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Wednesday, July 22, 1992

7·UP
12 PAK 12 OZ. CANS

s

STORE HOURS
MoRdayflKu Sunday

Ohio Lottery

Bidwell,
Cheshire
teams win

19

Pick 3:
874
Pick-4:
2417
Super Lotto:
6-18-24-25-29-40
Kicker:
121371

PageS

8 AM-10. PM

•

298 SECOND ST.
.
· POMEROY.OH.
WE RlSERYE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PIICES GOOD SUII.,
19 THRU JULY 25, 1992

DR. PEPPER

s

BONELESS BOnOM

2

-

Ba~~R---~----LB. $1

59

I

SAUERS
.MUSTARD
.

320Z.

c
PRINGLES
6·7 OZ. CAN

c
_V~LEY BE~L

$ 79

1
2
$1
Med. Eggs_. . _.ooz.

'2%. Mdk. . . . . . . . . . . . .GAL

GROUND .
CHUCK

GRADE A

SUNSHINE BITE SIZE

Dog Food. . . . . . . . . . . 2o LB. BAG
. REGULAR or DIET DR. PEPPER or

$299

7'9(

7•Up.......................2Uter Bottle ·.

Commission·authorizes
MR/DD levy request

T

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Stal'f
The Meigs County Commissioners authorized the placement of
a 1.8 miU levy for the Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities on the
November ballot when they met in
regular session on Wednesday
morning.
Steven Beha, Executive Director
of the board, and John R. Lentes,
president, approached the commissioners for permission to place the
latest levy attempt on the November 3 ballot.
The levy, if passed, would suppen the· operation of the board's
programs, which include Carleton
School and Meigs lndustties, providing direct services to children
and adults in Meigs County who
have mental retardation and devel·
opmental disabilities. The last
operating levy (1.5 mills) was
passed in June. 1982.
According to Beha, money
raised by the levy will help to con·
tinue basic education for children
and adults in Meigs County and
enhance existing services by
increasing physical therapy and
speech therapy programs. These
services include the operation of an
infant stimulation proJUlllll for chi!-

c

$219

'

BORDEN'S .

Ice Cream. . . . .sQr. Pail
'

ORE-IDA

(RINK!~

OR REGUlAR

French
Fr1es
.
.
.
.
sLB. BAG
---a-HJ-------oull
----,

$ 99 $

2
$ 49
2
---

CHARMIN

SG-DRI

PAPER TOWELS

3 1

ROLL

TOILET-TISSUE

89(

10 ta. PACKAGE

4ROLL
PACK

OoocJ Only At Powell'a Super Vaiu
Ofter Good JulY 18 thru. July 25, 11112
Limit f Per Cuatomer

90

,

GROUND
BEEF

10 ~B. PACKAGE

s

90

2 Sectlono, 12 P1gea 25 oenll
A lluldm~la Inc. Hew.DI-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 23, 1992

320Z.

Round Steak_. . . . . LB. t
SUPERIOR
9
9·
(
Frankies_. . . . . 12 oz. PKG.

'

99

Vol, 43, No. 82
Copyrfght.d 1882

HEI.NZ
KETCHUP

$ . 49

CubeS

Ine

REGULAR or·DIET
24 PAK 12 OZ. CANS

BUCKET

Low tonight near 70. Friday,
cloudy. High In mid-80s. Chance
or rain so percept.

MURDER SUSPECT- Falrmoilt (W.Va.)
patrolman Bruce Toothman escorts murder suspect Nick Mauro to the Marion.C!I!IDty J~til .
Wednesday after giving himselruJ!,to -~ilidritfeS'

a

rollowlnc clay-long standoff at a local motel.
Mauro was later charged in the shooting death
or his brother, James Mauro, who was round
slain .along w,ltb bis wire and two adult sons;
· (AP) ' •
.
'

dren from birth to ihrie years; early
childhood classes for children ages
three to six; school services for
children ages six lhrough 21: sheltered workshpp and community
employment job training and jobs
for adults; case management services for children and adults; and
transl'?rtation services (the program s vehicles travel 850 miles
per day lhroughout Meigs County).
According to Beha, the addi·
tiona! L8 mill continuing levy
would generate $402,000 annually
for the district, based upon cunent
property values.
Although the existing MRJDD
program will continue through the
next year, including its school-aged
program, the program's future
remains very much in the dark.
A I .8 mill levy failed in the
June primary, receiving 48 percent
of the coilnty's vote, and Beha and
Lentes indicated yesterday that the
board would continue to place
levies on the ballot until passage,
due to the dire financial straits that
the board faces .
Both were reluctant to specify
what cuts the board wiU be forced
to make if the upcoming levy fails,
but agreed that the school-age program was in the most danger.

· "If this levy does not pass, the
board will have to make some hard
decisions by the end of 1992, H
Beha said. "We will have to make
some changes in the program to
balance our budget lhrough the end
of 1993. We'll look closest at those
decisions that will not directly
affect the board's programs.H
"We don't want to make
threats," Lentes said. "We're in a
position where all of the cuts have
been made while still meeting state
standards. We don't want to choose
between serving adults and children, .but the public schools in
Meigs County are not capable of
taking on our school-aged clients.
However, if the school-age program must be cut, there is a place
for them to go. The adults who are
served by the MR/DD program
have nowhere else to go."
The commissioners also
approved the sale of the sheriff's
department's snow plow, and discussed necessary repairs on County
Road 28 between Mile Hill Road
and Apple Grove Road.
Also present at the meeting were
County Commissioners Richard E.
Jones, Manning K. Roush and
David Koblentz, and Commission
Secretary Gloria Kloes.

= = . ,.

Brother charged in family slaying
ByDAVIDWILKISON
•
WESTOVER, W.Va. (AP) - ·
Authorities remained P.=led by
the alayinp of a family of four,
despite the arrest of a relative after
a 16-hour standoff with police.
"I don't dtinlc anybody but God
and whoever did it can tell you
right now'" what ihe motive was,
said Maion County Prosecutor
Monty Brown.
Nick Mauro was clwged Wednesday with fatally shooting his
brother, James Mauro, 50.
James Maura's wife, Frances,
James A. Mauro II, 26, and Jeff
Mauro, 22, also were found shot to
death in their home Tuesday night.
No charges have been filed m tjlose
deaths.
"Until 3 p.m. (Wednesday), we
were in negotiations getting the in·
dividual to sunender," Fairmont
police Chief Ted Offutt said. "To
say that -we conducted a thorough
investigation would be premature at
this time."
Police say Mauro, 47, gunned
down his brother in his Fairmont
home some time Thesday before
returning to a motel in Westover
where he had been staying for
several weeks.
Mauro remained in the Marion
County Jail today charged with

first-degree murder and grand Jarceny. He was awaiting a bond hearing before a circuit judge.
Friends and co-workers were
shocked 10 hear of the killings
Wednesday.
Employees of James Mauro's
.pharmacy · in Kingwood surprised
him with a cake fer his 50th
birthday just two days earlier. His
wife sent roses and his sons sent a
bouquet of flowers.
"I remember him saying, 'I'm
going to leave the balloons. but I'll
take the Rowers because my wife
loves roses,"' employee Carol
Beveridge told the Dominion Post
of Morgantown.
"He was reaDy generous,"
Beveridge said. "He let people
charge and wasn't sure he'd ever
get tlie money."
The family celebrated later that
night at _the upscale ilffan~'s Restaurant m F81111lont, accofcling to
ownu Joe.Sestito.
"They were very nice people and
very friendly," satd neighbor John
Gallucci. "I just can't believe this
l!as happened."
Police were called to the scene in
Fairmon~ about 20 miles to the
south, Tuesday night after
neighbors heanl shots.
Neighbor Delores Raspa said she
·
·

•
f:
,..-----LocaI brJe s ------.
Hydrant demonstration set
The Meigs County Dry Fire Hydrant Committee. the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservatipn bistrict,- and the Columbia Township Volunteer Fire De!lartment are co-sponsoring a Dry Fire Hydrant
Demonstration (installation from stan to fmish) on Tuesday. Preliminary work wiU begin·at 4 p.m.' with installation at6 p.m. Pumping will foUow.
·
The delnonstration will be held at the Dave Daniels pond (origi·
nally Mattox Turkey farm) at the junction of Gaston·Tl and State
Route 143 in Columbia Township.
·
Dry fire hydrants are non-pressurized pipe systems that are
installed into existing ponds, lakes or Sb'eams to provide suction
supply to ftre department~ trucks.
·
Anyone interested in this project is welcome to aaend.

Patrol probes one-par wr.eck .

No injuries were reported in a one-car wreck on Red Hill Road
in Salem Township Wednesday arotlnd-8:30 a.m.
According to a rcpon from tbe Gallia-Meigs Post pf the Sta!C
Highway PatrOl, Randall C. Johnston, 17, of 29690 Sanford Dav1s
Road, Langsville, was westboilnd and lost control of his car which
went off the·rightside of the rpnd ana strucka ~. .,
.
' Johnston was not injured. A ~enger, Josh P. Sigman. IS, also
of Langsville, received minor inJuries but was not tteated, the patrol
reponed.
.
·
Damage to Johnston's 1985 Chevrolet Cavalier was listed as
heavy and disabling.
·
·
No citations were issued.
Condnued ()D pagelZ · · ···

saw a man n~ th~ Ma~ house
after the shots w1th somethmg like
a briefcase that he dropped ~d ·
then he picked up and took off m a

car."

The late-model Pontiac was
found three hours later at the motel
and the investigation shifted north
to Monongalia County. By 5 a.m.,
authorities, convinced Nick Mauro
was in Room 218, began to
evacuate 40 sleepy, confused motel
residents.
Tom Beorio of Piusburgh said
state troopets wearing eamouRage
and bullet proof vests and carrying
shotguns woke him at 5:30 a.m.
and told him to leave his room,
which was adjacent to Mauro•s
room.
"I figured maybe there was a fire
bus tour of tbe Midwest On the platform are
END OF THE LINE - Democratic presidenor a chemical spill until I opened
(L·R)
Tipper and AI Gore, U.S. Rep. Richard
tial candidate Bill Clinton gestures during a
the door and saw the police," he
Gepbardt
and HIUary Clinton. (AP)
downtowu rally Wednesday in St. Louis. It was
said.
. .
.
the largest gathering or supporters during his
Commurucatlons
w1th
the
Mauros began shortly after the
evacuation started. Mauro refused
to tallc with police lhrough much of
the day, using his wife, Sandra, as a
go-between.
BEIRUf, Lebanon (AP)- Sec- freeze construction on more !han Yitzhak Rabin, President Hosni
Police didn't say children were retary of State James A. Baker UI, 6,500 planned housing units in the Mubarak of Egypt and King Husin the room until the end of the the most senior U.S. official to visit occupied West Bank and Gaza sein of Jordan.
standoff, when Mrs. Mauro's 3- Lebanon since 1983, was escorted Suip, widening prior measures
After the Lebanon meeting,
year-old son and 11-year-old by Lebanese commandos to a applauded by the United States as Baker planned to rerum to Damas·
daughter were freed without harm.
meeting wilh Lebanon's president helpful for peace. But it was further cus and fly later to Saudi Arabia,
Police considered storming the oda
·
announced that building would go the last stop on a six-day ttip to the
room, at one point standing on the t rb'e meeting started at 12:30 ahead on 10,467 housing projects Middle East designed to ·measure
roof over Mauro's motel room with p.m. at President Elias Hrawi's already under way in the disputed interest in resuming Arab-Israeli
an axe, but decided against it while house in Zahleh, a longtime areas, including 1,686 in the peace negotiations after a three. month lapse.
talks continued, said state police fortress and sanctuary for Chris- greater Jerusalem ares.
Baker
conferred
with
Syrian
Before setting out for Lebanon,
Sgt B.L. Burner Jr. of the Shin· tians in the predominantly Shiite
nston.
·
Muslim Bekaa Valley, Lebanese President Hafez Assad on Wednes- Baker told the Damascus news
day night Earlier in his tour he met conference: "There is still quite
"You just have to give that per- Foreign Ministry sources said.
son every Opportunity to open up a
Jeeps loaded with Syrian sol- · hrael's new prime minister,
Continued on page 12
·
line of communication," Burner diers escorted Baker from Damassaid. "You try to work it to where cus to the Lebanese border, where
there's no one hurt at all."
Lebanese troops took over guard
Cable television IICfViee in the duty for the remaining nine miles
1lre3 was cut off to prevent Mauro to Zahleh, the sourtes said, speakfrom gleaning infprmation from ing on condition of anonymity.
television news crews watching the
Washington has declared
incident from a nearby McDonald's Lebanon off-limitS for U.S. citizens
A 15-year-old Mason County Road.
parking lot.
since a wave of kidnappings and
'ryle spokesman said the comThrough the day, police cruisers mass killings of Amencans and youth died at St Marys Hospital in
Huntington
after
bein~
acc'
(
dentally
pan10n
then 1'31! to a house at the
went back and forth between the other Westerners in the 1980s.
shot
in
the
head
by
a
JUVenile
hunt·
bottom
of
the h~L The Valley Resmotel and a eommand post setup
. Shiite m.ilitants, including some
ing
companion
Wednesday
night.
_
cue
_Squad
took McCarty to the
about a quarter-mile away as based in the Bekla, took responsiThe accident occurred on Gor- hosptta!. ,
. .
dozens of state and local authorities . bilitY for most of those lddnappings
scattered lhrough the. ares. More and for the suicide car-bombing don Creek Road. off Crab Creek . ~ mc1dent ts still under investhan a dozen businesses were that killed 241 American service- near Apple Grove 81 approximately tigsuon by the Department of
8:30 p.m., according to a spokes- Natural Resources and the sheriff's
closed in the plaza where the motel men in Beirut in October 1983.
.
was located.
.
Be.fore leaving for Lebanon, man 'for the Mason County Sherif- deparUnenL
f's
Department
McCarty
was
the
son
of
John
L,
Hostage . negotiatOrs
and · Baker told reporters he saw an
Adam McCarty,
15, of and C_onnie _(Bush) McCany .of
psychiatrists talked with Mrs. improvinJ atmosphere for peace
Southside
was
shot
when
he either Soulhs1de. He attended Pomt
Mauro throughout the day, befote prospects m the Micklle East.
fell
into
~
entered
the
path
of his Pleasant Junior.High ~chool.
Mauro finally talked to Dr. Herben
"I lhink the situation is considjuvenile
companion.
The
two
were
Funeral serv1ces w1ll be held on
Ward 111 2 p.m.
erably beaer than it had been and
··~e seemed to be calm and lucid that the deve!~ts of the ~~t crouched shoocing a1 ~arne when Saturday, July 25, at 11 a.m. at the
and JUSt needed to work through the past are positive,'' Balcer sa1d 1n McC4ny was shot w1th the .22 ~lcoxen Funenl RCIII!e, Burial
cilJiber rifle. The youths were hunt· Will be .at the Beale Chapel
process and tuln himself in," Damascus.
Brown said.
Israel announced today it would ing on a hilltop off Gordon Creek Cemetery mApple Grove.

t

Baker meets with Lebanon president

Southside youth kill~d
in hunting accident

..

�·'

!

"

.

"

ThU!'Sday, July 23, 1992

;, iCommentary ~
.

•.•

..

'

.

'•

'

111 Coart Street
PvllleJ:01, Oblo
DIVOTBD TO Tlllll'f'I'EU8T8 OP .'l'Hit IBIG&amp;-IINJON ARBA

ROBERT L WJNGE'IT
Publllher

..

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General M~~JU~ger

Ll!mRS OF OPINION are welcome. Thoy abould be less lhan 300
words. Alllettero ue subject to ,editing and must be aigned wilh n101e,
ad~" and tolepbone number. No uasipod Jetton wiD.be publiahed. Letton
should be in good tut., oddrelliq iuue&amp;, oot penonalities.

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

:lIs it a wave or a cycle?
•

By JOHN CUN)'m'P
AP BUll ess Allllyst
: NEW YORK - Perhaps the. U.S. economy is engulfed in a wave
: rather than npped in a cycle.
·
· That, at leas~ is one aa.empt to expllin why lhc best·laid plans of the
~ administration, lhc Federal Rnc,rre llld bllsineu have failed to IJOC!uce
: the economic growth and jobs . . everyone is looking fix.
• A cycle is a recurring and ~ predicllbte event lhat can be mea: sured and forecasl A wave is lesa regular (eve!)' 40 10 60 years), tess pre:: diccable and longer, and involves problems not ii!'CII in lhc typical up: down cycle.
. ·
·
: Almost all economic anal~ is based on cycles l1llher than waves, and
' most anti-recession measures 11e designed to counter cycles. Perhaps,
: suggests Lacy Huot, we might CQIISider lhat lhis time we're in a wave
: instead.
·
• The trouble with.waves is that~ Clll exert all.the fiScal and monerary
: muscle of govemmeJU - power ,lhil ~ m~ cycles - but make
: very tittle progress. It's sort of like lrylllg .to swun to shore agamst an
· undertow.
·
: Hunt, who is chief ec:onomist for the securities firm of canon McEn·
: tee &amp; McGinley, says lhc most obvious ~vein U.S. history was during
- the Great Depression of the 1930s, wh1ch lasted the better pan of a
: decade.
.
• While waves might have different anta:cdents,lhcy are associated wilh
; prolonged periods of excessive expansion Of excessive coatniCtion. The
; 1920s were the period of expansion, the 1930s lhc decade oC excess con: ll'IICiion.
. .
· Waves usually are attended also by population or demographic shifrs,
_ .and by a variety of SlniCtllral imlxtlances.
:;
Hunt poinrs out thalme economic slump of lhc 187U&lt;i followed a Civil
.:: War in which hunclseds of thousands of working-age men were killed and
·: much of the industrial and agricultural capacity of the South was
:• destroyed.
:·
In the 1930s, farm prices fell sharply because of new fanning tech·
• . niques !hat greatly boosted production. The farm-price drop forced a
: · migration to the cities, wbich were poorly equipped to handle the influx.
~Another factor in waves is one you mighi have surmised: Excessive
, . debt relitive to illcome and assets, a situation !hat weakens banks and
~ household and business balance sheets, leads 10 failures and sometimes
,...- even 10 panK:.
"
,
•
•:
Various wave-like elements are present today. The working age popu;. Jation lhc big consumer ,group, is j!rDWing more slowly. The economy is
; over-ieveraged. Construction, nauonal defense, and oil and gas exploration are in Owl.
. .
·~
Troughs in waves do not always respond to lh~ usual anucyclical
' medicine such as lower interest rates. What, for 1nstance, would be
' accomptished by encouraging more commercial structures when already
: they glut the market?
.
;
How, considering lhc bu~e federal debt and budget def~1ts, can government prime the pump wuh more money? How do you induce house·
holds who already havealllhc "swfr' they need- bought in lhc 'lOs10 go out and buy mii'C?
In waves lraditional remedies may be unavailable or ineffective, but
that does noi necessarily li!CIII their deslructive.power cannot be lessened,
says HunL Newrs, 11101e.aative appmaches m1ght be sought and perhaps
found.
·
·.
.
d' be ·
·m
Clearly. !hough, lhe applicauon of eff~Uve rem~ 1es gms ~~ .
recognition of the problem: Is lhc economy m a tradillonal cycle or IS 11
: : caught in a wave?

Today -in history
, .
By The AssoCiated Press
~ · Today is Thursday, July 23, lhe 205lh day of 1992. There are 161 days
_. left in lhe year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
.
One hundred years ago on July 23, 1892, Emperor Haile Selassie of
.: Ethiopia was born. Haile Selassie was emperor of Ethiopia from 1930 10
·· 1974; during his reign, he sought to modernize and uoify lhe country
·: under his autocratic rule. He died in 1975, a year after being overlhrown
:: in a military coup.
.• : On this dale:
:: · In 1829 William Austin Bun of Mount Vernon, Mich., received a
·: patent for his typographer, a forerunnrs of the typewriter.
:· In 1885, Ulysses S. Grant, lhc 18th president of the United States, died
: in Mount McGregor, N.Y., at the age of63.
..
In 1886, New Yorlc saloonkeeper Steve Brodie supposedly made a
: daredevil plunge from the Brooklyn Bridge into lhc East River.
:: : In 1942, 50 years ago, Harry James and his Orchesrra recorded " I Had
·• the Craziest Dream" in Hollywood for Columbia Records.
:: In 1952, 40 years ago, ~ mititary officers led by Gamat Abdel
·· Nasser launched a coup against King Farouk I.
.
:
In 1958, Britain's Queen Elizabeth named lhe first four women to
·: peerage in the House of Lords.
.
·:
In 1967, 25 years ago. rioting !hat clai.med some 43 lives erupted in
·. Detroit after pollee Jllided a black'Owned rughtspot.
.
:: In 1977, a jury in Washin~n convicted ~2 ,Hanafi Muslims of charges
:- stemming from the hosca~ s.ege at lhn:c buiklin~ lhc prey10us March.
.: In 1984 Vanessa Will18111S became the first Miss Amenca 10 res1gn her
:: title, becau~ of nude photographs of her that were published in Penthouse
: magazine.
'
In 1'986, Bricain's Prince Andrew married Sarah Ferguson at Wesunin~ ster Abbey in London.
:· Ten years ago: Actor Vic Monow and~ child B:Ctors were. killed
·: when a helicopter crashed on 10p of !hem dunnJ fllnting of a Vtetnam
~ War scene for "Twilight Zone: 'The Movi&lt;l." (D~ John ~dis ll!'d
.... four associates were acquitted of manslaughter charges m connection with
~ the dealhs.)
~ · Five years ago: PresideJU Ronald Reagan named nearly a dozen people
• 10 complete lhc ranks of his commission on the deadly -illness AIDS, and
:• challenged ·the panel to help "beat lhis'tlisease."
\. One year ago: The Senate voted to impose a long list of saict new con:;: didons on renewal of China's nonnai trade sllltUs'in 1992- however, the
:: 55-44 vote fell shM of the IWo-thirds majority later needed to ovenide
" ~ident Bush's veto.
. .
~ · Today's Birthdays: Actress Gloria DeHaven is 67. Supreme Coun J~­
• •liCe Anthony M. Kepnedy is 56. Baseball hall'Of.famer Don Drysdale IS .
·~ 5~. ActreSS Belinda Montgomezy is 42.
.,_; .• Thouglit for Today: "An expert is an &lt;XdiJutry fella away from home."
~;:..: "Bum" PhilliJjs, AmeriCIII foo~ll coach (1923· ).

Can Cliqton stifl'e l~berals? ·

NEW YORK_· we are ;~v:
emed by those we elect, but ill$j),
subtly, b)' lhc p6lilic8l JBties they
relw.Csenl That is fine. CandidateS
Without parties, like that nutty,
• .....
"·'""·"~•""1eav. e us
.oo
wu """" • ... .,., Clll
too vulnerab~ to penona1 ~~. To vote WJSely, each ~your '!Wn
hghts, we ought 10 examme 1101 Just
candidates but the essence of their
· 1 ' I'·
· 1·~
1
parues. n po IU~s. as m '· e, cu •
lure crea~s policy,. Leavmg the
Democrauc coavenuon, we should
ask: Who are these putatively new
Democrats?
Let me rate, and rant, by my
owp tights:
. .
There we~e sumng ~spects to
lhe Democrauc Convenuon. Recall
the ma~isterial Ba.rbara _Jordan
denounc1~g both w~te ractSm .and
black rac1sm, decrymg separausm,
censuring "~litical ~ectness";
recall Sen. B1ll Bradley s eloquent
plea for pluralism; recall Gov. Zell
Miller's mvocation about why only
•
'.1
Democrats can chum
the rass·IO·

richeS Am~ idea. · ·
.
There was, roo,1the heartening
emergence of a~ of first-line
. black leaders. Freed at last from lhc
'
·

Ben Ul'att
b
m en erg

political yoke of Jesse Jackson. we
saw the'likea ofR~. John Lewis
,..,..
and Mike Espy, Andrew YounJ.
Mayors Maynard Jackson, Dav1d
Dinkins and Sharon Pratt Kelly,
comingintotheirown.
.
Much of the platform made
sense. Much of what Clinton said
in his acceptance speech made
sense. Together they sketch out
Clinton's vision: to "re-invent"
govemmenl
All !hat is to the good, and will
influence poticy.
The strategy was basic: the
incantation of the word "moderate," so that sympathetic journal·
ists would buy it. They did. Of
course, incantation is not reality,

but, then again; po!itic'al, reality free markets don'.t work, wlllil we
c,annot be changed Without mcanca- need is 1 bigger dose of governuon fUSL We saw lha~ Democrars me: you concerned about a party
can talk lhc taJ!t· But will they w~ that barely QICIItions victory in .Jhc
lhe wallr,? Lets look at other e e- Cold war and the Gulf · War,
rnentsoflhcparty.
There is still a mean, sanctimo- Congress~ quotas?
nious and ve liberal aspect 10 .
Do YO!Ilike psychobabb)e, and
th'15 • . Didryou like lhc lecwre , that icty liberallet-it·all·hang'Out
party,.
Y
r T d .stufl'l Did you like thM video pre·
on family values rom · c '
· boutho lhccBndidale's
Kennedy and Rep. Jospeh. P. sentallOn a
w
.
Kenned Jr 1 Do you believe, as . drunken stepfather, !~king ~IfJ
k.
does that· Dan esteem, best his mother? Da we
esse ~c ~on
'
'II·
need the candidate inlimalllly whis8
~r:[~e~~?kOc,th; ~ ~i~!e:~ pering "!love you·: to his wif~.
some AIDS activists indicated lhat and to a bundled million olhcrs, vca
aid R
killed people 'wilh televjsion?
. .
~S? eagan
·
· Do you have a problem W!th a
D
believe that the party lhat will not allow its,candi·
0 you
"th
f dale to go along -with a reasonable
Demo;~·~~ ::ee the ~!ara!i'r ~f abonion position- leJality wilh
wfon:e.
· .lasher~? How moderate state restricuons? (The
em.nuts or "!BJI
. .
R · blicans are worse.)
·

l

0

WC?uldyouJ¥.lliftheR;rmb~s

~youlikeapanythalglorifies

wd they are ~ pany 0 men .
· Do you believe, along_ Wl~h
Mario Cuomo, that Al!lenca IS
• "ship--""'"? Because
headed .or
. ,.,...,. ·

a parade of victims; gays, lesbians,
1 lh homeless single
poor peo?P e, e
•
parents
· All thai is in lhc culwre of the
party, and it too ends ilp influencmg policy, and life, in America.
I cease my rating, and my rant·
ing. Asevrs, there's good news and
bad news. The best news is that
neither Bush nor Ctinton is isola·
tionist or protectionist. The ca'ndi·
dates that were - . Buchanan,
Brown, Harkin and Perot - 11e
history. The republic will Jili:ely
survive.
Oil balance: Clinton is a good
candidate, perhaps prodigioos, with
some powerful ideas. He is in a
party lhat still has in out'Of·touch
dimension. Rest assured the
Republicans will tell us all about.
that.
A key question concerns
whether Clinton will, on big issues,
tell bis liberals to stuff iL Another
· is !his: Are the Republicans any
belltr? We shall learn more about
that in August, in HOUSton.
Ben WattenbetK, a IICDior reno.,..
ai the American &amp;lterprise Institute, is authof of "The rlfst Uni·
versa! Nation," published by The
Free Press and a syndicated colum·
nist for Newspaper Enterprise
Association ..

