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                  <text>Grand, reserve champions in 4-H events are announced
POMEROY. Grand and reserve
·~lllmpions 'in lhc .1992 4-H misccllineous judging which took place
it die R,udlnd Civic Cenlel recent·
ly have.been announced by the
Meip County Ex~sion Servoce:
J!lilllll!ll.lhe proJCClS were Bnan
,Reed, phologil!phy; Pauy Dyer and
•Keith Wood, conservation; Paul
Shoemaker, woodworkin~ and
flliiC; Mike Shoemaker, engmeerinc; Gary Walker-electricity· Vick!e Fi!lk. first aid; Jackie G~aham ,
•111111 animals; Jo Ellen Sherow,
ClllS and dogs.
• Olher judges were Phyllis Rice,
6-eatlve arts; Dianne Rice, iniCrior
!le$ign and personal development;
Fred Dcel, engineering; Theresa
S1011e, personal dcvclopmcm; Bar·
b.ra Sllltkey, beginning projects;
~eannetc Ray, laundry and
l'nicrowave; and David Adkins,
~!abies and flowers.
The top winners in their
lesocctive projects were as follows:
l&gt;iiCOvcring 4-H I: grand cham• jrion, Rlllland Raiders 4-HClub.
-: Discovering 4-H II: grand
chllllpion, Pauy Nally; honorable
~ention. David Nakao.
: Exploiing Animals: grand
~ ham pion, Eric Montgomery;

reserve champion, Matt Stewart;
honorable mention, Skip Dodson.
Exploring Me and My Home:
grand champion, Odie Karr.
Blue Sky: grand champion,
Cheryl Jew~ll. .
·
. Cag~ Bords 10 lhe Home: grand
champoon, Harmony Thobaben;
reser11e champion, Mary Nally.
Cats: grand champion, Glenda
Kay Hunt, II; reserve champion,
.Joseph McCall; honorable men ·
lions, Tara Rose, Darrick St. Clair
and Loraine Lawson.
Dog Care: grand champion,
Michelle Caldwell; reserve champion, Roxanne Williams; honorable
men1ions, Billee Pooler, Kyle
Smiddie.
Grooming and Handling Dogs:
grand champion, Odie Karr.
Obedience Training: grand
champion, Amber Perkins; reserve
champion, Kyle Smiddic.
Guinea Pig: grand champion,
Yancey Hunter.
Hams1ers: grand champion,
Kindell Brown, reserve champion,
Jessie Barringer; honorable men·
lions, Odic Karr, Jason Mora and
Andrea Ncul.Ziing.
Pocket Pels: grand champion,
Harmonv Thobaben; reserve cham·

pion, Nancy Nally; honorable me'n' tions, CJ. Harris, Rebekah Karr.
First Aid: gfand champion,
Billee Pooler: reserve chamoion .
Miranda Nicholson; honorable
mentions, Linzie Nottingham,
Christine Schultz, Andrew KiiChen
and Julie Young.
Alcohol Decisions: grand cham·
pion, Melissa Neutzling; reserve
champion, Bclh Oark.
Keeping Fit• grand champion
Jamie Drake; ~serve champion:
Megan Swearingen.
Looking Good: grand champion,
Tabilha Swearingen· reserve cham·
pion, Christ)' Drake.'
Tobacco and You: grand champion, Traci Heines.
Learning About Stress: grand
champion, Rcbocca Wiles.
Living and Learning wilh Children: grand champion, Crystal
Smilh.
Teens Learn About Children:
grand champion, Tabilha Swcaringen; reserve champion, Billcna
Buchanan.
Me, You and Olhcrs Ill: grand
champion, Christine Schulu..
You and Your Money:.grand
champion, Michelle Laughery.
Skills You'll Never Outgrow II:
·
·

,.

MYSTERY .-ARM ·This week's myslery
fum, fulured by the Gallia Soil and Water
CnnMnalion Distrkt, is located somewhere In
Gallla County. Individuals wishing to pntid. pate ltllhe weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
auess to the Daily Sentinel, Ill Courl St.,
Poa~eroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Triloune, 1115 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45~31, and you may win a $5 pme from the

Ohio Valley PublishinR Co. Leave your name,
qddress and telephone number with your card
or leiter. No telephone calls will be accepted. All
contest enlrles should be turned In to lhe newspaper omce by 4 p.m. uch Wednesday. In case
of a tie, the winner will be chosen by lnllery.
Nul week, a Meigs Cnunty farm will be realured by the Meigs Soil •nd Water Cnnservalion
District.

Where to go for help on soil questions
GALLIPOLIS • A principal reason why lhe Soil Consmation Scrviu and Soil and WaiCr Conservation Districts are needed in our
coonty is lhai many people assume
·dial soils are more or less alike. Bul
Jrell di rrerences in soil properties
do exist over short disbUlces.
: Soils may be seasonally wel and
~bjcct to nooding during certain
monlhs of lhe year and olhcr partS
or lite year lhey are almost powder
!lry. They may be shallow 10 bed
ioclc: or highly erodible. They may
be 100 unstable to be used for foundatioos for buildings or foundations
for highways. Clay or wet soils arc
poorly suited ror septic tank
absorption fields. A high waiCr area
inakes a soil poorly suiiCd to basement or any mhcr type or underground installation. These soil
propenics and many olhers that
arroo land usc are described in lhc
soil survey for Gallia County and
shows lhe location of each kind of
soiI oo dctai led maps.
. Soil surveys can help you from
making mistakes when laying out
pll!ls for building surracc or below
surface homes or other installalions. These mistakes can be prc•cntod from happening if you conlac! your local Soil and Watcr Conscrvllion District office.
By using the recommcnualions
and insuuctions given by a soil scientist before building you can ofiCn
save- money; labor, time and major
rcp~in down lhe road.
. · Soil Surveys are inlcnded for
muy different users . They can
IJclp ·rarmcrs estimatc lhc potential
eiop of forage produclion or their
land. They can help home buyers
or developers dc~ermine soil relaiCd
hazards or limitations that arrcct
liotnc siiCS: Land usc planners can
~etcrmine lhe suitability or areas
Cor housing or onsile sewage disjiopl sySlelns. They can be used to
~rmuic lhe suitabilily and limila·
tlons for ·buildings, landfills, septic

Judging...
•

Continued from D-1
. Advanced Market Hog: grand,
J&gt;lvick Gibbs; reserve, Ginger Holcomb; honorable, Mike Horrman ,
J-ulie Parker.
,. Advanced Swine Production:
~· Mandi SheclS.
• The Normal Animal : grand ,
Billy Crane; reserve, Amy Sm1th;
honorable, Jennifer Proffitt, Dec
CIII!Cl'.
r Animal Disease: grand ,
Michelle Guess; reserve, Keith
Spencer; hollorablc. Chip Suttle.
Animal Health: Jllnd, Christine
Sc:hulu.; rcscrvc. M!fhacl Lcilhcit.

systems, recreation areas and many dance with soil capabilities and
olhcr uses.
lim iwions.
The soil survey can help in iden·
Information curren~r complciCd
lifying specific conservation prob- includes copies or s01l maps for
lcms in a given area and in plan· any area in Gallia County as well
ning measures lo reduce erosion, as lhc description and interpretation
slippages, scdimcnlation, and olhcr or the varioos kinds or soil types.
soil problems.
.
Before buying land lhe soil surThe inoenm report is available
vcy can help in evaluation lhc suit- along wilh conducting site specinc
abilily or a tract of land for the investigations when needed. The
intended usc. Where soil· maps final soil survey report is due in
August of 1993. ThiS informatioo
show lhat soil relaiCd hazards may is available by conlletins lhc Gal- .
damage structures or installations, lia Soil and Water Conservation
allcmatc sites lhal have ravomble District office at 529 Jackson Pike,
soil properties and be seleclcd or Room 308C, GallipoUs. ·
sl!uclural designs can be changed
Submitted by Wendell Tope,
10 compensaiC ror the hazard. Soil Ea T
v
Soil c
maps and descriptions can help in
rth ~m olunteer
onservalion Service.
the design or projects in accor. ··- - ····PARKERSBURG UVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Miaeral WeDs, WV
July 25, 1992
STOCK STEERS:
71.00-US.OO
3QO.undcr
66.00-100.00
3()().500
58.5(}.86.50
5()().700
54.5(}.65.00
SQO.over
STOCK HEIFERS:
62.00-111.00
3QO.under
58.00-93.50
3()().500
00.00-78.50
5()().700
45.00-67.50
SQO.over
STOCK BULLS:
62.00-115.00
3QO.under
67.00-104.00
3()().500
SS.00-86.50
5()().700
40.00-61.00
Slaughter BuUs
425.00-700.00
Cows &amp; Calves BH
45.00-53.50
Bred Cows By II
350.00-800.00
Bred Cows BH
Slaughter Cows:
Hi h Dressin

For insurance

call

CAROLL SNOWDEN
341' Secoacl ,.•••

GaWpoiiJ, Ohio
Pboae 4-46-4190

Home 446-4518

SU.TE FARM

'
INSURANCE

1!1

Like allOOd neismbor.
State Farm is iliere.
State Farm Insurance Companies

Home 01hces: Blclominoton. Ulinait

grand cham~ion, Leigh Mash ;
rcsavc champ•?" Crystal Smull.
Skolls You II N~vcr O~tgrow
11!: grand champoon, Moranda
Nocholson; reserve champoon, Ehzabclh powmc. ,
.
~kolls You II Never Outgr?w
IV. grand champoon, Chrosunc
Schulu..
.
Laundry ror ,Beg meers: grand
champ1on, Kmt1na Kennedy ;
reserve champoon, Pamela Neece;
honorable mention.&lt;, Tara Grucscr,
C1ndy Stcwart.
Adv~nced Lau~dry: grand
champion, C_yn1h1a _Coucnll ;
rcser11c champ1~n, Adr1a Frecker;
ho~orablc mcnuons, Juhc Nakao,
Lc1gh Mash.
.
Mys1cncs ._or M1cro~ave: grand
champoon, Michelle Miller; reserve
champoon, Sarah _Chffor~; honorable mentiOn, Jc.&lt;S!Ca Hwmllon.
Marvels .or M1cro~avc: grand
champ1on! JuheM~uu\l.
~lelm~ of MICrowave: grand
champ10n, L1han.Nakao.
. .
Advcntu~cs 1n Home LIVIng:
grand champ1on, K!1suna Kcn~y;
rcser~e champiOn, Tabnha
Swcann_gcn.
.
. Fwnuurc and Woodwork Rocy:
clong: grand champoon, Mall Clark,
reserve champoon, Mchssa Ncul·
zling.
Designing Interiors: grand
champion· Debra Frost;_rescrvc
champ1on, El11.abelh Downoc.
Your Firsl Home Away From
Home: grand champion, Miranda
Nicholson.
And My World ... Peoplc Cuslams or lhe W~ld ~ar II: grand
champ1on, Bobb1e Wh11e.
Creative ArtS: grand champion,
Billy Francis; reserve champion,
Molly Heines.
Creative Writing: grand champion, Becky Snowden; reserve champion , Susie Francis; honorable
· mentions, Darrick St. Clair, Beverly SICwart and Sarah Lodwick. .
Genealogy: grand champ1on,
Aaron Will; reserve champion,
Myea Haynes.
Adventures Wilh Your Camera:
grand champion; Megan Swearin·
gcn; rescric champion, Kyle Smid·
die; honorable mention, Kristin
Torres, Elizabeth Smith, Julie
Spaun, Amber Hayes, Scou Needs.
E~ploring Pholography: grand
champion, Kelley Grucser; reserve
champion, Kelly Osborne: honorable mention, Julie Young.
Adjustable Cameras: grand
champion, Miranda Nicholson ..
You and Your Bicycle: grand
champion, Jennifer Allen.
Caring for Your Bicycle: Billy
SchullZ.
Matcring Bicycle Skills: grand
champion, Bryan Colwell; reserve
champion, Bert Mash.
Small Enginc.1 II: grand champi-

Ohio Lottery

August 2, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Plge DB Sunday llmes-sentlnel

on, Billy Crane.
. '
Lawn and Gard~n Equopmenl:
grand champoon, Pholhp Hamm..
Learn to Earn: grand champoon,
Bert Mash.
.
.
Gctu.ng Acquamted _Wolh Your
Tractor. grand champoon, Chuck
Parker. .
.
. Assunng Snrc •. Efficoent ~raoon: grand ~hamp1on. Ja!On Ervm:
Model Airplanes: grand champoon, Jeremy Raymond; reserve
champion, Travis Lodwick.
.
M~l Rocket: grand champ!on,
BJ. Nicholson; reserve champ_1on,
Ben Crane; hon~rablc mcnuon, .
Jeromy Jackson B1sscll..
Kccpmg F1sh Al!ve: grand
champoon , SlephaniC Kopec;
reserve ~hamp1on_. Joseph McCall.
Spec1al Aq~anum Setups: grand
champ!on, Mochele Scott; reserve
chan_op1~n, Mallhcw Morrow.
F1s~mg ror lhc Btginnger: grand
champ!on, ToiTany ~oddy; reserve
champoon, A~ron Will; honorable
mcnupn, Chnstma SchullZ, Zach
Bell~. .
.
.
F1shgmg ,for lh~ Inlermed1atc:
grand ~hampoon, Joshua Roush. .
Let s Exp_lorc the Outdoors 1:
~rand champ1on, Vm~enl Broder1ck; reserve champ10~, Jose~h
MI.'Call; honordble mentiOn, Chrostine Schulu..
Exploring Ohio Ponds: grand
champion, Kellic Ervin, reserve
champion, Ben Crane.
Ohio Bird1: grand, Mary Nally.
Ohio Mammals: grand, Brian
Hoffman · reserve Michael
Leifheit. '
'
Ex~loring Our Forests: grand,
Chrislmc SchullZ.
Tree Planting: grand champion,
Jeremy Smilh.
Exploring Our Insect World 1:
grand, Jennifer Lambert.
Basic Beekeeping: grand, Mau
Kirk.
Archery: grand, Josh Roush;
reserve, B1lly SchullZ; honorable

mention, James Mc~y.
Sa,f~ty Wolh Guns. \:'d: Mau
Moms, reso:rve, J_ason
ra; bon.,
orable m_enoon, Bolly Crane.
.
Rope. grand, Cyrs~l Vaugh:
rescrye. Scot! Colwell, honors
menbon, ~cnmrer Lambert.
.•
. Explormg l;he World o~ Electnc
!ty: grand, _Moke Lawson, rese~e.
Sh.aun Rollins, honorable meDbOI),
Michael J..:&amp;n.lbert- .
Eleclnclty s S1lent Pa~nter,
Magenti~m: grand, Ma~ M~ms.
~orkmg lhe E_lecltiCity. ~rand,
Dar~1ck St. Cla1r, reserve, haun
Rolhn_s.
. .
Sh1elded Me!lll Arc Weld mg.
grand,Ja_son~llms.
.
Workmg Wnlt Wood~ Tools,
grand, Joseph McCall, rese~v~.
Sc.ott Needs; honorable menuon,
M1ke lawson.
.
Wonderful ,World or Wood.
grand,_M~lly Hemes; reserve,
Frankh_n P1erce; honorable menuon, ~~~haelc;Juess. .
Bu1ldm~ B1gger Thmgs: 8;13Dd,
Mall Morr1s; reserve, Jason Pien:e;
honorable mcnbon, Donny Cama·
han.
.
.
.
Grow1ng Bcddmg Planl5. grand,
Adr1a Frecker.
.
Growing· Annual Flowers.
grand, Cheryl Jewell; reserve,
Rebekah Karr.
, ·
Growing House Plants: grand,
Na~cy Nally; reserv.e, Crystal
Sm1lh; honorable mcnuon, Pamela
Neece.
Exploring the World or Plants
and Soils: grand, Lisa Hoffman., .
Exploring Plant Characlelistics:
grand, Philip Hamm.
Plant Growth Factors: grand,
Keilh Spencer.
.
Vegetable Gardenmg I: gran~.
B!andon Buckley; reserve, lusun
G1lmore. ,
.
The F~~1ly Vegelablc Ganlen,
gran~. Krisu Warner.
Vme Crops: grand, Crystal
Smilh; reserve, Nancy Nally.

FAMILY 'CRUSADE
WITH GRANDPA CRATCHET

AUGUST 2 thru 5
AT THE

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD
· st'Aii\itotm i 24
·

.
MAIN STREO, RUTLAND
I~
~--------------------...1:

Astros knock
Reds out of
first plac·e 5-4

Pick 3:

253
Pick 4:

8959
Super Lotto:

2-13-17-18-28-34

Page4

Kicker:

Low IOnlghl around 60, p•rl·

iy cloudy. Tunday, high In mid·
70s.

274167

Vol, 43, No. 69
Copyrlghled 1992

1 Sec:Uon, 10 Pogoo 25 ...,11
A lluhlmedlo Inc. Nowopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 3. 1992

Changing state fair
faces economic realities

HARD AT WORK ·These young United
Methodists made a real diJTerence in the tives or
two Meigs County resldeats following a work
camp in Apple Grove last week. Pictured as tbey

complete a paint job on tbe home or Rev. Florence Smitb are Tawnya Drent, Mike Wiley,
Jennifer Kerr, Jim Stasko, Rachael Frank and
Kristina Caldwell. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J ,
Reed)

·Group reaches out to help other people
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
In the shadow or the recemlyclosed -Apple Grove United
Melhodist Church near Racine, a
group of young United Melhodisls
and their adult leaders have made a
difference in lhe tives of rwo Meigs
Counliaiis.
Nine youths and lhree adults
from the Western Pennsylvania
Conference of the United
Methodist Church spent last week
scraping, painting and performing
minor repair work for two Apple
Grove residents • all in answer to
lhe United Melhodist calling lo
reach out in help to olhers.
Despite the oflen-inclement
weather of lasl week, Rev. Florence Smilh and Louis Sarson buth
received assislance in lhe area or
home repairs, and cleaning work at
the Snowville United Methodist
Church in Scipio Township was

also performed by lhe work camp.
dences received a fresh coat of
. The aim of lhe camp was to aid paint,' and o'ne lalented youlh was
an elderly resident and a handi- responsible for making several
capped resident, according 10 appliance repairs while on lhe job.
Carmel/Sutton Charge pastor Rev.
Ironically, those who participatKenny Baker, who has coonlinaiCd ed in last week's work camp paid
work camps in Meigs County ror for lhe opportunity 10 work for
lhe past II years. The Meigs Coun- free. They didn't mind.
ty work camp was one of seven
Tawnya Drent, 16, enjoys helpcamps conducted in Soulhern Ohio ing olhers so much LluU she plans to
by lhc Western Pennsylvania Con- make missions a career upon her
ference last week.
graduation from high school and
Allhough ibis is lhe first camp Bible college.
"I love to help other people,"
lo visit Meigs County this year,
work camps in lhe past have pro- Tonya said wilh a smile. "Plus, this
vided similar home repairs, as well is a really fun way to spend your
as work on lhe Cooperative Parish summer."
Anolher worker, Jeff Cummins,
headquarters in Pomeroy.
In fact, the Racine United said !hat the work was similar to
Methodist Church, which provided the service work he performed in
overnight accomodalions and cook- conjunction wilh his Eagle Seoul
ing facilities ror lhe hard-working badge.
"This is a lot or run," Jeff said.
Pennsylvanians, was built by vol·
"I hope I can come back for anolh·
unteer labor several years ago.
The Sarson and S·milh resi- er work camp nexl year."

By CINDY BENEDICTO
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Farm and family have been lhe heart or lhe Ohio
State Fair, the nation's largest,
since 1845. Bul corporaiC sponsors
are becoming its lifeblood.
Signs of lhe times will be visible
all over this year's fair, which
begins Friday. Companies have
paid to put lheir names on arenas,
refreshment sbUlds and even lhe Tshirts worn by members of the
fair's marching band.
Such corporate sponsorships, a
common sight al sporting events,
are a nalural bul underuscd way for
stale fairs to raise money, said Jeffrey Milgram, president of Event
Markeling Strategies of Dublin,
Ohio. He receives a commission
for geuing corporate sponsors for
Ohio's fair.
"Fairs are like the sleeping
gianls or these evcnl marketing
strategies," he said. "So many
people go 10 fairs. A fair is where
you can get a lot of exposure. ''
Ohio's and olher SIBle fairs are
relying on corporate sponsors part·
ly because of stale budget cuts.

The Ohio fair, a state agency,
had $500,000 in slate subsidies last
year. This year's budget of $8 mil·
lion includes no direct stale subsidy.
Aside from $1 million raised
with the help of Event Marketing
Suategies, lhe fair gets money from
ticket sales and concessions and
from state agencies that wanl 10
slage exhibitions.
Milgrom has taken lhe fair from
about $150,000 in sponsorships
eight years ago to about $1 miUion
1his year. He expects lhis year's
fair to have a record 40 corporate
sponsors.
The sponsorships give companies a big audience for their messages. About 3.3 million people
visited lhe Ohio fair lasl year, mak·
ing il the largest in the nation ;
according to the lnlcrnalional
Association of Fairs and Expositions.
Olher stale fairs have also begun
using sponsors. The Texas State
Fair, one of 1he nalion's largesl,
relies on lhem lo provide big-name
enlertainment, such as coumry
singer Tanya Tucker and lhe musi-

cal -group Los Lobos.
The Texas fair is a private, nonprofit venture with a $12 million
budget. . "We live or die on our
own like any other business.
There's no safety net out there,"
said spokeswoman Nancy Wiley.
The Florida Stale Fair also
receives no state funding and is
couming on sponsors for pari or
lh is year's $8.4 million bud gel. It
made $1.2 million last year.
Milgrom also is working wilh
lhe Illinois fair, which suffered
budget cuts lhis year and decided it
needed a system for fmding corpo·
rate sponsors.
Former Ohio Gov. James A.
Rhodes, who liked lhe fair so much
that he once slept in lhe sheep bam
to promote it, said he sees lhe need
to take care of lhe buttom tine. But
he also said he hopes Ohio preits slate fair tradition.
Billy Inmon, lhe Ohio fair's
general manager, said Rhodes
shouldn't worry.
"The heart or lhe fair is agricullure," Inmon said. "h has never
been my inlention to take away lhe
tradition.' '

Officials say backlog of appeals
by welfare recipients are costly
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Nearly I 0,000 appeals to welfare
cuts, which were intended to save
the stale money, are expected to
cost taxpayers, SIBle officials say.
Ohio has 9,968 pending hearing
requests, with 8,157 in the Ohio
Department or Human Services
Cleveland dislricl alone, lhe Akron
Beacon Journal reported Sunday.
The Cleveland dislrict includes
Cuyahoga, Summit, Portage, Medina, Lorain, Geauga, Trumbull,
Ashtabula and Lake counties.
Slate officials said exira hearing
offiCers have to be hired and over·
time paid 10 employees in lhe
Cleveland district orrice and the
Canton 19-coumy district office
who had to cancel vacations to hear

lhe backlog on social service advocates ror pushing welfare recipients
10 flle appeals in protest to lhe cuts
made in April.
"If lheir anempt was to clog lhe
system and let lhe stale know how
lhey felt, it was effective," said
James Bruney, spokesman for lhe
department.
Werner Lange, spokesman for
Interchurch Council of Greater
Cleveland, said people on welfare
need immediate help. The group
encouraged welfare. recipients to

file appeals.
"If given lhe option _of taking
the money now or wattmg two
monlhs, !hey would take lhe money
today," he said. "They don'l have
the luxury of thinking aboutiOmorrow."
Welfare recipients who appeal
lhe termination or their benerils
continue to get !heir benefits until a
hearing is held. rr they lose lhe
appeal, ihe money is deducicd from
lheir future benefits when lhey are
re-enroUed to lhe program.

cases.

WORK CAMP • These Uulted Methodists
from Western Pennsylvania did bome and
church repairs in Meigs County last week. The

group was one or seven wbich did similar
repairs In Southeastern Ohio. (Sentinel Pholo by
Brian J, Reed)

Ernest Marshall or Cleveland is
on welfare awaiting a nlling on the
appeal he filed in March. He said
filing appeals as a fonn or protest
may seem futile, but il was well
worth it.
"Hopefully, by lhe time thai
comes to pass, !here will be some
kind or nel for lhese people who
took part in the prolest," he said.
"Sometimes changes are costly
and sometimes lhey are bitiCr.''
About 96,000 General Assistance recipients losl their $100
monlhly benefit on April I. Gov.
George Voinovich slashed lhe GA
program to save money.
The program now allows recipients 10 get monthly benefits for
only six inonlhs during a 12-monlh
period. The SIBle expects to save
$307.9 million over two years, said
Budgel Director R. Gregory
Browning.
Some slate officials are blaming

JUDGING COMPLETED. Judging or Girl Scout projtflS for
the Meigs Counly Fair was completed on Saturday, wilh make-up
judging in lhe Court Street mini-park. Here, Pat Thoma, and
Harold and Rhea Norris look over one of the projtfts. The Meigs
County Fair will be held August17-22. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J.
Reed)

,_-Local briefs-___, President 'ready to go for blood' say GOP governors
Man cited in wreck
A. Danville, Va., man was ciled artcr a tWo-vehicle wreck on
Ohio 338 i~ Lclart Township Sunday around 5:30p.m.
. Accordmg to a report from the Gallia-Mcigs Post of l.he Stale
H1ghway Pauol, W1lloam R. Moore, 45, or 6917 Runic Place,
Reynoldsburg, was eastbound on Ohio 338 and slowed for olher
traffic. A fiQkup ltuck behind Moore·'s car, driven by Mark David
Tucker, o R'outc I, Box 1218, Danville, was unable 10 slop and
struck lhc rear or Moore's car.
No injuries were reported.
Damage 10 Moore 's 1991 Ford Tempo and Tucker's 1991
Chevrolet S-10 was lisiCd as light
Tucker was cited by the patrol for failure to mainlain assured
clear dislancc.

Accident still under investigation
A hit and run ace idem on Bast Main Street, Pomeroy, late -Friday
night remains under investigation by Pomeroy Police.
Police reported lhat a I988 Ford owned by Kenda Ann Kloes,
21, Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, was parked when il was sliUck on
Continued C?D page~

PLAINSBORO, N.J. (AP) Republicans are pulling out the
word here at ihe summer meeting
of lhe nation's gove,mors: President
Bush is engaged, upbeat and ready
10 go for blood.
· And not a momem too soon,
eilher.
"I:bere is {lalpable relief among
the Republican governors lhat
Bush, trailing Democrat Bill Clin·
ton by huge margins, has begun to
go on lhe offensive before his Aug.
17-20 convention- and lhal he's
not merely going through the
motions.
"He's broken out of lhe con:
finement of lhe While House and
'he's been around some real people.
That lends 10 energize candidates,"
Soulh Carolina Gov. CarroU Campbell said Sunday of lhc president's
latest campaign phase.

The entire Bush operation ized by biting commenls aboul
kicked into a higher gear last week Clinton, followed a slrategy session
wilh a newly awessive candidale, · with Bush campaign adviser
trips to the Midwest, Texas and Charles Black. It was by all
California, and a "distortion of lhe accounts much tamer lhan a brief·
day" policy aimed al undemining ing last week at which Black and
Clinton's record.
other campaign orricials were
The president attacked Clinton's browbeaten by frusuated and pan·
hcallh care policies Sundar. in Illi- ickcd Republican House members.
nois while 'his aides distnbuted a
The governors here said Bush
vitriolic broadside in the latest has been received enlhusiastically
round of an argument over mud- on his CB!"paign Dips to lheir slates
slinging and which side is doing and, unlili;e lhe congressmen, lhey
more orit.
are not alilfmcd by his poll sbUld·
Getting into lhe fighting spirit, mgs.
\
" We knQw a lot more about
Republican governors here 'hastily
what the hell's going on in our
sche_&lt;lul~ a show-of-support news
conference Saturday after hearing slates than lhey do. They're not
lhat Clinton was coming 10 town there. We're on the streets,"
for a cheerlcading appearance wilh explained Ohio Gov . George
14 of lheir Democratic counter- Voinovich.
Iowa Gov. Terry Bransmd said a
parts.
The news conference, characler· lol of the Republican governors

have had experiences like lhe one
Bush is goin~ lhrough "and won
under tough Clltumstanccs.' '
Campbell, who works closely
wilh lhe Bush campaign, said ClinIOn 's nalional lead appears 10 have
leveled orr at aboul 25 poinls and
he expects il to sink to lhe 18-20
range lhis week. "It will be singledigits afler lhe Republican convcntion and we'll have a horscrace"
he said happily.
•
Not lhat Campbell or any or lhe
governors are euphoric. And they
did have some advice for Bush on a
teleconference call Saturday, most
of il involving ihe need to mix 8lllf
mingle. '
"Don'llel the Secret Service
run the campaign," was how
Campbell paraphrased some of
what was said to BliSh.
\

\

:
·
·

·

·
. I .

�Monday, Augult :i. 1992

· commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Coart Stnet
l'lllllei'CIJ', Oblo
DEVOTED TO Tim ll'l'lUB8T8 or THit llltiG8-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publloher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Muager

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letter&amp; are subject to editina and must be sianed with name,
address and telepbone number. No unllianed letter&amp; will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addlessing issues, oot pmooalilica.

:where will Perot
supporters go?
By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
. DAYTON - Ross Perot's decision to slay out or the presidential
sweepstakes may mean lower votcr turnout at a time or declining interest
in voting, some political analysts say.
· " In the long run, I have a feeling many or these Perol supponers will
abstain from voting out of contempt," said Stephen Benneu, a political
~ ie nce professor at the University of Cincinnati. "With Perot pulling out,
there's a big gap in motivation for a large portion of the electorate to gel
to the polls."
Bennett' s view was echoed by Norm Fogel, a University of Dayton
political science professor. He said there is a strong chance Perot's
absence will mean a lower voter turnout.
"!think some of the people to whom he appealed are somewhat upset
with the political process," Fogel said. " They saw him as representing
something different and could have really increased the turnout among
that group of people."
Bennett said voter turnout has been declining since the early 1960s,
partly because or discontent with the political party system. During the
1988 election, only 50.2 percent of the voting·age population turned ou~
!he lowes t in a presidential election since 1924.
· On July 16, Perot announced that he wouldn't be a candidate for presi·
tlent for fear of throwing lhc election into the hands or the U.S. House,
where each state would gel one vote.
That left the race a contest between President Bush and Democratic
candidate Bill Clinton, and Perot backers without a candidate.
Fogel said many Perot supporters are even more disenchanted with the
Political process now than they were before.
" They felt abandoned by the political process, and now they're aban·
doned by their own political candidate for whom they volunteered," he
said. ·
· Tom Class, head or the Perot campaign for west-central Ohio, said he
doesn't think Perot's absence will mean lower voter turnout and that Clinton will benefit most from former Perot supporters because he offers a
, hange.
However, Class said he is holding out hope that Perot will get back in
the race.
" It' s taken a lot out or a lot or people," he said. "He didn't leave us a
choice for a leader. "
Bcnneu said Clinton will benefit from Perot's absence in the short term
bCcausc Perot supporters arc upset with the status quo.
" The real question becomes how many will vote, and of those who
vote, how will they split," Bennett said. " I would bet that more people
from the Perot camp will back Clinton than Bush."

