.
Racine, announce the birth of their
second child, a daughter, Ashley
Rae on Jan. 3 at O'Bieness Memorial Hospilal.
The infant weighed seven
pounds and four ounces and was 20
Havey, Racine Village.
Samuel E. Curtis and Mary E. mches long.
Paternal grandparents are Ray
Curtis, .2. acre&amp; to Jeffrey Mark
Harvey and Sharon Lmne Harvey, and Cheryl Laudennil~ Racine.
Maternal grand(Jirellts are Garry
Racine ViUage.
Billy T. Dailey and Carole M. and Carol Norman, Pomeroy.
The couple also hss a two-year·
Dailey, 2.58 acres to Thomas L.
old ~n. Chris.
Fitch, Olive Township.
· Dallas Blevins, deceased, affi.
davit to Josephine Blevins, Middle·
pon VUiage.
First Southern Baptist Church of
Meigs County, Ohio, Inc., parcel to
Christopher L. Pines, Pommy Village.
John and Ann Williams spent a
Moid U. Ahmad and Aulia few days with her sister and broth·
Ahman, parcels to Aulia Ahmad, er-in-law in Somerset, Ky., and
Scipio Townshio.
aaended the wedding of her niece.
Roben D. Hensley, parcels to
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Graham,
Patricia K. Hawley, Pomeroy Nellie and Ruth Lowe aaended the
Vilal'e.
funeral of Nellie's sister, Lena
Micbael E. Johnson and Audrey Pauley, in Wheelersburg on July 7.
L. Johnson, parcels to Audrey L.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley,
Johnson. Salisbury Township.
Mr. and Mrs. David Nappa, Mar·
Roser Theiss and Janet E. garet Hysell, Bonnie Arnold, Mr.
Theiss, 22.30 acres to James G. and Mrs. Darin Young attended a
Scott, Jr. and Cynthia L. Scott, cook-out at the home of Steve and
Chester Township.
Julie Stanley, Albany.
Darrell Napper and Bonnie NapBill and Dixie Lee Shafer, Zapa·
IM'T· ri~ht of way to Buckeye Rural ta, Texas, visited Ora Carsey on
Electnc Co-op Inc., Scipio Town· Monday. Dixie' s parents and
ship.
grandparents wac former residents
Charles Wheeler and Martha of Scipio Township.
Wheeler, right of way to Buckeye
Louise Eshelman and "Buddy"
Rural Electric Co-op Inc., Scipio 11pent Sunday visiting her daughter,
Township.
Nancy Price, Portsmouth, and
Kathf Barreu and Jean Duerr, =ughter, Mrs. Randy Gilley,
right o way to Buckeye Rural
Electric Co-op Inc., Rudand.
Esther Brandon, Jackson, and
Jenevee Florida Chesher, Lola Clark, local, visited Ora
deceased, certificate of transfer to Carsey' Pageville.
David L. Chesher, Salisbury Town·
Nellie, Ruth and Jeremy Lowe
ship.
visited
Nellie's sister and brotherWilliam F. Koenig, balf interest
in-law,
Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar Young,
in lots to JIIIICS R. Koenig, Middle·
Three Mile, W.Va.
port Village.
Roger Carsey and sons visited
Manning K. Roush and Ramooa
his
mother, Ora Carsey, last week.
E. Roush, rigbt of way to Colum·
Mr.
and Mrs. Duane Stanley
bus Southern Power Company, Sal·
s~t
a
day at the home of her sis~Township.
ter
and
btother-iti-law, Lorene and
Michael R. Elberfeld and Heidi
Bill
Scott,
Nelsonville.
Elberfeld, right of way to Coluni·
Mrs. Gertie Moore, Deuoit, is
bus Southern Powcr•Company,
visiting
her daughter, Kathy ADen
Chester Township.
and
daughters.
Harry S. Yarbrough, parcel to
Mrs. Martha Crowley and
Carol A.D. Hubbard, Rudand.
daughters
recently attended bible
Harry S. Yarbrough, parcel to
camp.
Carol A.D. Hubbard, Middleport.

989

J

6970

Christopber LaudermDt

RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Some
call Larry King a "kingmaker,"

Cooperative Education (NICE) to
be held in Denver, Colorado, July
20-23.
The Institute, coordinated by the
National Council of Farmer Cooperatives, is the largest annual edu·
cational event devoted to cooperatives. About 2,000 persons from
across the country will auend.
In addiLion to the Education
Professional program, Patrick will
also allend General Program events
at NICE. This year, more than 100
speakers will focus on Lhe theme,
"Cooperative Slrategies In A
Changing World".
Other programs at the Institute
will include sessions for cooperative direcJors, managers, and
employees; youth scholars; and
young cooperators.
The National Council of Farmer
CooperaLivcs is the national educational organization for agricultural
cooperatives. NCFC's membership
is made up of all types or agricul·
tural cooperatives: supply, market·
ing, fann credit, rural electric, and
farm business service.

