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                  <text>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:
.•

�1Ueada~August4.1992

.Commentary
The Daily·Sentinel

..
.

111 COart Sbeet
P'omeiOJ', Oldo

.
, ·DEVOTED TO TIIB IN1'BIUI8T8 or TID IIBIQS.IIAIJOK AJIEA
,.

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asolslallt Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mu~ger

LEmRS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould bC leas than 300
words. Allleuen are subject 10 editing 111d must be signed with name,
addr&lt;" lllld telcpbone number. No unsiBJled lclle11 will be published. Leuen
should be in good taste, addlessing issues. oot pcrsonalilies.

Moyer speaks out
on '92 campaign
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
•, COLUMBUS- Ohio Chief Justice Thomas Moyer says judges
should.remove t.hemselves from cases affectmg people who conoibuled to
tlieir campaigns if the amount received exceeds a fixed &amp;lllOUDL
Moyer, who is seldom seen off the bench by Statehouse reporlers,
e~ poundcd on that and other subjects last week after inviting them 10 join
him for lunch and ask questions on subjects of their choice.
· Judges usually try to avoid the appearance of being political but lend to
loosen up some when they run for re-election. Moyer talked, although he
still seemed judicial, over a corned· beef sandwich.
He has taken lumps in the media recently which he implies are unfair,
but claims that he and the coun arc unphascd.
" It's not hot over there," he said of t.hc coun and some of his colleagues who also have had some unwanted publicity.
Moyer and other justices have handed down decisions that helped contributors or their' contributors' professions or businesses. But they said
they were not aware of any such impact and that !hey ruled objectively.
" The people who made significant contributions to my campaign have
never called and asked me for anything," Moyer said.
•
But he added, "We need to discuss what amount is involved when we
get off a case, an amount at which we would feel comfortable."
He did not suggest a threshold. But when asked about a reccnt$10,000
contribution to his campaign, he said with such an amount, "You arc certainly nearing the point where there is a serious question."
Moyer may have trouble selling a lhreshold.
Justice Andrew Douglas, a fellow Republican, and two Democrats on
t.hc coun, A. William Swcdlley and Alice Robie Resnick, have received
contributions far in excess of $10,000.
They deny that the gifts affected their objectivity.
On anolhcr subject, Moyer denied recent newspaper stOries suggesting
he violated rules by waiving or substituting seminars and speeches for a
continuing education course judges arc supposed to take from lhe Ohio
Judicial College.
He said substitutions arc permitted and !hat courses at tile college are
tailored for trial judges.
However, the stories drew charges from Democrats t.hat Moyer ignores
rules he imposes on others, including lawyers who have been fined for
failing 10 meet continuing educalion requirements.
In response to olhcr questions, Moyer said he sees no evidence !hat the
coon's image has been damaged.
Last year, Douglas and Justice Craig Wright quarreled and got into a
wrestling match in a coun office, drawing national publicity. They later
made up and apologized to the public.
: Moyer said !hat in his travels around the state, "1 find there is a good
feeling about the court and the court system. That should be good news
for all of us. "
He is running for a second term against Judge Robcn Gorman of the
1st Ohio District Court of Appeals, Cincinnati, a Democrat, and J. Ross
Haffey of South Euclid, an independent.

Berry's World

WednESday, Aug. S

TUeaday,August4.1992

Accu· Weather' forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

.

Might Clinton break liberal gridlock?
With Bill Clinton ahead in the ed with a stated philosophy; 2) he
·polls, we should ask: Ir elected, knows voters dumped on a Carler·
would Clinton deal wilh the centml ized administration in 1980, and
issue of American public policy?
might again in 1996.
There is a unique "American
way of life," honored by the citizenry. The creed behind this American culture puts high value on
"personal responsibility" and
The philosophy is spelled out in
''personal initiative.••
· a set of articles called "The New
Alas, much recent public ~!icy Social Contract" in the current
has eroded personal responSibility issue of "The New Democrat,"
and initiative. We see it in mushy published by the moderate Demowelfare policies , marshmallow cratic Leadership CounciL Clinton
criminal procedures, gitchy-goo is a former chairman of the DLC.
educational practices, and bend· Many of his policy statements
over-backward racial guidelines.
come from the DLC playbook, as
Why might Clinton change it? did much of this year's Democratic
After all, those policies came from platform.
.
Democrats, who have gridlocked
Will Marshall, president of the
attempts at change. And· the last Progressive Policy Institute (a
time we had a moderate Southern DLC-related think uink), writes
Democratic president - Jimmy that Democrats need a "politics of
Carter - he got rolled by special· reciprocity," and an end to "some·
interest. no-fault, free-lunch Demo- thing for nothing" ideas of the lib·
'cratic libemls.
eral left. One remedy: a civilian
Clinton has things going f~ him G.! . bill that would guarantee
that Carter didn't I) He is associat· youngslers a college education, but

Ben Wattenberg

ROBERT L WJNGEIT
Publlsber

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

only if they earned it with volun·
tary national service, such as com·
munity police work.
Professor William Galston, of
the University of Maryland, aims at
the hean of social liberalism. "We
must resist," he writes, " ... the

proposition that different family
structures represent nothing more
than allernative lifestyles ... sharply
rising rates of divorce, unwed
mothers and runaway fathers represent failures of personal responsibility. ..." He says we can make a
pro-two-parent-family judgment
because ' ... family failure(s) affect
society at large. We all pay for the
... welfare, criminal justice and

incarceration .... "

In "Tbe Welfare Wars," columnist Elaine Ciulla Kamarck (a PPI
Fellow) lauds state welfare plans
designed to foster responsibility.
These include a New Jer!iey plan to
eliminate additional payments for a
second child born to a welfare
molher.
Sociologist Amitai Etzioni lays

MICH.

•

IToledo I 7SO I

out "The Communitarian Plat·
form," which includes teaching
"character formation" in schools,·
a university curriculum that
acknowledges that our core values
"come to us f~om our European,
heritage, not from other cultures,"·
and some anti-aime ideas includ·
ing "suspicionless" searches, and
anti-loilering laws.
·
The DLCers are not anti-gov-'
emment conservatives. They want
to use government to reform the
liberalism that has eroded the:
American responsibiljty staildard..
Still, they make some common
~round with Jack Kemp-style:
'empowerment" conservatives·:
The common goal is one shared by.
many: to align American policy
with American values.
Could such an.agenda be seriously pushed in a Clinton adminis·
trauon? Might moderate-liberal
Clinton bring around liberals on
domestic policf the way modelale·
conservallve Rtchard Ntxon pushed
conservatives on China policy? The
forces against it would be tilallic:
feminists, gay rights and civil
rights groups, the ci¢!1 liberty
lobby, some unions - Cac:h with
huge constituencies, each looking
for responsibility-free goodies.
There would be a monumental
Washington-style "battle for the
mind of the president."
The DLC types would be OUt·
gunned; !hey are few in number.
But !hey have ideas on their side,
and public opinion, and some poll·
tics. too.
The Democratic dilemma in
recent .decades has been obvious:
Liberal policy clashed discordandy
with American culture, and the
price was political defeat. The
argument can be made - very gin·
gerly, very lelltatively - that Clin·
ton would act to avoid a 1996
Republican renewal by following a
"Nixon-to-China" model. He can
do that by making liberals ~ the
ligh~ arMj breaking gridlock, in a
way that no conservative could.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior feJ.
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, is author of "The First :
Universal Nation," published by :
The Free Press and a syndicated :
writer for Newspaper Enterprise ~
Assocladon.
·

IND.

(WTI) hazardous waste mcmerator
in East Liverpool Ohio · the largest
such facility in the world. Legislation has been introduced to prevent

Sen.]an M. Long
the construction of any future
incinerators in Ohio . This legislation was motivated by a desire by
both lhc legislature and the Governor to stop allowing the rest of the
country 10 use Ohio as a dumping
ground for haiardous wastes.
Another issue which has been
on everyone's mind for lhe last few
months is health care. Recently lhe
Ohio Senate passed House Bill
478, the omnibus health care bill.

However the changes that occurred
to this legi slation were not
approved by the Ohio House, t.hus
forcing H.B. 478 into conference
committee this summer.
The conference committee,
which will begin its work next
week, has numerous issues to
resolve before reaching an agreemcnt on this bill. Among them will
be an amendment which would
guarantee preventative health care
to all children, saving millions of
dollars in long·term care.
Other differences between the
House and Senatc·passcd versions
of the measure which must be
resolved arc whether to include an
open enrollment period for insurance companies, a stale-run insur·
ance pool, prohibiting doctors and

•

PA.

Youngstown

~

~

~

•lcolumbusl'l's'

I

79'

W.VA.

~

KY.

,...

~.~--~-·

,,,,,~. .~ •..•.. r ~,.,:- ---

Showers 1'-stonns RIJ/n

Flodrl66

~

1&lt;6

Sunny Pt. CloiJdy Cloudy
C1892Accu-Wee.ther, Inc.

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low in
the mid-50s . Wednesday, mostly
sunny. High near 80.

Extended rorecast:
Thursday through Saturday:
Fair north. Chance of showers
or thunderstorms south. Highs in
upper 70s to low 80s. Lows mainly
in lhe 50s.

Area death
Ricky Johnson
Ricky Layne Johnson, 44, of
Middlepon, formerly of Milton, W.
Va., died Sunday, Aug. 2, 1992, at
Cabell-Huntington Hospital in
Huntington, W. Va., following an
extended illness.
Born in Milton, W. Va. on
March 9, 1948, he was the son of
the late Roy S. and Hester Louise
McCroskey Johnson. He was a former police office in Middlepon.
He is survived by a daughter,
Amy Relaine Johnson, of Sarasota,
Fla.; seven sisters, Gloria Porter of

Proctorville, Wanda McCoy of
South Point, Paoicia Dillon, Marcia Johnston, Arbra Beckelheimer,
Rada Keaton, and Paula Bledso, all
of Milton, W. Va.; and one brother,
Blaine Johnson of New Richmond,
Ohio,
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at the
Heck Funeral Home in Milton, W.
Va. The Rev. Lawrence Dailey will
officiate and burial will be in lhe
Balls Gap Cemetery near Milton.
Friends may call Tuesday from 6 to
8 p.m. at the Heck Funeral Horne.

Local briefs... - Continued rrom page 1

.

EMS units answer 9 calls
Nine calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs Coon·
ty Emergency Services on Monday and early Tuesday.
On Monday at 2:23 p.m ., Pomeroy sq~ad went to Lincoln
Heights for Mildred Shuster, who w~ taken 10 Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 4:19p.m., Rutland units were sent to State Route 124
for an aurp accident. Donald Stewan was treated at the scene. At
6:06 p.m., Racine unit went to Trouble Creek Road and treated
Mary Kerns. At 6:14p.m., Syracuse unit went to Trouble Creek
Road and took Kerns to Vetenms. At 6:21 p.m., Middlepon squad
went to Page Street and took Marilyn Bishop to Pleasant Valley
Hospital. At 7:45 p.m., Syracuse squad went to Second S~t for
Kallin Guinther. She was taken to Velerans.
At 6:13 a.m. today, Middlepllrt unil went to Broadway Sueet.
Barney Hiles was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 7:54 .a.m.,
Rutland unit responded to Side Hill Road for Ruth Morris. She was
taken to Veterans. At 8:46 a.m., Pomeroy squad was sent to West
Main Slreel. Alva Bro":ning was taken to Veterans.

••

Time to move forward .

(f

IMansfield 178' I•

•,

Summer is a good lime lor vaca·
tion for many people. Children are
out of school and many businesses
allow employees time off to enjoy
them selves. Similarly, the Ohio
Legislature usually takes a break
during the summer to allow members to spend more lime with their
families and other pursuits. However, this summer, my office has
not been quiet. We are using this
time to move forward on a variety
of issues, including ha zardous
waste and health care reform
because these problems do nol take
vacations.
Prevalent in the news recentiy is
the seemingly never-ending contro·
versy over the potential health
1m pact of the newly constructed
Waste. Tec hnolog y Industries

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

''
'

hospital s from taking patients' :
homes or cars for payment and •
from collecting bills not covered by ;
Medicare or a state-run plan, rais- ~
ing the limits on administrative j
expenses or providing legal immu- :
· nity to doctors who volunteer in •
free clinics. Whatever the result, :
the health and pocketbooks of :
Ohioans cannot afford to wait· •
much longer.
•
We arc still at work in t.he state !
capitol this summer. Therefore, as :
always, please feel free to call or :
write me , State Senator Jan •
Michael Long, if you have any :
questions or comments about th~ :
or any other issues, my number is. :
(6 14) 466-8156, and my address is ;
the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio, •
43215.
:

'•

•

GOP won't cite every anniversary
.

" My position on family values? Hey, great
question! Let me talk to my staff here and I'll
get back to you on that. "

•

America' s once-Grand Old
Party will soon convene in Houston
amid purposeful pageantry aimed
at showcasing the slivers of success
of its Maximum Leader: George
Bush, Foreign Policy President.
For starters , th e Republican
National Convention will celebrate
two anniversaries: the collapse or
communism, that ended the Cold
War, and our smashing, low-casualty .(albcit, low-yield) victory over
Iraq.
Both arc wonhy triumphs - tri umph s of America' s spirit and
determination . But when Bush 's
conventioneers translate them into
reasons why we mu st stay the
c ourse for four more yea rs watch out! Just remem ber the
anniversaries our Foreign PolicY.
President and his sales force wont
dare cclcbraiC:
THE THIRD ANNIVERSARY

OF BUSH'S FRIENDLY TOAST
TO THE BUTCHERS OF
TIANANMEN SQUARE. Just
months after China's communist

Martin Schram
dictatols killed hundreds who
demon strated for freedom and
democracy in 1989, Bush sent his
national sec urity adviser, Brent
Scowcrort, to Beijing, to raise his
glass and toast despots he called
" friends." Bush's kowtOw, forsak·
ing old principles for new com·
merce, was worse than wrong.
THE SECOND ANNIVER·
SARY OF BUSH'S NON-ULTI·
MATUM TO SADDAM. We just
missed il - last Saturday, July 25
marked the second anniversary of
the 1990 meeting in which Bush's

Today
ID hi• story-~-----------------------.11
By The Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 4, t.hc 217th day of 1992. There art 149 days
left in t.hc year.
, Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
. One hundred years ago, on Aug. 4, 189;2, one of America's most notorious murders took place as Andrew and Abby Borden were axed to dealh
in their house in Fall River, Mass. Lizzie Borden, Andrew Borden's
daughiCr by his first marriage, was accused of lhc killings but acquitted at
U'jal. the case remains officially unsolved.
' On ~his date!
: In 1735, a jury ·acquiucd John Peter Zenger of the New Yorlc Weekly
J(lumal of a charge of seditious libel brought by the royal governor of
New York.
,: In 1790, the ,Coast Guard had its beginnings as a U.S. navallask force
k(lown as lhe Rcven.ue Cutter Service was formed.
' In 1792, 200 years ,ago, English romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley
~ bom in Field Place, England.
: In tk30, pl~s for the city of Chicago were laid out.
, In 1914, Britain declared war on GermanY. and \he UniiCd Slates pro-

claimed us neutrality in World War I.
In 1916, the UniiCd States purchased the Danish Virgin Islands for $25
million.
In 1944, Nazi police raided the secret annex of a house in Amsterdam
and arrcsiCd eight people - including 14-year-old Anne Frank, whose
diary, which was published afiCr her dcalh, became a classic depiction of
tile Holocaust
.
In 1964, the bodies of missing civil rights worlcers Michael H. Schw·
emer, Andrew Goodman and James E. Chancy were found buried inside
an carlhen dam in Mississippi.
In 1977, President Jimmy Car1er signed a measure eslablishing lhe
Dcparlmcnt or Energy, the first cabinet-level department crcaiCd since the .
Department of Transportation in 1966.
In 1985, a pair of milestones were achieved in major l~ue baseball as
Tom Seaver of the Chicago While Sox gained his 300th v•ctory and Rod
Carew of the California Angels gol his 3,000th hit.
•
Ten years ago: President Ronald Reagan urged lhc Palestine Liberation
Organization to leave west Beirut and warned Isracl'of the "absolute
necessity'' of ending its assault on lhe I'LO stronghold.

·t
.'

..
ambassador to Iraq, April Glaspie,
2. The Stale Department's j
apparently led Saddam Hussein to human rights report that year had 1
think the United States would do blasiCd Iraq for the torture, execu-· '
nothing if he invaded. Kuwait. lion and disa~pearanccs of dissi.' :
Iraq's transcript quoted her as say· dents and the destruction of vii· :
ing " We have no opinion on the lages.
·· '
Arab-Arab conflicts, like your bor3. Yet, Bush signed a waiver of :
der disagreement with Kuwait." a congressional ban on aid 10 Iraq :
(While she now says she also because M human rights abuse( 1
talked lOugh, lhe State Dcpanment and permttiCd Iraq to get $200 mil· i
doesn' t support her claim.) Eight lion in Export·lmpon Bank credits '
days later, Saddam plundered to buy U.S. food, plus short-lerm
Kuwait. Had our Foreign Policy loans to buy other capilal goods.
President made sure that Saddam
Afte~ tying lhese together, I
gotlhc toughest of warnings, deli•· warned 10 that column that Bush's '
ercd at the highest or levels, we aid credits "freed up Iraq's own • !'
probably wouldn 't have had a Per· money 10 buy other goods, like fin···
sian Gulf crisis.
ishing touches .for nuclear bombS.: 1
THE ONE-YEAR-AND-FIVE· and chemical weapons to replace ' ;
MONTH ANNIVERSARY OF thoselmquscdagainstlraniansand ' '
SADDAM'S SUCKERING OF Kurds." Today, House Banking •:
AMERICA. When Bush ceased · Chairman Henry Gonzalez, D-Tex., ' :
fire before achieving some of the has shown lhc U.S. loans for food·: '
many objectives he cited - oust· were reportedly diverted to Iraqi '
ing Saddam and smashing his weaponry . (If Jimmy Carter had
nuelcarcapability-neilhcrhenor
such would
a thing,have
justsaid
imagine,'
Gen
, Norman Schwarzkopf done
what Bush
about ' II
checked the details. Soon Sad- il!)
'
dam 's copters were 11ying again,
The source or'my 1990 warning , :
and our frustrated general blurted wasn' t a hot tip from a Deep·• :
the uuth: He'd been "suckered."
Esophagus. It was just common·' '!
YEAR
AND
sense.
We'll need to summon lots
Two
THE
FOUR-MONTI! ANNJVERSARY more of it when Republican Con- •
OF ONE WEE WARNING THAT vention speakers warn of lhe dan· , I
BUSH WAS IN EFF!lCT FUND· gcr of entrusting inleniational (iOli- •, ,
lNG IRAQ'S NUCl-EAR BOMB· cy-makin~ 10 an untested slrangcr 1 :
·BUILDING. On April 12, 1990, - espcctaliy one who is only a ; 1
one newspaper ~lumnist (who you governor from Arknnsas.
. "1
happen to be reading at the
That "Stay the Course!" for-·; ,
moment) welded a few unconnect· eign policy warning will be given ·'
ed facts and produced a warning on opening night, by Ronald Rea· 1
that, truth be told, had no effect at gan - who, before moving inro the : '
all. 1wroiC then that: .
·oval Office, was only a governor • :
I . ,FBI ,and British custo!"s from California.
'I
agents had two months earlier
Marlin Schram Is a syndicated ., I
tailed Iraqi agents trying to buy write~ r?rNewspaper Enterprise : I
triggers for nuclear bombs.
Assoctation. .
·
:

I

I

I

The Daily Sentinel
hbliehed ..ery aRtmoon, Monday
tllloafb rrida7, lU eo.ut St., Polaeroy,
. Ohio by lho Ohio Valloy Publlohtor
CompanJIMaUimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 415789, Ph. 992·21156. Second cl11.1
poolop potd •• l'omor&lt;&gt;f, Ohio.

M-ber: Th Mlociat.l Pteu, and lhe
Ohio Nrnpaper AllodatiOa, National
M•rillna Reprueatatln, Branhlm
New~paJII! Sala, 733, Tbil'd Annu..
N1WYm,NoWYorkl0017.

POIITMAS'l'ER' Seod ....... , . _ to
The· Daily Sentinel, 111 CourL St.,
Punwoy; OHio 415'1l!i.
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SINGLBCOPY
.
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Lessons underway

(UIPIIlloiiO)

·'

Cooler weather on tap rest of week ·
By The Associated Press
Sunny and mdd weather IS on
tap for Ohto on Wednesday, fore-

casters said. And, for much of lhe
Slale, !hat c~uld be lhe start of an
extended penod of dry wealher.

The National Weather Service
said the northern half of Ohio
should remain dry through Satur·

p eti•t JUry
•
d
fi
names
rawn
or
•
c
Pl
Mezgs ommon eas Court duty
The following Meigs Countians
ha~e.been .selec!ed as potential
petit Jurors m Metgs County Com·
mon Pleas Court for lhe Seplember
term:
Teresa L. Smith, Reedsville;
Harold Lee Henderson, Guy~vllle;
Gary S. Bruley, Middleport; Tun A.
Gilkey,. Shade; Eva B. Wells,
Reedsvdle; Rick .wayne Icenbow·
er, Pomeroy; R~gtna K: Walls, ~ut·
Jan~; Georgta Emtly Smtih ,
Racme; Jane A. Rope, R~tland;
Je;ey Lee Bendey, Shade; Dl8llC E.
Rtce, ~eedsvtlle:. Jan A. Park~r.
Reedsville; ~!ante L~ Mankin,
Pomeroy; Ceha Ellen Bailey, Long
Bottom ; Jason Robert Roush,
Shade; ~andall L. Tackett, Sr..
Langsvtlle; . Rlla Jan Reed,
Pomeroy; Dt~na S. Carpent~r,
Rac•.ne; Glona K. Kloes, Mmersvtlle; Elva De~n Barnttz,
Pomeroy; L!oyd Jenkins, Pomeroy;
Demse Gt~eaut, Mtddleport;
D~nny Dwam Br~wn, Pomeroy;
Wtlham
StarhngL Massar,
Reeds ·ue· Deborah
Rh ad
es Mi~~ •
ynn
'K
eport
.
enda Ann Kloes, Po~eroy,
John Wayne Gaus, Ru.tland, Anna
~ Partlow, Pomeror,, ~ma J~mne Sanders, R~vllle, Sh~h~ 1•
Napper, Lang,svtUe; Joann Lilhan
Jacks, Lan~ville, Grace E. Weber,
Reedsvtlle, Carol A. Ault ,
Pomero~; Ramona Ma~ Hawk,
Pomeroy, Michael D. Smtih, Syra·
cuse; B.onme Sue St. Clau, Long
Bottom, Debra D. Mora, Pomeroy,
Myr.tl~ L. Abels, Long Bottom;
Pat~tcta Ann Chapman, Tupper~
Plams, James R. Ingels •. Rutland,
L~na L Basham, Cooivtlle; John '
Vtrgll Hetzer, Reedsville; :renms
Gay Hams, Lon_g Bottom, Reba
Dell Greene, Racme; Janet M. Jef·
fers, Pomeroy; Evelyn J · J~tt.
Pom.eroy; Jud~ K. Parson, Racme;
Jess•e A. Curlls, ~meroy; Walter
H. Barrett, Sr., Vtmon; Owen D.
Damewood, Reedsville.