MEET tlte DH/fJCR4TIC PRESIDENTIAL TICKET

~ILL

C.LINTON

ALGORE

TIPPER

HIL.LARV

GORE

CLINTON

It's OK to root for the Dream Team
The murmuring began three
years ago when the international
community agreed to let basketball
pros play in lhe Olympics.
The games are supposed to celebrate amateur athletes, the critics
said. It was a plot hatched by lhe
National Basketball Association
and its European counterpans to
create a lucrative global market,
they said. The United Scates would
tromp the rest oC lhc world and lhus
lend even 11101e credence 10 its ruf.
Han image, they said. The United
StateS was primarily interested in
avenging Olympic tosses to the
Soviet Union in 1972 and 1988,
they said.
I know nothing of conspiracies,
but the critics are emphatically
right about one thing: The "Dream
Team" the United StateS has dispatched to Barcelona is poised to
make basJcelhalll,lBSIC of the rest oC
the planet. Dunng the Olympic
warm -ups in Portland, Ore.,
Michael "Air" Jordan, Earvin
"Magic" Johnson, Larry Bird, Sir
Charfes Barkley and company leveled six opponents by an average
margin of 51.5 points. And, Jordan
hinted, it was in the national in!.er-

est !hat there be no letltll:
"We've got to regam our sense
of pride, our dignity. Some way even if it's just basketball. We can

Joseph Spear
at least show the world !hat we can
take control of something."
Predictably, the chorus of criti·
cism reached a cresceodo. William
C. Rho!len of The New Yorl:
Times berated the United States as
ignoble: "The uoderlying principle
here reflects a bully's way of doing
business and an attempt to regain
lost pride at lhe el'pense of hopelessly weaker opponents." Roger
Simon of the Baltimore Sun
assailed Michael Jordan: "You can
see his point We Clll't control our
own economy. We can't stop mur·
ders on the streets of our cities. We
can't even get rid of Sadtlam Hussein. So at least we can win a
crummy hasl:ethall game!"
After I read that, my thoughts
wentlilce !his: Oh my God, I want
us to win and that must make me a
chauvinistic creep and Ws. really

moie noble to lose gracefully anyway, and what the hell am I saying,
1 want the United States to cream
!hose futbol-loving johnny-come· latelys. That only took 12.5 seconds and now I can enjoy the next
few days of basketball heaven with
unclouded mind. For thpse of you
who are having trouble clearing
your cerebra of annoyirig pangs of
guilt, I offer lhcse hints:
t. It is not jingoism to want your
team to win. Only guilt-ridden,
neurotic, dyspeptic, hopelessly
sour-tempered apologists root
against their own couotries.
2. It does matter to win a
"crummy basketball game." It
matters because athletic events are
vicariously rewarding, are a safe
substill!te for warfare and are easier
for most of us to understand than
SALT talks, GA1T gabs and other
forms of global gameplaying.
3. Until now, the other nations
of lhc world have been deploying
what amounts to professional
teams. TheY have paid, fed, fenied,
roomed and groomed lhcir athletes.
They have offered up their very
best, and we have countered with
collegians. Now !hose nations will

The rebirth of Hillary
NEW YORK (NEA) - You
could tell from the way her eyes
flashed that Hillary Clinton was
angry with lhc question. Is it lnle,
the reportets asl:ed. her, that you
personally nixed Bob Kerrey? ·
During the early days of the
Democr~tic Convention, Sen.
Robert Kerrey of Nebrasl:a had priva1ely told all who would listen
that he had been Bill Clinton's first
choice for vice president, but that
he had been vetoed the candidate's
wife.
"The decision of a running mate
was Bill's alone," she said. "He
asked many of his advisers for their
opinions. He asked my advice on a
number of the potential contenders.
But 1 had no pan whatsoevrs in lhc
final decision."
Of course, none of her lisleners
'or anyone who knows much about
her relationship with her husband
really ~lieved that her input w~
that rrunor. But her answer was m
keeping with the new image of
Hillary Clinton that the campaign
tried so hard to sell.
This new image of dutiful wife
and mother- who only incidental·
ly is a lawyer- is a far -cry from
the image lhat both Hillary Ointon
and her husband aied to sell S!MI·
in~ in the snows of New Hampshllll.
In !hose early days of the campaign, Bill and Hillary Clinton 1101d
the idea of a "two-fer." Holding
his wife's hand, and extolling her
abilities as a lawyer, an activist for .
children's rights, and as a level· ·
headed adviser- his closest adviser - Clinton continually told his
audiences !hat if they voted for

The Dally Sentlne~

Quayle dismisses rumors of departure; Jobless claims jump to two-month high
Republicans say he is not a problem

l

.

The ·Dally·.Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

him, they would also be getting his
wife as a full-time, no-cost-added
bonus.

Robert }. Wagman
What you had in New Hampshire was, for the first time, a
woman appearing to be openly running for first lady.
Then came her now-famous
defense of her husband against
charges of ·philandering- "I'm
not just standing by my man like
some Tammy Wynette" -'- and her
equally famous defense of her
booming law practice- "Well!
could have stayed home and baked
cookies and held teas."
The n:sult was a torrent ofnegalive publicity. and a delu~e !lf ~plaints that she was nd1cuhng
women who stayed home to f81se
cbildren. Bolh she and lhc Ctinton
cam~gn imrnedia~ely n:t~lized the
deplh of the error·being made, and
the need 10 - as
Slafl'ers
now say - "rein
" Hillary
Clinton to the nation.
Abruptly, the Hillary Clinton
most peOple 1:new in little Rock the ambitious, often abrasive
lawyer - was gone, replaced
ovemlght by Hillary Clinton: helpmate, mother and cootie-maker.
Banished for the IMIIinder of lhc
campaign was her trldemart head·
band, repliced by a new "soft"
took.
.
There has been wide lpCCulation
that, should Bill Clinton become
president, Hillary Clin10n will
either function as 1 behind-thescenes atring-pull~. li~e Nancy
RCIIBD, or as an acufut 'co-pre51;

:r

witnW the truth - Michael flies,
Magic glides, Charles hammers
and Larry has eyes in the back of
his 'head- and they will weep for
lhcir own.
.
4. Basketball is ours. We invent·
ed it and we play it beller than anybody else in lhc world. It may be
true that lhc Japanese have better
microwaves, lhc French have better
bottled water, the Mexicans have
better frijoles and the Canadians
have better health care. But the
United States oC Amcric:a has better
basketball, and we are about to
prove iL
So enjoy. After the debacle,
they'll m~t likely outlaw hisket·
ball pros as an act of merey ·and
we'D nevrs see lhc likes of it apin.
But !hat will still leave Castro
crowing about Cuban baseb,all.
How abopt if we let lhc ~play
just once - in Adanra 1n '96 and We let Ripken, Oemens, Puclc·
ell, Fielder, Kruk and lhc gang let·
tle for once and fo~ all who best
plays !he game GotiiDVenled. What
say, Fidel?
.Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
· ·to!umatSI for Newsptper Elller·
pru;e Asloc:illtloa.

WASHINGTON (AP) _ Vice
President Dan Quayle used a television lall: show 10 deny speculalion he was being dropped from the
GOP ticket, and some top Republi·
cans suggested he's been wrongly
blamed for problems !hat rest wilh
President Bush.
"The problem wilh this administration ... is not Dan Quayle. It's a
lack of definition of what the
administration is about what it is
for and what it is will' do for the
next four years," .said William
Bennett, Bush's fonner drug policy
director.
"People are not angry at Dan
Quayle. They're angry at George
Bush.... He has zero credibility,"
added Richard Viguerie, a GOP
consultant popular among the
pany's conservative wing.
Bennett and Vigucrie were
...------· ----.

The Daily Sentinel

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She knows that she wil.l be a

Rep~blican tqcL As GOP~

m~ R!Jger Ailes' Jl!IIB.it "~lary
Ctinton m an apron tS lilre Michsel

''

.._....

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,_

BATMAN

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reallf

Hampshire.

:r;s·

TONIGHT
TOMCRIISE
IN

Suhlcriben not dflliriq 1o pay Ute cani·
er may remit in adftnce direct. to The

usual .to file claims and probably
causing some 10 delay filing until
the latest weelc.
A less volatile moving fourweek average of claims rose as
well. It hit41S,250, duringlhc four
weeks ended July 11, up by 250
from the ·period ended one weel:
earlier.
·
During lhe fii'St lhree months; of
this year. claims averaged around
450,000 then fell to arouhd
410,000 during April and May. But
since then they have risen slightly.

Lottery numbers

COLONY THEATRE

8UB8CJUPTtON IIATB8
By Carrier or Mottr Roate
One Woot. .............................. .......... .. SI.&amp;O
One Mootii ............................... .......... S6.96
One Yoar............................................ S83.20
BINGLE COPY
PRICE
Daily........ .... _....................... ..... -...25 Cenll

Clint9~'s i~ag~.

dent" like Eleanor Roosevelt. Dukakis m.a tank. Thism tum led
Howevrs, during~ conyention .- l!llhc fUMiest exchange of convenin on-the-record mtemews wtth uon ~: .
.
the networks, major newspapers
. Hillary Clinton had amved at a ·
and magazines, in smal!ef off-the· ~1d10wn hotel for a d~g- sesrecord sessions !"llh other s1on, when Roger Alles strode
reporters, and in a whirl o~ appear- across the l~y. He waited~ and
ances before scate de,legallo~ and mtroduced h1mself, and Hillary
various groups - ~ Clinton audibly gasped. .
.
vigorowly downptayed e1ther posRecoven~g qwctly, she smiled
sibility.
.
and ~bed iiiiO ~big and pulled
"I am not a back-room kind of out a bag of cooldes she banded to
~erson,'·' she told one reporter. Ailes. saying, "I baked them
'Nancy Reagan is different from myself.:·
.,
.
.
everythinf I have ever done or ever
A stilt-smiling Ailes 8ald later:
though1o doing."
).II
didn't lh~ she ,bad ~
As for lbe Eleanor Roosevelt kind o sense of ham or. S~c s
comparison she says: ''Bill Ointon going to be a forrllidable cam~is the kind of man who seel:s er." Then he thought for a rrunute,
advice widely. As presiden~. I'm "But you still have to remember
sure he will continue !hat habit, and !hat these are very tiberal cookies.·'
yes, I suppose that 1 will be one of
Robert'Waptan II a syudkat·
those he asks advice from occa- ed eolumnlst for Newspaper
sionally. But make no mistake Eneerorlse AJIIoc:iatlon.
about it, i.t will. be ~!II Clinton
Berry's World
alone who 1s pres~denl
She has gone out of l'!l" wrt to
insist !hat she is mucl\liko every
other wife and mother in the COUO·
try. As she told'a PBS\interviewrs,
''There is ao much m!R lhat I hlye .
in common with most of the
women in this cotintry than what'
~ us."
' ' , .
'
Hillary Clinton is ~~1110~~ry
snake-biL She now aeems ~ ""'!'"
SIR every wonl and expresslOO, m ·
contrast 10 the open and always
animated women who sho!"ed up
onlhc campeign trial b1ck m New ·

among'th~ who came 10 Quayle's
defense as rumors swirled that q ·
Bush campaign shakeup would
dump Quayle. Possible replacements included Housing Secretary
Jack ·Kemp, Defense Secretary
Dick Cheney and Gen. Cotin Powell.
Bush on Wednesday dismissed
the tall: as •'crazy rumors" and
said Quayle's place on the ticket
was "very certain." Quayle went
on CNN's "Larry King Live" program Wednesday night to insist he
had Bush's "full confidence."
· "I am making a difference. And
I will make a difference. And I
look forward to the campaign
because ... I'm convinced 1 can
help him (Bush) get re-elected,"
Quayle told'King. .
"I'm totally ded1cated to the
presidenL He knows thal Betieve
me if 1 thought! was hurting the
ticket I'd be gime," he added.
·
GOP pollster Neil Newhouse
said the Quayle rumors had surfaced mostly because "people are
searching for what action the presi·
dent can take !hat would re-estab- .
Iish him as a strong leadrs."
•'A Jot of his opportunities have
passed him by," Newhouse said.
"But replacing Dan Quayle simply
is not the sparl: needed 10 rejuvenate iL"
Newhouse echoed the com-

WASHINGTON (AP) - The 403,000 lhe week earlier, illustratnUOiber of Americans filing first- ed tough going in the nation's job
time claims for unemployment ben- marlcet as the economy slnlggled 10
ments of several top Re~ublicans efits jumped to a two-month high shake off the effects of the receswho suggested Quayle s recent of 422,000 in early July, lhc gov- sion. It was the highest level since
speeches on family values and his ernment said today.
lhe weel: ended May 2, according
support for removing regulations
The sharp increase during the to lhc Labor Departmenl ·
cumbersome to businesses had week ended July 11, up from
Allhough economists cautioned
done more to atrract conservatives
against readinj! too much into
than anything Bush has done in
weelcly fluctuauons in the claims
~t months. .
number, lhc increase was not good
Despite. his propen.sity ~or
news for President Bush, who faces
CLEVELAND (AP) - There re-election in less than four
emb~rrassmg gaffes hl:e mu spelli~g ~e word potato, "quayle were no tickets sold naming all six monlhs. ·
1s begmnmg to build a consbtuen- numbers selected in Wednesday's
II is a bad sign for the prospects
cy,'' among conservatives, Viguerie Super Lotto drawing, so Saturday's of any immediate improvement in
jackpot will be $24 million, the lhe nation's unemployment rate,
satd.
.
Bennett satd Quayle had Ohio Louery said.
which last month hit an eight-year
Pick 3 Numbers
~ome Bush'~ "real conlact man"
high of 7.8 percenL
8-7-4
w.tth co~servauv~ but thal much of
Econom isis had expected an
(eight, seven, four)
hiS s1gnifi~ IS lost because lhe
increase in claims, but on Iy about
news me.d1a so ardently focuses Pick 4 Numbers
half as large. The Independence
2-4-1-7
on!~ on his
bli
shared
Day hotiday was celebrated during
(two, four, one, seven)
ut. not . epu cans
the week before, giving unemthat v1e~pom1, C~nsultant Ann Super Lotto
ployed workers one less day than
6-18-24-25-29-40
Stone ~d. 9uayle s gaffes ma~e
h•m a ba~1tity.lhat Bush coul~ 1
(six, eighteen, twenty-four,
.afford :-v1th h1s already saggmg twenty-flve, twenty-nine, forty)
Kicker
po~~larity.
If quayle truly wa~ts to see
1-2·1·3-7-1
.
lhe pres1dent t;e-elected, It may be
(one, two, one, three, seven ,
lhe '!llng for him to do, 10 go to the one) ·
president and, offer to st~p do~
because I don t think you re JlOID,~
to get. George Bush to ask hun,
she wd.

'

�l"orneroy-MtOOtepon, on1o
. .

Paga 4

Chicago blanks Cincinnati 3-0
to drop Reds out of first place

tude.''
The last time the Braves were in

LOOK OUT! - Cincinnati third baseman
Bip Roberts dives into tbe Chicago du1out to
caleb a ruul baD bit by the Cubs' Mark Grace In

the third inning or Wednesd1y night's Natiollli
Leaaue game in Minneapolis, which the C11bs
won 3-0. (AP)

Scoreboard
F...a-, 22; Slloft!ol4, S.O llieao. 21:
BelL-· 21: llaolllo, New Yaok.
21: Wlllac:h. liloo!lftol, 21 .
1mPU!S - D. SandaD, Allula. 13;

In the majors...
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EalltmDiwlaloli

WL

'T wn

Cl

Ptt.

Pil•bwJh ..............l2 43

.~7

Monuul _............. AI 47

SOl
.49l
.414
.461
.421

N,..Yodt ............... 7 4l
SL!.ouio _..............4l 4l
OU.Ogo..................44 lO
-.tdphio ...........&lt;O lS

4

l
6
7-l
12

WaternDI'W.
37 .S91
ClNCINNATI....... .ll 31 .S91
s.. Oiogo .............ll 4l .m
Son FnnciKo ...... ..45 49 .479
llouolal ................43 52 .4S3
t..Aoa&lt;k&lt;---......41 S4 .432
A~on1a ...................SS

.l

•

11
13.l
ll.l

Wednesday's sco~a

New Yo!S 7, ~_An&amp;d• S

Oticogo 3, CINCNNATI 0
Son Fnncioco 4, Monu.ol 1
Philadelphi1 4, San Oitp 0
At.larna 2, St Lou.iJ 0

Piuolwah 10, - 7 . lliMinp
1Tonight's game

ONCINNATI {Rljo 7-6) at SL LouiJ
(Conni&lt;r 2.8). a,3l p.m.

Friday's games
l.ol A_nad':' (R Mutin~ 5-7) at Mm·
ou1 (D. Moruna 9-9), 7,35 pm.
San Fnne i1~0. Wibon '- 10) a\
l'biladclol\ia (A
· 11~ 7,35 pm.
PittlhUrah (Wa 3-3} u All una
(Glavine I... )), 7:40 pm.
San Oiqo (Scminua 5-l) at New
York (Funondcz 1-1), 7:40 pm.
OUCOIJO (Moqan 7-4) It lbul.on (J.
JonC!t ..._..,, B:3S p.m.
CINCINNATI (Hltllmond 5-5) 11 SL
Low. (rowkobw)' 9-4), 1:35 pm.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eulcrn Dhllloe

Tum

WLI'lt.GB

Toronto .................., 37
Blltimoro ...............S3 4 1

.606
.564

MUwoubo .. -........ .lO 43
Dcuvit. ...................46 so
New ¥ttk ..............45 49
8 0lton .~ .................44 41
CLEVE!AND ....... 39 56

.l38
.479
.479
.478

4

6.5
12
12
12

.411

ll.l

We.tern Dh'llion
Minnl$ou ........._...l 7 l1
.606
ou~ nd ................. 54 40
.m

3

TCAu .................... .SO 47
ChiCIIgo ..................46 47

.SIS
.495

8.S
10.5

Xanu.a City ...........42 52
Cllif'omil ...............40 54
ScoQlc .................... 37 l 9

.441
.426
.38l

IS
17
21

Wednesday's scores

Today's games
New YOJt (Kamiertic:cki 2-7) It Seaale
(Fkmin gii-4), 4 :0S p.m.

MiMeiOia (Ericklon 6·7) at Bonon
(Ckmen• J0-6), 7:3S p.m.
Te•u (Guun1a 7· 1) "Baltimore (Mellono1d 9·6), 7:3l p.m.
Xm111 Cily (Appict 11·3) 1t Q.EVE.
LAND (Ann.tltOn jl 2- 13), 7:35 p.m.
0\ic:ago (M cDowell 12--5) It Milwauk&lt;e (Uonoo ~l) , S:OS p.m.
Toron1o (Ou&amp;mln IZ..l) I t Oakland

•
•
:
•
-

Fiftley, Haunon, t 1; VanSlyke., Pitta~ I; B-, t.. Ana*. I ; " ' -·
dini. PhiJeblph 1• 6; oeftrma. U. AIJp.. 6; AlJooa, St. ....... 6.
IIOMJ! RUNS - M&lt;Oal!, S.. Diooo,
20; Shcffi.J.d, Saa Diqo, 11 ~ Boni11,
Pillol&gt;wp, 11; L Walkw, Moauool, 17;

Transactions

Daul.toa, Philadelphia, 1'; Dtwton,
Chicaio, 14: Holliao, Philo4olpbio, 13;
Molt WUlilmo, S.. - . a : Pcndlo\oa, Allma, 13.
STOLI!N BASES - Chiuom, M"'·
11011, ~ DoSbioWo, ~ 36; Llnll·
Coni, Sc Lou!., 30; Robuu, CINCN·
NATI. 26; l'mloy, lfouolaa. 25: Bigio,
-:14: llonL Allonlo, :14.
Frnli!NO (11 olocirimo)
Atl.ala, 1+3, .114, l .... ; Baathttd,
CINaNNAll, 9-2. .Ill, 1.14: SwindelL
CNCINNAll, 9-3, .7l0, 2.14: K. Hill,
Monuul, ll...t, .733, 2.63; Cone. Now
Y..t. ll-4, .733.1!0: Bloc:t, San P1011·
cilco, 1·3, .1TT, 3.09; Towbbwy, SL
LoW,,..., .692,1.91.
S11UKEOUTS - Cane, New Yart,
m: Smolla. Allan~o, 131: s. , ..........
New Yolk, 124; 0 . Maddu&amp;. CJ.icaao.
!U% Dnbek, P,iUJbwah. 109: 811101, s..
lli••·t06: Riio.ClNtiNNAn 106.
SAVES - Ch~rlt.cm. ClNCINNAT1,
23; Lee Smilh, SL l.ou.P, 23; D. lana,
Howton, 20; Wtt.teland, Montre1l1 19;

the Swl&amp;a Lea:pe oa a rehabililati011

01a-.

Mild. Wil!Umo, PhiWio1oltia. 11; M
,
Son Di.... 17; Bo1indo, ~-.... {("

Amerku Leque

BAmNa - Puc:bu, Minne~ou ,
.332: E. Manina. S..Alt. .322; a..... .
CI.EVELAND, .:no: R Aloono&lt;, r ....,.,
.311; MoU101, Milftull:ea_ .317; Harper,
~- .307; Knobloocb. ~.
.lOIS.

RUNS - Phillipt, Detroit, 69':
Xnobloocll, Minnooou, 66: - .... Mm·
nuou, 66; E. Manincr:, Sctulc, 61 ;
Mack, MimCID&amp;I, 61; Caner, T0111111o0, 61 ;
And....,., Boltimolo,ll.
RBI - J'Wd.,, !ldmiL 76; MoGwUo,
Otkland, 70; Puckm, Minnaeu, 67; 0 .
Bell, Cbicaao, 66; Caner. Toronto, 6S;
Thomu, OiictJO, 63; Fr)'rn.m, Ddrait.

62.

HITS - P'llckett, Minnetau, Ill;
Bacq•. Cl.BVEl..AND, Ill; Frymm, Detroit, I ll ; E. Mertinez, Seattle, 110;
Mod&lt;, Minoa"" I09; And&lt;non, Bollimore, 108 ; Devcre.un., Baltimore. 108 ;
Molitor, Milwa~ 101.
OOUBU!S - Hall, New Yo&amp; 21; E.
Martinez, Seattle, 21: Joyner, Kanua
Chy. 26; Mmlnaly, No• York, 26:
Yount, MiJw•ukee. 25; Reim•, Tuu,
l4: Jell-. """"Gty, 24.
TJUPLES - U.tach, Mil.wtutee. 6;
. llollimolo, 6; O.V...W , Bolb·

,_, 6&lt; R Alomu, TCIIOnlo,l: L '"""
ton.

Mi.nncaoL12, CLEVELAND I
MilwaW!.cc: 4, Teus I
0\icago 7, Baltimcn 5
Oakland 8, New York 5
Karuu City 6, Dost.on 4
Dcu-oit 3, Se~ ulc 2
C.Womi1 S. Totonto4

{Moon: 10.8), 10:05 p.m.

Dcltoi l (Leit er 6-4) at Clliromh
(lan&amp;slM 9-7~ 10:35 p.ni.

Friday's games
Min nc• oLa (Kru eger 9· 2) at Botton
(Dop&amp;on 6-4), 7:35 p.m.

1cff a.-n, Teau, 23: U.U.. Milwou·
..... 19; 'l'bipo, au..,.. 19: Roonloo,
-...19.