Letters to the editor
Thanks patient residents
Anyone who has driven through
Shade recently knows there is a lot
of Ohio Deparunent of Transponation construction work going on.
Due to the type of construction
work, Shade residents arc having to
ondure torn up sidewalks, driveways and front lawns. But for all
the inconvenience, Shade residents •
are being very patient and ODOT
personnel on the project want to

publicly thank the residents for
their cooperation.
John Dowler, deputy director of
District 10 of ODOT, Marietta,
echoes the thank you and asks residents to continue to bear with
ODOT and ODOT's contractor on
the job, Shelly and Sands Company
of Zanesville.
Ohio Department of Transportation
Columbus

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Monday, Aug. 3, the 216th day of 1992. There are 150 days
left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
Five hundred years ago, on Aug. 3, 1492, Christopher Columbus set
sail from Palos, Spain, with three ships - the Nina, the Pinta and the
Santa Maria- on a voyage that would take him to prcsent·day America.
On this date:
In 1914, Germany declared war on France.
In 1921 , baseball commissioner Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis
refused to reinstate the former Chicago White Sox players implicated in
the "Black Sox " scandal, despite their acquittals in a jury trial.
In 1923, Calvin Coolidge was sworn in as the 30th president of the
United States, following the death of Warren G. Hanling.
In 1936, the U.S. State Department urged Americans in Spain to leave
because or that country's civil war.
· In 1942, 50 years ago, Mildred McAfee took the oath of office as
director of the Women's Reserve, U.S. Naval Reserve.
In 1943, Gen. GeorgeS. Patton slapped a Gl at an army hospital in
Sicily, acc using him of cowardice.

Buchanan positions himself for '96
WASHINGTON _The l~te
Sen. George Aiken, R·Vt., had a
famous plan for ending the Viet·
nam War: Declare victory and gel
out. Former Republican presidential challenger Pat Buchanan will
follow a similar strategy in Hous·
· VICtory
·
I on bv dec Ianng
an d
endorsing the BushJQuayle ticket.
After a bloody and biucr baule
to unseat an incumbent whom he
regards as a traitor 10 the cause,
Buchanan hasn't changed his mind
about Bush as much as he has reconciled himself to reality. He will
bow out in Houston gracefully, but
not before claiming some measure
of vino~eation and victory in veer·
ing the GOP back to the Reagan
right With time running out before
the Republl·can . conventt'on,
Buchanan isn't talking. He told us
lhl·s ·,s h1's "down u·me."
Some of his victories seem triv·
ial. Buchanan will take credit for
forcing John Frohnmayer out as
Chal·rman of the Nau·onal Endow·
mcnt for the AilS' a ,,'avor1'tc r•'ght·
wing target, over its funding of
controversial an. Days after Bush's
close call in New Hampshire,
where Buchanan won 37 percent or
the Republican vote, the White
House forced Frohnmayer's resig·

Convention "at least" 19 women
have come forward with allegations
of intimate relations with Bill Clin·
ton. This follows a half·dozcn such

R b rt].
0

e

m

' agman

pre·convention allegations that
were considered serious enough to
be checked out by the Clinton

c~~f the governor had the affairs
he is now being charged with, he
would not have had. any time for
sleep, let alone to have run the state
for the past decade," says Wright
' th 1 h "Br'ng ng these
~~arg~s a~fght be ~he' nation ' s
growth industry these days. Bl!l-WC
take all this very seriously, and you
can expect that we will respond
quickly and forcefully to tell the
truth and SCI the record straight as
these false charges are leveled."
I

Hr

r 11 1: J'v'T
U':&gt;l

... !"'

'

nation.
"I think the Republican Party is
going to be a Buchanan Party by
1996," Buchanan said in a recent

arc fewer than the "brigades" he
once referred to, but they arc diehard and surprisingly young.
His early rivals - including
Dan Quayle, Jack Kemp, former
drug czar William Bennett, and
Texas Sen . Phil Gramm - rcpresent a wing or Republicanism that
could relegate Buchanan to the role
of outcasL This wing' is more inter·
venlionist, internationalist and proIsrael.
Despite these schisms, his difmeeting with supporters. "And one ferenccs with rival conservatives
or the reasons 1 think so is when have become more personal than
people refuse 10 debate and argue, political. Benncu suggested at one
and simply call names, it shows an point that Buchanan was "nining
intellectual weakness that can't be with fascism,"_and Buchanan
sustained. They kept me out of pri· vowed not to forget the attack.
maries. They can keep you out of Kemp referred 10 his "nativism"
·
They can kccp you off and GOP head Rich Bond even
convent•ons.
ballol5. They can disinvite you to made a comparison once between
d.mners. And th ey can kccp me out Buchanan and David Duke. Even
of the Houston convention. But for a strcctfighter like Buchanan,
that's not the way you're going to some of those punches seemed to
win the country."
wobble him.
The baulc- I'mcs arc aircady v1s1··
What made Buchanan run in the
bl e forawarm
· 1996 amongcon- first place? Conservative Caucus
scrvativcs vying for the .heart and Chairman Howard Phillips had ini·
soul of the party. Buchanan will be tially urged Buchanan to run as a
promoting what some have called third-party candidate, which
•'palcoconservatism," protection- Buchanan never seriously consid·
ism, "America First," and anti· ered . Buchanan's friends say he
immigration. Buchanan's followers wouldn't have ever made the run

By Jack Anderson
an d
Michael Binstein

PICKED UP lljr
IAAI)fll rr AND wrNT unur
n') IYIRI\DLC';)
~
n"IUJ:

.·

Q

had it not been for what he viewed
as Bush's caving in on lhc principle
of quotas, a "betrayal" that followed the breaking of the tax
pledge.
Houstmi will be the place not so
much where Buchanban cnhds one
presidential quest, ut wf ere'96
he
launches a new one or
·
Buchanan is a man biding his time,
taking names and planning for
another day . Behind the smile
there's a scrappy Irish kid pawing
the ground for another fight
·
"We're (Republicans) behaving
like the liberdls did before the Rca·
gan landslide when.they said, 'You
know the conservauves- you can
ignore their arguments. They ' re:
irrelevant. You don't even have to
listen to them,"' Buchanan told:
supporters.
QUAYLE'S
FAN1 bCLUB
Q 1
· bl Dan uay c may no c a e to
spell potato, but he has proved
himself to be an adept vOIC counter
and Capitol
for
B h Hill
E emissary
D
George us · ven
cmocrats
d h Q 1
grudgingly co nee c t at uay e
has been Bush's secret weapon
during light legislative bottles.
In the maddening days leading
up 10 the Senate's final vote on
Clarence Thomas' confirmation to
the Supreme Court, for example,
Quayle worked the Hill like a
precinct captuin, keeping rank-and·
file Republicans on board and
coaxing some Democrats to vote
with the administration. "The
White House ignores him until it
comes to a real close vote and they
need some help," says one member
of the Quayle fan club. "Then
Quayle 's on the phone talking to
the DcmocraL•."
One top Democrat praises
Quayle because he "doesn't threat·
en or bludgeon and he doesn't
oversell it. Quayle knows which
spigoL&lt; to wm."
During a rcccnl close vOle in lhc
Senate, one Republican was weighing his options in the safe haven or
his own office when his private
phone rang. Confident that Quayle
hadn ' t recognized his voice, and
determined not to have his vote
swayed, the senator replied, "I'm
sorry, the senator' s not in right
now," and hung up the phone.
Jack Andtrson and Michael
Binstein are synricated writers
for United Feature Syndicate,
Inc.

~Jilmz.
Good foreign policy begins at home
As President Bush and his
Democratic challenger, Bill Clinton, mull over their campaign
strategies, they could both usefully
direct time and thought to a (epon
recently issued by the Carnegie
Endowment for International
Peace. The product of a national
commission whose membership
could most accurately be described
as High Establishment, it is titled,
" Changing Our Ways: America
and the New World.''
There is not a radical, or radically new, thought in il5 90 pages, but
the report's net effect is considerably larger than the sum of its
parts. In direct, wcll·reasoned and
lucid prose, it makes a compelling
case for an American international·
ism in the post·Cold War world
based solidly on domestic revilal·
ization and new thinking about the
nature or world leadership.
This is a more substantial
accompli shm ent than its bare
descnption conveys. Commissions
by nature and too often by design
arc Rube Goldberg contraptions
whose sound and fury ordinarily
signify nothing or its close equivalent. When their membership is
drawn entirely from the ranks or
those who once held high office
and/or aspire to hold it again, as
was the Carnegie Endowment's,
provocative analysis usually need
not be anticipated or feared . Codili·
cation of the conventional wisdom
is the name of the game.
But " Changing Our Ways" is
belter than that by a substantial
order of magnitude. It addresses
American needs at home as well as

Clinton team battles

WASHINGTON (NEA) Attention, bimbos or America: If
you want a six·figure check, just
join the growing number of ~omen
who swear they had an affau w1th
Democratic presidential nominee
Bill Clinton. Proof is desirable, but
definitely optional.
: Be forewarned, the Clinton campa;gn's " bimbo watch" will not let
Jo:~&gt;Ur allegations go unchallenged.
In the end, you will probably have
to prove that you really did meet
the governor at least once.
; Several chcckout·counter
t4bloids and their television equiva·
Ients have standing offers of
S:\00,000 to SSOO,OOO to . any
women who will come forward
with tales or uysts with Clinton.
; Betsey Wright, the senior ClintQn aide in charge of responding to
and dcnccting these charges, says
t~at since the Democratic National

Pige-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, August 3. 1992

rather than commanding obedience.
Nor is there any real alternative
to the hard, expensive, grinding
business of adjusting to the new
facts of international life. It is not
just the "paradox or this new era
that a nation that pursues unilater·
alism puts iL• own people at risk."
It is also a fact that our economic
of its own principles and ll\Je self· and political well·being ultimately
interest dunng the 45·ycar struggle depend on the economic well.being
with the Soviet Union . And, in and political development of
restrained language no less firm for nations as far removed as Russia
il5 restraint, it repeatedly demands and China and as close at hand as
that we Americans face up to the Mexico.
realitie s of our country's changed
Most imponantly, our ability to
position in the world. We' re still compete with many of them as well
very large and very powerful, but as assist some or them requires the
there arc other big boys on the rcstordtion of economic discipline
block, and they're growing much and fiscal rc.&lt;truint at home, easier
raster than we.
to advocate than to implement.
The report is essentially a set or " To advance our intcrcsL' abroad,
' descriptions of the current stutus we must get our own house in
quo and prescriptions for improv· order," the commission report
ing or changing i~ all in service to says. And the task is made more
a fundamental proposition. The urgent by the simple reality that the
commission believes passionately American people wi II be lillie
that the United States has an obli- inclined to look outward so long as
gation to itself no less than to the they are distrJCted by doubt about
world to participate fully in the the health or their own society.
shaping or a new order from the
The nation's 11 Crisis is essentialrubble or the old fixed certainties.
ly political, not economic," says
It will not be easy, the report the rcpon, and that is unvarnished
warns. Some of our worst habits truth . Which brings us back to
must be abandoned. Unilateral Bu ~ h and Clinton . As everyone
action may still be necessary, and now understands, this is going to
indeed inevitable, under limited be the longest presidential cam ·
circumsi.anccs, but for the most pan paign in American history . It is
there is a new reality that can be already over two weeks old, with
ignored only at grt.at cosL Neither the traditional Labor Day kickoff
our prospenty nor ow secunty can still five weeks away. Both sides
be long insured by acting unilater- are campaigning hard, gouging and
ally . Leadership m today's world counter·punching, concentrating on
involves skill at molding consensus "caringII and uramily values" and

i~fidelity

Insiders report the Clinton campaign has hired one of the nation's
most respected private investiga·
tion firms, San Francisco's Palladino and Sutherland - headed by
auorncy Jack Palladino - to check
out and to discredit these women's
stories.
Wright, who is sensitive to
roccot stories about the usc of private detectives for " opposiuon
research" (i.e, digging up din on
your opponent), is quick to point
out that the Palladino firm is being
used only as a defensive measure to
counter what she terms "bimbo
eruptions: "
.
"Jack and his people have the
skills to intcrvicw witnesses and to
quickly gather facts that we on the
campaign staff don't have. It's a
shame to have to spend campaign
money on thjngs like this, but that
is what presidential politics has

the nation's challenges and respon·
sibilities abroad. ll admil5, albeit
too indirectly for my taste, that the
nation from time to time lost sight

Hodding Carter Ill

charges

become today."
Some of the charges against
Clinton seem to result from the
work of a Liulc Rock, Ark., private
detective, !.any Cue, who claims
that he is on the payroll of several
"national news orfanization~ to
check out Clinton s past life ."
Case, for inSianee, brought forward
a tape-recorded intcrYiew with an
Oklahoma woman who .claimCd to
have had a long affair with Clinton.
Palladino in!ervicwed the
woman in Oklahoma and obtained
an affidavit in which she claimed to
have been tricked by Case. She
denied she had ever met Clinton.
The Clinton campaign then gave
out the woman's statement, along
- with her permission - her
name and phone number to any
news organization inquiring. In
interviews, 1he woman told
reporters she has suffered from

"multiple personality disorders"
as a result of a brain tumor that ha•
since been removed. No national
media outlet picked up her claims
of an affair with Clinton.
Palladino also dcOated charges
brought by Sally Perdue, SO, a former Miss Arkansas, who claimed a
short affair with Clinton in the
carl y 19KOs. Perdue's charges were
publiciled by the fringe New
Alliance Party, headed by Lenora
Fulani.
Perdue could offer no proof of
the alleged affair, and Clinton
denied ever having met her.
Palladino and his employees
quickly contacted friends and relatives of the woman and found
many willing to put on the rc&lt;;ord
damaging statements about her
credibility. Reportedly, several
were able to offer details proving.
the purported affair could not have
taken place.
The only quasi·legilimatc outlet

competence.
But aside from George Bush
playing to his strong suit by talking
tough about Iraq, whose militury
defeat has been the one dear triumph of his otherwise undistinguished presidency, neither side is
talking much about foreign policy.
That is unfortunate, since there is
so much to talk about and so little
agreement on either questions or
answers. "Changing Our Ways" is
a wake ·up call as well as a
blueprint, and in both cases an invi·
tation to national debate about the
shape and substance of American
foreign poli cy in a profoundly
changed world.
No politician could or would
auempt to deal with all the rcpon's
specifics on the campaign stump.
The voters' eye.• would glal.c over
long before he got halfway
through. It is no less true, however,
that the·candidate who involves the
people in a discussion or the complexities and demands of the world
of the 1990s between now and
Nov. 3 will have a far easier time
of enlisting their sup]Xlfl in dealing'
with them after Jan. 20. "Changing
Our Ways" is a straightforward,
thorough guide to that much·needed dialogue.
Hodding Carter Ill, former
State Department spokesman
aad award-winning rtporter, editor and publisher, is president of
MainStreet, a Wa.~hington, D.C.based television production company and a syndrcated writer for
Newspaper ~: nterprlse Associa·
tion.

that aired the woman's charges was
lhc syndicated Sally Jesse Raphael
Show on TV. One major tabloid,
lhc Enquirer, took the background
matcrial and wmed the story into
how a "weird cult" is trytng to
" dc.•troy Clinton."
.
The Clinton camp is especially
scnsiti ve to these allegations since
singer Gennifcr Flowers' claims
that she had a .12·year affair with
the governor triggered a media .
frenzy in April. Now that the publicity has worn down, and so many .
new Clinton " bimbos" have
popped up, Flowers is reportedly
negotiating for a nude lay-out in
Penthouse magazine.
In the meantime, her allegations ·
arc not forgoucn in the Clinton
camp. Sources say a major effort is
underway to prove that Flowers
was paid by Republican operatives .
to come forward with her story.
Some proof is said to be in hand,
but " not enough yet to go public."

.----Local briefs----.
Continued from pqe 1
the driver's side. Damage to the back and front quw:r panels was
moderate, police said.
Theft of items from two palted vehicles ue also being investi·
gated by~ Police.
About 7 p.m. Saturday, Barbara Kline. Condor St Pomeroy
rc~ that scvcnl items had been takat liom her W:locted
wbilc it was pjllted on BUIIemut Avenue. Taken were a black nylon
cassette hOlder with 15 tipes and a ltandmadc wallet
Police also received a report of scvcnl items being taken from an
unloclr.ed car parked on tlie lot at McCI~m's Restaurant about 8
p.m. Friday. Among the Items taken were a black leather purse, two
casse~, a roll of pennies and a 35 mm Clll!cra along with film
belongmg to Joy Farley, and sewn rapes owited by Uoda Roberts
•wasdri-the~
'

OHIO Weather
Tuesday, Aug. 4
Accu-Weather' forecast

conditions and high

MICH.

IMansfield 175' I•
IND.

EMS units answer calls

w-=

Meigs Emergency Services units
eight calls b assisI.ance over the wedteild.
.
' ·
On Sunday at 11:06 a.m.. Racine unit too1t Robert Wood from
the station to Velerans Memorial HQspital. At 1:09 p.m., Sryacuse
unit went to the mobile home ~for Desiree Clemens, who was
taken to O'Blcness Memcrial
ita!. At 3:49 p.m., Racine unit
went to State Route 338 and toolt ill Morris to VetaanS. At 8:45
p.m., Pomeroy unit respondod to Spring Avenue for an auto rue.
Slumon Mattox was the bwner. At 9:09p.m., Pomeroy unit went to
U.S. Route 33.James Gm!naway was taken to VelielliD.!.
On Monday at 1:10 a.m., Middleport squad went to South Thin!.
Charloue Coleman went to Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 2:05 Lm.,
Pomeroy unit to Lalr.cwood Road for Anthony Perry, who was
li'BIISpOr1ed to Veu:rans. At 5:45 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Village Orccn Apartments. Teriy Smith went to Pleasant Valley.

Area deaths
Celia Ann Hite, 81, 367 Ash
Sucet, Middleport, died Saturday,
Aug. I, 1992, at Vcterans Memoli·
a! Hospital.
Born on Aug. 30, 1910,
Pomeroy, she was the daughter of
the late George Batey and Uobcnia
Piatt Batey. She was a meriber of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, and a life member of the
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post
128,•Ameri(:an Legioo.
She is survived by her husband,
John C. (Jack) Hite. a ~. Viola
Bayles, and a brother, Ben Batey,
all of Middlcpon, several nieces
and nephews.
Besides her pmnts she was preceded in death by a sister, Bessie
Quillen, a brother, Jim Batey, and
infant brothers and sisters.
Funeral services will be held at
I p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. Paul Taylor will
offiCiate and burial will be in Miles
Cemetery, Rutland. Friends may·
call at the funenl home 2 to 4 p.m.
and after 7 p.m. Tuesday.

Ralph H. Wiseman
Ralph H. Wiseman, 80,
Wilkesville, died Saturdiy, Aug. 1,
1992, at his residellce.
He wu a retirccl Obio Ocpirt-

mentofTranspcrtalion emplcjyoc, a
member of the WilkesviliC United
Methodist Chlnth, the Wilbsvillc
Orphans Friend Lodge and ·the
Wi!Wville 01apter OES 11.11.
Wiseman wu born.Man:h 22.
1912, in Wilkcsvillc, SlXI of the lilc
Howard Anson and Mary Francis
Steele Wiseman. He married
Madclinc Petm on Nov. 16, 1932,
in McArthur, and she survives with
two daughters, Mrs. Ho.ward
(Karen) Kessell, Columbus, and
0"·~ IUiantla) Bu•-L-, n-1...... -~ '".
"""" ""
ton.J;\urviving are five grand·
h'ldren and~ great
dchil
e1
our
-gran
•
~ervices will be conducted at
Aum•d 4 at....
I:30 p.m. "'··-'·
,....,.y, • - • ""'
ilkesville
United
Methodist
W
Chun:h, with Rev. Mel Franlr.lin
officiating. Burial will be in the
Salem Center Cemetery. Calling
hours are from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Monday u the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home in Vinton.
Masonic services will be bcld at
8:4S p.m. Monday . by the
Wilkesville Orphans Friend Lodge.

u-.

John Mayes, Sr.

POINT PLEASANT-John H.

Mayes; ~r., 88, of Point Pleasant,

died Fridaf, July 31, 1992, 11
Plcaslllt vaucy Holpllll.
•
He was bClm ~ IS, 1904, in
r~mnnlll p..,..:, 1 ·.00 of the late
........,...
-·••
Fral)tH and a:fect~Ma~:
e was a
~addition to his pmuts, he was
aliD = i n death by his wife,
IUialho') Mayes and a
Rae

'"-

•

son. lol)n H.~ Jr.

H~~~~~ MEDJCAL CENTEll

. Julr
Ja,ctson,
Morvan

v~ and

-

MaQie

Thomas
Nettie

Juir' 31 blrlhl Ronald Oml~~e, son,
Mr. aild Mrs. William
dauJhiCI', ViniOll.
Aaa. 1 dlachar&amp;H - Beverly
Kent, Okey Pullins and Aulcla
-Randolph.

Forty-two cases processed
in Meigs County Court

Meigs County Court Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien processed 42
cases last week.
Fined were: Robert Vance,
Albany, speed, $20 and costs ;
Angela Y. Shuler, Pomeroy, oper·
ated a motor vehicle with excess of
20 percent tint on rear window, $20
and costs; Sheni Todd, Columbus,
seat bell violation, costs only;
Thomas Swan, Rutland, liuering,
costs, 16 hours of community ser·
vice with litter control; Brian
Wolfe, Portland, domestic vio·
lence, six months in jail, suspended
to lime served, two years proba·
tion, and costs; Steven Shuler,
Langsville, seat belt violation, costs
only; Christopher George, Syracuse, seat belt violation, costs only;
Isabel M. Dill, Rutland, failure to
L. CLAVDE MILLER
display valid registration, $10 and
costs.
Lewis C. Miller
Tina L. Blevins, Middleport,
uwis Claude Miller, 83, Sec· seat bell violation, costs only;
ond Avenue, Oallipolis, died Satur- Heather H. Harless, Rutland, seat
day,Aug. l,l992,inColumbus.
belt violation, costs only; Warren
He was the owner and operator H. Warwiclr., Jr., Winfield, W.Va,
of Millet's Home fer Funerals until $31 and costs, speed; Dale J. Todd,
his retirement in Apri~ 1989. He Columbus, Pomeroy, seat belt viohad been associated with the funer- lation, costs only; Donna S. Capeal business in Gallipolis for 57 hart, Pomeroy, seat belt violation,
yem.
costs only; Erick T. Graham,
.After graduating from Gallia Racine, seat belt violation, costs
Academy High School in 1929, be only; Chad A. Wolfe, Racine, failbegan world~ ll the Entsminger 1m to control, $20 and cosl5; MariFuneral Home m 1932 and gradual- lyn W. Jeffers, Hamilton, speed,
ed from the Cincinnati School of $22 and costs; Kenneth E. Reed,
Bmbllmin1 in 1935, the fint cia Waterford, failure to display registo ~te under a then new law tration, $10 and costs; Nick B.
reqWm\g embalmm to auend a 12 Lawer, Middleburg Hts., Ohio,
month post high school uaining speed, $24 and costs.
program.
Alice F. Robinson, Rutland, seat
In April, 1946, he established belt violation, cosl5 only; Albert L.
Miller's Home fer Funerals, Coun Pooler, Miamisburg, seat belt vioStree~ GaDif.!llis, withbis wife, Iris lation, COSI5 only; Paul Robinson,
Bodimer Miller, Yihom be manied RUlland, seat belt violation, cosl5
in 1937. In June, 1954, the business only; Jean Corder, Pomeroy, speed,
moved to 532 Secood Ave.
S23 and costs; Gregory W. King,
He was a member of Grace Albany, speed, $22 and costs;
United Methodist Church, Oallipo. Patricia A. Jones, Reedsville, seat
lis; the Gallipolis Kiwanis Club, belt violation, cosl5 only; Bobby J.
where he was a founding member
and served u president in 1963;
Morning Dawn F&amp;AM Lodge No.
7, Galltpo'Us, Knights Tcmplar and
· r ...th of the Kn' h f
South-Central Ohio
the N1om1,_,...,e
•g ts o
Tonight, partly cloudy. Slight
Pythiu.
He was born March 2, 1909 in chance or showers late. Low
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., to the late around 60. Chance or rain 30 per·
Darius Clinton and Ora Walters cent. Tuesday, partly cloudy with a
slight chance of showers. High in
Miller.
Survivors include two children, the mid-70s. Chance or rain 30 perFred llodimel' Miller of Columbus cent
Extended forecast:
and Claudia Jean Babcock of
Brooklyn, N.Yi one sister Marie
Wednesday through •·riday:
Taylor of Gallipolis; three grandFair Wednesday through Friday.
children, three ~hildn:n, t1uec Lows mostly in the 50s each day.
g!cat grandchtldren and several Highs in the 70s Wednesday and
Thursday and upper 70s to low 80s
nte: ~ ~CC: in death by his Friday.
wife, two blothen, Rolm Earl and
William Ronald; three sisters, Ruth
·I..o utse
. Evans, Arlcne Morsc, and
Lena Gl'ICC Miller.
Friends may call after 3 p.m.
Veterans Memorial
today at the McCov-Moore Funeral
SAWRDAY ADMISSIONS ·
Home, Weth~rh~lt Chapel_. First None.
A;venue: Galhpohs. Masomc SerSAWRDAY DISCHARGES ·
v1ces Will be conducted at 9 p.m. Trinit Whitcraft.
bytheMMlin$,DawnLodgeN7.
scrNDAY ADMISSIONS
Services will be 10 a.m. TuesGlenn
Baker, Reedsville.
c1a at the Grace United Methodist
SUNDAY
DISCHARGES
c~h with the Revs. Wanat Wil·
None.
Slltlllld Joe Hefner officiating. The
bod willlk in state one hour prier
to ~e services. Burial will be in
Mound Hill ......
1"~•- ,.

Ryers ill, Pomeroy, seat belt violation, costs only; Fred Miller,
Racine, DUI, six months in jail,
suspended to 30 days, $600 and
costs, operator's license suspended
for two years, ~o years probation,
aiCQhol counsehng, no operator's
license, six months in jail suspended to 30 days, concurrent with DUI
charge, $75 and costs, two years
probation.
Carlos McKnight, Middleport,
no operator's license, five days in
jail, suspended with valid operator's license within 90 days, $75
and costs; Anthony Smith,
Cheshire, DUI, $350 and costs, 30
days in jail suspended to three,
operstor' s license suspended for 90
days, one year probation, alcohol
assessment, upon enrollment and
completion of the RTP School,
$1 SO of fine and jail time will be
suspended, failure to control, $25
and costs; Herman L. Dillon, Gallipolis expired registration, $10 and
COSts.
William R. Johnson, Racine,
seat belt violation, costs only; Eric
W. Sim, Pomeroy, seat belt viola·
lio, costs only; Paul E. Wilson, dis·
posal of a beverage container upon
the lands under agreement wi!h the
Division of Wildlife, $25 and

Victoria Buchanan, Long Bottom,
disorderly conduct, $50 fmc, sus·
ponded, costs, 90 days probation;
James N. Wilson, Shade, littering,
$25 and costs; Kenneth Mitchell,
Langsville, OUI, $600 and costs,
six months in jail, suspended to 30
days, operator's licenses suspended
for two years, two years ~.
alcohol assessment, driv~ under
suspension, six months in jail suspended to 30 days, concurrent with
DUI, $100 and costs, two years
probation, left of center, $30 and
costs.
Charles E. Michael, Jr., Racine,
passing bad checks (2), $25, costs
and restitution; Joyce Ann Smith,
Belpre, consume alcohol in a park
area, costs; Jeff P. Miller, Belpre,
consume alcohol in a park area,
costs; Matt Ridenour, Long Bot·
tom, disorderly condic~ costs only;
Shaun Price, Long Bottom, DUI,
$350 and COSIS, 10 days in jail suspended to three, one year probation, upon enrollment and completion of the RTP school, $150 of
fine and jail time will be suspended.
Forfeiting bond was Robert
Bromfield, Dayton, speed, $65,
seat belt violation, $40; Bonnie
Lucas, Galena, speed. $85.

Hospital news

or~~~~=

cousina, Nucy Rockhold, Cuya·
hosa Faha, . Delmar Oaborne,
Rcedivillc, and Joan Arui Lockbart,
Coolville.
'
Baidel her parents she was prci:eded In death by one brother, Glen
Perry in 1989.
Scrvica were
at I p.m. at
ihe White Funera Home in
Coolville with Rev. Robcn. Sandtn
olf'ICiatlna. Burial wu in Succesa
Clum:hofChristCemcay.

todar

Stocks

Am Elc Power ............ .......34 3/4
Ashland Oil.. .. ....................26 liB
AT&amp;T............................ ....43 7/B
Bank One........................... 44 3/4
Bob Evans ......................... 19 1/B
Channing Shop..................31 718
~lding .......:.............. l9 1/2
M~ul................... 16 SIB
Goode: &amp;R ..................67
Key cnturion ................. .. 20 1/4
Lands End..........................32 3/8
Limited Inc ....................... 21 7/B
Muhimodialnc .................. 27
Rax RestauranL...................9/16
Reliance Electric ................18
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 16 314
Shoney's lne............. ., ....... 22 3/B
~tar Bank ...........................31
Wendy lnt'1........................ 11 3/4
Worthingmnlnd. ............... 24
Stock rtports are the 10:30
Lm. quoin provided bL Blunt,
FJlllald toewlrl Gall Pillis.

or the Southeast.
Rain was reported in Buffalo,
N.Y., and showers and thunder·
storms were forecast in the Ohio
Valley, upper Michigan and the
western Plains.
Thunderstorms hiJ the southern
Atlantic coast Sunday and contin.
ued at Cape Hatteras, N.C., and
Miami early today.
Thunderstorms Sunday over
Texas produced gusts to 67 mph at
San Angelo, hail an inch in diame·
ter at Burkburnett and golf-ball size hail at Krum.
More than 2 1{2 inches of rain
fell in six hours Sunday at Jacksonville, Fla., and I 1/2 inches fell
at Fort Benning, Ga. Williston ,
N.D., received half an inch or ram,
a record for the dato.
. The West baked again. Record
highs were reached Sunday in
Ulah, including Salt Lake City, at
1~3; Provo, 101 ; and Brigham
City, 100. It was 96 in Phoenix at
midnight.
Temperatures in the 60s and 70s
were forecast today in northern
New England, the Great Lakes
states, the northern Plains and the
PacifiC Coast; the 80s on the East
Coast, Ohio and Tennessee valleys
cenual Plains and northeaster~
Roclr.ies; the 90s in the South and
the central and western Rockies·
and above I00 in Arizona 3nd cen:
tral California
The nation's hot spot Sunday
was Death Valley, Calif. , at 123
deJtrcCS.