Pick 3:

Page4

Names in the news
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mar·
Ion Brando bas bought an $800,000
home owned by actress Kristy
McNichol, but it 1Sil 't for himself, a
newspaper reported.
"He bought it for a friend," an
unidentified source said in Sun·
day's Los Angeles Times. The
source did not identify the friend.
The home, in the San Fernando
Valley, has four bedrooms and a
tennis court.
Miss McNichol, who appears in
~c·s "Empty Nest," lived in the .
house fa: about a year but decided
it was too big and listed it in January for $975,000, the newspaper
said.
She moved back to her Conner
home, also in the San Fernando
ViDey, the Times said.

Ohio Lottery

CLEVELAND (AP)- A Cuya·
hoga County judge says state Audi·
tor Thomas E. Ferguson's affair
with a state employee might have
been immoral or unethical, but isn't
grounds for a lawsuit.
Common Pleas Judge Lillian
Greene on Monday dismissed a Syear-old suit filed by Elisabeth
Tschantz, who said Ferguson
coerced her into having sex and
soliciting campaign conlributions
from fellow employees.
In the $1.25 million lawsuit, Ms.
Tschantz accused Ferguson of
intentionally innicting emotional
distress, and said she suffered a
mental breakdown as a result of the
relaJionship.
Ferguson bas acknow !edged that
a sexual relationship existed, but
said Ms. Tschantz consented. He
has denied the allegations in the
suit and noted that Ms. Tschantt
was on mental disability leave
when the suit was fded.
Ms. Greene said that "the c;oun
in no way condones conduct such
as in this ease - that is, the defendant having sexual relations with
an employee."
But she added, "Although that
conduct might be immoral and per-·
haps unethical ... without more; this
c.ondu~t is not actionable in the
state of Ohio.''
The jud$e said the 48-year-old
former reg10nal administrator for .
FetguSon could not prove thai:
-Ferguson intended tll'Cause

emotional distress, or knew or
should have known that the actions
would have caused emotional dis·

uess.

.

-The actions were so extreme
and outtageous that they were out·
side the ·bounds of community
decency.

-The actions were the direct
cause of the injury.
-The actions caused serious
mental anguish.
Ms. Tschantz said the judge
"ought to be ashamed of herselr'
and said she would appeal the dis·

missal.
"It makes me want 10 file a lawsuit against the stale of Ohio, the
court in Cuyahoga County and
every single individual who has
played a part in delaying this
case," Ms. Tschantz said. "The
politics that they have played are
absolutely merciless, with absolute·
ly no regard for human beings.''
Ferguson, 63, has been auditor
since 1975. Ms. Tschantt worked
in the auditor's office from Febru·
ary 1977 10 August 1986.
The ease had been in five COW1$
.:... including the Ohio Supreme
Coun- since·it was filed on June
4, 1987.
Lawye~s for both sides had
argued whether it should be heard
in Common Pleas Court or the
Ohio Court of Claims, the forum
for most claimS against stale offi·
cials.

they were youngsters in the rural
Pennsylvania 10wn of Bea~er Falls
where they grew up. By the time
they were teenagers they bad their
own band and were playing profes·
sional gigs at local clubs and coun·
ty fairs.
They are now veteran NashviUe
performers with a debut Epic
album, "Bigger Than the Both of
Us."
Their entertainment features
tight harmony, "bigM sound, high
energy and good humor developed
from years of teamwork in their
shared musical aspirations.
The Ellis. Brothers said lhat once
they went to NashviUe things really
began clicking for them.
It is reported that the improvisa·
tion and spontaneity learned after
years of playing fairs and stage
shows comes across in their vocal
harmonies, "that they bring people
to the edge, build to a crescendo
and then step back as lhe listener
falls over the edge.•
They have opened for Willie
Nelson, Loretta Lynn, Restless
'Heart, Rebll McEntire, and Alaba·
rna. It wasn't until an appearance
by Sawyer Brown was canceled
that the brothers knew they were
ready for Nashville.
"Instead of everybody getting
their money back and leaving, they
asked the crowd to stay and asked
us to do the whole sliow." Darryl
says. "That's when it really
clicked. Everyone said you ought
to be the main show." We got so
much encouragemen~ we decided
to make the commitment and take a
chance."
Their onstagc antics and crowd
appeal got them a permanent
engagement as the house band at an
area club. That exposure led to
other jojls on demo tapes fa: Merit
Music, Starsrruc~ and Wren Song,
publishing bouses. and ultililalely a
deal with Epic Records.