Chiclao. S; Siern, Teau, S; White,

TorMID, 5; R..U., ~lO. 5.
HOMJ! RUNS - Mc:G1ri!o, Ooklond,
21; 0=. DMiL 23; TeAl- lleuuiL
21 ; Ju1n Gonz1lez, Tuu, 20; Cuter, ~&gt;
Toran1o, 20: Balle, CLEVELAND, 19;
Canaoco, Oakland, 19; Fiold.cr, Dewit.
19.
STOLEN BASES - J.jMc:h, MilWIIl•
.... 33; t..&amp;n. ClJ!VEl-'IID, 32; Polonio. California, 3~ ADd...... B.ollimcn,
31; R. Hmdenon, OUland, 31; Raiua,
au..... 30: Knob~udl. ~ . 22.
PITCJUNG (II deci•ion1) - Ju1n
Gu~:m1n , Toronto, 12 -2, .151 , 2.00;
Xrueae:r. Mlnne.Of.a, 9-2, .111, 3.35:

Jamie Munit, Toronto, 12·3, .100,
Appi~r , K1n11~

4.4~:

City , 11 · 3, .716, 2.21:
M'uPtlla, Bahunore, 10-3, .769, 2.4S,
F!snina. S..ale, 11-4, .713, 3.19: Smiley,
MiM-. 104.. 714. 3.20.
STRIKEOUTS - Ju1n Ou:r.man,
Toronto, 131 ; Pereit, New Volt, 121;
Ocmn;, 11o1cM, 125; IC.. Brown, Te.tU,
106; R.. Jobn10n, Se.ule, 104; Appier,
KonouCi&lt;y, IOO; R,..,. r ...._ 9l.
SAVES - Ec:kcn.ley, OUhnd, 31;
Aauilen, MiMuou, 21; Ollon, Bllti!Titft, 23; Mc.i~&amp;mnmy, XAnw City, 23:

A_,..._
B~~ebllll

CJIICAOO WIIITI! SOX - ~
O..Puouo,oodloWoo,IOB~&lt;I

'tVILAND

INDIANS - Op. lloMol Joll Mllll, plldMr, to Colarodo

Sprlnp ot tba PadRe Ceut Ltque.

.. ~ lllo - h d tl Rod Nlchalo,

pildlor r.-ColcndoSort ...
iiiNNisarA 1WINS - Aolivuod
Millo Poalilntlo.lbinl-011, m.nlhe
dloohlod lia. l'lu&lt;lluocl w ....

r,....,,

.... "'hul - . olldlor. Jl&gt;ot.
land ol. the Pecific C'ot11.1Mpo. Sont
~~~· aad J.T. Bruect. oUt·
TEXAS JtANOERS - Aclivued
Donilo ' - pjldl«, -lbo l:Hioy .u..
•bled lilt. Set Daft Cumaa, ~. to
,.,,,.....
aq lll.lhe Amaicai'l Atloc:iatioo.
NOI!oool,..._

CIIICAOO CUBS - $;pol Emilio
lhar\aop. m•lllincw-1Mpe can-

MCDda,

tract.

.•

HOUSTON Amos - lloool Luio
Gon&amp;alc, uudi.ldcr, aa !he 15-day diloblod lioL Rocollod Cllrio oudioldcr, ftam. Tucaon of the P1cilic Cout

'-tOs ANOBLI!S
DODOERS Stnw._,, -older.

Pl.....! ~1
1M lJ..di.J~lia,JIIi

an
t 'we&amp;oJuly

21 .
ST. LOlliS CARDINALS - Plocod
J01e ()Quendo, teCOnd bucman, on the
1,..... dUblod tia1. u.;, AliDco,
LaulMllo
o( the """-ican
~lion.

~- -

FootbaU
N•lllllaiF_I._
BUFFALO BillS - Sianod Koilh
~IPiOUJ. linebKtr, Flank ICma, defen•ivo liDeman; Mall Duby and Kurt
Schaal. aafet.l01; N1to 1\amer and Vmoc
Murow,lipt lOW; Uaoonl Humpluico,
....- . O W Wollb ond 8"'7 Raoe,
wide real*; IDd Man. Rod&amp;•. tfliJ\a"boclt.

.

CINCINNATI BENOAUl - Sianod

auu BUI'III, dcl..a.,.a.

DAllA.! COWBOYS - Sipd 011'·
.., l.owio,
·
DENVER
BRONCOS
- Si,ncd
T0111ra1 MacWo.a. CfUINibact.. 10 a ouryear contnc:t, and Oou&amp; Widell, FJIII.
DETROIT LIONS - SiJncd Jeff
Campbell, wide receiver, Toby Ca.aon,

linebtcker; 1nd 8111 M.i1ehell, affemive
....... rd .

GREEN BAY PACKERS - Siancd
Robc:rl. Brook&amp;, wide recci.wer, and Edaar
Bennett, NMinl back. Apoed \0 Ulllll
with Jerry Holmca, comat.ck.

HOUSTON Oll..ERS - Sipd Morio

Bailey, wide receiver.

INDIANAPOlS COLTS - Si..,..t
Ranold Hwnpluey, ""'"""bod&lt;.

Riverfront Stadium, in June,
Cincinnali swept the series 3-0. But
while Atlanta has had a stellar July,
the Reds sputtered.
The disparity caught up with
Cincinnati on Wednesday, when
the Braves won their lith consecu·
tive game, beating St.Louis 2-0,
and Maddux pitched his 38th
career complete-game shutout, a
si~ · hitter. to lower his ERA to
2.20, second·best among NL
staners.
The result? Atlanta on top by
one-half game.
"It's hard to win when you're
not scoring runs." said Reds manager Lou Piniella, who had very lit·
tie else to say.
In two games, the Reds had a
to!al of 10 hits and were shut out
twice, their firsl back-to-back
shutouts since last Aug. 10-11 in
San Diego.
And with the uading deadline
just eight days away, Maddux who turned down a $28 million
contract laSl week - showed why
he might be the best player avail·
able for the pennant race.
Ironically, the Reds are one of
the teams mentioned in Maddux
uade ralks .
Maddux (12-8) said be got the
Reds on "a little bit of everything."
"I made some good J?il£hes and
I got away with some pitches," he
said. "Nothing was outstanding,
but everything was there,"
What about Lefebvre's comment?
"That's a nice compliment.
There are a lot of good puchers in
the league,' ' Maddux said.
He declined to talk about contracts or trade prospects, and said
he doesn't keep track of statistics.

Meigs beats WeUston
in AL district tourney
Terry McGuire and Jeremy
Phalin combined to strike out 19
batters to lead Meigs to a 9-4 win
over Wellston in Eighth District
American Legion Tournament
action Wednesday night at
Gloust.er.
The game was not completed
until nearly I a.m. today and was
played in a dense fog . Meigs
scored three runs in the sixth inning
to overcome a 3·2 defiCit thanks to
some shoddy play from WeUston
and RBI singles by Mike Vance
and Micah Bunch.
Meigs, 2·1 in the tournament
and 6-19 overall, will be back in
action today at around 8:00 p.m. at
the Glouster Field to play either
Athens or Gallipolis. Those two
teams will meet at Glouster today
at 5:30p.m.
No other details on the game
were available at press time

"Complete.games, ERA, strike·
outs - they don't mean a lot lo
me," Maddux said. "A five-inning
win feels better than a nine-inning

"With 13 bits, I really had a
good feeling about our offense
tonight," Lefebvre said.
The Cubs had lost 12 of 16
loss."
coming into Cincinnati and trail
Maddux has been used 10 pitch- Pittsburgh by 7 1/2 games in the
ing with inconsistent SUPJlOI:!. The ' NL East, but have started tbe secCubs have been shut out m five of ond half of the season with a joiL
his slarts, and have scored only five
"We fed that for us, the lime is
runs in his eight losses.
now," Lefebvre said. "We have to
"We haven't been scoring too start winning now."
many runs." said Doug Dascenzo,
In other action, ·Ailanta blanked
who drove in two with a single and St. Louis 2-0, Philadelphia beat
a sacrifice fly. "The last two days San Diego 4-0, New Yen defeated
we didn't score many runs, but it Los Angeles 7-5, San .Francisco
was just enough."
defeated Montreal4-l and Pitts·
Thefll'SttwoChicagorunscame b~ stopped Houston 10.7 in 13
off Greg Swindell (9·3), who had innmgs.
won six straighL In the fourth, DasBrates 2, Canlluls 0
cenzo dropped a flare just out of
Dust off the tomahawks and
Barry Larkin's reach in short left stretch outlhose vocal chords.
field to drive in one, and in the
The Braves are back in first
sixth he lofted a sacrifice fly to place - and cho!ming and chant·
center to drive in tbe other.
mg can't be far behind.
"I knew I hadn't been doing a
Atlanta won its lith straight
very good job this year," said Das- game and John Smoltz extended
cenzo, who went into the game his scoreless inning streak to 27 as
with only eight RB!s. "It was nice the Braves beat tbe SL Louis Canfi.
to get a couple."
na1s 2-0 Wednesday.
.. In the eighth, Kal Daniels dou"This is a bi~ win because we
bled in a run·off Scotl Ruskin.
go .back home m fitst place and
Maddux retired the first eight there's going to be a aazy Atlanta
batters he faced until Swindell beat crowd waiting for us the first
out an infield hit in the third. Bip - game," Smoltz said after working
Roberts followed with a double, 8 1/3 innings, allowing seven hits
but Swindell was held at third and striking out ftve.
the Reds ha¥e two players on the -.;. Combined with Cincinnati's 3-0
disabled list from home plate colli· loss to Chicago, tbe Braves moved
sions - and was left there when into ftrst place for the first time
Dave Martinez bounced oul
, I since April 10. The Reds dropped
The Reds also missed on scor- out of the NL West lead for the
ing opponunities in the sixth and
(See NL on Page 5)
seventh.

·'

....

""

:""fourth

1

CY
TOPICS

I
i NL games...
.
1
I

BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

IIi flfSIIime since June I.

his sixth consecutive decision and .
Kent Me!tker got tbe final two . Bobby BOnilla hom.ered.
•
·
outs for his fourth save and extendCone (11-4) allowed five runs
ed bis sCon:less inning streak to 21
and eight hits in six-plus innings,
. . 713 over 19·games.
struck out 10 and ·walked five.
Sid Bream drove in both runs
Orel Hershiser (7·9) lost his
I with a home run in the second and third straight stan.
C a sacrifice fly in the seventh off · With the score tied at 4 in the
i!i "-·~ ou
(6-5)
sixth, the Mets went ahead on
,Pi.dreso
VIIUil
pinch-hiiter Daryl Boston's sacri.
4
In Philadelphia, cun Schilling fice fly 'ind Howard Johnson:s
. pioohed his third ahutout of the sea- two-run single.
•
dD
DauiiOn h·
GlaDIS 4, Expos 1
• son Ill arren
11 a twoIn Mdntreal, Bill Swift scattered
runS':;g (8~ allowed five hits, seven hits over 6 2{3 innings and
struck out eight and wallc.ed none i'l Mall Williams hit a two-run homer. ·
his fourth complete game.
Swift (8·2), who started the seaAndy Benes (7-9) worked seven son 6-0, won for only the second
innings, givin' up six hits. He has time in his last nine starts. Chris ·
• lost four of his lasl five decisions. Nahholz (6-7) took the·loss.
John Kruk went2 for 4 to raise his
Greg Colbrunn hit his first
...;....Jeadin
major league home run in the ninth
National '-~
g average to 10 account for the Expos' only run.
.353.
Pirates Astros 7
Dodgers 5
David Cone
&lt;13

;

Astudy at HII'VIU'd rouad tbol mea 5'7" or oborter bYe o " ,_.
ceat puler rill&lt; or bellrlotlack !boa ta...e 6'1" or IIIIer.

• •••

"'I

R-n:ben ottiN Uahenlty ~ Mk:Wgoo teparllbot Retbo·A, lllo
preocrlptloa cnam !bot ..... wriDkleo, Is also etrediYe Ia oleolrlq lllo
oge opoe. bowa ao "ll..r• IJIIIII.

• •••

"Sua badce" !bot cbaapo ....... Ia the p.-ce or ......., .... "lanated by 1 Soa Diego rompo1ay. w......., are .wii'JIId to pi 0111 ~ lllo
IUD at dllfeftlll color CbiiiiCeo, depeltdJq OD lkbJ types.

••••

Recutar aerclse -auto protece aplllllcoloa aacer, ~to
otudleo at Hanan! School or Public Healtb aDd Uahenity ~ Sottlllen
Calllontla Medical School. II may prota:t ogollllloi!Nr caacen, too.

.. .
'

''

rhlm:s

=

Remem!Nr Ibis: w•ea womea who were dellcleal Ia lroD ud .U.
were glfta oupplemenls,lhelr memory IJCGI'eSitaprooed Ia o11111dJ II lite
Ualvenlly ·or Tuu. The ,....rcbero 1101ed belt noulll wlleo . _
took oae mlaeral or the other; both oupple•ull lo&amp;•tber wen ._
etredl...

&lt;ContinuedfromPage4)

..

Chicl•

r......

cs....

New Yotll: (Youn1 2·2 ) It Seattle

(PiollcrD-0),10:35 p.m.
.
.
Detroit (Rita 2-4) at Cahfom11
(J!lylmn 3-4~ 10:35 p.m.

Major league leaders
Nallotllll Leuue

BA'M'INO - lt.rut, fllilldeJphia ,
.353; VaaSiyt., PhttbuJh, .346;
. ·shcl!ieW, Son Die.,, .331; Owym, Son

- Di.... .321: MAliill, s.. Di~•. .3ll:
Cblaop• .314: a...o~~. """""'Jb.

a-

• .311

. lUNS - Bia;o, Houatea, 61 ;
• Hollial, Phil1dtlphll, 60; O.St.leld•,
M......U. n :
w......~ l9:

Ori•-·

· s-.~B; Kn*.Pbib+~·

=f·

' ll: a..,..,.. Di-.ll.
: Q( - Sbtffi•1d, Strt Diefo• 64;
·DINlloft, PIUltctelpiUI, 63; McGriff, San
•Dioao,
Now Ybllt, 61 : L.

H; ..... Pla~ P,
.,. 56i V~An 'a
!J5.
• JDTi - V..Sl)'t.. l'llulloop. 111:
• S!MIIIoW, S. Dlop, 116; Owjlol. loa

Wai:•,

at

•.. ~::.!'6:Adllla.
ErU. PbU•4•t~·· m:
ll:t DrP .. Moa·
: 111111, nO; DuM~e.ftd' •

v ,, u:it

"

DOIJBIJIS - - · Wkhlp'llia,
. ' :II; VuSirk' Pl ........ 26: Lo,IUI!d,
&lt;

StA.-il, 15; MumJ• Nn York, 23: ·
~ on..... Moatzwl. n : w. am ,

s.n

1IWIIJ,
11W4G,
•IIW30

.,....

.

supplements, rome to. • •

as=..
Ron ltd tt.nnilg, R.llll.
Mon. trw SM. 1 :00 1.m . 10 1:00 p.m.
Sundl¥ 10:00 1.m. to 4:00 II-"'· ,

PlllSCRIPTIONS
E. Mein

Friendty Strvicl

'" · 9UZ811
PoM•oy. OH

Op . . ~..

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS - Sianed
Pcto ShoRI, o!Ttn~lve uci.le. R.elcued
IC.cvin Allen, tlc:i.lo.
LOS ANG ELES RAMS - Waived

Neal Fort, offniwe tackle; TCiftltC!e 8..-.
bet, wide rccci.va-; a.ca Ridwd, NMina
bod&lt;,
fNp.lll'ud.
MINNESOTA VIKlNOS - Rdo:uod
Joey Browner, Kfety.

""'a...

NEW YORK GlANI'S - Sipod But
O.tea, c:an.er, to alltn.year cmncL
PHI!AOEl.PiliA EAGW - Sipd
Cocil Gny, offcnalvc lineman, to 1 ooe-

-377
....
,.. •..
-"-

yar canb'ICI..

SAN DIEGO CIAROERS - A..,..t
to lemu with Le&amp;lic O'Neal, doi'CMive

end; and Henry RoUina, lincblckcr; on
one-year eonlrlttl, •nd Cou.rtJMy Hall,
cern.cr, on • tw~yw conti'ICl.

Umlt2

$11ff

p.m.

Kansu City (Aquino 0-1) •t Q.EVE.
LAND (Scudder ~I), 7:3! p.m.
(Hibbud 7-') at Milwlllkoe
(J!Id1od l:o), loOl pm.
CWollll-4J" Oo1dond
II\ 7-S). 10:05 p.m.

99!.

'-"--"-==-=

Remember this, too! Wbea your doctor recommeads aotrltloul .

· t c:u1 (llurnl 2-2) ll 81ltimon
(Rhod" 1·0). Bl

•

Cundiff endCd lhe Mason rally by as the onl~ squads among the six
vs. Pomeroy KFC, 6 p.m.; Bidwell
·
fifth on a wild pitch, Bradbury · Hastlers, 7:30p.m.
OVP StaiTWrlter
striking OUl It took Slanley three . receiying first-round byes not to
Friday- Nelsonville Yankees No. I vs. Cheshire, 7 :~0 p.m.
went kl work on G.etn in die rop
Wednesday, !light's Kyger pil£hes to set Cundiff this time, as saybye-byesosoon.
'of the sixth. Nate Itemby got a
Cr~ Little League Tournament opposed to the four he needed in
Brian Bradbury, the Bobcats'
""""""*"~
walk. but after Jason Massie struck
doubleheader, played at the Kyger the third.
pitcher, tossed a one-hitter out, Hemby was caaght . ~ff fust '
Creek Employ¢es Club field, saw
Cundiff, VFW's starting pil£her (Manbew White beat OQllhe throw base by Drummond dunng Matt
Bidwell No. 1 aM Cheshire notch who walked five in a complete· to first froni shortstop Billy Cre· Preston's at-bat. The relay from
victories t)lat concluded second· game:effort. settled down by retir· means on .a routine grounder for an Drummond to fust sacker Shawn •
tound play and completed the ing tbe side in order in the fourth infield single in the fiftl\) while Johnson to Cremean, at second
qllarlerfinal prC-game portraiL
and fifth. Four of his seven strike- raclring up 13 strikeouts and giving nailed Hemby before Preston
· Bidwell No. l-7
outs came in those innings. which up eishi walks. With some help strock out swinging to end the
•
Mason VFW 6
· proved instruments! in keeping ru,s from his infielders, no Green hitter game.
Mason VFW, the sole remain- · team in·contenlion.
got past second in the flfSitwo in·
Preston, Gn:en 's stlrtcr and los·
ing Mason County team in the
In the Mason fifth, Stanley Dings.
ing pitcher, struck out six and
191D'J18Ment enll;ring the night's ac· · wallred Varian and BJ. Davis and
With a double from Bryan walked two in three innings.
lion, took some lime to get its of· befCKC Allen siuts c:Owd co~ 10 Dr~mmond as a catalyst for the ·Lewis, who pitched the entire
feilse going,~ the veteran-span- me plate, the Pita~ .brainlrust"got, . B()bc~ts' third-inning . rally, fourth and two batters in tbe fifth
sored team put one on in the first Stanley and third baseman C.J. Cheshli'C got three more h1ts, hus· . without getting an out, struck out
and twO one in the second before Johnson to trade places. Johnson tied p~enty on grounders a~d one and walked one. White, who
scoring on a throwing error. by two-strike pitch 10 Swts resulted cashed m on two errors to score 11S finish¢, whiffed two and wallred
catcber Josh Saunders in a third in- in a flare single 10 right field that fitst four runs to get ahead and stay one.
nins marked a seat-of-the-pants scored Varian, put Davis on the there..
,
The Bobcats' hitters were Cre·
out play b;y BidweU hurler Nathan launch pad 81 ihird·8nd saw Staals
After Joe Walk~ struck out to means (2·3), DJ. Fife (1-1). Drum·
Stanley (nine Ks, six walks), go to second base on the return start t~e Green fifth, Cremeans mond (1·2, double), Trevor Kerns
whose throw from his backside fol~ throw rrom the outfield.
fu~ h,1s ti!IDw PI!S' ftrst base on
{1-2) and Bradbury (1·3).
lowinJ his fielding a slow roller 10
But Cameron Smith, VFW' s White s. hll (Whue ~o~ld have
GliDe notes- The 12-year-old
the third base side of the mound by other left-handed hitter, grounded beaten die ~w even. if 1t was on Drummond, whose 13th birthday
No. 9 hitter Nick Northup got him out to thil:d, after which the run· target), allo~ms. Wh1te .to get ~o isn't coming until October, is fol·
by half a step for the first oul.
prevention throw to tbe plate was seco~~· A wild p1tch d~g Cll;is lowing in the footsteps of his older
By then, Bidwell was ahead 2· relayed to third and almost nailed Lew1s al-bat got White to-th1~d sister, Tonya Drummond. As a
1, and if Stanley hadn't claimed Davis. Tony 4vender struck out ahead of catch~r Drummond s · freshman on Kyger Creek's soft·
cleanup ~itter Keith C4ndiff- and VanMeter lined out to second throw. After Lew1s struCk out, ere- ball team in the 1990 season,
one of two left-handed sticks in the to snuff the raUy.
· means nulc!e ~ off-rarget throw on Tonya was a backup catch~r to
VFW lineup - on suites with
Johnson returned to tbe hiD in Andrew N1ben s grounder to short. then-senior Bobbie Jean Shaver
Josh Jeffers in the firing chamber the sixth to fan Roger Wood and which allowed White to score and before moving to third base last
.at third following Jeremy Van- induce Jeffers 10 hit a soft popup to N1ben to fC!!Ch fust..
season.
Met.er's run, lhe game would have first baseman Joey James before
Aftc:r N1_ben l:fl:lVed 81 second lnDiDg totals
been tied.
endinf,!':Jame with a one-hop on a.• wild ~MI£h dunng Seth Fergu- GreenNo.l... ....OOO 020 _..: 2·1·3
ofTCundifrs bat.
son .s at·bat, Ferguson beat out an Cheshire.:..........004 llx- 6-6-3
But Bidwell, niilking its two comeENDS INNING - Bidwell No. l's Cbad HoUanbaugb erounds:
hits - an RBI single by Carl DeJohnson fanned two and walked off·t~qet thro~ from Drummond
, WP- Bradbury
this
Keith CundiiT pitch to sbortstop, where Masoa VFW sbortstop
will that scored Ben Haney and an none to collect the save.
to·fll'SI, and N1!'ett SJl!Ulted h~me
LP-Pres10n
Josll
Jeffers rll'ed tO tbird base on the r~elder's choice to retire Nick
RBI double by Sarah Ward that ·
Bidwell's hitters were Ward (I· from second Without mterrupuon.
Rocchi
and get out or the first inning or Wednesday night's Kyger
Future acllon
scored Dewitt- and capitslizing 2, double), Dewitt (1-2), Johnson But Joey S.~ders ended the Green
Creek
Little
League Tournament game near Cheshire. But Bidwell,
on Mason's three walks and two (1·3 double) and Nick Rocchi (1· raUy by striking OUL
Tonl~ht _.. Rutland Reds vs.
whieb bad scored two nans by this point, held off Mason to win 7-6: ·
errors, responded with five runs in 3). Mason's hitters were Varian (2·
!"Jter Cheshire.pi~ed I!P anoth· Gallipolis Hills Indians, 6 p.m.;
(OVP pboto by G. Spencer Osborne)
its half of the third to take a 7-1 2), VanMeter (2-4), Davis, Staats er msUf8lll)e run m liS half of the Middlepon Cardinals vs. Racine
lead.
(both 1·2), Jeffers and Wood (bolh
1f one uses hindsi~ht, one could 1·3).
say that had Mason s J.R. Varian IDDiDI totals
·
JDtten the hit he' had in the fourth Mason VFW......OOl 410..._ 6-8-3
m the third had Cundiff reached
Bidwell No. 1...205 OOx ...:.. 7-5·2
base in lhat frame, things would
WP - Stanley (C. Johnson
have been quite different. As it save)
was, Varian started off the Mason
LP -Cundiff
with a flare into right field
for a single, and VFW was on its
Cbesbire 6, Green No. 1·2 .
way . Three more hits and two
The Cheshire Bobcats, the last
walks, combined with plenty of of the'26 teams to see aclion in the
hustling, cut Bidwell's lead to 7-5. . diamondfest, knocked off Green
But for the second straight inning, No. 1 to join. the,Racine Hustlers

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE

Thursday, July 23, 1992

By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNA Tl' (AP) - Greg
Maddux did somethins Atlanta's
vaunted pil£hing staff couldn't do.
He shut out lhe Reds and knecked
them out of first place in the
National League West for the fitst
lime since June 1.
" He is the best pitcher in the
league right now," Cubs manager
Jim Lefebvre said after Maddux
beat Cincinnati 3-0 Wednesday
night. "Everytime he goes out
there you get the feelinj! he's going
to win. It's a whole different atli·

'f!le D~Uy sentinel-Page-S,

I

~Brc.;;IrN~:·rcheshire finish diamondfest's second round

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

••

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~P!9! 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 23, 1992

~Olympics not quite whole in spite of no national boycotts
; . · By LARRY McSilANE
·; · BARCELONA, Spain (AP) · Nobody's boyconing, yet these
~Slimmer Games ate not quite
:;whole.
•: · N9 anthem wiU play and no flag
:-will fly for war-torn Yugoslavia,
''which bOwed to pressure from the
~ United Nations and agreed 10 com;pete only in individual evenlil and
--not as ateam.
'
: Although many of the natidn's
: 11~ athletes won't. 1» able to par·
·IICipate, International Olympic
:committee president Juan Antonio
•Samaranch said half a team was
: better than none.
: "I am happy. Very happy? No.
:H~ppy," he said Wednesday. "I
.think 65 percent of the team will be
·:

in Barcelona."
out on the Barcdona Games.
Those who do go will niake
When the Gamea begin Satur·
Olympic history since this wiU be day, it will rpm the llnt lime since
the first time Since 1972 tbat ath- 1972 when politics dida'tleave at
letes from all major countries are least one country's athletes sitting
present at the Games.
at home.
.
, ,
"ll's a victory," Samaranch
In 1976, tJ!e African nations
said. "Now we will say we will pulled out, a move Jimmy Carter
have universal Games."
dupli~ted four y~ later with the
,The agreement requires the for- Amencan team. The .Soviets and
mal approval today of the roc.
their allies did the same in 1984;
Among the victims of the U.N. the Cubans never left the island in
pia~: the men's w~ter polo team, 1988,
.
wh1ch IS the defending gold-medal
The South Africans are here for
winner.
the fust time in 32 years - they
The ij30Ctions earlier eliminated had been banned because of the
the once-vowerful men's basketball nati~n's apartheid policy - but
team, whiCh was already gutled by they re not very ha~y. The leaJil
the secession of Croatia Los A,nge- div~ded along rac1allines over
les Lakers star Vlade D1vac missed addmg two athletes to the ~m;

~Maddox signs $4.4 million

By Tbe Associated Press
Tommy Maddox came in from
: the draft ... and Joey Browner is out
·: in the cold.
·; Maddox, the Denver Broncos'
~top draft choice who is considered
;.their quarterback of the future,
•signed a $4.4 million contract on
; Wednesday.
• "I'm behind, so I've just got to
: get in there and catch up," said
:Maddox, who arrived in training
· .camp Wednesday but did not par~1icipate in a scrimmage Wednesday
:night "I've been going crazY. You
~~atch the news and you see every,.

-·

Sports shorts

: : TORONTO (AP) - Wimble·
: don champion Andre Agassi and
::J ohn McEnroe continued to make
·:quick work of their opponents in
:-the Player's International.
.(. .
'\

body up here and you realize
you're supposed 10 be here, too.
"This is a buSiness, but you're
still here to play football, and that's
whal I can't wait to do. Now that
I'm fmally here, I'm very happy."
The 20-year-old Maddox was
the rust player in Pac-10 history to
pass for 5,000 yards by the end of
his sophomore year. But the Broncos say they have no intention of
rushing the UCLA star into the
lineup. John Elway is 32 and,
despite off-season shoulder
surgery, has shown no signs of
releasing his grip on the starting
Agassi, seeded second, beat
Greg Rusedslci of Canada 6-4, 6-1
to reach the quarterfinals. McEnroe, seeded fifth, routed fellow
American Jonathan Stark 6-0, 6-1.

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they opted to participate without
theu 1181ional flag or anthem.
."The majority of the people do
not have loyalty to the. national
an.them ... or the flag," explained
team spokesman Mluleld Gearge,
speaking of the country's black
majaity. ·
One athlete who i,s definitely
showing up, American.long jumper
Mike Powell, is coming to the
Catalan region convinced a 30-foot
jump_can be had .In his last warmup th1s week, he JUmped 29 feet, 6
inches- a wind-aided world best
that won't count
"This is the best place in the
world for jumping. I did the longest
jump in history and I feel I can go
farther in Barcelona," Powell said
,

befae leaving ltaly for Sp~irt
His major compel Ilion will
come from Carl Lewis, who
announced a full recovery from the
viral infection which helped keep
him off the Olympic sprinl teams
"I'm feeling stronger·.:. I will
be 100 percent at Barcelona,"
promised Lewis, one of 36 athletes
at the Games trying 10 repeat as
gold medalists in the same event.
Included are two seeking to
make Olympic history, shot putter
Udo. Beyer of Germs:;: and bam·
mer-throwing Yury
ydch of the
Unified Team. Both won the gold
in 19?6, and a victory by either or
both m Barcelona would mal:e fQr
the ru:st gold medal winner or winners m the same event 16 years
apan.

The American baskejball Dleam
Team played ililtoughest game yet
- a S-on-S scrimmage which
ended with 'Michael Jordan's leaJil
beating Magic Johnson &amp; Co. 4036.
'
Jordan, speaking after the closed
session, acbowledged fans from
around the world might never see a
game that good in Barcelona. .
"All of us would love 10 see us
challenged one lime," 'the Chicago
Bulls guard s~id. "I don't thi~lc
you 'II see thiS team play to Its
potential unless it's challenged.
"A lot of us in the regular season can raise our games when a
game is cloae, but we may not ever
see that happen. Ther~ may not
ever be a game except m the fli'St

half."

contract as Broncos' backup q~J:arlerback ·

job anrt"ne soon.
"I m a competitor and I'm
going to be Qut there fighting (for
playing time)," Matl&lt;lox said. "I
want 10 play as much as possible as
soon as possible. .But I. understand
the situation."
Meanwhile, Browner failed to
pass his physical and was cut by
the Vikings, swnning the All-Pro
safety's teammates and signaling
that new coach Dennis Green is
still willing to dump older, wellpaid players.
The 32-year-old Browner, who
had been scheduled to be paid
about $1 rniUion this year under a
non-guaranteed contract, followed
Herschel Wallcer, Keith Millard
and Wade Wilson out the door.
"Whenever you have a new
coaching staff, there are going 10
be a lot of personnel changes,"

player representative Steve Jordan
said. "There are going to be a few
more before all is said and done.''
Browner is a six-lime Pro Bowl
participant and three-time All-Pro
who led the Vikings in interceptions three times and in tackles
twice during his eight-year career.
Dolphins .
Miami quarterback Dan Marino
won't play in the Dolphins' Family
Day scrimmage on Saturday so he
can rest his scarred left knee.
Nothing is wrong with Marino,
who had knee surgery for the fifth
time Dec. 6, coach Don Shula said
Wednesday.
"This is strictly pn:cautionary,"
Shulasaid.
Oilers
Wanen Moon missed all but the
final 30 minutes of the morning
workout as part of coach Jack

Pardee's plan to keep his quarter· end Leslie O'Neal agreed 10 a oneback fresh for the upcoming exhi- year deal on Wednesday.
Center Co111'1!1ey Hall agreed 10
bition season and beyond.
a
two-year
deal and linebacker
Moon will rake off the morning
Henry
KoUing
10 a one-year conworkout every other day during
trac~
leaving
10
veterans unsigned.
two-a-days 10 keep his arm fresh.
Rams
Patriots
Running back Bobby Delpino,
New England signed thirdround draft pick Kevin Turner, a in the fmal year of a contract w&lt;ril
running back from Alabama, and $325,000 this season, was a sur·
fourth-round draft choice Darren prise no-show when the Rams' vet·
Anderson, a cornerback from Tole- erans took the field Wednesday at
UC Irvine.
do.
Delpino had said during miniCowboys
camp
he was unhappy with his con·
Cornerback Garry Lewis ended
his holdout by signing on Wednes- tract and wanted more respect for
day. The Cowboys obtained Lewis, what he accomplished in 1991. Bqt
a three-year veteran, in an off-sea- he also said he would not be a
son trade with the Los Angeles holdout
"I have not talked to him,"
Raiders for a seventh-round draft
coach
Chuck Knox said "I under·
pick.
stand
our
people are talking 10 him
Chargers
or
his
agent."
Two-time Pro Bowl defensive
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The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