Rila Sue Knapp; Laura Jean Field,
Coolville; James L. Rhodes,
Racine; Karen D. Carter,
Reedsville; Edna Gray Parsons,
Racine; Leora Elizabeth Strom,
Pomeroy; Bobby J. Dudding,
Racine; Carla Jean Aeiker, Shade;
John Virgil Bogard, Sr., Long Bottom; Frank Anthony Parker,
Pomeroy; Lynn T. Lovdal,
Pomeroy; Phillip Lee Erwin,
Albany; Robert C. Brown ,
Reedsville.
Brenda Sue King, Reedsville:
Tim Matthew Herdman, Pomeroy;
Elizabeth Marie Stover, Racine;
Karen G. Grover, Pomeroy ;
Elearior Sue Hall, Pomeroy; Alice
Marie Bush, Racine ; Margaret
Ruth Grossnickle, Reedsville :
Randy Jay Smilh, Pomeroy; Joseph
Edward Kanawalsky, Reedsville;
Robert C. Bailey, Jr., Pomeroy;
James B. Thomas, Pomeroy; Rodney H. Manley, Pomeroy; Donald
L. Vickroy, Dexter; Paul Ray
SlePhens, Pomeroy,. Roy A. sayre,
Racine; Sherry Lynn Wilcox,
Pomeroy; Gertrude M. Woods,
Mtddleport; Judith M. Bing,
Racme; Peggy Jean Reitmire,
Pomeroy; Stuart W. Pullins,
Pomeroy; Richard Kevin Boring,
Reedsville; Kevin Randall Boring,
Reedsville; Vernon I . Evans ,
Pomeroy; John Emmett Martin, Sr.,
Shad!'; Ruth Ann Spaun, Pomeroy.
Lmda Lee Mayer, Pomeroy ;
Lydia Ann DeLong, P~meroy;
Manbew Shane Baker, Middlepon;
Dale Edward Rime, Racine; John
J. Kemmer, Rutla~d; HelenJ. Byer,
Middlepon; Tem L. McLaughhn,
Middleport; Brenda Sue Woodrow,
Racine: E.F. Glass, Middleport:
James F. Will, Pomeroy; Thomas
M. Theiss, Racine; Ida F. Counts,
Middleport; Celesta C. Coates,
Middleport; William B. Capehart,
Middlepon; Dessie Perry, Albany;'
Tony R. Jewell, Pomeroy; Terry
William Mullins, Dexter; Betty A.
Carpenter; Linda.Gene Dye ,
Pomeroy; Mary Hazel Francis,
Dexter; Carin S. Taylor, Middle·
port; Birdie Mae Hysell, Rudand;
Alfred F. Grueser, Pomeroy; Dena
H. Raymond, Albany; Richard A.
Johnson, Pomeroy.
Ruth Ann Birchfield, Albany:
Nancy M. Perry, Albany; Albert
Roush, Pomeroy; Marjorie Jean
Keebaugh, Reedsville; Deborah A.
Lowery, Syracuse; Samuel Eugene
McKinney, Jr., Portland; Keith
Alan Hayman, Racine; George W.
Folmer, Jr., Pomeroy; Angelia K.
Curtis, Pomeroy; Gary Eugene
O'Dell, Rutland; Charles William
Bolin, Rutland; Johnny R. Klein,
Reedsville; Roben Eugene Miller,
Middlepor~ Clarence E. Hayman,
Jr. , Racine; Sarah F. Hull ,
Pomeroy; Howard W. Russell,
Mtddleport; Kathy Eloise Bolin,
Racine; Keith Ann Sisson, Middle·
port; Sandra L. Mitch, Pomeroy;
James A. Richmond, Middleport;
Melody Rose Ramsburg, Pomeroy;
Fred A. Colburn, Pomeroy; Bill L.
Henderson, Dexter; Allen James
Eichinger, Pomeroy; Sandra Faye
Philson, Syracuse.
Carolyn Louise Smart, Albany;
Helen D. Eblin, Pomeroy; Gloria J.
Starcher, Long Bouom; Larry J;
Hudson, Pomeroy; Charles J .
Knapp, Pomeroy; Philip Anthony
Smith, Pomeroy; James Gilmore,
Pomeroy ; Regan V. Arnold ,
Albany; Darla Kay Humphrey,
Pomeroy ; Danny Ray King,
Pomeroy ; Tina Carol Sloter ,
Racine ; Mark D. Hudson ,
Pomeroy; William Stivers,
Pomeroy; Keith Gordon Ridenour,
Long Bottom; William Wayne Milhoan, long Bottom; Jeffrey Allan

°·

Danny W. Robinson, Middlepan; Patty L. Carson, Middleprot;

Alice May Plantz, Middleport;
}ames G. Nally, Pomeroy; Chester
R. Gorrell, Coolville; Donita April
Pooler, Pomeroy; Bruce David
Bumgardner, Middlepon; Virgil A.
Miller, Long Bottom; Linda S.
Hayes, Shade; Otto Falls,
Reedsville; Tammy L. Black, Rut·
land; Peggy Yost, Rutland; Saundra L. Bush, Langsville; William
H. Collins, Jr., Dexter; Geneva
Shackelford, Middleport; Paul J.
Huston, Syracuse: Frances I.
Keaton, Coolville: Mark T~
Shrivers, Middleport; Clarence
Triplett, Portland; Warren Dale
Hart, Rutland; Joyce A. Davis ,
Pomeroy; John V. Story, Pomeroy;
Blondell J. Miller, Portland; Mark
C. Warner, Pomeroy: Roger Lee
Jeffers, Pomeroy.
Tommy Ward, Pomeroy; Mark
A. Venoy, Pomeroy; Alfred B.
Windon, Pomeroy; Kevin Lee
Layne, Racine; Jack L. Lyons, Sr.,
Racine; David Henry Spencer ,
Racine; Victor E. Gaul, Jr.,
Pomeroy; Daniel W. Young,
Racine; Jerry R. Aleshire, Jr., Syra·
cuse; Denise Danielle Reitmire,
Racine; Shirley Ann Markin ,
Albany; Larry D. Kennedy, Mid·
dleport; Joann Pangio, Syracuse;
Kyle Stark Woods, Pomeroy;
Richard W: Vaughan, Middlepon;
Joseph ~. Manley, Middleport;
Melba Jane Carman, Pomeroy;
David A. Curfman, Albany; Nor·
man L. Price, Pomeroy; Barbara
Frances Beegle, Racine; Marsha
Marie Egleston, Albany; Tana L.
Kennedy, Pomeroy; Geraldine L.
Lightfoot, Pomeroy; Fred Batey
Smith, Pomeroy.
David R. Parsons, Racine; John
Edward MWllhY, Racine; Lewis 0.
Piclceu, Racine; Clarence R. Sargent, Racine; Terry D. Moore,
Syracuse; Clarence R. Sargent,
Racine; Tommy Gail Wilfong ,
Tuppers Plains; Austin W. Phillips,
Pomeroy; Clarence Gilmore, Mid·
dleport; Robert Dale Butcher,
Pomeroy; Luella M. Powell,
Racine; Eunice L. Jones, Pomeroy;
Cynthia Lyn Morris, Middleport;

Meigs ...
Continued rrom page I
Kennedy, grand champion, and
Molly Heines, reserve champion.
Fit It All Together II: Vinccm
Broderick, grand champion; Sari
Putnam, reserve champion, and
MyclfHaynes, honorable mention.
Fit It All Together Ill: Kcllie
Ervin, grand champilln.
Around the World with Foods:
Erin Smith, grand champion;
Dorolhy Leifheit, reserve champi·
on.
Extraordinary Eggs: Crystal
Vaughan, grand champion; and
Crystal Smith, reserve champion.

Swimming lessons at the Middleport Pool are underway this
week but it is still not to late to
enroll, Ryan Cowan, instructor,
announces.
'
Those interested in taking classes are asked I!&gt; repon at the pool at
lhe time for their respective classes
- 9 a.m. for swimmers, 10 a.m.
for intermediate swimmers, 11 am.
for advanced beginner, and S p.m.
for beginners. All classes arc 45
minutes long. For additional information Cowan may be contacted at
the pool.

Court news

Afternoon storm
causes power outage

A mamage license has been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Col!rl to Robert Trenton Southern,
51, Middlepon, and Carol Yvonne
Baker, 45, Middleport

Veterans Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
None.
MONDAY DISCHARGES •
Elizabeth Roberts, Robert Vineyard, and Alice Young.

Judpent sought
A judgment action has been
filed ' in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Charles Neece, Rut·
land, and others. agianst Tarmac·
Lonestart. Norfolk, Va., and others.
The suit alleges personal injury
resulting from the use of chemical
products at Southern Ohio Coal
Company.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Aug. 3
Mrs . Ronald Draise and son ·
Elias Elliou, Louella Flack Ver~
Nicholson, Marie Ruff, Janice
Swords, and Mrs. William Wolfe
and daughter.
Births Aug. 3
Mr. and Mrs. Barry, Graham,
daughter, Wellston.
,

The Addlsoa sullstatloa, ·
owaed by Columbo• Southera
Power Compaay, wu hit by
llg.btala&amp; Moada7 afternoon,
accordla&amp; to CSPC •llltaat area
mauaaer BUI Staadllb.
The power outaae lasted from
4:50 to 5:50 p.m. and affected
2,840 customers Ia aa am from
tbe Silver Memor.lal Bridge to
Cheshire.

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag&amp;---a

Divorces processed

Jones, Pomeroy; Charlotte F. Vanmeter, Reedsville: Ally son M.
McBenge, Middlepon; D. Mildred
Lee, Albany; Frank Cleland· Vir·
ginia L. Davis, Racine; Ke~neth
Allen Bolt, Tuppers Plains; Jane
M. Frymyer, Shade; George Douglas Circle, Racine.
Mabel Hannah, Albany ;
Michael J. Grueser, Pomeroy: Bonnie S. Barton, Middleport; Phyllis
Jean Cross, Racine; Betty Jo Smith,
Middleport; Brinley F Seth,
Pomeroy; Rusty Dean Bookman,
Pomeroy: Paul Leon Collins,
Reedsville; Sheila Rae Connolly,
Reedsville; Lucille F. Atherton,
Long Bottom; Larry W. Bunce,
Middleport;
Jennie
Sue
Williamson, Rutland; Violet Lois
Bush, Racine; Norman H. Bahr,
Pomeroy; Laura E. Riffle, Racine:
Marion Gene Graham, Pomeroy;
Melanie Ann Simpson, Racine ;
Chung Cha Stewart, Cheshire;
Frederick Dorset Thomas
Ch es h'tre,. Bren da sue Arms,'
Pomeroy; Tessie J. Wolfe, Racine;
Doris J. Haynes, Middleport;
Michael R. Stewart, Middleport;
June L. Griffin, Long Bottom; Lillie A. McGee, Portland.
Charlene Marie Cadel, Middle·
pon; Richard A. Hudson, Syracuse;
Shelley M. Proffitt, Portland; Joan
Obrien Hawley, Middlepon; Susan
Elaine Abbott, Pomeroy; Arlene M.
Taylor, Rutland; Patricia Thompson Holter, Pomeroy: Karen Anne
James , Pomeroy: Terry L.
McGuire, Pomeroy; Charles F.
Wagner, Racine; Stephen 0. Jenkins, Racine; Teresa Ann Wilson,
Racine ; Sandra Lorraine Lee
Chester; Donnie J. Fry, Pomeroy;
David Russell Thomas, Middle·
port ; Bobbie E. Roy, Racine;
Tammy Lynn Pierce, Long Bot·
tom; Zorra F. Johnson, Pomeroy:
Alexander May, Pomeroy; Alice L.
Hawthorne, Long Bouom; Leda
Mae Krnutter, Racine; Flora Marie
Bailey, Pomeroy; Loni Kim Blower, Middleport; Adolph Saelens,
Middleport; Carroll Henry White,
Racine; Mick Edward Eakins,
Pomeroy.
Jimmie Glenn King, Long Bot·
tom; Mary E. Wingett, Syracuse;
Marjorie
Naomi
Brewer,
Reedsville; Eva Schreiber,
Pomeroy ; Robert Lee Fortney,
. Reedsville; Henry George Wells,
Pomeroy; Dennis Dwight Boothe,
Pomeroy; Bonnie Louise Dailey,
Pomeroy; Mary Ruth Swain,
Reedsville: Stephen Michael
Kimes, Racine; Guy F. Demars,
Shade; Dreama L. Pickens ,
Pomeroy; James Hayman, Long
Bottom; Jon P. Buck, Middleport;
Valerie Lynn Simpson, Pomeroy;
Flossie M. Nelson, Pomeroy; Jack
L. Mowery, Pomeroy; Harold A.
Rainer, Pomeroy; Richard Alvin
Spencer, Coolville; Clella Findley,
Racine; Jackie K. McDonald ,
Pomeroy; Diana S. Taylor, Long
Bouom ; Sandra K. Butcher,
Pomeroy; Fred L. Burney,
Pomeroy: and Natha P. Biggs ,
Pomeroy.

Ventriloquist to
appear at library
Professional ventriloquist Mark
Wade will he bringing his all-new
summer reading program ''The All
Aboard For Fun Show" to the
Meigs County Public Library on
Monday at 7 p.m. as part of this
year's special activities planned by
the library.
Wade, known as the "Kidshow
Professional" because of the vast
numbers of children he entertains
annually, will be featuring ventriloquism, comedy and audience par·
ticipation in the 40-minule presen·
tation. Area lcids will get a chance
10 see and enjoy the antics of
Mark 's ~adcap friends "Vaughn,
the Talkmg Van" and Tim the
Ticket," plus hear special messages
about the care of books and the
imparlance of reading.
For additional information con·
tact the library at992-S813to learn
more about "The All Aboard For
Fun Show."

A divorce has been granted in

the court to Walter H. Barrett, Sr.,
from Terry M. Barrett.

Hospital news

Marrla~e license issued

\

SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

. ,' : ..

7

day, but there was a chance of scat·
tered showers across the south during that period.
Highs will he 75-80. lows will

be~~!~~ghtemperaturefor

this date at the ·Columbus wealher

~~\\~n~h:a:e~~~:~~~e!~~m~ :
19 0

~ · Sunset to~tght will be at 8:42 ·
~; 34 · :~d sunnse Wednesday at

·
Vandalism reported

Damage 10 large front windows
of IWo businesses are under investi·
gation by Pomeroy Police.
Both incidents apparently
occurred overnight Friday. Two
large windows at the Meigs Tire
Center, Main Street, were cracked
and a large front window at the
License Bureau on Mulberry
Avenue had a hole in it The hole
was probably created by a shot
police said.
'

Meigs County
announcements

Boosters to meet
The Meigs Athletic Boosters
will meet at the high school Thursday at 7:15 p.m.
Lodge to meet
Pomeroy Lodge No. 164 F and
AM will hold its regular meeting
Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
Smorgasbord
There will be a smorgasbord
dinner Aug. 15 at 5 p.m. at the
Long Bottom Community Build·
ing. Cost is $5 for adults and $2.50
for children.
Bake sale planned
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will
hold a bake sale Saturday beginning at 9 a.m. across from Farmers
Bank in Tuppers Plains. All members bring baked goods.
Soup supper planned
There will be a soup supper at
the home of Marvin and Dolly
Reed, Reedsville, on Saturday 81 4
p.m. In addition to dinner and
desser!S there will be gospel music
provided. All proceeds from the
supper will go to the Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom.
Preaching and singing
There will be preaching and
singing at the Faith Full Gospel
Church in Long Boltom on Friday
at 7:30p.m. Pastor Steve Reed.
invites the public. Fellowship will
follow.
Reunion planned
The Aaron Fry reunion will be
held Sunda~ at Krodel Park at the
No. 2 Shelter House. Potluck din·
ncr at! p.m.
Helmell'itting
All seventh, eighth and freshman football players on lhe Meigs
Local School District will have heJ ..
met filling at the Meigs Junior
High School sladium Thursday at 2
p.m.
Sports medicine clinic
There will be a spor!S medicine
clinic at Meigs High School on
Monday at6 p.m.
Voluntary practice set
There will be voluntary practice
for all students interested in playing football at Southern High
School through Friday of this week
from 7-9 p.m. All players are
encouraged to anend. The first
mandatory practice will be Monday
al7 p.m.
Football clinic
A free football clinic for all stu·
dents in the Southern Local School
District entering grades 3-8 this fall
will be held Thursday and Friday
from9 a.m. 10 noon.
OES to meet
Racine Order of Eastern Star
will present a SO-year membership
pin to Cora Webb, past district
deputy grand malton, at Overbrook
Center in Middleport, Sunday at
2:30p.m.
All members are urged to participate in the program .

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�Tuesday, August 4. 1992

.

'

TUeada~August4.1992

Page-4

.

.~Cincinnati blanks Houston 4-0

ball."

'

Cincinnati will be facing the
Braves' best - Tom Glavine,
Steve Avery and John Smoltz.
·:w~·u ge~ some right-handed
hilllDg m lbe lineup ... Glenn Braggs and Reggie Sanders," Pinieiia
said. "And our bullpen's in pretty
gOod shape...
It is n:S1ed, thanlcs to strong performances by Reds starters in the
Houston series - eight innings
Friday from Tim Belcher, a complete game Saturday from Greg
Swindell, seven innings Sunday
from Jose Rijo and 6 1/3 innings
Monday from Chris Hammond.
"They're a gtiO!I baUclub, we're
a good blllclub and they're in ra

.

place - that's what makes it fun, "
said second baseman Bill Doran.
"But no matter what happens, the
pennant isn't goin' to be decide4 in
the next few days. •
Bip Roberts said be didn't view
the Atlanta trip as more crucial
than any other.
" It •s not the last series of the
seasoo," he said. "We still have to
play a whole lot of teams."
One difference is that the last
lime the two teams played, Cincinnati was in first place.
"Nobody said it was going to be
easy," Roberts said. "We just have
to go out there and show what kind
of characttt we have."
Hammond showed character
Monday. After being passed over
for his previous turn in the Reds'
rotation, he pitched 6 1/3 shutout
innings to stop his four-game losing streak for his ftrst win since
June 17.
"It was a big game for him and
a big game for us," Piniella said.
"He seems to pitch better after a
layoff. That's been a P.attem. He
needed it, as weD as us. '
Hammond (6-6) allowed five
hits, struck out four and walked
OOIIe. Rob Dibble and Srott Ruskin
finished with hitless relief.
Hammond lasted just 2 2/3
innings his last lime out, giving up
10 hits and five runs in an 8-2 loss
at St Louis on July 24.
"He went blck to the pitch that
got him here, die chan~eup" catcher Rick Wrona said. • His fastball
got us ~ in the count; and he
got them swinging at a lot of first
pilebes...
Jimmy Jones (4-5) gave up eight
hits and three in ftve innings for the
Astros.
"Hammond got a lot of firstpitch Strikes, and that was die dif.

rerence -Jimmy dido 't," said
Houston manager Art Howe said.
It was the seventh shutout for
the Cincinnati staff and the 14th
time Houston has been blanlced.
"They pitched beller against us
than the B11ves did," Howe said.
The AsiiOS beat Atlanta two out of
three before losing thn:e out of four
to the Reds.
Roberts scored in tile rii'St on a
single by Hal Morris, who hit an
opposite-fiCld homer· in the thin!,
his fifth. The Reds made it 3-0 in
the fourth when Sabo scored on
Hammond's sacrifice fly , and
added a run in die seventh - after
a 1-hour, 24-minute rain delay on Bill Doran's single·off pitcher
Rob Mwphy' S·glove.

Sports shorts
DENVER (AP) - Colorado
Rockies vice chairman Mickey
Monos quit after he was ousted as
president and chief financial offtcer
of Phar-Mor Inc. and die company
requested a federal investigation.
Monos and his father Nathan, a
general partner with die team,.told
NL president Bill White that they
would seD their shares in the team.
Nathan Monus also will resign as
general partner.
The announcement was made
after Phar•Mor, based in
Youngstown, Ohio, asked for a
federal investigation of Mickey
Monus, who with other investors
coniributed $26 million of the $95
million needed to pay the Roclcies'
franchise fee.
Monos and former Phar-Mor
chief financial officer Patrick B.
Finn were ftred Friday. Phar-Mor
SPOkeswoman Carol Robinson and
FBI agent Michael Waldner con•
rumed the request for an investigation. '

Sholl!old, Sm Di.... ,]2.4; Bllllor, Loo
An1elllo .317; Oilce, Chieaao, .314;
Gwyan, S1n Dieao, .314; DeShields,
llotuol, ,313.
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PITOIINO (12 dociaialo) - G11vinc,
Allaata, 16-3, .Ul, 149; Cono. New
YOlk, 13_., .765, 2.69; Towbt.ary, SL
l.Gu i•, 11-4, .731, 1.92: Sw+indell,
C~NCD~NAn. tD-4• .714, l.6S; K. lliD.
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m&amp;EOutS - Cee, Nn York.
194; S..... AllltU, 149; S, p.....,o~oz,
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Ill; Dnbo*. Plllobuzolt, 122; B"'"' S..
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'&amp;'VEs - Leo Smilh, St. LaoU, 2l;
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BA'ni.NG - E. Martinet, Se•ttlo,
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~ Dream

0

National Leiigue game against visiting Houston.
Hammond, tile winnin_g pilcber, kept tile Aslros
scoreless for 6 1/3 inntngs before being relieved
to help pusb tile Reds to a 4-0 win. (AP)

MR. DO-IT-ALL- Cincinnati pltcber Chris
Hammond (left) is congratulated by Ills teammates after returnin&amp; to the dugout foUowing his
run-scoring sacrifice fly during Monday's

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luaa Ooazalu:, Teu•. 70; Thoma• ,

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Chi

aJ!VEUNI), Ill ; E. Mutiooc.

s..u., l29; Midi. Minnuau 1l'7: Frr·
m&amp;ft, DecroU, 121; Molitor, Milwaukee.
121; Audonoo, Balllmcn,ll9; PolMia,
Califomia, 11?; MaltinalJ, Ne.w York,

119.
DOUBLES - E. Mutina:, Seattle,

31 : loyntt, K:an11• City, 30: ld"fll!ries,
X.1auJ City, 29; HaD, New York. 29;
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Transactions
B-baU
A-oLoq•

DETROIT TIGERS - Fired Bo
Sc!lmlll Pkr. pRIIWcat.and Jim Campo

'* ... """"

bell. choinnan
and ...
CCIItiYC om~r. Announced th1t te1m
owner Thomu MonlaJwl will Ullr'tle lhe

d- ol prroicla'4.

