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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

Padres slip
past Reds;
Braves lose
·By ED PETERSON
Social Security
Mana1er In Athen.s
Breast cancer is among the top
· health concerns of American
:women. In fact, more than 40,000
. will die of breast cancer this year.
,fortunately, more and more
women have learned that early
detection through mammography
could allow effective intervention
'and trealliiCnt of the disease.
However, many women may not
know that part of the costs of mammography screening may be paid
.f!lr by Medicare. Since January
1991, Medicare l'llrt B has paid for
·up to 80 percent of the lowest of
li!ese, three amounts- I) the physi.c1an s charge; (2) the amount
ll!lo~ed under the Medicare physi·
ctan s schedule; or (3) the estab·
~ished fee limiL (The 1992 fee limit
~s $56.76, of which Medicare
would pay a maximum of 80 per·eent, or $45.41).
· Who is eligible?
. Wo~e~ must be age 65 or older,
.or recervmg Social Security dis:)lbility benefits to be eligible.

~edicllle will help pay

for diagnosuc mammograms for women
who have any signs of a problemsuch as a lump or mass in the
breast-any time·they're ordered by
the attending physician and are
eonsidenxl necessary.
If a woman is 65 or older, Medi·
care helps pay for a manlmogrnm
every other year. For women aged
35-39 who are disabled Medicare
will help pay the cost of a baseline
For women who arc
~.mammogrnm.
isabled and aged
4049, paymcnl
tS ·for one screening every other

y~omenaged50-64whoarcdis-

By CHRIS TORCHIA
Associated Pres.~ Writer
BOSTON - Dana Jones, a for..mer cocaine addict sick with AIDS,
, was sure things couldn 'I get any

TYLF.R LF.E DUFFY

Couple announces
birth of first child
Jack and Lois Duffy, Worthing·
ron, announce the hirlh of their second child, a son, Tyler Lee, on June
20 at Marion Ocncml Hospital.
The infant weighed seven
pound! and 12 and one-half ounces
and was 20 inches long.
Paternal grandparents arc Jack
and Jcanncuc Duffy, Syr:x:usc.
Marernal gmndparents arc Lynn
and Kay Rci.nke, Marion.
The couple also has another son,
Michael Scotl.

Th e George p ickens
· fiamz'/y

Missionary Pickens to. speak

abled arc covered for a yearly
,,
mammography screening. And so
LONG BOTIO~ ,· George and
are women aged 4049 who have Dcbbtc Ptckcns, m1ss1onaries from
been diagnosed as high risk for . Nairobi, Kenya, will be at the Long
breast cancer.
Bouom United Methodist Church
For more information about this on Thursday at7:30 p.m.
covernge. consult the Medicare car·
Ptckens grew up in the Long
rier 'responsible for processing Pan Bortom area, and has been in the
B claims. In our State that is
Nationwide lnswance.
Information on cancer detection
and prevention is available from
the Cancer Information Service's
toll-free number 1-800-4-CANCER.

llomeless advocates,
AIDS advocates say
:one feeds on the other

sweetsukura~

1'heR also will be seven sets of

By BOB THOMAS
Associated Press Writer
There's nothing like a gOOd old·
fashioned scam 10 gladden the
heart. especially when the victim is
worthy of his fale. That was the
fascination
"The Sring," and
that's the appeal of "Diggstown"
worse. Then he lost his home and - even though the film srrains
joined the growing lanks of Ameri· "edulity. '
The first item that's hard to
cans living with the disease on the
swallow:
Whether any boxer could
streets or in shelters.
defeat
10
opponents, some of them
"If you're homeless, thai's one
burly
sluggers,
within 24 hours.
disease that society loots at," said
How
about
if
the boxer happens
Jones, a 42-year-old former
preschool teacher who lives in a to be 48 years old?
Don't think abo'ut itloo hard .
shelter here. "If you're homeless
lust
relax and enjoy a well-acted,
and have AIDS, you're the lowest
suspenseful
movie.
of the low."
James
Woods
plays a con artist
A federal commission estimated
serving
three
years
in the slammer
that up to half of all Americans
for
selling
old
masters
painted with
with AIDS 8le either homeless or
about to become so, and at least 15 acrylics. His latest enterprise is
percent of people living on the smuggling convicts out through air
streets are infected with the human vents. All the while, he's plouing
his biggest scam.
immunodeficiency virus.
His target: Diggstown, a small
Many people with AIDS end up
town
with a big arena for staging
without aplace to live after getting
so stck they can't work or pay their unofficial and probably iDegal box·
rent. Some homeless people, ing matches. The owner is played
unaware of AIDS education pro- by Bruce Dcrn, .who has acquired
grnms, catch the virus through drug most of the town through thievery
and crooked police.
use or prostitution.
Woods drifts into Diggstown
·''One sort of feeds on the
other," said Paul Davis, director of with a fanwtic scheme: 10 bouts in
education for the Minority AIDS 24 hours, his chosen fighter ..vs. an
Project in South Central Los Ange- amateur field.
Ever suspicious, Dcm takes the
les. "Someone who's homeless is bail. and the belting mounts.
much more at risk of becoming Woods' chances hinge on Lou Gos·
HIV positive than the general pop· sell Jr., long retired from the ring.
ulation."
Once double-crossed by Woods.
Homeless advocates wam that Gosseu is reluctant and his wife is
for AIDS sufferers. many so weak tolally opposed. But the con man
they can't care for lhcmselvcs, the has his way.
added anxiety and physical hard·
Michael Ritchie's direction of
ship of being homeless are often the fights is .a masterpiece of
falal.
orchestration. Probably no movie
"There' s not a bener formula has projected so much sustained
for early death than being on the . boxing, yet each match has a dis·
street or in a shelter where you're rinct charnctcr. The preview audi·
subjcclto constant theft. rnpe, beat· ence cheered like a crowd ar a
ings. People are afraid.
championship bout.
The three principals are perfect·
ly cas1, each according to type.
Woods is the ideal hustler, cocky
and self-assured. Gossen con·
tributes his physical and moral
strength, along with a native skepti·
cism. Cunning and relentlessly cor·
chopsticks -one per astronaut.
"II could be mcs.,y," said shut· rupt, Dem exudes evil.
Oliver Platt, a fine young char·
tle food manager Vickie Kloeris.
In weightlessness, where liquids acter actor, provides ~ intriguing
become floating drops and erum bs ponratt of Woods con-wise
nit aboul like nics, food is a seri- accomplice. Heather Graham is
ous affair.
effec,tive as the sole female interest.
Kloeris and her team of food
While Rirchie achieves credibil·
scientisrs at NASA's Johnson ity in the ring, "Diggstown" goes
Space Center in Houston test virtu·
ally every morsel before it goes up.
Mohri, for example, had to
switch tofu brands for his week long
tnp on Endeavour because his ftrSt
choice had too much liquid in it.
The fluid splashed everywhere
when the package was opened
aboard a NASA plane that provides
brief bursts of weightlessness.
Nicollier had to seule for the
most heat-resistant chocolate.
There is no refrigeraror or freezer
aboard the shuttle, and the fresh
food is kept in lockers. Behind the
lockers are electronics that throw
off so much heat that the temperature in the pantry is 75 to 79
degree3.
Kloeris has warned Nicollier 10
eat his chocolate and cheese fast.
Anything requiring refrigeration
is forbidden . So is alcohol ,
L. DAKOTA COLLINS
although French astronaut Patrick
Baudry smuggled a boule of
French wine aboard Discovery in
Brian and Jayne Aim Collins,
1985. The wine was not opened
Long Bottom, announce the birth
until aflCI' the night
of their lirst child, a son. L. Dako·
Baudry didn'l go hungry, at
ta, on May 16 at Camden Clark
least. He dined on pate, crab
Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va. .
mousse, lobster in sauce a I' Ameri·
The infanl weighed cighl
eaine and jugged hare a I' Alsaci·
pounds and eight and one-hall
enne, all prepared per his instruc·
ounces and was 21 and one-half
lions and canned for OighL
inches long. .
Jhdeed, most shuule mealsMaternal grandparents are Elton
whether NASA's or French and
Japanese chefs' - are canned or and Joyce Ritchie. Tuppers Plains.
Paternal grandparents arc Larry
freeze-dried: just add water, pop
Collins, Long Bottom, and Teresa
into the shuttle convection oven
Collins, Maricl!a.
·
and voila!

c'

218
Pick.4:

Page4

2914

Vol. 43, No. 65

o'

Lindeman pleads innocent
to murder, robbery charges
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
An arraignment proceeding in
Meigs County. Common Pleas
Court on Monday morning afford·
ed Donald Lindeman of Racine the
opportunity to deny a murder
charge and a related count filed
against him on Friday.
The Meigs County Grand Jury
rerurned a two-count indictment
against Lindeman on Friday after·
noon, charging him with aggravated murder and aggravated robbery.
The aggravated murder charge

Birthday observed

La Caia Blue&amp;

HOJ.Y ROLLER -Sister Mary Ann, 59, a nun at St. J01eph's
Nursina Home in Utica, N.Y., prlldices ltfr in-line skating 'outside
!ht nursin1 home rec~ntly.· New to tltf sport, she says she practices
m a garage and parkm11o1 but may soon take to the strttts; Sister
Mary Ann·says that she has had some thrills, but as ror tht spills
she's had ~on. "Ir I J10 down a hill rut, I'll be dead," she said. "I'll
be gone wtth tltf wind." (AP)

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Storr
An ordinance providing for pay
increases for village employees to
tie effective in August was adopted
by Middleport Village Council at
Monday ni~ht ' s meeting.
The actton following a lengthy
discussion on village finances where the approximately $13,000
for the increases will come from,
whether Christmas bonuses will be
~iven this year, and howhca)lh
msurancc, ·now fully paid by the
village, may be affected.
Council members Paul Gerard
and Judy Crouks both questioned
the affordability of all three-the
pay increase, lhe bonuses, and the
WATCHING THE SEARCH ·Bystanders watch rescue work·
fully-paid insurance.
ers search Indian Crttk in Massieville near Chillicothe Monday.
"With things as tight as I think
Floodwaters killed two people and rorced the evacuation or about
they are, how can we afford to do
everything", questioned Gerard
300 others Sunday. (AP)
who referred to the "huge deficit"
and described the employees as
having "a real good deal." He
reminded other council members,
after commending the employees
and saying he would like to do
of
emergency
because
of
damage
everything for them, that it is time
By The Associated Press
caused
by
flooding
Sunday
for Council to face up to the fact
National Guard troops have
evening.
The
declaration
makes
the
that there is a financtal problem.
begun cleanup work in the wake of
flooding in the Ross County com- counties eligible for slate assis· Crooks was quick to agree with
munity of Massieville and are to be tance. The Perry County declara- Gerard and cited a major pan of the
joined by federal representatives tion stemmed from flooding in the problem as being the cost of insur·
village of Crooksville.
ance which is now ahout S130,000
examining damages.
Relatives
identified
the
rwo
peoannually .
The bodies of lwo people were
ple
whose
bodies
were
found
MonMayor Fred Hoffman said he
recovered Monday in the south·
central Ohio community, which day in Massievillc as Anna Fields, would be opposed 10 discontinuing
the Christmas bonuses, and Coun·
was visited late in the day by Gov. 61, and David Theobald, 39.
Theobald's mother-in-law. cilman ·James Clatwonhy con·
George Voinovich. The governor
511id ·he WOUl\IJil!k rrcsident Bush Karen Ross, said be was fleeing the currcd with the mayor rhat "good
rising wa~ on a motorcycle Sun· employees should be compensated
rbl'!'l:fC!d,~,;~~tp":li\\'llafal)~n for ' ~ay
·evening when he stopped to as much as possible." Payroll cur·
Rb~· ~;un~ 1 . ~ :~, ~~~. · '
1.
help
two women to safety. His wife rently runs $420,000 a year not
"In order 10 really gel some
help for a lot of these folks here . and two sons were in a minivan, including the health insurance cost.
The mayor noted that the village
who arc really hurting badly, this which the water eventually washed
is operating with three less employneeds to be designated on a federal away.
level as an emergency by the presi- ' Mrs. Theobald and her older son ees now. As how to handle the
clung to a tree and her younger son dcfici 1, the mayor said that perhaps
dent." Voinovich said.
"Keep praying and keep work· held onro a fence · until rescuers we'll just have to "vote to increase
what comes in to run the depart·
ing," he added. "The state's going arrived.
In Mrs. Theobald's last glance mcnlS."
to do everything we can to help.·'
Despite questions which were
Voinovich already has declared at her husband, "she saw him and
raised
about being able to afford
Ross and Perry counties in a state
Continued on page 3
the salary increases, the ordinance
was a·dopted by unanimous vote.
District Plan Reconsidered
Council again considered the
revised plan of the Solid Waste

National Guard troops begin
cleanup in Ross 'County area

PELLENS
80 Lb. Bag

(With Rust Remover)

MORTON.
STOP RUSTY WATER AT
YOUR WATER SOFTENER

.oo
PELLETS SALT
·SAVE

80 Lb. Bag

Catfish Festival planning
meeting is set Thursday

~

-~

'

--·

.oo

417 Gen. Hartinger~.
Middleport, OH
·

**************
271 WI llln Sla
OH
run n:d'OV' .
Ba-.A

includes.two death penalty specifi.
cations, and the aggravated robbery
charge a firearm specification.
Specifically, Lindeman is
charged with the armed robbery
and shooting death of Howard
Lawrence of Long Bottom in his
DeWitt's Run grocery store on
June 25. Lawrence, 69, was found
by a customer in the store, bleeding
from a gunshot wound to the head.
He was taken to Veterans Memori·
al Hospilal, and later to Grant Med·
ical Center, where he died nearly a
week larer.
During lhe investigation of rhe

incident, it was diScovered lhal courses, making him ineligible 10
Lawrence's wallet had been srolen. n:prescm Lindeman.)
Through Meigs County Public
Trial of lhe case was set for
Defender Charles H. Knight, Lin- September I. 'and bond was set at
deman emcrcd pleas of not guilty $500,000 on the aggravated murder
to both charges. Common Pleas charge, and $100,000on the charge
Coun Judge Fred W. Crow Ill of aggravaled burglary . Lindeman
appointed Athens County Public n:mains in the custody of the Meigs
Defender Michael Westfall to reP"' County Sheriff's Department
resent Lindeman for the remainder
Also present at yesterday's
of the case, due to the death penalty arraignment hearing were Prosecut·
specification. (AI yesterday's hear- ing Anomey Steven L. Story, reP"'
ing, Knight informed the court rhat resenting the state, and Pomeroy
his death penalty counsel certifica- Allorney John R. Lentes, who,
tion had been revoked pending along with Knight, appeared on
completion of continuing education behalf of the defendant.

Pay increase ordinance for employees
adopted by Middleport Village Council

Jonathan Baughman, son of Jeff
and Crystal Baughman, Danville,
celebrated his ftrSI birthday recently at the horne of his grandpat'C!lts,
Larry and Bess1e Taylor, Middle·
port.

The Wbite Houae, the president's
residence, stands on 18 acres on the
south side of Pe11D8ylvania Avenue,
between the Treasury and Ute Esecu·
tive Office Bulldln&amp;. The walls are ol
aandstone, quarried at Aqula Creek,
Va. The exterior nl1a were painted,
caualng the building to be termed the
"White Houae. • On Aug. 21, 1811, dur·
Inc Madison's admlniltrallon, the
bouae wu burned by the Brltl.slt.
James Hoban rebuilt It by October
1817.

Low lonlght In mld..fiOs.
Partly cloudy. Wednesday, high
In lhe mid-80s.

1 Section. 10 Pogeo 25 cento
AMultlmodlo Inc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, July 28, 1992

Cop~rlghlod 1112

too far with a lynching in the dressmg room. The sequence could easily have been discarded.
"D.iggsrown" is an MGM
release produced by Robert Shaffel.
The rating is R for language and
someumes brutal action. Running
time: 107 minutes.

New arrival

I

Motown star Smokey Robinson.
Wei~ left'Motown in 1964 after
a contract· dispute following the
release of "My Guy."
.
"She didn't make a dime off of
it," said her manager, Thomas
"Beans" Bowles.
Like many artists of the time,
Wells was naive about the business .
end of the music, her friend Maye ,
James said. "They were beat out of
a lot of money, Mary included . .
They were just signing contracts,
they were so happy to be making
music," she said.
·
Wells was born in Detroit and
began singing ar 10 in local clubs
and talent conrests. At 1'6 she ·
approached Motown Records
founder Berry Gordy hoping 10 sell ·
a·song l!ild found herself signed as :
a performer.
·

'Diggstown' opens
Aug. 14 nationwide

Shuttle chow becomes haute
cuisine when foreigners fly
By MARCIA DUNN
AP Aerospacr Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla . When Atlantis' astronauts hc;ld for
space on Friday, the shuulc pantry
will be stuffed with Parmesan and
Swiss cheese, Swiss cradcrs,
Swiss muesli and Swiss chocolate.
.Oh yes. and trufnes anyone"
Shuulc chow becomes haute
cuisine, it seems, when foreigners
fly. And more and more of rhem
are Oying.
Atlantis astronauts Claude
Nic~llier of Switzerland and Franco Maleiba of Italy will be the II th
and 12th non-Americans to fly on a
shuttle, and the fourth and fifth this
year. They will share the cabin with
five Americlms who will be snack·
ing on graham crackers and peanur
buuer.
Nicollier insisted on a box of
truffies and other foreign fare for
the seven-day mission during
which ihe crew will relea~ a European scientific sarellire and then
unreel an llalian satellire connected
to the shuule by 12 miles of elccLricity·generaling cord.
Malerba requested the Parmesan
to supplement NASA 's freeze dried fare.
''I'm sure there will be more
than one customer for it, " said
Malerba, who will be the first Iialian in space.
The c'uisine for the following
shuule night, in September, is even
more exotic, courtesy of Japanese
astronaul Mamoru Mohri.
There will be Japanese apples,
Jaeancse mushroom soup, Japanese
reil rice, Japanese white rice,
• Japanese rice crackers. tofu; pick·
led plums. soy sauce, seaweed
soup, dried seaweed wrnppers and

By ROBERT JAbLON
Associated Pres.~ Writer
. LOS ANGELES - Mary
Wells, who tried to sell Motown
Records a song she had writu:n and
wound up a singing star with Top
10 hits that included the bouncy
"My Guy," has died of cancer at
49.
Wells, who underwent surgery
for cancer of. the larynx in 1990,
d1ed at a hospnal on Sunday~Diana
Ross, Bruce Springsteen and other
stars had helped pay her medical
bills because she had no health
insurnnce.
From 1961 to 1964, Wells hit
lhc Top I0 'On the pop charts wilh
"The One Who Really Loves
You," "You Beat Me to the
Punch," "Two Lovers" and her
mission field 'in Africa for eight signature song, "My Guy," all
years. He and his family arc home written or co-written by fellow
on leave for the summer and are
visiting ·his supporting churches.
He will show slides and tell of his
work in Africa. The public is invit·
ed.

Credit Carda. May Be Uled For All Purchas 88
Exoludlng Lotteoy And Money Orders
We RHirve The Right To Limit Quanllllea&lt;.
SUISIDIAIIY
OF AIHLAND
iiiliiiiiiiiiitirll:i--~.:.::

• ________
...._ _......_

....... :

Whether Middleport has a Cat·
fish Festival in September will
depend on the turnout at a planning
meeting scheduled for Thursday
night at 7 p.m. in Middleport Viilage Council chambers.
Bob Gilmore, president of the
Middleport Community Association which annually sponsors the
event. issued an appeal through an
open letter to the merchants today.
It reads, in part: "We have an
established festival thai has been
successful for the past eight years,
and it would be a shame to see it
die out because of lack of interest
However, if we only ))ave the same
old throe or four pooplc show up at
this planning session, I will not be
in favor of taking on the project
again.ll's up to you. Be There!"
Gilmore in his letter thanked the
limited number of merchants for
their hard work and dedication
toward making the 4th of l uly cele·
bration a success.
"Now, it's time to gel some

decisions made for our annual cat·
fish festival ," said Gilmore.
The festival is traditionally held
· on the !hiro Saturday of September.
The associaiion president said that
each year the merchants involved
arc fewer and more participation is
needed if it is to be continued.
"We need help! It's too much
work for just a few of the group to
han~lc. We have over a hundred
business and professional firms in
Middleport, and we can do anything we set our minds to do. But if
we .sit back. and expect someone to
do 11 for us, it just won't happen .,"
Gilmore said.
He commended Susan Clark and
the Pomeroy Merchams Association noting that they band together
and get things accomplished.
"They help our entire community
by doing it righl the first time.
Susan won't mind at all if we copy
her techniques, nor will Larry
Banks and the Stem wheel Festival
Commiuee. They do a great job,"
said Gilmore..

Management District (Athens, Gal·
lia, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs, and
Vinton Counties) and gave a first
reading to an ordinance approving
the plan.
This is the second effort to get
the plan approved .by Middleport
Village Council. Earlier an ordi· ·
nance of approval had been given a
first reading and passed, but failed
on the second reading. Paul Gerard
has consistently voted against the
plan on the basis of cost and the
provision which would allow the
Environmental Protection Agency
to put an assessment on property if
landfill operations fall into deficit
somelime in the future.
Failure to adopt the plan, however, could result in one being prepared and implemented by the EPA
without local input, il was pointed
out.
The vote last night on the first

The mayor was authorized to
advertise for bids on the construe·
tion of eight houses on the Bersy
Ross building lot, South Fifth and
Palmer. Demolition of the building
is almost complete and the nexl
step will be pulling in utilities and
streets.
Mayor Hoffman reported thai he
mel Monday with a reprcscnlative
of the Ohio EPA regarding Middle·
port"s water system. He said lhat
the village faces problems with the
system in the near future in that
additional testing l'C(juircmcnt~ 'o
into effect nexl year which woll
cost between $10,000 and S20,000
and that the wells must be hroughl
into compliance. He suggested that
either a new well field will have 10
be established or the village will
have to hook into another system .
The Rev. Lloyd Grimm had
prayer preceding the meeting.

BREC annual mee(ing
charts progressive steps
A heavy work schedule that is
well in place to improve service
and cut down on the number and
length of power oulagcs was the
theme of the Annual Meeting of the
Buckeye Rural Electric Coopera·
tive, held the evening of July 24th
at Buckeye Hills Career Center at
Rio Grande.
Board President Gene Nance of
Chesapeake told the crowd of more
than 300 registered members and
guesrs that new General Manager
Walter V. Truitt, Jr., began instilul·
ing improvements after he took
over his duties al the firs! of this
year.
Truitt emphasized in his report
that along with increased right-of·
way clearing and system inspection
and maintenance by contractors,
new equipment and operations procedures arc also raising the produc·
tivity of the cooperalive's own
work force.
Other improvements include
increased phone li~es for contact

Article says Malone misses
numerous House meetings
According to the Commiltee to
Elect Frank A. Cremeans an article
in the July 21 Plain Dealer, report·
ed thai Slate Representative Mark
Malone, Democrat candidate for
the new 94th Ohio House District,
was "habitually absent" during a
six monrh time period.
Cremeans, Republican candidate
for the 94th Oh1o House District
(Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and pan of
Lawrence) says that he "believes
the men and women of the ·94th
District deserve active representation from their elected officials in
Columbus. This includes full par·
ticipation and near perfect attencjance."
Cremeans, Gallipolis, who will
face Malone, South Point, for the
right to represent the ciri7.cns of the
newly drawn 94th District, in the

reading was Council members
Dewey Horton, James Clatwonhy,
Judy Crooks, and Jack Saucrfield,
"yes", and Gerard "no." Council·
man William Walters is a surgical
patient in Doctor's Hospital North,
Columbus.
Other Busines.~
Mayor Hoffman appointed Bob
McClure, Skip Johnson, and
Arnold Johnson to the Middleport
Recreation Commission.
Council voted to close the Mid·
dleport Pool during Meigs County
Fair week, !lug. 17-22 although 11
will be available for private pllrties.
The proposal of SBA Consultants, Jackson, for engineering on
the Wheeler's Run sewage project
for $8,000 was accepted by Coun·
cil. It was the lowest of live cost
proposals for engineering work on
the projcc 1.