Nine killed on
Ohio highways
By The Associated Press
The Ohio Highway Patrol said
nine people died in weelcend traffic
accidents, including four in a pair
or truck-train collisions.
Wmcnd fatalities were counted
from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
LIMA - Bryan M. Perkins, 27,
of Lima, was killed in a one-car
accident on an Allen County road..
SANDUSKY - Jamie L.
Smith, 21, of Pickerington, and a
24-year·old woman whose name
has not been released, were killed
in a truek-train accident.
SWANTON - David A. Seamans, IS, of Bensalem, Pa., in a
one-car accident on the Ohio Tumpilr.e in Lucas County.
SATURDAY
TOLEDO - Douglas J. Crosby,
22, a pedestrian hit by a vehicle on
Douglas Road in Lucas County.
LIMA- George A. Wagner,
60, and Darlene Booth, 60, both of
Continental, in a train-truck accident on a city street.
•
W. CARROLLTON -Randall
J. Brewer, 22, of Moraine, a motoicyclisl on a city street in Montgomery County.
MARION - Charles H. Carey,
49, ofMarioo, in a one-car accident
on Ohio 739 in Marion County.

Lottery numbers

Weather

SurYIVOII include one daughter,
J~la S~ of Mesa,AZ.; tluec
SISim, VIJIUUI f:leal and Vivan
Bayes. both of Point ~ and
~OMirprdH
. ..._ Mayea ofLI~
City
''
"""" brllthers,
Ma • 1'1. Gallipolis,
Scotty ~•wMayes
of ~t P1casant, and Eugene Augusta Barnhart
Mayes of S~ Antonio. TX; and
Augusta L. Perry Barnhart, 83,
four grandchild;ml· .
cond
Tuppers Plains, died Friday, July
Func~ SI,'MCCS will be . ~- 31, 1992 at her residence.
tell Tuesday. 11 a.m.. at ForeSt Hi.~
Born in Reedsville, she was a
Cemetery m Flalrock. W.Y... ~·· daughter of the late Charles and
the Rev. Louis A. Huacll ofBciat, Dorothy Ch1110y Perry. Sbe was a
ln.K.
·
teacher in the Olive.Qrarige School·
"Frienck may, call l!!e Clow·HUI- Disuict for 45 yem. She - also
sell Funenl HOIIIC Tuesday from an antiq110 dealer in the Tuppers
9:30 Lm. ID 10:30 a.m.
Plainlllel.
. .

Hospital news

Ohio weather will be
cool, dry most of week
By The Associated Press
Forecasters were predicting an
unu~ual weather occurance for
Ohio later this week: Three straight
days without rain.
The National Weather Service
said afler the showers and thunderstorms move out or the Slate Tuesday, dry conditions arc on tap for
Wednesday through Friday.
It also win be cooler, with highs
in the 70s ~ the period.
The record-high tempemure for
this date at the Columbus weather
station lVIII 100 degrees in 1955
while the record low was 45 in
1965. Sunset tonight will he at8:44
p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 6:33
a.m.
Around tbe natiOD
ShOwers made their way across
the eastern Great Lalr.es area early
today. Thunderstorms struck parts

w

Celia Hite

The Dally Sentinel Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs announcements
Reception planned
Family and friends of residents
at Overbrook Center are invited to
meet the new administrator, Linda
Briggle, on Thursday at 7 p.m.
Entertainment will be provided by
White's Hill Band.
Membership fees due
Members of American Legion
Drew Webster Auxiliary Unit No.
39 are reminded the membership
fees are due and should be sent to
Mary Martin, Box 44 3, Middlepon,
Ohio, 45760.
Bible stbool
Vacation Bible School at the
Silver Run Baptist Church in
Cheshire will be held today
through Friday fro 6-8 p.m. nightly.
Revival
Revival at Faith Tabernacle
Church on Bailey Run Road will be
held Thursday through Sundat at 7
p.m. ni(!htl~. Brother Noah aliicoat wtll e evangelist. Pastor
Emmett Rawson invited the public.
Services set
Rev. Charles Hardy, Oak: Hill,
will speak at the Old Kyger Free
Will Baptist Church in Cheshire on
Saturday at 7 p.m. Rev . Bob
Thompson, pastor; invites the publie.
Trustees to meet
The Rutland Township Trustees

DOWIIIIIG CIILDS

MUlUII MUSSII

INSUUNCE

111 Sectllll St., Pouroy
Y~IIDEPEIIDEIIT

AHITS SEIVIII
MlltsCOUIJY
SIICI1161

will meet Wednesday at 6:30 p.m.
at the Rutland Fire Slation. Public
invited.
Reunion planned
The Sellers family reunion will
be held Aug. 16 at Star Mill Park in
Racine with a basket dinner at
noon. Family and friends welcome.
Vacation bible school
Vacation Bible School at the
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
will be Aug. 10-14 from 6·8:30
p.m. nightly. The theme is "Set Sail
with the Savior!" Crafts, recreation,
music, bible games, stories and
refreshments daily. Classes for
children ages three and up. Public,
invited. Call Shari Blackwell at
992-6792 for further information.
Wolfe reunion
The annual Wolfe family
reunion will be held Sunday at
Fork.ed Run SUite Park.
Post 602 to meet
Racine American ugion Post
602 will meet Thursday at 6:30
p.m. at the post home.

'
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA ,...,
446 4114
.

CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold naming all six
numbers selected in Saturday's
Super Louo drawing with $6 mil·
lion at stake, so Wednesday's jack·
pot will be $10 million, the Ohio
Lottery said.
Here are Saturday night 's win ·
ning numbers:
Super Lotto
2-13-17·18-28·34
(two, thirteen, seventeen, eighteen, twenty-eight, thirty·four)
Kicker
2·7-4·1-6-S
(two, seven, four, one. si•. live)
Pick 3 Numbers
2·5·3
(two, live, three)
l'ick 4 Numbers
8·9·5·9
(cigh~ nine, live, nmc)

The Daily Seulinel
CUBPIII1a.81
hbiUhed neey at\emoon, Motuta1
... _ , Priola~ Ill Caart
Oh~ by the Ohio Valle)'
i•hi111
Complft)'IM•lttmtdi• Inc ., Pomeror,
Ohio 45761, Pit. flll2.31116. Socood d ...... pold •• ~.Ollie.

St.r.:::i'"""&gt;·

M- Tho -•loot Ptwo, ud U.o
Ohio NeWip&amp;_)ll:r

Ad'rriliftl

"*--atH... National

Ra~ntati",

Bnnham

Nowapapor Saleo, 78! Tltinl Menuo,
New Yaot, Now Yorlt 10011.

POBTMASTER:Bottdoddnu~ 1o

The D1i17 SenUnel, Ill Court SL.,
l'ottMio)\ Ollio 45781.
SIJUCIUPTION IIATBII
11 Curler or Molar L•t.
o.e w..L..........................................$\.60 ·
o.e w...u..........................................$11.1111
Ooe Yoor.-.................... -.........._._, $83.JO
8INOLIICO"

raroa

0.11)&lt; .......................- .............. ,_Jll Coola

8 t lliMI'IDOt ...... klpayU..curi-

--

IDIJ ftlftit , ..........l'td \o , .
DoliJ hahtl 011 a - . ab or 13
-~~~-. Cnd\1 wOlbo a t - 11'

••locrip-

No
hJ . .n pmnitlool ta
anu wMra home carrier ""'• it
ulilabla.
...... t ......

......
"""Coulf'
w......... -...................- .........-.su.ta

13 Waeb. ............. _,,,...... ,_ ............$21.84

118

u w.........-......- ..........,_............MC.'It .
O.loldo ..... Oao.lp
IS W..U. ..... - .................._,...........$2Ull

:18 w.... .........................,_,,,.........NJO' '
u-..
. .. -..... . .. .... ._. . . . . . ...., .'

�The Daily Sentinel

.Sports

Monda~Auguat3.1992

PIIIJ...._..

Houston edges Cincinnati 5-4
.

· By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Remember ' ' Spahn, Sain and pray for
rain?''
These days, it's Belcher,
Swindell and watch ou~ Reds.
.Tim Belcher and Greg Swindell
beat the HouslOII Asaros oo Friday
and Saturday as Cincinnati held
ontO a tenuous one-half game lead
over .Atlan18 in the NL West. But
come Sunday, Houston beat the
, Reds and Jose Rijo 5-4 to knock
the Reds out of fttSL
It was rookie catcher Eddie
Taubensee's home tun, on a pitch
that Ril' o said should have been
unbll8b e, that did iL
"If you take that one pitch
away, it was my best game of the
year: And he hit the best pitch 1
threw," Rijo said.
It was a forlt:ball, lo\¥.and away,
that Rijo said would htlve bounced
in front of the catcher ifTaubensee
hadn' t got his bat on it - onebanded
"With a guy on ftrS~ I was just
~ng 10 hit it in the gap and score
htm somehow," Taubensee said.
"I was able 10 stay back on it just
enough 10 get the bat on the ball."

Taubensee has benefited from a
demotion 10 Tucson. Since relUID·
ing lO the big leagues, he's hitting
with more power and consistency.
"He looks like he has picked it
up offensively. That's whr we sent
htm out there," Howe satd. "He's
staning lO juice them a little biL He
hit that one·handed. He 's a big,
sii'Ong kid.''
Taubensee appeared in 45
games for ·the AstroS, batting .162
before being sent down June 12.
Since his return July 10, be's 15 for
35 with two homers.
His seventh-inning homer
chased Rijo (8-8) and snapped the
Asii'Os' three·game losing streak.
Reliever Joe Boever (3-4) - the
third of six Houston pitchers- got
the final out of the sixth and the
ftrSt of the seventh.
"We have such a quality
bullpen, I'd be crazy not to use
them," said Howe. "I just try to
mix and match as best I can. That
way, everybody feels lilre he's got
a role lO play."
Paul O' Neill homered in the
fourth, his.lith of the year, to give
the Reds a 1-Qiead.
Rijo didn't allow a hit until the
fifth.

Fielder, Tettleton help Detroit
post 5-4 victory over Cleveland
ON THE RUN - Cincinnati ca tcher Loe
OUver (lert) puts Houston's Eric Anthony on the
r.un toward third base after being ca u ~ ht
b,etween third and home on a grounder to tbll'd

In the majors ...

Toronto (WIIlh 6-4) 11 BCIIItaa (Hm·

keth l-1). 7,)l p.m.
Deuoit (Knu'dscn 2-0) u Baltimoro
(Sutcliffe 10-11), 7:3S p.m.

NATIONAL LEAG UE
• Team

Eulem Dlvklan

, Scattlo (Fiahar 1-0) al Milwaukee (Bo-

W L PtL

. Pituburah ...............57 48 .543
Monuu1 ................55 :so -~24
New Yc.dt ............. .Si 53 .490

Gl
1

· 0Ucaao................. .50 53 .415
St. LcuiJ ................48 56 .462

S.S
6
8.5

Philldclphll ...........46 S!J .433

ll

Wetlt m DMUon
. • A!lan!fl ................... 61

&lt;42

.592

• CINCINNATI ........ 60 4]
Su Diqo ........•.... .S6 SO
: SuFranciloo ........so
• HOUI~«~. .................47 51
.. 1..o1AnaeJe. ...........4S fiO

.583

~~

.521

U.J

.476
.452

12
14.5

.429

17

ss

•••
•
'•

Saturday 's scores
Pi111bu.JP 4, St. I..ouU: I
Allltlla l San FnneUeo 3
New Ymk 3, ChiCIJO0. lA same:.
OUetgo 6, N_. YM 1, 2nd aam~~

•

.
•

New YOJ:k 4, ChiCI&amp;O 2
Mattreal I, Philadcl;hla 0
HOUMa 5, aNClNNATI 4
Allanl:a 3, San FnnciscoO, lllaamo

r.o.

Today's eames
I-IOIIIICIJ (Janea 4-4) at CNCINNATI
(Hammond 5-6), 12::B p.m.
Chic:aao (Cutillo 6-7) at Montreal
(Martinls:t !0-10), 7:3S p.m.
Philadelphia (Abbot&amp; 1·11) atSI. Lou.ia
(T&lt;wb bwy 10-4), 1'3l p.m.
San Franci1eo (W ilson ~ 11) at Sa n
Diqo (Scminan &amp;.3).10:05 p.m.

Tuesday's games
Chieaao ( H arll ~y 1·0) at Mon tr~al
(G•nlnQ' 10-8), 1:3.5 p.m.
New York (Fern andez 9·8) at Pi tt&amp;·
bu&lt;&amp;h (lockoon S-10). Bl f .m.
ClNCINNATI (Bohnn -I) at Atl&amp;nu.
(Lciwml-4), HO p.m.
Phi\ldtlphia (Mathewa 0-1 ) at St.
Low. lam 2·l), Ul p.m.
San Func isco {Burkett 1-6) at S1n
OicJO (LdTcru 12.-6), 10:05 p.m.
Hwll.On (Reynolds 0-1) 11 U. Angclet. (Martinez &amp;.8 ), IO::B p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Cllifomu . ....... 41
Kanw Cily ..........;46

51

4.$
8
14..5
1.5

IS

18..5

l.l

9
10
16

51 .442

16.5
22

Saturday's scores
Tlml!lto :J, NIIW YOlk 1

Karwu Cily I, Oakland 4

·,

GB

.448

Scaale .................... 4l 6.1 .393

-~.-3
a..EVELAND
8, Detroit S
OUc:.ao I,Smtlhll
MiDniiiOYI 9, Milwallktt 6
Calitomil6. Tau 1

hanon 1.0), 1:35 p.m.

Major league leaders
National League
BATII NG -

KNil, Philadelph ia,

.343 ; Vt n S i y k: ~ , Piuabl.l rJh , .331;
Shdfickl, San Dieao• .32.5; Butler, Los
An ~. Jl'"l; DeShieldl, Monua.l, .315;
&lt;mi:e, O.icap , .)15; GW)M , San Dieto.
.309.
RUNS - DcSbiellk, Monlrcll, 61;
HoUiru, Phikd&lt;ljmio. 65; aigio, .Houo·

Wallr.a-, Mcmtrtal, 60.
l-Il TS - Pendleton , Atlanta , 117;
DeShielda , Mon treal, 126; VanSlyke,
PiltabufJh, 126; Sheffield, San DitJO,
124; Gwrnn, San Dicao. 121; K.tuk,
Philaddph.ia, 119; Lankford, St. Louis,
111; Butler, l..oJAntde~ , I ll.
OOUBLES - Ounun, PhiladclpbM,

Atla:nla ! , San Franci100 ~ . 2nd pme
Anaela 4, San Dieao I

~

MJnnCIOU {KtueJtt 9·2) I t Chi.CIJO

(Fcmmd.. 4-7), 1 ,as p.m.
Oakland (Stew_art '7-5) at Taxaa (Bo-

Sheffield, San !-&gt;itJO. ~; Mum y, New
York, 6S; McOriff. San Dieso. 64; Bends,
PituburJII. 62; Pmdh:t.ca. Allanta, 62: L.

PilliJ:wah 2. St. t..c.Us 1

W• ern Dlvidon
Minnaota .............. 63 42 .61Xl
, Oo.ilond .,, ............. 6\ 43 .ll7
- Te:\U ......................5.5 52 ..514
~ Chleaao.... . ..
.52 51 -~

S-S), 1:05 p.m.

oeo-

Sunday's scores

Eulrm Dlvbllon
Tum
W L Pt:L
TOIOido .................. 63 41 .606
Baltimore .............. .S9 46 .$6l
Milwa~ ........... ..SS 49 ..529
8otlml .................... 48 ss .-466
Dctroit.. .................. 49 51 .462
NawYolk .............. 41 S6 .46\
CLEVELAND ....... 4.5 60 .429

l iO

""'·
6l; ....
-·~·
~ 64; ButMcnl.n!lll,
64; Bonda,
PituburJ,h.
lcr,l.al An&amp;el•, 63.
RBI - Duhon, Philadelphia, 16;

CINCINNATI 9, HDUittrl 0
Jlhilldelphia 4, Maltrcll 2
Lot An&amp;clet 7, San Dicr;o2

•
,•

in the seventh inninJ or Sunday's National
League ·game in Cinc~nnati, which the Astros
came back to win 5-4. Anthony was eventually
tagged out by third baseman Chris Sabo. (AP)

29; L.mklord, St. Louis, 27: Van.Sf,kc,
Pin..burJh, 27; w. Cla.dF:, S111 f raacueo,
26; Murray, New York, 2S; Ori.uom,
Mon lrell, 24; Sheffield, S111•Dicao, 24;
Gmc, Otiuco. 24 .
TRIPlES - 0 . Sanden, Allmtl, 13;
finley, H0111t0n, 11; Butlct, l..ol ~clcl,
9; VanSlyke, Pitub ur&amp;h. B; DeSh1eldt,
Monua.l, 7; Alice~, St l...ouU, 7; Moftn.
dini, Pbiladei
'!S
·'· 6; Offcmw1, U. An gcle~, 6; San
, Otic&amp;go, 6.
HOME RUN - Mc&lt;iliff, San Oica.o,
21 ; Bondi, Pituburah, 20; Shefl"ldd, fan
Di~~o, 19;1... W ah~:~r, Montr c.l, U;
O.u ton, Pluladalphi1, 18 ; K11TOI , l..ol
Angelct, U; Dnnoo. Chiclao, 1.5.
STOLEN BASES - Griuom, Men·
llul, 54; Or.Shldda, Monuul, 4(t, Lankford, Sl. l..oWJ, 32; Fulley, HDUILOn, 2J;
Robctu, CINCINNATI, 21; Butler, l.DII
Anaele~, 21: Biuio. IIOUI\On, l6; G111t,
Atlanu, 2.6; 0 . Smith, St LoW, 26.
PrTCHINO (12 dr:cil ioru) - G\avint.,
Atlanta, 16-3, .142, 2.49; Cone, New
York. 13-4, .76.5 , 2.69; Swindall ,
CINCINNATI. 10-4• .714, 165: TcwU·
bury, St. Louis. 10--4, .714, 1.91 ; K. Hill.
MonlrMI , 12- ~ . .706, 2.92; Bhd:, St n
Fra nciaco, 9-4, .692, 2.91: Smolu., Atlant~, 13-6, .614, 2.S7.
STRlKEOliTS - Cone., New Yor.ll: ,
194; Smaltz, Atlan1.1, 1"9; S. Fernandez,
New Yod, 13!; G. M1ddu, ChU:a1 o,
125: Dr-.bcl PitUbwlh, 122; Btnea, San
Di'flo, l ll; Rijo.C!NCINNATI, \15.
SAVES - Olulton, CINCINNATI,
24: Lee: Smith, SL Louil, 2A; Wcitdan d,
Montreal, 23: D. Jonu , Hou110n, 22:
Miu'h Wi\Wno, l'llilod&lt;loltio. 20; loi)'Cn,
San Oiq:o, 20; Bdindt , ~uabw-Jh, 14.

American League
BAITING - E. Martinez, Scau\c,
. 336; Pud:eu. MiMaota, .332; Thc.nu.
Otic.ao • .318; R. Alomar, Toronto, .318:
Mack , MiMC101.1, .311; Hupc:r, Minneaotl, .31-4; Malltor, M.ilwa ulr.r~e, .] 14.
RUNS - Phillipt, De~roit, 76; Puckat, MiMCIOU, 74; Knobbucb, MinneaoLII, 73; E. Martinez, Suulc, 11; Macll,
MinnuDia, 69; McGwinl, Oakl.and, 6!5;
Caner, Toronto, 65 .
RBI - Fiddc:r, Detroit, ~ 1: McOwire,
Oakland, 81; P1.1ckcu, Mi n.:~ eaot.a, 7-4;
Carter, Tormm, 73; 0 . Bcll, Cbiaao. 72;
J1.1tn Ooau1e:&amp; , Tuu, 70; Thoma&amp;,

au.. ......

HITS - Pllcllett, MiMetOtl, 141;
Baerp, ClJNFlAND, 129; E. Mutinez.,
Sen tle, 129; Mack, Minncaola, 127;
Molicor, MUwau.kee, 121; Fryman, Deu-oil, 120; An derson. Bt himore, IU :
PUonia, Califcmia, 119.
DOUBLES - E. Martina, Su u,e,
31 : Joyner, JC•n•a• City, 30; Jd'ferie.,
Kanau City, 29: Hall, New Ycd, 29;
MauinJiy, New York, 21: Yount, Mil·
wallkce, 27; Reimer, Tcu1, 26; Sicm,
Tnu,:M.
'I'RlPI.E8 - Ocvc:te~U:\, Baldtncre, 9;
1.. Jciwm, Oliclp, 1; llitach, MUwau.
kea, 6; R. Akwnat, TOI:Qito, 6; Aadcnon.
Bthimort, 6; MoUtot1 Mil waukee, 6;
Mack, Minn1101.a, 5; Siem, Tuu , 5;
Whilo, T"""w, 5; !Wnoo, OUcoao, ' ·
HOMI! RUNS ~ MoOwi.., OUlmd,
32.: Juan Oonnlu, Ttiu, 26; PiaWar,
Dltroit, 24; Drtet, DetiOSt, 23; T~,
Detroit, 23; C.rt., Toromo, 22: Bcllt.
a.EVElAND, 20.
'
mlLEN BASES - """"'· c.t;t.U, 36: liNch, Mllwoutoe, 35; t..11oa,
a.£VItt.AND, 3!5; AMcnon, 's' l aN.
3~; lla lael, OJcaao, 31; a. ~ . .

I

OUlmd, 31; L .lolwon, cw..ao, 27.

PITCIDNO (12 dociaiona) -I111n
Oozmul. T......,l2·2. .ll7, 2.03; Appi·
er, Xa11111 Ci'J• 12.-3, .100, 2.12; JamJ.c •
Monia, Toron101 13-4, .76.5, 4.36; Mcllowdl, e&gt;iu10,
750. 3.57, """'·
Ill, BlllimON, 1()..4, .714, 2.59; FJ.mina,

u.s..

Scoulo, 12-5, .706,3,20;

Min·

Sm~&lt;y,

ncscu.ll ·5, .617,3.33.
STRIKEotrrS - Pwaz, New York,
141; Cem11111, BOltOn, 131; Juan Gutman, TOftWito, 133; R. Johnlc.t, Seaala.
111: K.. Brown, Tnu, 117; A~pict,
Kana u City, 110; McDowell, Chica1o,
110.
SAVES - Ecttnley, Oakland, 33;
Aauilcn. Minaa011, l9; Je.!f Ruacll,
Tn.u, 26: O!Jon, Baltimore., 25; Non1,
10m11t)', Kanau Cil)', ~; Reudon ,
22; Homy.
20; Thiap&lt;rl.
20;

au..,•. Mil_,...,

Olympic medals table
Countrr

S\1. Bro. All

c

UnifMIII Team .............. 32

1.JNltED STA1ES ...... 19
Omnany...................... 14
CW. .., ,,,. .... ,, .. , ..,. \0
A-.lia ........................6
Frwu:c.............................s

23

1' '14

II
t6
8

20 45
a 34
7 21

4
7
7

12 21
2 19
7 11

19

~:: : : : : : : : : : : :1:!

18 56

5

7 16

s

4

6 u
6 13

S...lb Kono ............... ,.,6
Cwda,.,, ..... ,,.,,. .... , ..l
Cubo .... ,... .....•.............. ,.3
Brit1in............................4
NCII.hcrlandl ...................0
New Zallllll ................. 1

1
I
2
3

4
6
6
3

11
12
II
10

1
3

•
3

7

Swodcn ,,,,, ... ,.,, ..,,,,O
Spoln ..............................6
Bolpria ......................... l
Cz..chaalo¥&amp;k.i.a .............1
Twk&lt;y, ... .,. ...., ..,..•..,,,1

•
0
4
1
I

3
0
I
I
I

7
6

Nonray,... ...................... l

Beltiurn .........................o

1
I

D
2

3
3

Yq01laria ....................0
'BrW\ .., ......................... 1

I

1

3

I

0

2

0

I

2

I

I

2

I

I

2

0
0

2
2

0

0

I

0

I

I

0
0

I
I

I
I

Rornanil .. ......................4
Pd&amp;nd...... ............ ......... J

Nonb Kon~~ ................... 1
Jsn.e.l ..............................O

uw ............................o
Da.nutc ........................o

SlO\'Uiia ....................,.. ..O
UI.Oftil ........................... l

o.-:. ...........................1
A1111tria ... ........................0
JamW ............ ............. .o

Nunibia .........................O
Pau .......... ,, ...................o

o

l'inllnd ..........................
"""'""' ., ......... ,... ....... 0

sllrinlm .........................o

0

0

6
l

4

2
2
D I
I

I
I
I
I

Transactions
BasebaU
Alllti1CIOW ...

BAL11MOJIE OlUOIJ!S - Oplonod

Ric.hi.ll L..wll:, pitct., 1o :Roc:!selte- or lhc
ln.nalionall..alp Pwdwed the cat·
"'" of Joct Voi&amp;l. 1hinl buemon, hom
ltodiCMC".
CLEVELAND INDIANS - Plated
Scott Scudd.-, plldllw, oa tht U-cla,
dloabltd llot. ROCiltod
Olto, ptidl-

er, rroa. Colorado 5pr1ap vt the Pa~:~r.
kCouiiAJut.

Na!laoll ~.~~...
CINCINNATI REDS - Opl\ootd
c.. Htmucla. ...ullldlt, lo Cllal·
lo..... of 10o Sooollowo IMaa Actl-

IMIIflelder, from

tho 1!-dajlloabledllot.
.
NEW 'YORK METS - Aclinlcd
John Pllllco, ~err. fnxn the U--day die·
ablcld lift. Pla-.1 Palal OiJ.an. ~ on
the 1$-d.aJ diaabllld li&amp;t, MrOKU'It 10July
21. P1s.co4 Howard Johntaa. •nod Bollby
BOftilla, oulfloldln. on tho 15·d•J diJ.
tblod lin. Rocallod '" Ho..U, llllfialdlr,
..0 l.tr M&lt;KnJ&amp;ha, lafiotdlr, 11om Todeof lhe llllli-Dallonal......,..
PITTSBURGH PIRATES - S1n1
Bla1 Mlnor, pitcher, 10 Buffalo of lha
Ameri.CIII Auociabon. R.ecalled William
Ponnyfodloo&lt;, oulfiold•; 11om Cllllliru oC

••*

lluoSoolhoml.eop

FoolbaD

..u._..

~~-rooo

Cl.BYlllANll BROWNS - S!pod
CLIJ Mlubawt, linabacftr. ApMd to
lCilml wtzbJAwyer Tillmlll, wide liOilY• •

_,.._.

...Dl!NVI!It BRONCOS
.
-

S!Jnol l.tr

o..w.. Gtrwiw llclle. to a lf!d• m
MlAM!IlOLI'IIIIiS - Sipod Muoo

* ±•,
.....WI PIIAiiCIICO
49l!RS ~. u

10

a fo.tt-)N.l' - llpd

s..v. Wlllaca, ol'wive IICklc, to I

two-

)'lllcmtnct.
.
SBATTLB SBAHAWKs - Slpod
Ia,- lobana, eff..,iva t1ckl., lo fou

C..Jill' COIItlldl.

,

Nagy. That sort of mtio is neces·
sary for a team that relies on
power, instead of contact, 10 score
runs.
"We' re not going to beat you
with singles,.' ' mana,er Sparky
Anderson said. "We re not the
type of club that will string tluee or
four hits tOgether. 'If we're going to
beat you, we have to hit the ball
tong."
Nagy has lost his last tluee starts
but hasn't pitched badly enough 10
worry Hargrove.
" Charles is going through a
tOugh time right now, but he's the
kind of pitcher who will bounce
back," !Wgrove said. "He threw
well today. He gave up five of the
wrong kind or hilS and two walks.
He just hasn't been locked in the
way he was earlier in the year."

quip~

F1elder, who led the majors in
home runs and RBis each of the
past two years, ranks first in the
majors with 91 RBis and third in
the AL with 24 home runs. He is
bidding to become the fttSt player
to lead the majors in RB!s three
straight years since Babe Ruth in
1919·21.
"He is so strong, be can take a
pitch outside his power zone and
still hit it out of the park," Hargrove said. "You might try 10 be
too fine with him. I think maybe
with Fielder, pitchers are guilty of
that. He can be pitched to, but it
too1c us four home runs 10 fmd that
Cleveland's All-Star right-hander, Charles Nagy, yielded Fielder's home run in the second iMing
and TettletOn's 23rd home run in
the seventh inning.
The home runs, however, both- ·
ered Nagy less than the two walks
he yielded to Tettleton and Dan
Gladden starting the fifth inning.
Both runners scored, on Mark
Carreon's double and Scou Livingstone's RBI groundouL
'
Nagy (11-7) got rattled when he
thought he struck out Tettleton on a
2-2 P.itch that was called a ball
' Those things happen, but I let
it get 10 me a liule bit," Nagy said.
Tettleton walked on the next
pitch, and Gladden walked on five
pitches.
The Tigers added a run in the
eighth on Lou Whitaker' s RBI
groundouL It proved critical when
Cleveland scored single runs in the
eighth and ninth innings. _

Sports shorts

o...

91&amp;1111 .. . . . ~~~

Bill Gullickson (12-7) got the
win, allowing three runs and nine
hits in seven-plus innings. Mike
Henneman yielded Albert Belle's
sacrifice fly in the eighth and
Sandy Alomar's RBI single in the
ninth before nailing down his 18th
save.
·
Fielder had no explanation for
his weekend outbunt, which con·
tinued a trend that began when he
hit three home runs off Greg
Swindell during a game at Cleveland Sladium two years ago. Six of
his home runs this season have
come against the Indians.
"I don't know what it is,"
Fielder said. "Hopefully I can slay
in whatever it is through the end of
the season." .
The Tigers needed only five hilS
to produce their five runs against

.