NalloootLu.,..

-Yice-

COLORADO ROCKIES -

An•

nounced the re•ianation of Mi ck11y

PITISBIJIGH PIRATES - Si.J1&gt;ed

looon Philllpo, pitthor, onol ,.ipd hint
toB-ollhoGuiiC-Luf'•

FoolbaD
NollaaaiF-ILeo.-

LOS ANOI!LES RAIDEIS - Suo·

~ F.l'Yil Placnon. dcfCNi.\'e bact.

NEW YOJlK OIANTS - Waived

Bndben)',oafcy,
-llanio. - - -· on4 · -

NEW YOIIKIBTS - Tncled ConriA

Anthon1, tiaJat cad, to the Green Bay
Pu:hn for a conditional drdl pick.
Aarecd to tennJ wilh Dave CtdlJtn.

.....
~ EAOLES - Siaoed

IUcb Mimo, Mfct)', and Kenn' lac:iton,
wide receiver. Waiv .. Quintin Smith,
wlde recci'ICit, tnd Huvcy Wilton, ddm·
•ivet»ck.

PI'ITSBIJIOH S'I1!EIJ!R3 - Apood

10 term~ wilh Lion Seucy, elttwlli.vellck·
),o, Oft a tour- )'Ill' OGIIriCL

SAN FRANCISCO &lt;19EIS - Apood

to lan'IJ with Bran JCIIlll, 1iat5 tnd, on •
threo--111r ~bact, aad llike Walter,

Unet.ctw, oa atW~&gt;-)t!Ucaauac:L
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS ApwctiO . , . wdb Cal Caw, comer-

-.WASHINGTON

REDSIUNS Apod .. _,...., l!tio Gaah, linobac:l:-

...

Team takes no timeouts

:::
By BILL BARNARD
":
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) : Chuclc Dalr has solved his problem
.. of not havmg anything to lay duringtimeours. He doesn't call them.
As coach of the U.S. Olympic
· basketball team,
is allotted
two timeouiS per hal , giving him
10 opportunities in five games to
discuss strategy, slow down an
opponent's momenllllll or chew out
a lacbdaisical defender.
But Daly, dubbed die "Prince d
Pessimism," has used none of his
10 timeouts.
"One of my main goals is not Ill
call any timeouts at the Olympics,"
Daly said Tuesday.
· He was amazed when ldevisim
arranged to have timeouts at the
Tournament or the Americas in
Portland increased from a minute
~ to 90 seconds.
•· So radler than having huddles of
silence in Blrtelona, Daly decided
to try and ticlc die~ habit.
•'I nearly did it against Brazil
and Spain because of a lack of
defensive intensity," Daly said.

0a7.

"Then I realized it probably
wouldn't have any effect, so 1
didn 'L"
But Daly ordered a rractice
Monday, to die chagrin o most of
the players. who have spent their
da s off plaving golf or attending
Y OlympiC
f -·events.
oilier
"I'd rather be sleeping,"
Charles Barkley said. "Everybody
got out of bed wanting to Bet this
over with as quietly as posSible,"
Monday notwithstanding, Daly
has kept a light rein on the team,
Doring the pre-Olympic training
camp at Monte Carlo, he joked that
if he enfOited a curfew, he would
have to live by it. too.
•'The coaching staff decided
early on that we needed to give
them some structure, but nothing
complicated, and to give diem die.
opportunity to use their talents,"
Daly said. "I have coached at AllStar games be~•.and we felt this
was the same slluanon.
•'They all want Ill play and they
all want to swt, but die staff just
keeps dangling die gold medal at

them Ill keep them going."
The Dream Team takes another
step toward die gold medal tonight
against Puerto Rico, which trailed
Team USA by 27 points at halftime
before losing by 38 last month in
Portland.
Unlike some coaches who have
faced the U.S. team, Puerto Rico's
Raymond Dalmau does not fully
concede defeat to the Americans.
Puerto Rico rmished fourth in
Group B with a 3-2 record, including an 82-70 victory over the previously undefeated Unified Team on
Sunday.
"My expectations were that we
could win an Olympic medal and
now our chances are not good
because of who we play in the
quartelfmals," Dalmau said.
"We can win if IIIey play absolutely lbeir worst game and we play
absolutely our best. We felt we
should have finished better than
fourth in our group, but we didn't
start playing well until it was too
late to improve our position," he
said.

nation, the country of McKoy, for
Olympic competition.
After his victory. McKoy said
~.was good enough.
ThiS ts the second-best day of
my life. ~ ~st was having my
daughter, satd the 30-year-old,
1be oldest Olympic champion in 1be
110 hurdles. .
The best th1ng U.S. vo~leyball
p~ayers did was ,shave thetr head,
Smce dlen, tlley ve gone 4-0, and
they beat medal favorite Italy by
scores of 9-15, 16-14, 15-11, 1513.
Both Jearn~ made the medal
round. The Umted States wtll play
lbe Unified Team in Wednesday's
quartNerfthenalslan. dsitaly .h~- l.sw•.ll race
the et r
• w 11e pam wt 11
meet Cuba and Brazil will play
HoU&amp;Iid.
There was good news and bad

news for the United States at the
pool_. The
water polo team
conunued •ts. move toward a g~ld .
~· ~f~g France 11-7 fortiS
third stratght VIctory•
But U.S. women ~ivers were
shut out for the ftrst tune ever m
the springboanl, whm the Olinese
~pleted a sweep of events. Gao
Min, 21, ~Y defended_htz
gold medal, JOuw:'g ~onn di~er
13-year-old Fu Mingl!l8 m 1be wmncr's circle.
.
.
The best U.S. showmg was Julte
Ovenhouse's rtfth; teammate Karen
LaFace of Fort Lauderdale, Fla .•
lirushed ntnth.
" It just didn't happen ," said
Ovenhouse, of Howell, Mich. " Not
very many peop1e can say that they
are Olympians, and that's sometiling I have that no one can take
away from me."

_u.s.

if!

alJ:o~f~=n~~=
Ivanisevic. who guaranteed Croatia

its fii'St-evcr medal with a live-set
win over Frenchman Fabrice Santoro, and Marc Rosset of Switzerland, who eliminated Emilio
Sanchez of Spain 6-4, 7-6 (7-2), 36, 7-6 (11-9).
A pair of U.S. boxers are in the
same boat, desu'ned "•or brooze or
beaer. Chris Byrd and Oscar De La
Hoya made die semis with victories
Monday; four of their teammates
ftght today for a medal. No matter
what, it will be the U.S. boxers'
worst medal showing since 1972.
Of counc, IIIey have to ~past
the tubans, whose record m lbese
Games is 27-1. Five are already
guaranrced lm1ze medals.
The frightening Savon went toe·
to-toe with Nicholm, outslugging
the American in the third round to
win die brawl.
"It's too bad. I wanted to go
home with a medal," Nicholson
said after dropping a 13-11 decision. "I thought I pulled it out I'm
not a judge, but I thought I won.''
Joining Conley at the medal
stand in Olympic Stadium were
teammates Tony Dees and Jack
Pierce, who finished 2-3 behind
Canadian gold medalist Mark
McKoy in the 110-rnecer hurdles.
McKoy, a Ben Johnson teammate who once admitted steroid
use, finished in 13.12 seconds.
~. of Tampa, Fla., was .12 secoods behind and .02 seconds ahead
of Pierce, of Marlton, NJ .
The eccentric Canadian also
once threatened to create his own

CAPTURES GOLD - Amerkaa Jacldt Joyner-Kenee
·
the gold she won ill the hepatlutto. 011 tile winner's podi- ronow- ·
ing ber winaina performance in tM event in Oly11pic lldioll Moo-:
day in BarceloDa, Spain. (AP)
·

ALL-STAR SQUAD-Pictured above Is the North Mason AD-Stars little league basebaU team, wbicb
recently won second place in tile Belpre All-Star tournament. In tbe l'ront row are, l'rom lert: Dana Gillispie, Roger Wood, Lori Bumgarner, J.R. Varian, Grant HufT and Joe Finnicum. In tbe middle row, from
left, are: Sterling Shields, Cory Fowler, David MitcbeU, Keith Cundiff, Jason Fields, Josh Jeffers and
Jeremy VanMeter. In the baclc are, from left: coaches Lee Bumgarner, Danny Gillispie, Carl Jeffers and
Gary MllcbelL

Jackson bidding to make Cooperstown
By JIM DONAGHY
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP)
- Now on deck for the Hall of
Fame: No,~. Reggie Jackson,
Can there be any doubt? The
only questions here are Reggie's
percentage of the vote and which
cap he will wear on his plaque. He
had some pretty good years for
both the A's and the Yankees.
Jackson will be on the baUot for
Jhe ftrst time in 1993 and should
get at least 95 percent. He has a
career average of .262 with 563
home runs and 1,702 RBis.
This y'ear, Tom Seaver set an
all-time record when he was named
on 425 of the 430 ballots for a
record 98.8 percent of the vote. The
previous mark was 98.2 percent set
by Ty Cobb in 1936 during the
very first election.
Reggie' s detractors will no
doubt say he had a low lifetime
baiting average, was a lousy outfielder and struck out way too .
much (a major league record 2,597
times), But averages or fielding
ability had nothing to do with what
made Jackson special. The man
knew how to win ball games, even
old-timers' games.
.
In Jackson's 21 -year career, his
teams went on to the playoffs II
times. His clubs also won ftve of
tile six World Series they played in.
"I'm very proud as being
known as one of the ~e 's greatest cluiCh hiners," satd Jackson at
tile legend's classic last month in
San Diego after hitting a grand
slam off Bob Gibson . "Reggie
Jaclcson wanted to be at bat when
tile game was on the line.''

nullll .wlh AilE.
YOU: bed, food, TLC.
STUDENT: IIIIUI'IIICe,lpelldlngmoney, 1 culttiN to lluiN.
Daaarvlng EnJ!:h IP••Idng hlghlr:hoollrs from 30
. counIIIXIoully IWIIt yoilr 011 NOW. ArlllrtOin
lnwoutturll 8tuclent Exohlng~- 11 y... 11n1cl to Ohio
by KMhll Bchleflr, 1t111e otno.ln Hlidlon, Oll'lng loollrep-

trlll 11gerly

,...ntltiVM, proven aupport, public MrYice. 8111,. our
•American DrMm•. Cll1211 1110 1111 or, 1.-o-IIBUI'tG

.

points were the most ever for a
U.S. woman in die Olympics.
At. usual, the women ~ttJacted a
star-Sllldded a:owd: Magic Johnson
and son Earvtn In, Dream teammates J~ S~kton, David Rob~son, Chruua" Laettner, Chns
Mullin and Michael Jordan,
moviemaker Spike Lee, and exNBA Sial' Julius Erving.
The undef~ women play~
Unified Team tn Wednesday s
semif'mals. Their most lilcely g~ld
medal oppooent? Cuba, 3-0, ~hich
faces Clifna in die other semifinal
game.
The women's tennis semifinal is
set as well, and it has a distinctly
American loolc. No. 3-seedcd Jennifer Capriati will play No. 2 Arantxa Sanchez Vmo of Spain, and
No.4 M.yJoeFeroandezwiU battic top-seeded Sleffi Graf.
"Nab, I'm 1101 excited," the 16year-old Capriati said, a grin
betraying her. "No, of course I am,
It's what I'm 1Im for- Ill win a
medal. I don't want to stop here,
thou h."
worst the United States can
do here is two bronze medals. The
bes~ with two upsets- a gold and
silver.

•

Jackson had 10 home runs in the teammate and Hall of Farner Joe
World Series and drove in 24 runs. : Morgan. "He was one of the best
Reggie's career as "Mr. October" RBlmenofhisera"
can be best wrapped up in Game 6
Also eligible for the first lime in
of tile 1977 World Series between 1993 are 300-game winner Phil
the Yanlcees and Dodgers,
Nielcro, Steve Garvey and fourReggie hit three home runs in time batting champion Bill Madthe game to tie Babe Ruth's record lock.
as the Yankees won the Series.
Mite Schmidt, who hit 548
Jackson 's third home run of the home runs, retired in 1989 and will
game landed in the center-field be eligible in 1995.
bleachers more than 450 feet away.
He put the crowd into a frenzy and
Sports shorts
even got a hug from Billy Martin.
BasebMU
Through ihe years, Reggie had
DETROIT
(AP) - Bo Schemhis battles with Charlie Finley,
bechler
and
Jim
Campbell, die two
George Steinbrenner, Billy and
selected teammates. He ~ven came most visible members of the
close to blows with Martin a couple Detroit Tigers' power structure,
of times. But the fans, who either were fired by club owner Tom
loved him or hated him , always Monaghan.
Schembechler, who qu jt as
stuck around to see Reggie swing.
'Michigan
footbaU coach after two
Can there be a better definition
decades
and
become the Tigers'
of a HaD Farner?
president
in
1990,
was notified of
Another guy who has a shot
his
dismissal
by
fax.
Campbell, the
either in 1993 - or perhaps better
team
chairman
and
a Tigers
in 1994 - is former Cincinnati
employee since 1949, got a phone
slugger Tony Perez.
Perez, a very important part of call in Cooperstown, N.Y., where
he had attended the Hall of Fame
the Big Red Machine, played 23 inductions
Sunday.
years and hit .279 with 379 home
Mon8ghan,
owns Domino's
runs and 1,652 RBis. Seven times Pizza Inc., lastwho
week agreed to sell
in his career he drove in I 00 or the club for approximately $85 milmore runs in a season and 12 limes lion to Little Caesars pizza maghad 90 or more.
.
nate Mite llitch. The deal is
"Tony belongs in Cooper- expected Ill lie a)lproved by major
stown," said former Cincinnati league owners by autumn.

DOMINO'S PIZZA

Ill w••••••,..,., .

992·2124

' for your flmlly to holt 1 foreign studtnt
NOW IS THE TillE

lollfrM.

champion Ilaly.
All die excitement did liute to
change the medals chart. The Unifted Team remained on lOP. with 78
medals (32 gold, 27 stlver, 19
bronze). The United States foltowed with 66 medals (20, 24 and
22), while Germany was .third with
48 (16, 11 and 21).
Monday was also a day for disqualif'ations _two, to be precise.
A Moroccan distance runner lost
his gold medal after a teammate
was accused of bumping another
runner to assist htm. Richard
Chemilo of Kenya was awarded
first place, replacing Khalid Slcah,
who would have given his country
its rii'St medal.
,
An otftcial protest is pending,
and a ruling is expected today.
·
In the women's 10-kilometer
walk, the Unified Team •s Alina
Ivanova had too much shimmy in
her step and was DQed for "wallcing violations." The medal went to
Chen Yueling of (]tina.
The distaff Dream Team did it
again, this lime against Spain: It set
a team record for most points
scored, smashing the home team
114-59. And Medina Dillon's 28

23
2!
19
17

0
I
I
I
2
2
0
0

I
0
I
I
0

happened.
Mi!~e Conley, who didn't even
qualify for t~e Seoul Olympics,
unl~hed a tnple jump that ... took
... this ... long ... to ... end, the second-longest leap of all time.
"I won a gold medal and
jumped over 18 meters C.S9 feet, 34 inches). Asking fo~nythin11
more than that is just beins
greedy," Conley, of Fayetteville,
Ark Said after Ills wind-aided leap
of 59 feet, 7 1/2 inches. Earlier, he
set an j)lympic record d 57-10 1/4.
The record jump had the 29year-old partying in the sand pit,
thrusting his arms skyward and
shouting•."Booml BOom! Boom!"
That's something he wasn't able to
do four years ago when after a sitver in 1984 be failed .0 make the
team.
'
Conley' s spectacular styride
capped an impressive day for the
United States. Two boxers and two
tennis stars are assured of medals.
Two hurdlers collected silver and
gold. The women's baslcetbaU team
roUed to a record-setting win over
Spain. And the men's volleyball
team, its confidence growing back
like its hair, knocked off world

22 66
21 41
' 39

7

BtuiL. ...................... .l
Eo1oaio ..............,.......... l
lmoi .............................O
uma ......,....................0
...............................0

69; WcQwire, Oakland, 61;

1181 - - · Doaoi~ 91 ; MeOwi&amp;.

B-

Olympic medals table

B. ......... S..uh, 71 ; )lbck,

C..., T-&amp;1.

0M1oao1 .... . .........62 43 .590

l· O) 11lant.,

l$:"-llt:OIIir,

dini,
..... 6;

M.iJIIIUDCI,

W...,..DIY..._
~ .............63

Pi........ 126; Sbtii'..W. s.. ilMI•.
125; Ow- s.. Diolo, llol; Lontlord,
S&lt;Lolio,l:lll; EN, ~...._120.
DOUBW - Duoooa. Jlbilodelphia,
• 29; Lukford, St. Lauit, 27; W. Clark,
s.. F · = :17; v..St,t&lt;., Plllo....,..
27: M1m17, New York, 25; qrilaom,
M_., :lA; Sholliold, S,. lliop, :lA;
CllloqD, )I,
l1UPLIS - 0. - · AllltU, 13;
FlllloJ,-.11;-.Loo~
9; V..Siylto,l'llubluP- I; DoShieldo,
Moa1a11. 1; AUc., St. LouU, 7; Mtnn-

Phi' , 'lia. »;lltlinda, 1\uabuq,h, 14.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

s . -..............a»

-......

s.. ~ti"'"·
64;
Dando,
64.
Ul Pbil1 J 1;1 i1, 77; MeOritf, Su DleJO, 69; Sherfield, S.e
16; .....y,NewY.a,6S;Ikndo,
1ldm, Atllftta. 62; L
60.
HITS - hndlek10, Atllnt•, 117;
DeSbieW1, Moat.tul, 1:26: VanS1)'1r.e,

a.-.

-3,0inp2
ILIM Z. P11i1V; t ·• 1
S.Diop6,S..,_S

(Oinioo 16-3). 7&gt;4() , ....

•

Holllao, Pbtld;ti• &amp;!:.llialo. Houo.......... 15; 0.,...

- . &amp;!; Ill*,

.:.
By LARRY McSHANE
:...BARCELONA, Spain (AP) • After 12 years as a political ~asual• ty, the. Cubans arc back ·~ the
• Olymptcs - and the Amencans
: arc wishing their Caribbean neigh" bon had waited four years for the
: Atlanta Games.
:
The imposing Cubans are threat: ening U.S. supremacy in die box: ing ring and on the baseball dia" mond with heavyweight Felix
~ Savon'whipPing Chicago's Danell
Nicholson tn a spectacular fight
and the Cuban basebaU team eager, ly awaiting the United States today.
How tough arc Cuban fighters?
Eleven of 12 boxers are sliD in die
run for medals. Only six Americans
are left
~ Ho~ rough is the Cuban base: ·ball team? Let U.S. coach Ron
··. Fraser handle that one. A victory
· over the 7-0 Cubans, he said,
,, "would be the biggest upset of die
:; 1992 Olympics." This Cuban team
• has outscored its opponents 78-14,
:; hit 12 home runs, and has two playcrs batting over .SOO (yes. thai was
• .SOO).
~
But stranger things have already
•
::
w

St•t• 1 9 Cil()~tl•d
In tbe maJors ...

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

The ·Daily Sentinel I~ Cubans ruling the roost in the boxing ring, baseball diamond

Sports
By TERRY KINNEY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Lou
• Piniella has gazed into his crystal
bill.
''I'D tdl you what; I'D make a
• prediction," die Reds manager volunieered wben Chris Sabo returned
· to the slltling lineup after IRkle
and blck problems.
"Sabo is going to get red hot
He reaDy moved 81l&gt;Und well out
lhere, and his bat was reaDy quick
, ... the ball was jumping off the
bat"
Sabo made Piniella look good
Monday, doubli\11 twice and sooring a run in Cincinnati's 4-0 win
over die HouSIIlO Asllos.
After beating Houston thn:e out
of four, the Reds begin a threegame series tonight with the NL
West-leading Braves in Atlanta.
Piniella said he had good vibes
about the lri.l'·
, "It's a btg series, and I have a
fee:t we're going to play well,"
Pin' said.
"I just have a good feeling
we're going to go over there nice
and relaxed and play good base-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

~11 Rwar41ngl Alleval)tl Llletlmel Call now..

FAIR SPECIAL!

99

PIZZA

ONLYI

\,

PICII!IJ

ASpecial Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Monday,.August 31, 1992

double play vounder by Gleaallen Hill In the
fourtlll11111 of Monday 1i1bt's American
League 11111e Ia New York, wbicb tbe Indians
won 8-6. (Al')

COMPLETFS IDS fART- New York leC·
.... ODd SliCker hi Kelly ltapa 1bove tile Clevelalld
Indiana' Pa1l Sorrnto •ftelo retlrlDIIII• 01 1
'\"

: · Cleveland records 8-6 victory
·:~over N.Y. Yankees in 12 frames
•

·~·

NEW YORK (AP) - Steve
"' Olin got Oil of one late-inning jam
before pitehing himself into ~er.
,.. Olin's wert was a major IOpic
= of conwallllion in die lndlllls club= house afler Cleveland'a 8-6, 12= inning vict.my (1lffil the New York
~ Yankees on Monday.
·
:
"We li«&lt;aght him In because
he' l a sroundball pitcher," uld
i Indians Manaaer Mike HUJrOve
: after Olin (6-3) thren double play
• baD on Ills firlt piteh 10 -« out a
111 bUes-lolded Yanlceea threat in lhe
:( IIIII iming.
"!Jot what I wanted," aaid
• Olin, Bernie W'tllilms' l i n = hopper to tim buemlll Paul Sor·
: rento that started die inning-ending
: double ptar.
·
•
But Olm sliD had 10111e drama
left after die l1ldlanl ICOied twice
- in die top of die 12th as die Yan~ kees put two on with IWo Qll in die

e
!