November General election, added,
"I doubt the hard working men and
women of the 94th District miss
one out of every five days they are
scheduled to work."
According to the CommillCC to
Elect Cremeans, Maione, now serv·
ing as representative of the 92nd
district, by a standard lawmakers
set for high school students in a
1990 law, was "habitually absent"
from committee assignments dur·
ing the six month study, according
to Thomson Newspapers.
: Creameans, whose background
includes 20 years as a businessman
and 20 years as an educator, under·
stands the importance of active,
"hands on", and responsive represcnlation for the 94th Ohio House
DistricL

by members reporting oulages and
with other inquiries, an upgraded
mapping system, and a revamp of
the accounting system . Additional
involvement in BREC"s ninc-coun·
ty servic e area economic and
industrial dcvclopmcnl efforts to
help retain and increase jobs as part
of long-range goals is also underway, he said.
The financial report on the
cooperative for the year ended
April 30, showed an increases in
revenues to $14,862,647 and net
margins of $2,098,100; Truiu
reported. While expenses related to
opernlion's improvements arc also
up for part of the last months of the
completed year and the currcnl
year, he stressed the cooperatives
~very intention of accomplishing
the required service improvements

without raising rates over the short·
term.
In olhcr business, the members
re-elected three trustees to new
terms. In District II (Gallia Coumy)
Marinelle Jeffers of Patriot was
elected to a full lcrm after being
appointed earlier this year to fill a
vacancy created by the resignation
of Beuy Stewart, also of Patriot,
after 12 years of service. Nanette
Gill of McArthur was returned II\ a
Di stricliV Athens, Meigs and Vinton Counties) post, as was Howard
Lemon of Oak Hill in District Ill
(Jackson Counly).
Adult Grand prize winners 3l the
meeting included: Curtis M. Swindall of Gallipolis, the 26-inch color
television set; Jean Davis of Patri·
01 , a microwave oven; and Norman
Continued on page 3

Judge denies protests
concerning Gallia sheriff
By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Starr
Gallia County Sheriff Dennis R.
Salisbury's name is still on the baJ.
lot for the November general elec·
lion.
Judge W. Richard WaiiOn ruled
proleSIS filed with the Gallia County Board of Elections by E. James
Sheets and Ralph Steinbeck, Salis·
bury's primary election chal·
lengers, were notlimcly filed.
· Sheets and Steinbeck filed
protests with the hoard on June 25 .
They contended an Ohio Supreme
Court decision published in the
June 22 issue of the "Ohio State
Bar Association Report" made Sal·
isbury ineligible to run for sheriff
because he lacked the five years
experience required by lhe Ohio
Revised Code.
The Ohio Supreme Court
ordered the Portage County Board
of Elections to remove Sheriff P.
Ken Howe's name from the prima·
ry ballot. Howe and Salisbury

believed themselves exempt from
the requirem ent because of an
opinion from the Ohio Auorney
General's office · an opinion the
Ohio Supreme Court invalidated.
However, unlike the Portage
County case, the protests by Sheets
and Steinbeck were filed after the
primary election which Salisbury
won making him the Republican
Party candidate for the office of
sheriff.
Furthermore, Walton wrote that
Sheets and Steinbeck must prove
one or mpre election irregulari'ties
occurred and that the irregularity or
irregularities affected enough votes
to change, or make the election
results uncertain.
There was no showing before
the court of any election irregular':
tics, error, fraud or mistake, Wallatt
wrote.
•
The primary election is over
with, Walton wrote. The bawd has
no way of going back and undoing
an election.

.,.,

�Tuesday, July 28, 1992

Commentary

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
TUesday, July 28, 1992

Pomeroy-MiddleJ)Ort, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--3

.

OHIO Weather

.Cold front will bring more rain across Ohio

Wednesday, July l9
1

Accu-Wealhcr .forecast for daytime conditions and

.

The Dally Sentinel
·'

DEVOTBD TO THit JIII'I'UDTII or THit IIEIGS-IIASOM ARM

ROBERT L WINGEIT
Publllber
CHARLENE HOER.ICH
Genenl MID~RCr

LETil!RS OF OPINION m welcome. Tbey should be !011 than 300
words. All lenen ore subject 10 edilin1 and must be signed with name.
oddress and telepbone number. No 1lllli&amp;Ded Jetton will be published. Lenen
should be in 1ood tute, lldcbellinJ iuuet, not penonalides.

Working poor
may get Medicaid
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLU MBUS- /'! legislative commiuee Irying to reach agreement on
a health care bill is being asked to expand the Medicaid program and create a commission to restrict medical rates.
· Moderate-income Ohioans would be allowed to "buy into" the Medicaid program under the proposal. Medicaid currently is restricled to wei·
fare redpient.s in Ohio.
The commission would regulate medical charges much as the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio regulates utility ra1es.
Rep. Michael Fox, R-Hamilton, said he will vresentthe proposals to a
House-Senate commitlee studying separate vers1ons of a bill designed to
make health care more accessible and affordable in Ohio.
Rep. Wayne Jones, D-Cuyahoga Falls, and Sen. Robert Ney, R-Barnesville, the bills' chief sponsors, said they think the proposals have
meriL
They said tile panel is open to further suggestions for what could
become a bill containing some of the Senale and House proposals as well
as provisions not previously considered.
Fox said the Medicaid expansion, which would require approval or the
U.S. Department of Healtll and Human Services, could provide healtll
care for about two-thirds of Ohio's 1.2 million uninsured residents.
Fox proposes extending Medicaid to families with income of lc.~s tllan
200 percent of the federal poverty level, which is $1 3,950 a year for a
family or four. This means such a family could purchase Medicaid coverage if its income didn't exceed $27,900 annually.
.
The proposal calls for families whose incomes are between 100 percent
and 200 percent of the poverty level to make co-payments with the state
and federal governments, based on a sliding scale tllat rellect.s the fami!ies' ability to pay.
Jones, who is chainnan of the six-member conference commiuoe, said
tile feasibility of the plan will depend on how much of the COSl Ohio must
share witll tile federal government. Fox said a I percent surcharge on
hcaltll care providers and individual premiums might pay for the slate's
share.
Fox's rate-regulation plan ties increases in health care costs to the consumer price index.
The new commission would restrict rate increases of providers and
practitioners to 5 pereent a year or the inOation rate, whichever is lower.
The commission could adjust hospital charges upward 10 allow for the
IRlcompensatod care they provide for the poor.
. Maryland has a similar program. Fox said he will ask an ofncial from
that state to appear before the commiuoe to explain how the program
works.
. The commitlee, which met last week to make side-by-side compari$0ns of tile Senale ahd House versions of the healtll care bill, will reconvene Aug. 5.
: Jones and Ney said they hope to have a bill by Labor Day.

.

Letters to the editor
Appreciates ride
' my
On Satunday, June 27, 1992,
(ive year old daughter, Lindsay,
and I were driving from Gallipolis ·
t8 Pomeroy 10 meet my brotller at
Attorney Charles Knight's Office.
: Enroute we had a tire blow out
on our car. We had just started
walking 10 uy and find a !Ciephone
when a gentleman driving a light
blue Ford Tempo with Meigs
County plates stopped to see if we
needed help. His name was Daniel
Stone.
Mr . Stone offered to either
change the tire or give us a ride to
wherever we needed to go. We
accepted his offer of a ride and

were delivered safely 10 our destination. I haven't been able to locate
a 1elephone number or address for
Mr. Stone and am writing tllis letltl
in hopes that he or someone who
knows him will let him know how
very much we appreciated his help
t!lat day.
In til is age of violence it is a mre
person who will lake a chance on
helping a stranger. Thank you, Mr.
Stone, for yow assistance and your
kindness.
Very sincerely,
Lesa J. Caldwell,
931 Fourth Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio

A week at Amerijlora
Dear Editor,
Well everyone made il back to
Meigs after spending the week at
AmeriOora.
: It was an ex tra bu sy eight
djlys .part ly due to the stormy
weather. At 10: p.m. Sunday July
12,lhe Patty Picken's famil y, Debbie Toundas, and I set up the MciRs
County display in tile Ohio Paval·
ion. Feeling proud of our accomplishments, left around I a.m. for a
I~~ e shut-eye!
: If yo u wa tched the weather
r~pon for Co lumbus, you know
between I and 8 a.m., there was a
terrible storm ,wind, lightning,and
buckets of rai n. Well , you can
imag ine our surprise Monday
morning.
: The volu nteer parking lot near
Ja mes and Broad was flooded
along with man y sections in the
Columbus area. There had been six
inches of rain during tile nighL At
7:30 a. m. we were back at the
Ameriflora site to help Monday 's
demonstrators unload and set up.
When lhe rain stopped, we cleaned
up the mess,revamped l~e . booll!_

Ross Perot did it his way and blew it
~

111 eo.t street
f'ameiOJ, Oblo .

PAT WHlTEIIEAD
Asslslant PubUsher/Coatroller

MICH.

spaces,and by the time the visitors
began making their wa y through
the Pavilion at 9 we had pretty well
whipped tllings into shape, except
for ourselves. Willi our clothes and
hair wet,we put on big smiles and
welcomed everyone to visit Meigs
County.
Monday was only the beginning
of a wet week. by Tuesday night,
Columbus had eight inches or rain,
by Friday it was pouring again. The
volunleers who came on Thursday, .
Sawrday, and Sunday were lucky,
they were greeted with sunshine.
Meigs County had forty -four
volunleers prornoting,showing tlleir
craft skills plus seven entertainment groups. A big ''THANK YOU
to everyone for making Meigs
County's week at Ameriflora a
huge success. Your effOrtS and time
arc greatly appreciated, for your
positive image displayed certainly
made Meigs County stand out. This
week could nol have happened
without each of you.
Sincerely,
·
Mary Powell, director

Today in history
By The Alloclated Pnle
: Today is TliCSday,July 28, the 210th day of 1992. 111m are 156 days
left in the year.
· Today's Highliaht in Histuy:
. Sixty yean aso. onJull28• 1932, Federal troop1 forcibly dilpened the
~led "Bolus Anny' of Wmtd War I 'ICtalna wbo bad aatJaered in
w~. D.C.. since May, demlnding money they wae
to
reeeivem 1925.

.m;u1cx1

\'

WASHINGTON (NEA) ft,ccording to insiders, the final
straw for Ross Perot was his
appearance before the NAACP
conventio11 in Nashville, Tenn. He
had not.~anled to make the speech,
complammg, "They ain't going to
vote for me anyway."
However, co-campai~n managers Ed Roltins and Hamtlton Jordan, were insistenL They believed
Perot had to begin appearing before
neutral, even hostile audiences,
even tlhough he insisted doing so
made him very nervous.
Rollins wanted the speech to be
a genuine camp11ign appearance,
complete with Bides and press han·
dlers. It also was designed to
include several blacks who had
joined tile campaign, especially tile
Rev. Calvin Butts of New York,
who had many close friends on the
NAACP Board. Media consultant
Jim Squires and Rollins drafted
what Rollins calls "a great speech,
saying all the right things and
touching all the bases, using exactly the right tone."
However, when Perot appearod,

geslto Perot that he himself was to cully. His initial response to this
plan was til at he could never sup-.
blame.
On the Monday after tile speech, port increased taxes or cuL~ of thi~
the opening day of the Democratic magnitude. He canceled the meet·
he ignored all his high-priced Convention, a major strategy ses- . ing and sent word throu~h Luce
advice, and did it his way. He went sion had been scheduled in Dallas. tllat he was an~ with h1s newly
alone. He threw away the prepared Perot had a staff member assemble assembled poliucal slaff.
This prompted Rollins to write
speech, and instead spoke off-the· a team of tile best non-partisan fed·
curr from some notes he scribbled eral budget experts to devise a way what is now being referred to as
on a pad as he flew from . Dallas. or bringin~ the federal budget into "tile memo." Delivered that Monday afternoon, it slated forcefully,
The resull was a disaster. His audi· balance wttllin five years.
cnce felt Perot's ionc was conde·
According 10 people who read that Perot had three choices: to
scending, and his "your people" the report, tile team concluded the immediately begin the cost-be·
quole was tile lead on tile evening only way to bring the budget into dammed professional political
news and lhe next day's headlines. balance would be to cut all nrc- campaign he had promised his supWhen Perot arrived back in Dal- grams - including the military, . porters: to continue the kind or
las he was livid. He called CNN Social Security, Medicare and quasi-campaign that he so far had
president Tom Johnson to complain Medicaid - by I 0 pereenl in real seemed comfortable witll; or quit.
that the network was portraying lerrns, and by instiwting signincant Rollins !Old Perot he still could win
him. as a bigot. Through his lawyer WI increases. The suggesled cuts an all-out campaign, but that if he
and confidant, Tom Luce, he did not even lake innation, or natu- continued as he was, the GOP
lashed out at Rollins. In the final ral growth, into consideration. So, would savage him until he was left
weeks of tile campaign, Luce had over five years. the cuts would with only his core supporters increasingly adopted lhe role of actually be closer to one-third of about 20 percent or the vote.
intermediary between Perot and his tile budget when measured in curown camp81gn slaff.
· rent dollars.
Rollins grew incrcasin$1Y conLuce told Rollins thai Perot was
Perot, when he saw the plan, cerned when he heard nothmg back
furious with him for talking him reportedly was stunned . He had from Perot all d•y Tuesday. On
into making the appearance. lnsid· long said that he could bring the Wednesday, Luce called to say
ers say Luce refused to even sug- budget intO balance witllliule diffi- Perot had rejected Rollins' first
option - embarking immediately
on a traditional campaign - and
the two men decided that, since
Perot was not prepared 10 accept
~~RE'~ .AsCARY
his advice, it would be better if
STAT I~ TIC ...
Rollins resigned.
SO% oF THt TRUCK&lt;;
"I was honestly shocked when
he
announced the next day he was
ON OUR
AR{;
quitting, " Rollins says. "I just
assumed tllat he would continue to
do it his way, using Ham ilion to
QAD~~s.
build and organize his grass root.s
volunteerS.
"I think in retrospect thai he
made the right decision because he
was simply not prepared to do what
it takes to bccoll)e president. He .
didn't want to· answer tlhe toush
questions. He didn't want to get
into tile political are01 and mix it
up. He above all did not want lo
see hinredibility and character
called into qilcstion. ·
"I see now, for many of tllese
same reasons, he would not have
made a succ~ful president."
R11bert Wa11man 15 1 syndiut·
ed writer rQr Newspaper •:nterprise Association.

Robert J. Wagman

NEARLY

ROA!X
PRIVIMG WITH

·~

Are Democrats no longer liberals?
At National Review ' s 25th
anniversary dinner, shortly after
Ronald Reagan's first election as
president in November 1980, I ventUred to predict that liberalism was
dead as a major theme in American
politics. This struck various of my
colleagues as unduly optimistic,.
and certainly the Democratic Party
disagreed, swbbornly nominating
liberal candidates for president in
both 1984 and 1988.
The I984 ticket in particular Mondale and Ferraro - was
unabashedly liberal, and the
keynoter at tile Democratic Con·
vention in San Francisco, Mario
Cuomo, thrilled liberals everywhere with his passionate defense
of the sacred cause.
· Bul Mondale managed to carry
only his own home state of Minnesota, so in 1988 tile Democrats
were more cautious. Their presidential nominee, Michael Dukakis,
was indeedd.usl another knee-jerk·
liberal, as eorge Bush convinc-·
ingly demonstrated during the cam·
paign. But Dukakis tried valian~y
to depict himself as a non-ideological technocrat, and "liberal" was
so spectacularly missing from
Democratic campaign rhetoric that

But over the course of time we
would glim~ the fullln: shape or
the Democr,atic Party: eitllcr tile
same old gang, updated here and
tile media began Clillin~ il "the L
there, with rather more far-out
word," implying that 11 was ofn·
environmentalists lnd gay libbcrs
cially unmentionable. Moreover,
and fewer labor union ofr~eials, but
the vice presidential nomination
stiU essentiallr the Uldilional coali·
was given to an autllentic moder·
lion Of VOIIICIOIIS special interests,
ate, Texas Sen. Lloyd Bent.sen.
or a genuinely new party ready to
Even that didn 'I work, however,
compete with the GOP for the
and tllis year there are signs that at
votes of tile central mass of the
least certain segments of the
American people.
Democratic Party are serious about
Like it or not, however, the libending its long affair with liberal·
erals would Oood back 10 Wa.'lhingism.
lon witll President-elect Clinton
AI the theiOricallevel, tile sepalike kelp on an incoming tide.
ration is complete. The tenm "UbMario Cuomo would be there,
eral" is no longer just not men- ests.
ready to eash Clinton's incautious
.
tioned; it is activelr repudiated: On
At the crucial level of the presi· promise oJ' a Supreme Court jus"Meet the Press ' recently, tlhe dential and vice presidential nomi- ticeship. The ultra-feminists, the
communications director or the nations, the party chose two mem- black· elite, the teachers' unions,
Clinton campaign said, in just so .bers of tile Democratic Leadership the welfare lobby, and those who
many words, that his tiger ' isn't a 1Council, an organization fonned profess to speak for homosexuals
liberal." And Ekanoc Clift, whom Iafier Dukakis' defeat 10 lry to move - all would be on hand, sure that
I had always thought of as the Last the party back toward center. hapPr. days wm here again.
Liberal (who would turn off the Whether any or the above changes
Ltberalism is dead, but the
lights), serenely told her colleagues arc genuinely sisnificant will Democratic Party and America are
dn "The McLaughlin Group" that ,depend, if tile Democrats win in not yet safe from it.s ravages.
"We're not liberals anymore."
William Rusher II a sy1dlcal·
November, on these two men, and
At the level of policy, the of course above all on Mr. Clinton. ed writer for New1paper •:nter·
Democratic platform has someNo doubt, as president, he prise AS&amp;OCiatlon.
tiling for everybody, as platforms would lean farst this way, then that.

William A. Rusher

tend to do. But il contains some
assertions that, however likely they
are 10 be disre.ll&amp;rded, break bland·
new ground for the Democratic
Palty: "We honor business as a
noble endeavor.... Welfare should
be a second ehanee, not a way of
life." II pledges 10 "eliminate nonproductive programs, achieve
defense savings, reform entitlement
productive programs, to control
soaring health-care costs, (and) cut
federal administrative costs by 3
percent annually." II even ~is­
es tllat America will remam "the
world's strongest military power ...
.prepared to use military force deci·
sive!r to defend our vital inter- .

\Viii .negative campaigning return?
It is widely predicted tllat this
will be the presidential election
from hell. Gresham's Law will
come into play with a vengeance,
with bad politics driving out tlhe
good. The ticket that hits the low
road farst and often will be tile one
that wins, or so we are told.
The assessment is only partially
correct. Negative campaignin~ is
going to reach a nadir. Bolli s1des
have skilled technicians who love
nothing beuer tban a fast-paced
game or pin-the-din on your opponent. Labels willl)e attached as fast
as tlley can be manufactured.
But saying that is almost inelevant to the likely outcome of the
presidential election. For the vast
majority of voters who are certain
that the system needs something
more tllan a light tune-up, labels
will be irrelevanL What tlley will
be seeking is evidence that at least
one of the two Jl(Ofessional politicians the Republicans and
Democrats have offered them has
sensible proposals for reinvigomt·
ipg tile economy and, more impor·
limtly, revitalizing the nation' s
spirit.
The open ~ret of 1992 is that
mbsl Americans are Perotistas,
even if Ross Perot himself lllmed
out to be a Hawed icon. Their overwhelming desire is fOr a system
that worts. The malaise that afflicis
so many of us is grounded in the
uneasy suspicion that sometlhing is

Hodding Carter Ill
badly amiss, that America is off
course and drifting.
Ross Perot did not invent the
national mood tllat his brief campaign so dramaticallY tapped. It
was there, waiting and growing,
and, if anything, his abrupt withdrawal from tile race in1ensified il.
He was much akin to tile proverbial
blind man uying to describe an ele·
phant, but he proved one thing.
What he encountered was much
bigger tllan he knew·or ex peeled.
It is also bigger t11an the old rags
of right and lef~ liberal and conservative. The people are impatient
when not disgusted with what CW·
ri:ntly passes for political dialogue.
They understand tllat it is a curtain
behmd which organized interests
advance their individual agendas
witll minimum regard for the col·
leetive good. They do not believe
anyone has tile answer. If many are
certain there is somethin~ wrong
with " big government,' others
have 'become no Jess disenchanled
witll a political theology that dei·
fies the market and, like Marxism
of old, promises pie in tile sky in an
ever-retreating by-and-by. What
most are seeking is a political leader whose policies renect whal they
·see as both possible and necessary.
Because so many lldult Ameri·
cans are uncertain, unhappy and

pessimistic about the future, this and Gore do not convince lhc votpresidential election is already the ers over time tllat they arc people
most volalilc in American history. whose vision ex tends further than
The polls have repeatedly drawn a Nov. 3. George Bush, the incumpicture of the electorate as genie, bent president, must convince the
changing shape with slartling speed voters that his second u:nn will be
and ease. Just two weeks before the something far better than the secDemocratic Convention, tile com- ond act or a play they alrcudy disbined neaatives of Bush, Clinton like.
In bollt cases, tile key to success
and Perot were higher than their
combined positive ratings. Three can be found in tile evolving conweeks before that, Perot's sranding sensus among the people thai give
in the polls was higher than any ratller tllan take is what the situathird party candidate in Amcritali tion requires. That is not to ignore
history and his negatives were half the fact that the first priority for
as high as President Bush's. The millions of Americans is to find a
president's poll numbers have job or feel secure in the one thai
swung from mediocre to record tlley hold. It is to recogniY.c tllal the
high to near-record low, all in little unease which affiict.s so many or us
more tllan a year.
has deeper root.s tllon the long linBill Clinton and his running gering recession. The campaign
mate, AI Gore, arc currently the which capitalizes on lhe growing
beneficiaries of tile people's rest- consensus that il is not enQugh to
Jess search for someone to trust, operate, individually and in groups,
but tlley know it can't last. Tem- as special pleaders, is the campaign
porarily, they have managed to be that Will WID.
all things to many people, ofTeiins
This is going to be the longest
in their youtll and vigor the impres- presidential campaign in history.
sion that, as Jack Kennedy The Democrut.s are already running
promised in his campaign 32 years all-ou~ and the president is clearly ·
ago, they will get " the nation mov- in battle aear.
ing again." Because the Democrats
Hodding Cartrr III, formn ·
·in 1992 have relearned an old les- State Department spokesman :
.son, which is that you have to win
award-winninR reporter, edi·
. before you can do anything else, and
tor and publisher, Is president or
. they have papered over the old Ma~Street, a Washlnpnn, D.c ••
, fault lines that split them so badly .bii!IH television production rom·
mtile past.
.pany and a writer for Newspaper
· Bul the paper will lear if Qinton Enterprise Association.

IND.

'''

84'

• ltolumbusl84'

•

I

By The Associated Press
Ohio _skies will start clouding up
ton1ght m advaoce ·of a cold front
that was bringing more showers
and thunderstonns, forecasters said.
Some scattered showers were
possible in northern Ohio tonight
and over the entire s.tate on
Wednesday, the National Weatller
Service said.
Highs on Wednesday will be in
lhe 80s.
.
· The lhreat of showers and thunderstonns continues in the forecast
Thursday tllrough Saturday. Highs
will be 75-85.
The
fur

tllis date at tile Columbus weather
station was tOO degrees in 1952
while the record 16w was•50 in
1962. Sunset IOlllght will be at 8:50
p.m. and sunrise· Wednesday at
6:27a.m.
.
Around the nation
Fair to partly cloudy weather
prevailed over the East early today.
Thunderstorms drenched North
Dakota, while it was mostly fair
elsewhere.
Scattered showers were forecast
today from Texas to Soutll ~arolina
and in the northern Plaans and
southern ROckies.

On Monday , thunderstorms
downed power lines in North Car·
olina and deluged Fort Worth,
Texas, witlh 4 inches of rain in two
hours. Parts or. West Virginia got
up to 7.8 inches of rain during a 12howperiod.
Showers and thunderstorm s
were widelf scallered from southeastern Anzona 10 northwestern
Kansas on Mll(lday.
Temperatures today were fore-

cast in the 60s in upper Michigan; .
tile 70s in upstate NewY ork, northern New En$1and and parts of
Michigan, M1nnesota and North .
Dakora; the 80s in the rest or the •
Northeast. the Midwest, tile north ·.
central Plains and the northern ·
Rockies: tile 90s from the Soutll- ·
east. tllrough the Mississippi Val ley, the southern Plains, the southern Rockies and the Northwest; and
above 100 in tile Soutllwest.

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Other ISoccjfyl

------Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy with a
low 60-65. Wednesday, variable
cloudiness. A chance of showers
and tllunderstorms in the afternoon.
H!g~ in tile upper 80s. Chance of
ram IS 40 pereenL
.

Extended roreclllit:
Thursday through Saturday:
Fair northern half, chance of
showers or thunderstonns southern
half Thursday and Saturday.
Chance of showers and thunderstorms statewide Friday. Highs 75g5. Lows 55-65.