.

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Ord explained that in addition to
Sentinel News Starr
the pre-algebra and general malh
A change in Southern High functions, the integrated maths
School's math curriculum to beaer (one and two) would provide
prepare students for the ninth grade instructions in word processtng
proficiency tests was approved at problems, measurements and probMoilday night's meetitlf1 of the lem solving skills.
Southern Local Board o EducaOrd said that to make the
lion.
change 95 new textbooks wouldf
It was noted by Supt. Bob Ord have to be purchased at a cost o
that many sbldents are having diffi. $25 each. The board voted unaniculty passing the required profi- · mously 10 go along with the recomciency leSt and thal currently there mendation of the superintendent to
are 63 students, sophomores and change the math program in the
juniors in the high school, that have high school.
not passed tile math portion.
Personnel
l&gt;assing of all four sections of
Several supplemental conlracts
the test-reading, writing, math were awarded and substitute teach·
and citizenship-are required for ers employed during the meeting.
all students who graduate after
Kim Phillips was hired on a supSept. 15, 1993. Students are pro- plemental contraCt effective July I
vided DP.JXI!Wnities 10 take any test as a Irainee for EMIS coordmator
they fad twice each year through for the 1992-93 school year. She
their senior year.
will be paid $2,000 by Lhe Stale
Supt. Ord said that the neither DepartmentofEducation.
the general math curriculum nor
Bill Hensler was employed as
the pre-algebra curriculum provide an activities coordinator for the
the tnstruction needed for the stu- high school and as a monitor for
deniS to pass the proficiency tesiS. special education students chang·
He proposed that the board drop ing buses. Hired as varsity assistant
general' math and pre-algebra from football coach for the 1992 football
the math program at Southern High season was Dave Barr, and Jennifer
and replace them wilh Integrated · Couch as a volunteer, will replace
Math 1 and Integrated Math 2 Suzanne Wolfe who resigned, as
which covers all of the sub pans reserve volunteer volleyball coach.
for math OR' the required ninlh Couch was also hired as the girls'
grade proficiency tesL
varsity basketball coach.

-·..- .............
-.. "._.

,.

..-

,.

~'

-~

~

•

·.

•

REDUCED TO RUBBLE • The old Betsy
Ross bulldlna 11 hlatory and the lot betweea
Flrtll aad Sixth Aven1e will bqln llklal oa 1
aew look as tlie IUmmer moves aloaa. Eight
houses for low and moderate Jacome famUies
wUI be constructed on tile lots after tile streets

The resignation of Sandra Baer
as cheerleader advisor was accep!·
ed at the meeting, and a general
discussion was held on whedler 10
continue the competition because
of the time and expense involved.
There is no consensus of the cheerleaders and parents on whether
competition should be CODiinued. it
was re)JOited.
Added 10 the district's substitute
teacher list were Amy 0 . Erwin
Daniel Thomas, Rose Ann Jenkins'
and Betty Hutchinson.
'
Otber Business
Bids for supplies were ~
from Sparkle of Gallipolis for J&amp;Di·
torial supplies, Valley Belle of
Point Pleasant for milk, Wli'Chouse
Tire of Athens for tires, Raven
Hocking Coal Corp. of Mason for
coal, Michaels of Jackson for ice
cream; Snouffers of Pomeroy for
fire extinguishers, Best Office of
Belpre for equipment repair, and
Heiners or Huntington fa bread.
Insurance eontrai:IS were awarded 10 Brogan-Warner of Pomeroy
for buildings, and Nationwide for
the bus fleet insurance.
The board set a lab fee of $! 0
for studeniS, and named the Racine
Home National Bank for de)Xl!iit of
funds.
Food service prices will remain
the same as last year, it was decid(Continued on Pg. 3)

.......

.
and utilities are put Ia place. Appllcallons ror
the FmHA Rural Houslna Loan ln·illlerell
ruads are curreatly bel11 taken b7 Jna
Truaell, bouslag ~peclallst at Middleport VD-.
Iage Hall. Lots wiD' be provicled and don-pay.
meal assisllnee olrered to qllllilled buyen.

I

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