LARGE
PEPPERONI
.,

...

i

bottom· of the inning when pinchhitter Kevin Maas lofted a high
drive IQ righL
"I saw (Mart) Whiten oot there
camping under it, so I wasn't too
worried," said Olin as Whiten
reached up with hia back asainst
the wall to caleb Maas'· bid for a
three-run homer. ,
"It was close but ir was an
out." said Olin.
"I wanted to get a pitch bt~
die air. I'm 1101 there 10 just
·
one in," Maas said. "I lhousht I
had enOugh of it, it just didn't make
it."'
New York held. 2-1 and •-3
Jeadl (1lffil 111e
thn:e innings of
the ace-saw game before Carlos
Bacrga put die Indians in front 6-4
with a thn:e-run hom« in die fifth.
Kenny l.oflal - the ocher Ilia
.pin die lndiiM lltaCk, 1litlina I
solo homer, hit fourth, an RBI

rtnt

triple and an RBI double in the
12th off John Habyan (3-6) that
knoclced in lbe go-ahead run.
Lofton's homer off Yankees'
swter Scou Kamieniecki gave the
Indians an early 1-0 lead. but Matt
Nokes' 14th homer, a two-run shot
off Indians starter Rod Nichols. put
die Yanks in front 2-1 in the second.
.
Lofton's RBllriple and Thomas
Howard's RBI jrOUftder aave the
Indians a 3-2 lead in die third, but
the Yankees came baclc with two in
dleir half of the third on RBI sinsics by Don Mattingly and Mel
HaD to make it4-3.
Mark Lewis opened the fifth
with a single and Sandy Alomar
was safe on shortstop Ra~dy
Velarde's fielding errot before
BIJelil hit his 14th homer two outs
later to put the Indians back in
front6-4,

RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CALLING:

992-2156
/

ASK FOR DAVE or P. J.

AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1991

•

'

'

I

�Sentinel

Ohio

1;Adams wins twice in oft~delayed

~iB~~!~ms.~~·..~~~.r!!!..~!~: ""'"
Mike McJ?aruel and B~by Hill.
Heat wmners were Ricky Lu~.
Bobby Hill and Larry Bond.
Local drivers Bryan Wolfe finished third in the second heat,
h'l S
Wolfe's Eber's
w 1 e co 11
Ci~go/McDonalds 1114 was fourth,
spmrung an axle on the thrrd lap of
the feature
Adams ·won the UMP Modified
main over Andy Bond J;)oug
B ' Hi k
Henry, Barry Jacobs, ennY. c •
e1• L.arry B_on d • AI an H1bbar d •
Hub1e Hatf1eld, Ray Plants and
John Burdeue.
:~ · hDesplledrizzleand:~olded':
Benny Thieman claimed the
.; a uge, amuous _crow .ray
Sportsman main over Aaron Flem:: weather as Skyhne got m 1ts frrst ing, Dick Grimm, Jeff Wood, Jim
:" rac_mg program of the _month, fea- Amick, Rick Hudnell, Kevin
tunng 12 feature races mal!· . .
Haught, Rick Deeter, Jay Ham :. In th.e Late _Model d)VJSIOn, mock and Jim Bolyard.
•:Adams Jumped mto the lead early
SUMMARY
:; but was c~a!leged lap after lap by
·Late Models
;. Albany drivmg ace Larry Bond m
DASH: Rick Lucas, Bob
•: the Facemeyer Lumber 1110. The Adams, Joe Mcmel, Kirk Isner
;. two battled unul commg up on a
First Heat· Bobby Hill Andy
.:' lap car, when the two JQuched and
· .
'
.
·: Bond spun having to go to the tail. Bond, Dan Momson, Larry Yanlls
:; Coolvihe•s And Bond then
Second Heat: Larry Bond,
' •challenged befdre §Ievie Lucas Frank1e W1lson, Bryan Wolfe,
•,
· '
·
Scott Wolfe
;. moved mto the scene, p~ssmg
F 1 e· Adams Lucas A
·~ Adams with four laps to go.
ea ur ·
. •.
.• ·
;. Lucas's lead was short-lived as a Bond, Bruce Denms, Bill Chi!~.
•: yellow reverted back to the last Isner, Joe Memel, Butch McGill,
:;completed lap.
Mike Mc;&gt;amel, Bobby ~ill, Mor·
;. . Adams lost his brakes at this nson, Wilson, Ryan Chne, Dub
·:point, but held off Lucas for the Barnhouse, Br~wn, Scott Wolfe,
:Owin.
Jay Jenkins, Bnan ~olfe.
;::: Rounding out the top 10 were
. UMP Modifieds
.
•: Andy Bond, Bill Childers, Kirk
F~rst Heat: Andy Bond, R1ck
Sentinel Correspondent
·~ · Bob Adarris Jr of Racine driv:• ;.
· :
· 5 '
·: ,mg the J.D: Drillmg 11~-5 ·rose to
; 1 -the occas1on to_ ~la1m th.e Late
••:Model and Modified poruons of
.' 1he $2 000 to win the Bob Adams
:: :.Sr. Memorial Race Friday night at
.~ :Skyl' e Speedway
•:
m
. ·
·
h
:• , Benny Th1eman cla1med t e
•: :Sportsman, Don Casto, Street
•• •Stocks; Paul Shular, Pure Stocks;
.,. d R ed 'II • Bob Bw'l the
an Ce Iinder
sv1 ePure
s Stock features
ey,
·•;:Four
'• h' h Y
ad p from Jut 1o
~ 'Y' IC w_ere "! e u
Y. ·
:• t

I

&lt;

Hatfield, Roy ~IS.
S~cond Heat. Larry Bond,
McG1U, Doug Henry, Adlllns.
Feature: Adams, A. Bond,
Henry, Jacobs, Benny Hickel, L.
Bond AUan Hibbard Hubie Hat'
'

fUnk t!l fEJ!JJ @3!1U'J

Waggalls
"

-.

, ...
j

•• '

. ...'ii:.

OTHE11.tiDIW
WANT $1Z. '19
0111«111EI

field,Ray~ts,JohiiBunleue.

Sponsman.
.
Frrst Heat: Benny Theiman, Ed
Venham,JeffWood,ChrisBolyard
Second Heat: Kevin Haught
· J H
k'
Aaron Flemmg, ay ammoc ,
D'tckGrunm
·
.
.
Feature: Th1eman, Flemmg,
Grimm, Wood, Amick, Rick Hudnell, Haught, Rick Deeter, Jay
Hammock, Jim Bolyard, Ed Ven·
ham.
Street Stock
•
HEAT: Don Casto, RoF. Dunlap, Lou Westermeyer, Rick Yenham.
. FEATURE: Don Casto, David
Hackathorn, Ralph Gardner,.
Harold Pickens, Roger Dunlap,
Mitch Brunton, Westermeyer, Yenham, Todd Wolfe.
Pure stock
FEATURE;Paul Shular, Todd
Smith, Bob Bailey, Ed House, Jeff
RIISseU, Sam Nay, Harry Wallace,
Ron Nutter, Chris Can ink, Rick
Blake
&lt;kyL pure stock
Feature: Bob Bailey, George
Adkins, Jeremy Barber. Tony
Roush, Ben Flora Dana Nichols,
Delbert, Cliff Whitley, Frank
Roush, Doug Sams.

(

@.

·,

By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
• More than 100 cars filled the
:•pits in all divisions, but when the
~dust had finally seuled, Charleston,
·:vv.va. driver Stevie Lucas in the
::oon ·s Disposal Masterbuilt 115L
: ·was the winner in the premier Late
· •.;Model Division Midseason Cham:jionships Friday night at Skyline
:-Speedway.
·• Lucas, who contended for the
::Win in the Bob Adams Sr. Memori·:afearlier in the night, proved to be
:) he class of the field, althou~h
:.coolville's Andy Bond rode hliD
·liard throughout the race.
:. Third was Harold Redman, fol: ~owed by Larry Bond, Bobby Hill,
·l!ob Adams Jr., Butch McGill, Kirk
:,sner, Bill Childers and Bruce Den; ·11is.
Larry Bond won the frrst heat,
while Redman and Andy Bond
claimed the next two. Bob Adams
won the B-Main.
:.· Butch McGill, who was very
~·..busy this night, drove l.llni differZ:J:Ijt cars in seven races, but found
·'..enou~h stamina to claim the UMP
:::madtfied main over Jim Wilson
=.. ;nd'Bob Adams Jr. Doug Henry
~· ,..~s next followed by Greg
• ~chilling, Don Kerr, John Burdette,
::: ~nan Hibbard, Bary Jacobs and
·:lee Wigal.
:. ~ Aaron Fleming claimed a clean
~ tweep again by defeating Benny
;.·Thieman in the Sportsman main.
~ Kevin Haught was third followed
~ by Jim Amick, Jim Bolyard, Jeff
• Wood, Rick Hudnall, Ed Venharn,
~ Rick Deeter, Benny Powers and
:: John Remy.
• Roger Dunlap scored a clean
·: sweep in the street stocks over
' David Hackathorn, Don Casto,
: Ralph Gardner and Mitch Brunton.
; Tom Morrison claimed the Pure
' Stock win over Ron Nutter, Jeff
:-Russell, Paul Shular and Todd
::Smilh.
·· George Adkins won the four: ·cylinders over Jeremy Barber,
' Dwight Henry, Dana Nichols, Tony
; ~oush, Bob Bailey, Roger Howard,
: Mark Frost, Delbert Roush and
: Larry DiUon.
•
SUMMARY
:
Late Model
•' · Heat- Larry Bond, Bobby
:;Hill, Dub Barnhouse, Joe Memel
:- Heat - Harold Redman, Steve
: I:ucas, Bruce Dennis, Kenny John• J&gt;Oil,
;. Heat - Andy Bond, Butch
··McGill, Kirk Isner, Greg Carpen-

I

:1et.