--Area deaths-Hortense Epling

Hortense Arnold Epling of Gallipolis, died Monday, July 27 ,
1992, at her residence.
She was born Mareh 24, 1901 ,
at Falls Church, Va., daughter of
tile late John T. and Helen Koehler
Arnold.
Mrs. Epling spent her childhood
at Pomeroy. She was active with
her parents in tile management of
the Remington Hotel, including tile
operation of her Lynn Street Tea
Room. She was later a teacher in
the Mingo Junction Elementary
School.
Married to Moses T. Epling in
1929, she lived witll her husband in
both Point Pleasant and Gallipolis,
where she was active in the Junior
Woman·s Club, Presbyterian
Church and the Daughters or the
American Revolution, which sfie
served as Regent.
. .,lr;,Q]~QW,i9&amp;,!.c:rl..~Jitbf!l.d.:.S., d~t.Jl
m ,....., MIS: "-P 1ng assumw own.
ership and management of tile M.T.
Epling Sand and Gravel Company
until1953. She continued her activity in the DAR and the Riverside
Study Club of Gallipolis, and was a
member of the Ohio Valley .
Improvement Association. She also
served on tile Gallipolis City Board
or Education and was elected presidenL
Survivors include three sons,
Miles Epling of Gall ipolis~ John
Epling or Cincinnati, and Richard
Epling of Morristown, Tenn.;12
grandchildren: 12 grcat-grandchil·
dren; one sister, Mrs. Paul (Zelda)
HcaJy .of Walnut Creek, Calif.: and
several nieces, nephews , and
cousins.
Along with her husband, she
was preceded in death by two sis·
tcrs, Mary Lippincott and Dr. Edna
Geules: and two brothers, Alfred
Arnold of Gallipolis and Bernard
Arnold of PitLsbw$h.
Graveside scrv1ces will be held
Thursday at II a.m. at Mound Hill
Cemetery, with tile Rev. AI Earley
offiCiating.
In lieu of flowers, memorial
gil\s may be given lo the Salvation
Anny, c/o the Ohio Valley Bank,
420 Third Ave., Gallipolis. ·
Arrangements are under lhe
direction of the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Welherholl Chapel,
Gallipolis.

~oy Gladman
Roy Gladman, 85, Scenic Hills
Care Center, died Monday, July 27,
1992, at Scenic Hills Care Center.
He was a laborer.
Mr. Gladman was born March
2, 1907 in Lawrence County, son
of the late John and Srepta Glad·
man.
Survivors include four .stepsons,
Duane Longenette of Long Bouom,
Robert Longenette of Albuquerque,
N.M., Clifford Longenette of
Reedsville, and Charles Longenette
of Hespcrsus, Colo.; several stepnieces and nephews; 15 step-grand·
children: and 18 step-great-grand·
children.
He was preceded in deatll by his
wife, Ella Longenette Gladman on
Oct. 24 , 1984, whom he married
Feb. 22, 1959 in Gallipolis; one
stepdaughter, Mrs. Joan Ramsey:
seven ~rotllers, Clarence, Ernest,
Dan, Stanley, George, Foster, and
Jtaymond .Giadman: and two sisters, Elizabeth Rader and Zona
Biggs.
Services will be held I0:30 a.m.
.Wednesday at Willis Funeral
Home , with the Rev. AI Earley
officiating. Burial will be in Christian Church Cemetery, Tuppers
Plain .
Friends may call at tile funeral
home on Tuesday from 7-9 p.m.

Anna Torrence

Word has been received of the
death of Anna B. Torrellce, 71, or
Cincinnati, who died on Friday,
July 24, 1992 at Clennont County
Nursing Home.
She was born on January 4,
1921 in Reedsville, daughter of the
laiC Harry Coleman and Ada Wal·
son Coleman.
Surviving are two daughters,
Anna Lee Cole of Cincinnati and
Linda Disbenneu of Delaware,
Ohio: a son, Larry Torrence ,
Cincinnati; a sister, Ruth TutOe of
Pomeroy; two half-sisters, Frances ·
Reed of Reedsville and Faye John·
son of Mineral Wells, W.Va.; 8
grandchildren, six great-grandchildren and several ni eces and
nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in dcatll by a daughter,
Bonnie Torrence, in t9n.
Arrangements were under the
direction of Thomas Funeral Home
in Cincinnati, where services were
held on Monday. Burial was in
.
Rest Haven Cemetery in CincinThe DUly Seulinel
nati.
Memorial contributions may be
made
to Easuninster Presbyu:rian
'
Publllbtd OYOfJ aftom...,, MndaJ
Church at 4606 Eric Avenue,
lllroalh ~ 1U c-IIK., .,,
Ohio bJ lha Olola Valli)' hlolllhlor
Cincinnati, Ohio 45227.

NATIONAL WINNER ·"Annie's Way", 1 Texas Longhorn
heifer, took the title or national reserve junior champion remale at
the national youtlh show held at the 1991 Texas Longhorn Exposi·
tion in Fort Worth, Texas. The heirer· was shown by Rebecca Ann
Scott of Valley View Farms, Langsville.

Scott wins national honors
Rebecca Ann Scoll, Langsville,
had reason to celebrate after the
1992 Texas Longhorn Exposition
held in Folt work June 24-27.
Her outstanding heifer, Annie's
Way, was named National Reserve
Junior Champion Female of the
National Youth Show. The Exposi·
tion is tile grand finale of the show
season for Texas Longhorn breeders and this year drew 500 entries

from across the counuy.
Rebecca, 13, is tile daughter of
Sam and Bonnie Scott, Valley
View Farms. At student at Meigs
Local, she is a member of the
Texas Longhorn Breeders of
Tomorrow, the Heartland Texas
Longhorn Association Youth
Group and 4-H. An outstanding
showman, she won the intennediate showmanship award at the
Dixie National this year.

EMS units answer 7 calls
p.m., Syracuse squad responded to
Bridgeman Street and took Gmce
Greer to Veterans. At I0:59 p.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to East Main
Street for David Hardwick, who
was taken to Vetcrans.
· On Tuesday at 6:28 a.m ., Mid·
dlcport units answered a call for a
bOO! fire. Rex Darst was the owner,
and no injuries were reported . At
7:45 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to
the sherirrs office. Donald Lindeman was taken to Veterans.

. Units of Meigs Emergency SerVICes answered seven calls for
assisrance on Monday.
AI 11 :25 a.m. on Monday, Rut·
land squad took Robert Snowden to
Holzer Medical Center from tile
station . At 11:35 a.m ., Rutland
squad went to County Rood I and
took Clllra·Shenefield to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
jl.t 5:10p.m., Middleport unit
went to Fruth Pharmacy and took
Paul Su:wart to Veu:rans. At 5:33

ational••• _ Continued
rrom page _
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__:_...::.._

;\ 1
J.l,

I

the bike go down," Ms. Ross said.
Two other people who had been
lhought missing were found safe
Monday. At least eight people were
treated at Medical Center Hospital

BREC...

Continued rrom page I
C. Will of Rutland, a microwave
oven.
Among 1h e ch ildren present,
Sam Drennen, foster child of Mr.
and Mrs. James D. Walker of Thurman, won the color television set,
and Katrina Potts, daughter or Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Potts or Patriot,
was the winner or the Nintendo
game.
Thi s year 's BREC coll ege
scholarship winners were also reeogn·ized. Present were $500 winner
Kelly Smith of Gallipolis, and $250
winner Jennifer Chamberlin or
Wheelersburg. The two otllcr winners nol able to be present were
$500 recipient S1ephen Radabaugh
of Jackson and S250 winner Eric
Les1.kowicz of Kius Hill.
Entertainment before and after
the meeting was provided by
Howie Damron and the Top Prioity
Band of Chesapeake.
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative serves some I 5,000 con sumer-members tllroughout much
of a nine-county area, including
c-pa•:;•ut.adlo
t..8
q\Ost or Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence,
Oblo 45
PI&gt;. 1181411!1.
d .... !
,.....
alP
C&amp;. CJdo.
Meigs and Vinton Counties, and
Lean Weaver
,
parts of Athens, Pike, Ross and
Lean
Gaskins
Weaver,
93,
of
M-'l'hoA li'I'No,u41H
SciOto Counties.
Obio
.\M~
Natloul , Hilliard, Fla., died July 21 , 1992 in
-~~
loliM, llruhaJD .
Florida.
Ntwlpopor ,_., '118 Tblrd .......
Now-. Now 1Ift 10017.
. Born on Aug. 21, 1898 in
Mason
County, W. Va. , she was a
P08I'MAS'I'IR:SIDd ...... ~ ..
Veterans Memorial
longtime resident of the Meigs·
'I'll• DollJ llalillal. Ill Coan 81.,
MONDAY
ADMISSIONS •
Pwwu)OJIIG4&amp;788.
Mason area. She is survived by two
ftlll()aiPTIOII IIA'J'ai
daughters and one son of tile Jack- Pearl Adams, Racine, and May·
II)'Clorrlw•- a-ta
sonville, Fla. area, and one son in belle lhle; Racine.
OM Woat. ..........................................$t.60
MONDAY DISCHARGES •
Newark, 13 grandchildren, 24
0.. )loa,th ................ - ................ ........15
0nt Yur.....~.............................- ..SUJO
Edna
Wayland.
great-grandchildren, and row great·
IDIGLII OOPY
great-grandchildren.
Pllela
o.o,........................- ...... ,_,,..-.21 Ceall
: Punml ~~erviees and burial lOOk
place
in Hilliard,'Fia.
I 1 ll&gt;ooo 1101 llollriM Ia
llouarrlThe Village of Rutland has
ti nmll Ia adnlioo ~~ Ia 'l'loo
announced
that water is now safe
Dally llaellul '"' o. Ill-, Ills or 11
_ .. Cnolll wiD ba ..... oarrllr
(or drinking and tile boil advisorr.
in affect has been canceled. A bo1l
.
No
bJ 111111 ••onallw:"'
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER advisory had been issued but since
......... """'" Ia
Discharges, July 2.7 - James tbal time the Environmenlal Protec·
Balles, Phillip Blflels, Letha Cot- tion Agency administered eight
~=
terill, Eber Lewis, Evelyn Munay, random samplings in the village
II
and
Mary Myers.
and tile results concluded that the
IIW..............................................
.18
IIIW..................................·............ .'78
Birtlls, July 27 - Mr. and Mrs. water is safe. The Leading Creek .
.,...... ...... Qo.ai,J
Michael Champion, a daughter, Conservancy District has treated
II w-.;.................- .......- .......
Wellston . Mr. and Mr.s. David . tile water and tile storage tank on
.w
......
.
.
.
.................................
..
DW..... ..................- .......- .........
s,ephenson,
a
daughter, lhc hill has been treated witll chloRavenswodd. W,.Va.
rine.

-

,r:-.,·

Nt"'i

If..,,.

Hospital news

Water deemed safe

--

Hospital news

.-....,u...
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..

w-.............
... . . .. . . . . . .. .. -.. . . . .m-'4

-=

l

_

_

Please indicate when you are available.

Name (Please print)
Address
[

•
Phone

Committee works on plan
to improve school programs
When school opens on Aug. 25,
Southern High School will see
some changes.
The Effective Schools commit·
lee of staff members working on an
improvement plan anticipates see·
ing more parent and community
involvement in tile school to help
accomplish the changes.
In order to complete plans for
the opening of school, the commitlee needs to know tile community
members who are wiUing to volunteer in the school and the work

Court news

Divorces processed
in Chillicothe, about five miles
An action for divorce has been
north of Massieville.
filed
in Meigs County Common
Members of Nati onal Guard
Pleas
Court by Terry L. Brewer,
Company D of the 372nd Engi·
Columbus,
against Bonnie Sue
neering Battal ion of Middletown
Brewer,
Portland.
were ordered to tile nood area, said
A divorce has been granted in
Ohio Emergency Management
Agency spokesman Gene Kinn. the cou.rt to Harold Smith from
About 40 Guard troops were to Bonita Jean Smith.
Foreclosures sought
help remove debris from streams
Foreclosure
actions have been
and creeks to avert the possibility
filed
in
Meigs
County Common
of more flooding.
Pleas
Court
by
Home National
OEMA representatives were
Bank,
Racine,
against
William B.
surveying the damage, Kinn said.
A federal survey team was expect· Cremeans, Pomeroy, and others, in
ed to arrive today to verify damage the amount or $1 ,930.60: and by
Home National Bank against Kcitll
estimates.
Myers,
Long BoUOnl, and others, in
Julia Bradley of the American
tile
amount
of $3,061.40. Both suits
Red Cross said the nooding affect·
alleged
default
on promissory
ed 126 homes and 76 mobile
notes.
homes.
MarrialJe license 1ranted
She said three hom es were
A marnage license has been
destroyed and 55 had major dam- granted
in Meigs County Proba!C
age, while 6R had minor damage.
Court
'?
Wendell Henry,
Seventy-five mobile homes were 68, Racme,Dalton
and Rose Louise Hughdestroyed or had major damage and es, 61, Columbus.
one had minor damage, she said.
Seven businesses were dam ·
aged, including both the town's .
grocery stores.
About 300 people were cvac uat·
ed when Indian and Trego creeks
flooded , sending water up to 12
fe et deep into some buildings.
Some residents had to be rescued
rrom car tops and roofs.
Ms. Bradley said a Red Cross
serv ice center would be set up
Wednesday in Huntington Hall
Slate Auto's already
lowp!el1liumscanbe
reduced even more by
. insuring bolh your car
Am Ele Power .................. .33 7/8
'and home with the S~e
Ashland Oil .......................24 5/8
Auto Companies.
AT&amp;T.. ..............................43
Bank One...........................44 !12
Let us~ you jusl
Bob Evans .,.......................19
how much your savings
Channing Shop.................. 30 7/8
can be.
City Holding ...................... l9 S/8
Federal Mogul. .................. 17
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 63 112
Key Centurion .................. .19 3/4
Lands End.......................... 29 7/8
Limited Inc....................... 20 3/4
Multimedia Inc.................. 27
Rax RestauranL .................9/16
Reliance Eleclric ........... :....18
214 EAST MAIN
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... .16 3/4
POMEROY
Shoney's Inc ...................... 20 112
Star Bank ................. ......... .32
992-6687
Wendy Inl'l. ....................... ll 3/8
Worthington Ind ................ 23 5/8
Stock reports are the 10:30
Auto .
a.m. qu1iles provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewl ot Gallipolis.
fniUI'•nc• co..,anle•

Stocks

,/!j .....
'•

those volunteers are interested in
doing.
Surveys to deu:nni nc tllis information are available at the high
school but for tllose who find a trip
to the school inconvenient, lhe
form is being made available
tllrough this newspaper.
The completed survey form,
printed below, may be mailed to
Koste EI-Dabaja, Southern High
School , P. 0 . Box 98, Racine
45771, before August 7.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

.

7

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IMIMI-.n.IIAT. a.._

From Our
Decorators Desk
Wallpaper and Blind Shop
has the complete look , the
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ne your decorating needs all
together wilh lhe complete
look . People see computer
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day, so they look forward to
coming home to an·
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Wallcoverings are painting
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While you are here, be sure
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IVY LANE
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BY WAVERLY

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP
Memorial Bridge approach on
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1-304-428-1 065
Mon.-Fri. 9-8;
sat. 9-5:30; Sun. 1·5

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Pomeroy-Middlepori, Ohio

The. Daily Sentinel

Sports

·

·

·

Oa-kland wallops.Minnesota
9-1~ ln&lt;lians drop 4-0 battle_

- Tuesday; Julyft,,1192

-

CUbs, Astros down
NL division leaders·
. By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
The fans felt it 'at Wrigley Field,
and the feeling was everywhere
else in the National League, too.
The races are on!
In Chicago, Sammy Sosa home·
red on Doug. Drabek's first pitch
· and Greg MaddQX and tl!.e Cubs
went on to beat' Pittsburgh 3-2
Monday night The Pirates' lead in
the East is dowD tO just one game
over Monlfell), only five over New
York and 5 112 over Chicago and
St. Louis.
"You could feel the enthusiasm
from the fans," Cubs manager Jim
Lefebvre said.
Montreal moved u!) with a 6-4
victory in St. Louis. The Expos
have not been so close to first place
after the All-Star break since Aug.
7, 1989.
"Part of the fun is to look at the
standings," Montreal manager
Felipe AloiJ said. "This is a club
that was 26 games out of frrst place
last year. You've got to enjoy it
while it lasts."
In the Wes~ Adanta lost 5-1 in
II innings to Houston, while San
Diego held on to beat Cincinnati 21. That left the Braves one game
ahead
of the Reds, while the Padres
.DOUBLE AND RBI • San Diego Padres
Monday night's game at San Diego. The Padres
pulled
within five games.
'catcher Benito Santiego is ufe at second with a
rallied in the eighth inning to win, 2-1. (AP)
"
It
was a good all-l!fOU!ld game
double as Reds Bill Doran attempts the tag in
for us," San Diego's Andy Benes
•
said. "There were so many impor•
tant plays."
·
"'
Elsewhere, Philadelphia defeat·
ed New York 5-0 and San FranciscO beat Los Angeles 5-1.
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Reliever
Myers dismissed suggestions slreak to 7 2-3 innings and lowered
Sosa. out since June 14 becau.'ie
Randy Myers might look like he's that he was showing the same form his ERA to4.98.
.
of a broken finger, sparked the
In winning for the seventh time Cubs by homeljng in his first at-bat
regaining his form, but the San he did in 1990, ·when he posted a
Diego Padres right~hander insists career-high 31 saves for the Reds.
in nine games, the Padres moved since being activated from the dishe never lost it.
.
"I'm not going·to say I'm doing eight games over .500 for the frrst abled list. He later singloo home
There were a few weeks of exile it now because I was doing it time since the end of the 1989 sea- the tying run in the fifth inning,
in June, when he blew the only two before and I got pulled out of my son. They also moved within five
then singled and scored the gosave opportunities he had, but he role," said Myers, who has blown games of first-place Atlanta in tile ahead run in the eighth on Kat
has regained his closer role with six five of his save opportunities this NL West while prevented the Reds Daniels' sacri lice fly.
saves in .the Ias.t 15 games includ- year. "I don't want tllatto happen from tying tile Braves.
"It was time fer me to get back.
ing his 19th of the year Monday again."
The Padres broke a 1· 1 tie in the The club really needs me. I know
night in San Diego's 2-1 victory
Andy Benes, the victim of eighth off Greg Swindell (9-4) that," he said. "But, what is more
over Cincinnati.
shutout losses in his previous two wheq Danin Jackson hit a leadoff important, I think we have a chance
"I felt I was doing the job (in starts, we.nt eight innings and triple to left past a sliding Roberts tO win the pennant. You can feel it
May), and I was pulled out of my allowoo seven hits with six Slrik~- and scored on Tim Teufel's.two- with the crowd."
role," Myers said. "But I never outs and no walks. After surrender· out single.
Maddux ( 13-8) gave up a home
look bad&lt;."
ing a leadoff double by Roberts in
''It was bad judgment on my
The Padres used a bullpen by the ninth, Benes (8-9) gave way to part;" Roberts said. "It costs us tile
committee last month, when Myers.
game."
Myers' ERA-soared above 6.00.
"I really wamed to finish the
SwindeU lost his second straight
but changed back when that game, but that's baseball," Benes decision 'after winning six straight.
approach didn't wort either.
said. " I've been throwing well He gave up seven hits, struck out
So it was Myers who got the call lately but! hadn't been getting pos· five and walked three.
in the ni)lth inning with one out and itive res ults.' '
Bill Doran hit his seventh home
runners at first and third, just the
Glenn Braggs grounded out, run, putting the Reds ahead t-0 in
situation the Padres envisioned for moving Roberts to third, before the second inning.
Myers when they acquired him Barry Larkin walked to set the
Benito Santiago tied it in the
from the Reds during the offseason stage for Sabo. Though he hadn't third with an RBI double that came
for Bip Roberts.
started in eight games because of on a 2-2 count that followed a close
Knowing as well as anyone how back spasms, he was sent out tO bat pitch that was called a ball.
dangerous Chris Saho can be at the for Hal Morris.
Swindell yelled at home plate
"Morri s had never faced umpire Randy Marsh about tile call
plate with a game on the line,
Myers was especially gratified to Myers," Reds manager Lou Piniel- when the inning endoo.
get him to pinch-hit into a game- Ia said. "Sabo had good success
Left fielder Jerald Clark twice
ending double play.
against him . Plus Sabo swung the helped Benes with suong defensive
"He's a real tough hitter," bat real well tOday in batting prac- plays. In the third, he reached over
t.f~ers said of his former teammate.
tice and was feeling better. We his head to make a running catch
"~ was looking for a strikcou~ an
took out shot and it didn't work."
on Roberts' long fly, and· in the
~y infield grounder or a double
Myers extended his scoreless founh he caught a fly baU and douplily."
bloo Hal Morris off frrst base~

Padres hold on to edge Reds 2-1

game, winning in the 11th. inning
on Eric Anthony's grand slam.
Anthony homered twice Sunday
in the Astros' final home gam~
until Aug. 25. The Astros are taking a 26-game, 28-day trip so the
Astrodome can hold the Republi·
can convention.
Anthony's ftrst career slam and
12th homer of the season came
against Alejandro Pena (1-5). "
Doug Jones (8-7) wop with
three scoreless innin$s. Xavier Her·
nandez went one innmg for his fifth
save.
Padres 2, Reds 1

run in the first inning w Af!(ly Vim
Slyke, but gave up only one more
run before leavmg after eight
innings. He escaped a bases-load·
ed, one-out jam in the eighth by
fanning Mike LaValliere for his
lOth strikeout and retiring Jose
Lind on a popup. Jeff Robinson
piu:hoo the ninth for his first save.
Drabek (8-8) allowed nine hits
in fifth complete game.
Expos 6, Cardinals 4
Datren Reecj and Delino
DeShields homered in the second
inning and Marquis Grissom later
connecled.
Ken Hill ( 12-4) won. John Wet·
u:land got his 22nd save, striking
out Gerald Perry with runners on
second and third to end the game.
Reed hit a three-run homer.
DeShields hit a solo shot off
Omar Olivares(~) and hit an RBI
triple in the founh.
Astros 5, Braves 1
HoustOn began the longest road
trip in team history with a long

Reliever Randy Myers got
pinch-hitter Chris Sabo to ground
into a game-ending double play
with runners on ftrst and third as
San Diego held on at horne.
Andy Benes (8-9) Iert after Bip
Roberts led off the ninth inning
with a double. Myers took over and
a groundout moved RoberiS to
third.

Four named to
OSU Hall of Fame
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Allan Hornyak, Joey Sindelar,
Aureal ius Thomas and Jim Paucr·
son have been selected to the Ohio
State ·University Athletic Hall of
Fame.
They wi II be inducted Oct. 9 and
honored at the Ohio State-Illinois
football game the next day.
Hornyak was a three-time AllBig Ten Conference selection in
basketball from 1971 to 1973. He
helped the Buckeyes to a 20-6
record and a Big Ten championship
in 1971.
·
He ranks lOth on the school's
all-time scoring list with 1,572
points. His_.carcer scorin$ average .
oft 22.8 points per game IS third in
Ohio State history.
Sindelar played on the Buck-

'

eyes' 1979 NCM golf champions.
He earned first-team All-America
honors in 1980 and 1981. His 64 in
1981 during the Big Ten tournament is the lowest single-round
score in the event's history.
Thomas played offensive and
defensive guard from 1955 to 1957
and won All-America honors in
1957, whel) the Buckeyes went 9-1
and won the Big Ten and national
championships.
Thomas was inducted into the
College football Hall of Fame in
1989.
Patterson was the .NCAA
sptingboard diving champion in
1936. He made six All-America
teams between 1936 and 1938 and
never finished lower than second at
Big Ten or NCAA championship
meets.

THE 1992

Scoreboard

.
'

AM~NICAN

LEAGUE
F.aaa Dhillon
W L Pc:L

NA 'I'IONAI. I.MGU[

K.u lll lvblon
w I.
, Pit l.lburgh
53 46
• M ontr~ l
52 47
'New York
411 51
'Ctu c•go
47 51
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&lt; Philadcl phi• S, New 'r' c.rk 0
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: Pitllburah (fcmlin 10.6) 11 ClvciJO
~ (Moram f.4), 2:2&lt;1 p.m.
• N•w York (Cone l\ ·4) 11 Ph iladelphia
• (MU.oWUliama 1·1), 7:3.! p.m.
• HOUlton (H1mdch l-8) at Atlan111 (Di·
• ~ockll-4) , 7:40p.m.
Mon~tc~l (Nabbolt 6-7) IL SL L.ouiJ
(Connie&lt; 3-1), 1:35 p.m.
Cineinnai (RJjo 7-7) II s.n Diq.o (De
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Lol An~et: (Hcnhilcr 7·9) 1t San
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: phil (Abb&lt;otl·ll). 11:11 p.m.
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•
81\timore (McDnn1kt 9-7) 11 New Yon:
(Sindc.-.on 8-1}, 7:30 p.m.
Tcxu (Jo. Ouzm~rt Z·B) 11 8011011 (Dop•on 6-4), 7:35p.m.
K1nu1 Cit)" _(Madia 1).0) 11 TcnnUl
(Key 6-l), 7:3.!_p.m.
Milwaukee (Bane~ 6-6) It Clevclmd
(Nichola 1·2), 7:3l pm.
Otkland (Mw,.ll!-9) 11 Minnc:ao~a
(Eri.u.n 7-7~ I:Qj
Selulo (Flcmina 1 -4) 11 Calitomil

·r.m.