~~~X. P.?.?E ~.?~!l!~i~~. Y~l~~r,~~!~l~. dQ~rug-borne AIDS

. (AP)- Many countries i~ Asi~.

Afnca and South Amenca are
thre~tened w1th an explosion in
herom use that would spread AIDS
throug~out_ some of the world's
poorest nations, a new analysis
conclud7s.
. Herom abusers were among the
first people. fou~d 10 have AIDS
when the ep1dem1c was recognized
a ,decade ago in the United States.
Smce l~e . mld·1980s, the needles
used to IDJCCI the drug have carried
AIDS wuh astonishing speed

land.
.
.
Dr. Gerry V. Sumson, head of
the drug research center at Charing
Cross ~nd Westminster Medical
Sch~l m London, said Wednesday
!IJat mtra~enous heroin u.se tx;gan
m. the m1~, 1980s m Sn Lanka, .
VIetnam,. soutljcrn China, Laos and
. Nepal.
.
·
· "The new diffusion of injecting
is occurring in countries which are,
mosdy ~and are either in drugPfOdQcmg areas or along drug
transshipment routes," he said. "In

diffusion of inje~ting h~s been followed by major outbreaks of HIV
infection."
HIV, the AIDS virus, grows in
blood. Heroin users often share
n~es that are tainted with blood.
·ThiS allows I he virus to spread
quicldy from person to person.
Slimson described the most likely spread of intravenous drug abuse
- and almost certainly AIDS as
well- at the eighth International
Conference on AIDS.
He based his predictions largely

production areas and shipping ~t10n,l!nt some IRJCCtmg has
routes. He said his work shOws:
n seen m olombla.
. .
-Dru in "cctin is sliD rare in
HIV spreads wah bhndmg
Africa. B~t ~ppy'~wing is now w_e~r 8:J'~0 !l drug InJectors. In
reported in Benin and Cameroon.
alan • o.r mstance, ~IV was
Heroin is becoming popular in r~ nouc~ among users m 1987,
Nigeria, although few users there ~n n~w ~~u~ half of them are
inject the drug.
oug tiO . 10 ccted.
- Drug injecting will probably
Herom I~JCctmg became comspread soon in Bangladesh Laos, mon m Manlpur 10 northeast India
10 the 1980s. IDV ~~ing ~gan
Vietnam and Cambodia. '
-In South America, cocaine m 1986, an_d the flfStmfecuons
cartels in Colombia and Venezuela were foun~ m September 1989. By
are experimenting with heroin pro- the followmg June, about half the
herom users had the VllllS.
•
"The public health task wiU be
0
·
to find the balance" between get-

drome is risin.g quic.kly, lll;lgely
~use of ~e mcreasmg availabil·
1tyofexpens1venew drugs.
In 1989, the lifetime cost of
treatment was $S7,000. Tha,t rose
to $7S,OOO in 1990~ $85,000 last
year and $102,000 this year.
By comparison, Americans
spend $20,000 for treatment of
lung cancer, $52,000 for breast
c~ncer and $17S,OOO for kidney .
failure ..
A smgle year's treatment of a
U.S. AIDS patient costs $38,000,
while caring for someone who is
infected with the AIDS virus but
not yet sick costs $6 000 largely

war chest of $4,082,280.

Dr. Daniel Tarantola of the Har·
vard School of Public Health esti·
mated that AIDS spending world·
wide this year wiU 10181$3.5 billion .
to treat the disease $14 billion to
prevent it and si 7 billion for
research.
·

.F
emale candzdates ratsmg mzllwns ::::r,:;..~-:~.:: :::.=·m ........
•

~ ASHINGTON (AP) '""' I IIi·

no1s De-:nocrat Carol Moseley
B~a~n ra~sed an impressive $1.6
mllhon smce .March for her U.S.
Senate campaign and a number of
other female candidates weren't far
behind, election records show.
Braun, the Cook County
reco~er of deeds who upset twoterm meum bent Sen. Alan Dixon lin
the,. March 17 primary, had
S5.22,697.at the end.of the March
fllmg_ penod, a~g 10 Federal
ElecuonCommiSsiondocuments.
Three months later, Braun's war
chest totaled $2,126,448 in individ·
ual and r,x&gt;liticalaction committee
conlribunons.
·
Close behind was rorrner San
Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein
who raised $1.4 million over th~
same period for a total $4,467,516
in her bid for California Republican
Sen. John Seymour's seaL
Pennsylvania activist Lynn
Yeakel, who captured the Democ~tic nomination in April and the
nght to oppose Republican Sen.
Arlen Specter, has raised $1.1 mil·
lion since March for a campaign
fundof$1,444,959.
· " It lays fQ rest once and for all
the belief that women can't raise
money," said Jane Danowitz executive director of the bipa~tisan
Women's Campaign Fund. .
This election year is widely
viewed as the Year of the Woman
in politics as a record number of
female candidates set their sights
on U.S. Senate and House seats.
Seven women, six of them
Democrats,_already have won Sen-

·

ate pnmanes nauonw1de .and. S8
;omen have won Ho~ ~anes.
ra~, Yeak~l and Femst7m are
considered solid contenders m toss-

up race~.
Both the House and Senate are
expected to have a record number
of women when the 103rd
Congress convenes next year.
Women now hold 28 House seats
and two Senate sealS.
~
reas_on fo~ the number .of
e ~candidates IS~. same ranonale g~venforf!D'!d·tlllsmgsucceif:
the Senate JudtCI!UY 0Jmmittee s
treatment of Anua H1ll and her
cha~ges of sexual harassment
agatnst Supreme Court Justice
a~nce Tho~. .
.
.
Every p1ece of mail, there's
always a reference to Hill-Thomas.
The image is still very clear,"
Danowllz S81d.
·
.The head of the Women's Campa1gn Fund expressed surprise at
some of the fu!'d-raising trends.
Yeakel's camlla1gn, for example, is
send~g donauon ~quests 10 people
wh~ ve never ~1vcn before, and
getung contnbuuons.
''She:s making money off of
pr~~pecung : ... ~t's unprecedent·
ed, Danow1tz S81d.
Braun's opponent, anomey and
former Bush administration official
Rich Williamson, has more than
doubled his campaign fund since
Marclr, from $495,470 to
$I. ,014,967, but still trails the
Democratic candidate.
Seymour, who was appointed by
California Gov. Pete Wilson to fill ·

J1;e

•

Sbmson srud.
In ano~r presentation at the
meeting Wednesday, Fred
HeUmger of th~.U.S. Agency for
Health Care POhcy and Research
said the cost of treating people with
.acquired immune deficiency syn-

Her opponent, Bruce Herschensohn, a television commentator and
a 1986 Senate candidate, has
increased his fund from $2 oos 878
10 $3 510 S58
' '
In'tow'a, siate Sen. Jean LloydJones won the Democratic nomination but faces an uphill fight
against Republican incumbent Sen
Charles Grassley
·
Lloyd-Jones· has doubled her
fund-raising account, but still on I
has $50,873 to Grassley·~
$1,242 330
' ·

os .

•

Super
July Sale!

500·

ONE UCK SHOES...........

BERKLINE. 25%

ALL PURSES•••• ~··········

Rec&amp;ners,.Sofas, Loveseats

YJ PRICE

•LLOYD/FLANDERS
Summer Furniture

CLEAUNCE · PRICES

Names in the news ...
HYANNIS PORT, Mass. (AP)
- Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy got a
birthday bouquet containing a rose
for each year of her life - which
made for a big bunch, since she
turned 102.
.
matriarch of the Kennedy
clan celebrated her 'birthday quietly
at home Wednesday. Her son, Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D·Mass.,
sent the flowers, said Melody
Miller, a family spokeswoman. ·
Mrs. Kennedy. who is in frail
health after a series of strokes,
rarely appears in public.
Relatives will celebrate her
birthday over the weekend with a
private party at the family compound.
On Friday, the senator will dedicate a plaque in Boston's Dorchester section, where Mrs. Kennedy,
daughter of a former Boston
mayor,lived as a teen-ager.

•

the remrunder of Wilson's Senate
term, had $3,719,425 on band at
the end of March and increased that
amount 10 $4,218,195 by the end of
June.
S~ter, the two-term incumbent
who s grilling of Hill persuaded
Yeakel10 enter the~· haso~~!&amp;need h!s oppon7nt m fund nusmg,
mcreasmg hiS fund from
$3,194,951 to $4,602,297.
~CP· Ba_rbara Boxer, the Democran.c no~mee for the seat held by
Cahforma Sen. Alan Cranston,
ra1sed JUSt over $44,000 but has a

•SERTA &amp;SPRING-AIR
BEDDING S.ALE
•SYLVANIA COLOR
TELEVISION;. SAU

Gene Hackman, Morgan Freeman
and Richard Harris.
MONTE CARLO, Monaco
If Magic Johnson returns
to pro basketball after the
Olympics; it will be in different
shoes than those he wore with the
Los Angeles Lakm.
Johnson said Wednesday he is
ending a 12-year association with ·
Converse - not because of his
infection with the AIDS virus, but
because he has long believed thai
Converse has not made good use of
its roster of stars.
(AP) -

ONE TABLE HANDBAGS••• $5,~0
ONE SECTION
$
CONNIE SHOES............

10

fJ'Ne

·SHOE PLACE

Anderson's
DOWNTOWN POM £ROY
992·3671

AC Brand
Spark Plug

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Ben
Vereen has been released from a
hospital, six weeks after being run
down on a dark highway.
The 45-ycar-old entertainer,
who suffered head and internal
injuries and a broken leg, will
undergo further rehabilitation on
the East Coast, his publicist, Paul
Baker, said Wednesday.
Baker said it is too early 10 say
whether Vereen will resume performing. The actor and dancer won
a Tony Award for "Pippin" and
co-starred in the miniseries
IIRoots.
He was struck by a heavy-duty
station wagon June 9 as he walked
in the middle of the Pacific Coast
Highway ncar his Malibu home.
Police said the driver, Grammy·
winning composer David Foster,
did all he could to avoid hitting
Vereen.

Limit 8.

64-1447 ser.

Ret1Btlr••
Olherw 10% Off

}~{ ·· ·

tl

sa:1rk Plug
Tester
45-4920·0

Socket
Holder

NEW YORK (AP) - Ivana
Trump is getting some money out
of her trademark hairdo with a TV
commercial for Clairol hair coloring.
In the commercial, which aired
for the first time Wednesday, Don·
aid Trump's former wife tosses he:
blond, ur.swept hair and assures
viewers, 'Gorgeous hair is .the best
revenge."
.
·
Deborah Santcmma, a Clairol
spokeswoman, refused' to say how
much Mrs. Trump, 43, was paid.

14 cu. ft. Gibson or Kelvlnator
1986 FORD BRONCO II XLT.................J6,995
1986 CHEVY 5·.10 PICKUP.................J4,495
1990 DODGE DAKOTA PICKUP••••••••••• J5,995
1990 DODGE D·50 PICKUP................ J5,995
1989 CIIEVY SILVERADO ·PICKUP••••J1 0,995

Thursd~y. July 23, 1992

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Oint Eastwood will get songwrit·
ing as weU as acting credits for his
upcoming movie, "Unforgiven."
Eastwood wrote an insaumental
piece called "Claudia's Theme"
for the movie, a Western to be
released nationally Aug. 7.
" CUnt is a music lover, and (t
shows," Lennie Niehaus, who
orchestrated, conducted and pro·
duced the score, said Wednesday in
a statement.
Eastwood sang country son~s in
his movie "Hooley Tonic Man' but
had never written a song before
"Claudia's Theme."
"Unforgiven" stars Eastwood,

45-7925-27

Spark Plug
Gauge
.035- .080
45-5810-2

3 or 3'12 in.
Vinyl gr ip.
45-4936. 37
~

.,... &gt;·

Engine
Tune-Up

•

Engine Dynamic
Gasksts By McCard

Restore•
power. 11 oz.
78-13t5-7

Des.igned to meet or exceed original
eqU1pment specifications.
OU Pan Gaskets

144
Western Auto
Brake Fluid
Super heavy duty. For
disc and drum brakes. 1-.=;;.;.;..;.;,
12 oz. 78-5541-4

AslowAo4

Carburetor
Cleaner

·

99 .
18
74-48t0serioo
99

upTo

Timing Caver Gaskets

Clt1n1 carbt . &amp;
chokts. 13 oz.
78 .6957-1

Ao LowAo

49
5 74.&lt;4690
Up To 18 99
aeries

Valve Caver Gaskets
99
99
Ao LawAo3
upTa

25

series

Associate·Store Ho• Ow•••
DONALD &amp; EDNA WILSON, Owners
49 North Second • Middleport, ON. • 992·55.15

•

)

;.
·~

�..

Ohio

.

,ByTbeBend

The Daily Sentinel

Business S

Thursday, July 23; 1992

·

Page

a

Exchange students
need home in Ohio .

tRUCK DECORARTING WINNEitS • Wluei's of tbe truck
: decoratiq eoatest ,...tile ~port Red Sox ror tile Middleport
: Youth 1-eag~ Kick-off pande. ~ltb Ljaeh Is tbe COICh and the
·
; team is spoDSOred by Mcl&gt;oaaJil•a of Pomeroy.

..
.-Wahama class of '55 holds picnic
• The Wahama High SciKJOI ClaSs
: 6f1955 recendy held a potluck pic: nic at the home of Wa)'ne lllld Jan
· BetgdoU in Galli~.
: · Player was said by Sylvia Blake
Sayre, and following the picnic
Majorie Clarke Walburn, class
: coordinator beld a memorial for '
. deceased members ~ die c1a1s BJid
: their family members.
: A short bu~ness meeting was
: held ~a thank-you riote fro1n the'
::.fiot Class 'SS ScbQIInhip recipient, Merrily Lieving, was read.
l.ieving is a 1992 graduate of
~. Contributions for the scbol~lfrship fund were collected by
ChaiJperion Sylvia Blake Sayre.
The aftt.mootl was speat tating
'llld exchanging pictures and shar·
news with rl • etes. Tile door
·'JII'IZC was won by Charles Roush.

or

.'ihf

Attending were: David and
Carol Ewing Roush of Amanda;
James and Carol Roush Proffitt of
~. W. ~a.; Charles and Geral·
dille Mat1m Roush of New Havtll,
W.Va.; June McMillan of Hartfml,
W.Va.; ,Betty Neal Ru~sell, West
Columbia, W.Va.; Calvm and Marilyn McDaniel of Point Pleasant,
. W.Va.; Dwightmd S~lvia B~e
· Sayre; Lutl!er and Sh11ley Oliver
Tucker !If ~ason,. W.Va., Peggy
"'cDamel .Edwards of Mason
W.Va.; He~b and Lola Roush
Miller ofHunlingtOO, W.Va.; Patricia Ro~JS!t ~oel of Pomeroy; Dale
and Marjone Clarke Walborn and
Wayne and Jan Bergdoll of Gal·
6polis.
Next year's picnic has been
scbeduled for I p.m. June 18at the
same location.

Host families are needed for
Christian· from Switzerland and
Katrin 'from Germany who are
coming to spend tbe next school
year in Ohio. The students arc
enrolled in the Academic Year in
America program, a non-profit
high scbool/homestay ~perience
sponsored by tbe AlPS Scholarship
Foundation.
The J1l'!lgr&amp;m's local representative, Sh1tley Coleman of Rulland,
is interviewing families in this area
who woUld be inrerested in hosting
Christian or Kalrin. Sixteen year
old Christian is a ilrummer w_bo .
also enjoys painting, politics, and
outdoor sports : He.comes from
Luzem where his dad is a computer
specialist Katrin, 17, comes from
Duisburg, a harbor town in northern Oennany. SIIC is an excellent
student with many' different inter·
ests. She plays the piailo and Oure,
dances ballet, takes fencing lessons
and enjoys Church activities.
Christian and Kaain arrive in mid· ·
August 10 begin the fall tenn with
their Alilerican classmates.
Shirley has the applications of

~ ·
THURSDAY
.:·:.: SYRACUSE • Tbe Sr.racuse
Presbyterian Church will hold
'"Vacation Bible' School through Fri,':cJay from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
!laiiY for cbildlen and youlh.

Brandon Hill
celebrates 9th
birthday

.

..

'-'A.LL

1

Visits with sisters .
Mrs. Richanl Rummel, Council
Bluffs, Iowa, visited with ber sisters, Mrs. Connie Devol and Iancie
Roush, CIM-:M'J!~Zke, and also Edna
Martin of .
port. She retmned
home Monday.

FRIDAY
RIPLEY • The Libeny Moun·
.faineers will perform at Skateland
·i~ Ripley on Friday.
'

HOCKINGPORT • There will
·be a free round and square dance
Friday from 8-11 :30 p.m; at Hock·
iJigport on Route 124 at the
Reynold' s building. There is coon·
r,ry, bluegrass and ·gospel music
·;tllere every Monday at 7 p.m. All
· bands ale welcome.
.. '.' LONG BOTIOM • Faith Full
Oblpel Church in Long Bottom
]llill have preaching md singing
Fnday at 7:30 p.m. Pastor Steve
, Reed mvites the public. FeUowship
' will follow.

.......

.•. •
SA11JRDAY
··, KANAUOA • The Liberty
Mountaineen will perfonn at the
D.A. V. Centlr in Kanauga on Sat·

P&gt;'· .

:; • RAC.INB •· The Circle Faliiily
.iCDDioa will be beld Saturday at
sw Mill Park in Racine with a

VCR· TV

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Goldsfor

filial

symphonic
Soundesign KTV
Phl1co.
Zenith
Sa~~ sung

Ellerson
Shintom
Multi Tech

or

BIKE WINNERS • These were the winaers the Middleport
Virginia Dean, Sharon Matson Yoath League Klcll-o" Day Parade. Brllldy Tobia tir the Middleand Phyliss McMellan were best . port Plllllles took first place iD the bike deeoratiac contest, ud
Cbrls GUlley of the Middleport Cubs took SK'OIId place.
.
weekly losers at Tuesday's meeting
of Ohio TOPS ClutrNo. S70.
Runner-up was Juanita
Humphrey and best KOPS loser
was Bernice DurSL
IIIII STREET • POMEROY
Pegi Vining was the winner of
the fruit basket and Shirley Wolfe
won the gadget Rift
·
Members wlio have met their
pledges for weight loss II'C Juaoita
Humphreys, Julia Hysell, Nellie
Grover and Mary Martin.
.
Two new members wer.e wei·
comed as was one visilor.
Wanda Faulk read an article
about "1" pound losles.
..
Everyone is to bring their
money and tickets Jtel[t week.
There will be a bate sale at
Krora''s in Pomeroy oo Aug. 3.
PICK UP
Further information on the
ONLYI
group may be obtained by calling

LAR.GE
PEPPERONI
PIZZA

-

*

Stoll

Public Notice

*

In Memory

HAPPY BIRTHDAY

JEREMVRAY
GUINTHER

Spring Air Jumbo Thick

Green

On YCIIII' 15th
Birthday today,

SAVE '140-'600

July 23, 11192.

twin N. pc. -1101 S2SUii

HE IS JUST AWAY .
I cannot ny, 1nd I will
not IIY
That he le liNd. He ••
ju.t-.yl
Whh • cheery emile
•nd 1 wave of the
blind,

o,_,utnoiSIH.IO SAL£S3tt.t5
King HI noii1M.IO SAL£ ......