Auto racing
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) Scou Goodyear, who came so close
to a surprise victory in the Indi anapolis 500, raced to his fim
lndy·car win in the Marlboro 500 ·
at Michigan International Speedway on Sunday .
This time Goodyear won an all·
Canadian laiC·race battle with Paul
Tracy, taking the lead for good
with 19 laps to go on a spectacular
restart following the firth and final
caution nag of the 2.50-lap race on
the two-mile oval.
Goodyear recorded a 5.932·second viciory, averaging 177.625
inph. 'Raul Boesel finished third
and AI Unser Jr., who beat
Goodyear in the clo5est Indy 500 in
hislllry, wl!S fourth . .
Auto racing
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) Road racing star Geoff Brabham
surprised a field full oC oval-mcing
experts by running away with the
thtrd round of the International
ihce of Champions at Michigan·
Inremational Speedway on Satur·
day.
( .

basketball team were bright spots
for the United States on a day when
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) - ·boxer Eric Griffin was knocked out
Jackie Joyner-Kersee reigned for ~ood, the highly touted men's
supreme again and the Dream tenms team got shut out, and the
Team beat the home team . But baseball team found its worst
nobody - NOBODY - had a bet- nightmare waiting in the medal
. tcr time at the Summer Games than round: Cuba.
Vitaly Scherbo of the Unified
The Unified Team, led by
Team.
Schcrbo, won 19 medals Sunday 10
Six gold medals, the most ever exiend its overall lead. It now has
won by a gymnast in a single 74 medals (32 gold, 23 silver and
Games, was Schcrbo's haul afler he 19 bronze). The United States is
collected four Sunday night. Nearly second with 56 medals (19, 19 and
everything the 20·ycar-old Minsk 18), while the unified Germany
resident touched turned to gold: held third with 45 medals (14, 11
vault, rings, pommel horse and par· and 20).
allel bars.
·
The U.S. baseball team had its
Wearin~ the hammer and sickle destiny in its gloves - beat Japan,
of the Sovtet Union on his uniform and avoid the mighty Cubans in the
for good luck, Scherbo twisted and first medal-round game.
twirled to a near-perfect night.
Couldn't do it.
Only a sixth-place finish in the
Instead, Japan rolled to a 7-1
noor exercise- his favorite event victory and a berth against the
- kept the son of two former Sovi· much more agreeable Taiwan team.
ct athletes from cqualmg American That leaves the Americans with
Mark Spitz's daunting record of Cuba, which beat them once
already here and holds a 31 · 13
seven golds in a single Olympics.
" I ccrlainly did not expect this advantage over the last six years.
to happen. It seemed impossible The winners will meet for the first
that I could win so many gold Olympic baseball gold.
medals," said the 5-foot-6, 136·
U.S. coach Ron Fraser assesses
pound lord of the rings and most his team's chances this way: If the
other apparatus. His Sunday sweep · Cubans arc overconfident ...
added to two golds already won in
:'They might overlook us.
the men 's all -around and team Hopefully, they do," said Fraser,
competition.
who knows bctler.
Trent Dimas, a 2t.ycar.old from
The U.S. basketball game feaAlbuquerque, ·N.M., ended a week tured a maniacal crowd rooting for
of mislakcs and misery for lhc U.S. the Spanish team - and there was
team by winning the gold medal in plenty to cheer early. The locals
the high bar.
managed a 9·9 tie in the first few
"We' ve been put down a lot. minutes, but by halftime it was 65We needed a hero like Trent," ,35.
coach Ed Burch said.
Even the U.S, players lost interBefore Scherbo's stunning per- est in the second half, allowing
formance , Joyner-Kersce made Spain a 22-9 second-half spurt
some Olympic histOry of her own. which cut the lead to 22 points.
Her victory in the sevcn·evcnt hep- Order was quickly restored with a
18thlon made her the first woman 164 U.S. burst.
ever to successfully defend her
For the second straight game,
gold medal as the world's greatest Charles Barkley led lhc United
athlete.
SI81Cs in scoring, this time with 20.
"This was the challenge," said Injured point guards Magic Johnthe 30-r,car-old from Conoga Park, son and John Stockton both played.
Calif. ' Because it was so historic, I It was Stockton's Olympic debut
reall y wan~ to get the gold. It was after a broken leg.
a great challenge, mentally and
The first round of basketball is
physically.''
over, and the quarterfinal matchups
Her husband and coach, Bob arc set: the Dream Team against
Kcrscc , greeted her with a dozen Puerto Rico, Lithuania against
roses afler the final event, the 800 Brazil, Australia against Croatia,
meters. Olympic decathlon champi· and the Unified Team against Geron Bruce Jenner greeted her with a many.
The big boxing ac1ion took
complimcnL
"You're the greatest" alhlcle place outside the ring. Griffin, after
ever," the 1976 winner said . He a shocking loss Saturday, lost an
may be right; Joyner·Kcrscc also appeal Sunday to.revcrse his defeat
won a hcptathlon silver in 1984.
against Spain's Rafael Lozano.
team Jordan, despite a mucous Although five judges scoring lhe
hometown crowd , rocked and fight had Griffin winning, he lost
rolled Spain in a predictable 122- 6-5 under a new computer scoring
81 blowout. It finished the first sysiem.
uvcah, he's been crying," said
round of Olympic play undefeated
(5-0), unchallenged and somewhat Bob Jordan, Griffin's personal
coach and sponsor. "They ripped
uninterested.
Joyncr-Kcrsee, Dimas and the the kid ·s hcan ouL He said, 'Bob,

they StOIC Our dream.' "
The lnrtmational Amateur Boxing Association delivered the final
blow to the I 06-pound Griffin, of
Broussard, La. "The incident is
closed," said Arthur Tunstall,
chainnan of the association's tech·
nical rules commission.
Teammate Tim Austin left nothing 10 the computer, batlering 112pound opponent Julian Strogov of
Bulgaria in a 19-7 decision. "I just
want to go and beat my man more
than the compu1cr can beat me.:·
said Austin of Cincinnati.
Seven American boxers are in
the quarterfinals ,.... one victory
away from a medal. Raul Marquez
of Houston was the lasl one in,
whipping Rival Cadeau of the Seychelles.
Back at the track, the world's
grealest high jumper won his first
gold medal - four years after he
first set a world record. Javier
Sotomayer, the only man ever to
clear 8 fcct, sailed 4 inches below
that to win the high jump.
Cuba 's 1988 boycou had denied
the 25·year-old Sotomayer a spot
in the Seoul Games. After winning,
he said he had feared politics
would deny him a gold again 1his
time.
"It 's a grea1 moment, but I
didn 't lhink il would happen," he
said . "I was overcome with joy.
My eyes were full of tears ....
Today is a reward, having been
deprived in previous Games."
Sotomayer will head home fulfilled, while America's ICnnis stars
leave town empty-handed. Topseeded Jim Courier, No . 3 Pete
Samprns and No, 6 Michael Chang
came to Barcelona expecting nothing but success.
They found nothing but trouble.
Sampras went down Sunday, the
last of the three American medal
hopefuls eliminated from the singles competition. He lost 6-7 (7-9),
1-6, 7·5, 6-Q, 6-3 to Russian Andrei
Cherkasov:
A shon time later, the doubles
team of Couricr·Sampras was sent
packing, 5· 7, 4'6, 6-3 , 6-2, 6-2, by
S~iards Emilio Sanchez and Sergto Casal.
" I sure wa~n ' t expecting this,"
coach Tom Gorman said. "I think
the disappointl)lcnt is shared by
everybody."
The U.S. water polo team, its
toughest opponent out of the pool
due to United Nations sanctions,
continued its roll toward a gold
medal by whipping Czechoslovakia
9-3. The 2-Q Americans are back in
action today against France.
Their nemesis for the past two
years, Yugoslavia, was barred from
sending any teams to the Games.
The United Siates won silver in
1984 and 1988, losing both times
10 the Yugoslavs; the Czechs made
the tournament as their replace.
ment.

Marquez of Houston, Texas, during their 7l·q.
Olympic bout Sunday In Barcelona, Spain. (AP)

POW! - The SeycheUes Rival Cadeau (lert)
lands a punch to the race or American Raul

N.Y. Jets bomb Philadelphia 41-14
in Hall of Fame exhibition game ·
By RUSTY MILLER
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Hall
of Farner Joe Namath was watch·
ing from the pressbox as Browning
Na~le stamped himself as the next
in line 10 follow in Broadway Joe's
white cleaiS.
Nagle passed for one tOuchdown
and ran for another on Saturday
and GleM Cadrez and DeMis Byrd
each returned interceptions for
touchdowns as the New Yorlt: Jets
roared past the Philadelphia Eagles
41-14 m the annual Hall of Fame
exhibition game.
" I felt prelly good about our
whole offense and I could see their
confidence in me. That's a good
feeling when you feellhe belief in
the whole huddle," Nagle said.
Nagle passed for 142 yards and
led the Jets to a 28-7 lead in his
ftrSt half of worlc.
Jets head coach Bruce Coslet
was among those impressed.
" He ran the team efficiently,"
Coslet said. "He directed the team
well and made some big plays."
Nagle said the regular season is
still too far away to be putting
numbers on the quarterbacks in
camp.
Ea~les head coach Rich Kotirt
said; 'I'm glad it's over. We were
very sloppy. We've got some builtin excuses, but I don' t use them.

passes for 142 yards in the first
We played without intensity.
" It's August 1st and they (the half.
The JeiS opened ihe scoring on
Eagles) are getting a wakeup call.
an
18-yard run by Blair Thomas
You can't play well without inrtnand
also scored on fteld goals of 42
sity."
Cadrez picked off a pass by and 30 yards by Jason Staurovskv.
Rookie wide receiver Jeff Syd·
David Archer midway through the
third quarter and returned it 73 ner caught a six-yard touchdown
yards, although he bobbled the ball pass from Kemp and running back
m the end wne and had 10 recover Heath Sherman scored on a six·
it for the touchdown and a 35-14 yard run 10 account for the Eagles'
points.
lead.
Chaffey went 70 yards up the
Byrd made it 14-0 in the first
middle
in the fomth q - for die
quarter when he stepped in front of
longest
rushing play ever in the 31
a Jeff Kemp pass and scored from
years of the Hall of Fame exhibiseven yards ouL
The 41 points by the Jets was tion game.
Herschel Walker made his debut
lheir third highest tolal ever in an
in an Eagles unifam and bad four
exhibition game.
Nagle, getting the stan at quar- carries for a yard loss.
Eagle quarterblck Ra11t1a11 Cun·
terback for the Jets, hit Pat Chaffey
on a four-yard touchdown pass in ningham, who missed mart of last·
the second quarter. On the preced· year with a knee injury, was held
ing play, Nagle hit Rob Carpenter out of the game.
The Eagles wore patehes on:
on an apparent41 -yard touchdown
pass, but Carpenter spitted the ball their uniforms in memory of defea·before getting into the end zone. sive tackle Jerome Brown, woo·
The officials, however, awarded was killed June 2S in 111 auiOtiiOthe Jets the ball at the four because bile accident in his hometown of ·
Brooksville, Fla.
·
of an inadvenent whistle.
A crowd oC 23,8S3 watc:bed die
Nagle scored on a two-yard run
as the Jets built a 28-7 lead at the game at Fawceu Stadium. Earlier, ·
John Riggins, John Mackey, AI ·
half.
Nagle, in his second ye:M out of Davis and Lem Barney were
Louisville, completed I 0 of 1·5 inducted into the Hall of Fame.

THE 1992

Gaerte wins $4,000 at K-C Raceway;
Wolfe in top five in Late Models

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By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Cecil
Fielder is on one of those power
binges that scares pitchets intO bad
pitches and makes opposing managers consider the most unconventional straregies.
Fielder hit four home runs and
drove in II runs as the Detroit
Tigers won two of three games
from the Cleveland Indians during
the weekend. He and Mickey TettlelOn hit solo home runs in Sunday's 54 win.
On Satlllday, Fielder hit a grand
slam, and Cleveland manager Milce
Hargrove said afterward that he
had momentarily considered walking Fielder intentionally - with
the bases full - rather than let him
swing. After all, Fielder bad hit two
three-run homers the day before.
"But I only sip1ed a one-year
(contract) extensiOn," Hargrove

Scherbo, Joyner-Kersee, Dimas
among weekend Olympic stars
By LARRY McSHANE

" I was cruising real well," he
said, " I could have thrown more
fastballs, but I'd been getting them
out with my forkball."
In lite sixth, he gave up a leadoff
single to Casey Candaele and
walked pinch-hitter Benny Distefano. Candacle moved 10 ihinl on a
fielder's choice and scored on
Steve Finley's groundouL
Taubensee's homer, after Pete
lncavi~lia had reached base on a
fielder s choice, gave Houston a 3·
I lead. The AslroS added two runs
in the eighth off Scou Bankhead in
RBI singles by Finley and Eric
Anthony.
The hittin~ of Finley, who broke
a O·for-18 h1tless streak with that
base hit, was encouraging 10 Howe.
"Obviously, we needed everything we got today,'' he said.
The Reds got a run in the sev.
enth off Rob Murphy on Glenn
Bragg's bloop triple 10 short right
field, and rallied 10 pull within one
run in· the eighth on Bill Doran's
two.run homer, his eighth of the
season, off Doug Jones.
But Jones then retired the side
and pitched a scoreless ninth for his
22nd save.

The Dally Sentinel Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August 3. 1992

SEAVER INDUCTED -Former New York, Clnclnaatl aad
Cblcago White Sox pitcher Tom Seaver flashes the OK sip towllrd
his fai!IIIY wbile holding his ~all of Fame plaque followla&amp; bls
induction as one or the newest tnductm into the Baseball Hall ot
Fame Sunday In Cooperstown, N.Y. (AP)

VALLEY
and
SUPPLY CO.
555 Park St.

Middleport
992-6611

'

By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Driving the Tim NonnaMJaerte
Engines #5j, former AII·Star
Champion Joe Gaerte ofRoche5ter,
Ind., claimed the $4,000 to win, 40lap ''The Club"{AII·Star Cirtuit oC
Champions Sprint Car feature Sat·
urday night at K-C Raceway near
Chillicothe.
Jeff Houser of Chillicothe
pushed the Coors{Houser Garage
1199 10 the front and never looked
back in claiming the $1,000 10 win
companion Lart Model Invi18tional
mce.
Gaerte looked to be the class oC
t~e field until All-Star contender
and leading winner Kevin "Pup"
Huntley found the high groove to
his liking and really started to
move mid-way through the race.
Jack Hewitt in the Murphy/). W.
Hunt 1121, a former Jim Keeker
USAC moun~ also moved intO the
high groove and came from,way
back in the pack to second place.
Hewitt and Huntley put on a
hair·raising show, each lap putting
their machines on the fine line
between winning and disaster.
·
On the 34th cirtuit, Gaerte had
dropped to third behind Huntley
and Hewiu; when Hewitt tangled
with David Snell in tum #I. The
kept moving, but Hewitt's front
'wing brolce sending him intO a spin
in tum three, where he collected
Terry Shepherd, Rocky Hodges,
Kerry Madsen, Frankie Derr, Kcl.ly
Kinser and race leader Huntley.
The 5even car pile-up changed
the complexion of things and gave
Gaerte the lead, where he held orr
Australian driver Brooke Tamell by
four car lengths at the f!Dish.
Ricky Hood W8l third, followed
by Joey Saldana, Tod~ Kane,
Byron Reed, Jack Hewttt, who·
made repairs 10 finish seventh,
Kerry Norris, Jim Nier and Marlt:
Christman.
.
Heats were won by Frankie
Kerr, Todd Kane, Australian Kerry
Madsen, Byron Reed and Mike
Bowlin,.
Kevtn Huntley won the Las
Vegas Dash, while Charlie Fisher
won the C-main and B!OOice Tat•
nell the B·main. Tatnell, Charlie
Fisher, Kelly Kinser, Rocky
Hodges and Rod George advanced

v .., ·-·····\•

frorri the B-main 10 the A-main.
Columbus, driver Charlie Fisher
moved through the C and B-mains
10 advance 10 the A·main, where he
bad mechanical problems and finished 22nd.
Twenty·seven Late Models
headed by local legend and first
heat winner Chargin ' Charlie
Swartz of Ashland, Ky., put on a
great show for the anxious crowd
on hand.
Swartz won the first heat over
last week's winner Paul Coyan,
Charlie seymour and Scou Wolfe
of Racine in the McDonald's 1114.
Jackie Boggs claimed the next
heat over Jon Osman , Butch
Dowdy and Mark Frazier.
Switching from Sprints 10 Lale
Model driving ace Jack Hewitt won
the third heat over Greg Stevens,
Jeff Houser and Brian Stinson.
Ted Johnson won the B-mait!
overCiarlt: VanHouten.
'
With Jeff Houser the man on the
point every won too1c a shot at the
local 'hot shoe, but no one succeeded. Jackie Boggs, Ashland, Ky.,
cliallendged early, along with veteran Jack Hewitt and Charlie
Swartz. Swartz, in a b11111d new N7
owned by Jack Williams, hooked
the cushion IJid went over the bank
onlapsix.
. On the ninth circuit, Donnie
Kennison's mount lost power and
was bntslled by Tony Throclcmorton. With no place to go, Wolfe
driUed KCnnison in 'the rear, spark·
ing a seven car pile·up that left
Charlie Swartz atop Ted Johnson's
mount on die fust tiim wall.
All drivers were unhurt but
only lbrockmortoo continued.'
Houser then held off Paul
Coyan at the fmish for his fust win
at K.C since late 1988.
Following Coyan, was Bog@S
Butch Do~, Mark Fraz~, MikC
Chance, ~tttlge Letat. Duane Acltley, Brian Sdnson and Clarlt .van
Houten.
The USAC Sprints come 10 KC
on Wedneadly, Auaust29.
SUMMARY
HBAT.Jiranlde Kerr, · Rick
Hood, Dave Snell, Mark Good·
Oeish
Heat-Kerry Madsen, Byron
Reed, Kovin Huntley, Jaclc Hewitt
Heat-Todd Kane, Joey Saldana,

••

Marlt: Christman, Rusty McClure
Heat·Rodney Duncan, Terry
Shepherd, Jason Dukes, Brook Till·
nell
Heat·Mike Bowlin!!, Joe Gaerte,
Kerry Norris, Kelly Kinser,
Heat-Jackie Boggs, Jon Osman,
Butch Dowdy, Mark Frazier,
LAS VEGAS DASH·Kevin
Huntley, Joey Saldana, Rod
George, Terry Shepherd
C-main-Charfie Fisher, Art
Wendt, Landon Stover, Dean
Jacobs, Marlt: Imler.
B·main-Brooke Tatnell, Charlie
Fisher, Kelly Kinser, Rocky
Hodges, Rod George.
A·Main-Joe Gaerte, Brooke Tatnell, Rick Hood, Joey Saldana,
Todd Kane, Byron Reed, Jack
Hewiu, K~rry Norris, Jim Nier,
Mark Chnstman, Rod George,
Davtd Snell, Rodney Duncan ,
Kevin Huntley, Kelly Kinser,
Frankie Kerr, Rocky Hodges,
Kerry Madsen, Terry Shepherd,
Mike BowUng, Jason Dukes, Char·
lie Fisher.
Late Models
Heat: Jackie Boggs, J~n Osman,
Butch Dowdy, Mall-FlliZICr.
Heat:Charlie Swartz, Paul
Coy an, Charlie Seymour, Scott
Wolfe.
Heat; Jack Hewin, Greg
Stevens, Jeff Houser, Brian Stin·
son.
B-Main-Ted Johnson, Clark
VanHouten, Dave Kirker, Joey
Dunseith, Nealo McCreary, Roger
French, Jeff Grimsley.
FBATURE:Jeff Houser, Coyan,
Boggs, Butch Dowdy, Marie Frazier, Mike Chance, Fudge Leist,
Duane Ackley, Brian Stinson, Van
Houten, Tony Throckmorton,
Stevens, Hewitt, Otarlie Seymour,
Donnie Kennison, .Scou Wolfe,
Charlie Swartz, Johnson, Ron
Adams and John Ostrian.

Sports shorts

Autoradng
TOPEKA. Kan. (Ar) ~ .Darrell
Waltrip blew away the fteld as his
new road-course stock car made liS
racing debut in the Coca-Cola
Mello Yello 350 at Hcallland Park
on Sunday. Waltrip's Chevrolet
Lumina was the only car· on the
lead lap at the finish of the 121-lap
race. Bob Schmidt !inishcd second.

.

..

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,

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is Co111ing
August 14, 1992.
Advertising Deadline Is
August 3, 1992.

.

CALL DAVE or P.J. TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

•

992·2155
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�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Monday, Auguat3.1992

Pag8-"l

Houston edges Cincinnati 5-4
.

lly TERRY IQNNEY
CINCINNATl (AP) - Rem em·
ber "Spahn, Sain and pray for
rain?"
These days, it's Belcher,
Swindell and watch out, Reds.
Tim Belcher and Greg Swindell
beat the Houston A.stros on Friday
and Saturday as Cincinnati held
onto a tenuous one-balf game lead
over Atlanta in the NL West But
come Sunday, Houston beat the
· Reds and Jose Rijo 5-4 to knock
the Reds out of fu-sL
It was rookie catcher Eddie
Taubensee's home run, on a pirch
that Ril'o said should have been
unhitab e. that did it.
"If you take that one pitch
away, it was my best game of the
year: And he hit the best pitch I
threw," Rijo said.
It was a foJicball, low and away,
that Rijo said would have bounced
in front of the catcher if Taubensee
hadn' t got his bat on it - onebanded.
"With a ~y on fu-st, I was just
ttying to hit 11 in the gap and score
h1m somehow," Taubensee said.
"I was able 10 stay back on it just
enough to get the bat on lhe ball."

Tailbensee has benefited from a
demotion to Tucson. Since returning to lhe big leagues, he's hitting
with more power and consis1.ency.
"He looks like he has picked it
up offensively. That's why we sent
h1m out there," Howe SBid. "He's
starting to juice them a tittle biL He
hit that one-handed. He's a big,
strong kid.''
Taubensee appeared in 45
games for ·the Astros, batting .162
before being sent down June 12.
Since his return July 10, he's IS for
35 with two homers.
His seventh-inning homer
chased Rijo (8-8) and snapped the
Astros • three-game losing streak.
Reliever Joe Boever (3-4) - the
third of six Houston pitchers - got
the final out of the sixth and the
fu-st of the seventh.
" We have such a quali ty
bullpen, I'd be crazy not to use
them," said Howe. "I just try to
mix and march as best I can. That
way, everybody feels like he's got
a role to play."
· Paul O' Neill homered in the
founh, his lith of the year, to give
the Reds a 1-0 lead.
Rijo didn't allow a hit until the
fifth.

" I was cruising real well," he
said. "I could have thrown more
fastballs, but I'd been getting them
out with my forkball."
In the sixth, he gave up a leadoff
single to Casey Candaele and
walked pinch-hitter Benny Distefano. Candaele moved to third on a
fielder 's choice and scored on
Sieve Finley's groundout
Taubensee's homer, after Pete
Incavi~lia had reached base on a
fielder s choice, gave Houston a 31 lead. The Asb'Os added two runs
in the eighth off Scott Bankhead in
RBI singles by Finley and Eric
Anthony.
The hittin~ of Finley, who broke
a 0-for-18 hitless streak with that
base hit, was encouraging to Howe.
"Obviously, we needed everything we got today," he said.
The Reds got a run in the seventh off Rob Murphy on Glenn
Bragg's bloop triple to shon right
field, and rallied to pull within one
run in the eighth on Bill Domn's
two-run homer, his eighth of the
season, off Doug Jones.
But Jones then retired the side
and pirched a scoreless ninth for his
22nd save.

Fielder, Tettleton help Detroit
post 5-4 victory over Cleveland
ON THE RUN - Cincinnati catcher Loe
06ver Oeft) puts Houston's Eric Anthony on the
r.un toward third base after being caught
b,etween third and home on a grounder to third

In the majors ...
Eattm Dt•lllol

' Ttun

W

- Pitllburgh ..............57

L PeL
41 .S4J

(Sutcliffe 10.11), 7:~

GB

MonuUI ................ll lO .l2A

2

NCYI Yodt ..............SI 53 .4_90
· Chicaao ..................50 53 .48S
SL Lwis ............... .4&amp; 56 .462

H
6

Philoddpbla ...........46 l9

438

8.5
11

M

•

,•
•
•
•

I
6.5

12
14.5
17

ne.au,ll·S, .617, 3.33.
STRIKEOUTS - Pom, Now YO&lt;t,

Major league leaders

141; ClemiWI, BOltOn, 131; Juan (hn:·
man, Toronto, 133; R. JoMaon, Sc.ulc,

~

•
:

h

(Jona 4-4) 11 CINC~'"NATI

(Hammond S·6), 12:lS p.m.
Chic aao (Cutillo 6-7)at Monuu l
(Man.inez 10.10), 7:35 p.m.
"Phi!&amp;llclphi• (Ablxtt 1·1 1) I t St. I...ooi.
(fewbbury I 0-4), &amp;:3S p.m.
San Fnnc:isco (W illon 6-1 1) 11 S1n
Diq;o (Scmin.ut 6-3). lO:OS p.m.

Tuesday' s games
Chic aao (Hukcy 1· 0) n Monuell
(G•rdner li).B), 7:35 p.m.
New York (Fem andu. 9·1) It PitU·
""'&amp;h (laduon S·IO), US
ONCINNATI (Boh.on ·1) at Atla1'111
' (t.dbnndt 1-4). NO p.m.
:
Phihdc lphi•' (M"•thew• 0-1) at St

r·m.

l.oui.l (a..rt

2-S), 8:35p.m.

S•n Fnnciu:o (Burkeu 7-6) at San
Diegc (LdfClU 12-6), 10:05 p.m.
Hwtton (Re)Tloldl 0. 1) at 1m Angele~ (Mattina 6-3), I0:15p.m.

;

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eulem Dlvltlon
Tum
w L Pd.

CH

Torooto .. ... ............ 63 41 - ~
Baltilnorc ...............S9 46 .562
• Milwauk.ee ............ .S5 49 .529
ss .1166
:57 .462
NewYcd ............ 48 S6 .46 1
" CLEVELAND ....... 4!1 60 .429

4.5
I
14.5
IS
IS
i &amp;.S

•
Wllllltrn Dlvlllol!
.. MinnaOLa .............. 6l 42 .600
~ Oallind ................. 61 43 .517

J.S

"' Tet.M .................... .55 52 .514

9

.. Chic•I0--··------··------52 5t .SO!!

10

:

=::::::--··:::::::::~:.

• ~ Cali!omia ...............41
• X..nau City ..........:46

.

s~~~.~uJc .................... 42

53

.448

58 .442
65

.393

16
16.5

2:2

Saturday's scores

·''

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::

Ktn.aat City&amp;, Oakland 4
Baltimore 9, &amp;.on 3
a..EVEJ.AND I. Detroit S
Otietp 8, S et~t tle 1
MiftnB~Dt~~9 , Milwaukee 6
Callfomi16, Ta:u 1

Sunday's scores
B&amp;l&amp;itnotC :Z, 801101'1 I
Tormlo7, N-York 6
Deboit !1, a.EVBU.ND 4
Minn.IIIIOia 5, Milwaukee 0
0\kaao 7, Saltdo •
0Mia•di, X..... Ci&amp;, 4
Tcw l, Calilomia I

Tonlrbt'seom ..

'
CLBVELANl&gt; (Nicholl 2-2) It New
;. Yo!lt~ :l- ~, 7 '30~m.
t•

TaradO (1uUI Ouzmia 12-2) at BOlton

•"" (ClcrniiMIII.'TJ, 7:3J p.m.

.-•

Oet.roi,l (droom 0..4) 11 Babirnore

: (Rbclc*: ].0), 7:35p.m.

I•

()UIMd (Mocri 1().9) at Teau (J01e
:. ()w:mao 1-l),l:l! p.m.

•
:·

TlllllloJ'•pm•
I:•.- 1·0)c.Jiloada
4-S md fclrcuFO
ll X:•n111 City (Appiw 12-3 and
;_.

.•

(lly~

~1 ·2), 2, 5:0lp.m.

·

aJM!LAND (OIIo4-1) " New Ya
,. (Y..... So2). 1:l0p.m.

•

Aauilua, Minnc~cu, 29; Jeff Ruud.l,

Toau, 26: Olloa, Baltimore. 25; Mont&amp;omery, Kans .. City, ~ : Reardon,
22: Havy, Mil_...... ~ Thia·
pen, Chica1o, 20.

Olympic medals table

. . . . . ..

=~cam
3~
UNITED STAre5 ...... 19

Yort, 65; McOriff, San Dieeo. 64; Bonch.
l'inabwJh, 6~ P&lt;odl""', Atlano , 62; L

Gernsany,.....................l4
OUnt ........................... IO

HITS - Pendleton, Atlanta, 127;
DeSh ic ldt, Montreal, 126; VanSlfb,
Pitttbu!Jh. 126; Sheffield, San Dic1o,
1 2~; Gwy~n . Su Oiti O, 121; Ktu,k,
Philldelphia, 119; IAnkrord, S1. l..oud,
I l l ; Butler, t..r. Anltdet~, JIB.
DOUBLES - ll..na., Phil•ddplti.o,
2~; Lankford. Sa.
27; VartSlrkt.
Pitubul)h. 27; W. Cla&amp;t, San f rancuco,
26; Murray, New Yort, 2S; Griu om,
M on ~l. 24; Sheffield, San .DieiO, 24;
Grace, Ollcago, 24.
TIUPl..ES - D. Sand1:11, Atlanu, 13;
Finle~, H0111t.on, II; Bullet, 1..01 ~elta,
9: Va nSl~ke, Pitllbufih, 8; DeS hteldt,
Monuul, 7; Alicea, St. Louia, 7; Moan·
dini, Phil•delS ··· 6; ~ennan. u. Angeles, 6; Sand
, Ouc:.aao. 6.

l'ronce ........................... .s
Hunpry ....................... IO

Loui•.

HOME RUN - Mruntf, San Diqo,
11; Bonds. Pitubur&amp;h. 20; Shdflcld, ! an
Dic!o, 111; L. Wal..ker, Monued, IB;
Dau ton, Ph illddphi1, 18 ; Ktrrot, Loc
Anades, IS; DaWIOII , Chica.o, l S.
STOLEN BASES - Gn110m., Mon·
uu.J, S4; DeSIUeldl, MontreiJ, .tO, Lank·
ford , SL Lau.ia, 32; Finley, HOUII.On, 21;
Roberta, CINCINNA TI, 28; Butler, t..o.
Anaele., 28; Biggio, H01.11ton, 26; Gant,
Atlanta, 26; 0 . Smith, St.l...ou.il, 26.
PITOllNG (12 Occbions) - Glavinc,
At lanta, 16-3, .842, 2.49; Cone, New
York, 13-4, .165 , 2.69; SwindeU,
ClNONNATI, 10-4, .714, 165; TewUbut)', St. Louil, 1().4, .714, 1.97; K.. Hill,
Montrea l, 12-5 , .706, 2.91; Black, San
Fnnci1co, 9-4 , .6!12, 2.91; Smoltz, At·
lanta, 13·6, .634, 2.57.
STRIKEOtrrS - Cane, New York,
l!M; Smoltz, Atlantt, \49; S. Fc:mltlder:,
New York , 13.8; 0. Mt ddull, ChieiJO,
125; Imbck, Pitubuqh, 12:2; Be~~e~ , Slll

Di"''· ' ll ; Riio. clNCLNNAn 115.
SAVES - Chuhon, CINCINNATI.
24 ; Le. Smilh, St.

t..mw., 24;

Wetteland,

Sll. Bro. AI
23 19 14
19 18 S6

Auttralia ........................6

~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

II
16

8
4
7

20 4S
a 34

1 21
12 21
l 19

1

1 11

5
S

7 16
6 IS

Cana4a .. ........................J

4
2
I

6 13
4 12
6 12

Cubo ..............................3
Britain ... .........................4

2
3

6 II
3 10

Romania ........................
Pol•d ... ........................ .3
South K01U ................... 6

Ncthedandl ...................o
New Zea1uwi .............. ,.,I
Sweden ..........................o
Spoin ..............................6
Bolptb ........................ .l
Cudladonkia. .............2
Tlukey .. .........................2
Narway ......................... .l

BcJFum .........................o

Yu&amp;OIIavia ....................0
Bwll ............................ .l
NonhK~ .................. .I
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EI!Onil ........................... l
On:tcocl ........................... I

Alllllit. ..... -···---····--··----·0
larnaica ..........................o

Namibit ....-·~- ..............0
..... ............................... 0
Fw.nd .......................... o

M..,.u. .......................o

s............................... o

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Transactions
BuebaU
AJMrlc.a Ltape

BAL11MORE ORIOIJ!S - Opaimod
Riohio Lowia. piadl«. ...oct...... of ...
ln~tional IMp. Pu.n:hued the am-

Monlrea1, 23: D. Janca, Hou11o n, 22;

bid of

RccheMr.
CLIVILAND INDIANS - Placed
Scott SC11dcler, pltdl~r, 011 tile 15· d&amp;J
dll.abhd tbt. RecaW Dan Ot&amp;G, pltmtt, frOM Colando
of lhe hclf·
k CauiiM1w.