(l.anpla19·1~

· SPQfll !ll!ysicals for· the feiJU!le
...... ill the~ Local Dll·
~will 111
the oeru o1
if~~~« ell WMR ""

ID:35 p.m .

Wtdnttdalf'l GIIMI
Milwaokoo (Ekb.o&lt;ll-0) 11 Cloveland
(s...ld'" 6-9~ I :U p.m.
Bal-(lhodoa J.GIII- Y. .
(Kamloniedd 2-1), 7:30 ,....,
(hnw 2-J)
(Qoo.ID-1), 7:3lp.m.
KIOIII City (Appi&lt;t 11 ·3) " T (WeDal ..), 7:3l p.m.
Chicaao (Hibbard 7-S) 11. Dluoi1 (Ritz
2-l), 7:Jl p.m.
Otkltnd (Sio~•n 7-S) at Mim11101.1 .
(Knq'" 9-2~ 1:05 p.m.
Salulo(Jlilhcr 0.0) 11 C.Uromil
(Blylev..,H),IQ:3l p.m.

T••

Physicals scheduled

. .

II-

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ret

an- •

1-f, 1-lO Lla. -

M

~12, 10 .... 10 IIOCIII.
T1le pllyiicals will be providod
free of charge during these times
only. SJ,udcnts must have a sign~
.physical card which may ' be
obtained at Dr. Hunter's office or
the high school.

,

·c lll.·DIVE or P.J! 'TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEll'S EDITION

912·2155.
------·-· - I

Today's Sports Parade ...
ByJIMUTKE
AP Sports Writer
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) All the words of consolation were
appreciated, but they didn't do
much. And they certainly didn't fit
her mood. So Jenny Thompson just
went out and got tauooed.
Alongside her left shoulder
blade now. set orr smartly by a tan
and the wbite straps of a bathing
suit, a gruesome red-green-and·
blue picture showed a swcrd piercing the heart of a rose.
As Thompson left the U.S.
swimming team's cheering section
and picked her way through a
crowd, sorileone struggling to keep
up finally drew alongside her.
"Nice toUCh. What's it supposed to

uf hours in Jenny Thompson's
young life.
She came to the Barcelona
Games with five separate primetime shots tO hit America's heart,
and already she has fired two
blanks. Three more chances await
Thursday and Friday and the pressure only figures to swell.
Despite the insouciance of
youth, Thompson must be sweat·
ing. Big time.
·

On! y one American woman has
ever won five gold medals in
swimming, but Shirley Babashoff
needed two Olympics to do it.
When Sunday dawn.ed full of
promise, Thompson reasonably
expected to accomplish the same
feat in one.
mean~ "
She was the world record-holder
"Nothing," Thompson said,
in
the
tOO-meter freestyle. She had
stopping, then reaching across her
muscular back to finger the image. clocked the fastest time in the
Her hand went ne~t 10 her left world this year at 50, the secondearlobe, where four different ear- fastest at 200. She figured w get
rings were parted, just below black the last legs for both the 400
Watarer sunglasses and a baseball fre&lt;:Style and medle~ relays.
cap ttig&amp;ed low against the hats!\ · Somewhere- along Madison
Avenue, Thompson was being
$UnlighL
·
· It was difficult to tell whether measurcxl for the front of the cereal
she was trying to live up tO her rep- box. She was the closest thing to a
mortal lock the talent-laden Ameriutation or hide from iL
can
women's swim team had to
" It's not supposed to mean anything. Besides," she added, stining offer. She was a custOmer so cool
a 19-year-old's rebellious grin, even her teammates had taken to
..it's only a rub-on. It's not a real calling her "James Dean."
tattoo or anything."
ILis 7 p.m. Monday, stiU hellish·
But someone without any repuly hot in Barcelona and half a day tation and a hardly recognizable
removed from what mnst have felt name thrashed her Sunday night.
Zhuang Yong of China, whose
like the most disaJlll!li~ting stretch

best previous time was a considerable 64-hundreths of a second
slower thai\ Thompson's, had taken
gold tO her silver in 54.64 seconds
and, in the bargain, the Olympic
record Thompson had set in the
preliminaries earlier in the dily.
Monday morning in the 200
freestyle, Thompson staggered
home 12th in a preliminary race in
which only the top eight finishers
advancoo.
Immediately after the first setback, Thompson blun~d out, "I
just choked big time coming
home," supporting coach Mike
Schubert's surmise that she had
seen Zhuang leading and made a
panicked dash for the wall. Chastcnoo by the time the next setback
occurred, Thompson was much
more cautious.
"I was just reaDy physically and
emotionally tired still from the 100.
... I saw everybody pass me," she
said, "and I couldn't really do anything about it.·'
Thompson showed. a bit of the
old bravado when she reluctantly
agreed she would have to win the
50-meter Friday lO consider her trip
a success. But then she complained
about being selected for random
drug testing when Zhuang was not.
When asked directly whether she
suspected Zhuang of using illegal
substances, Thompson replied
blithely, "I don't really know, so I
can't make a judgment."
· Clearly, losing two gold medals
had rubbed her the wrong way.

time lO move on. .
The 230-pound fullback ~igned
Oilers
a reponed S4.3 million, four-year
Joe Mon&amp;ana is still scheduloo to
HoustOn, which leaves on Tues- contract late Sunday, almost 10
saart for the San Francisco 49ers in
their exhibition opener against the day for Japan and its appearance in days after he was first expected lO
the American 'Bowl at Tokyo repon
Denver BUliiCOS next week.
Monilna, who had two days of Dome, ran through a shon, no-con- Colts
rest. limited his Monday morning tact practice in •preparation for the Owner Robert lrsay visited
pauing drills 10 just30 thriJws, and showdown with the Texas rival trJining camp und said the team is
"trying like hell" to sign backup
afterwards said 'llis arm felt just Dallas Cowboys.
Eagles
quarterback
Jack Trudeau and
about the same.
Veteran cornerback lzel Jenkins defensive back Ashley Ambrose, a
· " It (right ann) still feels tired,"
said Montana. who missed the was close to agreeing to contract second-round draft choice.
On the day coach Ted Marchientire 1991 season foUowing right terms, Philadelphia president HarrY
elbow surgery. ~·It felt pretty good , Gamble said Jenkins, a free agen~ broda put the squ3d through the
the early part, then it just got a little is one of 12 players still missing first of six scheduled two-a-day·
from the Eagles training camp. ·
workouts, first-round draft choice
tired."
'
Quentin Coryaft sat out with an
Meanwhile, Houston Oilers Browns
quarterback Warren ~oon walked . Tommy Vardell sweated ankle sprain, widcout Sammy Mar·
out of training camp and may not through his first practice, getting tin reinjuroo a finger and tight end
mate the 1e81D's trip to Tokyo for pOunded and scratched, and Cleve- Kerry Cash continued making
Satwday's exhibition game, ESPN land's first-round draft choice strides toward earning a starting
spot
couldn't hav~ been happier.
JqJorted Monday nig~t
.
Moon's agen~ Le1gh Stemberg,
told the nelwork Moon left camp
because of a contract dispute that
has liJl&amp;ered for more than a year.
General Manager Mike Holovak
declined -comment and Moon was
Ulllvailable lale TueSday night Oilers owner Bud Adams told•KRIV • .
TV said he was unaware of any
walkouL
"That's news to .me," Adams
said. "I really don't wantw comment on iL When you're negotiat·
ing, you expect anything. I expect
to see Wanen making .the trip. .
Chitfs
• Deron Cherry, who showoo up
a the Kansas City Chiefs trainil)g
c:amp .ll seasons ago as a free ·
agent puntQ, said aobd-bye Moo·.
. diy • a sill-tiJDC All-Pro f= safe·
. lJ and one of the best defensive.
mcts ol his time.
Ranted by family and friends,
Cllcrry wiped away tears as he
. .10111CCd his lletiremall during 111 ..
emotional news coaferenc:e. He 1
sai.d a severe knee· injury t~at 1
SIDELINE TALK • Clevelanll Browas fullback Tommy
nquiml SU1JC1Y two
aild
the fear ol a .possible c!ebilnating l Vardel1'(445aad ~ty Erk Turner,(29) tallt during n ~rt11k Mon·
injury helped him -decide it was : day aneraoon atlhe !tam's practiCe In Bert~~. (~P)

. lly The Associated ~

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Coming
August 14, 1992.
Adverti·sing Deadline Is
.
August 3, 1992.

-- v· - - - -.. ·-- --- 11----...,..--........- - --.------+'------ -·--

s.enterfield in fifth inning Monday night 11
1...levetand Stadium. The Brewers blanked the
Indians 400. (AP)
·

Montana to startfor49ers in
exhibition opener next week

Green will have to carry
P~:!lg~ls. lo~d tbis fall
WILMfNGTON, Ohio (AP) Harold Green entered the spotlight
last year when he edged aside
James Brooks, the Cincinnati Ben·
gals' all-time rushing leader.
This year, the focus will be
intensilioo, since Brooks' departure
w the Cleveland Browns as a Plan
B free agent.
"Without J.B., he's the guy who
is going to have to carry the load,"
said coach Dave Shula. "He's our
featured back."
Green says he can live with the
pressure.
"I look at it as a stepping stone,
an opponunity to get in there and
get a little more playing time,' do
the things I know I can do~" Green
said.
Green, a second-round pick
from South Carolina three years
.ago, played little as a rookie. He
began getting the ball on a regular
basis last year and responded well.
Despite being slowed by an ankle
injury in the second half of the sea·
son, he finished with 731 yards4.6 yards per carry.

GETTING THROUGH • Milwaukee base
runner Kevin Seitur (20) slides safely by Cleveland's Sandy Alomar IS h~ takes a' throw from

·--·-----·-------- ·--c-

yc&amp;l1•

--·-- ......

,_ ,.

By Tile Associated Press
The first game of the· battle
between the AL West leaders
wasn't a battle for long.
Terry Steinbach hit a three-run
homer and Bob Welch piu:hed nohit ball for 6 2-3 innings as Oak·
land beat the Minnesota Twins 9-1
Monday night That pulloo the Athletics within two games of the AL
West leaders.
"Let's not jump the gun."
Steinbach said cautiously. "We
don't have anything maslered here.
We still have two games in this
series. We just got some breaks this
time.'•
.
Welch (8·5) had a no-hitter until
Brian Harper dribbled a single just
past .diving shortstop Walt Weiss
with two outs in.the seventh. Gene
Larkin followed with a ground single off the glove of second baseman Mike Bordick, scoring Kent
Hrbek, who had walked . Those
were the only hitS Welch allowed
in seven-plus innings.
,
"I thought, .'Yeah, we gm a
grounder. Oh, no, it got through,"'
said Steinbach, who also doubled
twice and drove in four runs.
"Then with Larkin, it was, 'OK,
another grounder. Oh, no, that got
through, 100.'' '
Oakland has won four straight
and is 17 games over .500 for the
first time this season. Dennis Eckersley followoo Wekh and piu:hed
the ei~hth, then came out in favor
of Jim Corsi after Randy Ready's
grand slam in the top of the ninth
gave Oakland an insurmountable
lead.
In otller games, Milwaukee beat
Cleveland 4-0, Boston beat Texas
7-5 and California beat Seattle 3-0.

John Smiley (10-5) struck out
the first two batters but gave up
Carney Lansford's single, walked
Mark McGwire and aUowed Stein·
bach's ninth homer.
Smiley gave up five runs and
seven hits in six innings, struCk out
a season-high nine and walked two.
Brewers 4, Indians 0
Jaime Navarro (11-6) extended
his slreak of hitless innings to 10
w1th a three-hitter as visiting Milwaukee won.
Charles Nagy (11-6) allowed
four runs and 12 hits in 6 2-3
innings.

' '

Milwdoee pi( .ad · · 1 oo KC¥iD Scilzlcr"s RBI infidd
gte and hul Moliuw's •• ••
bunt.Jot.J• - g\dlinl.:ain the fifth ... Rabiat y - ... ri
sacrifJCt fly ill die se '
RedSox7,R g sS
•
Tom 811UUISlJ Iti1 a f"mt
inning grand m. a F&amp;waj l'llt:
and Herm WiuiaaJI!aa llldal t

»

two-run ·boma- oft lcwill a -

(14-7).

Frank Viola {9-6) _.._. al i l r
runs - one ealifd- _, 10 ._:
in six innin~

U. S. cagers romp again;

Johnson, Stockton hurl
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) Point guards Magic Johnson and
John Stockton are hurt and Charles
Barkley is still making mischief.
So what happens?
The U.S. Olympic basketball
team beats mOOal favorite Croatia
103-70 Monday nigh~ the closest
victory the Americans have had in
nine games. but still a blowout
They did it witlloutJohnson for
more than three-quarters of the
game because of a strained muscle
in his right knee. SIOCkton has bml
out with a cracked bone in his right
leg since June 29.
For the Dream Team, whose
previous closest game was 38
points over Puerto Rico in the
Olympic qualifying tournament,
the game against Croatia was an
opportunity 10 measure the size of
its dominance.

''It 'nS IJIIOd far a. -

dWtmr:• Vw r

rocused on a
Jordan said.
Croatia, wilh

-

to be·
I

m playas rn.

Yugoslavil's 19811 Olyapic; w-:
medal&amp;-. fJ!ImiiD be- o(
the Alnericms' ........ 11:111.
Dr.azeo PtJmwic of tile New - sey Nas stURd 19 puiiiiiS _, S.
jko Vrankovic of die a Ccltics had 11 poilus ad fo..blocked sllots. Di-o Radja. a
Celti::s drafloe, !lrolld 14 poinls ca
6-&lt;lf-10 dv:oin,
:
Butlhc- n:. USA CCIJI=~

trated 011 was Tlllli KMn=, "' -Jcm:l by 111111J ID lie ille-. . .:
ed player ill

e... J.,._ .-

The abseace of
SLOCkloiJ left lllc U.S. .......
a uue pOO!tc-dca • - - . .
Chqgo Bulls .lonbl _, So •ib:
Pippa1 diddlt#Jb•J••J..

Youngsters shine as 1992 Olympics resume
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) It's in the spinning, twisting, elegant dives of a 13-year-old Chinese
girl and the flailing speed of a 14year-old Japanese swimmer.
It's in the resolute strength of an
American who retired, then came
back tO collect a gold when everyone thought he was too old.
It's in a Unified Team that
knows it will be splitting up soon.
and stands wistfully before a nag
that is not its own.
It's in an Olympic Village
encounter between former track
teammates for Yugoslavia- Mirsada Buric, who braved sniper fire
to train in the besieged Bosnian
capital of Sarajevo, and Suzana
Ciric, a Serbian whose government
is held responsible for the siege.
"She was very glad w see me,"
Buric said. "But I had to tell her
that her country is the aggressor
against mine. It's killing our peoplt."
The new age of the Olympics is
taking shape in every event at these
Summer Games, revealing the
future in the diverse nationalities of
champions, the widening age span
among them, and the headlong
surge tOward professionalism.
In sports as in politics, nations
are coming together even as they

are splitting apart. And nowhert iS
it clearer than in tllis seaside city of
so many mingloo cultures that is
host now to 171 countries.
As Day 4 began today, China

and the Uaited Swes led die
medals lisl will 10 . - «, fallowed by dJe Unif"a Tca.·s

seven, ..t fne ad! far Ga

and France.

GOLDEN GRIN • Nicole Hnilletl ol SL ~ fl&amp;,
~eacts to winning the 10ld •edal ia t~o -n·s lll -let
freestyle race 11 the Summer Ol,.apics ill Ia • I , S,.. .._
day. (AP)

RUTLAND
BOTTLE

GAS
OYER 40 YEARS OF DEPIUIIU SEMI

Will "'M"RY
IIJSGiiCit

•Heating &amp; Water Heati•g
•Lift Truck Gas Delivery
•Grain Drying &amp; Cooking
•Constr.,ction Heating
•
FOR HOME, FARM, BUSINESS
&amp; INDUSTRY

,

I

•Normal LP. Gtls Tank lnstalllfl011
•ltnt FrH lank
•200 Gallons of LP. hs
Will IJIPIOVEI CREIII

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$19900

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and ·BOTTLE GIS
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742·2511

lOLL FlEE 1-IG0-137-1217
'·

....__

•
•
•
•
•
•

••'

•

'

�The_Daily Sent~el
·

","

: ~;;;;~;;~=:::::::::::::::::::::::::~r---~P~o~m~~~ro~y~M~Id~d~le~p~o~rt~,O~h~lo~-~--------------~~~----!Th~e~D~a~ll~y~Se~n~U~ne~I:!~~
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! iJ'IIIIICIIihs 1110· "Mik~" just kepi

·

Dt~r __A.. L~~ders~ My

, boytne..ci star1ed hvtng wtlh me

:b:t &amp;iiiiiOIInd, showermg,leavjng

!lllil dolhes lind having all his meals
1p It finally da~ on me lhal

1 ~ !Ia 110 Olher ~est~
! I Jally do love lhis man and I'm

·,_hippy just 10 be wilh him, bull. feel
~ about a few tlungs.
. Mille has never offered 10 help me
i' ~~ mil. food or utilities. He
: JS h\1111&amp; here f.ee. He has a good
' job but keeps telling me how
: brob he is. He says his money goes
~ into his J'Clin:menl account, new
; !:lr JliYIIICIICS, taxes and upkeep on
: ~ popeny.
, • ·I Jive m1 modcstapartmenl, drive
: a paid·l"or, older car and have no
: ,!'*f lOr invesunems or retirement

!Jie

': ·-•ts.
.
lfwewae!JI&amp;IIiedorengaged,or

· il

lie had e~r mentioned future

: ·plaat dill included me, this living
. "III!'IIIJCIIIelll might be acceptable.

: B•llc way_dlings stand,! feel used
' llllCIIberrissed.
: 1\&lt;e been 'voiding Mike's friends
Mil family bl_ll when v.:e ?a gel
i llljjdloet,l.aet like,every~rng 1s fine.
~ ~ auth IS lhatl m afraid of losmg
, lliBI. What should I do, Ann? I need
: yo. help... SAN DIEGO, CALIF.
: DEAR SAN DIEGO: .L•ke
' lhousanlb of olhers who wnle to
111e, you know exactly .what you
• DUJbt to do .. you JUSt need
f iOII.KOote to tell you 10 go ahead and
~ do IL OK, 111 tell you.
- • .G1ve your freeloader boyfriend
: two weeks 10 find another place. Tell
•
•

!

!

.......

Plumbing

'
recovery, So lhis is 10 say bless you,
Ann. You may print niy Idler 11111·
usc my name. - PAUL . HANSEN
SR., FRANKLIN SQUARE,.N.Y.
DEAR PAUL: ,I C8J1110i !dl yliu
what a wonderful feelillg)l .is 10
blow that~ Ibis colu111n I am
able 10 make ilich i diffenDce in
lhelifeofaRIIilcr.iAuasiibyoii'S
are whal bepl ·lbis. old wo.thclllle
delamincd 10 ..Y in lila. ~
'l1wik you.
~. . ~. '
Dear ADa Lalldel;i:' l(u,one
should
lhe pop:J wif 10 eill
a banana here it is '• from· a ,
former ~ flllishina "ICbool

too....

,uiN lAHDills

Mtm.
n-s,." • _.

c-s,..,,.,. ·

him you are ashamed or yourself
for having allowed him 10 sponge
off you for eighl monlhs and you
cannot permit this degrading
arrangemenliO continue.
Supporting lhis chcapskale is bad
enough, but much more damaging graduale:
·.
is what it's doing to your self·
Slice llle ~ in hslf iengdl·
esleem. Broom lhe bum oul and lhc wise on ·a liuit plait. Start at one
sooner the beuer.
endandspoonitoutofils·still. This
Dear Ann landers: Some time is miJC!I mcxe elepnllhan holding
ago you printed a Ieuer about lhc the banana, StriJlpiDJ tbe skin
importance of having an annual and looting ljtc ' a monkey. ••
checkup for prostate cancer. That CA111ERJNE M,, MILWAUKEE
column may have saved my life
DEAR C.: No one ·has asked
My bro1her had prostate canoer how 10 eat a blnailll laldy, but if
and died. My daughter had another SOIIICOIIC shoodd, 111 be n:ady. And
form of cancer, bul fortunately, it please doo'l"knoct lllOIIteyl. Some
was caught in time and treated. She's peop)e lhiot Darwin was ripl.
perfectly line now.
WlraiCfJ!tpp~ptriOIIWiro
After 1 saw your article, 1 went has evc'?lliirt'?· ~1!11 Liillders'
immediately to my physician. He bt?Oklel, Gerru, ._.1s ldtalJor ~
gave me the PSA (Prostatic Specific . '!'glrlstDIId or .ci1/foe Ulbll. Gems
Antigen) blood test, which is IS 1J r.Diltcliollqf AMI.tutderl most
painless and simple. The resulu rt([IMISledPf¥.11twlUSIJ1S.StttdiJ
showed that 1 did indeed have self-41ldrust'd, loq, 'btuiltut·siu
prostate cancer. Fortunately, thanks ertwiopt 1WL 11 tlled: or .IIIDMJ
to your column, il was caught in order for $4.85 (litis irtcludes
lhe early stages.
postogt alld lttJNIIills) to: Gems,
1wemlhrough radiation lre81rnenl c/o .AM i:Ju~Mrs, P,O. /Joz,_ll562,
and my doctor has told me thai ChlttJBO, 111. 6()61 { .0562. (In
the odds are 98 percent for a full Canad/J, send $5.87.)

:

WASHINGTON (AP)- Mobil
• Oil Corp. has &amp;gleed 10 SlOp mak·
: 1111 c:IIVIIOIIIIICIIllll claims about its
: Refly Trub Bags under a sellle·
' ..meal announctAI Monday with lhc
Fedcnl Tl'lide Conunission.
.· The commission contends
: Mobil has advertised, without a

'

~ _Weight
1

fo!W..iJw ~t.p"""" •~••···
Goillo c-ty

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

-·-

·~ ....
641 A,.W. 0..
119-W.a.l.t

decom:

' A series of six-week classes for
: wcipt conlrol will begin Aug. 10
; lind 12 ll lhc Meigs County Hcallh
• Dcplrlmcnl Classes will begin al

.

: ; Tllcn: will be ~ choice of nights

;for lhc classes, c11hcr Monday or

:.llfcdiiCsday. Classes are free to
__ t,:tcip County residents.
· Each class will be two hours
, diiration and aucndance l~ required
· at only one two-hour session week·
: ly. Clas!Cs will include nutrition
:.education, s1ress management,
• weekly weigh-ins. relaxation ICCh·
: niqucs, recipes, diet recall sheets,
: exercise ICChniques and other phas-

~:$wearingen

to participate
:Jn Ohio teen pageant
•• •

9t9 In••

70-l...._.
667-&lt;:..hllo

....._

931-Bell'.

l•lh• Rd., lllcint

30 VISITS FOR 530
Offer Good Thru
July 31, 1992
Call for Ajlpolntmen1

RATES
Days

Words

I
l
6

15
15
15

10
Monlhly

15
15

Rate
S4.00

Over 15 Words

S6.00
59.00

SJO

$

.20

Public Notice

$ .42
5 .60
$.05/ doy

513.00
51.30/doy

CQIIIION

Rl1e11re forconseeutive Nnt, broken up days will be
, ....... ""-day ............od•.
.

•

•

I

COMPARING VIEWS • Dennis Miller, len,
wllo taped his last late nl1ht show July 14,
clowns wl~h Arsenio Hall, ri1ht, during the tap·
lng of The Arsenio Hall Show Monday In los

Angeles. Hall, whose show competed with The
Dennis Miller Show, Invited Miller to do the
opening monologue. The Derinls Miller Show
'!'Ill be in re-runs until September. (AP)

Community CalendMr it~ms
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. llems
must be r'"ivtd well in advince
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.
TUF..SDAY
RACINE • The Racine Ruritan
Club will meet Tuesday at 6:30
p.m. at Star Mill Park in Racine.
All nx:mbcrs urged to auend.
POMEROY · There will be a
MADD mOOting Tuesday al 6 p.m.
al 119 Buuernul Avenue in
Pomeroy. Public invilCd.