Health Comfort
SAVE '1 50-'&amp;oo

$408tJilll'GIF.T
-~~~ na1
King Ill noii10H.IO

' Dtluu 2·volume, full-color, hlttorY ot
tbt PrMidtncy by World Book. klllllor
ICiulllllld child"" 111111. FREE with
pun:IIIM of 1 Spring Air 8ack SUIJPC)Iter

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

SALE ......1o

i l,

POMEROY, OHIO

SMALL DOZER
WORK, DRIVEWAY
WORK and
LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
IEASDNIILE UTES

Meigs County Maoon Co., WV

992·7553

Area Code 614 Area .Code 614 Area Code 304

446-GaiUpoUo

992-M;ddleporli

. 367-Cheobl..
388-Vinlon
245-Rio Grande

Pomeroy

256-Guytn Dill.
643-Artbia DU1.
379-Walnul

985- Chetter
843-Portland

241- Letart Fdt
949-Racine

742-Rullond

6·26·'92·1 mo. pd.

STu:co~

Deed

Tho above doocrlbod real
tltalo Ia ldenlllled In lho
recorda altho Melgo Counly
AudUor by Parcel No. 03oos:~RSONAL PROPERTY:
• II
bl
1972 "' nglon mo Je
home, aetla11RH7216F
Said real ftlate wu appraloed al: S 8666.00
Saldmobllohomewuappraloed at : S 3833.00
Torma of Sale: Caoh
Real eelolo· and mobile
homo cannot be oold for lou
than lwo-thlrda ol lho ap-

if~

PLASTER
Public Notice

Public Nollce

~

CUSTER'S

882-New Bnen
895-Letart
937-BuiTalo

ORDINANCE NO. 1260·92
An Ordinance lo Author·
lzollnenclalaulllancelo I he
Meigs County Chamber ol
Commerce. Boll ordained by
lha Council of tho VIllage ol
Middloporl ao lollowo:
Sac. I. Thai 1ht VIllage of
Mlddleporl ohall provide
fundoln lhoamountol $2000
lo tho Meigo Counly Cham·
bot of Commerce lor lho cal·
ondar yur 1992.
Sac. II. Thai the Clerk·
Tre11urer 11 hereby euthor•

1300 Vine Street
Mitltlleport, Oh.
.lot Custer ~
614-992-2213 5
Jerry Custer )j
614·992-3159 J:

36970WI•Itad
P..oy,DIIIo

...,ti•ai-1·

.

For -relnfonnallon coin·
IICI Scott Shonk, II 8t2·

3213.

(7) 22, 23, 24, 31o

'

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

FOR SALE
Agriculture
Lime

VALLEY INC.
II. 2

Millwood, W. Va.

304·273·5555

AUTO RENTAL, INC..

38904~

Creek Road
Mlrldleport, Oltlo

•19e9§ADAT

r

~

614-992·7144

264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

B·ISSELL B.UILDERS, INC.

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

New Homts • Viayl Sidia1
New Garages * Replacemtat Wiadows
Room ldditioas • Roofi11

tGarages
oComplete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

l:OMMERCU.L and RESIDEN11AL
FREE I:STIMATES

FIIEE ESTIMII'ES

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

985·4473
667·6179

Clio Sunday Cells)

,,. 6... 614-915·4110

Andy &amp; Chris,
llovt you.
They took away
my hom~~; they took
away my monay;
And thty took ME
away from YOU. But
they can't take 1way
my love for you.
Lovt,
Grandpa Bluell

~

11411&gt;11 mo. pd.

&amp;-30-t -.pd.

FOR SALE

Call 614·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7

Chesllire, OH.

MICROWAVE OVEN
anti VCR REPAIR
AU MAlliS
lrl11_1t 11 Or We
PlckU~

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992-5335 or

&amp;

co.

'Tab lh l'rlll Owt Of Plilllhrg

-"' u. o. '' '" r..•
INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
FREE ESnMATES
HAY! REFERENCES

lolwo 6 p&amp; Loan MtSsogo

COUNTRY LOTS
FOI SALE
1·51CRES

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

P.O. lox 894-WIA• May
RAON~ OHIO

Approved Township
ROIId (blacktop), 1/4
mile from At. 7,
loceled between
Cheater 1nd Tupper~
Plalna.
Each lot le partially
wooded with excellent
d111lnage. Service by:
T.P.C. Water Co.1 ·
Columbue &amp; Southern
Electric Co.
LOTS FROM $3,500
and up
Owner Fln•nciCI
(6141 915·3594 Of

(For..ly lltlo Rltlto W
-

lajlool

PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowers • Gail Saws
• Weetleaters
614·949·2804
•
:

TyrM

i '
~

· N·

G

c

;

r'~--:-.-"""
•.

........

915·3~ ~ loo.

985·3561

WE DO

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

30 VISITS FOR

ROOFING

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

8uh11 Rtl., Rlciae
530

Offer Good Thnt
July 31, 111112
Call lor Appointment

ADD ONS • REMODEUNG ·KITCHENS
• BATHROOMS· SIDING • DECKS
YUIS EXPERIENCE
Al

742·2328

949·2794

3 Announcements
MRomanUc

t

' I

WMI-

Clnd~

dlngt" 'Smcliy llountoins
'Clorgy
'EioQa..
~
'Phdogropho 'l'loroio 'limOs
"Video
•Ac:couWI Jltiont
'llodoot Pricaol Chotgo ftl 'No
WoHing, No Blood THt
"Gitllnburg, T•• IIIII .,..aoo.

WEQ.RING.

A Wonderlul Fomlly ElporiorE o.
Scandinavian. EwopMn, South
Amoricon, JoHloh
S.hool E&lt;ehongo St.-.. J,,.
riwlnglnAug,.l. - A Hoot
Flmfty!Amlrican lntercull .. al
Sludont Exchongo. Col Kothio
216-150-Htl Or faD 'X 0 og.,
C.ll Yow Dlte: ..... Someone
Spoelal! 0111 1-I00-73H644 For
Doting, ROiillfiCII And Fun.

$1.31Win. AU UlootY!oO. ~
18o Goio Call 21,_11Jll (Dial
Syotomo Olllco~

Ch.l...
In
Tho
V.llor '
CGotilnbutv'• Orialnll 'ltrodllirig
thopol) FIH Po.tilng. '!!loughi·

lui S.Nico lo A...-d Thtoilth
Muok:, Flowlft, . .ophs,

Vkloos And Rocopl-. IM·
436·79113, 1-800422-4573.

DiWot'CO $611' And - p i t y
$MO' eo.... Childron,l'lopio1y,
One Slgnatu,. Divorce, Mililar),
Mlooln9
$pouR,
Elc.:
'Unconlootod And EidudH
Gow1 FHt. Call ToM FIH ,

~~~ 1.-.w-~
FIN SlnaiO -

oonal AdS. Wlito

Lol11i', Jlor.
O.P. P.O.

To

Bo• 114 MusiHon, Ohio .tt6CI.

Good Parenti?? Then Open
Vour Home To A T~ Exchongo St-! AI S t -s
SciMnod, Fully lnoutMCt.~
Own Spondlng $. You
Your Student PIN• C.U ,....,_

Oftlco
2171.: ...... 11.

PDMIIOY,OIIO
3123/92Mn

Announcemen1s

7"15-'112-tfn

....s~~o...

llyrile S.ach A..ort Y8Cition
Atntatl, Clc•ntront Candas,
Houooilooplng lndudod ...

-/Oo.o- s......

p....
Whi~- .
l.ighltd
Tonnlo Coutlo, Pu111ng G.wons.

Got! Pocluigoo Avllitlilo.
lrochuN: 1..0 4&amp;1-6653.

Froo

To Work.
To Worli At 54". FEE. $3 To Mlr·
lowoi' 303 Edgowoill', Winchos·
Ovor 40 And - . ,

bod My Story, "How1 1111-

1.,, N 37318.

·

Time
stt.,. Unil• And
C.mparound ,..mblrthi.,. Dfs.
tml

Solos, ChOID!I -klo

S.l.ctlons. C.ll \'eeation Nil·
worli U.S. And C.nod.o 1o8QO.
or :J05-5fi6.2203. F[H
30S.SU

TNCkt
Tractor ·Tr~llere
HoURI
Mobile Homet

1·100.137·1460

Equipment Cl•ned &amp;
Degreaaed
FREE ESTIIIATfS

45765 Flatwoqda Rood
Pomeroy, Ohio 45718
(114) t112·2411
(814) tll2.f575

Lewn Mowing.
F•rtlllzlng, Weeding,
1nd Steeling.
Shrub1ndTree
Trimming &amp; Removal
R-Illa eom-1
FtooEotlrnol•
S.21-'t2.tln

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Custom

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

Frame R;lr
NEW &amp; USED P RTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

•LIGHT HAUUNG

992·5553

BILL SlACK

or TOll FREE
l·IOG-141·0070

TJrll·trr.nzr

7/1711 mo. pd.

FRESH SWEET CORN

$1 • 50 dOZ.
NOW

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE SALEs

Of Sweet Corn, String Beans,
Tomatoes and New Potatoes, Etc.

Wamlng! Bad Credit

tHd, Amazing Frw Aecon:t.:t

Mesuge

12-5-tfn

•

o.t.ils

Why Noo Hoot An Excho!!i"

,....,, Countrloo" Scandlnowlo,
South Amorlc.l, ..,...,., ........

:"'~l;;:.:~'i'"'A~;-~=.~·

llonolt.aoo.7ls-.!16a.

4

·

Giveaway

2

. \TTE~TIO\
\ltiiHI\ ,\ l) tnthh-\\ttk

l l tlllll ( h l t h l "

Big owing HI · F-.
•••, . 114-446-4503.

.1

U Houl
•

Daubtt PDrCellln Janitonl S10k .

RCA Color eor-lo TV

Gtahty HI Efflclncy
Air Coetllioltn, Heat

P1"'1, Fnaces &amp;
Now Water Heaten.
Bennetts Mobile Home
U91SIIf«BcHol Rt ~.

-·

S.i .

llooonl Work, llopolr Or lho
~or Pono. 114-44&amp;-4722.

ON..

c•

pus

7W-. old
1 lomaio, pon
1o, lo
homo, 114-M3-521 .

I

Gtllptls, OW.

16141 4411'9416 w1-80H7H967

'.

.I

1

Sludont? Siuda... Hom 20 !lit·

·it&amp;C EICIVITING
BULLDOZING

PH. 614·992·5591

Rewall

~~~1~ E-lCal~Z4 - ~·

Col~,

4·4·92-111

PONDS
SEP11C SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS I
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Umeetone,
Dirt, Gmel1nd Coal
LICENSED ond BONDED

ts O.wB-

tiling. loorn To E,...
Nogo11ww lnlonnotk&gt;n, Gtootan·

m•.. pupploo,, wu old, ~""
LOCATED CORNER OF IT. 7 &amp; 143 ~~~~-:':1':..__ ,
POMEROY IY·PASS
. r=ll!.v~~a:.~
Ferii1le, GOIDd
h Kid s .·
992·5114
7n21W/1 mo.
614-406-0251.

•FIREWOOD

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

::~~~ lnlcw~,.,.

f

I

•

ANDUP :

CALL (6.14) 446·9971 (Kelly)
KENNY'S AUTO CENTER·

~

.. KEVIN'S UWII .. RED HILL FARMS
MAINTENANCE
PRODUCE
949·2391or

Ill

(7) 23; 1TC

;a·

"'==~!!::!~~~~ -------..!...------~-,l736-a250

NOTICE OF DRAWING
DARWIII, OHIO
JURORS
7131/'91/lln
OHico of Commloalonera
of Jurors, Meigo County,
I
Ohio, July 20, 11112.
.
•HNCIIIners
To All Whom It M1y Con corn:
• Convertible Tops
On Tueoday, lho 28th day
• Custom Carpets
ot July 11112 ol 8:30 o'olock,
•CultomSMt
A.M., at tho office of lha
Covers•
Alao Boats
Commf11ionoro ol Juroro.of
Melgo County, Ohio, Jurora
will be publicly drawn for the
Sapltmbor 1882 term of the CIIIIUI'IIIft
Common PI•• Court oluld
IPIII.I'I'IIY
Coun,Y.
fUIImu1'11
WaUoco Bradford
1.0. McCoy
Comml•ak»nara al Juror•

•

AciNI · - Peat

6181'9211 mo.

992·7013 or

Public Notice

numbing

~PAINTING

11211fn

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK .
AVAILABLf.
SEPTIC SVSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLfARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE·TRUCKING

..,...

MUNDI'S

Quality
Stone Co.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

DAVIDSON'S
'PLUMBING

WICK'S
HAULING SERVICE

MAR

Business
Services

446·2411 or 1·800-365·1229

St At. 588 West
Gallipolis, OH.

H·92·tln

lzod 10 provide lhlo aula·
lance upon tho prftonlallon
of proper lnvolcoo approved
•SAND -GRAVEL • DIRT
by lho Mayor.
praloed
Jame•value.
M. Souloby, SheriH
•UMESTONE
Sac. Ill. Thlo Ordinance
of Meigo Counly, Ohio shall take offocl and be In
(614) 992·3470
(7) 23, 30: (8) 6: 3TC
force lrom and after lhe ear·
II ell deloao provldod by law.
PubliC Not1ce
Paned lhe13dayofJuly,
1992
NOTICE OF SALE
~JAY
AUesl:
By virtue ol an Order of
Brtan Conde, Clerk
Sale loouocl out of tha Com·
Dewey Horton, Preoldorn
mon Pleao Court ol Melgo
of Council
Counly, Ohio, In lho cooe of
(7)
23;
lTC
City Loan Flnanolal Sorvlceo,
Inc., PlalntlH, agolnol Bony 1---------t SIZED LIMESTONE

and over 1 strip of ground 20 turtln, et el., Defend•nla,

OH.

Wlka Davlilsol :.

POMEROY, OH.
67 5-Pt. Ple..ant
458-Lr:on
576-Apple Gmve
773-Muon

667-CooMlle

feet wide adjaconl to lho upon • judgment lharein
Eulerly aide of lho above rendered, being Cue No. 92·
land, and tKtendfng In a cv.139 In aold Court, 1 will
aouthorly dlrecllon 11 111e oHorfor nlea11holrontdoor
aame width Ia a rlghl of way altha Court Houoe In Pom35 IHI wide and along and oroy, Ohio, on tho 26 dey of
over oald 35 h. right of way Augual,1882,ai10:0Do'clock
orlendlng In a woolerly dl· A.M. lhelollowlng lando and
rocllon to tho Counly Rood tonomenta, lo·wll: ·
No.2&amp;,tobeuoedlncommon
Sltuale In lho VIllage of
end jolnlly wid! all othar par· Pomeroy, Counly of Melgo,
oona who havnllkerlght, u and Slalo of Ohio, lo-wll:
• moano of lngreu and
Being lol Number Filly·
egreotloandlrotnthtpubllc Three (53) In Naylora Run
highway from the reoleotalo Addlllon to lho City ol Pom·
harein deocrlbed. Tho gran- oroy, Ohlo.
lora horoln rnorvt ,h 0 rI9hi
DEED REFERENCE : Vol·
1o docllcate nld right of way umo 187, Pogo 313, Meigs
lor public road purpooeo.
Counly Deed Rocords.
Ercopllng and raMrvlng
Tho above deocrtbod real
all tho cool undet lha above ostalo Ia kfonllflocl In the
doac:rlbocl promloea whh tho recorda altho Melgo County
right to mine tho ume. Aloo Audllor by Parcel No. 16orcopllng tho rlghllo uoe ao 01118 . ·
much of tho aurface of tho
Said real ellalo Ia apaald real Htalo 11 may be praloed al: $ 6500.00
necooaary Ia open, operate
Terms of oalo: Caoh
andoqulpacoeimlnlngpropRoalealotoconnotbeoold
or1y 'With bulldlnga rallrood lor loao !han two·lhlrda of
awl1chea necoaaary lo mine tho apprafoocl value.
ond,.....ovelhaCXJtllrom lhla
James M. Souloby SheriH
and odjac:onl proptt1y, oil of
of Meigo County, Ohio
whlchlomoreopoclllcollyoet (7) 23, 30 ; (8) 6; 3TC
lorth and d-fbed In prov1• 1.;.;;..._;;...._;~---ouodeedoohaldrealeotalo,
Public Notice
oo ohown by lho racordo in 1- - - - - - - - ,lhoMtigoCounty Rtcorder'o
PUBUC NOTICE
OHico.
NOncE lo hereby given
Bolilg port of tho rtaloo· that on Seturday, July 25,
toto conveyocl bv deed re- 1802, at 10:00 a.m., a public
cordocl In Deed Book 248, oale will bt hold ot lOS
Pege767,MeigaCounlyDoed Union Avonuo, Pomeroy,
Recorda.
Ohio, to Mil lor coah tho fol.
DEED REFERENCE: Vo~ towing colltllral:
1117 FORO TEMPO 4 DR
2, , In Memory
St1FABP38SIHK2014112
11116MERCURY LYNX
2DA.
St1113BP5183GTI02&amp;41
Tho Ferm111 Bank and
SIVInga Compony, Pom•·
roy, Ohio, reaorvoa lie right
to bid ai lhle nit, and to
wlthdr- Itt above..,.._..
af prior to eale. Furthw, The
Falmen Bonk 111d SavlnfiO
Compeny rlltrYoa Ill right
to rtject ony or all bldo
aubm n.d.
Further, 1ha above collot·
etal wiU be aotd In the con·
dillon It lo In with no
expr•atocf or Implied war-

=

RMibiiiMII
~-

•

of May 24, 1971.
Togolhor with the rlghtlo
uoo In common and jolnlly
with thograntora herein, !heir
halra and aoolgno, and all
Olhar paroono who may be
gronted 1 like right by lho
granloro, their helra and
anlgno, I right of way on

He h.. WIDdered Into
1n unknown land,
And left ua drlitmlng·
hOJJ very frir
II rtMdt muat be,
alnce he llnge,.
'there,.
And you - 0 you, who
the wildett y.. m
For the old-time lltp
we'd let
tnd the glad raturnyou go .,.k to
I think of him .faring
yow own apeclal
on,udtlr
pllce.
I I
In the love of then aa .
II
WI could hold
the love of hll't;
kill yow prlt·
ty llttlt , _ for jlllt
I think of him etllf 11
onem-day.
the 111111, I ny:
HAPPY 11th
'
He le not dMd - he le
BIRTHDAY,
juet.-yl
SHELLEYI
Loved llid mllud by
We love you Jed, end
Ptarlllld
lloril
mi!M you very much.
lnd
lnd
Hippy Blnhdly Bud,
Granny and P~-pa
Mom&amp;Dad

Spring Air Firp~

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
391 WEST MAIN StiEET
H2·3524

u c otlce

NOTICE OF SALE
By vlnuo of on Order of
Solo luuod out of tho Com·
mon Pleao Coun ol Meigo
Counly, Ohio, In the cooe ol
Tho Home National ·Bonk,
Pfolnlfll, 1111lnot Ronald E.
Hontloy, ol ot., Delendenlo,
upon 1 judgment therein
rendered, being Case No. 92·
CY·$7 In oald Courl, I will
oHorforaalo,otlhelroftltloor·
qlthe Court Houao In Pomeroy, Ohio, on 111o 26 day of
Augull, 1992,al 10:30o'clock
A.M. the lollowlng lando,
tonomento and portonal
properly, lo-wll:
·
REAL ESTATE:
SUuatod In tha Township
of Choalor, County of Meigs
and Stale of Ohio: Btfng In
Socllon 4, Town 2 North,
Rongo 13 Weot, of ll!o Ohio
Compeny's Purohuo, and
deocrlbed oo followa: Beginning ., I point Nord! a d•
groea 45' Eaol 484.8 feel, and
North 8 dogrHO 10' Eoot 35
leo!, and North 81 degrtoa
15'Weal416feol,ond North8
degreea 49' Eaot208 feotlrom
lht Southoaot CXJrnor ollha
Allon E. Ball and Froda Ball
57.73 acrolracl, aald point ol
beginning being marked by o
loculi pool; lhance North 9
degroea 04' Eaot2051eol lo o
loCUli poll; tho.- North 82
degroea 32' Wftl 21M fool to
a Jocuot pool; th- South
10 degrlft 18' Weol203 fool
along a lenco line to a loculi
fl!&gt;ll ; thence Soutb 11 d•
grHO 56' E11121 0 feat lo 1ha
point of beginning, containIng 0.97 ocroo, more or looa.
Tho btorlngaln lho obove
doocrlpllon are rnognollc oo
2

. - oo.-po. -tllll Qlt.lfi
F.. 10. po. nal Q11.11i SAL£ $131..

$ei,QOO ond

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~7!~~~
P bll N

twin U. po. -noii44Ufi
Full 01. po. 1101 1571.115 SALE $214.115
OuoonHI nal II:IIUO SALE 1&amp;21.10
lOng HI nal II 711.H SALE S7ti.IO

muo IALE $111.10

WE REPAIR ALL MAKES

I'M-_,.

n.• 1ct11g o1 ~ 1o 80% o1 pun:~.-

Rol*lo. 4 BR. 3 - · 2 gorootl, Nlfed1
BR'IIpt P~ lnclldos 4,800 oq. ft. lorm
l*ig.

99

*

pnco

omount may ,. ..,._,.. ~ poroon 10 buy ""t nice....,. on 3% ..,..In

*

Sylvania

GE
RCA

GaWa County

ume 316, Page
47, Molgo
t---;:==========;--1 · Counly
Record•.
JERRY'S GARDEN FRESH
PRODUCE
Whhe sweet com, tomatoes,
green beans. Two locations.
State Rt. 325, langsville, Oh.
Main St., Rutland, Oh.
Call 742-2852

CHARLIE'S

Classified pages cover 1he
following lelephone exchanges ...

IULlEftll IOIRD
4:30 P. ·&amp; DAY IEFORE
PUILICADOII

Fulloo. po. naii3&amp;Uii SALE SUUS

Repair Center

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

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
SWiday Paper

Free Ad.: Giveaway aod Found ad. uoder 15 wonb will be

run 3 dayt at no cbup.
• Price of ad lor aU capit.alletton i1 double prtce of ad cOlt
1 7 point line lype only u•ed
• Sentinel il not ,spo•lhle for fi!'I'Gfl after nrat day (chetk
for error• fllll day ad run1 ill paper). C..U Mfore 2:00p .m.
day after publiution to atake correction
• Ada that mwl be ,.-WI in advu.e• ue:
C.rd ol Thulii
Happy Ado
YudSaloo

i

992-2234 or 992-S638.

COPY DEADLINE

• Ada oul.lide lhe county you ad rwu mud be prepaid
• Receive di.aeou.at for ad. paid in advaoce.

Name omitted

.

992-2156

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

1

Special meeting set

an ad

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. • SAT.S-12

FAIR SPECIAL!

BARLOW • The 18th annual
Mid-Ohio Valley Steam Engine
and Antique Power Show will be
Saturday lllld Sunday at the fair,
.
grounds
in Barlow. Events will
· ·. ELEANOR, W.VA. - The Lib·
include
old-time
with
.: Orly Mountaineers wiU F.form at steam engines, saw threshing
mil)ing,
shingle
'o.ihe Pucnam County Fair mEleanor,
making. models, arts and crafts, a
W.Va. on Thursday at8 p.m.
huge flea l'll8lke\, an antique lniCtor
Brandon Hill celebrated bis
pull
and food.
.
': ATIIENS · The Athens County
ninth
Monday at MeDon·
~brine Club will hold its annual
POMEROY - The Senior Citi- aid's inbirthday
Pomeroy.
·Green Corn Dinner on ThUISday at zens Dance Club wiU bold a dance · Marcy Hill and Amy Metzer
6:30 p.m. 81 tbe Shrine Clubhouse Saturday from 8-11 p.m. with
·,ill The Plains. All members and music by Smokey Mountain hosted the party.
Attending were his parents, Mr.
Drifters. Public invited. Those and Mrs. Steven Hill, his grand~$UCSIS are welcome.
attending brinJ snacks for the
: · RACINE • The Racine Legion snack table. ThiS will be the last molhers, Mrs. Mike Griffith, Mrs.
Sandia Baer, Mrs. Dennie Hill, his
. Auxiliary will hold a picnic Thurs- dance unli.J September.
great·gtandmother,
MIS. Ruth Carr,
. day at 6:30p.m. 81 the Bill Cozart's
RUTLAND • There will be a his uncle and aunts, Mr. and Mrs.
,umpsite.
dance at the Rutland American Troy Griffith Boone and Colton,
Legion Hall on Saturday from 8 Regina Humphreys and Rosanna,
.' .: MIDDLEPORT · The Meigs p.m. to midnighL Music by White's Sonja Demosky, Autumn Griffith,
·County Women's Fellowship will Hill Band. Public invited.
Missy Rainey, Courtney Hill.
-ineet Thursday at the Middlepon
Others atiCIIding were Stephanie
:&lt;i:biii'Ch of Christ. Everyone welLOTI'RIDGE • The Lottridge Ash, Michael and Matthew, Jason
·:~e.
Community Center is hosting an Cundiff, Jeremy Fisher, Jay Stepp,
ice cream social Salw'day at 4 p.m. Robbie Wyatt.
. · TUPPERS PLAINS · The Tup- prior to the Country Music NighL
Sending gifts were great-grand·
. ~rs Plains VFW Post No. 9053 All bands are welcome. Music mothers, Inez Hill, Fredreckia
WiD meet Thursdar 81 7:30 p.m. at from 7 p.m. to midnighL Refm&gt;h- Faris, Mr. and Mrs. Yeauger and
·: the post home. AI members urged ments
available.
Jessica Stobart.
:]D,lltiCIId.
SUNDAY
.: . RU1LAND - The regular boanl
POMEROY - The annual Singer
Charles E. Canon Jr.. Pomeroy,
meeting of the Leading Creek Con· family reunion will be Sunday at a juni(J' at Ohio University major·
. ~ancy District .w~ be Thursday the Senior Citizens Center in ing in computer science, bas been
·at 7 p.m. at the dislnct offiCe. Pub- Pomeroy at noon . Family and awarded the C. Paul and Beth K.
:. Uc invited.
friends invited. Bring a potluck Stocker Scholarship and the Kibble
disb. Table service will be provid- Foundation Scholarship. His name
·• ROCK SPRINGS · ·A flower ed.
was unintentionally omitted from
:arranging class sponsored by the
the list of scholaisbip recipients 81
.Meigs County Garden Clubs will
DARWIN • Descendants of O.U. in Monday's edition of The
lie held on Thursday at 7 p.m. at Tommy Gillcey and Milda Jane
the Rock Spring·s Grange Hall, Hudnall will bold their annual Daily St~~tinel .
:10c81ed at the Rock Springs Fair· reunion Sunday at the roadside
grounds. The cost is $2 per person. part on ~te 33 south of Darwin.
There will be a special meeting
!bose attending should bring a A potluck dinner wiU be served at
piece of wood (such as driftwood) noon. Bring a covered dish, table of Pomeroy Village Council Mon·
day 81 7 p.m. 10 discuss advertising
to be used in the arrangement, the StZVice llld folding chair.
for
paving bids.
·mechanics of arranging, several
:(towers and greenery or filler.
Membership in a garden club is not
t~uired to attend. Information is
available by calling 949-2746 or
·992-3216.
~ ~'

vual't::

St Rl 588 W•t •
- Phone 446-1595 or

.·'

Sales·Service-Eslilmes

CONSOLIDATED SECURITY SYSTEMS

992·2124

BRANDON HILL

Uniden • PanaSHic

Estl••••• ·

DOMINO'S PIZZA

potluck dinner II 1 p.m. Bring lawn
chairs.