··

·: B-Main - Bob Adams Jr.,
:.'Jiarold Redman Jr., John Wright,
;·Q.ick Lucas, Jay Jenkins.
· ;;. Feature - Steve Lucas, A.
: ~ond, Harold Redman, Larry
: l;lond, HiU, Adams, McGill, Isner,
' ~bilders, Dennis.
&gt;
UMP Modifieds
:~· • Heat- McGill, Don Kerr, Greg
•:SC'hilling, Jacobs, Burdette
; . Heat - Adams, Doug Henry,
••,Andy
. Bond, Lee Wigal
:,. . Feature - Butch McGill, Jim
~!son, Adams, Henry, Schilling,
,Kerr, Burdette, Alan Hibbard,
2 atobs, Wigal.
'• :
Sportsman
:~ ·Heat Fleming, Thieman,
•Wood,Remy
:: l;leature - Fleming, Thieman,
~ Amick, Jim Bolyard, Wood,
~i1:k Hudnall •. Ed Venham, Rick
pjeter. Dick Grimm.
..,. •
. Street Stock
·
~~~ - Roger Dunlap, David
· kathom, Ralph Gardner, Ed ·
.
an
. • Heat - Don Casto, Herb
{(GBride. Harold Pickens, Wayne
~.Rick Venbam
~ :feasure - Dunlao. Hackathorn,
Gardna', MitCh Bruaton, Ed
Redman, Wayne Eidson, Ted
Tucker, Herb McBride, Rick Ven-

euo,

ham.

Pure stock
Heat - Tom Morrison. Bob
Rider) eff RusseU, Gary Porter
Heat- Ron Nuner, Rick Cooper, Sam Nay, Paul Shular.
Feature - ·Tom Morrison, Ron
Nutter, Jeff Russell, Paul Shular,
Todd Smith, Gary Porter, Bob
Rider, Steve Bigley, Dave Helton,

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Heat - George Adkins, Jeremy

Barber, Ben Flora, Doug Sarns.
Heat - Delbert Roush, Bob
Bailey, Dana Nichols, Dwight
Henry, Tony Roush.
Feature - Adkins, Barber,
Henry, Nichols, Roush, Bob Bailey, Roger Howard, Mark Frost,
Delbert Roush, Larry DiUon.

6OL HAIR PRODUCTS
• SMING GlAZE
• FINISHING SHINE

Bengals have four players
competing for tight end spot
WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP) The Cincinnati Bengals have a new
tight ends coach this year, and they
may also have a new starting tight
end.
Four players are competing for
the spot held since 1985 by former
All-Pro Rodney Holman, who had
a subpar season last year. They are
vetemns Eric Kallus and Jim Riggs
and rookies Craig Thompson and
Jeff Thomason.
Tight ends coach Mike Pope,
who spent nine years with the New
York Giants making Mark Bavaro
into an All-Pro and getting tight
end Howard Cross onto the allrookie team, says he plans to use
the tight ends as pass-catchers
niore this year.
Pope said throwing to the tight
ends more wiU keep defenses from
collapsing on the wide receivers.
''When a team double-covers
your outside receivers and singlecovers your inside receiver; you're
. going to have a hard time ~ith_rour
passing game," Pope sa1d. We
want to ... make them play more
honestly on defense.
"We're not necessarily featur-

'

.
.

'

~Lucas, Fleming also win at Skyline
•

.

.' .

HOW ABOUT

48 CT.
ANTACI
TUMS

YOUR CHOICE

NOT

MICROWAVABLE

ing the hacks and tight, ends. i!J !he
passing game, but we re unlizmg
them more effectively," he said
·'We were predicrable in the last
couple of years,'' Riggs said.
"You could almost tell what we
were F,Oing to do by certain formations. '
Riggs caught three passes for 38
yards in Saturday's training camp
scrimmage, including a 26-yard .
catch over the middle.
''We want to be aggressive with
the football down the field, but if
it's not there, we want 10 fmd the
underneath receivers," said Dave
Shula, the Bengals' new head
coach this season. The Bengals
;.vere 3-13 last year under former
coach Sam Wyche.
Riggs, a backup for all of his six
years with the Bengals, is delighted
with the new emphasis.
"I feel we've never really utilized the tight end as well as we
can in our offense," Riggs said.
''In a two-tight end set, in previous
years, we'd wedominantly run.
This year, we Udo a lot more pass-

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SKU18441 B

lEBCD.
SPIN CAST
COMBO 101
WITH

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INCLUDI:S:

:;QY0.18LB
ZEBCO PREMIUM
MONOFilAMENT LINE

~71AY

119.991

t'A

SNAC ..--......

PRINTED

Former Bengals receiver
enjoying success in new AFL

All-star race slated
for Wednesday

WITH WASHABU
IABIICPAD!

SHAKESPEARE

ing.' '

CINCINNATI (AP) - Former free agents including Miami UniCincinnati Bengals wide receiver versity's Milt Stegall.
Ira Hillary is on a record-setting
"We · c~·gratulate him for the
receiving pace in the Arena Foot- success th t he is having in the
ball League that he hopes will get (Arena) I gue," Bengals coach
him back into the National Football Dave Shula said. "Right now there
League.
is not any interest. His name has
HiUary, 29, is closing in on AFL not come up."
marks for receptions, yards receivRockers coach Fran Curci thinks
ing and touchdowns.
Hillary could play in the NFL ..
"This game has put the fun
"He's a great control rece1ver.
back into playing football for me," 'He has ~treat hands," Curci said.
Hillary said. "I'm having some
success playing in this league. If it
so manifests itself into an opponunity in the NFL, I would defmitely
welcome that
"I don't know if there have
been many players that have come
The All-Star Cilcuit of Champifrom this league and go into the ons Sprint cars will be coming to
NFL. Due to the success that I've Interstate 79 Speedway near
been having, I would like to get Shinnston, W.Va. for the ftrst time
another shot in the NFL."
in 10 yearsr£ ednesday when they
Hillary, who was an eighth- will com
for the $4,000 fmt
round pick by the Kansas C1ty prize an the fii'St-ever $1,000 to
Chiefs in 1985, spent 6ve years in win "Whecly" cont.est.
the NFL. He was a backup receiver
Track promoters and Rocket
and return man with the Bengals Chassis innovators Mark Richards
before the Minnesota Vikings and Steve Baker have indicated
acquired him via Plan B. then that they hope to make a deal to
released him three games into the have Sammy Swindell, the nation's
season.
hottest driver, on hand
John Fourcade made the jump
Swindell would join the All-Star
from the AFL to the NFL .' He reglllars as well as Ohio's and
played quarterback for the Denver Pennsylvania's best drivers.
Dynamite before hitching on with
Ttoy'sJack Hewitt, after tourillg
the New Orleans Saints.
Ausb'alia this winter, btouJhl the
Mark Rodenhauser, a center, idea or a "Wheely Contest to the
went from the Chicago Bruisers 10 states, where Richards picked up
Chicago Bears. Jeff Faulkner. a the idea for the J. 79 race.
defensive end, went from the
Point leader Frankie Kerr or
Bruisers to the Phoenix Cardinals.
Fremont and Kevin Huntley of
The Bengals aren 'tlonking for a Bloomington, Ind., are loclted in a .
wide receiver with Tim McGee, torrid biUie for the point-lead and
Eddie Brown, Reggie Rembert, $10.000 to win series point fund.
Carl·Pickens, Brian Brennan, l&gt;iilte
Time trials are at 7 p.m. and
Barber, Shane Garrett and.several raceutB p.m.

INFANT CARSfAT/
CARRIER

•

s1san
FRENCH

SWEATSHIRTS

STEAM
IRON

ASST. MOTORCYCLE &amp;
mUCK PAINTS

()()14/MftE

711 THE
$19.99 ~ICE!

so a.

SANDWICH
BAGS

1OWlO ""':::~...--'_) .. -t
DETERGENT

DESK lAMP

ASSORTED COLORS

-::::=

NOT
$11.991

DESK lAMP

fXJNIMRE 7!1/9, 99/....

I

PRIItCETON. W.VA.'

•tl:J2 StafiDN Orin
RITA, W.VA."
•MiclwoyPIOU

WELCH, W.VA.'
•AI. 52 Soulh

WESTOYER, W.VA.

---c-Cif.

•WHIOftf Plu:1

IAMKIURIVILLE, 'IC VA.

RtCtn.AHDS. YA
•The Brit.. yn Shop Clr.

IECKI.E'(W. 'M.

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S&lt;UI '

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•1134 ....... Ad.
II.Ulflllo; ......
•711 8Mftlld ......

ITOIIIi HOURI: liON. THRU IAT•.t

: . - . -.... DllololhOnoturul.,.llullnooo,

•

.

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

ne.r Au I.-den: 1'1llnb for

printinJ Lyle ~'I leiter .._
his ~ frolll
- lllcoholisM his effona., Jill a . - y JIIOIIIIII
going while in priaon. Prouse's
appell for public oubllp at tbe
reluctallee of prt.- ofrteials to
cooper1IIC ia a ~ J110111111
inlpUed niC 10 wrile.
~ -I'CipOildilla to a leiter
from Uncolll W.tocz, • i11n111e
in Florida who couldn't- 10 Set
lilY 4hg rdllbililllioft il IJI'iDI; I.
100, rea.d lhe leu« front \V.tocz
and thou11t1 that Ibis Florida
prisORer
just whininJ iNtead
of taking advantaae of recovery
programs that sun:ly must already
be in place in Florida and everywhere else.
Shame on aD public olfteials who
are responsible for nnning our
prisons. Locli:i11g people up and
del!ying diem access ED drup or
alcohol doc&amp; not, and never will,
cure addictiOII.
Addietion is . . . . . just lite
diabeta or my other iDness. It is
chronic and JIIOII'CIIi¥C, hu ao
cure UDd can kill yoL To . _ .
fnn addiction ftlqUila a life-long
efforL It takes courqc lllcl the
continuiJta IUPPIJil of other ftiCOWI'·
ing adclias it 12·*11 JIIIIIIIIIIIU
u Alcoholics~ To delly
pliSOIIM access to this kind of~
is aiminal.
My eyes Mre opened 10 the true
nature of addiction when lily 1011
began ~ ail months 110· I
still chob .., when I *JP 1lilll elf
al his 12-*P ~ He is only

Aim
.

w•

· VISITING" CAMPUS • Sevmllltlldellll rr1

•

Eastera High School visited Dtlla~~a Collep
nceatly tor a tour ot the Cllllpa ad a p,_..
tallou by tbe Collqe's Olllce oi,A...IIdOII. Tile
studeats are partlclpnll or Upward Boulld, a
colleae preparatory proaram coordlaated by

of

Ohio Ualvenlty. Glvla1 ibe studellll a tour
tile c-pu• II DC lllldeDt Carl Easley, left. I'll'·
llclpatlllllhldeats laduded, Ia ao particular
order, Jasoa MIUer, Jenlter Carmea, Sheryl
Tlloma and Joshua Dickens.

Community calendar
. COIDIIIUDity Calend'lr lteaa
- - appear two da,s before UD e...t
-· ud die day ol tbat evenL Ileal
· •at be received wei Ia adVIIIft
to
pabllcatloa Ia tbe Clll·
endar.

-re

Route 124, across from Forked
Run, throu1h Friday from 6-8:30
p.m. nightly. Classes for nursing
through adull

REEDSVILLE - THe Eastern
Athletic Boosters will meet on
TIJESDAY
Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the high
RUTLAND • A family crusade school careteria.
at the Rutland Chun:b or God will
_be conducled by Rev. John Smith,
POMEROY - The FOE Ladies
' abo known • ·~ Clatdlet" Auxili_, No. 2171 will meet Tues' duough Wednesday. CMadc hours day a1 7:30 p.m. Membership dues
: . are Sunday at 11 Lm. and 6 p.m. are due.
: and Monday·dmJah Wednelday at
7 p.m. Pubfic illvitcd. To pre-resisPORTLAND • Ponland Ele ·
ter call tbe chun:h II 742..()02().
mentary 1'1'0 will meel Tuesday 81
7:30 p.m. at the school. Everyone
MIDDLEPORT • "Voyage to welcome.
the Deop" is the theme for Vacation Bitik: School at ViciOry BapPOMEROY • American Legion
tist Cluth ia Middleport lhrough Drew Webster Post No. 39 will
; Saturday from 6:15-8:45 p.m. meet Tuesday . Dinner at 7 p.m.
• -niglltly. Rev. James Keesee inviltll Meeting 8 p.m.
' •childrell ages four and up. Call
POMEROY - t.{eigs County
· m~ for blllsportation.
'
Nursing Mothers Support Group
Rt.m..AND - Rutland Church of will meet Tuesday at noon at the
the Nu.ene will cooduct Vacation Mei~ County Health Deparlmenl
, Bible 5aool through Friday from Toptc will be "How to Nurse a
' 9·11 :30 a.m. "Set Sail wuh the Newborn Baby."
;. Savior" is the theme. Singing ,
CHESHIRE - Vacation Bible
' scripture memorization, bible stories UDd crafts will be featured each School at the Silver Run Baptist
day. The children will sing for the Church in Cheshire will be held
morning worship service Sunday.
today through Friday fro 6-8 p.m.
nightly.
. REEDSVILLE • "Set Sail with
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
the Savior" will be the theme for
:. : Vacation Bible School at the Pel· Township TrusJeeS will meet Tues·
, lowship Church of the Nazarene, day at 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville
'•

·'

town hall.
WEDNESDAY
REEDSVILLE • The Olive
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Shade River State Foresll)' Building.

;
•
•

'

~·:21st annual Farrar reunion
'l'he 21st annual Farrar reunion
wu held recently at the farm of
j .Juaior and Bess Miller on Stem·
• INqa' Road. A total of 57 family
,•• aA:n llld friends were prescnL
1: Olfta - JftiCIIIed 10 lhe old·
-;.:• 11e•ber preaenll James FI!"V
(II),li!Cbon; youncett. Madi1011
( Mario p.,., (12 days); re:~
l tile Dll I c, Xris IIOWII,

; Alt.; . . . c..wren preMIII, Mr·

:r .. .,... DalllloiJo, line, Wea·

Westerville; Mrs. Juanfta Clark,
Mr. and Mrs. Vince Cnli:e, Kristy
and Kayla, Bob Farrar, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Bobo, Mr. and Mrs.
James Famr, Briln Smilh, all of
Jacbcll.
Mr. alld Mn. Eames! D. Millclr
llld daapter, Kin, Mr. alld Mrs.
Enesl Millet, Jr., Dlnlee, Mich.;
Mk:haelltopn, Eric. Mlc~.; Mr.
. . Mn. Floyd Farnr . . pllldclaa•bter, Jackie Sac Farrar,

·• _.
cinClma.i.
;1 · Atlelllllq were Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. aad
·~~ Mall

Plrill', Mr. IDd Mrs. Chuck

I, Pllfir
UDd ....,..,, Morpn, Mr.
UDd Mn. FruCU Farrar and son,
. '5coa, Mn. MlltN Famr. Michele

Md Madlaon Marie Man·
;l 'ilbl, Nick t'r I
Julie Foam;~ i'~ttar

•"""'·II

I

•,

al t.a..
; • Wr. ud iln. Do•l lobo,
• 'Awl ow, Mdlo UDd Celly, Mr. 1114
Mn. BIB Ballo IIICI Su!c. all of
i

•

held

Mrs. lvar Farrar,
Po11eroy; Mr. and Mn. Le•
Ramey, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Dave Farrar, Oak Hill; Mr. aad
Mrs. 1..awm1ce WrAf, ~ut;; Mr.
and Mrs. Brace S~ewan, Medway;
Krls BlOWn, Redfield, Ark.; Mr.
lid Mn.
Bid! -.cr, Mln:r
llld Orll, Syracae; llld Hesdwt

an.

Wile,~

(

Landers
.............
..,....,_
c-.,......

..

ANN~

17 and his co.11F II Pta iaiO
lllOIIIy aduiJ meeejap with lOIII
11n111U1- me. l'lllnot sure I
c:oullldoiL
So I AJ 10 pri10a officials
~Get--. JllllCib:lled

and . . 1le1p to . . - - wllo
want UDd _. m:ovay pqllllll.
All !bey hawe ~ 'JOII,IIId )'011 have
the authority 10 establish these
IJ10111111S. Every lllinla Wilted is
a life lost. -- G.A. IN UTHONIA.

ROCK, ARK.
DEAR LI1TI..E ROCIC: NrainJ,

threateniag or wilhholdin&amp; sex
never worts. You liCcd oullide
DEAR G.A.: You've wriucn a intervelllion. Call his physicilll
IeDer that is fdled with SOCJd sense. llld . insist that he lay doWII the
I pray that prison offic:ials will pay law. (How's his blood pressure,
llll:nlion, UDd !bey just mighl if I choltaeml, ticker, CIC.?)
bemendous lllllbcr of rellden clip
Many obese ..... cbl't lllderthis COIDIII and send it 10 the llllnd lhlt ses is mllllllltlnler •the
JOYCIIIOI' or dU . . . PJtone your
· and they -s ED ~ llllde
public librlry for the 111111e and ~W~n:ofthis.
lddress of your pernor, folks. A
lstllal Au Uuulers co'- 10"
b1izzml or 1eaen will atiiiCI some clipptd ywr a,o yellow !liM •?
lllallion.
FM a COfiY of lltr frwl-ly
Dar A.. I ndHL luve been YCI[IIeSicd [l«&lt;ffllllfll Ulfi1S, llflll IJ
BIMiied to I IOQd for IC- #f«»tntd. IMr. IIM~~t~~-liu
yan. He i1 a -lderful hllllt-' trtlltlopt 111111 11 cUd or _ ,
and flther. Tile Jlllblm? "Jab" bu ortltr for $4.85 (lllis illclNdtl
pilledll- pollllds liloe we've pDSIIIft /lllil itlltullillf) 10: GtJru.
beea mmled and gets 1alpr every ciD Allll LIINitrr, P.O. .BoJc IIS62,
yar. He's only 30 ad COllieS from ClllcllfD, Ill. 60611·0562. (111
• fllnily with • history of heart Clllllllia.ltllll $5.87.)
GA.

A Syracuse Asbury United .
Methodist Chun:h held a Mlcome
dinner for its new minister, Rev.
Dernn Newman, reCently.
Rev. NeWIIIM pvc the blessing
and presented a speci~l suest,
Samuel Naaman from Pakistan.
He spoke about and showed
slides of the missionary work being
done in Pakislall and Nc:pU UDd m
orphanage of which he is very
fond . A free will offerin&amp; was
talcen 10 help with the Christian
work beinl done there.
Rev. Naaman will soon receive
his "Doctor or Missiology" from
As"''"' Seminary. He also gave the
••
:.::;!'.. .
.

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees. will meet
Wednesday at6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station. Public invited.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT • Family and
friends of residents at Overbrook
Center IR invited 10 meet the new
administrator, Linda Brigglc, on
Thursday 81 7 p.m. Entertainment
will be provided by White's Hill
Band.
POMEROY • Revival at Faith
Tabernacle Chun:h 011 Bailey Run
Road will be held Thursday
thllliiJh Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly.
Brother Noah Callicoat will be
CVlll&amp;eliSL Pastor Emmett Rawson
invited the public.

Business Services'.

in soybean field, officials say
DAYTON, Obio . (AP) - .
Authorities are· seeking a suspect
after uprooting and burning what
they say was the largest crop of
marijuana plants ever seized in
Ohio.
John Lenhart, superintendent of
the Ohio Bureau of Criminallden. tificuion and Investigation ,
dechned Monday 10 identify the
suspect, but said the man is
· believed to be out of the state.
" AboutiOO,OOO marijuana plants
with a street value of up 10 $200 ·
- million were pulled from a fouracre sor.bean field near the western
' Ohio vtllage of Camden in Preble
·· County over the weekend, Lenhan
.. said.
,
"There's no question about it
.. being the biggest in Ohio," he said.
, "And it's certainly got 10 be one of
the biggest in the nation."
Lenban said the previous reconl
seizure in Ohio occurred several
. years ago in Sandusky County,
where authorities discovered
13,000 marijuana plants. He said
12,000 ro 15,000 marijuana plants
were also found last weekend
growing in Musldngum County.

But the number of marijuana
plants growiag in the Preble Coun!Y soybean field WM "almost unbelievable," Lenhart said.
Lenhan joiaed dozens of other

Levitt named to post
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich named
Roben E. Levitt of Hartville, former Jongti111e member of lhe Ohio
House, 10 die state Industrial Commission for a term ending June 30,
1998.
He succeeds Hager Fugate of
Hamilton, wbose term expired.
LeYill, who served six terms and
at one time was msjority floor leader of the House, will receive a
salaryofS78,000ayw.

Voinovich's office also
announced Mortday the reappoint·
ment 10 the stare Medical Board of
Raymond Alben as a consumer
repe.scntalive.
Albert, who owns a tree farm in
Amanda, was given a new term
whicb expires June 31 , 1997,
Board members receive $17 an
hour, plus expenses.

WICK'S

law enforcement officials who
pulled the plants from the ground
and theil burned them. The 10 tons
of plants filled about six dump
trucks, authorities said.
Gordon Flora, chief deputy of
the'Preble County Sheriffs Department, said authorities were alellcd
to the marijuana by the property
. owner, who discovered it while
walking through the field. Flora
said the ·property own~. who isn't
a suspect, had rented out the field
to a tenant farmer.
Lenhart said the marijuana was
planted in the field by seed along
with the soybeans. As the soybeans
grew, so did the marijuana, malcing
it difficultro detect until it began ro
grow higher than the bean plants.
Most of the marijuana plants
were about8 feet tall, Lenhart said.
"It was at the stage ani! height
that it could have been harvested,"
he said.
It took 35 sheriff's deputies,
volunteer firemen, state and federal
officials all day Saturday and 67
offteials half the day Sunday to pull
the plants.

EXCAVATING

BULLDOZE!! 1~CIOIOE
­
ond lRAC~ WORK

36970WR•IIIII
P-.y,Oitlt

SHRUB &amp;
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
. 992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

~

Street festival
plans finalized

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 will meet Thursday at 6:30p.m. at the post home.
POMEROY - The Meigs County PERI group will meet Thursday
at 1 p.m. at the senior citizens cen·
ter in Pomeroy. All members urged
roanend.

Plans for the annual Rutland
Street Festival were completed
when the Rutland Fire Depilbt""'l
Auxiliary met reoellly.
The event will be held Sept. S
beginning at II Lm. lllCI ruMing
untiiiO p.m. and will be held at the
fw station.
Events ED tate place dlroughout
the day include: Prince and
Princess contcst for ages 3-S; Mr.
and Miss Rutland for ages 6·9:
cruise-in motorcycle show; pie
balcing and cake decorating contests; decoraled bicycle CORtesi for
ages through six, and 7·16.
There will also be craft
and 10 re&amp;islel for one of these contact Maijorie Davis at 74Z··ZIMl!l,
Joan SteWII111 742·2421, or
Willford 11742·2103.
To enter the Prince and P,rinc:esa
or Mister and Miss Rutland conte11,
contaCt Margaret Edwards at 7422535.
There will be a
machine, basket bill toss and other
games and activities available
throughout the day.
Food ilellll will include full fry.
hot qs, sloppy jocs, baked bean&amp;,
cole slsw, ice cream, popcorn and
other itei!IS.
Further informatioa may be
ob!ained by COIIIICting 111y auxiliary or ftre dt:poibnent members.

er, Hydrangea and grapes in a
areen container. The .second
arrangement, "Golden Wedding
Anniversa.ry• used yarrow and
eunomous m a ceramtc contatner.
The third, a mass arrangement,
"Memorial Day," used phlox and
Queen Anne's lace is a white cOn·
tainer. The fourth, a family
arrangement, used red roses in a
white basket, and the ftnal arrangement "Golden Anniversary" used
zennias alld peony leaves in a bas-

ket

Pauline Atkins won the traveling prize furnished by Neva
Nicholson. Eva Robson is to furnish the prize for September.
Dorothy Woodard won the door
priJC.

Pearl Canaday, Pauline Atkins,
Neva Nk:holaoll, SICIII Atkins and
Martia Dennlaon furnished flowcn
for chun:hes.

MLINDA'S
tJ' PAINTING ·
&amp;

MICROWAVE OVEN
end VCR REPAIR

•t••
J
te 16 yeau
RASCALS TALENT DIRECTORY, with lilajer ltw
lriot.

¥er. City Alflllatl••• I• tk• ehll• ••••ll•t ...
aetlat l•••lttf will rtVIIW ekfl•re• I• .... aru
lUI. It .1ft 111111eflllly ••• tkll.rtl lilt

'""" plaee• fer •••· eerer•, eatal•t•• rl...e,
·••• TV lllllllrtlale: ••• prttra•• fer elluh
111k 11: TOYS 'R' US, HU..IES, lACY'S,

FlEE ESnMATES
HAVI IEFEIENCEI
loforo 6 p.m.loavo Mosoap
Air• 6 p.m. 614-985·4180

To place an ad
Call 992-2156

COPY DEADLINE
Mooday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

MoN •. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M•• SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES

••t be,.,.-

• Ada ouLiide the couai.J your ad nau
• Roccivc clitcoul lor . - paid i• _......_
• Free Adl: Ciw:away aad Fou_. adl • ..- 15 wonll will M
run 3 u,.. at M dulrp.
• r.;.. ol od fw oU capiw ku.n ;. douMo price of od ..,,
• 1 poiaL line type only .ted
• Scmlind t. aoli'CIIpoa~iblc for crron afkl' r.... t d.y (check
for erron lint day ad...., ia paper). Call Wore 2:00 P·• ·
day •fter ,..w~ to ..Ue CO(nttie•
• Ad. that
L.e paMI ill .dwuce ue:
Card ol Tltub
. llappy Ado

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
HXl p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. l}lur.;day
I :00 p.m. Friday

FREE ESnMATES

CALL
614·992·6949

~

STUCCO

.: .

PLA~TER 1J·
1300 Vine Stre1t
Middleport, Oh,
Jot Cust1r
614-992·2213
Custer

BISSELL &amp; BURKE

CONSTRUCTION

GoUla County· Melgt County Muon Co. , WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

Ia N-rio•
Yord Sol.
• Acl...lf..d Od•..........,, ploood -. ... C.llipa&amp;o Doily

446-Gol~poll.

992 ~11iddleportl

367-0-hir.
S88-'Villl0n
24:;..llo Gronde
2S6-C•yaa Dill.

Pomeroy

64l-Anhia DioL

Trihu,.. (..eepo Cluoif...t Dioplay, U..- Card or Lepl
Nolice.) willallo appNr ia the Poi.t Pleuut R._;.~er ud.
lhe Daily Senli..t,
o- 18,000 ""-

319-Walnul

98S.O.....r

843-Pordoad

r.•

247-teta ..
949-Racine
742-Rudond

,..,hi,.

•New Homes
•Garages
•Comp!ete
Reinocleling
Stop &amp; Compare

675-Pt. Plea1ant
458-Le&lt;.n
576-Apple Grove
773- M..on

FIIEE ESTI_.ES

985·4473

882-NeW llaven

895-Letart
937-Butfalo

New Homea, Roofing,
Room Addltlona,
Kltchene, Porchea and
Bath a.

COMPLETE
REMOOELING SERVICES
FIN Eat· 20 Y11 Exp.

773·5684 or

992·5249
7mmt1

Words

Days

15
15
15
15
15

I

3

•
'

$ 4.00
$ 6.00
$ 9.00
$13.00

8LOOMIMIDALES, .... llftrflewlit IUIIIIIIIJ.

412-856-8055
'•.

1 1\\\1111

$ .20

21-

$.30

2t-M....1 .........
23- Profea~ional Serwtca

$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

$1.30/day

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

:-;::---- - i

Btt·'neu Opporwaily

949·2398 or
1·800·837·1460
Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
R"ldtnllal&amp; Commercial

Frll EttlmltU

K

I

•71- Au.., lor S.le
'72- Trucb for Sale

~-Mol&gt;ileHo-lorReno l 7l- Vano&amp;4WD'o
'i 74- Mo10rcycle.
43- Fan~• ler Rent
75- Boau &amp; Mo ton (or Sale
~ A,.rt.Menl for Rent

you need the facts. You can get them

45-- Fumilhed Roo11111

46-- Space for Rent

from us.

47- Wanted to Rent

7- Lo.1 ODd Found

11-FI.tp'lfutod
12- s;...- ..........
13-1--.
14-llooi-T...u.;,.
15-Se..................

8- PuWic Sole &amp;

16- Rodio, TV

4-Civ-.way
&gt;- HapprAdo
6- Lo.1 ODd Found

The American Council For Drug Education
is a nonprofit organization
dedicated to informing the

Auction
~

public about the health hazards

'l'anoed ·,.~~oy

48- Eq.Np.eal for Rent
•~Fort.....

a CB Rtpoir

17- Mir..!h-..
18- W'ulod To Do

51- H-loold c-lo
52.Good.
53- Aritiq...,
S4- Mite. Men:handile

s,......,

SS- Buildins Supplies

of drug abuse.
PubliC Notice
Call for more information

PUEIUC NOTICE
The VII'- Council ol
...,....
will ICCtpl
8lllud
lor a planing
.., nut I Ding projocl on
Wtet 11111 8tr11t In

=t.!lllo

educational materials

1-----;..,;;.;......;._______ll~'~~•t,.

lid!' I P1nla lor II~
' "'' d lllrtln will be

r1111nd ':{ tile

...............-

...

. .•

wll .. opoald 81 11:00

toniD bllf.., - .. fi -1
·
-4111,J_I
......
BR ..... ,._., --.UDOoq.l.-

bldg.

. . . . eft . . . . 7, 1

•11111
~~DIIilhll bi41111f

'

=
,...
•••t

lilt

I

11

..,._ • ....,. ....

1-800-4BB·DRUG

at tho Pomeroy-Middltport
corporotlon lint and
conllnulng -1 to nttr lht
Pomeroy-Maeon bridge,
ending at the point whero
lht ODOT ropavlng protect

The object of the
complolnllt to ocqulrt title
to the following deacrlbed
reel eallllt by porlltlon
accorclng lj&gt; low.
Said 1111 eslllt being
alluotocl In the Townahlp of
Olive, County of Melge end
Slltt of Ohio, Fraction It,
Section 14, Town 4, Range
11 Ohio Company'•

wllll

.,

II

'

Ill•

-~
bond no

949·2168

DARWIN, OHIO

7131f91/tln

QvJIYMAR
Quality
·Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7

Cheshire, OH,

1/2/lln

FOR SALE

Agriculture
lime
VAllEY INC.
Rt. 2
Millwood, W. Va.

304·273·5555

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
P.O. Box 894-WIIt• Aley

RAONE, OliO
(for..Jy ~ lillp 5oMII

fa9iotl
PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowers • (RIFI Saws
• Weedeaters

614·949·2804

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
flumblng
.. ,_II

;Ji'
38904lecDI!I
Creek Roocl
Middleport, Oltio

S
i
wa.Dmlsaa :..
~

614-992·7144

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

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

PH. 614·992-5591
12·5·tfn

COUNTRY LOTS
FOR SAU

1·5 ACRES

Approved Townahlp
Road (blctcklopl, 1/4
mile lrom Rt 7,
locoted bet•een
Cheoter and Tuppera
Plaina.
Each lot It )*tielly
wooded with ucellent
d111lnage. Service by:
T.P.C. Water Co.;
Columbue &amp; Southern
Electric Co.
LOTS FROM $3,500
undup
&lt;&gt;-Rnanced

(614) 985·3594 .,
985·351

AUTO RENTAl,. INC.

$19e9§ A DAY AND UP

to the pertlnonl ODOT
CALL (614) 446·9971 (Kelly)
conetrucllon 1nd malerlll
speolftcollona. PIJIIIenl wll
UNNY'S AUTO CENTER
bo made on Ioiii tono In
1
place. An In ploot bid price
5 1 .,d
:OH:IO
:::
ahall lncludt all n......ry lonnlfly ownlll by Wm .Si!i
labor, oqulpmont, and Loulaa C•Unv-, beginning
mlltriolt to complete lhla II Ill C.,ter ol thetownlhlp
rood ludlng hom LIHlt
work.
Complellon dolo of Forkocl Run to
projtcl It September 30, Run at comer
· Ntw Homts • Vinyl Sieling
E. ColtOIIn; thtr.CI IC•uth I
11112.
The VIllage Council of 20 rodoo to the aecllon
New Garages * Rtplactmtnt Wiaclows
Pom111oy rMtrVM the right thence with aacdon
Room Additions • Roofi•a
to IICOifll or rajtcl any or 1111 WMI 44 rodl to Ianda of F.
C
.
Anclrow;
thiiiCt
north
lo
bldo lind/or 111y pill thtrtol.
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
John Andl110n, lhe center of uld townahlp
FREE ESTIMATES
vu..- Admlnltlrllor road; lhlnce In on eutllly
Kathy Hya.., Cllllk/Tr-. dlroctlon following lha
614·949·2801 or 949·2860
mundorlngo of ..ld rood to
(7) 30; (8) 4, 2tc
place of beginning,
(No Sunday Calls)
conlllnlng
5
acr01,
mort
or
21121112
Public Notice
Rtlerence Vol. 180 fill· I"
IN THE
1....
Vol. 286 Pll· 241; Vol.
COMMON PLEAS COli'IT 523;
281 1111 m Mel Vol. 327 pg.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
BRUCE E. DOURM, ET AL 471 Mtlga COunty Died
PLAINllFFS R-rdo.
The praytr of leld
YS
ROBERT ~;~~ET~~AL~8 ~c0111plolnlle thlllhe lbovt
dttcrlbed real ntato be
..
p111lllloned ooconlng lo llw,
FRESH SWEET CORN
LEGAL
Mel ..II Ill ln-t of the
BY
dofendanta be ..1 off to
ROBERT
AN, II lhlnl, that lhe rulao- be
Now
doz.
living, whott
known ordered told according to
tddrMI Ia 701 l'lnntt St., t., end ..IIIII ~dlndoonll
&amp;
Complon, Ca. 1111220, end II lnterlll be pold to lhlnl In
he It decuttd, the prop oilton lo which lhey n
unknown htl18 devl•-· •lllllll, end lullhtr lhlll the
ltgllllt, admlnlotralon, defendlnll be requllld to
exaoutorw and/or -lgne of Ill forth llll'f doflnM which.
Robllt Grog~~n, d1Ct11td; lhey lillY INrle or bt,lorwer
A. G. STEVENSON, If lvlng, btrrlll th.,.lr..,, and for LOCATED CORNER OF RT. 7 &amp; 143
who11 llat known addr... euch lurlhlr rtltl tn law or
I• 211 Wut Brook Hav., In equity to wfl!oh the
POMEROY BY•PASS
Rd., Wtlllngfold; PL 110M plolnllfla lillY be .,lltltd.
ond t( he II doCtlle!i, the Tht dtltndtnlt Ill
992·5114
unknown htlra,' devlio-, required to onewer the
legalMa, odnllnletralort, co01plalnt within twtnly·
"'_..,. oncror 11119n• o1 tlahl dey• alter the 1111
A. G.
d•••••d; publlciUon or thte nollot
and FRANK 8TEVEN80N, which will be publllh;j
JR. 11 lYing. wh- lut one• 110h wMk for tlx
known ad*- to uo'Soulh --live WMkli, the lilt
ouv1 &amp;bill, llldla, Po. publlollloll wlH be m. . on
1t013, and II he Ia the 41h clay ol Auflutl, 1112,
dtotalld, the unknown end the twtnty-tlght daya
htln dtvl- llga- for ••w• will cornm..,,;,letratorw, 'exoou!A.. on that ddt.
and/or 111 ~g~~ 1 of FrMik In - • of lhe llllure of
SIWIIIIOII, Jr., dto-e!f, the dolllldonll to . , _ !II'
.,. hiNby nollllld lletiMv otherwleo reepo!HF ••
O..llty HI Effidelcy
han bhn ,.•m•d requlrocl by Ohio Aulea of
diiMdlnllln 1 1oga11011on Civil Prootclu11 ludgon111t
Air Colcllla•ers. Heat
•llllll BNGI E. iiounlo, II wiH be rtncltrtd agllnot
P...,.,F...es&amp;
11, plllnlltfa VI. Robert lhtOI for the rtlltl
Now Watw Healers.
Grogen, II II, ...,.,d.,ll; domanded II! the DD. .lolnl
thl• ecdon hat been
l.anyE.Ipr,_ Bennetts Mobile Home

~=2=64:U:P:P:E:R:R:lV:E:R:RO:A:::lDC:::=G:A:L:LI:PO:L:IS:.

RED HILL FARMS

176- Auto Parla &amp; Accet,.ri•" l
j11- Auto .Repair
. 78-- Ca1111ping Equipment

PRODUCE

I

,I'HviCF:i
•
po
Phunbing &amp; Heating
Ixc~ ntinc
Eleclrical &amp; Refrigen•lio1

$1.50

General Hauling

Mobile Home Repair
Upho!Aiery

------Public Notice
------· Blcld111
1u
h
"'ue1 rn11
lllilllcloly ~ •how· .
lng. rllfiOIItlblllty, IXptrl·
- , Mel oiiHl lo do the
qlMI lnd qulllllty ol work
required. _ llde from
cotllraoton.lnapiii•Cid
In •. It portloultr work will
nolbt -~~Inc!,
The project lnvolv11 the
planing oil of exltllng
· bllulllnoue mottrllla In
oooonlaooo with IIDIII 254
~P-1 Planing, Bllum·
nout) of ODOT Contlructlon and Motarlol
8peolflootlono. Only the
1011111 pllnlng.:.:.Tllllll
!II 1M plantd
le to
be tr!niiPOrttd In truck•.
...... od by the Vllloll to
the - dlllgnattd by lht
le to be
n)IIWICI with 404 Aaphllt

RETAIL WHOLESALE SALES
Of Sweet Com, String Beans,
Tomatoes and New Potatoes, Etc.

sm:_,

~111 J.::•.
~':.'.!•:=: ~:.,~·:·, P~=t r='.T·i~ ;:,Jg:,:t :;".....~ ~ :!
111 11
•• d •

FRU ESTIMATES

L:;======::t:======~

I 100,.
btlld will 1M
Clerk-'ll • ••· A Vlltgo. ·
,_, et .... Ia tile.......
Till plantd -

.CIIt....-.7t041Df

Fiiht drwg •b.se with facts.

Pa•u.,, Ohio

4J7II 11111 11:00 Noon,
..,.t I, 1•. The II*

n.ptoollll _ _ _ ...... ...
~
_,...., ... , _ ... I _..,.

the AIMrlo•n

v-.

t,dlt!l%:.:111ot':u:•~..•luJhE.

Gutters
Downspouts
Guttar Cleaning
Painting

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

1-'\ Iill :- I I' I'Ll E~

Ae_,.

41- HoUIU for Real ·

Public Notice

::;~~:"'~,0~ ° ~:

!57- MuicnllnalrumenLI
· 5~ Fruill &amp; Vep;tahiet
, 59- For Sale or Trade

ro&lt;

Public Notice

......Tille work thall conform

32- Mobile lloooeo for Sale 6
q P
33- Far., for S.le
162- Wanlccho 8 uy
34- S..i.., Buildinp
63-- UvMtoek
3S- u,,. A
64- Hay &amp; Groin
36- R... t UIOie Wanoed
65- Seed &amp; Fertilizer

IU\1\1:-

To prevent and fight drug abuse,

lduodoft

992·7013 or
992-5553
or TOll FREE
1·800.841-0070 .

6-26-'IINin

!56- Pello for Sole

,\ I I\ 1·::--

GET RaULTS -PAST!

Drut

NEW &amp; USED PARjS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

667--Coot.ille

Over 15 Words

Rate

mo. pel

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

667·6179

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

Repair

3·16·1 mo pd

7128192/t mo.

Clauified pages co11er lhe
foUOW!ing telephone e:rchanges ...

••l

10

COuftOII

1

CUSTER'S

RIVERSIDE
BUILDERS

Monthly

for

Spedallrlng 11 Custom

3123/92/lfn

llatteri1Dr • Exterior
Spray • Rol • Brus~

NEW-RE;AIR

7121/'121lfn.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Fra~~e

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

POIIIIOY, OHIO

6

and adults.

co.

"Talre Tile Poi• Our 01 Prinrlrlg
• lrr U1 0./IFor You"

217 L S.C... St• .

USE YOUR PHONE
TO SOLVE
ADRUG
PROBLEM.

for children, teenaBtrs,

FIEI ESTIIIARS

6/411211 ... peL

· AlliiAIES
Iring _IE Ia Or We
Pick UJ!o

and a free catalog of

RASCALS TALENT SEARCH

UPIOLI'I'IIY

ROOFING

7117/1

lcrftl fr•• hil Olfloo

Thelma Hawley, Dick and Belly
Ash, Dennis and Cathy Moore ,
Andrea, Elma Louts, Bill and
Dorothy WinebrenMr, Calroll UDd
Addie Noms. ~ Cundiff, Mary
Lisle, Hallie Robenson. Jean SIOUI
and grandson, Clay Crow, Amy
Wesver, Helen Tesford, Charles
HoiMd and Bob Smidt
A cake, baked by Kathleen
Fryar, WM served with dinner with
the inscription "Because.. JCIUS is
Real" ''Welcome Rev, Deloit ~w­
man and Samuel Neaman and
scripture verses I Peter 3:1S llld
Revelation D • I0.

1-800-488-DRUG

I:OMPLI'rl 11'1'1

Hown L Writesel

TJrlf·tft~lL'

DaiOUILbOR.

Fifty-three members auencled:

•HIIdllntrt
• Convertible Tops
• Custom Carpets
•Customs..t
Covers • Alao Bolts

All

992·3831 .

so

Rev. Dcron Newman, his pamtts,
Sam and Barbara Newman; his
grandparent.s, Rev. and Mrs. Earl
Bazd!, all of lmnton; Samuel NM·
man, Franklin and Wanda Rizer,
Marie flootdashell. Kathleen FryJr,
Laura, Tammy and Scooter, Carrie
Ann Gloeckner, Larry and Ann
Wiles and Rebecca, Karl and
Eleanor Kloes, Archie and June
Lee, Russ and Hope Moore ,
Charles and Emmogene Hamilton,
Bill c~ Billy and Ben, Dana
and Bernice Winebrenner, Beulall
Ward and her guests, Earl and Millie Davison, and Viola Miller,

HAULING SERVICE

AVAiLABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES end
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYBINBTAUED
UMESTONE-TRUCKIHG
FREE ES1lMATES

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

Syracuse welcomes new minister

Atkins hosts Rutland Garden Club
members; Woodard discusses roses

The annual picnic of the RutDorothy Woodard read an uti·
land Garden Oub was held recent· cle on "The Garland of Roses•
ty at the home of Pauline Atkins.
used at the Kentucky Derby. It is
Dorothy Woodard, Neva two and one-half yards long and 14
Nicholson, Binda Diehl , Pearl inches wide. Exact!~ 564 prime
Canaday toured JIDCt Bolin's gar- Kentucky roses are tndividually
den prior ro the picnic. Following hand sewn to a length of fabric
the .....,u, all members toured Mrs which hM been coveftlll with areen
A&amp;~.
· hopse foli11e. k is then lined with
For devotions, Pauline Atkins green satin. Each rose is attacbed to
read "Summer Searching." "Little its own hidden water pik. Master
Robin Redbreast" and "My Gnind- desianers at the Kroger Floral
father's Farm."
Shops begin the laSt of mating the
Neva Nicholson and Pearl Cana- garland at 3 p.m. the day before the
They work all mght for 12
day state d 1hey had weeded race.
hours strai~ht 10 handcraft "The
pllntcrs in the mini-put on Depot
S~~eet and in lower Rutland.
Garland of oeea."
The flower show and open
A wortshop WM held usinalhe
meetint in Aupst were discuSsed Meigs County Fair schedule. The
and commi- appoinled.
ftnl arrangemeM made WM "Beau·
A leiter WN read f!'lllll Roberta ty of SL Palrick's" featurin&amp; peen
- aoUIOI:-mem
•ber.
us inc Japanese HoUy. Live ForevW"
.........

clilcase.
A laay 1e1tllll rellliondip inside
~ is imporllnt 10 •• I've
lilld Jake. his beer belly is a lOIII
turn-off, but he doesn't tel the
IIICSIIJIIO.
I've suggCIIed propiiiiS IICh •
Weiahl Wlldlen. but lie -~ 10·
A11, I walt this marria&amp;e lo
work but its dilficult 10 1M wilh
aomeone )'011 nobtfer.-tollne
- with. He refuses 10 COlle with
me ED a ...n.,C coanselor, aayila
it wiD llllkllllllm woneifMq
a Slllllpr imo it.
y- old ldvice, •Ne )'01 bcaer
off with hiM or without hi111?"
doesn't_.. to JRlly bele. I do Willi
.him .. jill stimier. - T.R., urn.E

OhiO

~ Record marijuana seizure made

1\JeSday, Auguat 4. 1992
. Page-l

Recovery from drug or alcohol
addiction requires a life-long.effort

4.1982

•

llnglh, 2U•t In wklth 111011 CoiMion "'- Co!wt. lllolgo
or lola. RtpiW'nllllhlokneo• County, Ohio, Pomoroy,
• 1o be a Inch•; btglnnlnt Ohio 457•.

\.•

!"•14,

.wa. CCMC:: ~to;::

fituo Coull
30; (7) 7, 14, 21, 21;

.

U91Sofftr4Sdltoi1L ~............
Clll6141 «H4it w1-10Hn-m7
•

1111
I

l

�PQmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PMif 1G--The Dally Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32. Mobile Homes
tor·Sale

Apartment
for Rent

44

.Wookoild ,..,... t o - 001111;
·130 "· wotor front on AIOCoon
CNolc. 2 lA, 1·112 lrllhll, moblto
homo with ntraol S!lti,OOO or

3 AIWioUnetmtntS

--.304-122-wtl.

Tuesday, August 4. 1992 ~

1HI S ISo eqz/Ncr

SIIIIE: QPGOI MUST

SELL:

l"MM tal SMI·•R• 5 p.IR.

"1111: Gomo" to Ttrlt Spoc~

-

t:111111r PICk, ~Footurod Hon- .

~.,;:o
·~-t::
"WMh h Wolalot In

~

Golill." CIII 1-I00-431-13i7. Call
Cl•up 1111. Flot Foo Por Call.

a
-·
Mincn·_
....,.

" Can't you recommend anything for Insomnia
besides a job as a night watchman?"

9

Wanted to Buy

Wontod To lll'f: Junh Autoo
With Gr Without lloooro. Colt
4 pooppt_, milod brood, Lttry u..ty. 114-3R-1303.
~~~· llou Top Pricoo Plld: All Old u.s.
Coino, Gold Atngo, Sltvor Colno,
Skilf- '.- · pluo 1 mo. old Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Stoop,
- -.1.1411,
151 Soeond A-111, GoNipollo.