American League
BAITING - E. Mutinu, Se&amp;ttle,
.336; Pucicu, Minnaot.a, .332; Tltomu .

Cleveland's All-Star right-han·
der, Charles Nagy, yielded Field·
er's home run in the second inning
and Teuleton's 23rd home run in
lhe seventh inrting.
The home runs, however, bothered Nagy less than the two walks
he yielded to Tettleton and Dan
Gladden starting the fifth inning.
Both runners scored, on Mark
Carreon's double and Scou Livingstone' s RBI groundout
Nagy (11 -7) got rattled when he
thought he struck out Tettleton on a
2-2 p,itch that was called a ball.
' Those things happen, but I let
it get to me a little bit, •• Nagy said.
Tettleton walked on the next
pirch, and Gladden walked on five
pitches.
·
The Tigers added a run in the
eighth on Lou Whitaker's RBI
groundout It proved critical when
Cleveland scored single runs in lhe
eighth and ninth innings.

I

0

Jack Voia&amp;. third bwm11t, from

Sports shorts

s,....

ta, 73; E . Martinel, Seattle, 71;,Mack,
MinnuOI;a, 69; Mc:GwiM , Od!Ui d, 6S;
Carter, Toronto, 65 .
RBI - Fielder, Dc:troil. 91; M.cGwirc.,
Oakb nd, 81 ; Puden , Minneaota, 74;
Cartar, Twmto, 73; o.BcU. Chicaso. 72;
Juan Oo nule&amp;, Tnu, 70; Thomu,
"""~"· 61.
HITS - Puckett, MiMetoU , 141 ;
&amp;crp, Cl.EVEl.AND, 129; E. Mutincr:,
Seanle, 129; Ma ck, Minneaota, 127;
Moli10r, Milwaukee, 121; Fryman, Delroit, 120; Andenon, Baltimore, 119;
Pal.onia, Calif.:mia, 119.
DOUB LES - E. Martinet, Sc.~ttle,
J l : Joyner, Kanau CitJ, 30; Jetftrita,
K1n111 City, 29: Hall, New Yotk, 29;
MaUinalJ, New York, .27; Yown, Mil·
w•u.kee. 27; Reimer, Teu t, 26; Slmt,
Tom ,l6.
'tlUPt..BS Btlllm""- 9:

Dev..,.,.,

L. Jtm.m, Olicap, 1; Utueh, Mihrtube, 6: R. Alonw,
Baltbnort, 6; Molilot, Mil wa ukeo, 6;
Mack, Minne.tott , 5; Sierra, Teua, 5;
White, Tormto, 5; RaiMI, QUeaao, '·
BOMB RUNS - ~ llUI.nd,
32; Jum Oowlu, Texu, 26; P'aeldu,
O.UOU, 24; Deer, Deuoi&amp;, 23; T...._,
n.tnit, 23; Car\w, Tonmto, 22: Bdk.

r....,.., ".......,,

.

Nagy. That sort of mtio is necessary for a team that relies on
power, inslead of contact. to score
runs.
" We're not going to beat you
with singles," mana~er Sparky
Anderson said. "We re not the
type of club that will string tluee or
four hits together. If we're going to
beat you, we have 10 hit the ball
long.''
Nagy has lost his last tluee starts
but hasn't pitched badly enough to
worry Hargrove.
'"Charles is going through a
tough time right now, but he.'s the
kind of pitcher who will bounce
back," Hargrove said. "He threw
well today. He gave up live of the
wrong kind of hits and two walks.
He just basn 't been locked in the
way he was earlier in the year."

A~toracing

BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) Road racing star Geoff Brabham
surprised a field full of oval-racing
experts by running away withlhc
thtrd round of llie lnt~rnalional
Race of Champions at Michigan
Inteniational Speedway on Saturday.

- ' ··

STOUN BASS$ - Pal.ania, l:alirm-!!!.'t...'!i.Y!'!._dl, Mllwoulloe, ll: ~ .

""'v.......,v, 35: . . . _ -

35; Ram., CtdCIIJO. 31; ll ~

I

Scherbo, Joyner-Kersee, Dimas
among weekend Olympic stars
basketball team were bright SJIOIS
By LARRY McSHANE
for the United States on a daY when
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) boxer Eric Griffin was knocked out
Jackie Joyner-Kerscc reigned for ~ood. the highly touted men's
supreme again and the Dream tenn1s team got shut oul, and the
Team beat the home team. But ba seball team found its worst
nobody- NOBODY - had a bet- nightmare waiting in the medal
. tcr time atlhe Summer Games lhan round: Cuba.
Vitaly Scherbo of the Unified
The Unified Team , .led by
Team.
Scherbo, won 19 medals Sunday to
Six gold medals, the most ever extend iiS overall lead. II now has
won by a gymnast in a single 74 medals (32 gold, 23 silver and
Games, was Schcrbo's haul after he 19 bronze). The United States is
collected four Sunday night. Nearly second with 56 medals (19, 19 and
everything the 20-ycar-old Minsk 18), while the unified Germany
resident touched turned to gold: held third with 45 medals (14, II
vault, rings, pommel horse and par- and 20).
allel bars.
The U.S. baseball team had iiS
Wcarin$ the hammer and sickle destiny in its gloves - beat Japan,
of the Sov1e1 Union on his uniform and avoid lhc mighty Cubans in the
for good luck, Scherbo twisted and first medal-round game.
twirled to a near-perfect night.
Couldn't do iL
Only a sixth-place fin ish in the
Instead, Japan rolled to a 7-1
noor exercise - his favorite event victory and a berth against the
- kept the son of two former Sovi- much more agreeable Taiwan team.
et athletes from equaling American That leaves the Americans with
Mark Spiu's daunting record of Cuba , which beat them once
seven golds in a single OlympiCs.
al•cady here and holds a 31-13
" I certainly did not expect this advantage over the last six years.
to happen. II seemed impossible The winners will meet for the first
that I could win so many gold Olympic baseball gold.
medals," said the 5-foot-6, 136U.S. coach Ron Fraser assesses
pound lord of the rings and niosl his team's chances this way: If the
other apparatus. His Sunday sweep · Cubans arc overconfident ...
added to two golds already won in
~ 'They might overlook us.
the men' s all -around and team Hopefully , they do," said Fraser,
competition.
who knows beucr.
Trent Dimas, a 21-year-old from
The U.S. basketball game feaAlbuquerque, ·N.M., ended a week tured a maniacal crowd rooting for
of mistakes and misery for the U.S. the Spanish team - and there was
team by winning the gold medal in plenty 10 cheer early . The locals
the high bar.
managed a 9·9 tic in lhc first few
" We've been put down a lot. minutes, bul by halftime it was 65We needed a hero like Trent," ,35.
coach Ed Burch said.
Even the U.S. players lost interBefore Schcrbo's stunning per- est in the second half, allowing
formance, Joyner-Kcrsce made Spain a 22-9 second -half spurt
some Olympic history of her own. which cut the lead to 22 points.
Her victory in the seven-event hep- Order was quickly restored with a
tathlon made her the first woman 16-4 U.S. burst.
ever to successfully defend her
For the second straight game,
gold medal as the world's greatest Charles Barkley led the Uniled
athlete.
Stales in scoring, this time with 20.
" This was the challenge," said Injured point guards Magic Johnthe 30-ycar-old from Conoga Park, son and John Stockton bolh played.
Calif. " Because it was so historic, I II was Stockton's Olympic debut
really wanted to get the gold. h was after a broken leg.
a great challenge, mentally and
The fi rst round of basketball is
physically."
over, and the quarterfinal matchups
Her husband and coach, Bob arc set: the Dream Team against
Kcrscc, greeted her with a dozen Puerto Rico, Lithuania against
roses after lhc final event, the 800 Bra1.il , Australia against Croatia,
meters. Olympic decathlon champi- and the Unified Team against Geron Bruce Jenner greeted her with a many.
compliment
The big boxing action took
"You ' re the greatest athlete place ouiSidc lhc ring. Griffin, after
ever," the 1976 winner said. He a shocking loss Saturday, lost an
may be right; Joyner-Kcrsee also appeal Sunday to reverse his defeat
wo~ a hcptathlon silver in 191!4.
against Spain's Rafael Lozano.
Team Jordan, despite-a mucous Although five judges scoring the
hom etown crowd , ro cked and fight h.ad Griffm winning, he lost
rolled Spain in a predictable 122- 6-5 under a new computer scoring
81 blowout. It finished the first system .
round of Olympic play undefeated
"Yeah, he's been crying," said
(5·0), unchallenged and somewhat Bob Jordan, Griffin' s personal
uninterested.
coach and sponsor. "They ripped
Joyncr-Kerscc, Dimas and the the kid's heart ouL He said, 'Bob,

. they stole our dream: ..
The lnlemational Amateur Boxing Association delivered the final
blow to the 106-pound Griffin, of
Broussard, .La. "The incident is
closed, " said Arthur Tunsllll ,
chainnan of the association's leehnical rules commission.
Teammate Tim Austin left nOthing to the computer, battering 112pound opponent Julian Suogov of
Bulgaria in a 19-7 decision. "I just
want to go and beat my man more
than the computer can beat me,:'
said Austin of Cincinnati.
Seven American boxers are in
the quarterfinals -. one victory
away from a medal. Raul Marquez
of Houston was the last one in ,
whipping Rival Cadeau of the Seychelles.
Back at th~ track. the world's
greatest high jumper won his first
gold medal. - four years after he
first set a world record. Javier
Sotomayer, the only man ever lo
clear 8 feel, sailed 4 inches below
that to win the high jump.
Cuba's 1988 boycou had denied
the 25-year-old Sotomayer a spot
in the Seoul Games. After winning,
he said he had feared politics
would deny him a gold again this
time.
"It' s a great moment, but I
didn'lthink it would happen," he
said. "I was overcome with joy.
My eyes were full of tears ....
Today is a reward , having been
deprived in previous Games."
Sotomayer will head home ful·
filled, while America's tennis sial's
leave town empty-handed. Topseeded Jim Courier, No. 3 Pete
Sampras and No. 6 Michael Chang
came to Barcelona expecting nothing but success.
They found nothing but !rouble.
Sampms.went down Sunday,the
last of the three American medal
hopefuls eliminated from the singles competition. He lost 6-7 (7 -9),
1-6,7-5, 6.{), 6-3lo Russian Andrei
Cherkasov:
A short time later, the doubles
team of Courier-Sampms was sent
pocking, 5-7, 4-6, 6-3, 6-2, 6-2, by
S~iards Emilio Sanchez and SergiO Casal.
"I sure wasn't expecting this,"
coach Tom Gorman said. "I think
the disappoinupent is shared by
everybody.' '
The U.S. water polo team . its
toughest opponent oul of the pool
due to United Nations sanctions,
continued its roll toward a gold
medal by whipping Czechoslovakia
9-3. The 2.{) Americans arc back in
action today against Fmnce.
Their nemesis for the past two
years, Yugoslavia, was barred from
sending any teams to the Games.
The United Siates won silver in
1984 and 1988, losing both times
to the Yug061avs; the Czechs made
the tournament as their replacement

POW! - The SeycheUes Rival Cadeau (left)
lands a puncb to the race or American Raul

Marquei of Houston, Ttxas, during their 71-llg.
Olympic bout Sunday ID Barctlolta, SpaiD. (AP)

N.Y. Jets bomb Philadelphia 41-14
in Hall of Fame exhibition game
passes for 142 yards in the ftrst
We played without intensity.
half.
"It's August 1st and they (the
The Jets opened the scoring on
Eagles) are getting a wakeup call.
an
18-yard run by Blair Thomas
You can't play well without intenand also scored on fteld goals of 42
sity.''
Cadrez picked off a pass by and 30 yards by Jason Stauruvslcv.
Rookie wide receiver Jell SydDavid Archer midway through the
third quarter and returned it 73 ner caught a six-yard touchdoom
yards. although he bobbled the ball . pass from Kemp IIICI running back
m the end zone and had to recover Heath Shennan scored on a sixit for the touchdown and a 35-14 yard run to account for the Eagles'
points.
lead.
Chaffey went 70 yards up the
Byrd made it 14-0 in the first
middle
in the fomtb quarter for the
quarter when he stepped in front of
a Jeff Kemp pass and scored from longest rushing play ever in the 31
years of the Hall of Fame exhibiseven yards out
The 41 points by the Jets was tion game.
Herschel Walker made his debut
their third highest total ever in an
in
an
Eagles unifoon and had fOlD'
exhibition game.
carries
for a yard loss.
·
Nagle, getting the start at quarEagle
quartelbllck
RandaD
Cwlterback for the Jets, hit Pat Chaffey
on a four-yard touchdown pass in ningbam, wbo missed most d last·
the second quarter. On the preced- year with a knee injury, was held
ing play, Nagle hit Rob Carpenter out of the game.
The Eagles wore patches on ·
on an apparent 41-yard touchdown
pass, but Carpenter spiked the ball their uniforms in memory of dcfen·
before getting into the end zone. sive tackle Jerome Brown, who'
The officials, however, awarded was killed June 25 in an aiiiOIIIOthe Jets the ball at the four hccanse bilc accident in his hometown of
Brooksville, Fla.
of an inadverlenl whistle.
A crowd of 23,853 watched the
Nagle scored on a two-yard run
game
a1 Fawcett Stadium. Eatlicr,
as
the
Jets
built
a
28·
7
lead
at
the
camp.
John
Riggins,
John Mackey, AI
half.
EaF,les head coach Rich Kotite
Davis
and
Lem
Barney were
Nagle,
in
his
second
year
out
of
said, 'I'm glad it's over. We were
into
the
Hall
of Fllllie.
inducted
very sloppy. We've got some built- Louisville, completed 10 of 15
in excuses, bull don't use them.

By RUSTY MILLER
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Hall
of Farner Joe Namath was watch·
ing from the pressbox as Browning
Na~le stamped himself as the next
in line to follow in Broadway Joe's
white cleatS.
Nagle passed for one touchdown
and ran for another on Saturday
and Glenn Cadroz and Dennis Byrd
each returned interceptions for
touchdowns as the New York Jets
roared ~ lhe Philadelphia Eagles
41 -14 m the annual Hall of Fame
exhibition game.
" I felt prelly good about our
whole offense and I could see their
confidence in me. That' s a good
feeling when you feel lhe hetief in
the whole huddle," Nagle said.
Nagle passed for 142 yards and
led the Jets to a 28-7 lead in his
fu-st half of work.
Jets head coach Bruce Coslet
was among th06C impressed.
"He mn the team efficiently,"
Coslet said. "He directed the team
well and made some big plays. "
Nagle said the regular season is
still too far away to be pulling
numbers on the quarterbacks in

THE 1992

Gaerte wins $4,000 at K-C Raceway;
Wolfe in top five in Late Models

SEAVER INDUCTED - Former Ntw York, Clnclanatla•d
Chicago White Sox pitcher Tom Seaver Oashes the OK sign toward
bis family while holding his Hall or Fame plaque followlnc Ills
Induction as one or tbe newest inductees into the BastbaD Hall of
Fame Sunday ln Cooperstown, N.Y. (AP)

Auto racing
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) Scoll Goodyear, who came so close
loa surprise victory in the lndi ·
anapoli s 500, raced to his first
Indy-car win in the Marlboro 500 ·
at Michigan International Speed way on Sunday.
This lime Goodyear won an uii Canadian late-race battle with Paul
Tracy , taking the lead for good
with 19 laps to go on a spectacular
restart following lhc fifth and final
caution flag of the 250-la)7 race on
the two-mile oval .
Goodyear recorded a 5.932-sccond victory, averaging 177.625
mph. Raul Boesel finished third
and AI Unser , Jr. , who beat
Goodyear in the closest Indy 500 in
history, was fourth.

OUcaao• .318; R. Alornu, Toronto. .JIB;
Mack, Minneaot.a, .317; Harper, Minnel~
u., .314; Malitor, Milwaukee, .31 4.
RUNS - Phillip~ , ~troi~o, 76; Puck at. Minneeou. 74; Knoblauch, Minneso-

CUVEL\ND, :10.

Bill Gullickson (12-7) got the
win, allowing three runs and nine
hits in seven-plus innings. Mike
Henneman yielded Alben Belle's
sacrifice fly in the eighth and
Sandy Alomar's RBI single in the
ninth before nailing down his 18th
save.
Fielder had no explanation for
his weekend outburst, which continued a trend that began when he
hit three home runs off Greg
Swindell during a game at Cleveland Stadium two years ago. Six of
his home runs this season have
come against the Indians.
"I don't know what it is ,"
Fielder said. " Hopefully I can stay
in wbaaever it is through the end of
the season.''
The Tigers needed only five hits
to produce their live runs against

ouL''

8
7

M;ld\ Wllliama, Phila&lt;l&lt;lplti.o, ~ Ml"".

Sl!l Diqo, 20: Belinda, Pltubtqh, l4.

Toron10 3, New Yori. I

•

.309.
RUNS - DeShie.J. da , Monltcal, 68;

Walktr, Momm.L 60.

Today•s games
..
...
•

a.,...

ler, Lnl Angelel, 63.
RBI - Dau!lon, Philadelph ia, 76;
Sheffield, San ~icao, ~; Mllml y, New

PituburJh 2. Sl LtAUt I
New Yolk 4, Chicago 2
Mmtral I, Philadelphia 0
Hcuton 5, ONCINNATI 4
Atlanta J, San franciJco 0. Itt Jll!M
Atlanta 3, San fnnciiCO :5, 2nd pme
l.ol Angela 4, San Dicso 1

A~icr,

110.
SAVES - Eck.IUileJ, Oakland, 33;

Monueal. 64: Bondt. Pla.burJh, 64; BUl-

Sunday 's scores

Ha&amp;~~~ton

BATTING - Kru.k , Jfhiladelphia.
.343; V ~nSl ytc, Pi tuburah •. 338;
Sheffield, San Dieao•. 325; Butler, Los
Anploo, .317; O.Shiddo , Mon...t, .! IS;
OUua&lt;&gt; .. 31l;
s.n Di&lt;t~

an...

111: IC. lrollfft, Tnu, 11 7;

K.auu Chy, 110;. McDoweU, Cblca10.

' Holhn1, Ph.ibd¥•• 6.5; BiJP, ~ow ·
ton , 6S; Ktuk, Philadelphia, 6S; (hiuom,

Pinabu:xh 4, StlAlil I
Atlanta 3, San Francitco l
New Yodr; 3,Chicago 0. lst same
Cbieaao 6. NewY«i. l, 2nd same
ONCINNATI 9, Hou11m 0
Pbilallclphia 4, Mwttr.l 2
1.o1 Anaelct 7. San Dieeo 2

Cloklood, 31: L J-.,C~Mqa, Zl.
PlTCIDNO (12 docidOI!.I) - Juan
Ou1maa, T0101110,t2-2. .ll7,l03: Appi·
Cl', X....1 City, I:Z..3, .100, 2.12; Jamie
Mom., Toron&amp;o, 13-4, ,765, 4.36; McO...U. OU..JOo ll·S, .?SO, 3.S7: Muu;.
"'· 10.., .714, 2.S9: Flom;na.
Suttle, 12-S, .706, 3.20; Smiley, Min-

hanon 1-0), I:lS p.m.

Notional Lo•2ll•

Saturday's scores

..
.
•

p.m.

. Sellnlo (f"llhcr 1·0) 11 MU waukee (Bono S.S), l:ii:S p.m.
Minnctota (XNe&amp;cr 9-2) at Chi.caao
(Fomondu 4- 7). H IS pm.
O•kland (St.e•art i -5) at TCAu (Bo-

WMit rn Dl r ..lon
,.. • Atlantt ...................61 42 .592

" ClNCINNA11...... .. 60 43 .S8l
San Diq,o .............. 56 .SO .52.8
: SUI Fnnciaoo ........50 55 .476
• Hcwiton ""'"""""""., 57 .452
Lot AnJelt1 ...........4S Iii) .429

in the seventh inning of Sunday's National ·
League ·game in Cincinnati, which the Astros
came back to win 5-4. Anthony was eventually
tagged out by third baseman Chris Sabo. (AP)

TOJMto (WDlll ~) II Br:-taa (HDI·
keth5-1), 7:35p.m.
Dettoil (Knud1en 2· 0) at Blllimote

NATIONAL LEAGUE

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - Cecil
Fielder is on one of those power
binges that scares pitchers into bad
pitches and makes opposing managers consider lhe most unconventional sttalegies.
Fielder hit four home runs and
drove in II runs as the Detroit
Tigers won two of three games
from the Cleveland Indians during
the weekend. He and Mickey Tettleton hit solo home runs in Sunday's S-4 win.
On Saturday, Fielder hit a grand
slam, and Cleveland manager Mike
Hargrove said afterward that he
had momenlarily considered walk·
ing Fielder intentionally - with
the bases full - rather than let him
swing. After all, Fielder had hit two
lhJee..run homers lhe day before.
"But I only si$Ded a one-year
(contract) extensiOn,". Hargrove
quipped,
t:ielder, who led the majors in
home runs and RBis each of the
pasi two years, ranks ftrst in the
majors with 91 RBis and third in
the AL with 24 home runs. He is
bidding to become the fu-st player
to lead the majors in RBis three
straight years since Babe Ruth in
1919-21.
"He is so sttong, he can lake a
pitch outside his power zone and
still hit it out of the park," Hargrove said. " You might try to be
too fine with him. I think maybe
with Fielder, pitchers are guilty of
that. He can be pitched to, but it
took us four home runs to fmd lhat

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Augu•t3. 1992

VALLEY LUMBER and
SUPPLY CO.
555 Park St.

Middleport
992·6611

•

By SC01T WOLFE
Sentinel Correspoadent
Driving the Tim Nonnan,Uaerte
Engines 115j, former All-Star
Champion Joe Gaer1e of Rochester,
Ind., claimed the $4,000 to win, 40Jap ''The Club"/AII-Siar Ciltuit of
Cbampions Sprint Car feature Saturday night at K-C Raceway near
Chillicothe.
Jeff Houser of Chillicothe
pushed the Coors/Rouser Garage
#99 to the front and never looked
back in claiming lhe $1,000 to win
companion Late Model Invitational
mce.
Gaerte looked 10 be lhe class of
the field until All-Sial' conlender
and leading winner Kevin "Pup"
Huntley found the high groove 10
his liking and really started to
move mid-way tbrtlugh the mce.
Jaclc Hewitt in the Murphy/]. W.
Hunt #21 , a former Jim Keeker
USAC moun~ also moved into the
high grpove and came from way
back in the pack to second p~.
Hewitt and Huntley put on a
hair-rnising show, each lap putting
their machines on the (inc line
between winning and disasler. ·
On lhe 34th circuit, Gaerle had
dropped to third behind Huntley
and Hewitt, when Hewitt tangled
with David Snell in tum II. The
kept moving, b_ut H~w!tt's fro~lt
wing broke sending hun mto a sptn
in tum three, where he collected
Terry Shepherd, Rocky Hodges,
Kerry Madsen, Frankie Derr, Kclly
Kinser IIICI race leader Hundey.
The 5cven ear pile·up changed
the complexion of things and gave
Gaerte the lead, where he held off
Australian driver Brooke TalllCU by
four ear lengths at the finish.
Ricky Hood was third. followed
by Joey Saldana, Todd Kane,
Byron Reed, Jack Hewitt, who
made repairs to finish seventh ,
Kerry Norris, Jim Nier and Mark
Chrisunan.
Heats were won by Frankie
Kerr, Todd Kane, Allslralian Kerry
Madsen, Byron Reed and Mike
Bowlin,.
·
Kevtn Huntley won tho Las
Vegas Dash, while Charlie Fisher
won the C-main and Brooke Tat•
nell the B-main. Tatnell, Charlie
Fisher, Kelly Kinser, Rocky
Hotlgea and Rod Gecrgc advanced

Croni the B-main to the A-main.

Columbus, driver Charlie Fisher
moved through the C and B-mains
to advance to the A-main, where he
bad mechanical problems and finished 22nd.
Twenty-seven Late Models
headed by local legend and first
heat winner Char gin' Charlie
Swartz of Ashland, Ky., put on a
great show for the anxious crowd
on hand.
Swartz won the fll'SI beat over
last week's winner Paul Coyan,
Charlie Seymour and Scott Wolfe
of Racine in the McDonald'slll4.
Jackie Boggs claimed the next
heat over Jon Osman, Butch
Dowdy and. Mark Fnzier.
Switching from Sprints to Late
Model driving ace Jack Hewitt won
the third heat over Greg Stevens,
Jeff Houser and Brian Stinson.
Ted Johnson won the B-main
over Clark VanHouten.
With Jeff Houser the man on the
point, every won toOk a shot at the
local hot shoe, but no one succeed·
ed. Jackie Boggs, Ashland, Ky.,
challendged early, along with veteran Jack Hewitt and Charlie
Swartz. Swartz, in a brand new 117
owned by Jack Williams, hooked
lhe cushion and went over the bank
on lap six.
On the ninth circuit, Donnie
KeMison •s mount lost power and
was brushed by Tony Throckmorton . .With no place to go, Wolfe
drilled Kemliaon in the rear, sparking a seven car pile-up that left
Clwlie Swartz 110p Ted Johnson's
mOIIII on the fU11 tum wall.
All drivers were unhurt, but
only 'TitrockJnmton continued.
Houser then held off Paul
Coyan at the fmilh for his fU'SI win
at K-C since Jato 1988.
Following Coy~. was Boggs,
Butdl Dowdy, Mark Frazier, Mite
c~. F~

Lei.lt. Duane Ack·

ley, Brian Sunson and Clark Van

ijoulen.

The USAC S(l'ints come to KC
on W~y. August 29.
SUMMARY
HEAT-Prankie Ketr, Rick
Hood, Dave Snell, Mark Ooodlleiall
Heat-Kerry Madsen, Byron
Reed, Kevin Hundey. JICk Hewitt
Heat·Todd Kline, Joey Saldana.

Mark Chrisunan, Rusty McOure

Heat-Rodney Duncan, Terry
Shepherd, Jason Dukes. Brook Tal·
nell
Heat-Mike Bowlin,, Joe Gaerte,
Kerry Norris, KcUy Kinser,
Heat-Jackie Boggs, Jon Osman,
Butch Dowdy, Mark Frazier,
LAS VEGAS DASH-Kevin
Huntley , Joey Saldana, Rod
George, Terry Shepherd
C-main-Charlie Fisher, Art
Wendt, Landon Stover, Dean
Jacobs, Mark Imler.
B-main-Brooke Tlllnell, Charlie
Fisher, Kelly Kinser, Rocky
Hodges, Rod George.
A-Main-Joe Gaerte, Brooke Tatnell, Rick Hood, Joey Saldana,
Todd Kane, Byron Reed, Jack
Hewitt, Kerry Norris, Jim Nier,
Mark Christman, Rod George,
David Snell , Rodney Duncan,
Kevin Huntley, Kelly Kinser,
Frankie Kerr, Rocky Hodges,
Kerry Madsen, Terry Shepherd, .
Mike Bowling, Jason Dukes, Char·
lie Fisher.
Late Modeltl
Heat: Jaclde Boggs, Jon Osman,
Burch Dowdy, Mad:-Frazier.
Heat:Charlie Swartz, Paul
Coyan, Charlie Seymour, Scott
Wolfe.
Heat; Jack Hewitt, Greg
Stevens, Jeff Houser, ·Brian· Stinson.
B-Main-Ted Johnson, Clark
VanHouten, Dave Kirker, Joey
Dunseith, Neala McCreary, Roger
French, Jeff Grimsley.
FEA'I1JRE:Jeff Houser, Coyan,
Boggs, Butch Dowdy, Mark Frazier, Mike Chance, Fudge Leist,
Duane Ackley, Brian Stinson, Van
Hooten, Tony Throckmorton,
stevens, Hewitt, Charlie Seymour.
Donnio Kennison, Scott Wolfe,
Charlie Swartz, Johnson , Ron
Adams and John Osman.

Sports shorts
Autoradnj
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) ~ Darrell
Waltrip blew away lhe field as his
new road-course StoCk ear made its
racing debut in the Coca-Cola
Mello Yello 350 at Heartland Park
on Sunday. Walt'rip's Chevrolet
Lumina was the only car on the
lead lap at the finish of the 121-lap
race. Bob Schmidt finished second.