Route 684 Wednesday at 7::io p.m.
wilh Miss Connie Grace, Jackson,
who will be going 10 lhe All Tribe
American Indians at New Mexico.
Rev. John Neville invilCS lhe pub!lc. Pauy Hysell is missionary pnes•denL
·
RAVENSWOOD · Wildwood
Garden Club will hold its annual
picnic Wednesday at 6 p.m. al lhe
Ravenswood Park.
THURSDAY
LONG BOTTOM • George
Pickens, missionary from Nairohi,
Kenya, will be al lhe Long Bo110m
United Methodist Church on
Thursday al 7:30p.m. A fellowship
hour will follow.

CIASSD'IEDS
Gin' RESIJLTS • FAST!

VS
ROBERT

IULUnl lOAD DEADUNE

al the calvary Pilgrim Chapel on
RouiC 143 in Pomeroy. Rev. Victor
Roush invilCS lhe public.
MIDDLEPORT - A Calr.sh Festival organizational meeting will be
held Thursday at 7 p.m . at Middle·
pon Village Hall council chambers.
POMEROY • Free clothing day
will be held at the Salvation Army
in Pomeroy ThurSday from I0 a.m.
to noon. All area residen\5 in need
or clolhing are welcome.

~J:i COURT

BRU~t=m

Bl .LLETI\ BO.\R il

Community calendar

4:30 P. a DAY BEFORE

PLAIHTIFFS

~m.EJ~s

LEGA~No~~:AVICE

FOR SALE
Agriculture
lime
VALLEY INC.
304•273•5555

unknown

PUILICAnON

__

PRICE REDUCED!

............
-ooniO ••"*''I
"' "' .. ,-"' ~
buy ""Y n1co hotne on
..,..In

DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE·TRUCKtNG
FREE ESTIMATES

..

LANDCLEARING,

.. $88,900 ll1d
~,...

3~

992·3838

:0"'"
-

· 4 BR, 3 1&gt;1111, 2 goi'IQOI, - 1 ·
PIIIPOIIY '"'*'clio 4,800 oq. ft. linn

Cll814-llllz.71041or

6/B/'11211

1.

0.JAYMAR

M&amp;M FLEET INC .
Prolessional Aerial Photography
Homes, Farms, Special Events

Quality
Stone Co.

Phone:

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Day-446-9814
Evenlng-446·4406

Call 614·992·
6637
. St. Rt. 7
Ches.ire, OH.

1flltfn

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

....... ...

.

~

-

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

HAPPY
13th

BIRTHDAY,
ISAAC!

In Loving
Memory Of
Michael Patrick
Bissell,
· July 28, 1992,
his 5th birthday.
Sadly missed by
Mom, Dad &amp;
Sisters
11

..

_.... _

IO AI...M or
--~·

...._. Tllil 1 IIOiy . . . . . . . . blll-11 llllt

...........

.....

Allo-11•2- .....
_ . . .. All 1111 on 2

-""" Don'l-1111-

llalu, c.un~.=
10; (7) 7,14, 2t, 2t;

....

Cal (614) 446-9416w HOH72-5967

WE DO

ROOFING :;

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATII·
ADD ONS • REMODEUNG • KITCHENS
• BATHROOMS • SIDING • DECKS
YURS EIPERIEIICE
1L
7·15-'IMrl

Toshiba • D.rake ··..
Uniden • PanasoniC
Sales·Servii~Estitlates :::
..

AUTO RENTAL, INC.

•

•

~9.95 A DAY AND UP
CAl-L (614) 446-9971 (Kelly)
KENNY'S AUTO CENTER
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

St. Rt. 588 West '·

Gallipolis, OH. .

446-2411 or 1-800·365·1229

Hown L Writesel

ROOFING

BURGLAR • FIRE
CLOSED CIRCUli T.V.

Trucka
TniCior ·Tnillere
HouMoblleHomu

NEW-REPAIR
Guttel'11

Realdentllll· Conol1811:111

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Equipment C._ned &amp;

Painting

FREE ESJIIIA1ES

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
eGiraae•

.

•Complete
Remotleli•g
Stolt &amp; Compare
f.EE ESTidES

985·4473

sta.. lkitiMIII

(614)11Z-2411
(614)11Z..S75

712B/'112111n.

they took ME

Love,
Gl'11ndps Bluall
5-»1 mo.

lEVIN'S LAWN
IUINRNANCE
949·2391 or
1·100.837·1460
Llwn Mowing,·

Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub end Trt111
Trinvnlng &amp; Removal
R•kllnUII • COIMiwtdll
FtMEollmol•

Help Wanted

Busy optometry practice seeks full
time optometric assistant/technician.
Assist In choosing and fitting frames,
checking spectacle Rx'a, preliminary
testing and miscellaneous office
duties as needed.
Salary based on experience.
H you enJoy working with ~ople,
mall· or drop off a resume before
Augusta.
. SCHMOLL OPTOMETRICS
443 Hartinger Pkwy. ·.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
PLEASE, NO PHONE CALLS!

SHRUI &amp; 11EE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SlACK
992·2269

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZER
WORK, DRIVEWAY
WORK and
LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE

R&amp;C EIClYIDIG

IEISONlllE UtES

BASEMENTS&amp;

992·7553
POMEROY, OH.

BULLDOZING ..'

PONDS
.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS .
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER .
UNES .

HOME SITES

HAUUNG: Umestone,

Dirt, GI'IIVIII 1nd Colli

LICENSED IIIII 110H0ED •

PH. 614·H2-5591
12~

HOUSE

PAINTIHG
l•terior • bterior.
Spray • Rol· Ins~
FREE ESTIIATES

CILL

Announcements

614-992·6949

3 Announcements

712f111211 mo. pd.

CUSTER'S

1300 r... StrHI
Miilthport, 011.
loeC.sttr
614-992·2213
C•sttr

KEII'S IPPLIIIICE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

ROFESSIONAL

7117/lmo.

PWTER

Ill IIIIlS
lrl, Ill• Or We
ldr !!-

6·26·'92· 1 mo.

• Custom CsrpMI
•Customs..t
Covel'11 • AIIO llotlta

STUCCO
&amp;

MICROWAVE OVEII
a1dVCR REPAIR

USED RAILROAD 11£5

•HNdllners

CIIUU'IIInl
. Dlll.l'l'lll

•
SL Al588 Wool •
Phone 446-8515 or

lsWliY from YOU. But
they can't take away
I!IY love for you.

• Convertible Tops

Ill

btl••••• •C-"-tiolt

CONSOLIDATED SECURITY SYSTEMS

IAildY &amp; Chris,
I low you.
Th•y took away
home; they took
l•vw•y my money;

667·6179

111.

24 YHn lll..ri1111

45765 Fllltwoocla Roed
Po......,, Olllo 457&amp;1

949-2168
BISSELL &amp; BURKE

Direct Pollw.fb.. C1

Degreued

FREE ESTIMATES

OPTOMETRIC ASSISTANT

lt... llng

Bennetts Mobile Home_ffi!_tillg
1391SaH•d ScHolld. ~Gnlt I\CIII

l•thorlnd .....n fr.

TSilf·tnN

LilTIN. •Ill Ill,

Now Water Heaters.

SATELLITE T.V•.

Fill IJniiATIS

-

PlntpS, fll'11CKH &amp;

742·2328

11411211 -,..

DR. RICK BILLMAN, OPTOI\fETRIST

Glality HI Effldeacy
Air Coldltlallers, Heat

llo Sunday Calls!

FREE ESnMATES

NOTICE

r

COMMERCUL and llESIDENTIAL
t'llD ES'I'IMATES

HAVl REFIIINaS
••,•• 6 p.a.l- ......
Air• 6p.a. 614·985-4180

Visitors announced

..

New Homes • Yiayl Sidiag
New Garages * Replaceme'• t Win.ow1
Roo•ldditiaaJ * Roofing

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

Recewes
. • , card

...

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

"Talri lU I'IIM 0.1 Oll'riwllng
-Lor U1 Do II for Y•'

the

. JACKSON EYE CLINIC
O.D.

LOCATED CORNER OF II. 7 &amp; 143
PO.ROY IY·PASS
992·5114
mo.

&amp; co.

Chili cook-off
planned during
VBS scheduled
Bend festival

FamilY, makes visit

8£TW18'f DESIGN

RnAIL &amp; WHOLESALE SALES
Of Sweet Con, String Beans,
Tomatoes aad New Potatoes, Etc.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

VBS scheduled

PRESCRIPTION WRITING
OPHTHALMIC MEDICINES
TREATMENT
MANAGEMENT

$1 ~50 doz.

2-7·92-tln

Elberfeld among
20 exhibitors

Harrisonville
area happenings

Now

264 UPPER RIVER ROAD
HOME SITES
TRAILER SITES,

Tbo prlco - - -

INTEIHIIIIf.

Rt. 2
Millwood, W. Va.

BY PUBUCAnON
3 16-1
pd
ROBERT GROGAN, 11 l':====·==mo=~
ltvtng, whoae 1..1 known II
ldclr- Ia
P10n• SL,
HOWARD,
Compton,
end II
EXCAVATING
h• Ia
the

Meigs County land transfers

Couples visit

·· ' TAI1111A SWEARING~·

Jt7..a.&amp;artfal.

11"""""
,,....._'........
.._

-

,Meigs S&amp;WCD,fair
~ board co-sponsor show
The ·Meigs Soil and Wall:t Con·
servalion District and the Meigs
County Fair Board are co-sponsor·
in1 a bay show allhc Meigs Coun·
1y Fair. Entries are due in lhe seerer tary's office by 4 p.m. Aug. 13.
~~ :- Categories for the hay show
.... ilclude class I -75 percent or more
· ·a!ralra; cia.~ 2 • all grasses; class 3
• 49 pen:cnl or less legumes.
·, .· . Prizi!S for alllhrcc categories are
~ 420 for first place; Sl5 for second
.: Ji1a« and SIO for lhird plaee.
·'" .. Requirements include: entries in
;.:.~secretary's offICC by 4 p.m. on
Aug. 13; purchase of a membership
; ..:Jickct; exhibits in place by 11 p.m.
"~,~~us. IS; bring a whole bale of hay

......_

671-PL. " - •

BRONZE
TANNING

949·2826

The agreement would permit
Mobil lo make claims about the
RUTLAND • Rutland Fire
degradability of liS plastic bags
Department
Ladies Au~iliary will
when lhcy are composllXI, but only
meet
Thursday
in.special session a(
MARlETTA • Buckeye Hills·
if it discloses lhallhc availability of
7:30p.m. allhe fire station. All
Hockin~ ,Valley Regional Developcornposting programs is limited.
members are 10 auend as plans will
ment
D1Sirict
exctutive
commiltoe
The Fl"C ciled company state· will mCCI Tuesday al 7:30 p.m. in
POMEROY • The Allegheny be made for the annual block party
ments lhallhc bags "contain a spe· Marieua. The audit budget commit· Wesleyan Bible College Girls Trio
on Sept. 5.
cial ingredient lhal promOICs their tee will meel at 6 p.m.
will perform
Thur~y
at
7:30
p.m.
.
.. .. . - .
bneakdown afwr exposure 10 cle·
ments like sun, wind, and rain"
, HARRISONVILLE - The Har·
and lhat this in~ienl "promotos nsonville
Citizens will meet
degradation w1lhou1 harming the Tuesday Senior
a1 7 p.m. at the town
cnvironmenL"
es of weight conlrOI.
The Fl"C staff, however, said house. Snacks will be served. All
George K. Church and Theresa
There will be a limil as 10 the
Compiled by:
members urged 10 aucnd.
M.
Church, Pt. lots, to Gary L.
number of people who can be degradation takes places very.slow·
Emmogene Hokteln Con11o
Secoy,
Olive.
admiued lo each series or classes ly in landfills bec'ause they are
POMEROY • Meigs County Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
Ruth Pauline Thompson, Lora
which are to be held in the confer- designed 10 minimize lhc e~~ Republican Women's Club will
ence room of the Multi-Purpose or the garbage to water, au and meet al 8 p.m . Tuesday at lhe
Lorena J. Wolf, parcels, 10 Maxine Lillie, Bill Little, Wilma
Building, Mulberry Heights, sunlight 10 prevent ground water Courthouse. All Republican RobertS. Koren and Penny E. Parker, Howard Parter, Peggy
Thomas, Charles Thomas, .66A. 10
contamination.
Pomeroy.
Koren, Olive.
women arc invilCd 10 atlCnd.
Residents should register as
Mary Alice Samuels, parcels, to Bill LitUe and Lora MliJiine Liule,
soon as possible due 10 class size
·
MIDDLEPORT • The regular Suzy Amber Green, Pomeroy Vil- Salisbury.
Freda
M.
Grucser, Evelyn Hoi·
limitations.
meeting of lhe Meigs County Scot· lage.
lon,
Edison
Hollon, Helen .Ober·
Meigs County residents may
William B. Capehart, parcels, 10
tish Rile Club will be held Tuesday
register by calling the heallh
holzer,
Edwin
Obcrholzcr, Edna
at 7:30 p.m: at the Middleport William B. Capeh·arl and Alice Herber and Kenneth
A. Herber,
deparUncnl al 992-6696. When reg·
Masonic Tc:fle. All _32nd degree Jane Swwan, MiddlcP\)FI Village.
istering, indicate a preference of
Donald Parsons and Beverly 1.3496A,IO Freda M. Grucscr, Sal·
Ed Elberfeld, a nephew or
the Monday or Wednesday evening Robert Elberfeld, Pomeroy, and masons in vi 10 ~nd.
Parsons, 16.374A, to Donald Par· isbury.
Freda M. Grueser, Evelyn Hoi·
class.
sons and Beverly Parsons, Bedford.
Rachacl Elberfeld Downie, Racine,
WEDNESDAY
lon,
Edison Hollon, Helen Ober·
· Sandra K. Marcinko and Olio
HARRISONVILLE • Mission·
is one of 20 exhibiting pholOgrafhY
hob.er,
Edwin Oberholzer, Edna
al The Oreal Southern Hole in ary services will be held atlhe Har- Marcinko, right-of-way, Westvaeo
Herber
and
Kenneth A. Herber,
risonville Holiness Chapel on Corp., Olive.
Columbus which is presenting New
parcel,
to
Robert
A. Venoy and
Danny R. Tillis and Saundra K.
and Diverse Images of Columbus
Tillis, parcel, to James C. Birch· Eslhcr Lomine Venoy, Salisbury.
by members of lhe Columbus chapEsther C. Rudolph, Robert L.
field, Rutland.
ter of The American Society of
Rudolph,
Richard H. Rudolph and
MaRazinc Photographers . The
"Voyage 10 the Deep" is the
Phyllis
M.
Rudolph, tracts, 10
for judging, no round bales. All hay exh1bit will run lhrough Sept. 8.
theme for Vacation Bible School at
Rudolph
Brothers
Lid Pin.,
Elberfeld, son of Belh Elbcrrcld, lhc Victory Baptist Chwth in Mid·
become.~ the property of lhc Meigs
Chesler.
County Fair Board and will not be Westerville, and the late Jacob dleporl Aug. 3·8 from 6:15·8:45
returned to the exhibitors. Judges Elberfeld, roccived a M.A. in pho- p.m. nightly.
will take a slice or hay from lhe tography from The Ohio State Uni·
Rev. James Keesee invites all
The Rull.and Church of the
vcrsity m 1982. He currently leaCh· parenlS of lhe community 10 send ~ig
middle of lhe bale for judging.
Nazarene
will.conduct Vacation
There must be ·!O exhibits to es commercial pholography at Fctn their children (ages four and up) 10
Plans
have
been
announced
for
a
Bible
School
Aug. 3·1 from 9·
make a show and hay must be Hayes Metropolitan Education l!le "Voyage 10 lhe Deep."
chili cook·off lo be held Oct 10 11:30 a.m. daily.
Center and owns a cOnlmercial·stu·
grown by lhc exhibitor.
Further information or arrange· during the Big Bend ~ternwhecl
The lhcme 1s "Set Sail wilh lhc
Trophies and ribbons will be dio. He focuses his business on ments for rides may be obtained by Festival.
Savior."
furnished by lhe Meigs Soil and producing and licensing slllCk pho- calling 992-6302.
Thes•·;:enh:_r~~vasrc'o~~~~~~
. Activities .Cl!Ch day will include
Water Conservation District and tography through a network or
""" ~
smgmg, scnpture memorization
agencies
around
the
world.
A
caSh prizes will be furnished by lhc
wilh Jay and Sherry Warner in · bible stories and crafiS. Prizes will
Meigs County Fair Board. Trophies I.Cacher as well as a photographer,
charge of lhe cook-off event. ·
be awllf(led for perfect auendance
will be prcsenlCd atlhc Meigs Soil Elberfeld is fascinalCd by "the proThose inlCncslCd in l;aitieipating and for scripluros learned.
and Water Conservation District c~ss of Transfcrence ... lhraugh
in lhe cook-off are reqijired 10 proThe children will sing during
which knowledge and culture arc
annual meeting on Oct 20.
vide
proof
of
a
negative
Tubcrculothe
momin_g worship services on
transferred from one individual to
guests of Mr. and Mrs. sis skin ICSI. T)iis 1es1 i~ provided AUg. 9.
,anolher and from one generation to BobRecent
Mahr were Debbie Foley and free of charge althe Me•gs County
another."
,
sons, Francis Foley, Columbus, Heallh DcpartmenL
Anyone intcreslCd in participal·
Nonga Roberts, who rc;cently
.Jerry Popejoy, Florida, Bob Pope·
joy, East Liverpool. and Cindy !ng in tl!C cook-off~ or (or furlhcr celebrated her 81 Sl bi'rthday ,
rnformauon, shpuld contact Mr. or • received a birtHday card from Pre.~•
Foley, Snowville.
Mr. and Mrs. Kennelh Mark ins
Mrs. Paul Riggs and daughter, Mrs. Warner at 992-2528. '
idcnl and Mrs. George Bush.
of Racine were Thursday visiiOrs and Mrs. Gloria Kloos visilCd Stel·
'
or Mr. and Mrs. Jake Pendleton of Ia Atkins and Ruby Diehl Tuesday
Tabilha Swearingen, daugbter of Middlepon.
-cvening.
Myrna Swearingen and grand ·
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King
daughter of Wanda Swearingen,
auended
the wedding of their
Rutland, has been chosen 10 partici·
daughter,
Geniva,
at 'Chicago, Ill.,
pate as an en111111t in lhe Miss Ohio
Danny
an'
d
Sharon
Darst
and
~ounces the a.ddition to his Practice.
Teen USA Pa~canl, an offiCial pre- sons recently visited Virginia over lhc weekend. ·
Howard
Day
G
ilkcy
had
major
liminary 10.MISS Teen USA.
of
Each girl.selected possesses a !!each, Va., where lhcy also wenl surgery al Rive(si.de Hospillll in
10
lhe
700
Club.
Their
son,
Corey
Columbus
on
Tuesday.
rare combination of personal
for
Mr. and Mrs. Gordan Atkins,
charm, physical beauty and outgo- Darsl, also celebrated his 14th
Washington, arc visiting a week
ing personality which qualified her binhday recently.
and
of:
wilh his IIIOihel, Siclla Atkins 111\t
as a miss Ohio Teen USA entranL
•Ocular Dieea~ al!d Injuries • Foreign Body Removal
aun~ Miss Ruby Diehl.
•
Preliminaries anll finals will be
Bob Jewell aucndcd a 1110101ty·
prescnlCd in the main ballroom of
•Glaucoma • E'!ler:seney (Urgent) Eye Care.
cle
convention al Westerville over
Jo
Tyree,
daughter,
Melissa,
and
the Holiday Inn in Worthington.
.
Miss Swearingen will compete family. sp¢nt a few days in lndiaria lhcwockend.
Mr.
and
Mrs~
James Hewiu,
visitink daughter, Deidra Hysell
Sept. 4-6.
.
Columbus,
vi.silCd
Mr. and Mrs.
. Rick Billman,
Olairman for Miss Swearingen, . and family. Son, Chuck Tyroc and
Bob
Alkire
Thursday.
Debbie,
very
1\lCCDtly
moved
lhcre.
a rre.~mar\ 81 Meigs High School,
201 Columbia Street, Jackson, Ohio 45640
Mr. and Mrs. Dou1 Bishop
Hclpina10 celcbnile their new
i~ Mary Martin, presideni of lhe
Telephone 286-1419
Drew Webster American Lesion home they had a coot1111t in their spenl lhc wcckcnd wilh his sister,
,, .
back.yanl and,.lalel' WCDIIO the fair. Sue Ferro, in Canlcl.sburg. Ky.
Auxiliary Unit No. 39, Pomeroy.

reasonable basis, thai the bags
when disposed of as trash,
pose and return 10 nature in a reasonably short time.
The company has claimed its
bags offer a significant environ·
mental benefit compared wilh olhcr
bags, lhc FTC said.

M... Coouoty M_, Co., WV

-Code 614 Ana Code 614 ...... Code 304

classes begin

•

:6:30p.m.

Ckmjfiod _ . , cOHr 11u!

'*

~ Maker of Hefty Trash Bags agrees
~ to end environmental claims
•

•

FRESH SWEET CORN

38904 l.eallll!l
Creek loitl
Mkltllepclrt, Olllo

.

ees'.

RED HILL FARMS
PRODUCE

PLUMBING

:'
~

•

Busin-e s-s

• TUescfav
July
· 28-1992
,.
I'
_.., ,
t
.

. .. ·.'·

loading boyfriend should.
1;-~hape up or ship out, says Ann

.
TUeaday, July 28, 1992

RIVERSIDE
BUILDERS
N-Ho11111, Roofing,
Room Adcltlon.,
Kltchene, Porchee •nd

a.th•.

COMPLETE

AEIIODELJNQ IEAVICES
FIM ElL • :1111 Yra &amp;p.

773·5614 or
992·5249

'-RACINE
=======!1
MOWER
r

CLINIC

:=.4-'=' Mtr

•r.v._~101

w_., fljiM)..... --L

IF

...._ • _ _.

PARTS &amp; SEIYKE
Mowers :.-.1...
• C.. Saws
• Wnunters

. 614·949·2804

WICK'S
HAUUNG SERVlQ

,_,,OW.

36970Wa.lllll

~

:.=..~=..=
Arneriean,
't" t~~e Hiah

&amp;-

School uc,.ngo 111-..; " ·
.Wing
In Augwl. - 1n1...,....,
FIIIIIlyiAmoncan
Student Ercltanoo. Col KMfllt
21WIO-H11 Or(~'%"

~ Yloour Dale: MMt Sa:: a: :w
....- II Olal 1--l1'1o1444 For

Doting, R - - ANI f&lt;tn.

...3MIIn. AN U1o11-. Agoo
, •• Olio Coli 21~ tDial

.u-. .,

Syotomo Olllco~
Olvarco $81' Anll ......___ _

JMO' eo-.~=-•
llloolng
,.,....,

Ono SignoiUfO otvorw,

'll....,...,.,. And JIC::
~===;:~~~~
00¥,
Fooo. Cll1--.oci
Tal f1M,
r
~~d~~~F... A...,,r.u~oo.

COUIITRY LOn

1lfH

l~ 1

Apploved Townaht
Road (blllc;klop), 1 i4
mill from Rl. 7,
localld bMw alii
Clielttr and Tuppera
PWna. •
Eech lot • pMillly
I ':=~with u:caiiMII
I,
s.mc. lly:
w.terCo.'i
Columbll8 l Southern
Eltctrlc Co.

LOTS FROM 13)oo
and up
OWner F1n-.d

u:~~o.~

-.. . =-o.--.
.....
r.tJrUe BelCh

Retort v.a ..oc

c...:

=
....•
tl 1

-!Out

I

.......:,

11nlo

......

~

..

.-.

t"'.\t'~
Paclca~......
~

Ooll

,_

.....

?· •

l=.~,
~cr~~r~••uu
. Col

...

..... U.S. ANI~,_
731-aMotiGIIMtt .....
hnlll tnhw
· ;

--

(614) 915·3594 •

••

'I·

'·

*•

-

�Dally Sentinel

,Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'
SNAFU® by Brua: BeaUle

32

11.-er·
IN
tff

4

Giveaway

3172.

S - h old mill kltlon. 304t1WIOS.
I Wllfto Klltono, 1 WhHI Dot, 2
GN\' Kilt-, 1 GN!' Cot. 1
- k KMion. 114 31W253.

~

1210 Alohordoon, abr, 4x12 Ex·
2 Air Cond, 1Dxao
loirnlng, Vinyl Skirting, Goo
FumoOo. s....._FriO, wo-.
0..,'!',_ Stonogo llutldlng,' Nloo,
Blil up AI CiltN C...k; $5,000
114-441-o44S.