WW

:!,!::.Tt.i'

F-l:onningjon.

IM-36~ .

Employment Services

T-IWIIIit lapdhomo.l14. . &amp;ii

11 Help Wanted
==.,.,;..,:;..,,.;.,,.,;.;;__

'AVON' ALL AREAS! S1ooM ,.Or
time wtlh .... Vou'H kt¥1 thl
company. 1-IIICJ.IIZ-1311.
6 Lost &amp;. Found
....~ lpllltcationo, ott
-;;;;;""C;;;diC:;;;j;i;;"'C;;
poolt
, lu!Uport.timo, aooty In
FOuntt ICoudl Cuthlon On peNan, 2-tpm, 110111'1 ·smear.
-~ClaM To - . g Alloy. gubonl, AI-IWOOd, W.Vo.
~
Gollipolto
Doily
TW Ttrird A"'""' GoJ- AVON I All Arooo I SNfloy
8paoro,:I04-t711-M2t.
Rlt!illiD\ s.ndhltt Ad 1 matt llttol lnolructor, pon·tlmo.
~ c~cnd PYPPJ', 304-1~ Pl.... rMDOnd wtth 11U"M to
5a171
P.O. Box 472, Gottipollo, 011io
~------------- w~
1 _ _v_a_rd,;,.,:Sa..:....;le:.___ il·l Fnnch ouanor • Gotloy. Do
,.. hllvo an -votic, DNit"
poroanolity, tho! would tlirtvo In
- - - : -- - - : - - - - o lurl-flllod -'&lt;lng o t Galllpolls
,.,_, D'o Fronch
to
loolllng lor, wolt.,.,....llr1 VICinity
- - . linl-c..U • blr.
--==~~~:;,;.;.,....,..,..- t - onthualom, tho
gin clo4hol, to ouccood • ....
inllntl - - · Aug. •• rolor-. "' - k - " '
7.
Apply in - · lion • Thuro
2:00 Pll • 4:00 PM. No 01•
- - - - l o P o l d l n porlonconoceoury.
Uwm IIUIIUE: 2:00 p.m.
111o od to to Nn. Drivoro Go To Worh tmmodlolely
50ndllly&gt; -on. • 2:00 p.m. RoodNnnor Dlttribution So&lt;·
""~.......
.. odllion • 2:00 'licoo, Inc. TX·1-IOO-au.azt7
J:lftl..S. . . ,.
Com~ltlv. Pay N.w Con~
tionolo
Medico!
/Dontll
C&gt;qod - : tot ~ Qutno, IV-tion Etc .. Sign On Bonuo
.._
I t .
lloutllul EOE
miil:;. truch tool bo1 .

---------1
I
"'"'"'at

Duo••

m--.
a..*'-.

-· -.:...

1

Flodood Eaoy. World EICIItont Poyl AI-

-·
T-.
-

,.,.,
Too Producto ~t Homo. CaM
lias
Jl T• Ulll·. H, 1110 Toll F,.., 1.-..e7-6MI, Elt.

-

-

-.

~3.
Frilndly

· ...... Tuoo,

G-. -

Homo Portlol Hu

CoHOe- O,O..intiO For Domonotrotoro.

Ao " 1w

• ..._ a
1 .; Morot No Catli tn¥ootmont. No Sonllco
- . 111N "'-i, 1311, Ptll""' ChorgO. High Cornmtooion And
........... "kG . . .
Holtftl ••.,• . Two C.llloal,

Ga-.

Ovor 100 Homo, Cal ,, ..
_II0-4i.d&amp;~
,_..hto, 4171.

-

Clip. . IIW I

oill -

, I'ROf' baldH;

-

:1St to 50t ooch. H You'ro Aiwlyo Driving, But
....,
• •• gin cio4hoo - · Oolng A.,-o. At
- _.... ,ortl- $15, ......., TronoiiOfl,ltion, 0...
mony othor Dri..,. EJ_.t Tho
From
ia.ar r.. m 1 . .. too ........ U.. Ancf
Gee tt. Jo6n U..
i j -· ......... 1.. ~ I. - . . t-2. ~.
y.:1.,.~,.v;
w-:
ICII!onl
Psy, , . . _
--~
~uto. 8onuo, • Top llnotlo, •Oft.
:B1rito. 'Etnio.o Si. Rt. 7 SotoiiHo
cll'oi :Iii;
llllllllcotiono, ' P o - Floll
llonogor, 'lnrllriduolizod TuooctOy., I w.-odoy~ 33 nmo l'ragram, 'Svpari« c-~~ ,....., ott Rt.511 •rom nnttonol Equi_,., 'Much
Goltlpotlo., I.a. Kldo ctothoo, Moro. Call Munoon Todly, And
- E r e.
Pill Your Caroor in llooion. 1·
.~;;.~s~~~ni;:;zi;rj",
1100-423-7129 Munoon ,.,., _ _
..., •to. -~~ totion Putting Poopto Firlt, EOE.
_ " " * ' " " _lor...,. Lt-o Wontod At Tho Ollio
Slllo Fair From July ~- Augull
pt. PleaSant
25. Apply In Poroon ~t Tho Por1011011
otttca
On . Tho
I VIcinity
Foirgraunrto.
=-,-=""'-'*-::•~Y~Inf~:::'So~to--:SI:::'ono--IM-Uiic
-iono
_ w_o_
nt.d: toid iuit..riot
~do
•·
r111 ' "" •·- ~=p doing counloy I rao:lo,
· - tea AITP
' ' "· ...... I
2013 Of 11...... 1212.

2-. - - ,
-

Thtfa.
-".?,.!,.

1111

_ ... a.-

..

;t';.iiwi;..i;;_;;

..:.
~..:.s..;;..•_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

l John Pock.

~o..o;;
...~o,ooj;;;..;..,.;;;-e;EI;p..,..;;i;;;c,;;i,•,
Aun M - . South, $out-.

Pomeroy,
Mldcl'-""

c:,;
Hoontond

=="!&amp;~V=Ic~ln_lt-i-y-~~ I =.o:.-..::""'~ro

ll lionilp yordl ..... Auguat 4th, Ptld 8y Com~,
41.-J.
Sft\. I 111'1 on S1 ccIll Ad. It &amp;pr-, Inc. 1
MS; '. ' tp~ 'a.

......."""

-..y,

ltollllto

Homo lnt•· houro, ....... word - - n g
lofr.,liafa ,.,.,._ ,. 1/2mt. out LMcf. ~. ••.- kww:c lftdlor
if1~Qoolo Rd., Co. Ad. 3 off Rt7, oducolion o muottloto"fh:i,~·
• _ , ,...,. -

a-"' I; ..,Ho troltor on rlgllt, ~ 7, 8o1 C-3
nt
!111m"'•1Iom•Aug. 3rd-lth.
Aociillor, ZOO ill1ro St, Pt. PI,
W'/':15580.

• tom1..:::
~167, Now Umo

,._.,
Nlldtnce. Homt
Photo lrimmlrl
""-'or;, dWW, -ing, cur- oarn to $125 .., doy, no 01p.

...,_Y

!Iii""- ..,..
elothoo,
. . . . . .,• • L.ael al -..ryth~
ii9

'--- - --

... -

Sotoo -

II Psld In

• t .a D.cllrw·: 1:00pm

the

.., - . tlio od io to "'"•

SrndO!t odlt- 1:00poo Friday,
. . . . , odltion
tO:OOo.m.
s -. .. . .

"'- ..,-Hor

.._ JOIII - . ii/WI5, Now
~~

Rood,

=

llrt. eMiro btfaro

c ..:.AII:-:t.'• •lottllne.
-folio Iii

;r 11 '·
....,

-

•· •

- - ·

~urn~~-.

......,_....,..,
an

r;...-I. ·IR1:M
I'AIIO 8AI\I

..._~-

..._, •

..., •

•
5

Wilt ~In My Homo. FonAroo. A-ne•
Avlllolrlo. odnoy Aru. Call
24:...,.s-.:..ua::.7.,;,
. ..,.-,-,,...,.---,1:I::-M--'
Caro tor tldorty lady ooch
wo.k,nd. Mull bio clopondobto,
hovo roloroncoo. Call In
Pom• ov. 1'\4.112..181 between
N,M..,..fri.

Old In

01arg. PorlabliSawmtll, don't

houl , _ toao to tho mlU JuOI
.... :104-t71·1117.
HIMinl Prvltatlonal Tret S.·

~ 1:Jt:~k:.':t~~:':'"b:
timatool
1 -*· 1144414314.

...... 10

nrr t
.r" rr~ •

PuiiiiC Sale
&amp; Audlan

OH

5 5

·

.