The Meigs County Fa.i r Tab Is Coming
August 14, 1992.
Advertising Deadline Is
August 3, 1992.
CALL DAVE or P.J. TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

992·2155

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By The Bend

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The Daily Sentm·ei

I ~~~~~~~~~~~---------r----~~~~~~O~hl~o--.----.------------_2Th~e~~~~~~

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Page 6

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Local educators
attend OASIS

e.,)

Nine Meigs County educators
were al Ohio Dominican College.
Columbus last week for lhc Ohio
Academy for School Improvement

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Byliul-1ollllftw
PUISIOIR

thou auiludc. She even befriends
Pike, played by Beverly Hills
90210 swr Luke~. who is rnn
the other side or the ltaClts.
The movie's plot is a perfect
reOcclion of Bu!Ty's cbalacasimple and shallow. The script is a
string or bad one-liners dill n:cts
like a garlic nocklacc. For CQ111J11c.
Burry tells Merrick that she bas an
advantage thai past Slayers lactlld
What. he asks.
"My acute fashioo sense."
Confronted by the vampire
Amilyn, who nxcnlly lost his ri&amp;ht
arm in a baldc with Pike, Buffy is
invited 10 join the lllflks o( lbc tiv·
in~ dead. A vampire can do anything, Amilyn ICIIs her.
"Oh yeah?" she rclor1s. "Clap..
Even the (anti) climactic billie
at the senior dance between Buffy
and Lolhos, the King or the Vam·pircs (played by Rutgcr Hauer), is
as nat as a week-old mug oC beer.
There is no action. no SllspciiSC,
nothing. Burr simply stakes I.Jltlm
and he dies . By this point in die
movie, the audience will prollllllly
he cheering for l..olhos.
"Get up! Get up!"
Rutger Hauer and Donald
Sulhcrland arc established aciOrS

Your Social Security
By ED PETERSON
Social Security
Manager in Athens
Many people know Ihal Ihere

. - arc new rules for deciding whelhcr
child is disabled under the Sup: · plcmcntal Security Income (SSt)
; progr1m. But there still may be
• qucsliolll regarding what the new
: childhood disability rules arc.
; . · Under lhcse new rules, cbildrcn
arc c:onsidcflld·disabled and eligible
for benefits Ullder the SSI program
if lhcir impairmcnl(s) substantially
affects their llbilily 10 function the
way thlll childron of a similar arc
normally would.
·
Because a child's functional
,. ibilities usually change as he or she
grows and dcvclo!Js,the new rcgu:~: Ji11ioM roflccllllis variability. They
• ~ iOcludc spcciriC guidelines for considcriag how a child functions as
. he Of. she qcs and provides C&gt;am·
. pies or the kinds o( things childn:n
.: can do • asc groups or birth 10 age
: 1. 1 to 3. 3 10 6. 6 to 12. 12 10 16,
. and 1610 18.
· .. Other new regulations provide
dCtailcd $Uidclincs for evaluating
mcnlil d•sorders in children and,
for lllc fil'll time, specifically cover
- qlllll ak:ohol dcp:ndcftcy diiOI'·
" lien, IIIXiety diiOfdcfS, lltenlion
•" ilcfic:il hyperactivity disorder, pet·
IOIIIIky diiiOI'Cttt, aulism, tic din: ;;,den ~~~:h 11 Toun:uc's Syndrome,
·. •and ..eliL
:.·- 1'1lc SSt pt01ram now provides
;;: islli 1 tee to moro Lhan half a mil·
" lloil dialblod children with limited
' ·family income and rcsoun:cs. And
· ·while we hive undcrlal:cn a wide·
ranginJ outreach campaign 10
;,i.localc chiklnln who might qualify ·
·'"for SSt diaability bcncfill under
illele critllria, IIIOIIl remains 10 be
•• 1

done. You can help.
•
If you know or a disabled or
blind child who may qualify for
SSI payments, you should rofcr lhc
child, parent, or guardian to a
Social Security office. Appointments can be made by calling IU'
toll-free number, 1·800-172-213
any business day from 7 a.m. 10 7
p.m.
Also, if you know somcoac
whose SSI claim as a disablod cllild
received a less than fully Cavorablc
decision, or whose childhood disability benefits were tcrrniiiiiCd oe
or after Jan. I, 1980 lhroup Feb.
27, 1990, advise the claimant-«
someone who can act oa the:
claimant's behalf-to conUICt
Social Security for a review o( lhc.
past claim under lhc new rules.
If you would like II10IIl information about the SSt program and
childhood disability, you can call
our ofnce at 592-4448.

Attendance record
set at AmeriFlora
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) AmeriFiora '92 set a record for
one4y llltlldance over die wetend, officials said.
About 20,000 people 1ltaldcd
lhe international i'lorll cdlibiD
on Saturday, Ameriflcrl em.

showed.

MarkelinJ Director Steve
Zonan acditccllocal media for die
sueeess. A oo- D11io wwiw ..a
lhree television sWioas bad U-we
shows froill die e•hihiliAmeriflora has suffered frua
Jowet..lbaft-tKpO w ., •• [
The eUibilion cads Ol:t. 11.

eGaras:•

~

•Comp te
Reinodeliag
Stof. &amp; Co:are
f EE ESn

Stra~gics.

widllliJb cn:dibility. Why they
~ Ill be a Jllll1 o( this nop is
ufrW.MJe Tile word "black..ra.esiOIIind.
On the odlcr aMI oC the acting
spectru• is Paul Reubcns as
lAlla' rip!.._. -pirc. Ami. lya. RN1 *' is bcsl ~ as his
alter CJO, Pee Wee Herman .
Ndloo,PR.eubaa's dlnciCr is 1101
- 1 0 lie llbaiOO seriously, he
is s&amp;jll ....... d ID lie It lcasl a Iii·
de fri&amp;JW . 1 But it llbu lot or
setr coavol 10 wltclt a potential

They were Donald Shuc, TupPers Plains Elementary School
principal, Rebecca Edwards, Eastern Junior High School teacher,
and Joe Bailey , Eastern High
School teacher, Eastern Local
School Dislricl: Karen Walker. Salisbury Elementary, and Jeannie
Taylor, Meigs High SchooiiCaehcr,
and Gordon Fisher, Meigs High
School a~sistanl principal, Meigs
Local School District: and Linda
Fisher and Jennifer Hill, Portland
Elementary School. and Vicki Hill,
..., e ~ .,. sawning from Soulhcrn Junior High SchooliCaeh·
a~ .-c--.ing Pile W~:~:, er, Soulhcrn Local School District.
The academy now in its lith
and lllllllugll h,_;ally.
year,
is gcarod 10 as.~isting oducaScaly? No. F....y? Not really.
lors
in
utilizing the Effective
Tile vicwin&amp; public will probably
~ a slake lhrouch lhis monster Schools Process in lhcir individual
'l!hools and dislricls.
within I'MJ weeks.

COPY DEADLINE

Call 992-2156

Monday Paper
Tuesday Poper

CLOSED SUNI)AY

POLICIES

• Ad1 oullide the eouty your ad runt MUll be pre,.id
• Receive di-=out for ad. paid in ad,.•nee.

'{

•

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'

949·2391or
1·100·137-1460

• 7 poiat liat type only UHd
' Sentinel ill not ,n .poNlhle for error• aft.er finl day (eh.!ck
for error• far1t day ad ruM in ptper). Call before 2:00 p.111.
day aft.er publkatioa lo make correctioa
• Ade that MUll he P-W. in advllllOfl are:
Card ol Thuu
Hoppy Ado
Ia Maaoria•
Yard Sale.
• A clauirled .dvertiae~~e:al pllced ia lhe Callipolia Daily
TrilKIM (except Clauif'led DUplay, Buliaeu Card or LepJ
Nolie•) w;illallo appear in the Poinl Pteuanl Resiller and
the 1&gt;-ily ·Senlinel, reuhine: over 18,000 homfll

~.!Upolloo

992-M;ddt.po.U
Pomeroy

367-Cheoh;,..

675-PL Pleuant
458-Loon
576-Ap,&amp;e Crovt!
773-M..an
882-New linen

985-Ch•••.,

388-VInten
245-Rlo c..nde
256-Cuyan
643-Arahia Dill.
379- Walnut

843-Portland

m....

247~art

F.U1
949-Radne

895-lot:tart:

The object or the organi1.alion is
band togelhcr girls for spiritual
A "Go To Church" Sunday; semi- and moral upbuilding, 10 develop
annual visitaliol), and fundraising leadership. 10 seck knowledge, 10
activities arc also planned.
tcacb love or God, love of Country,
The lntcmational Order or Job's respect for its nug, love or home
Daughters is an organi1.ation for · and family, and rcvcr~ncc for lllc
young girls between the ages of tcachings of lhc Holy Scriptures.
o;cven and 20 who arc the direct
The local Bethel was instituted
descendants of a master mason, and cbanercd in 1959 in Pomeroy
adopted daughters by law. step· and later moved 10 the Masonic
daughiCr; stcp-gr.lllddaughlcr.;, sis· Temple in Middleport. The regular
1crs, half-sisters, step-sisters, sis· mocllng.~ or the bethel uro the sec·
tcrs-in-law. nieces, grandnieces or ond and fourth Monduy of each
first or !IIXOnd cousin.• or a master ~th (c&gt;.ccpl July and August) al
mason in good standing in the 7.30 p.m. at the M1ddlcportMason·
miNIIIic lodge, or so n:lall:d 10 his ic Temple. Anyone interested in
wife or widow, or daughters of lcaming more aboullhis organi1.u·
majority members an: eligible for tion is invilcd 10 call 992-5328 or
mcmbcn;llip.
(304) 773-5936.

Days
1

3
6
10
Monthly

Words
15
15
15
15
15

Rate
$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

Over 15 Words

$13.00
$1.30/day

1· 1\\\11\1 .

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

21- Bu.m.. Opportunity
22- Money ao Lo..
23-- Pro(euional Ser,-ieet

Rates are lor consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged lor each day as separate ads.

-----=:-::-=====-==-----!

se

llL\T\1

.-....

.

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.

2- I• MentOry
3-- AanouncemenLI
4-- Gi\'MW&amp;y
S-H•ppyAdo
6- Lott and Found
7- Lolt and Found
8- Publ;. Sale &amp;
Auetion

efll, lOSE &amp; IHROAT •AllERGY
•HEARIII&amp;IIDS • HElD &amp; IIECI SURGERY
·.

9- Wanted.lo Buy

II- Help 'IVa .....
12- Silualiou Wanted
13-- lnnan.~tee
14- BwiDIIII Traiaiag
15-- Schoob A ln~tructton
16- RadM&gt;, TV &amp; CB R&lt;paw
17- Milcellaaecnll
18- W.. ted To Do

~

I Flll\1 :--ll'l'l.ll-.~
6
q P
62- Wanled lo Buy

\lllll .ll \\111'1·.
Sl- Ho•aehold Cooda
52- Sporfi"' Good.
~ Antiq~te~

54- Miac:. Me~Mndiae
SS- BuildiJII Supplie~

DESCRIPTION
Counly ·or
llolgo, In lhl Stolt ol Olllo,
ond In dot Yllltgt ol Pom""Y· •d bounclod ond cieocrlbod u lol~o: Bolng o
pall ol lol numbaf ElghltHn
(11) In Pom~roy, dosc1lbed
•• foUowa: Commencing on
Chtny Straal Shly (etll 1111

lnlm lha corn or oiChorry Mnd

fri&gt;niSirlllt,thenclrunnlng
olong nld Cherry SIIHI
T-1y-o11 (28) 1111 ond II·

CMJ.
CALL BY NOON TODAY AND GET CABLE TV INSTALLED BY
The 1111 publication will
mode on Sept, 7, 1992.
VILLAGE 01' POMEROY
3, 10, 17, 24, 31, (8) 7; 6TC

Public Nollce

•

Public Noll~
P.UBUC NOTICE
To:Emmelt Olmolt and
R-oe GilMore, H lvlng,
whoM oddrMolo unknown;
lilt'unknown helro, d.._,
lfiiiiHo, admlnlotrotolt,
e.-oro, ondlor ooaiQno ol
EINnoll Gilmore ond
Floronca Gilmore, II ell-

AUGUST 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
FREE SAME-DAY INSTALLATION (REG. S39.9S)
PLUS••• FIRST MONTH'S SERVICf ONLY S9.9S. AS49.90 SAVINGS
'

.. ·-

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'

PUBLIC NOnCE
TO: Thtlmo A. Gru-, II
living, who11 oddltlt lo

unknown;theunknownhelfl, 1121 ond recorded In Dood
dtvl-,llgaltHo, Hdmlnl• Book 13311 page 120 .......
REFERENCE DEED: Voltralora, ••Kutora, 1ndlor
ume
14e, Poge 121, llelgo
•••lana of \ Thelm• A.
County OHd Records.
GrutMr,ll dtctHoid.
Audllor'o Porctl No. 16TO: J - Gr-. II livIng, who11 lui known odIe 1805 IlL Yomon
Point Ploooan~ WoOl
ond whoM .,_nl

..,. .n..lld

linl- tha lmmadlole hNIIII, ulely ond
....... to "" oltlunt of ...
YMiagt ol POm...,y, Funhar,
doe deleollve ond unoalo
oondldon of oald ovucture
po111 on lfiiWgtnoy 1o lhe
publlo h•hh; ufaty oncl
,...,.. ol lhH QOIIImunlty.
llwo•'-purouanllolhe
oillhoriiY -..1 by till Olllo
IIIYittd COde leo11oft 711
ond Ordlno- No. 427 ol lhl
P-oy, you aro
nollllad IIIII II uld
olruOIUN II nol IWIIOvod or
""obHIIIIId Wllhltllhllty~:
doyo 1n1m lhe loll ~
liOn dote ol IIIIo notloo than
lhe Vllloge ol POtftlfOy wlM
Mid elfUCIUII Ia be
OlniGIUfl

=of

HURRY OFFER ENDS SOON!

_j
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••

• N-·'

Wilker., ...,

t

••

[!]

-

.. . •

OVEN
aad VCR REPAIR
AU 1111111

lrl, It II Or We
kk UJ!o

-Electrical &amp; Rer.;, ..,tio~
85-- General Hauli~
86- Mobile Home Repair
87- Upholtlery

0066Q

Th• lasl publlcollon will
be mH&lt;f• on S.pL 7, 1992.
THE VILLAGE OF POMEROY
18) 3, 10, 17, 24, 31,19) 7; 8TC

FOR SALE

Road (blacktop), 1/4
mile from Rt. 7,
located bettnMn
Chetter and Tuppera
Plalna.
Each lolla partially
wooded with excellent
d111lnage. Service by:
tP.C. Water Co.;
Columbua l Soutbem
Electric Co.
LOTS FROM S3,500
and up
Owner Rnanced

16

915-3594 •

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
915·3561
lcrwo '"• Pwt Offlco

WICK'S
HAUUNG SERVICE

~

•SAND -GRAVEL • DIRY
•UMESTONE

(614) 992·3470

1.

CUSTER'S

~

STUCCO

.: ·

PUSTER

-

1300 VIH StrHt
MiMeport, Oh.
Jot Custer
614-992·2212
1ar1rw C.ater

LINDA'S
PAINTING
&amp; co.

"Tab IN p,;, 0.1 Of Plilllfrlg
-1M u,Dot• Fat r.. •

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
FREE

unum

helr1,

left

mernorlea
We 818 proud

own.

and Ordlno- No. 427 ollho
VII""' ol p_,.y, you '"'
htfoby nollllod lhll II oalol
OlruClUN lo Ool IWIIOvad 01'

""obMIIalld wllhln lhlrty(301
I

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

R&amp;C EICAVADNG
BULLDOZING

~FIREWOOD

LICENSED ind BONDED

USED RAILROAD TIES

PH. 614·992-5591
12·5•tln

4·4-92·1111

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

oHNdiiMrs

• Convertible Tops
• Custom Carpets
• Custom Seat
Covel8 • Also Boats

......

numbing

;al

liB

ca•PI.I'nAna
IPIIIoSTIIY

t

i~

FOR SALE

to

Agriculture

He Wll the belt.
Sadly mllllld by
wife Eileen; 1011
Charlie and daugh·
tera Judy and

Joyce

·Ill ACREAT DEAl

Y'll~·Z'l$9 .

608 EAST MAIH

POMEROY. OHIO;

NEW usnNG- FARM: 208.61+ acreslocalod on Ball
Run Rd. Oldor lrama homo, 4 bedloom1. LCD walar
ooma tillable and
acrea,moll limber. FREE GAS
with 6 oil ond gas wells. Has bamo, garage, colltr, llhocl,
and chicl&lt;on houM.Asking $125,000.

'"'"*'

NEW UIIA RD. - Rallch slyiM home wilh 3 bedrooms,
1112 baths, heal pumr .;entral olr, · .. .11'011. oul·
buadlnga, oppn&gt;x. e oaoo. Ownor rwlocalid - tn&gt;Cious 1o
oaNI Come 111...mlllo on orr.r.

REDUCED - Porlltnd - Older I ftoor lrwna home with
Home has boon redueHd to

Lime

VAllEY INC.