111111 Eicono 12115 w mp OUt.
All Ellc., Cloood In Porch Inc.
Oood Condtllon, ,1.....1-:1431.
1184 llonlion 14x51 mobllo

"""!!t.!
....bod........ Ill - · 175-t

fuN b1oadod Cocker
hao - .. . ~--

1184 Nu.... rnobllo 14170
FNI Puoolol, 1 ,.,..In, 1
- lli:M 11pondo, 3 bodnoomo,
11111, All &amp;lock. 114-245-1311.
+---------....,---------~ llrgo both, lllllocklo wlconlrll
llr, underpl=.lf 2 dlckl,
Full bloodod, moll Slblrlon
blockl, nice.
5-2511.
- , , bllol .,.,, tyr. old. 1oao 11
Help Wanted ·
11 Help Wanted
1111
Moblll Homo,
oholo,l~~~
~~~~--~~-14171 Complltlly Fumllhod,
~"""'· 12wk. Cold Col· Clinic IUpiO'Vio« For Prlvolo Somllrvek drlvoro wHh COL to Llko - · Wllh 40Ft. Polio.
lloiShlphord mix, h-, Non-I'"'IH Fomlly Plonnlng Sor- run wtlhtn IIOOrnl. rodluo of l.ocalld: Johnoono . Moblll
,... clolobd,....,. wlchlldron, ¥1c11 Blood In Chlllpoob, Pomoroy.
Homo moot ovorydoy. Homo Porlt 304-'1113-4351.
•114--7M4 1~ 3217.
Ohio; 0-h OO'Ionlod ln- Apply to: Dolly
lonllntf, PO Box 1H1 Montlon mobllo homo.
dMdull To llonogo
14180. lotutii\JII lluol 101.
Kll1ono: AN Sl,.., ~- ORb And llodlcol And c.,.. 121C, P......,, Oh Oltl.
111Uni1Y Educlllonll So,.looo Truck Drl-., WYou Wont To 81
Clll 304-182·3711 or
W1ollo 01111 _ . , 1 ,..r old; For 1110. Clllnl Lood. Provldo
Homo
Wllh
Your
Ftmly
And
colund kilt-. 114•1'12-3111.
OUir-h, lnllkl, L.aborolory, Frl.ncla M•t Wttktndl, Elm
2br 12111 Flamingo, Good eon.
And Follow.U. SorllcM To 25c
Mlllil Run Plonly Of 111111, dillon, 14,000. IM-441-1720.
6 LOst &amp; Found
F.....,.. And lloloo; Schodulo Got A
Top onetHo, 0..1... For A
.:.........,;:..;.,;.;..,.:.....,.;..;;...,;,,_-.1 Phyololln CIMioo; Must 8o Eo· Conloony
Thll knowo Drivoro Ionic Roclolmod lloblll Homto,
FNI To A Loving Honoe. ..._.,_ oollonl Communlollor, Drlolop All 'rho Compony,
And Hovo Smlll Down Payment V.rioua
f\11... lllcll lab 18~11 Ml1, 1 Knowtedge Of And Bt S.rwtUve Min. 3Yro. OTR Exp. Coli
1 - SliM, ONit Seltctlon, Fr11 S.t·
Old, l.o¥oo PoGplo, Igloo To Blnh Conln&gt;l And Atproduc· 1114-2711 Dopi.AG-2.
LID.' 6 Dttlvory, Flntndng AVIII'1&lt;&gt;"- And Allll~1l3t
live ~~h luUH; Dotoll
1&amp;10. 1-114-m-t:zzo.
: 11 monlh
old holfw calf. 1 Orfonlod. Sond - · . l.ollor Truck Drtvoro: Slo~ln; Ply Up
lloon 12180 Wllh lll14 Ex·
Into- And Homo Throo To Zit, Wllh Porlormlnco In- · 1101• ~ . . _ ond whho 01
Emi&gt;lorrMnl lleflroncoo: Plan- erN- AI 3 • 1 Momho. Homo Plndo. 2 Bod.....,, Good Condi.,... an toce. Col ~~7. nod Poronl- Of Sovlhlool EVI'I' 10-14 Doy1. IIUII 8o 21 t lor\ ta.OOO. IIU.t Uava, 81Clbol:
Block
Gonnan onto. 311 Alohllnd AvoniHI, W/2 VHro OTR Exp. HozMII En- ~45t1.
SMphordiEnglllh Sollor moll Athont, Ofllo 4&amp;701. Sollry dorurnenl:. O.Cktr Tran.,att, 1· NORRIS • 111112 Ctmbridgo
old 1
Commonourtlto
Wllh
Ex· 100434-11110, Aok For Oopl. S-1.
14x70, Dlx. llodll, Aolood orn.
I'IWf. 1
· r•n ;::nco; 37.5 Houro Por WHk
Room, :lbr, 2 Btth, O.k
......
- · JulY
L.aol 25th.
...
·~
WANTED; Full·tlmo or Ptn~lmo Ctblnolt. Ro;. Price 122,000.
- -EllS Squid
-IL
I"
" find or -L:IOWJ'&amp;. Dopondoblo= . -....
-=-ond
--:-~C.-ro-:-tor
- LPN 1o tour j41 ton hour Clo...out Prlco t11,11115 (No
por wook. To work wllh Tr-1 Flnonclng Avolloblo.
1j111. -~~~- -tlyl
lkllr1y lldy In hor IIINIInt
. - In ICF llcliMy. Solory F - City llobllo Hom11. 814._
~ Lab , MiidldctlopoodiOo.oit~
roforoncoo ,
LAiol: .
~-·,
mo~
·~ 1 • _
commen•ur~te with IJpMince.
324
~-1340.
.
1
, _ , , Sue- Raod, 114- - · - · ~· 3.
bii!Mivll Mnetlt package. Con·
·
Drt..,. Oo To - k lmmodloltly IKI Opll Gn.81tw, RN, DON,
11/W
Cow 0an1 Ap- Roodnrn- Dltlribullon Sor· Lakin Hoopltol, 304-475-3230,
1 -1, U-- ~Did U-.. vlcll, Inc. TII-1~W147. 111 31, Mon-frl, I :OOAM-4 :OOPII. 33 Farms for Sate
You'd T;" iM.m11 TX·t-215-1217 ConlpoiMI..
111 Aonl Form LAcolod In 011111
Hortty erPly- Con....,lonolt llodicol 14
Business
'
/Danlll IV1011Ion Elc.. Sign On
Co. I Room Hooao, 2 Full lothoi
CIA, lArgo Toblcco LH11 Col
Training
t
Yard Sale
EOE.
For An Appoinlmonl Todoy\114NowfiiSovlhololorn 311~111.
ort.... Wonlld. SovlhWoot Rolroln
llolor Flli;hl Inc. Slorllng luolnon Collogo, Iorino Volloy
Toom Poy 21 ti2 Clnlo Por Mill. Ploza. Cllt Today, 11+441-431711
llodlclllllto lnouronco. Lood· Rog.IIIHJI-121'18.
Gallipolis
lng/Unlo!dlng
Poy.
35 LOt &amp; A
L.ayovor!Soop Poy. SIIIIIMo 18 Wanted 10 Do
=--•-....,c,..re_a.:::g.;.e
,_.,., I
&amp; VIcinity
ocro
lol.
Wllh
Commuricttiona.
E•c•Uent ::-:::~':'""'::":~~:---::- 314
SF....,- Solo: 1122 Third -~~ • Bon• Pocklp. lt You Wll lob~ln lly Homo. Ftn- pony-colt polluro. Public
ANI. At,.,.ncH water, .ttctric. $C500. 30C·576' - N "On F~.z~ JulY Hut 1 YMf' OTR ExpM'ience, ctd In
Cloln MVA • A;t 23. Coli Avllllblo. odnoy A111. Coli 2114.
~~Solw!:::,,1~hlw;'!1 Todoyl t-321-aotl.
IM-245-1117.
...,.. fl1uo p...,. o-ooo I
B2 Acroo For Solo .., OWner,
UIIOtllloo..__
Drt..,. Wonlod. U.S. •-•· EIA TREE SERVICE. ToP.PI~g, N·Q • High Sc
ochool Alit. 114-31&amp;Inc. Starllnt T••m Pay 21 112 Trimming, TrM Removal, HMgl 1435, lf4.381.8686.
Coni Por IIH1. AI Can-lonll Trimming. FI'M Ettlmtllll S'J4.
Flool. SIIIIIHI c:-..nlolllono. 317-llsrAftl&lt; 4p.m.
lleclctiiUfe
lniUI'Inca.
Rentals
L.ayovoriB,..kdown Ply. Ao~­ Goorgoo Ponoblo Sowmlll, don~
houiJ.":
to;o
lo
lhl
mill
lull
nod Troctoro. H Yo&lt;l Hovt 1 Yotr
75-1~7.
OTR Exporltnco. Cloln MVR ' call
'"""- - - - - - - -: llllnltooum Ago 23. CIH Yonguord 11111 Poulo'o Doy Clro Clnlor. 41 Houses for Rant
...,...lorvlot Todo1! 1· Sail, aHordaW., chlldclrt. M-F
Pomeroy,
2 IR houH. I mlll1 out St. At.
100..121·2014,
1 o.m. • 1:30 p.m. Alii! :m.to. 211 outoldo of GoiUpotlt.
Middleport
Drt..,. Wonlod: Fl.tlbod E•· BtfON, '"" IChool, ~nt DtpoiN I ntarenct. 1250
8~ZI4. In- month. 304-17H11111.
&amp; VIcinity
-·
Plld
Wtoldy woleomo.
toni Toddltr !)oro, 814-141-4227.
l..oocttdiEmply
111111, LltoiHHih
2br eny Schools, 1350/llo. PIUI
lntUNnct,
Bonue.
A.ldlr
AI lolol II Plld ln
Utllhlu. Rotoronco And Oopooll .
.WoMIOI. Dtoillno: 1:00pm tho ~09''"' · ~vencH OlatrlbuUon
114 Ul 4U7.
Fmancial
1-314-1007, 21
lily tho od It 10 Nn, !lytltol,
Wllk.
"""'"' odlion- 1 :OOpm Frldoy, Houro, 1
2 Bedroom Homt For Rtnt,
lhMiy
••
10:0Dt.m. DrtYOro: Oo You Wom Bonor
NNr O.Kipolll And Golllpollt
Business
Clly S c -. IM-441-161l
Poy' Oo You Woro lloro llllto' 21
Thin Coli J.l. Hunt t400-2JB·
OpportunHy
3 IR, 1271 monlh. Dopool1 •
~UNT EOEI8&lt;oioltot To liNg

WI-

=·

~

do,.

F-

w,

o.,.

.......

BcrMn.

8

PubliC Sale

l Auction
-lon
··Vlrglnll,
Uconlld
.
.,CIIIto I Wool
-

~

It~· wanted to Buy
'

llouahl And Sold:
tllfrolcal, Nov .. ,

•
11.- 1a1 731,
Otifl\.111, Ohio 4ii3t, 114-446-

*

lioio,

""'* •1IIWor
St11 U. Your NonAjtpillnut,

WI:Mnt
Qllt

TV't1 ~A'1, Ulcrawue1,

A) : c.ndtt....,., Elc. 114-251·

0

· -- -

-

~....- . 10)'1, comic booko,
plclu-. Iron ulllolo,
-

ond· fumlturo, Ooby ...,In, 114. .,..,.
T......, Dock For A Mobile
......., 114 441 40&amp;3.
-nlod • 8
J k Au1
ij;h 0.. ·~~:
' - • ~ 1~ • • • -

..:'oro. C:::

-··~'·

--·

Tap Plld: AN Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Ring~ Sllvor Colno,
Gold ColnL II.T.:o. Coin Shop,
1t1 s.cond Avenue, Wlpolla.

Jun" ~.,.. l14-W. • ~
-,
" :.:::~:._--:-.,.--:~o-:-:--,,-1
.
young At 81.111, c To 1 Wantha
OW, IM-215i-1t01.

Employment Serv1ces
11

Help Wanted

·-ALL AREABI-o your
lloot wtlh ... You'll lovo tho

......,. t..aoo-112-1351.

Ntrlrtnet requiM. For more lnfonnollon. call 304475-3812.

INOTlCEI
FEOERAL OOIIERNMENT IS 01110 VALLEY PUBUSHINO CO.
4 Rocm Dupllx Wllh 1 Cor
~IRINO . tti,OOO • 1121i000/Yr. 1· rocommondo thll you do bullIIOWIIW500 Ext. G IIIII For ""' wllh pooplo you know ond Oorogo, Polio • YordL AI: 1103
Avo,...,
...nlpotll.
NOT lo otnd manoy lhrou;h tho Clrclt
lmmedlatt Altp ...
mall until you hive lnv.tlgtled 1350/Mo. Lawn Malnttnanct In·
· - - -- ·
cludtd For Into Coli 814-367Friendly P.,loo H11 lhl offorlng.
7700.
Optnlngt For Otmontlrttora.
No CaM ln.-fMnt. No Sefvlct • Elm 11 000 Wllilly • ElChlfOI. High Commllllon And llblllhod VOndlng Routt. lluol C.., 3br Houoo $350/llo. Rot,
Dtposlt, Nice Slartlf HouH. No
Soli. 1-100-375-YEND.
HoltHI Awtrdl. lwo
Polo, Would Conlldor Sllllng.
ev
... eoo tt~ma, c.u ,
""Loa
Homo Doolorohlp" Top 114-441-4722.
.a75.
l,og "Homo lllnutocturor, Sookt
H You're AlwtYt Driving. But Doillr. PrOioctod Torrhory, High
Full Trtlnlng
Novor Going Anywhlro. AI Eomlng
L.aodo P
. Hood Hot InUunton TrtntportaUon, Our &amp;
Orlvtrt Expecl The lttl From tart.,• With p,...nl Employ. 42 Mobile Homes
Moctolo Slo~ln~ Al $1,110.
Uo, And Thoy Dot M. Join U., mont
for Rent
1·100-214·LOGS(5647)
And Mlkt The llolt Of Your ••ar~ntwood Loa• Hofnel• 427
Time, Pty And Your Fu"urt. Wt
14r70 3br With Ell)lndo, Stove,
Rlvtr Rock Blvc(, Murfreelboro, Alfrig,
ot!or: 'Excolllnl Poy, "IIIINgt TN
Wafer I Trah PtkJ,
3712i.
Bonue. • lop ltnefh, •on.
McCIIIkly
A01d. Vinton Arta.
loiN
Slltllttt
. Com- Vondlng Roulo: LAcll. Wo ~••• $250/llo. 1250
Oopooil 114-31&amp;muniCIIIono, 'Poroonol Flool Tht
NIWitl Mtchlntl, Making A till.
MaNitf, 1ndfvkha~~ll.z..t Home Nlco Sloody Cillo Income. 1·
'Time ll~m, "SUperior Con- 800453-8313.
2br· llobllo Homo, OopooH I
venllonol Equl_,, "lluch
Rotor..,.. Aoqulrod. 114-251·
lloro. Coli I I - Todoy, And Woltt lannlng Btdt, tMw Com- 1122.
Pu1 Your Clroor In llollon. 1· mericai·Homa
Unitt
From
1100-123-ltll llunoon Tronopor· $11111.00. Lampo, Lotlont, Acc11- 2br Trlllor, Out SI .AI. 211, 1
1tllon Punlng Pooplt Flrot, EOE. oorl11. Monlhly PoymorMo LDw IIIII, Oopooi1 l Aoftronct RoAo 118.00 Coli Todoy Froo qulred. 114-2M431.
Lac.l Ar~l cootelnlllor. z 112
Color
Cllolog.
1.80Q-221-I:!i2.
10111 Trotltr In Oollpollt•CloiO
YNI Did Compony Expondlng
Wolff Ttnnlng Bodo
To Groctry, Alto,.,_, •hono:
Slllowldo. HIGh 1ncomt PatonS.·_ _ _ __
tilt. Ground F- Opponunlly. New commt"III-Rorne un1t1, 1,1_4.-_c•:.:.•:.:.111;.:.1.:;
1
$11111.00.
Lampo, •o1 1 -lie • IR, · Coli Mr. Ioxton At SEll 1.JOG. from
Lollona.llomhly poymtnll tow '' •
r ••
-·· por
155-53i7, W"kdoyo,ITo 3.
11 $18.00. Colllodoy, FREE NEW morllh. Troth pold. t150.
col
Dopoolt
•
,.,.,..,..
roqulrod.
Local lrveklng componr, noodo
t.aoo.azs.B212
No
polo.
AIIQIIItvmlthlct.
orcllolog,
I drtvw to filii new pDiih ON, , .
1104475-3000 'llllpm.
qulrmonlo must bo 23 ,,. old,
Real Estate
peu dru:r.ttet. Home Wtlktndt
44
Apartment
• ono y during w"k. Will
eontldtr 1tuclene1. All rUM to
for Rant
ust COlli, 30C.a75-2760.
31 Homes for Sale
1 bod"""" opl tor ront, qulol
Looking tor houMketper, must
htWI releNnc .., 114•H3·11t80 217 Koller 0..., O.Hipotlo, Ofllo nolghbol'h" d, 1044'1&amp;-15110.
~5131, Tofol)hono: IM 441 3311,
anytl~.
Price: $52,000.00. Uvlna Room, 1 lodraom l'umlthod AponNHd aomeorw to build llnct. 3 Bodroomo, Fomlly Room~ 1 ment, UUNtlea Pilei, Upttalr•,
304·773-5111.
And 112 Bathroom• 1 wr Second AvoniHI, Qalllpollt, No
Gorogo, Irick F...m WHh Cldar Poll, Good ~ ..... · Photo Trlmmert
11523.
Siding ..
"rn to 1125 per dal, no txp.
noodad, t.-212-4381 .

- --

Atcll Aucllon Compony,
tul tkmo - - r . complolo

.

.

44

&lt;:.:':1:•

"':'..':'J'!iJ

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
for Flenl

for Sale

lt' WlOE CLOSi.QUT • 1H1 SkYIInt 11170, 211r, 2 lith.
!ltg. Pilct $22,000. Clooo-Out
PriCe 118,11115. Dot. l Sol. (No
Tr1dM) Financing Avallablt,
Fronch
en, llobllt ~-·· 114441~. .

1 yoor old tomolo po~ B11glo
doG.
'111 , Slrpor
BNllo
M...gon-no molor. 304-8i5-

-k

Mobile Homes

TUesday, July

•

vana •

73

28, 1ii2

4 wo·•

•* a..,,..,-.,11oo1,
ua

4x4
KHl_llodf Uft, 110 ti...,O. IM-24.....

Fumlthod Ap. ~'!.'.. 1234/Mo,
Utlltll" Pold, .,, llocond
Avtn"", OllllpoNt. IM Ctl 4C11

74

After7p.m.

Fu(fliohod EHic'-t ttllllmo.
UtiiHIII Pold, ~ I'Ou~h Golllpollo,114 441-4411 Aftor ?,..m.

- "

-N.

Third

-Mtctdloport, Ofllo,

bodraom furnlthod
,.,, S04-Ia-2HI.

~pi, dop

BACK FROM
WI-IERE?

1
I
1187 Z10R good aond, J01 Ill

1111 CIA 100 1'2, I,ICIO
Mlln, Exctlilnl Condtlloftl 114371-aN, 114-:171-ZIII.
.,.,. SUUd OUidi'IC*' 210. lx·

bldrDOml, 3()M71..2072 ......

1:00.

45

Furnished

Rooms

e&gt; 1112

~~ ........ 31171.

1-

..

to ohio I

"""i :or1,..............
.

l,QW llolnlononco, Clotn, LArgo Boock Stllld'1~ OH, 2 lA
KHchon, 3 Bodroomo, UtiiKy,
Uttlfll•
Nlol Yord, 3 111111 F...m Hoillfl, ~
1-1311.
,Aodmon Soollonol Homo, ,10th Conlplol!y Flllnlthod, 1llr, nt11
Aonl, aBod~ri&gt;Om
2 Full Blilho, .. Ullrory, lll'tcll1t. hill, ..,,
DutbuJid 1 0.11 , lit lchootl, IO_L...,.._.........,. I1413(,000. I
.
441.o311N.... 7p.01.

.. .;i

46 . Space for Rent
Counlry Mobile

~-

Pork, 111.

33N., undw new m11nagtmtnt.
Loti, $88; home ,....... $ZS5;

114-112·2117

Moblll homo lot tor ronl 111. 2
bolwton Y ond Jorrlco Rd. 185.
month, water &amp; IIWir p1kf, 304-

1.,._ 1111 5:00PM.

RoloH 0.. Offici SP1M Avillloblo.
L.afo1111111111. ~ZZI.

Merchandise
S1

Household

Goods
42" Round lloplt Tobit, 4
Chilli, 1 LHt. 1,.__7271, 114~-15117.

Air CondMionoro, Attrtgorltoro
Dry~ &amp; Waahlr, Color T.V.,
Mlcrow~vt, 114-251·1238.

g:

l Sa~o on AH VInyl ' Cor·
In Slock. $1.00 Uo. llollohln
rpoto, IM-441-ll444.

OOOD USED APPLIANCU
w..~ooro. dryoro, rotrtgoro~"'.!!
r1ng11. ~kogp Appllo-,.,.
Vlno 51-, CIIIIM-44f·731101, 1·
~to-3CeD.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complolo
homo flrmlt~I~J:·
Hour~: Yon-Sat, ..a. 11
0322, 3 mille ou1 BulovHII Rd.
, , . Dtllv.ry.
Olk Fumlluro: Chino
ClblntCI, Wlllhltlndt, tlbtt &amp;

ehalrs,

Mc'::Tt·

dak, Me. I'M

:ttl.

Larkin•

PICKENS FURNITURE
NoWIUood
Houllhold flrmllhlng. 112 mi.
Jorrlcho 'Rd. Pt. PINotnl, WY,
coll304-111-14110.
A. I S. Fumhure. Ntw, uMd, anllquoL ~o..-td flrmflhlngo.
llooon, WY. 304-773-1341.
Retrlgtr..or Whitt Frott FrH,
$16; Rotrlgorllor Coppootono,
Frotl FrM. 115; ~~~tor,

Copportono, Llko Now, USO;
Rtrngorotor WhMo F - F~

1150; Waahtr QE H.wjduty
175; W11hlr OE HooV)'duly 1111;
Dryor Horvool Gold 1111· Kinmort Dryor, Wllfto, t11 ; a.:.;,lo

e

.....,
PRI NT NUMBERED
lETlERS IN SQUARES

. , UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER

304

Kina 1111 "ooftlldor" wlltrbtd.
Dutl _ ....._ Look• llk.o 61 Farm Equipment
11gulor bod. Exctlonf oondl8 N Ford Trtclor, Vory Good
llon. 304-182..17110.
Condftlon, 614-317-7127. .
morblolop
bolh.....n INih hogo, oood moworo,
vonhlol, 22143, only 3 toft, 11~
price, c.n aellver, 814-ICS.
NCh, 114-141-2171.

Ploot l"on I lll' llnoro ond
numboN tor portobll olgno-$55.
Buy ono boxlono box hM. Otflr
oxlllrn-Auguol 1. AAA Slgnt 1·
aoil-133-:1453on}'llmo.
Plolllc And llldll Cui.., linch
ThN ICI Inch In Slock. Ron
Evono, Jockocn, Ohio. t.JOG.
537-11528.

Rent·2.0Wn

,.., Sltltlcroft Jo1 loll, 411
Englno, llttt-. ft,OOO,
0.. ..., Oftor.I14441-A1t.
1H4 loll 20 lurldor VI 10
mph · plul trollor, """' torllt $1,500 114 44WOIO..,...

L.alt 215 IIF Troclor With
F"'"l Loodor, 11,8110; 11000 Ford
Dltllt Wllh Vorm- Round
Boler, S7,415i. T020 For;uoon
Wllh Grodar ollda, 11,115'. 814211-1522.

blno. Gthll5 grindor mlxor. 304Radium bt• hell•; 1ntlque 273-4215.
hNttr wllh lire brtckt, pt; one
to' high cell Iron .,... , 63
Livestock
or cool· 14' tlborglooo boll 1 =-~~-;--:-:--~-:-40hp. Evlnrudo motor; 18 2 roglolorod polnl quorlor hor11
oluhmlnum boll whh 115hp. ~ tor ..... 1 mill, 1 .........
Jo n~on motor; wood tpiiHer, 304-17WOII.
12hp. Kohlor motor ond 2 11oge
pump, 114·11112-2311.
F - Plgt, 121 A Hood. 114211-1111.

Sooro Yord Fonco Excolllnl
CondHion, sz10 con ..,.,.
Zp.m. 114-441-11715
Sigler Full Olt Hoot Slovt '
Tonk.l14-211-15111.
Slgno: Ponoblo llghlod chlngoolbo lttlor lign-Sjloclol $21111 •
Regullr PH.
FJH tet,.
ltrlldollvory. Oftor llpirM
Au;ul11. AAA Slgno. 1-533:1413.

r

Stonn door In
125,114-141-211 •

·--

1fl3 Oldo .. 11,000 111101, 1H4
Plym..-h lleltonl 24,000 lllltt,
Exeolltnl Fomlly OWntd eo...

t8~3

PHILLIP

~·773l

=-·~ t~l:;;·lt'~140Hfl

With Exlflll SoftwtN Included.

Supplies

*"i..-,

goo
..,.
lon
lrvcklln~ti ~ porto,
rollttoro,
Olllo, ole. D I A Auto,
Rlplty, WV. 304-3~ Of 1100-2'13-1518.

- Chrylllr- Yorkor,' Oood
Condllon, Hl;h Mlit!tgt, ':i~c:'~
1117 Plymouth
· DodoCondlllan,
11.200:""
Om,., l,QW lilloo, 13,0011.: 1111
Pl,_h
Allttnt
lllton
Wogan, 13,200.1M~--

Muol loll: Apooho -!II por. 8tnlc, ~ .....

OldtmabMI

111411 04~

lllpoo, wln-

~FAITH

81

Homt

ACROSS

.

lmpiOVIIIIIntl

1 LaiiHl•-

6 C011lront1
11 Of a lootblll

BASEMENT
WATERPIIOOI'INO
Uncondllonol ltlollmt guo,....
110. Local roftroncn - ·
F... HllmiiH. Cllt 1114-237-, dey .. •
·
Rogoro ....,..... W i t ting.

54

I~~~Work
1111.

lo 1:00 p.m. IM·IKI2·2821.

Mlscellanaoua
Merchandise

kick
13 Eskimo

e.z=u.,...._

.liT
Alrotlon Mol.... flpllrod. • ,.built ,..,.,. In olocl&lt;, RON
EVANS, JACK-, OH. 1 -

137-1821.

c:-

Rllltblo Wlll-.lng,
morclll And AtO!dontlll.
'F110Eolf'Exporlonood

boat;

Ylr.

AND WINTHROP

14 Covered with
lrHI

IS College

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

16 Women a 17 Fountain
nymph
10 102, Roman
20 Obt1ruction
22 Layer of toll
23 Small valley
24 Weight
ay1t1m
26 Ztro
28 Lon; tlm1
30 Recent (pref.l
31 Nautical rope
32 8e11t ol
burdon
33 Willing
'

I'M PLUMB TICKLED
YOU AN' SNUFFY
ARE TALKIN'
AG'IN!!

AN' HE WAS
TH' ONE WHO
BROKE

(2 wd1.1
36 Corntlll Sklnne•
39Wingl
40 Occupied 1
bench
42 City problem
44 Drop
lllddtnlr
45 River In

Aflfcl

olltrln~

Curtll Homt lmprauM..U:
YIIN Exporltnct On Oldtr I
-Foundlllon
Room Addtllonl,
Wortt.
~
KMchono And lotho. ,.. a.;
tlmat•l R Iss a r II No .lolt
Too llgDr- . , . . _ _

_. ._-

t A Q6 2
+KH

------------------------------------------'
Tbe World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle _

doWI, Nntttt, ltc. Cbude Wln- ,.. Ponlllc Fltrro, 114-_ .,_,114-3~1':1~ntl~l4~.-:-7-:-::--Wuhlr And Dryor t17.11 WHk, 1110, Rio Orondo, OH Coli 114- .
Bunlc Bod Compilll, 18.21 :MUIZ\
, . . Panlllc Sunblf!l~ 4 Door,
WHk, 4· Drowor Chlol 13.12
&amp;ue.....tlc, AMJFM ..-;, ca,ooo
w"k• llexllnor u.21 WHk, 56 Pats for Salt
Mlloo, Good CondHion, Prlct:
S04-47W511
Solo And Choir tt0.31Wook.
.;.;;;;;-;;ii~~~;p; IUOO, Col
~...... •nd Supj&gt;ly Shop Pol Antwtring lloclllnt,
Loovo
G"'""'lna.
AI
broodo,
oiYitl.
CASH
AND
CARRY
•
IIIHIQI Will Rolurn Col.
Rolrigorlloro 811~11 AI 1311, tom• Pol Food Doollr. Jvlle
1tl7 OTA Trone Am (l.oodadl
Rocllnoro SMV, 211 unk .':.1,~ Wlbb. DotiiM-441-4231.
IIIII, Dlnolto Sll With 4 P
Exo. Cond. l.QW mlloo, old ltgiltorod Hlmlloyon Tlroo,
Elo.
1~773l
Cholrt, 1129. OPEN: llondoy 2mo.
kMiono, 1· moll 8oll Polnl, 3
Thru Solurdly U .ll . To IP.II. IMM&amp;e
llul Point, htwt lhota. 1117 Pl,_h " " ' - Mini
Cloood on Sunday. LOCATED: 4
Van, MkJnlghl Blut, PS: Pllo~~·
1111• OH Rauto 7 On Aauto 141, 304-112-2112.
Vory Good CondMion, "'llh
In Clnltn1ry, 114 Milo On Un1111-14,1100. 114--1171.
coln Plkt.
,.. Chevy GO SpoctNm.
53
Antiques
u ooo mltn, o.-omotlc, llr, PS,
Austrlllln Shophord Pupo, 1 p:J
8 ~cWilko
Did,
IM~41-1
...
Buy or 1141. Alvtrlne Antlquee,
1,.123t.
1124 E. Moln SINOI. on 111. 124, Drlgonwynd Clltory: CFA Por·
Pomeroy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00
I Slomooo Klnono. 114a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 Ill,.
~..1144 AHor 1:00 p.m.

11,100.

...

.AJI0985

.

Serv1ces

All typoo m
• ,, - . •77HOA.
olont. ,,.. - - - ltrnel Home
Room Addhlono, ..,._ b ..
lortor I lntortor Pllntlng, Ex·
114-446-'11171, · - - - lnourod l.ooollid f.D.
cally. 114 fht 1511,

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

fiJ

~MX£. (.)()fJA)'T rr?

110D.

114-ZINtOI.

Otdomobllo
Royolo
lraughlm V4, AC1•f!! 1PI, I'W,
p - loltt, A..,.M Sllroo
~11o111. Loododt All Bilek,
lii,OOO 11110. PIN. CoN Pol .

::1:

KIND Cf REiJ6IJS

Aoyt ..

B-loom $5,100, Ex_,
CoOridMion, v.e. Fully Loodod,
M lllr:k, 11,000 Mlloo, 15,100.
Phone: 1 -·'11171, 114-4411-

4221

Cote- .No.-

IIHPII. Oood

.....

4711ddle E11t

48 Fullton photogrtpher

Rlchlrd-

50 tncunlon
52 Dan;en

53 Rldlculoue
failure
54 Rendezvous
55 Chirp

t2 Kind ol
·,· '•
chMH
I3 SntaH wtnd •

4 Free
5 Home ol Eve
6 Su1ttn1nc1

DOWN

7 Unit of 10111
8 Rift;
I Llll dllllcult
10 Hank

1 B&lt;rda

2 Put on on
3 Une on m1p

lltllrurntnt .. •,

18 Olympic cq. ::.

"SIT MY

VITTLES
. ON TH'

THEICEII..

eo~ ..·• Plum!llnfl

Trucks for Sale

...........

Fourthandl'lnli
GoiiiDOIIo:Ohio

1154 Ford Plck-\111, llody Good,
Auno Oood, 11,100. 010. 114-

84

'""'·
.
11114 T.,.,. plcllup. 2 wo. 11uo1

Rllfcanlill

Chivy 112 Ton I Fl. Bod V•
~ ........... AC. Good
•
- · tt,IIIO. 114~41-1131'

_ ................_,,24.

=-=·~IWI,EC,
Aid,~
lllltt, Aolilng:PU:
14,2t0.
I
1212.

.

~ 112 Tan flU V-1
Aulo, Atr, AIIIPII, Low 111111'
,..... Goodt IM ua =n.
'
u GIIC z 111 ton. 11110 or - ·
Con bo bohlnd 1217 ~-­
Avo. PoOploo

.....

"'*"

Electrical&amp;
Rlfflgtrlllon
• .

J

. . ....

wiling,-- .. .......
Uunul ........_
R - r lloolllaol, WYI 11111
304-175-1111.
·.
;

Miller

85 Gtntral Hlullng
Wo Do 111uit!19 AIIJtloot, '
Anyptooo, No Jolt

T~llt

rill:f:,.

Too Utut. 11111 1111 CH
- . 1 Work, Any Kindt I
~-Anylfnot.

87

Uphollttty

Oi

. '

-~
~

holdt

·.·

biHd

mUtlcal
34 Untn
·'
35 Actor Duryei 7

37 Follt
38 Comfort

':Jh=\"

Heating

27 Mtllelft

33 Dick-

Blpllc
Tonk
Putrootna
Co.
RQN
EVANS
INTl
' Jlc-. OH 1-.n7-lla '
Dovlo
lltw-V.O
1trv1ot,
Ou~ Creek Rd. Parta, aupo
plln, pickup, lind
114441-G214.

Piumbln;l

· '

-.

2e::J..g

TABLE II"

'=
~~=1414.

Will build ...... - . ·~
teriOnod
· itllrllftt.
fll!l .. 1
oldlng or trllltr
241-8112.
.

21 Author o1
Ftull
23 SPICtert

25 Child's tor ~ :

Ron'o TV ltMoo, -'oildna
In Z.ntlh •'- • ulidna
. 1IMIIIil
othlr brondo.- ....

18,000 BTU window Atr odMionor ond Klilcllow&lt;iod wood
bumtr. 306-an.enz or 304-8752311.

•.

'10 6 3
• 10 9 7

'm·•••••

campara&amp;
Motor Ho11111

1171
Compor, 33Fl. ~ II.';, 1 Clrpot.l3,1100 FlfM.

EAST

West
Nortlo East
Ambrose Bierce was a sardonic lei· Soolb
1•
Pass
low. In his "Ilevil's Dictionary" he de2+
3'
3•
Pass
lined a bore as someooe who talks &amp;+
Pass
Pass
P...
when you wish him to listen. But it is
also true that you can learn more by
Opening lead: • K
listening than by talking. This apmay pay dividends at the
table too. ·
didn't like to open one dia·
mond on the 8-4-3 tripleton. However,
jplayi1ng five-card majors, one must at
the bullet - que sera, sera.
.,
South saw that he was home if the nine and. when East discarded, threw'
finesse was working. But af· the diamond six from his hand.
:
West's bid, was that likely? No
West won wltb tbe heart jack b~l
way, Jose. So South set out to try to was endplayed, having to lead into
.make the slam even il West had the di- South's A·Q diamond tenace or to conamond king.
cede a ruff-and-discard.
Declarer won trick one with dumTrue, South should find the wiMing
' heart ace, discarding a diamond line of play anyway, but what pur(IOII\!·
hand. He cashed dummy's K·Q of was West's three-heart bid goiJta tO:.;
spades and ruffed a heart in hand. serve? One opponent had opened and"
South returned to dummy with a club the other had made a strong lllli!P"
to the ace and ruffed another heart in shift. West didn't even have the high-~
hand. Next, South cashed the club king est-ranking suit. There are times wb~. ·
ruffed the club seven in the dum-· IllS best to utter that underused wordmy. Finally, South called for the heart "Pass."

Budalt Tr1Miulnlan11...UMII A ;
robuln, llortlng o1
llirtlna 11 tr11.00 •
114-2-77, 11W7t-mll.
•

1111 Ponlloc Tront1111 · 301
Tunod Pon. Ena. Oood Condl·
lion, 14,:100. Co~ """lmt, 814-

1..

+QJB53

Drawing
a road map

&amp;

tm C..chmon 2311. Homo, Excllllnl Condition, 114216·1521.

Ford Tt""" LX 4dr. - n .
~oollonl -Lon, '" Opllont,
AIIIFII.ICHMtll, aulclrMIIc I
tow - · P:IOO, 114-1124711.

I KJ 5
+10 9 6

By Phillip Alder

1111 Clllbrtty Eurooport. onglno. Oood body. 12200. 112-2l'OS.

44Wt30.

'KQJ875

•u
SOUTH

11171 Bonnor 1M ft Clmpor ,
liupo I, 11,100. or lor
boll, good cancl, 1104-411-t'IH.

-

.3

WEST

ALDER

Tubt, Slot, Jookolo, CMo1 . ·
~~.~......, lui-.. t
1ft
CUitOI'II Palnl ....
•
Top And Covor1 110 Hill,
Condl-1
..............
~¥:"
$7,100 .... 411 -

79

condllion,

Stov1, $100: Rtlrigar~tor, S17li
LloydiFiandara all w.athlr
wlcktr· 2 chairt, coltae tabla,
1110; Colloctlblo ....... tchool
dnko, 21" hlah, 120; 114-IKIZ·
31H or 114-1112'-34811.
Tondy 1000 EX PC. RIB Color
monRor, Znd drivt. DMP
130A Prfntor. t100'1 _,h of
progrtmo. IIIIO. 30W1N471.
Tondy 1000 SL Comp.-or, 2
Vura ad, Lll11 New, L.wded

Block, brick, -

·
Autos tor Sale

71

• K Q7 6

tA2

Acceasorlas

-----

~ti·H

NORTH

110 Chockm1111 1111. 231 HP

AUto Parts

TransportatiOn

..

BRIDGE

Oooda!::·

Solfl lunlc Bodo, Complolo,
Aloo Soort Twin Bod 6 lion,...
Sol. Bolh Llkt Now Cltl Aftor
4:30P.M. 114-446-3200.

.,

"You must talk over your differences," the old lady told the
arguing newlyweds. "because there is always hope when
people are forced to listen to BOTH SIDES".

'A942