.. ,.. Pouto'o Goy

ea.. Cont• .

s. ... a~abM, chlklcare. M·F
I o.m. • 5:!111 p.m. Agoo 2~10.
Sotoro, oftor oclooot. Drop-lno

Ylllaae

u---

Business
Opportunity

~~~ ~-a
· : : . :~ W'/21580.
=-~:::
:r...'It,:1Pt.....PI,J
OOi,.
ANtotor, ZOO Moln
.
1

12 . SitUatiOn
WBniiCI

.........
.. ... and"""'"*'
,W. .._ CIHI, IM-ti2·'NII.
14

Busllllli
frlllnlng

tti,!IN (No

MH.

'

l8urenctvll ... Va, 42.87 acret, t
miiH aouth...a of Lawrtn·
!NOTICE!
cavllll, 114 mila N. ol &amp;75. 304·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 137-3443.
•
riCDifttNINie that V0U do butf..
nooo with-'" you k,_, ond
36 Real Estate
NOr .. oond tloraugh tho
moll untM you ho" in-lgotod
Wanted
thlloltoring.
loouty Shop lcx:otod In traitor HOllE WANTED: Vi&gt;ung Fomlly
Substant&amp;.l Down .Paymtnl
•-plato wHh 3 tllliont, 5 H11
For
Ownw -Fin1nctd ACr..ge
doyoro, $5,000. !1114.,.2-3241.
With 11-4 Sodroom Houoo or
Eatobllohod Poy Phono Routo lloblto Homo. CaU IM-367-7021.
Low Coot, Hlgll Aotum. ~111t-2IGO.
Rentals
VENOINO ROUTE: 001 Aich
Qutcl? No Woy! But Wo Hovo A
- · I t -, AHardobit, 81111-

41 Houses for Rent

2 bedroom houu $2!0. month,
nooo.
VEND. - ; Ltot. • - - luu I •cuity deposit r•
quirod, no pota, 304-175-5004.
~ Aoute: Loco!. Wt Hovo

----

Tiro- Mochi-, lloktng A 2 bedroom unfumlhHd house,
Nico Stoody Caah · I· 507 112 Stcond SO, Now Hovon,
1004510351 •
wv. 304-1711-341Q.
WoiH Tonnlng Sodo, Now c.... Zbdrrn. ~ tor renl In
IMrictt tloml
Unitt
From Pomoroy 12501 month, SilO
1
SIH.OO. Lampo, Lotiono, Accoo- dopoolt,
oM-HZ~U.
oorioa. llonthly Poymonlo Low
Ao $11 00 Call Todly Now Froo 2 lodroom Homo For Root,
Near Gallipolis And Gllllpolla
C:O.Citotog. l-100-221-1292.
Chy Schoola. 614,.46-161l
· WotH Tanning Bodo
New commercllt-Rome units, 3 room &amp; both cot1190: lur·
lroon SIH.OO. Lampo, Lotiono, nishecl, AC, IIC,..nH porch,
Montloty

...,.,.....

low

"

$11.00. CaM todly, FREE NEW
........ 1-IOO-a2N292

22 Money to Loan
lllanoJ Wontod: $11,000 -urod
by guollty root ootllo. Ro-d

lo 8o1 ~LA

m,

cJo GtHipolle

Dol~ T~~ 1 125 Third
, "" 4M~.

Awnuo,

Cloti

Real Estate
31 Homes for Sale
2021 llorquono Avo, 1 , . old,
'"

brick Nlnttnlnce tree
holM. 4 • I droomt, llt\IM living

,_, ,.nlrogt'OOiiVIImlly room
cornbtrootlon, loltchon, utility
~. all OM .. .,.., aonr.d
polio In blch, prtvocy tone•,
gsrago, ohown by appointment
only lCM-1711-1231.

'

a,.,,,

·~·-

Price

!1114-I'IU213.

Two otory houooln Auttond on 2
Colt Only 2 Pvtitiono 1&lt;&gt;41, DopOI Stroot, 114·Jii2·27H.
o,or.IIM-441-7111
- o d: po•~tnoo •
32 .Mobile Homes
1kuptng

Clolo-Out

Tr-1 Flnoncing llvoiilbto.
F...,.h City lloblto Homoo. 114'441-8340.
12x14 Porch, Awnlna, I Under·
otnnlng, iNoWI $400. 114·381-

lnform.tlon milled on r.quesl

:l:, =JoJ::•T~~I

"""" ~'

NORRIS • 18112 Clmbridgo
14170, Dtx. - · Rtlood Dfn.
Room, 2br, 2 B1th, Ook
Cabinoto. Rog. Prico $22,000.

Ac"''II IVIIiobto lor homt
conotNCtion on Asybum Ad,
,.a10n1ble rntrlctlont., wattr,

217 Kolter Dr, Dollipotlo, Ollio
4M31. T o t -: 114-441-:1315,
· 1.-212..,_,
Prlco: $52,000.00. Uvtna Room,
SocNOiryiSooh"-',
with ' Sod-. Family lloono~ 1
llnow'1dgt ot compullriz..t And 112 lot-., I '"''
word ,...
Ina ,.._ Clonogo, lrlch Front WMh ea.kr
Mt~, manYII •a lll;u.,lng Sidlnloyotom, oond to 8ox c;.
~ coro Aoaillor, 3lrr Alnch 8~1 llooon W. Vo.
Ltrgrr fA, WM F i r - I 112
aatl lloln It, Pt. PI, WO/ 25&amp;ao.
litho, 2112 Lot. 114-4W4i34.
Soo Tiro Countoy And 001 Pold BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
For Ml Pttrico Ottoro Quality
Tnrck Drtvor Trainlna In Only a Hiotartcll Aroo C.nor Lot • ttl
Wooht Call l·liiURIIIO. llo"' St. Pt. - . W. Vt.
Flnornciot
AooillFor Cornplototy -otird: 2 Full
O...Mtlod Appliclntt.
litho, S IMp Bod- HVAC, Now Carpot. Avlltolrlo
To got in touch wMh oomoono lm-lotly. I,._42GI.
thoi hlo milt ond will bt mohtng 1: - - - ' - - - _ ; ._ _
....._, 304-175-1515.
By Dwnor: ~lro Aroo, Nino
T,.., DriHrtiilfA;,.,~n p~•. Roorno, loth, Lorgo Ftot Lot.
· - 114 441 11?11 Doyo, Evorlngo A~
dorot LlnooA oro Top Pot~ tor 3:30p.m IM.C41.o4:15.
t::~~oloo"n.t!~~. :;... orA I:F:::..,..:..=to:;;by;;.ow;.;.;_no;;.r:;;..-==-hot-.,-,....,..
,.
up. l-1110o61B-:1711. Dopl. A0-3. Syroc-. op111 ' - · fully •
hHehon, dining I"'XXfn,
room,
Truck Dfl¥tra: Staruna Plr Up quipped
2-3 blldroom-'f•m»J
To 211, With Porfoniionco In- woodbumor 2
~~
At 3 a I •Mont••.
oor progo,
-•
~ tod
In
blc'ytid,
~ Every 10oM O.vs. 11 ..1 • 2.S neigt\bortl aa~ . 114-tla;em[
W/2 Vooro orR Elp. llolMot En-rot. Dtcur Tronopon, ,_ Low llolnttnonco, Ct-, Largo
IOO .. IM 1110, Alii For Dopl. 11-1&amp;. K~chon, 3 - - Uti!Wy,
Wontodl Proloollonll Holrotytill Ntca Yord, 3 Mitoo F"'"' Hoi.,.,
Thot-oToEomM...tMYou IM-441-13II.
Anr Aaarwollvo And Enlov Rodman Soctionlt · 1110th
WotlllniAnd llovtng fun wttlo A Aero, 3 Sod.....,, 2 FuR lotho,
Groot T•m 01 lfytillo, ."' A Outlluikling, Gottipotlo Sdooott,
Ctotn Buoy Ilion And AboH 134,000. ~~~USII.

Ci'-

Good Cond'
2 Bod·-·•
r
.~.s~·.ooo,
Muot Movo, 114-~ .,

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

21

lor Salt

••

=~:o~-·-·

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14 Wk111 Zbr, Ooo, -

· Air,

Private UM, Mitt From Holler,
No Ptto. U71111o. 114-446-2!1110.

-

-- - .

2 bedroom..---·
wv. 304-77'3-6241.
.

2 Bldroom

Tr1i~,

IIUnlmurn

Wtttr, Trash Paid, Depoalt I
AolortncH Roquirod, No Pats.

614-4411-4819.

~ ·•
'

L4~~
(!1111/nlf

C::o, 304471-tm '"" a:oo
2 BR unfumlahld, M pela, S200
month, 1100 dopatit. 114-441-

3117.

2br Fuml- Carl MIN Rood,
on 325, No Ptta, Dllroolt a
Rolor- RtqUirod. iM-241~2.

3 Bodroorna, 1225/llo. 1100
Oopooit, No Ptto, 614·379-2511.
Nico 2br Troilor, Ovt St. AI. 218, I
Mttn, Dopooit &amp; Rotoronco A•
qulrod. &amp;M-2M-121t.
T.. tl lloctric, 2 BR, l37l por
month. Troth paid. $150.
Oopooit &amp; rolortnce roquirod.
No polo, Applionc11 lumlohod.
304oi7WOOO 'tit lpoo.

44

Apartment
for Rent

2
lldroorn~1_
SIO"
6
Ro-ttor, "" Condhioning,
OH Thl Strwl Parking, Oalilpotlt'. IM-44MIN 1-4:30 P.M.

2 SA -manto In lllcldlepon,
nowly r-lod. tow utM~too,
no pets, _$220 ,...

month,

dopoolt roquirod, 114412-2311

ooro

,

2bdrm. apta., fatal

pllonooo

~Metric,

lumlohod,

apo

iouncloy

room flclll•, cloM to Khoc:it

In town. ADO!iclllonl ovlliobto
II: Vlttoae ·a- A!lll. jMI or
cottlt4-f82-37tl. EOH.

.

-.

Pop com machine "P-tO''. 21M

hlgto II" wldo, _ , . . _ .
p.M., !1114-7'13- e~olo •N IIIII now,
:;5m::.::,:
, M::•::oon:::,.:WV::.:;,·- - - - 120 voll
, 1431, Hot dog
ttoomor bun - - · on Jllnlri'
46 . Space for Rent
tooo
ilko 1244.
now, Hoi
oiHPaint
21"
high Iatoll,
11" wido,
dtiop lryor "2 bookot" otointoM
Country Mobito Homo Port, Rt. ttoot, :llltb 1r1oo por hour, . Ilib
SSN., under new 1Mn1gamant. lot copleity, uoo. 304-6711-2132.
lol:a, W ; home ,.,....., S2SI;
114-iN-2117
R-11 Ditch Witch l,.iiChot
wlbockhoo
will WiiiiC/oDuotz
trodo,.....
114-114-'1142

~:00

61 Farm Equipment

IIIII •Bronco
II XLT, S1,500
.tt4-4.-e-On'l.

'

arotn

chlllno buv 0111 aot
ono lroo dll'lng tfii Gofiit
County &amp; llooon County Folro.
lOW

::.:~wo~.
WV. :104-t11-'!l:n.

:"'..:::,·

lntornotionll llodot 370 Dlalo
l'i:"'Dtoh
Cond..:="•a!~;
•- I
--.
..... IWIJI.7164.
Lito llodot 215 MP Troctar Wit~
F - Loodor, $1,150; 11000 Ford
Dlooll With Vormoor Round
II tor, l7,415i. TDZO For- ,
With Grodor · - · $1,11(. 1142J1.411122.

~

==------

111711 . -

=::
good

szo:

t::·

. . VI'RA FURNITURE
114-441-)151
Ront-2.0Wn·
Wtahor And Dryor l17.11 W•k.
Bunk Bod Cornploto, ...21
Wooh, 4 Ora- Clilll h .IZ
Wooh1 !'"&lt;llnor 15.24 W•k,
Solo""" Choir 110.31 Woolo.
CASH
AND
CAAAY
Aolrlgorotora sto•tng At 1311,
Aoctlnoro $141, :Ill Bunk Sodo,
'"· DinotiO Sot With 4 Psddod
Cholra, $129. OPEN: Mondoy
ThN S.turday IA.II. To IP.M.

Ctoaod On SUndly. LOCATED: 4
Mlioo 0" Rout• 7 On Routo 141,
In Canlonooy, 114 Milo On UncolnPiho.

52 Sporting GOOds
....
Bow, 3 Arr- WHh Flotd Pto. I
Brood Hoodo, 411501 Pull, 21"
Drtw, Noodo Now Strlng 121;
Romlnaton 110 Wlngmootor
12gs. P'ump 2 Borrtttol.%1" llod
a 30" Full ChoU wzs con
Honoy Aftor 1:00 P.M. :104-t7111433.

S3

.Antiques

~-....:,;;.:;,::::::::.,..,,....­

Bll'f 01 aott. Riv«lno Anttquoo,
tm~~~-on~M

- o y. Houri: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. Ia 1:00 p.lft., luncllr 1:00
to 1:00 p.m. IM-112·:1521.

54 MIICellaneOUS
Merchandise
10 gol. lloh tonk conopioto, doll
MW &amp; OW:. 304471-

coUCtlan,
31131.

30" Murry Aiding - · I HP
lrigga, 1221, D. Glngorich 114W.Jm.
... ft llbto, $150. ltntt, ...
cond. 304-171·11M.
Air condhl- ttoo, Ito« lon
$15. 114-441o18tl.

58

Pets for Sale

Groorro ond SUDOIY Shop Ptt
Groonolna. All bioido, ttytoo.
limo Pol Food Oootor. Jutto
I ,:W;::obb,:.·:.:Ca::.l::,ll:.:14.:..~=11-0:.:~::::.·--,.,...
1 Wooh Pornoranlon, 114-2455085
·
AKC AduH Dodoohundl, 2
Fomotoo, I lloto, $125 Eoch, All
3o 1310; IYr Old lloto
'Chihuohuo, Block&amp; - · $71.
114-:117-JIIOI.
AKC ~~ L t - PupDiol2., 4 Fornoto, 4 lloto, 114-441IIIII;
AKC Uoou Aplo pupplol, AIIC
Ctlrn Torrlor pupplol, 304-t71131131.
AKC Mlnoturo Ptnochlro, 2
moltt, 12 wko old, IZOO. ooch.
304-6'11-2444.
AKC rogiotorod Cockor Spaniol
rtody
logo,
pupploi;
""':104-t711-7231.
- · • -· ·
AKC
ragl1t1rM
O.rman
Shophllrd puPfloo, 2 112 rnontha
otcl, IM-37H455.
AKC ScOttloh T~, I wkl. old,
f1m1.., •mill norHh~dlng 1
llrot ohot and - - . roaucoo
to 1200, IM-114-41n, MMnL
OrtgoroWind COtlory: CFII Por·
llono &amp; Slomooo KMtono. IJ4441-3144 Aftor 7:00 p.roo.
Filh Tonk, 2413 Joclooon Av"
Point Pleo11rot, JC14.1711-2013;
lull Nno Tropic.ll O::looblrdo,
omatt snlmoto ond 1
,
HAPPY JACK MANOE LOTION;
prornot11 hooltng ond hlir
growlh to ony mongo, loot olfol
or tunauo on tloai a horoOI
wlthouf Cortloonor SOUTHERN
STATES 304-671~
Whlt'l ao diHtront lbollt tho
Hoppy Joch 3-X lloo colllr'l ft
workllll Corotolno NO IYnllootic
Pl"lhroldo, lot !logo I cololl
SOUTHERN STATEI, 3114-171-

Boor coolor lof 11to, II 2710.
goi, h - contontt coot, 304895-3431 ot 304o47U112.
57

Musical

Bloekbtrrlol lor - . lao:ll
Instrument•
-hborrtn. Wo pic- 1 - lor
you, .. por Sqt. golion, IM-It2· Iundy liulo 1375. 3114-171-4201.
11151.
Bundy~ ltuto, ucottont concltConcNOt &amp; Ptootic lotrtic llonl1210,
114-Mt4001.
Tonho, Jot Aorttlon Tanh. Jlon
Ev- Entorprlolo, Joctooon, OH
58

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

..-m..a.

Will do
114.fl3•nt'l

Coroiflllly
llor, to L.Jinfy, fumlolood,
...,_ Mit, *•

8-4.

-or.

14 ft tiborgtoot bon boot, 40 hp
lloooury
304-IJU~.
1r OUichlto conoo a podcln.
$250. 114 14111t&amp;oftor p.m.
11185 Choo:kmoto 18ft. 235 HP
Evlnrurlo Dutboord Mtr., E••·
Cond., Low Hourt, ta,500. IM- • ·
,;,441;;;·,;,m;;;:;,l_ _ _ _ __
'.

' '

Cl 1M2 Ill&lt; ~EA . ~.

EAST
+A983

•u

..

+KQ63%
+J a65

,

+10974
+Q9 7 3

SOUTH
+7542

A tough defense
to get right

"AKQB4

+85

+A 10

·,

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

By Phillip Alder

W.ot
Pass
Pass

Nortb
3 ..

Ero11

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead: • K

"·
I

7:36(!) Majof Leagua . ._
Cincinnati Reds at Atianta

s

.

Braves (L)

1:00 (,JlO (I) 0 Full HouN
Bicky gives birth to twtns on
Michelle's fifth birthday. (PI

/b IR~s:,:·Q

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

BudQOI Tranonolooiono, Uood 1
,.bultl, ••nlng 14 ••· lront
wholl drivo ttortlng ot .. 11.00
114-2411-5177, IM-JJ'II.Z213.

Envlronmentallata fight to
IIYI wildlife sndangerld by

•

c -

theGuww....
tDORNcue:I11An
Ice diver runs out of air: 1
Cltlkl ll~n by a snake. (R)

111111

Stereo.
aDO

Now ·
•body pono, 0111
ton !Ill
lrucktsn-.
whllta,
r1cl1ton
malo, ate. D &amp; A AIAo'

«

11J Mulder, 11M Wlllll Q

w-·· ""'-

a Croolt and a-.

1: , •

IIDO-tl3-l515.

tD
VOIItrbll World Series,
semlflnal from Santa Monica,
Calif. (T)
aPrheNewaC
·

'

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

I::'""":"'::-::;~:._:,;.:;:.:;::__

0 Rill Tin Tiro, ir.l Cap Q

8:30 (I).
0
llnprD•- Tim upsets

of Dan 's pok11&lt; cttuma 111vt1

Roseanne 1 very 1ffactlonate

~s~Rl.:::·L

SocietY lpiCII'I StereO. Q
IIIlO tD 0 'To It 1111 IIHt

•

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

(PI 2 of 2Y CBS~
Movie (2:00) Stereo. C .

11J MOVIE:.Amulng 1\odn:

I NEVER 'IQJOW ~EW
HE'S F'UTTIN5'N60N.

WAU..~~

ONe 'CFiHE

T1te Movie v (2:00)
a Nalh., Now stereO.

~11-Uca:::w.e.

e

a Lany King Llvll

Sclti'ICfOW and .... ICing

1:30(1)0 CliO Colch Hayden
Invites Luther to kHp him
compan~CMstine's. (RI

Tonlgltt
10:00\110 (110 20,120 Stereo.

w

(!)

YEP II

ND WONDER II

SOLO EVER'
LAST ONE,
SHERIFF!!

I LET OL' SNUFFY
OUT THIS
MORNIN'!!

ALL TH'
LOCKS!!

a world Ntwl

c-

45 Belonging fo
Ul

48 Y.I.P.
48 Poalll number (2 wtfl.)
53-- Clear
DIY

54 No man-ltland
56Difnka

57 Eccanllk:

..
e1 co•llfn•
GIHk dtltJ

32 Compotlllon

border

56 Long tooflt

58 HolM color
eo SHtf

82 Htrlicllc

37 Bock !Ilk (II.)

..

2 Two wordo ol

dllnlay

3 CfttclnnaU
bill cklb
4 Spring

DOWN
1 Archltact

Chriatoplllr

fiiiiYII
5 Slllp'a pole

• College

bel

0 700 Club With Pat

..
.'.

10:30(2)0 QXJNiulllrnar
OIJntplc Gantea (Cont.) Q
Ill Ntwl

IliOn . .

10:36(11 MOVIE: T1te Scaipl1unlln

=

'•

(2:f5)

11:0011) T1te Hot~...
1110 1110 00

r::t

ASTR()..QRAPH

out-.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

,._,_.-,ft4.882 : ..•_ 82 Plumbing &amp;
r~:! 11 -"""':=H~II~t;::ln~g~-Cartor'a Plumbing
Fourth •nd Pine
Golllpoito, Dlrio .
114-441-3118

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

hopeful 1o1: the yeir altMd. However,'
you're likely to gttttl'll• 111111ng1 ln .
opurtatna111d of~·
LEO (.lufy 21-Aut- 22) II ••odatR ~
you're lilting a poor eurnpie, thtly re
likely to ig110111 your ~irectlvlllnd tuggeatiOnl todiY. Don't expect othtlrl to
do wMt you won't do yourtlll. LAO,
. treatyourllllto ablrthdiYgift. Send fof
LaO'I Aatro-Qraplt pradiQIIOnl for the
'

.'

wat.,..ay
44 Cilltttdlan

RDIIIrtlon

~

r o - L.................. 114,., 8loytlno 11170 21M: 2 hth. 4411-0331 NM "/p.m.
·
11og. Prleo m~. Cion ao~
~ ttl "I
a lotlot. (ljo fumlohod Apt. 1.'!'.• . ~.
"- • • · o1oio11it,
Uti!Mtoo Paid, "" 114- Avtnut, ,Odlpat61. 114 ttl 'u tt
~~~: - -- -- - - - - - A..:.~..:...c'~
~·;;.
M·;___________

(L)

42 ArtifiCial

22 Taka a maal
23 Rowing tool
24 WIIPJ clouds
27 New Yolft btll
cklb
31 Yoko-

35 lllde fabric

Lil1tlllnll to Alt1llfcl

rr:~!t ~

HE BOUGHT

cuckoo

40 Shoe

for two
34 Hemondo Dt

Stereo.
1D Be

::1:'

11' WIDE CLOBI-01/T •• -

20 FOfiiY

Pro(T)

"*""' . . .

-

opanlna

ID 8urllng Newquay England

BARNEY

39 Tropical

1 W•drallad
In
5 Dlv1n
I 121 Roman
12ACIIIIIIPtrfman
13 Gland14 Future bkt.
15 Companion
of oddo
1&amp;Fid
17 Colllcllon of
..Jinll
f8NIIII

Stereo.
1D
to flulvfvltl Q
t:OO(I)e (1)0 Rotlllllll One

.~.k"tpo.

b. llo'Lj:IJl..,k

ACROSS

Jill's V&amp;lentlne plans by
glvl~ln his sponsor. (R)

s-.

mn Supo'rr·;

HolM

(I)

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

:r:t::

IE: I'Ndllor(RI

(2:00)

v~r rnatlllll prQIPeCII lOOk rather ·

~--

WEST

+KQ

II=~.:=,:- r;a
a Be a SUtr Stereo.
tD 8chup Talk
aero..n..