fill ESTIIIATIS

~~~ St. Ma- WY

( 04) t73-9J60
7/1711 mo.

$7,500.

CO...ERCIAL BUILDING - W. llaln, Porn_, - I800
oq. ft. 4 bedroom epl. upolairs. Good location - r-vily
lnovolod MI'IL Allking $33,000.

'I

ClMCIHED ADl

BUSINEII II 80000 0000...-WFRE IURHG
OUT OF ITOCKI IF YOIJ'IIE EVER WANTED TO
SELL, NOW liM TillE TO UIT.WITH US. OUA
ADI ATTRACT ATTEN110N AND OUR SALEI

STAFF II EXPERIENCED TO SERVE YOIIA

NEEDII CALL:

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Specializing In &lt;ustoni
frame Repair .
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES I. MODElS

992·7013 or

II. 2
MIIIWOCHI, W. Ytl.

992-5553 .

or TOll

FREE
I ·800.141·0070

304·273·5555

DAIWIIt, OHIO ·
7131f911!1

3-16-1 mo pel

Announcements

Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614-992·
6637

3 Announcements ·
A Wonderful Famllr Ell*ltnc•.
Se~ndfniNn,

EuropaM, SO...h
JlpiMU
HIGh
School E•ehl~ Stuctent.. lrriwl"llln Altguot
AFarnny!Amerlcen lnlercuMUrll
Student Exchlng~~. C.ll KM:hil
ArMrleln,

a-

21WS04110rf.O Sibling.

F,.. Adult T1lk Un1.

St. II. 7
Uea.ire, OH.

2.81 ocns with omal lhH&lt;f.

992~2156

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER ·
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Umestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

614-992-7144 !:

18at
For 111118 on earth

....... -..-tobolnoo-

Revlllll Codt Stcllon 711

'•

UB

God
In your garden of

·THE

GALLIPOLIS,

264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

n.DweiJi•

him,

VUiagtOfllolalo ond lho11111 oltualld lh__, hN

.... •d unMie """ ....
· - - " " - lhe I•
- htallh,
Mlelyol"""
wtllweto
thaaltlunl
...
Vllltge ol Polwoy. F..-,
lha dHiaotlva and unoafe
oondllloli ol ·uld ..........
po- Ill tm•IIIIICJ to lhe
publico hilhh, Milly lind
....... ollhH -unity.
Th.,.,_pur-nltotha
oulhorlty _..., by lho Olllo

CALL (614) 446-9971 (Kelly)
UNMY'S AUTO CENTER

un-

clevJ....,

11 103 Clltrry 111111, ......
....,, Olllo """ ..fully

19e9S A DAY AND UP .

8

38904Leatlag
Creel lead
Mid'tpart, Ollie

known;

Itt~

2/12192

AUTO RENTAL, JNc;.

BILl SlACK
992-2269

Aug. 3, 1991
He left uaauddenly

ti'IIISUI8

· llie S•dar Calla)

Public Nollce

61411111 MO. , .

HATFIELD
Who passed away
one year ago

So

614a949·2801 or 949·2860

•UGHT HAUUNG

RAYMOND

he

New Ho11111 • Viayl Sidiag
Hew Garates • Repl•ctllllal Wiadows
loem Additions * Roofing
·

HAYI REFIIENC£S
lofwo 6 p... L-o Mts10p
lh• 6 .... 614-985-4180

NOnCE TO BIDDERS
The Boord ol Eduoallon period
PLAINLY MARKED "BID".
ol lhe Mtlgs L-1 School
In ordorlo be considered,
Tho Boanl of Educollon
Oi1trict dnlrea lo r1101lve all oealid bldo ohsll be re- reserves lho 1lgh110 accept
soalid bldo lor tho following: colvH&lt;f In lhe Treoourer'a or relecl ony ond all bids.
GHOollne, OU, oncl Anll· OHlca, 320 Eoll Moln SIIH~
Jane Fry, Treasur"
rr-• • lor o ftve (5) ytor P.O.Boi272,Pomoroy,Ohlo, Meigo Local School Dlolrlcl
on or before 12:00 o'clock
320 Eall Main 511801
noononTuesdoy,August10,
P.O. Bol272
2
In 111emory
!=~~~~==
11112.
Pom.,oy, Ohio 4576i
ENVELOPES SHALL BE (11 20, 27; (B) 3; 3TC
In Loving Memory
Real Estate General
Of

But

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •

r-y,OIH

7/101't2111n

&amp;

LOCATED CORNER OF RT. 7. &amp; 143
POMEROY IY·PASS
992a5114
7n21'9211 .mo.

COMMERtiAL and RESIDENDI\L
FaD: !ESTIMATES

Public Notice

Hla thoughts

$1.50 doz.

36970WR•R...

2t7Liect.. ll.
NIIIOY, OliO

I"!

182- Plum~ins&amp; Huti~
·I SJ.-.. Exca.alins

· ...,
boon dellnnlnad Ia bo ln... duorlllid btlow, baa .,_
cult ind unMie ~~~~ uld lnopoolld by"'" lppropololl

PHONE ·1·800·344·3331

FRESH SWEET CORN

712em/1

::'lo and morolully d•
You . . htraby nolllled
lltlow,haobttnlnopHOIHd by lhH Hpproprlill lhol lhH - 111oio Hltu-

=

TODAY

614a992·6949

FREE ESlliiATES

MIDOLEPOAT - Ownor anxiouo to HI lhia 1 loor lrHme
homo wilh 2 baflrooms, llorago building. ~.,.
• ..... sa,000.
Making on orr.~

I• unknown;

11 200 CCNMior llrllt, Pam- txecutora, 1ndlor eulg1111 ot
J . . . Gru.er, u........
Ylll90fR~:~I•8ndlleatruo­

CALL

Clll

RED HILL FARMS
PRODUCE ·

Interior • El:terior
Spray • Rol - I!Ws~

S·14-92~ho

111 1\, l'llll r \I'IO\

'

:IW.

1391 SolfsrHcfloollol.
Wlpals, OW.
Col (614) 446-94i6 •1:.00-172·5967

PAINTING

•dmlnlolrotoro,

You . . horoby nollflad

dill y011r ,.., Hille altualld

.

dead~ 11 ~ogdoleo1July23nl

)

64-- Hay &amp; Crain
65- Seed &amp; Fertilizer

8

HOUSE

NEW USnNG - CHESTER - Orie floor lrama home
wilh 2 bodiOOIIla, anclooad roar poiOh, thed, new vinyl
aiding, naiUrai gao Lennox FA heal, TPC walar, Eaollm
School Diabicl. Alking $20,000.

-•·

'

SlrlllollhowklthoiTwonty·
ltndlng bock from Charry
Ill (28) ltol, Sixty (etll feol IO
lol number Nlne100n (18), lhl
uld P"""''" odlolnlng lhl
Telogroph lot to callid, lha
obove -llbed promiHo
bolng 111M umo lol or parco!
of ltnd oonvoyH&lt;f Ia Thtodore Nlggomoyw by Goorge
Weyoomlllor ond wllo, by
dead boorlng dolt ol Augull
25th, 1873 ond IOCOrdH&lt;f In
Deed Boolt41 onpago190of
lho...-dsoiDeedoolllolgo
County, Ohio, 811 oloo dead
from llaryNiggamoyor,dalid
November 201h, 1111 ond
rocordtd In Deed Book
Numbaf101 on pago 318 or
lhe...-doofdeadooiMelgo
County, Olllo, and btlng lho
"'"" proptfiY convoyod by
Julluo Epplo ond lla1g1111 A•
Epple 10 J - Gruooor by

!

•

:•

63-Li~tock

I

Bennetts Mobile Home

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

I

!

lnlm lho loll pubb
doll of thlo nolloo lhon

lbder She Wrote

1121111211-pci

Gwality Hi Efficiettcy
AW C.tltlolers, Heat
PllllpS, f•raaces &amp;
New Water Heaters.

1-5 ACRES

614·949,2804

.58- FNill &amp; V'8"10bleo
.59- For Sale or Trade

~ ==~P~u~b7.11~c7.N~~~~~~~T-=~P~u7b~llc=N~~=I~~==~t=~P~u=bl;lc=N=Q=tl=ce:=~~==P=u=bl=lc=N=~=I=ce==~

Major I eague ........_.

773·5614or
992a5249

Approved Townahlp

• Weedealers

· 71- Auto. for S.le
41- Hou.ea for Rent
72- Truck• for Sa~
42- Mobile Home~ for Rent 173- Vant &amp; 4 WD'a
43- Far•• for Rent
i74- Moton:ydea
~ Apertmenl for Rent
. 75-- Boatl &amp; Moton for Sale
45-- Fumtlhed ROOMI
176- Auto ParLI &amp; Acce.,.rierl
46- Space for Rent
!77- Auto Repair
47- Wanled lo Rent
~ 78-- Campin8 Equipment
4.8-- Equip•enl for Renl
:
:-1.1\\IU.'
49-Forl.aue

'

.. ----~---------

........

COMPLETE
REIIODEUNO IEAVICES
F- &amp;L • 20 Y1t Exp.

P.O. Box 894-W•• Alley
RlONE, OHIO

Mowers • c•all Saws

;5~ Pell for Sale
157- MwicaiiRILrulllenll

,\ I I\ I· ~TO I .f.
32- Mobile Hoflet (or Sale .
33- Farm• for S.le
34-- 8Uiineu Buildln~
3S- Loll &amp; Ac ...
36- Re.l F..&amp;ate Wanted

OHv WV, &amp; H.u.D,

RETAIL &amp; WHOLESALE SALES

IF-.Iy Eoah Rlqo Slo..

RATES

10

(hllll.l"'

COUIITIY LOTS

(

ton; a swimming party and trip 10
the wave pool in Hurricane, W.Va.;

\lolllll l\ Uouhh \\ldt ll 11111t

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

....
PARTS &amp; SERVICE

667-CoolviUe

SlluoiM&lt;f In lha

.....

AeeJdentlll A Comrnen:ill
Ff'M btiiMlM
11-26-'I!Wn

. \TTE~TIO\

Now

937-Buffaln

742-Rutland

removed.

Robin Hood

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing. Weeding.
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trllhmlng &amp; Removal

S.

New HoniM, Roollng,
Room Addltlone,
Kltebene, Porche. and

lEVIN'S LAWN
MAIIITEIIANCE

GaWa County Meigs Coun1y Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

• Price ol ad (or aU capitalletten U douh" prke of ad cotl

'

1:00 p.m. SaiUrday
l:OOp.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
I:00 p.m. Friday

Classified pages cooer 1he
• following lelephone exchange• ...

• Frtt.Adl: Ci.,..way and Fouad ad. uader 15 worch wlll be
r11n 3 da)'l at DO e.arp.

RIVERSIDE
BUILDERS

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

Wedneoday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

MoN. ahru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M •• SAT.8-12

.: f.

r

2·7-92·1111

To place an ad

lhe Vllloge ol Poonoroy will
IDOUM uld IIIUCIUrl 10 be

llemanl Shaw

ES

985·4473
667·6179

'~t'o~=n·s colors for

this term arc peach and teal; her
Oower is the while tiger lily; her
emblem the teddy bear; and her
lhcmc "Makin' a Difference.•
Some activities planned for the
term include: grand session in Can-

I, .._ _ _

;Duffy slays chances for box office profits
as well as vampires in new horror/comedy
•

•
•• Jlllffy lllf Va•plrt Slayer
Riled PG-13
'·, . ••(o.IOI Rve)
'· ltl~ CeMury Fox
'
Vamp ires have invaded SouIllem California lllld arc terrorizing
spoiled rich Valley Girls and Boys
and it's up 10 Buffy, head cheer; h:adcr, mall bunnr and vampire
• slayer 10 save lhcm . Unfonunu~ely,
she docs.
:
Buffy, played by Kristy Swan• son, is a mindless blonde with
more shoes lhan brain cells whose
life revolves around boys, pom
:poms, and two-for-one sales.
.. A scruffy man named Merrick
: ~ (PonaJd Slllhctland) comers Burry
in lhc locker room
school one
• . day 10 inform her of her birthrighl:
: ·She is a Sla)'CI'- a descendant a
long line or females with special
abilities for hunting and killing
vampires. Mcrridt explains lhal she
is lhc Chosen One or her generation lllld that il is his job 10 train her
as he has her prodcccs.o;ors over his
past 100 or so lives.
Los Angeles has become infest· .
·.cd with vampires, he ICIIS her, and
she is 10 be the Orkin Man or the
·Nelhcrworld. The training begins,
.with a litde reluctance from Buffy,
as a heavy-duty workout which she
sticks 10 ICnaciously ....unul it mler. fcros with chccrlcading pr.!Ctice.
With each successful slaying,
Buffy seems to gain brdin cells and
drift from her spoiled, holier-than·

or

•HewHo••

l,

mes-

to

.,. • • • •• ' "- r-: iiiYe IIRidy 1111 tnyiclf "' for lbiJ "1be incoasi IIC • cia iu &amp;a ... W, J
JIll'
-JIM love?
: Ill lillie di
Pleue find oat all nile cr•n. allola llle I •'s •..,. ••f··llllllt
lr,
ID

:a;:

or
or

tnstailation bclhcl oCTICCB
Bethel No. 62 lhc lniCnlalional
"-'"'""' or Job's Daughters. Middle·
port. was held llitCIIOy a !he Mid·
dlcport Masonic Temple.
IMiallcd Wll':'l BclhM Clark.~ored ,quccn; K1m altol, scmor
pri~ccss; Sticy Stewart, suidc;
Apnl Hudso!t, PH.Q No. 62, Marshal; Mary Stein, PHQ No. 62.
chaplain; Jessica Chcnlicr.
rccordcr; Trisba Wamcr, first
~ngcr; Jessica Jollnso11, lllird nies·
scnger: LeiLani Fowler, senior
custodian . .Not present wen: Cindi
Rou.~h. Jami Ervin. Becky Elliou.
Jodi Imboden and Amy Cobb.
lnsta11ing offic~;rs were Beth
Clark. officer: Mcrri Amsbary,
PHQ No. 62, PBG No. 62, guide;
Drcama Braley, PHQ No. 62, marshal: Mary Stein. PHQ No. 62,
chaplain; K~y JohRSIHI, PHQ No.
62, PBG No. 62, recorder and
musician; Ann Mallo•. MMJD No.

...
· ·b-•- ·
111 diJCllill
w·wlto
llellet.._dlcto;o..or
, 15 •
, 0, af:s;' I&gt; 'lA• laiDW
if 1 ca dD..,...., for you,'
~· 'IIIMullilwllllil
.. -.
-Nlle....,.IDaa.; ovu
. ...,... ,_~¢ wYtJOU

JD* n'

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTIOII

Job's Daughters instal_l officers

· 'lllapuo.
.. 1'llil • for

•

Business Se

Monday, AL!Gillt 3. 1892

·

llow.d L Wrltesel

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
Gotten
Downllp0ut8
Gutter Clllanlng

Painting

FRU ESTIMATES

949-2168
71211'9V11n.

'''*2!1·21101

Uv1, OM On One.
Roduco Salo And Fut Wllh
Capl+s And ~·V.,
111-lc AI Fnoh Phlu-r. ~

Go-

Tho • ala 1lamo' 1o Thol Spoo:lal
Oolly Pick ~ F0111Wid J4on.

~~:Sm. ha~ ·~

Seeton. "Wofth ha Wtklhl In
Gold.,• CaN 1-ICI0-43f.tBt. Call
Chi.... $10. Ftot f • .... ,Dol,
MHciwo. Minon_PII,.II
Ponftloslon.

4
lllk

Giveaway ·.•
Mlrod a-. llOOd ..itth

:~7:"'

"""""' ~-i!04"

Tamo AI""" 10 llOOd homo. 114441·'1075

�Sentinel

Monday, Aligust 3. 1992

Ohio

SNAFU® by B~ Beattk

32 MoblltHOmH
tor salt

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by lMry Wrtpt

,...

•

72 Tl'uckl fol' Sill

Ohio

Television
Viewing

HOW~YOOR~

E11JJIOIWP££.T10
~ WAA'B r.oillr.e»~J
Ill TilE W(ll.O(F

I

~ H.l..''«ll llO ?

=·

1:00 Ill. CIJ. (J). Ill.
IIJNewa
()) Clltrln ~~

vans • 4 wo·a

I'LL ~ROW T~E BALL, SEE'?

::.
'"t.'":\C~:
20111.
•
-

~

::-.'.":1..~.:.::

j}l~l~t

Slaapl1111

NORRIS

•

Cambridge

1112

14x70, Dlx . Model, Raised Din.
Room, 2br, 2 Bll.h Oak
C.blnolo. R~. Pri&lt;:a !22,000.
CI....Out Price l18,1m (Na
Trldn)

Flnanck'lg

Atttllable.

Frtnch City Mobllt Homta. 114·
441-1:140.

Tralla&lt; IIFI.aiOFI. Heavy Duly All

~

S Doon
"""' 01 L.JFI. ... Solo y--~Roln-

EIR TREE SERVICE. Topplf19,
TrlmiM., Tree A.movtl, ~

Trlmmlntl. Froo btlmotMI 114-

~ Solo: Allllquoo, CoiJoc.
tibiM, Loll w
I .... llotwl
Wed. '1llru ~ 1W1 ,...,.,.

31J.7117 Aft1r 4p.nt.

.

Gao,._ Pottlblt S.wmlll, don't
hlui,LO: !eat to tht mill lull
Clll
'7S·1ll7.

'RIIJ Hoed, RiuQ,....

Hillard Prof--'onal Tr.. s.r.
Ylco T~
, Trimming, Atmov.
I~,
Trimmtd, FM E•
tkNtM!
I Allt'ftOYid. 114·
041.tSI4.
Mloo ·-;Po"'u"'la::;.,:-o.=y-;c.=,.-;c.;cn:::l,:::-r.
a. ... tftardlbtl, ehllde119. M·F
I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ag11 2,._10.
ht-., '"" IChool. Drop-Ins
wa'e am•. 114 ... 8224. Hew Intint Toddler Clre, 1Mo44W227.

Pt. PIIIUnl
&amp; VIcinity

Will Mow Smol Lawno. 614-411·
1Uf.

Sttti Ulilhy Trtl..,, $500. 114·
441·'11113.

WMklnd Rttrut To SIIUt Ealalt 1:10 Fl. W.ter Fronl On Ate:·
coon c,..k, 2br, 1 112 Bllhll
Mobil Home With Extru
133,000 Or Bill OHor. 304-522·
2210.

1&lt;1ottt1

46 Space for R•nt

"

AMI II Or OHa S.C. Avtlllb&amp;l.

-·*

• ..,..... Olltor ..... .......
MUll Taka All, 111 Call Hoowy A~
tori:OOP.II. :104-171-ICU.

Household
Goods

( BliStf

314
acre
lot.
With
ponylftorHrlcllt Plllu,.. Public

-·---11,001
..
'-t
1t111 ..................... !

Wlllf', ..tc:lrk:. $4500, 304-!'JI..

2804.

Or

and

NOT to stnd money lhrough the
INN unlll you hlvt lnvttUglltd

lhoallorlnJ.
... uty•-;;;~~
,.:P 7tac
:-a:-:1otl
:c;cl:n-7tlllc-;;::lor
tomplett wllh 3 lttUont, S

Real Estate
Wanted

Do~

Fumllun: China

oablntta. Wllhltlnde, 111M •
-rllaryo,
Larklna
daak, ale. Ill 441 ~•:___

chllra,

Rentals

·-·- ..
-·-"·.
-·---In
41 Houses for Rent

z llodtootii , _ 1210. _ ,

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

r.........

- . . , , ...... ........ 1110

2 Bllho. .1/2 114-146-1232.

tllpooll,oM-102-62&amp;1.
2 Bodroont lloma For Rant,
Nair Galllpallo And Galllpatll
CHy Scltoal1. 114-44&amp;-1111.

Out Rl. 211.

2021 M1rquen1 Av1, I Yf1 okl,
Ill

anly 304-t7S.1231.

*-!. -

-.....
-......... •- c.._,
---,..-124.-...-......
--·
--- --.. -- -·

217 Kolloy Dr., Gall\~\~ Ohio
45631, Talap-: I
3385,
Prico: ~.000.00.
3 1 - o . Family
And 112 lllhroomt .. ,1•....• _,
Garaga, lllck F - WHh C:O.r

1

c...n.,
...... w. · -·

,.. ... til Alhellllo'llll.

Siding.

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

3bt Ranch Stvlt 1111on W.VI.
Larga FR. Whh F~~f:· 1 112
Batho, 2 112 Lal. l
· 134.

s. 4,

....

.....

lim Ia PGinero,

£1-.ySchool,
-··'
YARD SALE

:w. ..... !lpltL 10
Ralroed • .. rt· p n, OM.
8

,""'

.''fl.!:

TRICk Dltnn, Anlericln

-

""

,..,,,

. . . . ..

True~ Drl...: -

&amp;Auction

"'· Dlnallo Sol W1th 4 Chllra 1121. OPEN: ThN S.turday IA.II. Ta 11'.11.
Cloaotl On Sunday. LOCATED: 4
Mlln· 011 Rotllo 7 On 141,
In c.roanary, 114 Mila On LJn.
-PIIIo.

11x7112 Bod,.,.,.,, Unluml-.
Ext~Pt For Sto¥1, Aetrtaentor,
DW, No Pelt, 1 Milo ~111.1511.

·-22M.

:a hdroom Tr1iler, Minlmum
•

Alllfenc11 rwqulrM, No Ptta.

Ill 411 411'1.

2br Fumllhecl Cof1 Mill Aotd,
Oft 125, No Polo, Dopaall l
Atltt'etae AlqUirtd. 114--::lq..
11122.

211r -~~ lloma, Dopaa1t l

Aa,.._ Raquh•d. 614-251·

1122.

Toll! Metric, 2 lA, UTI per

... Pay U,

To -.. Wllh PerfGnilnca lncruMI At 2 I I UonUtt. Home

Evaoy J0.14 O.ro. lltal lo 25
W/2 YNro OTA EIJI. Hullll En·

t1at oootooro. Dacltof Tra..,..,., I·
100..:14-IIIG, Alii ""'ao,l. l-11.
Wtotftdl , _ _ - . ......

1bdrm. 1p1, tor reo~ , $225/rna.,
aecurlty cMpolit, no pete. 114-10:1-2211.

- - · T o Earn llarol M'lou

;..:.ar..,~;...~ ~1:'1.

2

ltdroomt

Stottt

I

A-

Off The llrttt Parkkla, Qfll..

Call Only 2 - Opanll-.nilt

• ulllhlaa pold. HUD OPPfavod.
A • " ' - roqulrotl. 304-1752722.

-

T- 01 Sfrtlalo.

Claon '";'. ..,., And

:

In

Rolriaorllar, Air CanciMianlng,

A

llpallo. 114-44f.GII51-4:fii P.M.

·~::.,.."J:"T!'":.~i

Wllk1 . ~acllnar 11.24 WHit.
Sola""" Cltalr 11UI WHit.

14 Wlde1 ~. Gil, HNI, Air,
Privati 1.0'1, Mill From Ho4&amp;tr,
No -.I27SIIIo. l14-4...2300.

- . Tmh paid. 1150.
Dopoall • .......... roqulrotl.
No ptll. Applilnc11 tumllhtd.
304-6714000 'til lpro.

3 Yrt. OTR
E.lp. , . , ... 2781. . . .. AO-S.
I

W11k, 1 Dnwer Cheat $3.12

CASH
AND
CARRY
Altrialrllort StanN AI $311.
llaclliwra $141, 2d lfun.lt Bodo,

l - · Roll ,..,_, · -:
a:..C....11Ji.

~­

.

-

.AKC

Mlnltur. Pintct.fa,

.................
-.-.aa

.,

~

tiOO.

76

2 llotl,_ 11&gt;4. 1125 - h. All

IMatftd: ......... - - .
11~ baaltkltplnt 1111111. le•·
1111 ltGura, ..,., bJ - . Aug I
lo lox C-1 CM'I Polnl ptiHinl
Raglalar, 200 Main Sl, Pl. Pll.

- 114Ollar.

C'c:'tn'=:=
.......
~os;r

........

-~~1 11c.DlR-. ·

~---··
C&amp;mpera&amp; .

-- -11111

~tel 1... ....._

,.o. .."'"tn.
'"""a St

Complllly ' - · 1br, .....

,........_

•,

..

.........."......................

to Lnnry, pM'tdna, Mit, lit,

12

SHuatlon
W1nlld

...... 7p.m.

fum,_ Ap4,

J!t...

IZSIMo.

UIIH!aa Pold, 001 looand
AftnW: Gel~l. 111 1•1111
Alllf7p.ro.

ONo

'

from ~~ mechanic. (R)

Stereo.

MotorHomea

l!lle

E: T1te lolt ...,.

(A)(2:00)

r'l

0 Murder, Sl1e- ...
Ia Craol&lt; ond ChtM

~=~ -

11itn.r (R) (2:00)
1:30(1). (J). Amlrlcl'l
""""'"' People Undlrwl180'
golf and trampoline lkling; 1

ai"e

M1Jor Did
Gunny lets Ellnbt111 in 011
making money In 1118 stoCk

IIIID

marlte;,.~tereo. 0
Ia Nl
Now Siifeo.

0 llatclt lltllllar1 Q
t:OO(J)D tile ,...,..Klng'a
H(PI 2 ot 2)' All(; ~
Night- (2:00)

c
Ill. liZ. MurpltJ ._,

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

52 Sponlng GOCK!J

~INa'
~e~

FRarl

craov.t:tED eus ~

Ban ................. -

- · , . . , _ - Flold ......
• ..... - · 41111011 Pul, ...
Drow, ll~na 121;

aoW'II·- :

~~R~~~=~

W•••• Brt11sh Bulldog va.
RepoMan.

THE' c:ll.ll'el~

a ICing
B
Sci-

\M::lRL.D.

~~II==? )

/

Murphy befriend• Corky to
gel an lnvMa11cn to the Whl18

10 "T'1411-1K THAT
THieteMY
wtlH

WI-:IY OOFFE:R
NESDLE9el.Y

00 '1111 '&gt;\QJDER
WfN NOeOOY 51~
NEXT' "0 YOIJ OJ A

1.ar1y

Llvel
and Mro.Klng

1:30 • • liZ. D811grting

w- Tho Suglrbekers
bocomt trapped In 1118

HAPPY JACK IIANOii LDIION;
S3
,......., Nllng and M~
Antiques
growth •• •nr ....,., 1to1 ,,...,
-:---..,-,.;:..,.;..;.~- or lung,. on I ...,...
luy 01 1111. R - Allllq-. . wtlltoul CarUIOMili&amp;Q Food l
1124 E. Moln 111-, an Ill. '114, S.pply, 114-1024114.
-.,. Houro: II.T.W. 10:00
~Ra~g~lo~tor;;otl;iPP;iom~•~aniftiOian~P\a~:f7
1 00
o.m.
••p.ro.
I:OOI ~""·
Iunday '
Dltl
lhaio,
Ia 1:00
tl2-2121.
1250.114-31~1114.

w""'

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

10:00
BARNEY

w..-,

57

t!iDDD TH'TEACHER
NIGHT- WAS FIXIN'
TO' PADDLE
MARE
MY
BOTIOM
??
AN'

WHAT ARE YOU
SO TICKLED
ABOUT THIS
,MORNIN'?

Mulk:ll
Instruments

21" ell« TV~,.~. 140. Young
Iundy ftuta. IICIIIInl c ....
ma" Coon nvvnn, llue T1ci llonl
$250, 114-MWOOI.
~. Rod Tic~ lSI. -.ZS'IS.
Flndor • - Guitar W11h A..,
30 G1l. Electric Hoi W11., T1nk, .~ndolyn, Autaltarp. 114lalto Than 2 Yaara Old, 1611. 114-

JEST IN TH'

NICK DF
TIME II

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

Fruits &amp;

Vegetablea

.......,.
............
_ri
.._ ,.......,.....
: : - ........
Orl_.c.... ......... ...

Cit Dol:lf, D-IC, IM-211-111111.

~

.

CIMin!l
-own $1IOIAiin•.
lrtng your
Concrlla I loollo Blllllh1tt1t1 F.,... J.l/2 I. at
T1rtka, ..t.1 A1111tlon TMU. r4on
Evana Enl..,..lolo, ~..-. 011 Golf....... 111111 Rl. 7. IJ4.211.

1--·

La._ Plo
Y011r 0,. Poaoh On;ltanl. UnOhlo'a

Gao l!!llr, Pl.
DooL
11x7 ~ Claroga Door, tllll .
1111111111.

c.a

1211. Dlllt -

..... - •lli'•l=,... =•ii
-.........
•••za
· f7.....
.~......

Trusting
partner's play

tK3
t714

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: South

....

By Pblllip Aldtr

woods. (R) Stereo.

Ill MJih of 1M Mlya: Popol
Yuh Tho Mayan my1h lhat

Alsotha
.

.

ACROSS

.

food
31 H..hw

1 ACtrlllSl11mottl
5 RtlgioUI
lyaltm
8 Pre!lldtnUal
lnlll*
12 Ctplblt ol
(2 wdi.)
13 ActorNovelo
14 Sltot1 for
llll'rah
15 Bt!IHIII

33AIIWHIO'

lngtoSL-

37 Sllngy

•lftrmlu..

40 Lui wllllnd
42 In rtldiMII
(2wcll.)
41 blllncllnld
46 lltllly

46ACirtll

Hmr
48o-flc-

•=-.......

ter181 (abbr.)

41 1111... llorJ

18
18 Entfgy unH

'""'

(tllbr.)

51,••, -1
52 GrMt
53 Sind forth

18 Idol
20Ttkt--

....

54~

. 21 Hollo short

23 Dwtrt plant

(2wcll.)
55 Ellborate

· 27 POilU•• word

seC
chair
57 Rom•

' 24 Outgrowth

28Satid1Mdtr
Amaz
· 28 Brolkfnt

-

DCJMI

5 Smollor'o

'
1 lllxtd 1111
2 SurntiiiiY
3 llrlnp Into
hlntKinJ

hithWIY

5 Ll,.ot.,.
7 L0011111 tllout •

811pluiIWMkday

.....

4lfltttiYI
W«d

lOG.-

ASTRO.QRAPH
BERNICE
BED,EOSOL

Refrlgerltlon

...-.

.....1111111

"f!IJIIII
. . . . . . . C,,...Q.

.,

1 111 I I
IIMiir ...
u:•h .. 111 n • ~ !'lolot.
Rldnour It 11rlrMiw

Ceo •

.. ltWM-

72 Tiucka for Slit

- -..a_--.
--.

1111 -

.010.114-

..4 .... 4114. 1117

=~-

---C..Ctll. ...
Cll tl1 -

...,

~

till

o=...
.

.

'

....... 4, 1112
Takoadvantageol~1aln1tta '

)fir altWd where you can make bull·
,... con11C1s under eoclal condl11ona:
• The llnka you'M W1abllah could prove 1o
blt ol 1rern.r.doua 1to1p
LEO (~ 23-Aue. 22llf you're uncertaln obou1 laking a apeclflc ac11on 1o- ·
dey, put It on unlll later. w1tan you'll.
.hovemore time to evalua1a Ma ramlflcatlono. Don't ·be lmpu-. Know where
lo lool&lt; lor romonce and you'll find 11 ..

The Astro-Graph Matchmaker lnsta~11y
reveale whlcll ligna are romantically
perlec1 for you. Mall $2 plus a long, selladdretaed, s1ampad envelops lo
Ma1chmakor, c/o lhis newspaper, P.O.
Bo• 91428, CleYOiand, OH 44101·3428.
VIRGO (Alit. 23-lept. 22) Gelling your
!acts stralgh1 should be of ulmo.s1 lm·
portance todey. You mlghl bllnctlnad
lo jump lo conclusions pradlca1od upon
fauHy lnforma11on. Lool&lt; before you

Is no111ta lime 1o lire verbal salvos.
AQUAIIIUI (...... 20-Feb. 11) Do no1
volunt- cri11cloms, -lions or advice loday. Instead ol geHing a fo'lendly
response, you might gel a healad
reprimand.
P18CES (Feb. 2DI Thla may
not bit one of your more producllvo
daya, owing 1o lha1 foct thai you'd ralhor locus on 11ta lnalgnlflcan1 ra1ttar lhan
lito _,..,,
leap.
Allfll (Mitrcll 21-Aprll 1t) Belora
LltfiA (llopl. :IS-Oct :13) Your ludg- maklngcommerdalpllns1oday1htllnmonl In financial mauora migh1 no1 be volvo someone also, check 1o make
up lo par today, owing lo your Imp&amp;- · oure you hove 1hlslndlvldual'a consent.
lienee. Don'l be Nllslled wl1h ballpark .. If 1hlnga go wrong, you mlghl bit hold 11flgureo. Walt and work wllh exac1 nancllly accoun~.
numbers.
• TAUIIUI (Aplll _ , 20) Touchy doSCOflllfO (Clot; M-Ilo¥. 22) II you '
-c:Ouklcretleunrte&lt;llllry
choolt IO Ignore corlaln delallo, an lm- ·
on ll1a hornalront todly - II you
porttnl ObjecUVe might nol be achlevwd '
wlthoul.o:ortal&lt;*lng 11ta
today. And II you lrlpup,l1'o Hkely lo be t
Think before you apeak.
due to lndllference 1oward 11ta 111111 ;
21......,.20) Before ftnd lhlngo.
1
o11ttrs 1oday, be doubly
SAGITTAIIIUI (lloto. IHiec. 211 Thll j
your aim lklrte 1/'e clean. You
mlgh1 no1 be one ol your beHor dayolor might s11r1 1he crl11que, bul contrlbukeoplng -rota. A sharp odvoraary , tors will ftnlsh lt.
who'll be IWII'It of thll IIC1 COUld ge1 ; CANCIII (.IUM 21-.lulr 22) You'rio Ilk•
you 1o r - rncn11lan you !"ould.
ly to keop big
under con1rol
CAPIIICOIIN (Doc. - . 11) Even ) today, but It could be 11ta smaller OU1·
11t0ugh you might fMI lustlllad In giving loyo that do you ln. Be bolh panny-wlse
eonteoneB plecll of your mind, It could · ond pound-conteiOul.
prove1obeunwlse1odoao1oday. This

Ujotd

i :OO)
!1l P.o.v.
dille liZ

NINo1w111Mtllfllm
EapDitn Maggie Is curious
abOut l charml"'l slrlngor
who ~ to Cicily. (AI

on-!__,H

I

••pan-

11 Elllrtlt
22 Fo'tllll tl
23 11ot11111

-.
~

30 ot
dtntiOII"•
32.._._

......

3AO...
35 Ct,bn

S7 1111-,t
MGroupof...,.
311 ,...... - .. '
41 - lltrll : .~
43 . , _ .

........ ...

47 Slrttll Pl't .,

D ISallllltl Tonight
11:00()) T1te l k l l l t y Cile IIJe • •
Ill Newtwtlell

50-

=•

..-.

~~01,1

CELEBRITY CIPHER

EDt~tWinN....,..,.

CrltM 111111 Afllr ~

T1llll Stereo. 0
Ia NIIIWIII Nliw Stereo.
8Mot-lt
0 IIOYit lfoclc.fiMdl

' MDIGJGUP
JD
JKX

JKX

QP

OXY

ZIDDN
ROLl

UTDHGHTJXP

ZLQOI

PMDlJ

AXNGT,
KTN

.. '
.;

a••= .. or...s~NMq
atlllc•orfiMOwe......,,..~n~~..,._.
.... ...__
.....,..,...z..,.a

11:30()) DIMIIMIItr

~.·.........
;;:!tr'
-......

;,

51 1002, RoMart:

R•-NIISteroa.

41

-· ·

CfllltiOo . :
4 6 - - · ..:

())Newt

=
oa.-

·..'

MTJ~MOI .....,

10:30(])e 0 XXV-..,
Olympic GloMI (Cortt.l ...

OIMMII1t• Cnlot1 ond CtiiM
lpariiCentor
lllllpolll
Tonlgltt

·-

-+--t-1 25MSPI
Naal41••
...

(2:301

.....

•.

1117- .........· :

1D:OI(I)IIOVIE: Mljor-

Helling

Electrical &amp;

lladao;

SOUTH
tAKQ4
.KIOI6

A-

Plumbing &amp;

'

s-.

U76 54

perlonns In Austin , Texas.

•

lntllltlllonll 170 Dlolt
12Ft. GoM Coudlllon.

tKJ

(1 :00)
IIIIWortd Newt
1D 700 Club WHf1 hi

'

.............
-.
_
...___. -=
....... - ""·-.
.
..=...
- ....... -.11_ -·
··-·
w- .... ----..-....... __
=.. ...
- - .,_:o. ...._
......

~.--.

tA9132

tl0 765

~~...
-.2.:0111 Night
1n Aultln Alan Jlekson

:n;nms.

.....
Pllotooo:

I

•u

S~trftJt.r

Clamoinhordl lluto, . - 30" Murry Rldlf19 - . , , I HP MWiranlllnlnlclnltllloo. lttl.
Uootl I mon1N 1:121. :104-411D. CHngorlch 114- 11424.

a.................. - , . 56
1•1.............. nw•M • 30W7NI11Z.

~11

contains a mlraculoue
resuortctloo, 1118 Nting ol
lorlllddln lruM and a dWCent
Into 1118 '"odetworld Ia
explOred.

I WOKE UP

251·1702 """6:00p.m.

:v~~"'l':."·

..

-

Hlll'mln recelvts love letters

AitC Scottllh T......, I 1lb. akl,
...... '""" notHh~dlngl

~•..,............... Gollo
, lM-~y­
AIIIIW8aGhllnll ,, •• ,.....

',W.YL

IIliD
ondllle
Aat of DllccMI r stereo. C
11\D tale Evtltlng 8ltldi

AKC rtglle :Mt CoeUr lplnill
pupp&amp;n: Hf'lt ehotl &amp; WOflted,
Notlylega.--

Choln _ _ ...,_..,

'A-AUMUII_,_

:-r"Aia

Stereo.

,:

EAST

WEST
tn
.11.7
tQJlOI

G::c",!l' laclaly. (R)

, _ - YldiOI Video
clips of off-l&lt;ey slnQing by
adults r~ ~~~~

:1

7,000 T - !1t1e1to Fer loll.
114-:MWIM. ·

~'·:.\)In

l1o .... ~

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

PHILLIP
ALDER

Tbe World AJman•c"Crosaword Puzzle::::
.

7:35(1)Btnlonll Son
I:DD CIJ • (J). Amlrlcl'l

".......... - ·:

1-3-tz

1:05 Ill MOYIE: Hlall Plelnl

a~~eoswstereo .

..........'! .... ald. 1200. oaclt.

61 Far:m Equipment

4 u
~...!'I

l~llfN£A. w

liZ Milar LMgue BtMblll

Now ........... .....,- -

FMtn Suppl1es
&amp; l1ves1ock

: AI 0111 U.l.

__··-=·
... .,.., .........
.
_, . _,....,
........

0

(L)

lootNC~

,_

-

•

1111 C101111N

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

1111 !l1f:!!lo. -

e

Auto Plitt&amp;
Accessories

---....,- ........
:ner .. -·
•• a. . . .

1-7121,1........

Elac1rloold'"'"""'••
old ..b1ae1t
......
blaclt ......
...... Mmltotl Ouani!Mioo. loautllul
wardroba, lorm with ooga, 114- Ctao. ... ~... Juty ......
H2-62TB.
·
tamllor 211h. Wll-'o Or·
· It
Rl. 112,OrNaoh
Fllrflald.
41 ..J114.2711
411-

WV251611.

T.. -

••

NOI\TH

tJ 13

No&lt;.. Easl
H.L. Mencken wrote, "Faith may be
PIISS
It
Pass
delined briefly as an illogical belief in
Pass
!NT
Pass
Pass
the occurrence ol the improbable."
Pass Pass
U you base all your bids and plays
Opening lead: t Q
on the assumption that your partner. i! ·
making a mistake. it is a prescriptior
lor disaster. To do well, you must trust
your partner.
South's one no-trump showed !a-17
.
points in the modern style. North used . dent, when dummy played the club 10;
a transfer bid, promising live bearts, East wan with the kfrw, not the jack ~
and jumped to three no-trump to oller He «~~~lillued with the club jadt and
a choice of games. South had a strong receivod a club ruff to defuL the.
preference lor bearts.
«~~~tract.
•
West led the diamond queen, which
"Nio:e play, pariDer,' said West:
was won with dummy's ace. Now de- "But if you bad..., with the jadt aDil
clarer played a low heart to his king t:1111tiDued with the kill&amp;, I -w bave .
and West's ace. West was tempted to placed you with a doublelllll. U 11M!'
persevere with the diamond jack, bu1 bad K.J-x, I would tl)lect you to win.
' he had seen bis partner's discouraging with the jadt and returD your low club~
lour at trick one. Accurately, West
t'r.;~. ~. pointswt_'1b1.!,. woulclubsd ~ .
switched to the club three.
........,. ,_
wv
'""""
Knowing that West wouldn'1 lead a be our Ollly c1w1ce. •
low club .without an honor in the suit,
"Maybe,' "'Plied EasL. "but Ibis~
East was able to place his partner seemed safer."
..,_ _
' '
with the club ace. To avoid an acci·
® ...,_....,.....
~ .·-

1111. WltMI o t - Q
De Fttnly Feud

AKC
,.........
Woahat And Dryit 117.11 WMk, .......d-2112 .......
Bunk ltd COmplel1, 11.21 -.~.·

42 Mobile Homes
forRenr

Wtotor, Troah._~altl, -

8-3

""'-·nd-• to $200,114 •••·1•n Adwa

I BR. 2 car praga. Nil pump,
2 wMie, oulbuikl• blme, S Bod,_.l, 1225/Ma. 1100
contrirlly locllotl. U mltai hom Dopoalt, No Pala,IM-371-2511.
M11on and Ntw Hlvtn. 3fM.8I2..
Small Trallar In Galllpolll,amo.

..-, Olton T.,.

..... Wt

Public Slit

frw

In

Utlto
- - . - ....
-- ·
- . ....
...,..
ciirllll..llse
' llllycla,
9 ttL

IIMry An.

1Mintfn1nc1

· 4clrongroamltamlly
............ ""'"living
roam,
.....
camblnallott, khcloon, utMhy
room, ttl one tlvel, COV*rld
patio
back, privacy linea,
praga, ,.,_, by appolnl.-

_ , .. . .... ll~C)IW
M:; ............... ot

-

brick

56 p I for Slit
-=:::--::8~1-:::::=-:::::-::::
Of00111 and '"""" 1~

Jorllclta Rd. Pl. P l - . WV, 1 Wlllt ,........., 114-JCI.
ca!IIOW11·1410.
~.
A. II. Fumluf'l, New, uMd, ,,... AKC Adull Dlcholtundo, 2
....... Houllltald lumlahl1111•·
.. 1 Ma~ 1121 -,.All
MalOn, wv. -71J.5341.
~ PH; 1n ON -~
... -· .
Saora Potlabla Dlohw.-, Chlht11huo, llackl - · 111.
114-317·-·
Kokll Service FOf I 1~ ~2
tr Wltll. 1200. E.C. • 1
AKC Cltacalala L a - PIIP'
0151.
= ·4Fomlla,4Malo,l-.

~.
VlfKAng Routt: L.octl. Wt Have
TN Nowoll Machl1110, Makin!~ A
Nice SINdy C.ah IIICOIIIO. 1- 2 llotl""lflf unlumlhlld hotaa,
507 112 8ICOnd 8t, fMw Hann, AUCTIOII I SWAIN
IOMIMS54.
RJRNITURE. 12
WV.IOWINIII.
.Olivo 81., Galllpalla.- l Uaotl
WalK Tannln9 Bodo, Naw Camfumltwe, hNtlf'l, Will"" 6
Mric.l Home
Unitt From 2 BR - · I mllaa aut 81. Ill. Worlt baala.l-.:niO.
211 -ltla ol GoiUpalll.
1111.00. Lampo, Lallono. .. _
1210
VI'RA RJRNITURI
- . . llonthty ""Y""'"' Low Dopoall •
AI llt.OO C.N Todly Now FriO
114-448-3111
~ca•a~aa. 1-221•212. .
Rani.Z.OW.

31 Homn for Sale

1111, Hla Granda, 011 Col 11424W12t

PICKENS RJRNITURE
Groam!ng. All . , - ,
Natllt\Jiotl
.....
Pal "4
- 441 Hatlllltald lumll!tlntl. 112 mi. Wlbb. Call
IIZIL·

h11bllehld Pty Phone Route
Low Colt, High Aelum. 1-too111..2100.

Real Estale

- · wt"'

dowo._ Hntolo, oiG. Claiodo WI"'

-

dryo ... 15,000. 304·112-3211.

VENDING ROUTE: Gat Rich
Outck'? No Wt"tl lUI Wt Htvt A
Goad, StMdy, Altardabll, Bual· Wott1 Laat. 1-214VENO.

Black, brick, -

'*'ca-. ..... u.....
pta·· ._.,::-~1

men's 110m hurdles, triple
jump; men's vollaybltll: U.S.
vs. Italy; alnglas tennis.
quarterfinals; women's diving
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lnformaUon mailed on r.qutll,
304-67U253.

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�JIJge-1D-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:Thoughts of a 4-H member

Gilkey-Hudnall famil{es
gather for reunion

·Extension's corner
"Guess I'm not very good in 4H. This was my first year, and I
. •just didn't seem 10 do too well. The
kids like me OK, but the leaders
,and junior leaders seem to like the
•Qlher kids better."
• "Seems like the leaders don't
. think you know anything unless
• you get an A at the 4-H fair and
have perfect writing and spotless
paper on your records ... guess they
don't understand about lillie sisters
·:and writing with crayons."
, "Last week, I was supposed to
~ive a demonstration at our meet·
ang. Boy was I scared! I wa' mak·
Jng brownies. I was kinda afraid at
.l)rst, but then I stancd telling about
·.the day I made some that had dog
·hair in them . The other kids
..dnjoyed hearing about it, and I
.. \hought they'd learn to be careful
like I did ... but Susie, our junior
leader, gave me a dirty look then,
so I j11't read from the project book.