~~~ ~41 ~114-

..,,

)·~1

317-0514

Rotrl~rolor, Worko
011 Dryor1 $21, Workl
•
1617 Wooo Gorogo Door, 1100.

...

'

.....-

Untold · Basin • Sixih - Hidden - BOTH SIDES

Evlnnrdt OUtboord Mlr., be.
Cond., l,QW Houro, 11,1100. 114-

Ntw Holland suptr 717 forage
h"""lor. Ntw ~olllnd I ft. hoy

I

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

75 Boats &amp; Motol'l
for Sale

c:.

Rongo, ~~- $121; Pon· 11100. 114-441-7231 Allor lp.m.
oblo W11hor OE l~j Air Condlllonor 11 000 81u 1216, 2 Toylor Wlllfl1o~ 1 • OUtllcM
Vurt Old, §ag;o AI&gt;QIIoncoo, WOod Ftr.d Hot wattr Fur·
111 Ylno Sl-, f400'-4119-:1411, I\ICII. Helt1 Your Enth Homll
And Oomoollo Hot Wotor F"'"' A
et.,_73INI.
Wood Flro Dullldo Your Homo.
SWAIN
t.JOG.S..!I-2213.
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 12
WATERLINE SALE
Dllvt St., Golllpolll. Nww. Ulld
tumit!Mt, hNtlrt, Wntwm I :t/4 Inch 200 PSI 111111 1 Inch 200
PSI 133.110 Ron Evono EnWork booti. IM-441-31&amp;1.
Thomotvlllo 2 Pc. Living Room torprf-, 1.-all'-Ml!l.
Sullo, Excolllnl Condii!Gn, i14- 5S
Building
~-3110.
VI'RA FURNITURE
114-441-3151

~.

• &gt;

')

aotllnt

5151,tlo1CH1WY.

.

"

6
~====:;:::::::;r.iiiiiiiiiiiii~~ 111aood..:,.'!!!;_
IIIO,
MW•
T
Col--.
apm·
54 Mlacelianeous
~·~
Sl"plng "'"m' wllh cooking.
Ma-llandl'""'
11 Kn-W KX 121. 12100. lx·
Aloolrtllor opoco. All hook..,po.
'"
•-ion. l.QW HR. Call 1tt.r 2:00 p.m., 3fM.77.).
· 4111·1011.

Roomo torronl·-k
or ...,.h.
SJ:~I!loll1201lno.
Golllo
Hotll.
1
1180
-'

441-otOt.

MOVIII. CIM 11114e nee. EOH.

VOV HAVE
TO SAV?

........ thin 10 tn. »1-4'JII.II21.

2fldrm. lpCI., lOIII -lrlc, op-

l!oM 1 1 - -

15TI4AT ALL

oolllnt -

"NEA. ...

72

.

HAVE YOU 6EEN AJJJAV?
WHO ARE VOU?WHV TELL ME 7
WAAT TOOK VOU SO LONG 7

;~

3114.

Wodao Ape, 1101 llwdono Sl,
PcHnf P..._nl, no ptla, 1 and 2

2 BR oponmtnlo In lllddllport,
_,. rornodolld, tow utllkloo,
no pM1, $220 per IMftlt'l ,
dapollt roqulrod, IH-112-2311

_,MO,....

•

-

a?ZI.

By OWner: Cholhlro A,.., Nino plltnc.l flrmlthod,. llundry
Roorno, 81th L.aroo All lAt. room tocl~c'"' toochool
114 Ul 1811 OoYt, EVInlngt A~ tn
lawn.
laM IVIIltbf&lt;e
lor 3:30p.m 114-441-4421.
t1: wr- 1
Aolo. 141 ar
011t IM.fa.mt IDII.
For 1111 on Land eon,,...J..~ !loom• I Bolh, Clll14- 2br Aportmonl, Looolld, :14·1!11
441·- Galllpotll /Kanouga - - , _ Oolllllollt.
Am.
..... ~ttrtoorol• tt!Girno.
Ui; Homoo. llondlrd - I t ttoo 'a..;,;;ji.1H ui 3170, 114Avolllblo 0.. Dntan Your OWn.
Flnoncfng
AvoiTablt. Froo IIALITIPUL APARTIIENTI AT
IUDOIT I'IIICII AT ~ACKION
Brochuni.
Alit 14C0:
Loa ESTATI!,.
. _ R...·-o 0..., Box
__Nl - . . . ,. Jlllt

..

Manor
and
Rtvers.a.
Apl"mtntl In Mkld .. _... From
ttllll. Colt 114-112·7711. EOII.

Ra,.,tneea rtquirM. 3oc.-e75..

do,.

.''

.•. "
' ,.

2 IR oportmonl. 1321 noonlh. All
.. IIHIOI pold, HUll lptlrOVod.

HVAC, Now Clrpol. .(VIIIIblo
lmmodlllly. 114-441-22011.

-.

Groclouo living. 1 oild 2 bod....., opoHmon1o 11 Vlllo;l

• '·

31Adlult

41 WMktttd-

1

Complllely Rtnovllea: 2 Full
Bolho, 3 Largo Bod-, -

"

Fumlohod: 21.t ~ Aoorno, Bolh,
Dowrw... IN, UJII, Cllln, No Pelt,
Rtforonco, Dopaott Roqulrod.
114-441-1111.

dttt...,.

BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
Hlolorlcol A,.. Cornor Lot • til
Moln St. Pt. Plao11n11 W. Yo.

..

Motorcycltl

BERNICE ·
BEDE OSOL

year~ by mlillnQ 11 .25 plulalong,
114111-actdriiiiOid, 1t11111ped .,..._ to
Altro-Oraph, c/o thll ntiiiiPIII*, P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3-428.
. . B1111re to 11111 your zoclllc llign .
VIRGO &lt;AltO- :a-llpl. :a) There ....
. hlppeningl behind lht It this
time, wlllch you might be unawwe ol,
thlt could prove to be very bentlk:lal.
There lo • chance you might get 101111'

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�page 1o--The Oally Sentinel

by Bob Hoeflich

Russell Cline is one of Meigs
County's real Yankee Doodle
Dandies-born on the Fourth of
July.
This year Russell and his wife.
Leona, were gueslS at the horne of
his daughter and son-in-law, Grace
and Alva Holsinger, Jr., in the Tup·
pcrs Plains area for a king size
party honoring his 85th birthday. It
was quite a musical occasion with
~is children and grandchildren
entertaining vocally and with gui·
tars. A party Russell and Leona
will long remember. By the way,
not listed among the gucsLS in an
earlier report on the party were
Russell's son, Carol Cline, and
Carol's daughter, Seva.
And Russ and Hope Moore ccr·
tainly had a nice outing to mark
their 50th wedding anniversaryaboard the Mississippi Queen.
Russ and Hope boarded the
Queen at PitLSburgh. They toured
the glass factory al Wellsburg, W.
Va ., on their way downriver to
·Cincinnati . At Mariclla, their
daughter and grandson boarded the
Mississippi Queen for a tour of the
boat and enjoyed a luncheon with
Hope and Russ. It was about 9:15
p.m. when the boat passed by
Pomeroy but the Moores' friends
and neighbors were along with
riverbank with flashlights to greet
.thein with blinking lighLS. By the
way, Hope comments that there is
nothing more beautiful than Meigs
County when viewed from the
boat.
And among the passengers on

board during the Moores' trip were
twins, Pauline and Eileen Andrews,
formerly of Pomeroy and now· of
Lakewood, Ohio. They are daugh·
tcrs of Chester Andrews and lived
on Buucrnut Ave., before leaving
Pomeroy. in 1936. They arc rcla·
tivcs of the family of the late
Clarence Andrews and have visited
here over the years. They asked
the Moores' to say hello to all of
their kin and friends here.
The next outing for Hope and
Russ will be in August when they
auend a family reunion being held
in Wellsville, W.Va.

Padres 4-1;
Braves lose

LONDON (AP) - Michael
Jackson is suing a London tabloid
over anicles claiming he was dis·
figured by plastic surguy.
The Daily Mirror falsely
claimed Jackson· 'is "a scarred
phantom whose face is covered
with scar tissues, with a hole in his
nose, one cheek higher than the
other and an oddly sagging chin,"
his repr¢sentatives said Monday.
Jackson is seeking unspectfied
dama$es.
Mmor Group le~al manager
Charles Collier-Wnght said the
newspaper will defend iLS actions.

STEVEN P. ROSENFELD
AP Business Writer
AMES, Iowa- Wocds resistant
to herbicides arc threatening wheat
fields around the globe and could
become a problem in this country,
researchers say.
According to one Israeli scicn·
list, weeds pose a bigger menace
than AIDS tn .poor nations where
wheat is an essential food source.
Jonathan Oressel. a professor or
plant science at the Weizmann
Institute of Science in Rehovot,
Israel, says chemical-resistant
weeds already infest more than
1,000 wheat farms in Australia and
more than a dozen in England.
North American wheat is at risk as
well, he said.
"This is just the beginning. We
have to worry about it now," Ores·
sci said in an interview at Iowa
State University during the recent
First International Crop Science
Congress. "The problem isn't
gain$ away - it is growing expo·
nenllally."
Gresscl, a pioneer researcher of
hyrbici&lt;lc resistance, addressed the
t" to~gr,l;Ss, which attr,a!:ted some
1,100 researchers from 85 coun·
tries.
Joe Antognini, national program
director for weed science research
at the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Washington, said Monday

By LARRY ROSENTHAL
· A550Ciated Press Writer
· NEW HAVEN, Conn. Women living near toxic waste
sites arc slightly more likely to
have children with birth defects,
but more research is needed to
, 'determine if the dumps are to
blame, according to a study pub·
lishcd Monday.
• Researchers from Yale Univcr·
sily and the New York Health
·Department reviewed a total of
27,115 births in 20 New York
counties for the study in the AmeriCan Journal of Epidemiology.
' In New York state, 30 infanLS
per 1,000 are born with birth
ilefeciS. The rate rose slightly 10 34
infanis per 1,000 when the
researchers looked at births to
.'mothers living within a mile of a
chemical dump, aGCOrding io lhe
lludy.
The rate was even higher - 49
..biel pet 1,000 live births - for
mothers living ncar 90 sites consid- :
Ired highest-risk, the Investigators :

~;

.

854
Pick 4:
4312

Buckeye 5:
8-12-15-26-37

Vol. 43, No. 641

11

Firms jazz up chefs'
uniforms with slimming
lines, shoulder pads

Toothpaste
maker to make
brush, too

First birthday

NOTICE

Last day to pay
the second half
trailer taxes is
triday, July 31, 1992.