Toshiba • Drab,

Realdentlal· Commercial

Name TOPS winners

:;Meigs Community Calendar

llthirfllll .....,. "" "

Direct Pollct•Fire C011nect.
24 YHH bptrience
State Lkensed
ConstltatiOII

these two students as well as those
of several other boys and gids who
would like to live in this pan of
Ohio neXt year. Students have been
carefully screened, speak English,
and have their own spending
money. Al12 family needs to provide is a bed. a place to study, two
meals a day, and an open bean •
ready 10 receive a "son" or "daugb:ter" from another county.
Interested families should call
Shirley Coleman at 614 742-2125
or Regional Dilector Lynne DaVid
at the AIFS national office in Connecticut at l-800.322-4678. The
American Institute for Foreign
Study Follndation i~t a rnll-for-proRt
educational organitation and its
Academic Year in America pro·
gram is one of the nation's most
respected student exchange pro-

grams.

SATELLITE -T.V.

BURGLAR· FIRE
CLOSED CIRCUIT T.V.

•

•

�11 .

Sentinel

Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32

Mobile Homes
. for Sale

1892

KIT

Apanment
for Rant

CARLYLE® by Lerry Wright

74

'

~=-or INdo lOr good 4 :
w.
•~
1113 Honda Sho!fow 100, :?,100
MIIM, EXCIIIIInt Condition, 114-

241-1444.

1114 llonolon 14x51 moblro
" - 2 bodroomo, olllloc, IJI.7Ut.

7

45

-0

Furnished

Rooms

-r-

46 Spaca for Rent
Country llollllo Homo Park, At.
33N.,
~·
Lol•.~..!'f: rolllllli, S235;
1
2117

*"..
llobllt -

At. 2

lot for -

bo4-wotor
Yond
Rd. 1111.
month,
l 0.tontco
pold,
IJWOOO tiN I :OOPII.

l.....n. Ad., Ktnauga, OH.
Thurl., Fri., Sit. 15 guna,
t...., NnoN. Loll mite.

lmmtdlltt optnlllgl IVIIIIbll WANTED; Full.flmo or Po~·tlmo
turru.. tor
.Co~llled Nu110 Aids. Con· LPN to work lour (4) ton how
IIICI Jocklt Wllli.omo, ADON, dip

Rio Grandt: 2 lllloo F""" Bob
b.. Conoo u..ry On
•t,....IU. RDid · FoHoW Slgnt,
Sm. Bid, \:hd;, V-ha
-CICio, 81cycflo, Etc. Sot
....., 25111, W.lf4.245-11111.
A........ Soli: Thu,., Frl l
c.nt..l Ho411,
llllc.lllllchandlu.
Two 111111 Nonh Of Hobor
Hootlitll At. 110, Adult And

Sot. 14 Porto

ClcMI!Ilo r:,'*·IIIIC.
Ell·
81ko,

a.
_.....,,.

on:llo

Fitoloy, 24th. H, Rain Or llhlnl.

.7 111111 Off Holahborhood Rood,
HI kllchar ~ood, 22nd-28th.
....,. Clath•, lllcrol

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

n,. Ytrd Sate, Qabtown
Rd. GIMipollo Ferry, Frl I Sat,
ltfi0.4:0G, good prlcee. Flrlt

-r

ttMig far HWJGII&amp;

Huall Yard Sole, July 23
I :14. Allin or Slllno.
Sl,

-..wv.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All· Y•d Sileo Mull II Pold In
Aclnnco. lloldtlno: t :oo,m tho
cloy be'- tho od II to nm,
S&lt;mdoy ~Mfon. 1:OOpm Friday,

llondoy
odhlon
tO:OGo.m.
So-y.
Wright
Slrlll,
Pomoray,
l hunuy ond Frldly, II-?

8

PUblic Sale

&amp; Auction
Rlell PoiNOn Allctlon Company,

)lfHk. To ....k wtth
t &gt; l - a... Confer, 110 rooldonto In ICF flciiHy. Solery
P I - t D~vo, Gllllpollo, OH commentur~tt with IXJ»rilnct.
W31.1M-446-7112.
Extonolvo bonolh pocugo. Contact Op.il OrueMr, AN, DON,
JOIIS AVAILABLE
!-akin HoopHol 304-475-3230,
(Sill- r1f1111 bo4- 150- lkl 38, Mon·Frl, i:OOAM-4:00PII.
1385 WMiy) "Full .. Po~·Timo.
Duo lo tho hlfh coot or flctory 14
Business
lfMCI, lneW•nc:e. worker '•
oompon..,lon, ond comTraining
penr • ., , . ., runr comptnltt can uve thoutandl of
clolllro In production tln~e with
pooplo -~ very lllmplo
products 11 honie tor thom.
Spoclol llltlllo or e1porlonco not
noodocl boca.. lnotructiono 18 Wanted IO Do

and INittril.. trw Mnt to you.
A"::Jou comprote ....t1, Mnd
M
lor poymont. Tho molt
worfl you do, tho moro you oom.

•- ..,.
doy durlf19
Will
tlruatoot.
- wook.
-con.W. •udenta. All run1 ta

•uct-r, COIIIflllf•
..-.
HrYk:a.
Uc.-d
IM,Dfllo l W11t Vlrglni.o, 3Q4.

Nit CGIII 1 304.e11.n&amp;O.

l7W1II.

anythM.

9

LPN, IIA Port·Tln~e II·W-1'
8:00A.M.· 7:0GP.II. Vonlpuncttn
SkUll Nocouary. Outgot119 Poroonal~y A +. II You'd "Enjoy
811ng Port Of A W•fl-• loom

laoko,

~a,

llouaM

And

tfstnHal,

Sold:
Novel,

c..iloo: Thaophillll, Box 731,
Q Mp liS, otlio '411131, 114-4467211:1
Dool Junlc Ml Slit Us Your Non·
Wilrtdno llolor Applloncoo,

Loolclf19 lor houN"-, muot
have ,_..... IM-tiz.llleo

TMl ...._ '-li.Ne ct. 111 \n

Othlro
Llvoo
Coli
Uol
Phyolcllne Wolaht Looo Cantors
614-441·1 m AI~ For Ill. Word.

Etc. 114-251·

IIHh.lnlc Ia rnalnlliln 1m111
truck 1~, write 101 C-11 csre
Point P-ont Roglotor, 200
lloln SC, Pt. PH, WV 25550.

Cltol-1! ' toyo, boolco,
- . . , p1ctuno, Iran oldlloto,

MERCHANDISERS· E1porloneod

vtFI"a.
Condit-.
-.

Cctlar 1"1'~
Air

lllcrawavu,

...
- . . Ooby -"IIML

· 114-

Part Time Repe Wtntlld For In

-Storo Slrvlclne. Must 8o Rill·
a'*
• Havtl GOod Tnlntpofll•
lion. Calil0f.l45.11117.
Mualclana, INd and bill, for

To Buy: Acldlf19 fila.
clllfte,l-·1700.
-

To BuN unlt Autos
Or Whhotit llotoro. Coli
IMry Uwly.IM 31113G3.

country end rocllond roll group.
AlrNdy have 2 guHarlltt and
vocalt plut dnimt, 1114-Citl2083, John Pock.
National At Slate Award-.Win-

nlna Nowopopor s - Ul•·
T.., Pilot: All Old U.S. tylol Editor. Small Norlh-t
HIO P.ll. OailyiProvloUI Ex·
-~---Coins,
~ II.U . Coin Shop, porlonco Prwtorrod. AODIY To
. . - - . Golllpollo.
Persanntt DeDI., The Rtvltw
Tlmoo.~,)13 E. C:.ntor St-. F...
E.""'plcyment Serv1ces Iorio, unlo 44130.
NMcltd- CertiUed MUI'IIng 1..11.
tont IO&lt; ICF II bod flclllty. Coli

1t

C.reh.l.,... of Point Pleaunt,

Help Wanttcl

·avor All AREAS! Share your
- ·,.. You'N lovo tho

=•-••·

1•

1121351

AVON I AI . AIMs I Shlrioy
S,.Oro, »HJI.142tl.

304-4"fl.3005.
Pan time HCrttlry, word
proclilllr payroll booid&lt;Mplng
htlpful. Write · BoX ~1e care ol
Point P~111nt Atglltlr, 200
lloln Sl, Pl. PM, WV 25510.

Awon ,.,y holll...? Repre~~n·

Pholo Trlmmon
earn to $125 per day, no axp.
n -. t-2e2-431V.

~ , . _ L.Mn Nama 1

Progrnolvo 111 Bod Long Torm
Coro FociiHy 8Hidf19 Social
S.rvk:• ·Dtrector Ta JoJn Our
Hootlh a... Tum. Duollllod
Condldoto Will Kovo SSW Or

?
c· I

Fund Allow? Holpor?
'P To lllconw on• or
ol, ... Koy, lf4.112o7110.
_ , Soles Or t.aQO.
-

-

C16i1
TY
Subc011tractor1
Wltft OWn Truck, Tocto
·~ - · Fl~'"'• Laoldor ~. 11

-

-

_,....

·-

..m
e:-:--"'-,_.·- ,.,---:= -=-

. t Y- OTR Ell·
........... Profit st.ing, 401K,
- . . , SalifY, Anil Full
ku
Aun llillktwllt, ~h,
liM IP I Ll l.
Home
R~uJar.
lila ttoold bpr-. Inc. - .
441tt53
-

Oo To - k lmmoolaloly

.........,""' Olllribullon 9er·
,.,.... Inc. ~t.aoo-444-61•1.
llt'..-.285-1217 CompotHI••
l'ay Mew Canventlonela M.clctl
1Donta1 NICOIIon Etc.. Sign On
-EOE.

·

Drtvoro NMdadllll

E.J,.n.. cld

OT/A Drlwrs 1re
noodocl llr on ootabll- q

...,.. TIL • 1..n Cantil', Drivll't
tlolo . . will bo - d In

._ ~ WV . . .. Drfvera
2 ,.. -~- 111m 11
:.112 ~- WICoMQ ond

:II - ·
~ ....
1/CoHt.
b collnt
bonlltl llf1910
pock·

or 304·562·
- • OG lion thru F 1
&amp; t-.24W071
I :~:
'
r.

lOI.
1a.r -

1 Exclllonl Poyl Ao..... -~~ At Homo. Coli

:l: Froo,

~-. Ert.

WNI

Balwstt

In My Homt. Ftn-

ctd In Pity Area. RtftrencH

Avalllblo. Rodnty A..l. Coli
Jull 2041 mlnul• 1 clar work- 114-245-5887.
Ing at horne, rou 01n um _,..
"!I'Y lmpr-e WI- KNglr Babytlttlng.ln my home, acraea
Publlol!lng hU e DotinG of 1 from North Point School, Kin·
WIICcmt,
hiVI
vorloly ol d l - - • that dergarten
1&amp;111:1 bDih IMP lftd . womtn. MfllrtncH, 304-475-4112 .
IMt Df 1111 you work when you
wont. (0.. company to PlYinG Clr1 tor bed P1U1nt In mr
$342.00 f* wttlc to auemtH home, blat of care, Nl80nlb&amp;e
simple pltnt hi~.) For mort ratoo, 614-MII-2311.
Information and 1 FREE llotlf19 EIR TREE SERVICE. T-'ng.
of over 60 compenJtt praently Trimming,
Trw Removal, J.ledge
hlrlna, wrHo ro: kl'lglt' Publish- Trimming. Ftw Eatlm~~..a! t14Ing, 30A LollvoD St.; OHIIIH, IMI1''115TAftor 4p.m.
'
Taunton, IIA. 02780. K~
Gte~rgee
Portable
Sawmill,
don't
Publlohfne roqulrw $3.110
houl your toa• to tho mnr )uti
tor - Orilo,.ond
llr call304~11·1t57.
llollrig.
con -no1 bollllod
wMho&lt;Jt
·
ond
handllf19.
Mloo Paulo's Dly Corw. Conlor.
Allow,... daytO.
Silo, olfonloblo, chlklcarw. 11-F
Uahl Duly Olllco .Work, CRT I o.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 211-10.
Sklllt Holplul. llondoy Tlwu let~, after tchOol. Qrop-lnt
Frldoy, Fufl.lln~e. (~ c.,.. wolcomo. 514 4411224. Now ln.
pony) Sand All..,.: P.O. lo1 lint Toddlor c.iro, 114-44U227.
254, Qolilpollo, OH 45131.
Local tNoklng compo,.Y Nledo
Financial
I drtvw to Ill na poettMm., ,.
quirmenle mUll be D yn old,

ful· -

Wanted to Buy

~

Bachllor'l DlgrM In A Hum1n

Slrvlcn Fi.old And Ono YNr 01
Soclol Worfl Exporlonco In A
Hoolth Coro Soiling Worfllng
Dlroctly With lndlvkfuolo. s.na
Ruumo And Salary Hlotory To:
Adminitlf'ltor, Plntcrelt Cart
Conlar, 170 PlnocrHt Dr., Qlf.

Upollt, Otllo 45831.

PTS It Looking For Owner·

o~toro
With 11114 Or N-r
,...... .

Tandlm Troctoro With Slooporo
To Run Ton 11-otom Stotoo.
We Guarant•• You Will Bt
Homo Evory -kind Whh
Plonty Of , _ Around Worfl At
.101 loaded And .70t Empty Ptr
Milo. For Into Calf 1-ICJ0.42i·
10Z4.

,.
::: -.-,..
::-,-:ry- - .--;:::"'
:l'l
-:= to-:nl;-::
11
nMded: MUll hive
typing
I computer skills. Applicant
must alaa work will wtth the
public ond - k wllll unolor
pr1a1ura. Send rnum1 with
,.,..._ 1o: P. 0. lox 428,
Goltlpolfl, OH 4511'1.
SH Tho Country And Got Pold
For Ml Potrlot 0Horw QuoiMy
Truck Drinr Trolnl119 In Only I
WMol Col 1-ICICHII-tiSo.
Flnoncllll
Alllolonce
For
Ouolllled Appltclntt.
Simi truck clrlvoro wHh COL to
run wlhln 21J0ml. Ndlu. ol
-oy. Homo moot ovorydly.
AIIIIIY to: Dlllylllntln!f,_PO 801

21

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
NComrMnda lhlt you do busl ~

tlll7 ZIOR good cond, 30• 3584.

42

Mobile Homes
for Fient

Ult.lnt

PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uoool

wAA.rir

: C::::h.:.:.=:':.*'a:
- .. a-.

--&amp;li.

75

0

COmplete the th uckle quoted

· ~ UNSCRAM!LE FOR
ANSWER

SCIIAM.I.ETS ANSWERS
Limpet ·Lunge· Elude· Define· NEED IT

I'~ J.l&amp;f fAKI~ A. eAJN'

My wise old granny lectured me one day. She said
that wisdom was the quality that keeps you from getting
into situations where you NEED IT.

•to 74
'J4 3
t K62
.A KQ 4

PHILLIP
ALDER

e- ...........:...

wm'
.A91
'AQ987S

EAST

t4

t5 3 2
'K 2
t l087 5

.J? 3

.98 52

SOUTH

,,0 6

.KQJ6

Have confidence
·in your partner

.,0 8

tAQJ 93

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: North

By PIIHUp Alder

,,

Weot

Perhaps the most important thing
to have at the bridge table is confi·

1•

2'

Pass
Pass
Pass

your partner. U you can trust 3 •
and plays, everythilig will be s •
easier for you. And, of course,

•m=same

,.3.

Norlb

Obi.

3'

u

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Obi.
All pass

thing applies for yoGr
Opening lead: ' 8
partner.
Today's deal is another from the tri·
held last May in Mempbis.
North made a support double on the
secoad round, showing exactly three
diamonds. If instead be bad bid two di· advantage of the information. He led a ·
amonds, it would have guaranteed low heart away from bis A·Q. East,
four..card support. This treatment is Bill Root, won with the king and re· '
popular in expert cirdes; it applies turned the heart two. West won with
only if partner's suit can be supported the queen; he continued with the heart
at the two-level.
ace, East discarding the spade two. ·
Alter that, North and South es!ab- Declarer ruffed and tben cashed two
lisbed that they didn't have a hea rt rounds of trumps. When the 4-1 break ·
stopper, and settled in lour diamonds. came to light, he switched to spades. :
But lbe key call was East's double of However, West ducked bis ace on the ..
three hearts. He hadn't raised hearts first round, won the second round ami
on the first round, so he rated not to save his partner aspade ruff to defeat :
bave heart length. Therefore, the dou· the contract.
ble tloDoled a top heart honor, proba· - Note that any leed other than a low ·
bly doubleton.
heart allows four diamonds to make. ·
West, Richard Pavlicek, took full
1!&gt; ---•••autaaiiN.

ALLEYOOP

'------------.J

56 Pets for Salt
o - .ond ..._ tllop Pill

Eliioh.--.

-nt.

1-l~tl

NORTH

BRIDGE

Gr-tf

!

Tbe World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Services

5
1111 Ford Footln ond 1N7 Ford

Improvement•

111M Ford F10Uva L, I l l -,
111,000 mlflo, aoool cond, U,?OO.
30U714280
miT gr.
1111 ford Probo GT, 41,000
lllloo, Excollont ConoiMion,

All ty~ maoonry, brick, I iliON. F... ootlrnotoo. J04.
'I"'WWO2.
Barnett Home tmpw D f41:wlta.
Room AddMionl, a . _ lx·
torlor I lntortO&lt; Pllntfng," Ell·
porlooocod, lnoiWIII l.octtiol l,o.

~Truck, lf4.114a·23111.

r.ve

M,IOOi

1111 Pontiac

tt.zoo. .-..om

e,ooo

~lly. ltt

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

t3AIIInproduc:lng

ITS NorA
DIA~. .•
IT!5ALOS-.

14 Gold (Sp.)
15 llabfew
17 .SIMt ot coJ.
Iqt chair
18 U~hl
19
n1tur1
21 AN · 23 UM 1 chlif
2411rs. ln
. llldrld

Ul 1111,

27~column

· 21 Group ot two
32 Slc:k

8 Iron
g Tenth prell- •
denl(2 wds.) .
10 NOIII
newtgelor
11 Btrddhlat
1Mna
16GaMOUOtvol
20 Sea duck
22 FuriOUI
24 VauH
,
25 Ci'lll dlaorder .
26 Va111tla
28 PllmiiH
30 - -uma ·
(ntvtrl
• ·
31 !&gt;root ot
owneraltlp
33 Lazybontl
35 Evtnlna eong ·
40 Dntroyld
.
43 Type of mollt .

Hear

1 Belli
mo¥8ment
2 Soviet Union

. 37 Placid
38 And olherl

(abbr.)
3 BlbHcli WHd
4
5 Hu unit
(abbr.)
6 P1rt ot Atla
7 HorM tood

PASSIN'
BY?
HE WAS
PROB'LY

Rlfi.oblo Wlllpo,...,.,

m.clal And _ ...ill.
~rMEitiiM...
"EiporlOIMod

OUT

r&gt;;..;:·.,

IN

TEXtZ.

6~:l'/Worfc
7711 .

Trucks for Sale

1877 Chovy Pick up tnock, 310
onatno.
- · ...11100,
~.. t14-1113•
put on,
aood Condhion,
1101.

rl

!
!

•'

1m Fordo, outo, olr, olklf19
11100. 304-6 5-334.'1.
1110 Chow 112 Ton I Fl. Bid y,
I , Automoilc,
- ··
foe.....
Good
CondMion,
S1,UO.
' _,.-24
tt
after I.

45 Splltl OVII

.

46 Actor Alch11d ·,

47 Actor
Jenning I
48 Vllaln In
Dlltlllo '
50- - ontho
beck
51 Ha1olnt ot A
Dol'lllouH .
52 WWII event ·. ~
55 Golf pog

ASTRO.QRAPH

•'

·-'
Electrical •

ence. wv•arnlng you In the year ahead . ber. ot the opposite gender. Your
Send tor Leo's As!ro-Graph predictiOns ' charm and style will be dlfflcuh to resist.
today by mailing $1 .25 pluaalong, self· AQUAAIUI (Jan. 20-Feb. 11) II might
addressed, 1tamped erwttope to Astro- take longer than usual to accomplish
Graph, c/o lhla newspaper, P.O. Box what you set out to do today. However,
BERNICE
91428, Cleveland, ·oH 4410.1-3428. Be through persistence, you can achieve
BEDEOSOL sure to state your zodiac sign.
the reaults !or whiCh you're. hoping.
VJIIQCI (Aug. U,.lepl. 22) Individuals 1'tiCEI (Feb. 20-Merch 20) . Someyou associate with loday will have a times, when we o!181'analyze, we Impede
1trong Influence o!/81' your thought pro· ' our own progr011. Tills might be true In
· Select lmaglnltlve companions your CIH todey. H o -. w)lat you do
who are capable of alim•lallng your , spontaneously has excellent chances
mind.
for ••ocesa.
LIBRA (SepL 23-0cl. 23) Things look AlliE&amp; (M8rch 21·April111 You're now
promising atlhll time regarding a com· ' In a favorable cycle tor generating lddl·
merclal endeavor In Which you 'ra ·in· i ~ llonill Income by using your lnllllllve
volved. The Important thing II to keep l • and enterprlllng capablllllet. Don't Ill
•
movtnglorward now thll you've gained . on the sidelines.
TAURUS (Aprfl zo.Mar 20) It you're
momarllum
·
.
.1u1r 24, 1tlll
ICORI'IO
:!A-Nov. 22) Your male · p,_,tly Involved In an arrangement
could have tome very constructive ; . thai you bel~ Is not making IIUftlclent
a.-~ tndlvldilala you war~t out ot yout . ·IdeM today regarding a collective ln- 1 _ progress, Ita your cue IO lake a more
to help In the put will mike s!n&lt;:are volvemtnt.lllten carefully to your part- 1. active leadership role as ot today.
~lin the yew lhead to return your· ner's IIUgglllllons; they may be beltar l .. QiwHh~..J..-:.2:.;:..
~
11
tevora. In one Instance, more might be than yours. :
~.
'"""'
~,,
done lor you than you originally did tor IAGITTARIUI' (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Strlv- restrict your compaaslonate 1~.
lng to be ot genuine eervice to anotner ' Do all you can to hltlp - plus a bit more.
~21-Aui22)Yourcompetltlve could produceunexpocted bentfllato· • 1CANCEII (June
22) _A talnf
·won •, lair proipec! . If
lnltlnct8 wiR be ~ly llrOUIId today. day. Your purpoes In helping will not be . heart has yet othen won't be offended by your selfllll, yet personal gal111are probable. , , there Is someone you re lntWMiod .In
tiCIICI 1 fact they'll ec:tmlre your CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. 22-Jaft. 11) You ·romantically, ltop waiting lor lh!a lndlmetttoda ~ tryto emulatelhem. Get a ·:could be quilt lucky today, eopeclally In 1 :vidual to ml?ke the flrst move. Take the
, jump on lila by·underatandlllg the ln~u.:. ~lt"!t~OIII w~e you deal wllh 1"~: . .~~II and run wiJh It

(Oct

:olJ"-

21.......,.

'

I

DOWN

34 Sllndar
36 lillnllllltltrl

_.:;._ _ -=JET=-- -- ..