·.Afterwards, Susie said I should
:,have used glass bowls and trays
and posters and things like that.
Guess you just about have to be
· perfect to be a good 4-H member. I
wish Susie had helped me some
before I gave the demonstration
and showed me how not to be
:afmid."
.
"We had a special achievement
. program for our 4-H Club. I'm

Monday, August 3. 1992

-Author Unknown
•Taken from the Ohio 4-H
Newsleuer found in the Ashland
County Clover Courier.
PAINTING DOLPIUN • SUDSet Sam, a bottle nosed dolpbin at
the Clearwater Marine Sdence Center, creates a painting witb tbe
encouragement or trainer Amy Baird. Tbe pllintangs are featured
on tee-sbirts and litbograpbs wbicb the center is selling to raise
funds. (AP)

can handle about 900 runctions.
By DIANE DUSTON
One or a series can be programmed
Associated Press Writer
MONROVIA, Md -When lhe into any or every switch in the
. buyers of a certain big brick house house. •
Want the bathroom light on ,
· in this distant Washington, D.C ..
By JAMES MARTINEZ
: suburb say they're calling home, music playing and the shower
Associated Press Writer
they won't necessarily be talking water running nice and hot before
CLEARWATER,
Aa -Sunset
you get out of bed? Tap the bedside Sam took up his brush
about a family member.
just a few
This house answers its own tele· switch once.
months ago, but he's no sttuggling
Another flick of a switch turns artist
phone and talks in a hwnan·sound·
· in$ computer voice about what's on 1he kitchen ~ghts, coffee maker
Already, the boulenose dol·
and radio.
·
goma on inside.
ph in's colorful works have been
If the doorbell rings while issued in lithograph and on T·
Itrs a "smart" house - the ulti·
· mate gadget, the home that the you're watching TV, flip to the shirts. An art auction and a gallery
futurists of the 1950s and '60s channel thai moniurs the doorway opening are in the works.
dreamt about.
to see who's lhere.
"He's having fun and helping
In a few short years, the space
The highly scheduled person out his fellow dolphins at the same
age technology that makes the can put the whole house on a 24- time," said Dennis Kellenberger,
smart house so smart will be as hour, seven-day clock so it's lit up, director of the Clearwater Marine
common as microwave ovens, says warm and humming in the morn· Science Center, Sunset Sam's
·Potomac Edison which wired lhe ing, shuts down when occupants home. Proceeds will pay for center
house and is conducting public leave for work and is playing renovations and rescues of stranded
tours of it
romantic music in softly lit rooms dolphins.
The Federal Communications when they return in the evening.
Some activists aren't amused.
Commission gave its nod of
If fue breaks out, the bouse can They say Sunset Sam and his paint·
approval for further development automatically alert the rue depart· ings are ~nother example of how
by voting last month to ease certain menl, shut down the circulation captive dolphins are exploited.
private borne restrictions on use of system to keep smoke from spread·
"There's no doubt in my mind
radio and cable television signals ing, flicker the front lights 10 signal they're having this dolphin paint
needed to make smart bouse tech· fuefighlels and illuminate a path· pictures to get people in the door.
nology work.
'
way to exits for inhabits.
It's sad," said Mary Mosley, a con·
"It's somewhat disquieting to
This house's computer "brain" servationist who has fought for the
think of oneself as living in a dumb uses minimal power and keeps a release of Sunset Sam since his
home," FCC Commissioner Ervin daily tabulation in dollars of how stranding on a beach in 1984.
Duggan wisecracked before the much has been spent on energy for
''How do they know how the
vote.
all the appliances, lights and other dolphin bUly feels?" activist Ric
It's also somewhat disquieting gadgets.
O'Barry. "It's a deception that
to be standing in what appears to
Houses like these are popping always comes bnck to the dolphin's
be a normal home in the country up around the country first as phony smile. No matter what
that has smart house capabilities.
demonsuators, lhen for sale 10 indi· they're doing they always seem to
This house can be programmed viduals.
be having a wonderful time."
to watch the bnby, make the coffee,
Chuck Barger, or Potomac Edi·
Biologists al the center say Jhe
start the shower, dim lhe lights and son, said the "smart" technology
14-year-old dolphin is blind in his
tum on 1he music.
adds about $10,000 to $15,000 to right eye, suffers from liver prob·
It can be equipped to sense the cost of a new bouse.
lems and could never survive m the
whether people are in a room and
Leon Weiner, chief executive wild.
reduce the heat and douse the officer of Smart House L.P, in
Veterinary technician Amy
lights.
Upper Marlboro, Md., which Baird said she was always looking
If the baby cries, sensors over designed the system says he's for new activities to keep Sam and
the crib could activate the TV near working on one that can be pool companion Sybil stimulated.
the parents' bed and give a view installed in existing homes, but cur· She got the idea of trnining Sam to
through the television camera in rendy the only smart houses are the paint after watching a TV news clip
the child's room.
ones built as such.
The " brain" in the basement

The sixth annual German family
reunion was held rccentl y at the
family's home place where John
and Evclyn German now a have a
cabin, located in Meigs County
near Rutland.
Five children or the late Mr. and
Mrs. Howard German who aucnd·
ed were Howard Curtis German.
· Langsville; Robert German ,
Newark; Belly German Bowles,
Pataskala; and Edna German Wick·
about a painting elephant at the er and John German, Galion, along
with spouses, grandchildren and
Phoenix Zoo.
great-grandchildren.
·
The training began in March.
Beuy
Bowles
was
in
charge
or
Sam learned quickly how to hold
the
event.
A
total
of
66
family
the brush in his teeth and touch it to
members and guest.~ attended the
the canvas.
"In the beginnin~ he just Sort of weekend event.
Some the families slepl in the
made a do~" she SBid. ' Now he is
making longer strokes. If you look cabin, bunk beds, tents, campers,
at some or his earlier works, you while others spent the night in
can really see how he's pro- ncar-by motels.
A weiner roast was held one
gressed."
.
evening
followed by a hayride on
Every Wednesday, people line
up three-deep around Sam's indoor
tank to watch the chirping dolphin
create another mastelpiece.
Ms. Baird first offers Sam a
choice or brushes. Then she pre·
OSHKOSH, Wis. (AP) - At
sents Sam with a choice of colors, ing ace Chuck Yeager, admired m
and the 390-pound dolphin nudges war and peace and non-ficlion liter·
his selection with the tip or his ature, reminisced about his days in
nose. The trniner dips the brush in the cockpit of a World War II
the chosen color and puts the brush fighter plane.
·
in Sam's mouth.
"The objective was 10 get at as
Raising himself up, Sam makes close as .you could to the guy you
a dash across the poolside canvas were dog-fighting and lit the barrel
and is rewarded with a fish. A loud ... right up his fanny and pull the
screech is Sam' s way of showing trigger," Yeager, 69, said at the
he's enjoying himself, his trainer Experimental Aviation Associa·
said
lion's 40th annual fly-in.
A finished work by the llippercd
Yeager and two other former
artist might have red, blue, green members of the World War II-era
and shocking pink flashes that look 357th Fighter Group flew P-51
like a cross between a Jackson Pol· Mustangs Saturday for an audience
lock an4 a kindergartner's fmger or thousands at the international air
painting.
show. The weeklong event, which
Some visitors have.offered up to began Friday, includes 8,000 air·
$175 on the spot for unframed can-.' craft and was expected to draw
vases, more than $1,000 has been about 800,000 spectators.
·
raised through the sale of $12 T·
The P-51 was the plane Yeager,
shirts, and limited-edition a brigadier general, piloted when
lithographs go on sale this week for he shot down five German planes
$75 each.
in a single mission.
For now, the originals are not
Yeager made more history when
for sale, but the center·plans an he broke the sound barrier Oct. 14,
auction this fall to be followed by a 1947, in a Bell X· l, causing the
gallery showing.
fmt sonic boom ever heard.
His exploits were told in Tom
Wolfe's book, "The Right Swff,"
and 1he film it inspired.

Vol. 43, No. 70

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an evntt
and tbe day or that event. Items
must he received weU in advance
to assure publication Ia tbe cal·
endar.

Vacation Bible School at the Fel·
lowship Church of the Nazarene,
Route 124, across from Forked
Run, Monday through Friday from
6·8:30 p.m. nightly. Classes for
nursing through adult.

MONDAY
RUTLAND • A family crusade
at the Rutland Church of God will
be conducted bX Rev. Joho Smith,
also known as 'Grandpa Cratchet"
beginning Sunday and continuing
through Wednesday. Crusade hours
are Sunday at II a.m. and 6 p.m.
and Monday through Wednesday at
7 p.m. Public invited. To pre-regis·
ter call the church at 742-6020.

CARPENTER · The Board of
Trustees of Columbia Township
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the fire station.
TUPPERS PLAINS • The
Orange Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home or the clerk, Patty Calaway.
POMEROY • The Meigs Band
Boosters will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the high school band room
to discuss plans for the Meigs
County Fair. TB skin tt&amp;ts will be
given before and after the meding.
Donations for the booth at the fair
may be delivered during the week
of the fair before II a.m. any day
of the fair.
ROCK SPRINGS • The Salis·
bury Township Trustees will meet
Monday at 7 p.m. at the township
hall, Rock Spnngs.

RU1LAND ·Rutland Church OC
the Nazarene will oonduct vacation
Bible School Monday lhrou1h Fri·
day from 9·11:30 a.m. "Set Sail
with the Savior" is the theme.
SinginJ, scripture memorization,
bible llDrics and cmfts will be fea·
. tured each day. The children will
sing for the morning wcrship eerviee Sunday.

CimSTER • A blberculosis skin
testing clinic will be held at the
Chester Fire Station in Chester
Monday, from S to 7 p.m. All food
handlers must have a current tesL

REEDSVILLE • "Set Sail with
. the Savior" will be the theme for

RACINE · Racine Village
Council will meet in regular SCS·

I

sion Monday at 7 p.m. at the coun·
cil chambers at Star Mill Parle.

7:30 p:m. at the school. Everyone
welcome.

REEDSVILLE · Conditioning
for varsity football players at East·
em High School will begin Monday at 1 p.m. at the football faeld

POMEROY • American Legion
Drew Webster Post No. 39 will
meet Tuesday. Dinner al 7 p.m.
Meeting 8 p.m.

· SYRACUSE • The Suuon
Township Trustees will meet Mon·
day at 7:30 p.m. in the Syracuse
Municipal Building.

POMEROY • Meigs County
Nursing Mothers Support Group
will meet Tuesday at noon at the
Meigs County Health Department
Topic will be "How to Nurse a
Newborn Baby."

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
Possible improvement of street
lighting in Pomeroy was the subject of Monday naght's regular
meeting of Pomeroy ViUage Coun·
cil.
Ron Carmichael, representing
Columbus Southern Power, dis·
cussed a recent rate increase and
how that increase will effect the
cost of lighting saeets in Pomeroy.
Alternatives to existing lighting
fixtures were presented by
Carmichael, with costs outlined.

LETART • Letart Township
Trustees will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the office building. No
more mid-month meetings will be
held in the 10wnship.
TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
Athletic Boosters will meet on
Tuesday at 7 p.m . in the high
school cafeteria.
POMEROY • The FOE Ladies
Auxiliary No. 2171 will meet Tues·
day at 7:30 p.m. Membership dues
are due.
PORTLAND • Portland Elc·
mentary PI'O will meet Tuesday at

PAGEVILLE • The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet Tues·
day at 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville
town hall.
WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE • The Olive
Township Trustees wiil meet
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
Shade River State Forestry Building.
RUTLAND • The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at6:30 p.m. at the Rut·
land Fare Staiion. Public invited.

Smoking restrictions begin
NEW ARK, Ohio (AP) - The
city and Licking County have put
smoking restrictions into effect
despite a Jut-minute challenge by a
citizens group. .
.

Currendy, the village pays nearly
$2,300 per month for street light·
ing, and according to Carmichael,
changing lighting sources in certain
areas of the village (namely the
downtown shopping disuict) could
increase lighting output and
decrease costs to the village.
No action was taken on
Carmichael's presentation, but
Mayor Bruce Reed and council
members agreed to review figures
presented last night for possible
action at a later date.
In a related matter, council

approved the placement or a 1.9
miU five-year renewal levy on the
November ballot. That levy will
fund street lighting at an annual
rate or $23,349.59.
As the result of a meeting last
week with Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman and the Middleport Board
of Public Affairs, Pomeroy Council
agreed to pay half or lhe $15,000
cost of an engineering study with
the firm of Burgess and Niple of
Parkersburg, W.Va.
The study will address potential
ways to improve water quality

''Our attorney advised us 10 proceed as if it were business 11
usual," Maxor Frank Swe said
Saturday. ' The resuictlons are
I!Oing ahead as planqed."

.CREATIVE • Joshua Hager was reaDy ere,.
· atlve ·wltb his 4-H· rood project. He used a
cucumber boat as tbe centerpiece for ltis Meals
for Easy Llviag dish. Goldfish created from
peeled tomatoes were placed on parsley and
chicken and vegetable kabobs completed his

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stair
That there is fun in foods was
apparent at the recent judging of 4H food projects held at the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center.
Nearly a hundred youngsters
gathered in the activity room with
their prepared foods to wait their
tum to be called before one of the
judges - Jan Burleson, a Gallia
County homemaker, Judy Clark, a
4-H advisor; or Sanda Eyman,
Clark County home economics
teacher.

Missing vehicles recovered
On Saturday, Michael R. Stewart of Middleport reponed his
1991 Nissan bUck had been taken from the parking lot at the
Mizway Tavern near PomeroY.. The vehicle was recovered by Gallia
County deputies on Poplar Ridge Road, and had been burned.
Deputy Jeff Miller recovered a vehicle stolen from Franklin
County on Saturdat afternoon. The 1984 Dodge Chllll!er belonging
to Audrey Whtte o Columbus was found at the intei'$CCtion of State
Route 681 and Townsend Road. It had been damaged and had ficti·
tious license plates. Columbus police have indicated that charges of
unauthorized use of a motor vehicle have been flied against Robert
Hutchinson in Columbus.

Recent vandalism probed

RASCALS .TALENT SEARCH
ages J mos. to 16 years

.

'

The 4-H'ers demonstrated how
to set a table, presented their pro·
ject books, answered questions
from the judges, and displayed a
food they had prepared for the
judge's taste test.
When the interviews were fin·
ished, grand and reserve champions
were announced, those who didn't
quite make the top spots were rec·
ognized with honorable mention
awards, and those with the most
outstanding projects were selected
to participate in the Ohio State Fair
food and nutrition program.

,---Local briefs-___,

Mr. and Mrs. Mike Lavender,
Mikie and Heather, weae Saturday
visitors of Mrs . .Kevin Knapp,
Michelle, Amy and ~ley.
Naomi Smith was a Saturday
afternoon ~isitor of Dorothy
Reeves.
Mrs . William Dummitt and
Barcn or Rodney were recent visi·
tors of Mr. and Mrs. Harley John·
son.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank and
family were Sunday visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haning.
Friends and relatives gathered at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Reeves and family to celebrate lhe
first birthday of granddaughter,
Kaylce Reeves, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Bryan Reeves, on July 25.

.:

food tray. Joshua was grand champioa in his
cate;ory and was also selected as a Staie' Fair
participant. He is a member of the Triple R 4-H
Club of Tuppers Plains and this is his second 4·
H cooking project.

Meigs County 4-H food
projects judged recently

Visitors announced

41·2-856-8055

within the two villages.
Altorney Patrick H. O'Brien
met with council to discuss
progress on removing unsafe struc·
tures within the village. Abandoned
houses on Cherry Saeet and West
Main Street will be the subject or
asbestos removal, funded through
this year's Community Develop·
ment Blpck Grant program, and
demolition by the village. SbUc·
lures on Condor Saeet and Chester
Road are targeted for demolition at
a later date.
O'Brien said that one propeny

By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Staff
Gallipolis Police Sergeant
James D. Taylor has been appoint·
ed by the Gallia County Republi·
can Central Committee as the
party's candidate for sheriff,
replacing Sheriff Dennis R. Salisbury's name on the November bal·
lot
Taylor was selected Monday
night after a meeting or Republican
Party Central Committee members
in 1\le Gallia County Probate Court
Room.
Taylor is filing with the Gallia

CICERO, Ind. (AP) - Jeanne
White did more than the usual cele·
brating at her wedding. After nuptials attended by Phil Donahue and
his wife, Marlo Thomas, she
launched a foundation to fight
AIDS, the disease that killed her
son Ryan.
Ms. White, 44, and new husband Roy Ginder Jr., 37, a consbUction worker, were neighbors
who met through their children.
Ms. White also has a daughrez, 18.
He has three teen-agers. It's the
second marriage for both.
After the wedding Saturday,
Donahue and Thomas hosted a
kickoff fund-raiser for the Ryan
White Foundation.

RASCALS TALENT DIRECTORY, with m1jot New
York City Alflll1tlont In the ehll• m•••AA•I 1nd
eetln1 .l..uttry will, review ehll•re~ In fila ltll
1111. It htVI tUIIIUfully h1d ehlldren IIIII
11dltr ~1111• ftr 1dt, emrt, Dlfllos•• vldeot,
111• TY OtllllttDIIIt; 1nd P"lrlllt for ellente
tue~ It: TOYS aR' US, HUOOIES, MACY'S,
8LOOMINODALES, ete. l•tervlewl•l tooll lt~~lly• .

A Multimedia Inc. Nowooaoer

owner has been served with notice
by certified mail, and service or
another owner by advenisement
has begun. The village, according
to O'Brien, must wait for 30 days
after service 10.proceed with demolition. Council authorized adver·
tisement for the asbestos removal
portion or the project
Council also:
· Authorized Village Administrator John Anderson to purchase a
1981 International dump truck,
spreader box and tailgate salt
spreader from an Ohio Department

of Transportation sale in Columbus, at an estimated costs of
$7,100;
• Approved a liquor license
transfer from Pearl's Exxon to the
new Riverside Marathon;
• Approved the Mayor's report
or fines coUected in the amount of
$4,100.
Present, in addition to Reed and
Anderson, were Council members
Belly Baronick, John Blaeunar
Scou Dillon, Larry Wehrung, and
Thomas Werry; and Clerk Kathy
Hysell.

Veteran Gallipolis police sergeant
appointed Gallia sheriff nominee

Cicippio was compii'Oiler of the
American University in Beirut
when he was taken hostage by the
pro-Iranian Revolutionary Justice
Organization on Sept. 12, 1986. He
was freed on Dec. 2, 1991.
The group threatened 10 kiU him
o~. I, 1989, unless Israel
re
Sheik Abdul Karim Obeid:
The threat was suspended minutes
before the deadline after intense
international pressure.

todar.

In mid-50s.

1 Section, 12 Page• 25 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 4.1992

People in the news

Calendar of events

tonl~hl

Cou.ncil discusses .street lighting, water projects

the old country roads. The tractor
and trailer were furnished by the
driver, Howard Curtis German
while Cheryl Coy of Galion fol:
lowed the trailer in her automobile.
Some of the families had four
wheelers and played "road side
bandits" dressed in wigs and
masks. Jerry Coy, The Plains, was
the head leader.
·
The main event was a luncheon
with Joe and Randy Bowles and
Jim Oswald serving as grill cooks
and others providing covered dishes and cold drinks. The prayer
before the meal was offered by
Jody German.
Those attending traveled from
Langsville, Belpre, The Plains,
Newark, Kirkersville, Pataskala,
Mt. Gilead, Galion, New York and
Florida.
Howard Curtis German of
Langsville will be in charge of the
1993 reunion.

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)- For·
mer hostage Joseph Cicippio spent
the third anniversary of what was
to be his execution day enjoying
his freedom and honoring the faith
of those who prayed for his rei~.
Cicippio, 62, was the toast of a
party thrown Saturday by about 75
people who had kept vigils for him.
Later, in a telephone interview,.
Cicippio said his happiness min·
gled with old grief.
"Who would ever think that I
would be here
three years
reflectinF, back on at?," he said,
adding, 'I don't think of myself
rig!at now. (Marine Lt.) Col.
(William) Higgins is on my mind
right now because he didn't make it
back," Cicippio said, referring 10
his fellow hostage who died in captivity.

Low

Wednesday, high non 80 •

8936

Copyrighted 1992

Sixth annual German
family reunion held

a splash with his artwork

•

PageS

me?"

:A master computer in
'the basement; true tales
from a country home
Painting dolphin creates

MIDDLEPORT • "Voyage to
the Deep" is the theme for vaca.
lion Bible School at Victory Bap·
list Church in Middleport Monday
through Sallltday from 6:15-8:45
p.m. nightly. Rev. James Keesee
mvites children ages four and up.
Call992-6302 for lniDSporlalion.

Joyner wins
Gold Medal
for USA ·

Mr. and Mrs. Ererson Willison,
Katie Pierce, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Ivan Stanley, Effie Maffin,
Steve Marrin, Miranda Muffin ,
Nelsonville; Penny Bingman. Jesse
Bingman, Brook Bingman,
Amesville; Mr. and Mn;. Joe Judson, Gary Hogue, Kelly Hogue,
Samantha Moore, Danicllc Moore,
Kayla Moore, Muha; Josh Hogue,
Trimble; Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
Sturgeon, Brandon Sturgeon; Min·
ersvillc; Mr. and Mrs. Sammy
Lewis, Okeechobee, Fla.; Martha
Varner, Duncan Falls; Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Bri~kles, Radcliff;
Margaret Canter, Essie McKee ,
Lavada Pidcock, Kaycee Pidcock,
New Marshfield; Mr. and Mrs .
Junior Wiblin, Pagcvillc.
The door prile was won by
Linda Gilkcy. Bill Young was the
oldest and Jordan Gilkey the
youngest. There wa~ several small
pri1.cs or money to the children. ·
Music was provided by Kermit
Gilkey, Guy Thoma, Junior Wiblin,
Penny Bingman, Bob Secoy, Ray·
mond Brickles and Emerson Willi·
son.

The 22nd annual family reunion
for descendants of the laie Tommy
and Milda Jane (Hudnall) Gilkey,
was ·held recently at the roadside
park on Route 33 ncar Darwin.
Aucnding were Mr. and Mrs .
Garold Gilkery, Amber Wolf, Mr.
and Mrs. Terry Gilkey, Terry M.
Gilkey, Dana Gilkey, Mr. and Mrs.
Cash Mustard, Jonathan Mustard,
Erin Shellman, Robert Young, Rick
Gilkey, Daniel Gilkey, Courtney
Gilkey, Robert Secoy, all of
hthens; Lenora Hudnall, Glcna
Wade, Bill Wade, Mr. and Mrs.
Carlos Ruucr, Albany; Tommy
Gilkey, Maxine Wiener, Iva Pow·
ell, Pearl Gilkey, Pomeroy; Mr. and
. Mrs. Jim Duncan, Jason Duncan,
Jami Duncan, Jordan Duncan, Mr.
and Mrs. Tim Gilkey, Amanda
Gilkey, Mr. and Mrs. Kermit
Gilkey, Justin Gilkey, Mr. and Mrs.
Tony Gilkey, Edge! Gilkey, Dar·
win; Darrell Young, Shade; Bill
Young, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Thoma,
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gilkey,
David Gilkey, Tyea Gilkey, Lan·
caster; Leroy Gilkey, Logan; Cindy
Gilkey, Shawn Eas~ Brandon Ea~t.

really very good in art alld wanted
to help decorate ..., but this group or
girls who arc the president's
friends wanted to do that. So I had
to address the invitations while
Steve, another junior leader, kept
checking on how we were doing
and telling us to hurry."
"La.'l week we had a 4-H tour.
Since it was several miles away, I
needed a ride. Mr. Kent, our leader,
finally gave me a ride, but he didn't
seem very happy. Guess he thought
Mom or Dad should have taken
me. I wish they would ... , but they
don'tthink much of 4-H. The kids
who have parents who arc 4-H
leaders arc really lucky."
"I don' t know ifl'll stay in 4-H
or not. I just don't seem to do very
good. When someone explains .
what I'm supposed · to do, and
reminds me of the meetings. I usu·
ally try 10 do it... And some of my
friends from school seem 10 have a
lot of fun on those afternoons that
we have our 4-H meetings. Since I
don'tlivc on a farm like some of
the kids, may be I should just for·
gel it. Wonder if anyone will miss

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
744
Pick 4:
•

•

Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported that a number of mailboxes
were damaged by vandals on Yost Road and Eagle Ridge Road over
the weekend. Some of the boxes are bein• held at the sherifrs
office for the owners. Anyone with infonnaaon regarding the inci·
dents are asked to contact the department
,
Tim Baum of Chester reported that a window was broken on the
rear door of the B~um Lumber Company buildinJ in an apparent
burglary attempt. Nothing ·Was reported missing, Since the suspects
failed 10 gain entry.
··
Ed Aderer of Staneart Road rcpor!M an auem)lled breaking and
entering incident to the sheriff's departmenL Nothing appeared to
be missing and it is believed thai the suspects had been·tl:ightened
away frQm the scene.

Grocery theft results in charges
At 2:50 p.m. on Saturday, the Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment received a call from the Ridgeview Carryout on State Route
.681 near Albany, stating that a female subject left the Store without
paying for groceries.
.
.
Gloria Hill, a swre employee; attempted to stop the customer and
·the suspect attempted 10 flee, struck the Hill vehicle ailcl dragged
her some distance. Assisted by Hill's SJIC!USC, Meigs and AthCns
County deputies 'found the suspect'~ vehicle in Athens County and
impotiilded the truCk. Charges have been.filed by Hib and warrants
are fonhconting.
·
~OIItinued on page 3

•

'

Chosen to go to the State Fair
with their projects were Alison
Rose, Trick for Treats; Kristina
Kennedy and Molly Heines, Fit It
All Together I; Vincent Broderick
and Sari Putnam, Fit.lt All Togeth·
er D; Shannon Enright and Jennifer
Mora, Breads I; Kelley Grueser,
Breads II; Danielle Grueser, Meals
Outdoors; Emily Asbeek, Quick
Meals; Crystal Vaughan, Extraorili·
nary E~s; Josh Hager, Meals for
Easy Laving; Noelle Pickens, Food,
Friends and Fun; Lisa Hoffman,
All American Foods.
Named as alternates were Jen·
nifer Lamben, Meals Outdoors,
and Traci Heines, Quick MCI!bl,.
Grand champions and reserve
champions and those receiving
honorable mention in the food
judging were:
Science Fun with Dairy Foods:
Cheryl Jewell.
Let's Begin Cooking: Julie
Spaun, grand champion; Lori Har·
ris, reserve champion; Amanda
Neece, honorable mention.
Tricks for Treats: Alison Rose,
grand champion; Kay Hunt, reserve
champion; Tara Rose, Kindell
Brown, and Cassie Rose, honorable
mention.
Breads 1: Shannon Enright,
grand; Jennifer Mora, reserve
champion; and Ezra Thobaben
Patty Nally, Billee Pooler, and Har·
mony Thoibnben, honorable men·
tion.
Breads II: KeUey Grueser, grand
champion; Ben Crane, reserve
champion; Cynthia Cotterill, honorable mention.
Meals for Easy Living: Josh
Hager, grand champion; Megan .
Swearingen, reserve champion;
Bobbie White, honorable mention.
Meal Outdoors: Danielle ·
Grueser, grand champion; Jennifer
Lambert, reserve champion;
MicheUe Scou, honorable mention.
Food, Friends and Fun: Noelle
Pickens, grand champion·; and
Kristle Warner, resetve champion.
Quick Meaii&gt;Emily Asbeck,
grand champion; Tnci Heines,
ieserve champion.
.
All American FOods: Lisa Hoff·
inan, grand champion; Jacue Hall,
reserve champion. · ,
Fit I! All Together I: Kristina
Condnued oa page 3

\'

County Board of Election today,
David T. Evans, chairman of the
Gallia County Republican Executive Committee, said Tuesday
momin~.
:
According to Evans, Taylor
served with the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department from 1973 to
1977.In 1977, he started work with
the Gallipolis Police Department
and was promoted to sergeant in
1982.
Taylor replaces Sheriff Dennis
R. Salisbury as the Republican
Party candidate for the office of
sherif~. Salisbury withdrew his

name from the ballot last Friday
after Judge Richard Walton, from
Lawrence County, said a new law
requiring sheriffs to five years of
law enforcement to run for election
was constibltional.
Two of Salisbury's primary
election challengers, E. James
Sheets, Kanauga, and Ralph Steinbeck, Rio Grknde, filed protests
with G,allia County Board of Elec·
lions and in the Gallia County
Court of Common Pleas based on a
recent Ohio Supreme Court deci·
sion ordering the Portage County
Board of Elections to remove
incumbent Sheriff P. Ken Howe's
name from the primary election
ballot because he did not have live
years law enforcement experience.
·The board of elections and Walton denied the protests. However,
Walton's ruling also opened the
door for further protests.
Salisbury said Tuesday morning
that he will back Taylor's candida·
cy "110 percent" and hopes his
supponcrs foUow his recommendations to vote for Taylor.
· Taylor will make "one tremendous sheriff," Salisb11ry said, citing
Taylor's law enforcement experience.

Three issues
may be on
ballot in fall
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Voters in the Nov . 3 election likely
will face ballot issues dealing with
term limits for politicians, toxic
chemicals and a constitutional convention.
Supporters of the term limit
constitutional amendment and the
chemical righi·to-know law headed
for Secretary of State Bob Taft's
office today to file petitions on
behalf or their proposals.
Ohioans for Term Limits sched·
uled a news conference to
announce results or its petition
drive for an amendment 10 limit
tenure of Ohioans in the U.S. ·
Congress, the Ohio Legislature,
and offices or lieutenant governor,
secretary or state, attorney general
and treasurer.

GRAND CHAMPION • Eleven year old Shannon Enright or
Rutland was graad ehampioa in Breads I at the judging or 4-H
food projects. A second year 4-H'er she is a member rJ tbe Coun·
try Clovers. Here 'Jan Burleson evaluates a Joar rJ nul bread may
byShumu.
~~---------------,------------~

Huntington
man killed in
Rt. 2 accident
A Huntington man was killed in
an accident that occurred at 1:19
a.m. Sunday on S.R. 2, just north of
the Gallipolis Ferry nilroad tracks,
according 10 inf11'11181ion received
from the Mason County Sheriff's
Department Theiday.
Maxwell M. Whidey, 45, of
HunlingiOn was prooounced dead
at Pleasant Valley ·Hospital follow·
ing the accidenL 1\vo passengers in
the vehicle, a 1989 Mercury, owned
bJ Palsy Bill', w= Ronald E. Har·
ns, 27,11111 JclfBowers, 'll, both of
Leon.
1_!ley w«e ' trllli8IIOited to PVH
by Pomt Pleasant I!MS. A hospital
spnknman RPCliiCd both men wm
treated lltd released.
The sheriff's deplnment is stiU
in~ the actidenL
Abo am"1o 11 the accident
scene was die int .Pleasant Fire
DeparimenL

TRAINS ON DISPLAY • The Railroad Club or Southtast
Ohio, Meigs Division, Is dlsplayln&amp; several model trains at tbe '.
Meigs County Public Library Ia Pomeroy throuall Saturday~ ' :
There are. nve operaliag displays ot various sizes for viewen to •
:enjoy and the intricate displays reature many lllddn nrprlset for '•
onlookers. b addition 10 lbe traiDs tbere are many mllcellaneou
items pertaiaing to lbe railroad IDdustry. Pidured witll oae ot tile · '1
displays, built in large part by the late Charles Lqar, are KeJtll •
Weaver, David Robinette aDd Natbu Roblaette. Tbe public may ·
view the displays tbrougb Friday nooa to 9 p.m. aad oo Sllurday'' ,
li:om nooa to 5 p.m:
.•

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