Howard E. Frank
Meigs County Treasurer

Clifford indicted
in BCCI scandal
•

NEW YORK (AP) - Former
Defense Secretary Clark Clifford, a
pillar of the Democratic establish·
mcnt and an adviser to presidents
as far back as Truman, has been
indicted in the BCCI scandal, the
Manhattan district attorney's office
said today.
A grand jury indicted Clifford,
his colleague Robert Altman and
several others, according 10 a state·
menl by Gerald McKelvey.,
spokesman for District Attorney
Robert Morgenthau.
The statement said the indictments and guilty pleas by other
defendanLS in the case were to be
discussed at an news conference
later this morning.
·
The charges were not

by Tonja's ~randfather . AI far lert is Dan
Smith, coordonator of the antique tractor ~ull
and show at the Meigs County Fair. (Senhnel
Photo by Brian J, Reed)

ALL IN THE FAMILY· The Hunter rami·
ly, Racine, stands beside one of their antique
John Deere tractors. From left are Douglas,
Jacob and To11ja Hunter with baby Emma. Two
of the Hunters' four tractors were once owned

MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) U.N. experLS found no evidence of
weapons programs in Iraq's Agri·
culture Ministry, and Baghdad
boasted today that Saddam Hus·
scin' s dignity had been restored
during his standoff with the West.
Iraqi television showed Saddam
laking a symbolic victory swim in a
river near his hometown. There
also was footage of a bare-chested
Saddam driving a speedboat
lrilqi dews reporLS said Western
leaders were losing sleep over
Tuesday's pro-Saddam and anti·
U.N. demonstrations in Baghdad.
U.N. inspectors said they had
completed a systematic search of
the agriculture ministry today.
Achim Biermann, the German
head or the team, told reporters in
Baghdad that they found no matcri·
als covered under the Persian Gulf
War cease-fire, which dirccLS Iraq
to surrender iLS weapons of mass
destruction under U.N. supervision.
But, he told CBS radio, "There
is room for the concern some major
material might have been brought

Tractor pull events and tractor show
to be held Aug. 22 at Meigs County Fair
lly JIM GLAUNER
Sentinel News Staff
Tremendous tires; custom
designs and raw P9Wer typify truck
and-tniCtor pitlls. But at the Meigs
County Fair, the antique tractor
pull and show will flaunt age, history and tradition, not modern style
and lhe ability to crush a fleet of
junkyard cars.
The 1992 tractor pull events are
scheduled to begin at 12 noon on
Saturday, Aug . 22. The tractor
show will begin at 10 a.m. on Aug.
22 and run through 3 p.m.
"We're trying to present the history of farming," said Dan Smith,
coordinator of the antique tractor
pull and show. The antique tractor
show is the first ever at the Meigs
County Fair, but the pull has been
held several times, according to
Smith.
Old tractors cannot pull the
enormous loads dragged by modem
trucks, so they haul only a normal
load when entered in pull contc.•L•.
No extra weight or engine power
may be added to the trucks at the
Meigs County Fair. They must per·
form as they did decades ago.
"We're not in the hot rod tractor
business," said Smith. "We want
them to 'look, sound and reel like
original tractors."
To ensure this, antique tractor
owners make sure their machines

r---.

are authentic, down to the original
color, parts and decals. "We're
prcuy hep 'on getting the right
~·illi~ .~th. .
.
Tractors only qualify' 'as ·
antiques if they were m-ade· before
1960, according to Smith, and the

oldest truck in this year's show is a
1927 John Deere D model, owned
by Dale Kautt. "I wanted it
because (1927) was the same year I
was' born," said Kautz.
Kautz owliS"ll antiqUe tlactors,

istry for several hours Tuesday and
today, while Ekeus mel with Iraqi

officials to undcr.;core their obligations under the cease-fire.

Meigs board hires two
assistant grid coaches

Two assistant varsity football
coaches for the 1992-93 school
year were hired at Tuesday night's
meeting or the Meigs Local Board .
of Education.
Hired were Greg Deel who
comes to the district from North
Oallia High School and Jeff Baker,
who will be substituting in ihc district for Jack Slavin who is on medical disability until March.
Tbe resignations of Jean Taylor
as junior class advisor and Edna
Davis as a substitute cook were
accepted by the board. The high
school · athletic budget was
approved.
The board accepted a $500
donation from Hcwleu Packard for
Meigs High School. Actually.
out.''
according to Supt. James CarpenA previous inspection team was ter, the money was provided by
barred from the ministry and gave Hewlett Packard so that Rick Ash,
up a 17-day stake-outlast week
because of increasingly hostile
dcmonstratiQils. U.N. offteials have
repeatedly expressed concerns that
the Iraqis used the thai time to
destroy or remove weapons-related
documents.
Two Middleport village
U.N. experts suspected the min- employees, Bill Durst and David L.
istry contained documents on Iraq's Ross, will retire Friday.
chemical, biological, nuclear and
Durst, the water department
ballistic weapons. Iraq denied the superintendcn~ has worked for the
charge.
village for 26 years. His career in
Officers of the U.N. commission water operations began in 1953
charged with destroying Iraq's when he went to work for the late
weapons of mass destruction said Rodney Downing at the Meigs
the team, along with commission Water Co.
head Rolf Ekcus, were returning to
While working for the village,
the commission's regional head· Durst 's responsibilities have
quarters in Bahrain this evening.
extended into street and park opcr·
The team had searclled the min- ations and supervision of general

high school math and computer
teacher, could attend a seminar in
Chicago sponsored by the company. The seminar resulted in several
computers, calculators and other
equipment being supplied for classroom usc at Meigs by Hewlcu
Packard.
·
The Ohio Capital Conference 10
be held Nov. 9·11 in Columbus
was discussed by Carpenter. He
encouraged board members to
attend the conference where ther~ •
arc numerous speakers on school .
affairs, as well as exhibits of new :
materials and equipment. The ·
superintendent will aucnd.
:
Attending were Supt. Carpcntct, :
Treasurer Jane Fry, and board ·
members , Bob Barton, president, :
Larry Rupc, John Hood, Roger :
Abbou, and Randy Humphreys.
:

1\vo veteran Middleport
employees to retire Friday

TRACTOR KEEPS ROLLING • Dill Cornell's Ferguson 30
will be shown at the Meigs County Fair antique show. Standing by
the tractor, from left, are Bill Cornell and Dan Smith, coordinator
or the antique tractor pull and show ror the Meigs County Fair.
(Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)

Local briefs---. Judge

Thefts, vandalism reported

Wayne Runyon of Cheshire reported Sunday that while his vehi·
cle was parked at a residence on Smith Road, sonictinc stole his two
Kenwood ~rs and two Realistic amps from his vehicle.
Whaley s Grocery reported on ~onday that sometime after 6
p.m. on Sunday, someone had knocked three mailboxes from the
post ncar the store.
Investigation is continuing into the mailers.

Columbus man cited
Billy J. Thompson, 23, Columbus, was cited to Meigs County
for failing to maintain control of his vehicle following an
a.cctdent Monday mght on State Route 124. According to the report,
Thompson was traveling cast an!l went off the right side of the roadway. His vehicle traveled across the roadway and landed in the
ditch on the left side of the roadway.
The vehicle, a 1981 Chevrolet owned by Wendy Brown had
damage listed as moderate to the right front. He was not injured.
Co~rt

Wilson burglary probed
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported Wednesday
that deputies investigated the burglary of the Hampton Hollow
Road residence of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Wilson.
According to the report, the residence was entered sometime
between 9 a.m. and ·3:45 p.m. The kitchen door was forced open,
the drawers ransacked and three guns reported missing along with a
bedspread.
Investigation continues.

EMS units answ~r calls
Two calls for a5sistancc were answered for assistanca by units of
Meigs Emergency Services,
· On Tuesday ai 3:22p.m., Syracuse unit went 10 Stalll·Route 124
and lOOk Terry Patterson 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 10:37
p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Collirts Road. Saralt McDowell was
taken 10 Vetctans.

defends
decision
CLEVELAND (AP) - A judge
is defending her decision to not
consider a claim that another
woman's mental breakdown was
related to an affair with Ohio's
state auditor.
Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Judge Lillian Greene, in an
interview with The Plain Dealer
published today, declined to elaborate, say in$ only that her decision
not to constdcr the testimony of Dr.
Alvin Sulker is justified.
"!applied and followed the
law," Greene said.
She told the newspaper that a
recent news analysis about her
decision in the case "puts a clood
over my integrity."
Greene on July 20 threw out
Elisabeth Tschantz's $1.25 million
injury suit against Auditor Thomas
E. Ferguson. The court has.
instructed people involved not to
discuss the case outSide court.
The judge ruled .thai Mrs.
Tschantz, a former Ferguson
employee, didn't provide the evidence nccdod to go to trial.
John Duda, a lawyer for Mrs.
Tschantz, said he followed proce·
du ~e s and the judge made the
Wldttg decision.
. ·
I\ .

.

'

--·

ROYALTY ANNOUNCED • Additional
royalty ror the Melp CoUllty Fair, In addition to
the Kina and Queen, which were selected at
Racine' Fourth or JuiJ actlvltln, were
announced at TuesdaJ'I livestock Interviews
held at the Rutland Civic Center. Pictured with
1992 Fair Queen Bobble White, center, are; l·r,
Horse Princess Susan Grueser; Lori Hayes,

relief workers. His duties as water
superintendent will be taken over
by Mike Rawson.
He and hi s wife. Grace, and
their niece, Kilty Pugh , res ide at
440 Pearl Street.
· Ross has been a villogc employ·
ce for 24 years. He began working
as a mechanic and malmcnancc

man for the village in January ,
1968. He and his wife, Betty,
reside at Route I, Middleport.
Once retired Ross plans to open
a small repair shop at his home.

'

'

Horse rrincess runner-up; Dairy PrlnceSII Nora
Eastman; Livestock Princess· Lisa Hoffman; •.
Livestock Prince Mike HpiTman; and Glnaer •·
Holcomb, Livestock Prhtcess runner-up. (Not •·
pictured· is Fair King Bobby Johnson,) See stor1
and additional photo on page 11 of today's Sentinel.
~
~

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'

'

announced. A source who spoke
BCCI, with operations in 70
Tuesday on condition of anonymity countries, collapsed last year amid
said a state charge of scheming to allegation s of arms smuggling,
defraud was likely.
drug money laundering and financThe investigation has centered ing of terrorists.
on allegations that Clifford and
In another development, a key
Allman lied to regulators in 1982 BCCI investor involved in meet·
when they said the Arab -owned ings with Clifford, Alunan and lop
Bank or Credit and Commerce BCCI officials during the 1982
International had no ownership in takeover of First American pleaded
Washington's First Americ an guilty, the investor's lawyer said
Bankshares Inc.
Tuesday.
Clifford and Altman acted as
Sheik Kamal Adham, a former
BCCI's principal lawyers in thi s head of Saudi intelligence, pleaded
country. They also were chairman guilty 10 a misdemeanor violation
and president, respectively, of First of New York banking law and .
American Banksharcs, Washing· agreed to pay $105 million m fines,
ton's biggest bank -holding compa· Plato Cachcris said. The auomcy
ny.
said Ad ham won 'l be sentenced to
jail.

U. N. experts find no . evidence
of weapons programs in building

·'

'I

2 Sectiont, 16 P1ges 25 oenla
A Mulllmldlo Inc. Nowopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 29, 1992

In Emmy nominations, drama series
also is miniseries, movie, special

.

high In

.at

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The ·
Rolling Stones, Madonna, U2 and
Be sure to make a note to · other rock aclS were overcharged
remember Allen E. Dill, Sr.. who nearly $1 million by two concert
will be 86 on Aug. 8. Allen has so promoters, prosceutors Say.
many major health problems. I'm
Promoters Allen Spivak and
certain that he needs to feel your Sidney Payne and their company,
support and love at this particular Electric Factory Concerts Inc.,
time. Cards will reach him at were charged Monday with mail
35934 Texas Road, Pomeroy. fraud, unlawful payments to union
45769.
officials, theft of union funds and
HIS PAL MICKEY • Michael Jackson, right,
tax evasion.
If you think there's any chance
smiles with Mickey Mouse during his visit to
If convicted, Electric Factory
that you may be working at a food could be fined $2.3 million; SpiEuro Disneyland in Marna-la-Vallee Monday.
booth at the Meigs County Fair vak, 54, could be fined S2.6 million
Jackson sued a London newspaper Monday for
which opens Aug. 17, be sure to and sentenced to 20 years ·in prison;
get out to the Meigs County Tuber· and Payne, 51, could get a $2. I
culosis Office. and get your million fine and 10 years in prison.
required skin test
Other rock acLS allegedly overYou can gel the free test Man· charged from 1987 to 1990 were
days, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and the Grateful Dead, Tbe Who, GenFridays from 8 a.m. until noon and esis, David Bowie, Pink Floyd and
from I to 4 p.m. at the office which Paul McCartney, federal prosecuthe academy, the two-hour pilot of campaign to get guest appearance
By DEBORAH HASTINGS
is located in the county's multipur- tors said.
NBC's
''I'll Fly Away" drama Emmys included in the already tooAP Television Writer
pose building on Mulberry Heights
Electric Factory said in a state·
LOS ANGELES - Actors and series earned nominations includ· long awards telecast: HercLOfore,
in Pomeroy.
mentthalthc promoters "have
cameo trophies have been ·awarded
While the skin tests will be amicably resolved the is.~c of dis· producers are protesting some of ing outstanding TV movie, writing during non-televised ceremonies.
the 300-plus Emmy nominations in a miniseries or special, and
given from 2 to 6 p.m. at the tuber· crcpanc•cs'' with lhc various aclS.
That demand placed the acadc·
handed down this month by the sound editing in a miniseries or
culosis booth on the fairgrounds,
special.
my in a double-bind. The organi7.a·
that will be too late for you to
LONDON (AP) - Actor Peter Academy ofTelevision Arts &amp; Sci"I'll
Fly
Away"
also
was
nomi·
tion
already was under pre~surc 10
ences.
report for work in a rood booth Ustinov provided the laughs at a
natcd
for
best
drama
series,
and
tighten
iLS long-winded broadcast.
"It's
very
upsetting,"
said
prosince some time is required to dinner celebrating Queen Elizabeth
two
of
iLS
cast
members
were
recTrying
to
solve both problems, the
ducer
Susan
Baerwald
,
whose
ready the test resulLS.
II' s 40 years on the throne.
ommended for lead drama actor academy dumped guest appear·
"Cruel
Doubt"
miniseries
is
com·
Joimng the 66-year-old monarch
actress.
ances into the coveted categories of
Do you sometimes feel as and her husband, Prince Philip, peting in the category of art direc- andThe
new
rules
confusion
hai
lead and supporting actor and
though you're living in a rain for· were Prince Charles and his wife, tion 'for a miniseries or special with
prompted
other
academy
glitches,
in drama and comedy
actress
est? And have you heard thai pre· Diana, and all five prime ministers the series piloLS of "Homcfront,"
including
delayed
balloLS
and
nom·
series.
"The Young Indiana Jones Chronidiction that we will have frost in since 1964.
ination
announcements
for
the
Thus, Kelsey Grammer, who
cles"
and
"I'll
Fly
Away."
September? And did yo.u know
Ustinov made a surprise appear·
Aug.
30
awards
show,
which
will
plays
the supporting role of Dr.
"It's
hard
enough
to
compete
that I expect you to keep smil· ance after the dinner at Spencer
.
I
be
telecast
by
Fox
Broadcasting
Frasier
Crane on NBC's "Cheers,"
against
all
the
other
movies
and
mg .........
House, once owned by Diana's
Co.
is
nominated
this year as outstand·
miniseries,"
Baerwald
said.
"I
ra'lnily.
The
academy
itself
is
troubled
ing
lead
actor
in a comedy series
He reportedly had the crowd don't understand why those piloLS by the confusion surrounding this for a cameo he did
on Wings/' in
could not have been (exclusively)
~owling with laughter with a dia·
year's
nominations.
'
'I'm
very con· which he played the same character
nominated
in
series
categories."
Iogue based on comments previous
Baerwald and colleagues includ- ccrncd that it never happen this he plays on "Che«rs.''
sovereigns and their prime minis·
Still there? The confusion gets
ing
Marian Rees, whose "Miss way again," said telcviston dircc·
ters had made about one another.
Rose White" Hallmark Hall of l\)r Gene Crowe, who was appoint· worse.
ed six weeks ago as chairman of
Series pilots were allowed to be
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) Fame presentation is nominated for the academy's awards commitiCC.
nominated
this year as made-for·
- Don Knous, who has made a 10 Emmys, arc quick to point out
What
happened
was
a
series
of
TV movies because the awards
career playing the sort of guys who that their criticism is not directed at mishaps beginning with academy commitiCC
"decided it wa.~ a situa·
the
pilots.
were probably picked on in high
efforts
to
meet
a
number
of
diverse
lion
in
which
the pi loiS were not on
"They
are
quality
shows,"
said
school, was actually class president
member
concerns.
What
Em
my
an
even
competitive
playing field
Recs.
"We
are
a
separate
genre.
I
that weed resistance to herbicides and voted most likely to succeed
officials
ended
up
with
pleased
from
regular
episodes,"
said
really
feel
that
it
was
an
unforlu·
is serious but no cause for alarm.
when he graduated in 1942.
few.
nate
decision."
awards
director
John
Lcverence.
"It's not something we should
And on Saturday nigh~ he came
Earlier, actors launched a public
That same logic doe.~ not apply.
ignore," Antognini said. "We have home to an adoring crowd of class- ' In one of the more stunning
however,
to the actors in said
examples
of
new
rules
instituted
by
to understand why some herbicides mates.
pilots.
Under
academy rules, those
do this, why others don't do that,
Knotts, who played Offoccr Bar·
actors
can
be
entered in a series
but as a practical matter, it's not ncy Fife on "The Andy Griffith
category
or
a
TV
movie category,
something the farmer has to get Show" and had a role in "Three's
but
not
both.
frantic about."
Company," thanked his classmates
Both Lcverencc and Crowe said
Crop and herbicide rotation gen· for encouraging him when he left
the academy will no doubt be a'ked
crally prevent weed resistance, he West Virginia for New York with
to change the new rules beforo the
said.
no job.
1993 ceremony. "As we look into ·
"There are hundreds of repons
"You have to commit yourself
the
next year. I'm focused on
of repons that this weed is resistant if you want to .make it," said the
cleaning
some of these is.,ues;"
to that herbicide in Idaho or whcr- 68-year-old actor. "That's about iL
C'IIcr," Antognini said. "But when I knew (acting was) what I wanted
forms wouldn 'I do.
By NITA LELYVELD
you boi I iI down to acreages, i1' s to do when I was 6 years old.''
"We've got the hippest looking
As.o;ociated Press Writer
relatively small."
WASHINGTON - In some cooks I' ve ever seen," said Markel t
Jack Feck, chairman of the
Bob Hartzler, a weed manage- reunion commillce, said he had trendy restaurants these days, the Street's manager, David Oarfmkel.
ment specialist at iowa State, how· been trying for 30 years to gel chefs' fashions may be houcr than
Evcn the more traditional cook
ever, said he shared Orcsscl's con- Knotts back for a class reunion.
has
some choices these days. At
the stoves.
cern . "We haven't seen anything in
"Hot Chefs- Cool Uniforms" New Chef Fashion of Los Angeles,
"I've ~n trying to bring him
the U.S. to this point, not to say it back, but •not as Barney Fife," is the slogan for Chef Clothing chefs' tunics still look conserva·
won't happen," he said.
Fcck said. "We want him here as Revival USA of Para'mus, N.J .. tive, but they feature shoulder pads
But the threat is real, Hartzler the president of the class of '42. which is exhibiting its madc·to·be· and tummy-slimming tapered cuts.
said, "especially when you look at Although we're proud or him for seen uniforms at the annual Ameri· They come with elegant blue pip·
the new herbicides thai farmers arc what he is, we're proud of him for can Culinary Federation convcn· ing, faux pearl snaps and eye·
catching embroidered logos.
using. They all have the same being our class president''
tion here this week.
• "There's no reason chefs have
mode or action - they block a sinSure, the company's chef's
gle enzyme."
pants come in traditional colors- to be seen in public in glorified
And the impact on the average
black and white. But they're fash· pajama tops," said Lucien Salama•.
American consumer'!
ionably baggy, and their bold who rounded the company with his
"Probably not much," Hartzler
stripes and oversized checkerboard wife three years ago under the slo· ·
said. That's if the problem is conprints wouldn't be out of place in a gan, "If you look good, you feel
trolled by rotating herbicides and
good, you cook good."
new-wave dance club.
There arc matching aprons and
New Chef Fashion sells a verother farm management pr~ctices.
CINCINNATI (AP) - The neckties. And even baseball caps sion of the traditional toque, but it
Procter &amp; Gamble Co. is entering for those who feel awkward in the also offers baseballs caps with
AMBER HF.NDRJCK
traditional tall, white chef's haLS "CHEF" embroidered on the
the domestic toothbrush market.
front.
The consumer products giant, known as toques.
"I used to wear run-of-the-mill,
"More and more restaurants are
which makes Crest IOOthpastc, said
on Monday its Crest Complete opening their kitchens up to the cheap uniforms," said Ralph Fcra·
Amber LaDawn Hendrick,
toothbrush is the first designed to public, so the chefs have to look co, executive chef at the Nassau daughter of Dwain and Aimee
fit the shape of teeth. The multi· good, " said Kim de Ia Villefro· Country Club in Glen Cove, N.Y.. Hendrick, Mason, W.Va., cclcbral·
level bristle design allows the moy, who co-founded the compa- who stopped by Salama's exhibit ed her first birthday recently. A
toothbrush to reach up to 37 per· ny . "These days, presentation hooth to try on jackets. "But I like balloon theme was carried out with
cent farther between teeth than a docsn 't just mean the table and the a good-looking chef, especially an outdoor pany aucnded by many
"We've always suspected there conventional fiat toothbrush, P&amp;G dish. It means the chef as well."
when he's out in ·public. So these
family and friends.
is this kind of link but it has been said.
That's why the Hyatt hotel in new jackCIS are great."
Maternal grandparents are Larry
extraordinarily diff~~:uh to demonNot everyone shares Fcraco's
The company said it took more suburban Reston, Va., chose the
and Beverly Rupe, Middleport.
strate," said one of the authors, than 10 years to develop Crest Chef Clothing Revival look for the enthusiasm for change.
Paternal grandparenlS arc Robert
Michael B. Bracken, professor of Complete, which is available staff of its Market Street Bar &amp;
and
Janice Hcndnck, Lctari, W.Va.
epidemiology and public health at through dentists now and !Will be Grill. The grill's kitchen is in the
theY ale School or Medicine.
spld by retail outlCIS later this year· middle of everything, out where
Bracken said the study took into · Although Crest Complete ts diners can sec iL
account differences in the frequen- P&amp;O's first entry into the U.S.
And for a restaurant that hosLS
cy of birth defects attributable to toothbrush market, a subsidiary has gallery openings and serves dishes
age, race and educational level. But been selling toothbrushes in Ger- Iike Santa Fe piha and peppered
it didn't consider many other fac· . many under the Blend-a-dent brand duck b(CBSt salad on a bed or Sonotors possibly related to birth name for 50 years.
ma greens, traditional chefs' uni·
defects, including alcohol con·
sumption and cigarette smoking.
An outside expert cautioned that·
NOW IS THE TIME for your flmlly to holt 1 foreign student
the neighbors of toxic waste sites
next fill Willi AilE.
tend to be poor people with the
YOU: Hd, food, TLC.
poorest diets and hygiene and the
STUDENT: lntursnce, ependlng IIIOIIIJ, 1 culture to lh1re.
dirtiest jobs.
·D111rvlng Enghh IPMidng hlglllchoolll'l Jrom 30 cou..,
"'l'hC question is, 'Which one is
lltM 1111tty llld •xlously - I t yow·a~n !~!OW. Allllrlcln
doing them in?' They arc liying in .
lntlrllulllnlltudlnl behln.. -11 YMI'I Mrvlcl to Ohio
a kind of environmental poison
by Klltlll lchltflr, stllfll olllae In Hudlon, clllnglocll ....,..
soup. The question is how to figure
re..ntlll-. proven 1uppart, pt*llc SlrVIcl. Shire our
it all ou~" said Norman W. Klein,
"AIIIII'Icln
Drum". Clll 211 110 1111 or, 1-800-SIBUNG
director of the Center for Environ·
mental Health at the University or
ExcltlngiRennlrigl Rel•llllltl Lllltl1111l Cell now.
Connecticut.

aoa...._

L&lt;&gt;w tonight In mld·liOs.

Partly cloudy. Thursday,
the low ·80s.
·

•

Copyrlghtld1H2

·Birth-defect rate higher
·near toxic dumps, but
link remains unproved
1

Pick 3:

Page4

Researchers fear
tough weeds threaten
world wheat supplies
1 By

Ohio Lottery.

Reds blast

Names in·
the,, news

Beat of the Bend...
Now isn't that special?!
Ross Perot geLS all oJ those people going on his behalf and then
out of the blue decides that he
won'l fun.
'
; In the long .run, perhaps, that's
·good. After all, had be made it he
might have awakened one morning
and decided that he didn't want to
be president any longer. For all we
know his successor might have
made Dan Quayle look prclly pres·
idential.

TUesday, July 28, 1992

Pomeroy--.Middleport, Otllo

J

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