.......... Dloktj TN~, 1·

ontalope

53 Fllghtlall
bird
54 Sllallfllh
56 - Tin Tin
(movitl dog)
57 Awry
58 CIUCM rubber
' 59 0ld age
60 Wtnt bJ cor
6t Remain

a.ac

n••

72

44TO?Jrl
46 Southern
Ifill
49lllrge

""

WiiiENT
WATEAPIIOOFINO
1111-.., 1 ownor, 114-:11~04 Unconolhlonll llfotlnlo tM. Local rtforoiiCH furillohod.
Attorlp.m.
Froo llflmotoo. Coli ,.
1H1 Grond llorq10lo 11,500 114·237-0411, oloy or llfthl.
1111•, Excollont Condition, 514- ~._ .... Wit241~~ . . '
ling.
tnt Pontile SUnblrd Convor. Home rep~lr and ~ntlnlnce,
tlblo, whMo whh black top and roofing. lldlnG, guttorw, , _
ldltlorit 1nct Tntlrlor
~11
trion,
lockoAIIIIFIIIIIond wl~.- fie, -loot 'Ina, 114-llt2·2111.
than 11.~1., S10,500 080
lf4.ft2......
'
Aorotion llotoro, ropllnol. Now
For Solo: 1887 Cadllloc &amp; ro-buiM motoro ln.atock, Flootwood Brougham lllnt Con- EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-.
dhlon, -1751.
537-1121.

Rll2.

lltldplper

llltrl

1110 llltoublohl Ecllpoe GS Rod

Fordo. Call 1·

eave tor

t2 Future anJa.'

I+'

..... boollont Conolhlon Low

· - by DEA, FBI
Cuot- Low .. 1100.
Gil, BIIWo, liar·

39 l&gt;ollitlve
voll1
41 Poet-linger
McKuen
42 Fa•ala

~=

Hom a

Anewer lo PreWloUI Pullll

tz wds.)

1 Placaa

".~

I

7

A PRI NT NUMBERED
'I:J LETlERS IN SQUARES

Boats &amp; Motors

24WI21.

1110-4-10, W For Ootil. 8-4.

I

I 1 I' I I

•
.
.
.
by filling in the missing words
L-~-L-...1..--l'--'--' you develop from step No. 3 below.

~~~~~,.,~.,~-~-..: :.:::::::;r:;~;;;~;::;:=~~ 1H8 S1arcreft
for Sale
boat end t . -

HouMhokl lumllhlf19. 112 mi.
2 bldroam tral*. ntar Ak1a Jorrlcho
Rd. Pt. Plouont, WV,
All lnldo,
P11nt, cerural atr, priYIII, no
lema
Food
Dlillor. - Julio
moll until you hlvo 1..-lgotod
caii30H11-14110.
Wobll. Cotllt4~1&gt;023t.
=~· 30U75-122t afttr 5:00
thlofforlna.
S..uty Rill ION- wotor bod,
VENDING ROUTE: Got Rich 2br lloblto Homo F.. Ront, q-.. lll'!o, d•l •torw I tomp 3 Puc:h Davn, 2 While Fanl•ll
Pl. . ., 1 B~n P~, U
Ollf!:k? No .WoyiBut .Wo,Kovo 4 Ito"'- , llopoolt Aoqulrod. contrott, ..oo.lfM.I7WIT7.
Good, Stoocly, Allordoblo, 8uol· .,. •41 01:17.
R. I S. Fumnuro.
•
u
- ·--· .- -e"n .
nut. Won't latt. 1.fi00.2M·
W11k Old MOIMititn Filii
lloblll homo, lumlohool,2bclnn., 11q..o. .';t,.o,uoohold lumlohl~ 5Pupo,
VEND.
114-2U-t241.
utiiHieo lnciUdacl, on tno rtvor, 11liOn,"'· 304-773-53.,.
Vending Route: Lac:at. We H•v• lllcldloport, 114-llt2-1Mt.
Rotrlgorllor WhHo Froot F,..,
Tho Nowoot llochlnoo, Moklng A
Nlco Stoody Cosh lncomo. 1· Nice 2br Trollor, Out St.Rt. 211, I SIS; RolrlgoretO&lt; c:lopportor~e,
fi00.9M-0354 .
IUIH, Dlpoolt l Reloronco R• Froot Froo, SIS; ~oirtgo!otor,
Copportor~e, Lillo Now, $210;
quh1d. 6f4.~21t.
Wolff Tonnl119 lido, Now c.,..
Ref!fglt'alor White FrDIII Fra,
marica~m•
Unite
Fram Nice Cloon 3br Homo, S150; W11h11 Ill! H11vyduty AKC nglaurld bll cacur
Stn.OG. Lampo, Lotiono, Ac._ Total Eloctrlc 1 .Largo Yord, No 175; W11hlr GE Hoavyduty 1115; Sponlol piopploo, 304~11-7231.
oorllo. Monlhly Poymonto Low ~to, No Dnonu. 114-307·11131.
Oryor Horvoot Gold1 I'!; K.,.
As $18.00 Coli Todoy Now FrM
moro Dryor, Whho, •~i.~llctrlc AKC Roalot- Doborman
Rsnge, Coppertane I"UO; Port- Pu:S.' I Color Catolog. , lf00.22Hm.
44
Apartment
otol, Tolll
obit W - GE SM· Air Con- Doc
Do-Cr.wo Romovool,
for Rent
dltlonl~.•15.000 BTU 11211, 2 W
, AH Colors Avlltoblo,
YNII Ulll, ~kaaao Appllo_., 114-251-11320.
Real Eslale
1 bodroom 1p1 tO&lt; ront, qulol 71 VIM SCf'Mt,- f-100l41844H,
114-446-73111.
Aulltrollon Shoohlrd Pupil, I
nolfloloorhood, 30~1550.
:,:.,.~=;:;.,.....,....,-,---- 1 Woilllo Cld, 614&lt;1 ..·1 1
bodroom
opl,
all
utiiHin
pold,
Sat af new bunk bide wfone
31 Homes for Sale
mo. month, 304-17WHI.
mottron novor uHd 1711. 3Q4. Bob¥ Forroto, I Woolol Old, 6142021 Mlrquena Avt, 5 yra old,
171-161• onor 5:30 PM.
· 441-6734.
1bilrm.
apt.
lor
rent,
$2251mo.,
all brick malnttn~nce he
SWAIN
DDra;;g;;.;;.~,niMid~Cottc;;ii;ory~:CFCHA:iPi;.,;;:.
homt, 4 tt.clrooms, IINIII living ...... ny dopoolt, no pots, 114AUCTION I FURNITURE, 12 olono l Si.omHO Klttono. 114room, dlnlngroomltamlly room 812·a211.
combVIaUon, kilcMn, vtlllty 2 bodroorn opt, $350. month oil otlvo St., Golllpollo. Now l U* Ul 3144 Aftor 7:00p.M.
room, all one tlvel, covt~ utiiMIM pold, no HUO, 304-611- lumlt ..o, h11toUe Wntom I Floh Tonk, 2411. Joe- Avo.
patla In back, privacy ftnct, 2T22.
Work - ·· 114
3111.
Point
304-IJI.ZOIS,
gartge, shawn by appointment
VI"RA
FURNITURE
1\oU
llno Tnoplcol tloh, blnlo,
only 304-4175-1231.
2 Rooms I lath, Downstalra,
614-44 ..3158
- - ond o...,UOO.
Cloen,
No
Plio,
Qullll,
I
Ront·2.0Wn
HAPPY JACk IIAHGE UJIION;
Rotoronco And Dlpooh A•
qulrod. 114-441·1511.
~~ h11Nf19 ond hllr
Wllhar And Dryor S17.11 -k, g.-lito
_,.., hot opol
Bunk Bod Cornploto, SUI or lung,. ony
on
doao l horooe
WMk, 4 DniWir Cheet $3.12
Corttoanoor SOU"IIlERN
WMk 1 ~ocllnor W• -lo, wHhouf
STATES 104-t'IWTBII.
Solo""" Clttolr S10.31Weok.
LilaH APIO ·Puot&gt;IH AkC, I
CASH
AND
CARRY
WMo+
Shots, Wormod, St7S.
Hlstork:al Aru Carner Lot ~
2bdnn. aptl., talal electric, ap- Retrtaar1torw Starting At 1311, 814311 lt5e.
Main St. Pt. P111Nnl, W. V1. plloncoo lurnlohld, i.oundry Roclmoro 1148, 2XI Bunk a =
Comp61ttly Renovated: 2 Full room IICNIIIM, c - to school 118, Dlnotto Sill With 4 P
IIIIo Zobnl llnc':Jt : :-'tho
8 8.
laths, 3 Larg1 8Hroorn1, New In town. AppUcatlona avall1bla Cholro $1211. OPEN: llonday old, SIO •ch, IM .
Thru
ilaturday
IA.II
.
To
IP.II.
HVAC, Now Corpot. Avoltoblo It: v:~ GrMn Apte. Ml or
CIOiod On Sundoy. LOCATED: • calli
·3711. EOH.
lmmodlally. 114-441·2205.
- - · toyo one~·
Mlln on Route 7 On Route 141, tNCUPI, AKC, oleo ooluM dogs.
8rlck honle lit. Vornon A••· 3 2br Apo~mont, l.ocotod, 34-112 In Cantonory, 11• IIIIo On Un~-~bod,......o, 2112 bltho, l.. mol SmHherl Avlf'IUI, Glllipollt. coln Plkt.
1 Thoroughbred Auatr~llln C.t·
dining room, full bleement, lO.t- Stoveb:,~'..IJ'ttlf•tor, $180Jmo.
til dog, Ill, I - old, 304-112·
175-45111.
StOG
. 114-441-3170, 114· 53
Antiques
2226.
0146·13 .
::--"""'::-::~~-:-::~8rlck
·
3
llldroomo,
2
Bllho, 2 Go11goo, 1'&lt;111 a... 301112 t3tll S~ tumlohool 1 bod· Buy or soli. AI-IN AntlquOo, 51
Muslcel
..-, WMh Smoll ApoflmoiO, 8 room apt, upttalrs, $110. JHut 1124 E. Main St...t, Pomeroy.
Ac!'M Ovtrloolllng River, I'Jot.. 1 ~··· rw1 l o1op, no pots, Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
lnstrumenls
no Hud, 304-IJI.ZIIt.
p.m., Su~dly 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
258·1141.
11.·812·2521.
Bundy Cll~no~ Excolllnl ConBy OWn«: ChMhlre Aru, Nine BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
dhlonl SilO. Clll Boloro 2p.m.
Roomo, Both, Lor~• Flat t.oc. 8UDQET PRICES AT JACKSON 54 Miscellaneous
114-44t.o715.
114,._71 Dayo, EvOnlf191 A~ ESTATE~•. 138 Jtockoon Plko
Merchandise
tor 3:30p.m 114-4.1-0425.
from 11woumo. Walk to ahotl I
58
Fru1t1 &amp;
moviM. Colll14-441-2511. EOH.
HoUH For Sate. 0n Land ContO Inch Toblo Saw Radial Ann
Vegetablea
IFICI, 4 Rooms I Bath, Call t14o a-h St. MlddiiPQrl, OH. 2 BR Saw, 114-31U1!11.
441·"H44 Golllpollo /Kanouga luml~ opa~mo111. UtllltiH
Canning tomot- M e . -.
Arwa.
~ld. Depoatt I rttll'lncl. 304· 18,000 btu air cand, 1 yr aid, Iring yaur own eontalner. ·
112.all.
. "* 2 montho1,S•OG. 3CJ4.e71- Boughman Farrno. 7-112 II. ol
3000 unlit 5:00PM.
Log Ho-. Stondard lllodflo
GIHfpollo, Slllo At. 7. 114-211Avon- Or Dlolan Y- OWn. Cornlllolly Fumlohocl, 1br, nort
1535.
2
Oftlco
Doploro
For
S.ro,
114Financing
AvallaiM.
Frel to Llbrary, ptrklng, . hut, 1lr,
For Soil: Eorty . . . . . . oook·
BIOChuro. Abo Loa reloroncol.clopoolt roqulrocl. 114· 441·1700.
- c Routo 0.., Box M()(1, 441-4331oo._ 7p.m.
Ina. c-*'g, illlllng. IM-25130"
Montgomery
Watd
gat
Moll, l tm.MI 31571. 1-fiOO.
ICilS.
Fumlohod Apt . 1br,. $2a5illo. range tor natur~l or prop.1ne
23t-31H .
gat,
like
new,
S200;
30,0008TU
UtiiHIM Pold, 107 lllo:ond
North
ColONna
Cooatlll Avonuo, Golllpollo. 114-441-4411 1lr conditioner, 1300; 114-IM122l
Farm Suppl1e s
Propo~y: SC. Jomoo Ptllntotion Afler7p.m.
otforo Tho But In Cooatol
loby
bod,
Olrollor,
highchair,
&amp; LIVC5tock
eftk:lencr 11111.: play pan, w•lker, car tNt, 11'11~
Living For Second Home Or Fumlehld
central
hNtialr,
private
I
qulet,
~lrwmont.
Outotondlng
Amonltl• · lncludo
Prlvllo on .,,... porllif19, ratoroncoa. que rocker, 304-11!-4548.
OcNnfront Bttch Club, ln- 11~2.
81by crib, walker, ewing, Clr·
ti"ICOIIIII Wotorwoy Pork, Dyo
rler, toy1 1nd baby clott•e. 114Fumlohod
EHicloncy
$1115/mo.
Chamllfonohlp Got~ Swimming UIIIHIM Pold, 120 Fou~h, Clll· 182-27?9.
And Tonnlo. 0011 • Wotor
Homnlt•, Cullom Home1, llpollo, 114-441-4.,1 Aftor '7p.m. Conc:rett I Plattlc: S.ptk:
Town- l Potlo Homos Fumlohool: 2 .~· • Roome, 8oth, Tanks, Jtt Atrallan Tmb. Ron
1
Av1llablll. Propertl11 Including
""' Cllln, No POlio, EVInt EnterpriiH, Jacbon, OH
Club
llomoborohlp
F..., Doownotolro,
Allflroo"!!J Dopollt Roqulrod. t..IOD-537·8521.
138,000.
Ro-t
O.r 114-441-1011.
FREEINSTALLATKlN
"01-..ry PICkoC" By Cotllf19
SWIMMING POOLS
·-2&gt;1$.!1171.
0!"'"1- llvlf19. 1 """ 2 Only S79t.OG S..utll10r Abott
room apo~- 11 Yllllao around
llx31•4 Poet Inc-:
llonor
ond
Rlvorotao
32 Mobile Homes
Apoolmontoln lliddloport. From Fllltlj_ Deck. Fence, Laddlrt.
Etc. uon1 Blllovo M? Cal 111'1
for Sala
SiN. Cllll-·7717. EOH.
1-10Cf.l41-t121
12xll Whh Ono .... llurvond

nest with pMtfM rau know 1nd
NOT Ia 11nd money through the

The elderty gent, who lived in
my apartment building, always
had something wise to sey
to me when I was leaving for
work. My favorite was, "Mind
~.~~ ~wn business before

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I
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I
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SURE .. 1M DROWIIIING.
AND M'{ 6,UDD'i IS
t::/\T"'" COOKIES ~

-·-"1231

dHk. ttc. 814 441-4311.

.

7·•1

WI-•·

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S310G or trodo tor anyth1119 011
54 Mlsc:ellaneoua
64 H_ay &amp; Grain
!'!u•l votuo; car hautor t,.llor,
.t7110, 114-812-la2.
Me1Chandll8
St- tor ulo, doltvery ml~ 111M Boja 20 1 11dor VI 10
Largo amount Foolboll cardt, oblo, col 61+Wz.7H1, 114-112- mph plus lrallor, . .., .._
oomo 8-llcoldo, $120. J04. 11010•.____
oortoo P,IOO .-.-.614111-4e34.
:fl7.0584
Land Dovllopmont, Ef. 47 wanted to Rent
Transportation
1888 Four Wlnno 110
Lllllllmo lom!IY .,_bollhlp:
ON Homo Contor Will Show You
f\lodlll 111 HP 11304·77Wtl15.
Royol
Ooko
A.-t.
Cooat
tQ
Howl Your Now SJn;lo Or Nice, c!Mn 2 or 3 ~ 1llroom
Neer Pomlt"'i, OH. ,,_..
Doub1o. Will, Saptlc, Foundt· hollll, protor privelo oottl119, CoUt.
Boor Trollor, Gllvonlnd Con71 Autos for Sale
441 ~..
.
lion ., Orivowoy, Allin One Loon 114-812·2421, -~~~ 11
lllructlon
Now 11m - •·
Pockaao1!- Rot-, Dpon Lots noanswtr.
1m Ford :114 ton 1nock, u111My 114UI1831.
bodv, 11000; 1811 Nl ....
Whh Llgmocl · 1-IQO.IH.
1710.
Sanlro, oxcollni -ton. MUIII Sill: Now 44" lololl119 · ...
Merchandtse
-blckboat-.S100
&gt;
$2700; 114-lltMIII. . ·
llnn. l14-~101.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1110 Oldo DoHa 171, Royoll 2
door coupe, one awn., uc:et• ocro portlot on Llodlna Crook, 51
Household
SHOO, • acro po~lal, $1000,
lont condhlon, "-· 307 v. 76 Auto Parts &amp;
1,11110, 114-112.e711. ,
Ludlng Crwk watw avelleble,
Goods .
PIHtlc And lllolol Cutv.tllnch
Accessories
·2TT2.
1110 Yolklwoaon Rtbblt Good
tD-5 Thursday • IIMLrdly, Thru 10 Inch In ·
Ron
4 Whho opoloo ond llrlo, ,·
U Ac,.. For Sail by ow-, 8ulovlllo Plko, 11• IIIII At • Eveno, .tociiMn, Ohio. 1-. CondMion, Calllf4.446.287t. .
lito
Ford
or
.tolo,
$110:
'
N.G. ~ Se- A..o. 11+318· 1110, Houoollold Goods Crofto, 137-1521.
1111 Olda 8roughlm, now
1431,
311MH.
SPQrlo crano, NASCAA Mlllll, 11oaro Yn Fonco, E l i - - n paint, Y-4 motor l plaotlc toolbox !Or tuil otao '
INck,
140,
814-MI-3005 :
Cordi.
CondMton, $210 CoM lloloro tronomloillot!, 11,300, Aalloy onylln~e.
2p.nt. 114-44t.o7tl
· - · lOU"II-2410.
Rentals
8udglll Tronomlnlonl, u.d •
Tandy 1000 Sl Clomp&lt;Aor, 2 1113 210ZX Turbo, IOOd ont:: robuiR, 11anl119 It SlltL)ront
Y-. Cltol, uu Now, Looldad body worto. "$2,500.
whMI drlvo 'lllrtl119 ot JMI.oo
Whh Ertrul Sottw... lnciUdacl. IJI.IIOI or 1"11-3100.
114-245-17177, 1144N-2213.
41 Houaes for Rent
1112 Ilk a . - o Coftlllro 310, ~~~
Altlrlp.m.
2 BR honle: $271/m0., ttOO-. l I l l - Dn All VInyl I Cor- Toytor 8lngll , _ Sol 8orvo Vol, • o~d, T·Top, Rolloy -maro •~• ond: 1111 117Dwhoolo, S3,8!)0.104~711·t331.
1V73. No hood. SlOG 010. 614On AI. 5M In Eno. f14.311-lli3,
t41~MS.
In StoCk. SI.OG 1111. llollollan let CtMM Machine. ~~ ..
1-1:30, lion. lhru Frl., nk tor
_
Air
eo.d.
taoo.
Will
rpott, IM-441-11144.
Don.
Dollvor. Now ~ .,.._ 1112 Otdo Cutlou Cll. $1,000. or Now flU tonko, body po~o, trodo tor Clmaro, 3Q4.17S.7tll. ton truck whoolo, rodlot-,
2314 Mt. Votnon Avo, Onlell 2 Dlnotto 101: gino top, I chairs. 3311, Or 411-12M111.
1112 Suboru DL, 2 whool drivo, tloar rri11a. etc. D I A Auto,
boclroom1 biHIMI1I, ~ gorogo, 114·311-9211.
~oylor Flrod Ho4 Wltlr
OutI _.t, aoool rumlng car, Rlptoy, WV. 304-37Mm or ,.
nice y.,., rot l diD. $250. mo, 0000 USEO APPLIANCES Wood
Fur· 1310.
100-2'1:1-8588.
304-6"1Wit8.
no polo, no Hucl, 31f4.l!J1.211t.
clryoll, rolrlgoretor:!, - · Your
Entlrw
Homo
Appll- ,. And - l c Ho4 Wlror from A 1113 Iuick Aogo~ WIICkod RobuiH 310 VI motor tor 1m
2br City Se-, SSSMio. Pllll rongoo . .. _
drl\'lr aide, manJ III'W parte, Ford F·tiO. Al~.lool thin 3,000
UtllhiM. Rot~r~nco And Dopollt. Vlno St-. Cllll-.7311, 1· Wood Flro Dutalda Yaw 1-100141221:1.
I00-41111-3411t.
114 Ul 4417.
aoool lnopoctlon, drlvoo good, mllu. Also, .., trona-.
51..882·553•.
304-111-3420.
WATERUNE SAL£
3br 1·112 8oth, lOG Block Of Kenrnot11 port1ble WMMr I
Third. lluot have Rot--.
good cond, SlOG. 304·773- :11• Inch 200 PSI 1185 1 Inch 200 1114 Ford f.3SO Ton Dual Slou1 Volvo Grlnolor, Soot GrindPSI $33.10 Rein Evono En. WhHI, Dilllt, Good Condition, Ing 1111, Offoro And T.-. 614No Poto. lloml- I:OG·11:00.
lorprl-, 1-100-53"1'1128.
Manr Elln11, 14,200, 080, 114- 441-2301, lf4.441.1111, VIcki.
LAVNE'S FURNITURE
UNm
·
Whho fltooraiHo t - . Ills
Comploto lulrllonllllllllltnaolfngo.. 55
2 bedioom home~J:· nlc• •Houro:
Building
ohon wldo Dod Chivy, $300.
llor&gt;Sat, H. I~
neigh-.
3.
3114~75-2773.
0322, 3 mlln 0111 Bu- Rd.
Suppllea
Nice lbr, 2 Story- Whh Full FrooDollvory.
-mont, Chosht.. Vllllgo,
Block, brick, lliDoo. win.
1221 .... .... DlpoSlt. New O.k Fvrnllure: Chln1 ,., I
Nntllo,
....
CloUdo
cabln.te,
walh8ta,.,
table
1
614-317-GIM.
.... Rio Grondo, OH Coli -11+

g:.

T11U, JUI.Y 23

HUUI

UO&lt;J••

,_IIAL' GOVERNIIENT 1$
111.000 • 172.-Yr. 1· 72tC", P~roy, 01141~n.
• Iff tfOO Elt. 01111 For Truck Orlvenl, t.2
llan-On
' 11 ' 1 - .
Banut For lefe, a;;.. D"rtwra
.. &amp; ltj ..._ ,...._ HM WIOTA Exp. TuiUon..fr11 Traktlng For lnoxp. Corn Tronolnc. 1·
100
a.,.. Hlgll Coo 1 It II n And
'75UNO, Do114. A-111.
·Two Col- Truck Drt..ro, Amorlcon PrillClll 1 100_... Llnll, 011oro TOjl P'll!:
Land.IM,OOO. 1~1431, • ..._
'
iloMIIIOMYOU,IIo
.talal- Hlrlna lloll-ondo.llln. l Yro. OTR 3111111.
.. - . .- · - Ana Exp. 1ol00 Ill 2711. Do!ll. A0-1.
Q? 77 J' For A Llol Of Truck DriY11'11: .Mif19 Po' 'Up
Mol Allllntlon, Clll I· To .... Whh Porloroiiance In~ bt. ....
. ...;;; AI , • lllonttta. E\IOIY 10-14 Oovo. lllllt lo 25
I?
':r
•
,.;,..
W/2 Vn,. OTR lxp. Hullol En.
_
, llr ..._ Coolnly.

*

•

'

1183 Yomoha 1200 Fill Draoo ,
12,000 IIIII. Aold119 $1,100. 114- .
211-1252.
1114 Honda Nlaht- !OOIS,
blk • rod, 7,000" mlflo, 2 ........
1119 tun loco holm Ill, $1,100- ,
- · 304-1"11-4001.
·~
111M Honda loblo, 2
St,ooo. (10011 conol, 304-111-4031. '
111M Honda •XR4011; Good Condhlon, Rooontly 0 . . - ,
Now 8oalt And lncludad. St,too. . -..'1'171.
1181 Honda XR200A, aood
ohot&gt;o. aooc1 onglnl, $410.-_ '
1"11-11011 or 17W100.
·"

Roome for ront • - o r molllh.
Sto~l~ ot S120/mo. Goltto Nolol.
11C • 1110.
Stoot&gt;lna ,.,..,. wHh oooklng.
Aloo t11l1or _ .. All --ups.
Coil oftor 2:00 p.m., J04.7735UI, MillOn wv.

Yard 5ale

Television
Viewing

Motorcyclal

1113 Hondo Vo4l 1111111. -

TUTI&amp;Ill

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.

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'YESTTX,

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&gt;PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Whh Jollnny Carson gone, It will be a little like
lll&lt;lng 0 letter 'our of the alphabet.' - Jolin l arroquelte.

'

.,

•

�:page 12-nie Dally sentinel

•

Thursd8y, July 23; 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·weather pict~re bleak heading.
into weekend ·
.

OHIO Weather
Friday, July~
Accu-Weatha- fOit.CaSt·for

conditions and

MICH

•

IToledo I 79" I
e

PA.

IMansfield Iso• l•

By Tbe AsMldated Press
Aseries of low pressure systems
rippling alon$ a stalionaty fronllll
system contmue to bring rainy
weather 10 Ohio.
The National Weather Service
says showers and thunderstorms
were in tlte forecasts for tonight

Lows
and higbs on
to mid-80s.

IND.

will be in the 60s
in the mid-70s

Forecasters said lhere may be a
break: in the rainy weather on Saturday.

• IColumbus la2• I

The recool-higb temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 99 degrees in 1933
while the record low was 47 in
1947. Sunset ronigbt will be at 8:54
p.m. and sunrise ·Friday at 6:23
a.m.

Baker...

W. VA.

·~

..e&amp;\

~ ··'

~

""''''

well,"

-----Weather----Soutb-Central Oblo
Tonight, variable cloudiness
with a chance of showers and thundersiOOIIs. Low around 70. Chance
pf rain 40 percent Friday, variable
cloudiness with a chance of show·
ers and thunderstonns. High in the

mid-80s. Chance of rain 50 percent
·
Extended forecast:
Saturday tbrougb Monday:
Fair on Saturday and Monday.
A chance of showers and thunderstorms Sunday. Highs mainly in the
80s. Lows in the 60s.

Israel has had troopS in southern .
Lebanon since invadinl the country
in 1978. After a second invasion, in
1982, Israel's self-styled "security
zone" inside Lebancn wu·exoanded in an effort to keep hostile Muslim guerrillas from attacking the

r----Local briefs... - .....

664

Pick 4:

Page4

0772

1Vz Mie South of Tuppers Plains On State Route 7
Cloak tor ow New 418 Sip)

·

1992 Fleer Ubra 8-.bllll Serlee f. I
1992 Topp. St8dlum Club B••l!balll •11.
111t12 Tripi• P1.y BaMINIII"Jumbo PIICkl
1892 Fleer Footbell •Jumbo PIICkl"
1992 Score PlniiiiCie Regular or "Jumbo
PIICke"
1992 NFL Wild Clln:t Football •
.
1992 Upper DIICk Baelblll Jumbo PIICkl
Regular Line of Upper DIICk, Don Run,

Jewish state.
Baker made his trip 10 Lebanon
on a day that seemed to epitomize
the variety of violence and disorder
that conunues to plague the small
Mediterranean country despite the
ending of a 15-year-long crvil war
in 1990.
At 7:30a.m., five hours before
Baker llld Hrawi met, Israeli war·
planes bombed suspected Shiite
guerrilla hideouts 35 milea south·
west of Zahleh. At least two people
were reported woonded.
··
At 10:45 a.m., a top aide to
Palestinian terrorist Abu Nidal was
assassinated in Beirut, 23 miles
west of Zableh.
There wu no immediate claim
of responsibility for the submachine-gun slaying of the aide,
Walid Khaled.

Vol• .u, No. a

1992 Leaf Serleel
PacHic Plu• PIO Foolball

COMIC Bill CIW&amp;'I'IU

he Card Box h• ~ huJitl••lectlon for
lhe Comic Book Collector
'Old to New Coma
'Sought Alter Comic•
'Rare Comlce
COlli AND SEt GUa HUGl SlliCTIOII

By JIM FREEMAN
OVPNews StaiT
It's up to the jud~e to decide if
Gallia County Shenff Dennis R.
Salisbury can run for re-election.
Attorneys for the sheriff and his
primary election challengers, E.
James Sheets and Ralph Steinbeck,
presented their cases Thursday
mornin~ before Judge Richard
Walton m the GaUia County Court
of Common Pleas.
A decision is expected next

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Now You Can'Piek Up Your Monlhly B~~~eba]J.,
Football and. BMketball Beekett8

OPEIIMONtlY-SATUIDAY 1011.11.-6 P.M.
CALL 667·6092 FOR SPECIAL APPOIIITMEIIT.

week.

Court news

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Pre•lnltllled WlndOWI .

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lllcrOIIIfl Worlls tor
Wlndows•nd

Hospital news

~.Fia.

, He 'Will preceded in death by a
lirother and two sisrm.
' Graveside servicea are set for
tbunday at 1 p.m. at' Suncrest
Cemetery with Father Melvin
Averyman officiating. Military
niDI 'llli11 be held by the American
Lelicn Post 23 of Point PleuanL
;. There w= no calling bours and
iinugemerus II'C under the direcCian of Wilcoxen Funeml Home. ·

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Matt Myers and Keltb Myers, Sr., all or Long
Bottom, are pictured casting their liars (and
relaxing) Wednesday eveuing.

Walton, from the Lawrence
County Coun of Common Pleas,
was assigned to hear the case.
Sheets and Steinbeck say a
recent Ohio Supreme Court decision makes Salisbury ineligible for
re-election.
The Ohio Supreme Court on
May 20 ordered the Portage County Board of Elections to remove
incumbent Sheriff P. Ken Howe's
name from the Democratic Party
primary election ballot because he
lacked the five-years law enforce-

ment experience required by Ohio code and said the requirements
were designed 10 insure the re-elecRevised Code 311.01.
The decision also overturned an tion of incumbent sheriffs.
"lf.the voters don't want (SalisOhio Attorney General 's office
opinion stating that Howe and Sal- bury) in office, they don't have to
isbury were exempted because they vote for him," Eachus said. He
took office before the requirements cited a·finding by a Richland County judge who said the code was
too1c effect
In his opening statement, unconstitutional.
The constitutionality of ORC
Richard D. Roderick, attorney for
Sheets and Steinbeck, asked the 311.01 is already being contested
judge to declare Salisbury ineligi- in Brown County by Kenneth L.
.
ble to run in November's general (Duke) Snider.
Snider, who was at the hearing
election and asked him to tell the
board of elections to remove Salis- in support of Salisbury, attempteil
to run for sheriff in Brown Coun!)'
bury's name from the ballot
Salisbury's attorney, William but was inclillible because of the
·
Eachus, said the Ohio Supreme five-year requl!CmenL
Snider has been a certified
Court's decision did not apply
because the Portage County case police officer since ~ug. 8, !988,
was "properly and timely filed." and now serves as ch1ef of police 1)1
Sheets and Steinbeck filed their Mowrystown. In addition, Snider
first protest June 25 compared to said he has a master's degree in
·•
February 26 in the Portage County education administration.
Approximately 60 people
case.
Furthennore, Eachus challenged attended the hearing in the Gallia
the constitutionality (of the revised County Cowt of Common Pleas.

Largest drug, cash seizure
Miller
asks
Supreme
Court
to
:
in Meigs' history reported review 6th District election ·

JAMES BAKER

Pomeroy Court news

" Mutdmedla

Decision expected next
week in Salisbury case

Score, Fleer • fopp1

LAZY DAY • Fishermen, as well as boaters,
are maklug good use of tbe uew Obio River
access project at Forked Run State Park. Here,
Billy Barber, Johu Myers, Keitb Myers, Jr.,

Marriage liceusa grruated
The Big Bend Youth Football League will hold sign up on
Marriage licenses have been
August I, August 8 and August 15 from 9 a.m. to noon at Big Bend
granted in Meigs County Probate
Health and Fitness Center (Locomotion) on Mechanic
Street
in
Coon
to Timothy Thomas Michael,
'
19, Racine,. and Tara Lyn· Morris,
Pomeroy.
·
21 , Pomeroy; to Harold Eugepe
Those wishing to .sign ~ should bring a copy of their birth cerHood, 59, Racine, and Mary Magtificate.lnfonnauon 1s av8llable by calling 992-3486 after 4:30p.m.
dalena McDaniel, 54, Mason,
W.Va.; William Ray Finkenbinder,
7I, Racine, and Mary Joyce Clart,
57, Racine; and to Richard Allen
Hudson, 23, Syracuse and Lana Jo
Nine were lined and nine others Jr., Racine, $375 and costs, DUJ, Proffitt, 42, Racine.
forfeited bonds in the court of also $43 and costs, left of center; Divorces, dissolutions proe !&amp;sed
Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed Tues- John Bauen, Athens, $63, failure to
A divorce action has been flied
comply; and Marion Arnold, in Meigs County Common Pleas
.day night
.
Fined were Martha Boyton , Pomeroy, $60 and COsts, failure to Cowt by Tammy 1. Baker, Tuppers
Pomeroy, 5375 and costs, DUI. and yield.
Plains, against Dale W. Baker,
Forfeiting bonds were Carolyn Reedsville.
.$63 and costs, disorderly manner;
James Lee Games, Pomeroy, $113 Elam, Pomeroy, $42, speeding;
An action for dissolution of
and costs, public intoxication; Robcn F. Lawson, Reedsville, $67, marriage has been filed by Tina
William Johnson. Middleport, $213 no insurance; Jane Harris, Racine, Clark, Pomeroy, and Charles M.
and costs, petty theft; Kimberly $63, speeding; Mark B. Williams, Clark:, Gallipolis.
Turner, Coolville, $53 and costs, Pomeroy, $64, speeding; Raena L.
A di~lution has been granted
'speeding; Kenton Ramsey. $88 and Eblin, Pomeroy, $64, speeding; in the court 10 Charles K. Burris
costs, consuming alcohol under age William Amott, Racine, $60, fail- and Sandra S. Burris.
21 and $88 and costs, open tlast ure to yield; Naree A. Hale, Dexter,
A divorce has been granted to
on' the parking lot; Kenneth $60, failure 10 yield; Angela Reese, Qixic Inez Porter from Thomas C.
Mankin, Pomeroy, $113 and costs, Pomeroy, $50, no insurance; Mari- Porter.
public intoxication; Elmer Parsons, on Arnold, Pomeroy, $80, no oper- Judgment sought
aiOr's license; and Rodney Clonch,
A judgment action has been
Langsville, $80, failure to comply.
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Arthur Sttauss,
Middleport, and others, against Jeff
Middleport Court news Grate,
Coolville, and others, in the
Jack Sprouse
amount
of $10,324. The suit
Three were fmed and two others
Jack Andrew Sprouse, 58, of
on a promissory
alleges
default
Colorado ,Springs, Colo., f~erly forfeited bonds in the court of. Midnote.
of Mason County, W.Va., died on dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman this
Thursday, July, 16 at his home fol- week.
Fined were Mark A. Clark, Midlowing.a short 1Uness.
dleport,
$425 and costs and three
· Born on February 1, 1934, in
days
in
•jail,
physical control of a
Kaylong, W.Va., he was the son of
Am Ele Power ...................33 1/2
motor
vehicle
while under the
the late James M. and Maud
Ashland
Oil .......................24 3/8
influence of alcohol or drugs, and
(8ooth) Sprouse.
AT&amp;T...............................43 1/8
A member of the St. Paul $100 and costs, driving under susBank One ........................... 44 1/4
€atholic Church of Colorado pension; Briar. K. HoOey, MiddleBob Evans ........................ .18 1/8
Springs, he spent four years in the port, Sl 0 and costs, running a red
Charming Shop.................. 30 7/8
Air Force, was an A1r Force light; Stephanie M. Gardner,
City Holding ...................... l9 7/8
sergeant, and was presented the Pomeroy, $10 and COsts, no operaFederal Mogul... ............... .l7 3/8
IJ9od Conduct Medal, Under civil tor's license.
GoodycarT&amp;R
..................63 7/8
Forfeiting bonds. were Michael
service, he won the Shield ComKey
Centurion
...................
20 1/4
inand Award and Master of Space R. Van Meter, Pomeroy, $60,
Lands
End
..........................
30
3/4
pPeralions Award. A graduate of squealing tires; and Judy K.
Limited
Inc
.......................
20
1/4
. W.twna High School, he attended Hunter, Middleport, $50, speeding.
Multimedia Inc ..................27 1/2
the University of Maryland.
Rax Rcstaurant................. .. l(l
• Surviving are his wife, Linda
Reliance
Elecll'ic ................ l7 7/8
Gail "Lucy" Sprouse; daughter,
Robbins&amp;Myers
:............... 17
~Iizabeth Ann Sprouse, Colorado
Shoney's
Inc
......................
21
Springs; son, Adam Sprouse of
VeteraDS Memorial
Star
Bank
.....................
:
....
.33
1/4
tolorado Springs; six sisters: Judy
WEDNESDAY AD~SJONS
Wendy lnt '!. ....................... !! 1/4
Ointher, Chester, Joanna Reed, - Lovena Neal, Middleport, and
Worthington Ind ................23
i:tuntingiOn, W.Va., Pearline Van- Martha Parson, Racine.
Stock reports are the 10:30
Eltthem of Barboursville, Betty
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt,
~napp. of ))elaware, Ohio, Lera - Winnie White, Cecil King, and
Ellis
and Loewl ol Gallipolis.
I.'Ji&lt;:,e of Texas, and Maurene Fhur- Addie WII!!ICI'. ·
ln,in of New Jeney: thrtc brothers:
~ fames M. Sprouse of Chester,
i\lfml Sprouse of Point Pleasan~
ind ROICOC SfiOUSC of Winter Gar-

..

2Sectione,14 PegH2$-

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 24, 1992

Copyrlghletl 1112

EMS units answer calls

Sign up scheduled

sunny. High In mid-80s.

667·6092

Coutluued from page 1
Units of Meigs Emergency Services answered calls for assistance on Wednesday.
At 7: I0 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Old Route 33 for Olga
Yonker, who was laken to Pleasant VaUey Hospilal. At 8:02a.m.,
Rutland squad went to Headley Street in MiddlepM and took Evelyn Munay to Holzer Medical Center. At 8:33 a.m., Tuppers Plains
squad went 10 State Route 7 and took Tony Jones 10 Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
. .
At 2:05 p.m., Middlepon squad went 10 Pleasant Ridge Road in
Pomeroy. Norma Parker was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 8:25 p.m., Middleport squad went 10 South Second. Levena
Moodispaugh was tnnsported 10 Veterans. At 9:14 p.m., Middleport squad went to Overbrook Center and took Eva Schreiber to
Veterans. At7:17 a.m., Pomeroy squad took Paul Houdashelt from
Wehe Tenace to Holzer.

Low tomlght In mlcl-605:
Partly cloudy. Saturday,.partfy

•

TBIE CARD BOX

Coutlnued from. page 1

aways to go with, I think, respect to
Lebanon. ... The ISiliCii negotiating
team and the negotiating team fro.m
Lebanon, we hope, will get back
together very soon in order 10 make
progress with respect 10 the issues
that confront that negotiation as

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

Gallipolis,
Middleport
teams .win

fell near Garfield, Kan., and. thun- the northeast Plains and the rest of
.
derstorm winds gusted 10 75 mph at the NorthweaL
Highs
in
the
80s
were
forecast
Ontario, Ore. ·
, ·
Temperatures in the 60s were for most of the Southeast, the
forecast !Oday for northern Penn· . northem and central Plains, tb.e
sylvania and 'southern New York southern Rockies and most of Ca)istate and in nonhem Montana and fornia. Temperatures in the 90s
the PacifiC Northwest coas~ Read- were ex,pected in Florida, South
ings in the 70s were expcctcid ·jp the Carolina, the southern Mississippi
rest of the ~ tbe Midwest, Valley, Texas and New Mexico.

Around the Dation
Fog and clouds hung over many
Eastern cities early !Oday, with rain ·
in some areas.
Heavy rain ·and strong wind
were forecast for the centtal
Atlantic coast states !Oday, while
steady rain also wlis expected for
tbe southern New England coast
and the eastern Great Lakes.
Wednesday evening, rain showers and thunderstorms extended
over the central and southern
· Atlantic coastal states, the southern
Appalachians, the Tennessee Valley, the Mississippi Valley, Texas,
Kansas, North Dakota, the Rockies
and the Pacific NorthwesL
Tornadoes touched · down
Wednesday at Clearwaler', Fla., and
north of Ruper, Idaho. No injuries
were reported. Golf ball-size hail

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Low At S11 hr Monlh•
IIIII 'rtct 1011712$/12 flog. 11.15121·1509

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na was confiscated at the scene Jail, pending the flling of charges,
early on Thursday, along with and the cash and drugs seized yes$65,000 in cash. Soulsby reported terday have been sent to the Ohio
on Thursday that another $37,000 BCI labs for te$ting.
was seized from an undisclosed- . ''This is yery dearly 'the largeSt
location.
cash seizure from drug transactio&amp;s
Soulsby was ass.isted !n the ever seized !n the county's histosearch by Story's mvesugator ry," Story srud.
Michael Canan and representauves
Charges of possession of more
of the Ohio Bureau of Criminal than three times the bulk: amount of
lnvesti~ation and Identification, marijuana will~ flied against Di.lStorysrud.
lard, Story sa1d. That charge IS
Dillard was arrested and is now commonly known as "traffiCking in
incarcerated in the Meigs County marijuana", a third-degree felony.

President Bush is heckled at
meeting with-POW-MIA families
WASHINGTON (~) - President Bush was roundly heckled and
interrupted today when he went
before an audience of POW-MJA
families to defend administratiqn
efforts to get information about
Americans who did not return from
combat.
The episode began when one
woman s!Ood up and yelled at the
president, "No more lies."
Then, a good portion of the
audience of about 300 stood up and
shouted at Bush, "Release all flies;
tell the truth." Some people held

up pictures of missing relatives.
It took five minutes before order
was restored. In the meantime,
Bush walked away from the lectern
at a suburban hotel and talked with
Jeff Donahue, the brother of an Air
Force major missing in Laos and a
member of the Notional League of
Families of American MIAs-POWs
in Southeast Asia.
Returning to the microphone,
Bush angrily told the group he did
not like the suggestion that he
would sit on knowledge about
missing servicem~ . .

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Low Atl15 Per Month •
Evorydoy Low Price 120-&lt;100

ASHLi\ND, Ky. (AP) _The Steelworkers Local 1865, said the
mood was grim at a United Steel- mood at union hall today was "not
workers union hall today during the too good at aU." He srud telephone
final boors before Armco Steel calls were from employees wo~rCo's Ashland hot strip mill was to ing if they were on the layoffhst
~d 10 a permanent halL
Hewlett said he didn't know
The move will' result in the how many salaried employees were
elimination of about 675 jobs. In . included i~ t?e first round of laythe first phase of the shut down offs and didn t know when another
layoff notifications were being seni 411 union-covered workers would
!Oday 10 264 union members.
he notified.
Mike Hewlett president of
The employees have known

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Highway closed by high water
Low Aa 115 P1r Month •
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He said sue h charges were
"totally unfair."
"What kind of allegation is that
to make against a patriot?" Bush
demanded.
"Would you please be quiet and
let me fmish?" Bush said when he
was interrupted again. "Would you
please shut up and sit down?" he
said to applause.
"To suggest that the comman:
der-in-chief that led this country
into its most successful recent
effort would condone for one sinConfinued on page 3

Mood is grim in final hours
·before shutdown of Arm~o f!Zi!l

---=-, · .-~.-, .•~m \
'

. What is being described as the
. largest seizure of cash from a drug
. transaction in Meigs County history took place in a search and
seiztiie,openllion early. Thursday. According to Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story, his office and the office of
Sheriff James M. Soulsby obtained
a warrant 10 search the Keebaugh
Road residence of John Dillanl, 37,
nearChesterlateWednesday.
According to Story , eight to
nine pounds _of processed marijua-

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Rei. •t.tl 1'3·388

1 111 11a•u.,

Ra&lt;lk&gt; Shack hao
...rythlng·you nttG
from jacka, corda,
cabM and tnttrl to
1ho """'you to
lnotallthem. Como 1o
Ul for II your I ...
phone-.

Heavy rains late Thursday night and early Friday morning
washed gravel from driveways, .filled bottoms and ditches, and
resulted in the closing of ORe" state hiahway.
State Route 143 just a few miles off State Route 7 near the old ·
landfill enaance was still closed at 10:30 a.m. Friday by high water.
County Highway employee David Spencer said that no COUJlty
roads were closed.
. ·
, .
·
Gene Gnite who monitors rainfall at his residence on Front'Sireet
in Middleport siid that .82 of an inch fell after 11 p.m. last ni$ht'
until the 1ain stopped about 7:30 a.m. this morning. Heavier rams
were reported in other sections of the county.
.
.

Swan cited to court
Meigs County Sheriff Jl!lles M. Soulsby reported that .Thomas
Swan of Racine was arre&amp;ll!d on Thursday evenina Cll a Capiaa from
Meias County Court for failing 10 pay old flnea.
He was alJo cited 10 Mei&amp;s County Court 911 a littering charge.
&lt;;Joul!ou~f! ~ page 3

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Congressman Clarence Miller of
Lancaster, who narrowly lost the
June·!i GOP primary eleetion in the
6th Congressional District, asked
the Ohio Supreme Court to review
the results.
1be election was won by fellow
Rep. Bob McEwen o( Hillsboro by
286 votes, election officials ruled
after a recount completed July 7.
Miller claimed m his contest of
election, filed late Thursday. that
there were irregularities and inaccuracies in the tabulation of votes
in several countiea, incfuding Highland, where McEwen lives.
McEwen said he didn 't expect
Miller to challenge the election
results.
· "Frankly I'm surprised and a
little disappointed that Clarence
thinks it necessary 10 tie the courts
up with this after the secretary of
state's office certified the results,"
McEwen said in a news release.
About 66,000 votes were cast in
the election, which featured the

Malone to
be honored
Saturday

State Representative Mark Malone (D-South Point) will be honored at a picnic in Meigs County
on Saturday, according to Meigs
County Democratic Chairman Sue
about the s?utdown SIDCe April, but Maison.
Eugene Branstool, Chairman of
th~t hasn t made the end less
the Ohio Democratic Party is
pal?,ful.
,
• ,
expected
to attend the picnic.
. Every~ne s r~al depressed, . Bmnstool was.
recently the subject
sa1d Lotlle Rat! Iff, a 14-year
of
nationwide
med1a attention
employee.at the m111. "They~ n?t when he cast Ohio's
votes for Presto show 11, but you can see 11 m
idential
Candidate
Bill
at
their eyes."
.
_ the Democratic NationalClinton
ConvenCompany spokesman B1U Skaf,
tion in New Y01t City. Ohio's vote
gs has acknowledged th.at mora !l put
Clinton "over the top" and
?.n the 39-year~!d steel hne has ~It made him the party's official nomirock botiOm, although qualuy nee for the presidency.
also hosted Clinton
who .andBranstool
his
running
mate, Senator At
worked on the bot strip mill were
Gore
of
Tennessee
at his Licking
invited to witness its closing this
County
farm
on
Sunday.
afternoon, in what was tenned a
Several Democratic candidates
farewell party for the" mill.
are
expected 10 be in 11tendance at
Skaggs said Owen Bradley, a
the
picnic, including State Senator
retiree who put metal bands around
the firsl steel coil that rolled 0111 of Jan Michael Long (D-Circleville);
the mill in 1953, will band the last State Representative Mary Abel
(D-Athens): the Democratic candione.
date
for the 6th U.S. Conaressional
Meanwhile, the union is coolin·
Di~trict,
Ted Strickland of
uing .0 negotiale a sevcance pactLucasville;
and local Del!locratic
age for wormen who may 1ote jobs
candidatea.
in the shutdown, which ~ workA $10 per-person donation :will
ers viewed as a prelude to econombenefit
Malone's re-election camic chaos for the entite Ashland
paign, and those attending are to
area.
bring
lawn c:hlir. The picrilc will
"This whole area's &amp;WtiiO be be helda It
home of Jane Prymydevastated. ll's goi~F to_feather er, Gilkeythe
Ridge
near Dar·down to everyone, sa1d Greg win, beginning 116"Road
p.m.
·
Bradley, 33, a 13-year Armco
The
~Y is 1ocaled off State
employee. "I j!'st don,'t see any Route 681 West, lind signs will be
hope at aU for thiS area nght now. .
posted.

only Republican House incumbents
in the ·na.tion running against each
other.
The Supreme Court, after hearing or reviewing the evidence,
could declare either candidate the
winner. It also could determine it
was a tie and must be seltlcd by lot,
or set the results aside and require a
new election.
The 6th District wound up with
large portions of Miller's present
southeast Ohio lOth DiSI!ict following a congressional redistricting
law enacted by the Legislature earlier this year.
Miller's petition asks the
Supreme Court to "correctly ascertain and announce the results of
said election, after eli~ina~ng th~

impact of the 11regutant.'e~. ana
inaccuracies descn bed herem.
The 12-term congressman
charged that the Highland County
Board of Elections failed to follow
standard procedures in remaking
certain ballots because the original
voting cards were not accepted by
the machine.
He also said that absentee ballots in Hocking County may have
been voted by an individual or individuals other than the voters to
whom they were issued.
Miller said that since the election, his staff has conducted inter·
views with about 200 Warren
County voters whose precincts
were split. and that some may .have
voted in the wrong congress1onal
district

Memorial Fund established
A Sharon Wright Alzheimer's
Disease Memorial Fund has been
established by the Meigs County
Council on Aging, Inc.
Wright was employed several
years as the coordinator of the
Alzheimer's Disease and Related
Disorders Program before her death
in November, 1991.
Her dedication to her job and to
her clients prompted the Council
on Aging to do a tribute to Wright.

The plaque will be placed in the
multipurpose Senior Center and
will list the names of conlributors
of $50 or more.
The funds collected will go in10
th e Center's fund for the
Alzheimer's Program.
Donations to the Sharon Wright
Memorial Fund may be made II the
Center or mailed to the Meigs Multipurpose Senior Center, P. 0 . Box
722, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.

has~~~fof=oo re~

•

~·

DISPLAYS PLAQUE - Bttb neJa, Commault, Strvketi·
Director for tile Sealor Ceiuer, displays the Shno• Wrltllt
Alzllelmer's Disease Memorial Fuud plaque ftk:h wiiiU.1 Ia tbt
Seaior Center. Tbe Dames ollbose contributlag $50 ar...,... wiD
be listed on tbe plaque.
·
I

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="33668">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="33667">
              <text>July 23, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1983">
      <name>sprouse</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