THAVE~

Aut-1,1182

t

PHILLIP
ALDER

(I) 0 Mainl'a Fomlfr

~

rolrlglfltor,

+K 4 2

basketblll, qu&amp;rttlfinals;
boxing, quarttrflnals; men's
platform diVIng final;
welghtllftlng, super
heavyweight final; &amp;Cl.li!Btrian,
team jumping final (1')' C
(J) Mljtlr L.Hgua aaM&amp;N
Chicago Cubs al Montresl .
Expos (L)

MISCE Ll-AN~OU$ ''

1-4-t!

+J 10 6

10 7 u
+AJ

Clle E'llfllllttment Tonight
Siereo.. Iii .

lloya:::.•.1•-aoao.
GOnd~o.tow.~• ,'--~---­

microwtv~
,...,...11111,

.J

NORTH

BRIDGE

7:30

•

75 BoatS &amp; M0 tOr&amp;
for Sale

84

all the wonderful lhings I would accomplish . Grandpa said
that I couldn't build a reputation upon whall was GOING to
DO.

ID T1te Waltont
7:0&amp; (!) lived)' HHiblllietl
(2) 0 IIJ XJN Sunttner
OIJtttplc Gamet Men's

FRANK AND ERNEST

1011.

J= a,:...!.e.
f

,
,
,

- Kowo11kl KX 125. $1,900•
E•cot- con&lt;ltion. 304-1111·

:.:r-....:

e ·l

~~
a Montrflne

"

Muat Sot!: Apochll loki,. comPI'· Sink. tton, ta1M1 ~ bo1,
1171 Corvono, Sltvtr Annivor· =~~::.""
MOO.
oory N,OOO or Boot Ottor. 114- I
-7H3.
WinnlobOgo Mot• - . Z'lft.
CondHion, N,IOO With
1171 Muatang, run• aaod, ,...
'.
llrtt, •"'mn tlott, ult or lrllde
tor I or ~ whotlor, !1114-&amp;7Wttt.
Services
1171 Joop CJ-7, good cond. IM:11'1'03tl
81
Home
1171 vw Rolrblt, good oond,
Improvements
"'"' grotl 44,000 onltoor. 111711
Ford F.ZIO truch, Good cond, Blrnete Home tnpovententt.
runo vory good. $7011. - · - Roono Addiliono, -Goro1101, El·
1711-21127.
t - a tntori• Pointing, E1·
porloncod, tno ..od Loutid Lo11tt AIIC Spirit 4
Rlbulft Englno, GM 4 Cytlndor, .cally. 114 4411!111,
$150. 114-3i7-724f.
BASEMENT
1183 Chov Cavollor, runo &amp;
WATEAPAOOFINO
tooht aood, Ftotroch aroo, 304- Unconditional lllttlnMI gu•r•ntoo, Lout roloroncoo tumlohod.
8711-2111.
Froo ottimiiH. Cali COilsct I·
::ll::c8.:=,~;--ot-:-Coi:-:-:ico-:S:::T-::•:--.-_:-, 114-237-0411,
&lt;loy ., night.
•
•
' -p., ~·.
"" oro;gor, Good conclltion, Rogtf'l BaMnwnl Wlltrproowtrlle, 30WI2-21tt.
Hng.
liM Buic- Rogal, V.f, Fully Curtil Homo 11101110VImlnll:
Voora E•portonco On Otclor 1
I
Nowor .. Room Acldhiono
Foundotion
Work,
Rooting'
l(
1115 0oc1to Arioo, Automatic, KMchono o\nd litho, Froo e.;
Air, CN!ol, bcotlent Conclhion, tlmotHI
Ratoronooo No Job
$1,100. 114-4411-11552.
Too Big Or Sloooltll48~1.
1181
Oldlmoblto
Roysto
JET
."
8~hom f5;100, Ercottonl
CoOridltlon, V4, Fully Loodod, Aorttion llotoro, ropolrod, Now ' ro-bullt motoro In ttoclo, RON i
All Bilek, 7&amp;,000 llitoo, 15,100. •EVANS,
JACKIOH, OH. 1.i
Phono: IM-444FJI419, 114-441- 53J.IIZI.
,.
4223.
;;::;;~=-:==:--::J
I
-·
-bto Wlltplporing, c'
Oldlmobito
Armoto
lraugham Y.. , AC, ~L PI, 'N, .,,.. E.tiiiUIIIt
Allldontlot.
Sooto, AM,.• lleroo
'
Ca-10. Loododl All llao:k, 'E1parioncod
......:
Worh
111,000 Mltoo. Jlttll. CaM Pot 'Oui!Hy
IM-441-JII19, 114-441- &amp;14-441-ml.
Ron'o TV Sonlico, opoelotlllna
- ·- --In Zonlth oloo aor'liclng moil
1.. Pontloe Firtt&gt;l&lt;d, Vol, T· Olher
brenda. Houee Clita, aleo
Alt, .- . Groy, · - · aomt •PIIIIInce rwpalrs. WV
304o1711-Z:IIt Ohio 114-441-2454. "'
11117 Dodgs Omnl Nw tlroo, Aulo
Tonk Pumotng HOcDolll•
II,ZOO 1. . Cloryllor Now Vorkor So!lllc
Co. RON EVANS EIITERPRISES
ucol. Condicion Higto "'"""" Joolooon, OH 1-100-6374121. '
"
Sl,too IRI Ply11iautlo ltllion
Sow·Yoc
Sonllco
:':~
G&lt;ldltion . h,200 Gtvto
Goorgoo C - Rd. P..a, o..,:
ptln, pickup, tnd dllivory, &amp;141117 CITA Trlno Am ( _ , ~214.
lie. Cond. Low roottoo, T1roe, lie. i',500. 114-44t-77R
WIU build polio _ . , . . ka ~
ocroonod roonoo, PU1 ,. vtri;l 1
1117 PoniiH ......... 4 tloar, lldlng « trollor utrttng. 1M: ' ,'
Allifll.
AC, 2414112.
•
~~·· -ion.
1111

=Or l.:r..

IIIIIIIII

Radial • Again • Foggy • Quorum • GOING to DO
As a young kid with a paper route. I made big promises of

,~~~Tonight

11

79

CompleJo .the chucll\e quolcd
by f.lltng 10 the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

~~SiaiT=' Q

IJNI&gt;f,

Rll)llly, WV. 304-372·3133

e

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERs

~Iii: "'WHh

. '

I had commented to a

lhat a certain politician .was
very charming. My friend observed that charm was a way
of getting someone to say yes
without asking a clear ••.••••..

.I

O ~~ic!~~~\ER LETTERs

~,L=J&amp;SJ

FOUND IT/ wf HAD
YOU flt.~D

·

e

7~~0 IIJ Wheel of Fortune

1184 Horoilo VI 5 Sobro 7 - : l
ml't
Elcoltonl
Condition ·
$2400.00 114-46'11171
. ',

76

\

1:36 (!) Andy Ollffltft

.
.

1111 KXIZ!!. OIG i:ond, J1,300.
3044715-ltt r or 1711-1371.

17 I I IB I

.

IRI elcffldr:-' r;a

=:.'"·

t

Jr Q

IIJ Sc aobr 0oo
tD Up CloH
1D New ZOllO Q

Hobbit mopad .
NIUOnlb~ 1 ·
IM-It2·21110 or IM-.8112· ':

1113 Niaht Howk 150,
Ercoltont Conditlon, Low Milot
11,500 0.8.0. 114-311.-_
'

QE R 0 UT

I

~L&lt;Il.:=s...._.a.

(!) Squn Ot1t TV

I AeroDoHit
With 12111
Nooh
High _
Sclooot_
Anro:

"""ioo"""-·- ....
tliod it.:=,,~

a:3011JL,:; ::~

condHion,

311-1~3.

Iii:. ,vo~, - · - -

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

SEE ...

· • -,•

11?11 Yomoho 1100 Spoclol Full
Drs-, Low Mttoo, $1,150, 114-

,....,,_ for '· ott .. _ port•
Ina, prlvoto ontranco, ohowor,

IE~L APARTIII!NTI AT
IUDQET Plltc£1 AT JACKIOH
18Tlii'U IH JocUon Ptu
• ..., . . _.
lroon Sli'VttiO. Wot' to ohotl •
140110, 3 biclr-, w,_llfl -·Colt 114-4414MI. ICIH.
, _ , lor~ bock front
Sl,
-"· qplt- lilY l..lud- fur;;;,;;;ti IR: It tngwooil-lllo'o-.1

T~ROWN,

I I

1:0&amp; (!) I Lovl Lucr

·Motorcycles

74

depot~~, ...................1111.

1

-,

· ~1-...,.:0:...J:;.-:U,T;...:;S.,..--ll
5
. . 1
. 16
L--'--L--L...J.....J. ;

Racing

!DIIItbun

1

-own.
heM•-I MI .....

TilE 6ALL IS

01elllorn
1887 •oncocondhion,
I , 4-whMI 72,000
driVt, '••• :r
:!!"'
Aoldna
$42911, 114-'1112· • ,
·
7
llor 1:00pm:
,

.
- · 11,3011. - -·
1110 0tc11 CuciiM lul:tM;Mr, ¥·
I, P8, P8, PW, AC, AM*M
. . _ ..- .. -

roorn,

SUPPOSED 1'0 WORK .

:taU~

a World fodlr

I DIDN'T SEE
ANV EARS !=LAP..

·,

.,..

·oF
B~~='ln.,

1112 Ford Van, 11,500. - ·
2370.

Hailend _ , 717 lo&lt;!ftl
horvootor. Now Hoiland I ft. hiy
Merchandise
or
·
blno. Dohlll g~ndor ml••· 304-Sound
Oooltn Homo ...... 2n-4215.
5I
A~M Caoollto Ployor,' Sopo· ;;
Household
ratt T-•bto, ~ Spaohro a 63
Livestock
Slond, Ploya AM loundo 21"
GoOds
Bieldo a Othor Biu iloo., 41 Inch moro· pony; wootorn
Toko AI~ $15 Call - , A~ horiO aoddlo; 13 Inch youth
7 ploco dlnotto oil : paddod .
IM-446-75V7 or . chotro, llu now. 1125. 114-446· tori:OO P.M. :104-f75-14U.
1155.
Stove, 1100; Relrl~l'ltor, 1175: Hog lor bulchorlng, roody now,
..
Sovlngo On Ail Vinyl I Car· Liovollf.......,. ol wuthor 304'·773-58711.
In Stoch. 15.00 Up. llooioliln wic~•· 2 cholro, coltoo t':!i
$150; CoHictlble rniP'• 8C
r.-to, 114-441-10W4.
doohl, ill" hltlh,
IM-It2• Aogttt orod Anguo eottlo, 3 bulla,
I lio 11oro, t cow. Pricod upon
For Solo: 2 hoollng ..... , I 31H pr 114-ltf·:MH.
King coli a wood; 1 coot. IMlnopoction. IM-1112·!11133.
Toyior Wit-- Dutoldo
311ollU
Wood Firod Hot Wttor Fu"' Two poreonlogo stmmtntot llul
col- and ono Hlltor. GOOD USED APPLIANCES ...... Nootl Y"''f Entlro Woohoroc. doyoro, 11trigefotoro, And DoonMtic Hoi Wlltr F"'"' A clitia, 1Mol43-1:153.
rangtt. .._
~pplloncoo, 71
Wood Fi,. Dutaldo Vow ·
Vlno St-, Cittl-·l':IH, I· 1-IOO-III-:at3.
::64=-=:H~ay~&amp;-::G;:..:rs~in~-100..111-:MH.
Wltir Nootor Silo 52,-40, 30 Dol· Dlioy Altolll Aolll, ilttlvory
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
ion ond (0 Dollion ovolloiJ'!, llorrn·a Fo ...., AI.
Complete home tum~13:. Noturat gso, 'fouro chalco. 31 304-nl'-201
$151.11 w-ottlortl a Thornol
•
·
Houro: M'"'"Sot, 1-a. 1
Fall gr~ln storage avaMable,
0322, 3 mil" out lul.IYIU. Rd. Hlrdwar~ 114 11t 0111
Froo Doilvooy.
llorgsio F- 304.t37-201a.
WATERLINE SALE
Now Otk Furnituro: Chino 1'4 tnch 200 PIIIHS 1 tnch 200
e.tblnltt, walhM_., table I PSI U3.50 Ron Evono EnTransportation
chalra, ~rr.:rr,· Larkins torpri-l~l'IUI.
dooh, ate. I
;na.
Wlolr"""' -!do $1,100;
PICKEHSf'URNITURE
.wtolrl"""' lllgMot I t - ..10; Air 71 Autos for Sale
No-'Jood
Condhtoftor, 1321; In Canton
Houootoold tumtololng. 112 mi. Podootll Sink, 1225; tn Carlon
Jtrridoo Ad. Pt. Pt-nt. WV,
Whirl- lith Tub $350~ :
con 304471-1410.
Psnnoy Wiekor Fumlt..., 1 '
A. &amp; S. Fumitu,., Nlw, uNCI, an- Solo, Choir, L&gt;ooongor, End IH2 Ford Gotuy, SIZOO Hrm,
sctuol mllol;
1171 T·linl,
tlquoo. HOUHhold tumlohlngo. Tobltt Cotloo Tobia, Old Roch· 31,000
~~ ur. __
ina Choir, 180. 114-311 1111.
1
Muon, WO/. 304-773-5341.
~. ~-·•"•·
1H7 Carn.~ro conw.rtible; wtth
SeaN whha contlnuou11 ctun 55
Building
prol-ionolly rotruiH 250, lcyt,
olodric r•ng•, $15. 304-l'!iouto1 lloc top, noodl . point,
Supplies
&amp;451.
gooo lor rootorotion, $4,200. or
SWAIN .
bMI offrlr. 30UI2-3323.
Btocll.
brich,
wt"'
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12 -~ llntoto, ate. C
WI"'
Oil" Sl., GoHtpollo, Now a Uood toro, •to Gronclo, ON Call 114· IV75 .Chovy. Nov• Vory Good
llochllnicot Condition, $500.
furniture, hlltiN'I, W..cem &amp; 24~121
I1C-t46-7t28, Ev1nlngs.
Work -o. &amp;14-446-3151.

1 · - • ..,...od. ,_ kttchon,
upolllro, prtvott ontronct,
utlllloo oold. eobto,

Mvlng

~SqunO.TV

~EKE'S ~OW IT'S

20.,.,
111711 Ford 4 _ , drl" truclo,
auto, 11,000. »WJI.2f711 1tl1r
5:00PM.

~~~='~"~"~':""'~·:"':·===:,;;;:;======~

Bon Puroon Mlll4ong -

2 bedraam trailer, nur Akra
Pllnt, c:enlnl air, privata, no

11,580.

1172 .loop CJ5, Vol, 3 lpood, .

tor 4 .........

'

~u.~

---~~~~~

now top, tlroo, aood cond, moy

trtde

.

•

8:GO (2) 0 (I) 0 1110 1110

-419S.
73 Vans &amp; 4 wo·s

$240 "" - h. 114-441-

~ IOCition,
romodtlod tpto lor - ·
now - -·

fOOII.

TUE., AUG. 4
EVENING

~~~~-------11183 GIIC lhon bid, dloall 1.2 t -·
ong. 4 apd. 4 wholl olrlvo. •
coildMion, """

=·

t•ne. deck, undlrlkltUng. •~ SINplna rooms whh cooking.
31Jt.0404 oft• a p.m.
~too tralt&amp;r opoeo. Ail '-'""PI·

lont Toddtor coro,IM-44UZ27. 33 Farms for Sale
Suporlor Polntlna Ca" fo&lt; Froo I t5 Acrt Fsrm LA&gt;cotod in Gtttlo
Co. 8 Room HoUII, 2 Full B1tt11,
Eatimole. """ f\4-446-1151
CIA, Lttgo Toblcco L.o.ooo Ctll
Wilt Snooil Ltwno. 114-441- For An Ajrpointmont Todly\6141151.
371-2111.

Financial

0

roqulrod, :1114-1~1111 on.r
, doyoi'IU1131.
Ono bod,_ lumlolood opt,
roof, ctmralelr, 3Q4.87W151.
11181 Hally Pork 14172, 3 bod- vort ctoon a ntca, no plio, 31M'
roomo, 2 lull bltho, toto! oltc, _.1711-~1311:::;,.- - - - - oot on privata rontod 1&lt;&gt;4, .,. 54 Miscellaneous
cond, 304-175-1842 oftor &amp;:oo.
45 . FurniShed
Merchandise
IIIII 141111 Danviito Aodmon 2
Rooml
Botho Htlt l'lrmp, 114-4411-0512 :--..-~~:;:;,.-__,,.. Pttotlc And _ , ~ a!roCtt
1
Pricoo To Soli!
Roomalar ront • woolo., month. Thno 10 Inch In Stock. Ron
Booutllul 1110 Donvlllo 14172 Siortlng ot 1120/mo. Doitio Hotll. Ewono, Jock- Dlrlo. 1 CA. •-•· doyor, OW, coiling IM-141'!1580.
. '
137-IUI.

welcome. IU 148 1221. NN In·

Homo Evory 7·14 Doyo, 111!"81

-..v''

fJX51&gt;.

Wattr, ltOVI, ,.I, furnt.t.d. No

Now 11oon I:Z.IO With 7ll4 El· C.il oftor

.,.,. - . 2t1t Jociooon Avo,
IIWI, g,oo. till• ? d...._, toya,

t ,

a

18 Wanted to Do

IQJ'h !lido,
alit iiilnolun Caltto,
--2051.

t

~r""'=:·

Plrontoi
· ~--...;,-----~---------111158 FonMI Pork bv HotlY Pork,
I
3 b i d - both hot(, .....
lnllllotion, v\nyt lldlng, ahlngto

Giveaway

4

=.

Uh - · Whh 40Ft, P•tio:
Locotod: Jollo-o lloblto
Homo Poll!. 304-JIII-4:158.

•

tm Cloov :114 ton, 4•4. 1111
Chov 112 ton, '!l!c IIIlO, !111,000
-.304-I'IU-.
111711 Ford Truck Club Cab, AGO
c.n IM-311.f313.
11112 $-10, 4 cyt, 4 oplod, Roily
whooto, aood cond, 304-47112714 .. 1'11-1&amp;77.

C:I6T-r~&lt;c I~N

111'1,
:~ nod,
lumlohod,
and
Rtver.li.
bldo, undo
ttopo, no
all Manor
oloctrlc,
114-8112·5800 or Apar1mtnlt In Mldd..port. Fmm
$111. Cali 114-Hz-77111. EON,
114-8112-1521.
11183 Nuhuo, ' bid.....,, 14J70 M1rtto, SC, Ocoonlront Aloon.
with 7&gt;112 Olplndo, CA, Ouoon Flvo Doy Summor Spocio~ Only
wot..trod, !liirdon tub, 111 ti&gt;' $291. Continontol lra•kl•tt, InPool. CCTV, Ploono,
DUII'M:II, 10120 decla, $14,000. M~ move, 310W'JI.7MO or 171- Eftictonclol, Fonleotlc Locotion.
Call Groonbrtor1oi00-44N541.
3504.
1184 M1na¥&gt;n 141M moblil N. Third Mldd'-1, Olllo, I
home. 2 bldrooi'IW, 1llelec, 304· bedroom turniohlld opl, dop I
roi,3D4-182-3R.
6711-7131.
Noor Contanooy: nico 2 8R.

....,. Olli- llomborohip.

72 Trucks for Sale

I W1'711 C.HEi '()

Fumlohod EHieii!Oey 1111 Utt!Mioo
Ptld, Sloort lith ttl Socond
1f73 IZIIIIIotlito - · 2 Boci- Avonut, 11311/Mo. 114 441 31MB.
POOfM. NewlY Aemo dated,
$4,100, Firm. 114-311--.
Groeiaua Hvlng. 1 ond 2 bod1p1rtments at

'
"'

'

Sclooot 8111 For Solo, Elcoltont
Running CondHion, 114-3811444. '

Fumlohod olltc~y 1n ,..,.
quill, wilt """' Cll a I~· .,,;
poling, pri••• parlolng. IM.+i'i2602.

room

71 Autos for Sale

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

r

I

..,

..

IDNnlwatcll
AIMnlo Hll StereO.

RO
day those 1ou'tt be invotvad with mlghl
do your thinking lor you. Unfortunalely,
they're not 11 smart u you are.
PfSCEI (Fib. :10-March 20) Occasion·
ally, your hunch• are right on target.
But today, your Intuitive procauea
might play tricks on you. Rely on your
logic, not on your m)'ltlcal perceptions.
AlliES (MMch 21·Apoll 111 Someone
you're c1ote1y tnvotved With might not
do thlngl u you would do them today.
But don't try to make thll Individual
over In your own Image; accept both
iaultlond Vlrt-.
·
TAURUS (April. 2HIQ 20)
I
yourllll wtlh an lntlllctlvt · ally
·
could aerloully Impede your progrou
where on tmportont objective 11 concenlld. Partnn inuat hive good
anrtbutn.
-·
·
oa.t 111117 21-.luM 201 Beware
SAGITTARIUS (Not. D-Olo. 11) While the InclinatiOn todly to malce herd work
chlllengn usullly bring out your bettor out of totnethlng t11at lllould be
. qlillltletr, the oppollte might be't,..lo- . -lively euy. A .,_ anltude could
di!Y. You could wattle under ~n~~Ure. atroy 'f(WIInnllttve tllld purpcee.
owing to an .,_... atlltude.
' 4CANCIII (oltlttl 11......, 221 Usually,
CAI'IIICOIIN (Dec, :&amp;Well. 1t) Try to
adri&gt;lt at managing your
avoid actlvttlll today wheri you
But thlo aplendld qulllty
you have lo opend a tot of money to . mlgllt 1101 be CJIMWIIIng today. Be carehavu good time. ltlln't likely you'll,.. lui you don't coat yourllll or eomeone
' celvevalul for your dollllr.
· alae, money,
'
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year ahead by mailing $1 .25 plus a tong, carinot make decisions lor yoursell to·
Hlf·addr-. atampold 'envelope to
Astro-Graph, c/o,t~ts newspapei, P.O. i
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 101-3428 . .
Be sure to atate your zodiac sign.
VlRGO (Aug, 23-ltpt. 22) You're analytical and 1obMrYant toda1, but you
might focuo on negative aspects rather
than PQIItlve ones. Thll CO&lt;Jid csute
IOU to be a def11tlst and not at all
auertlve.
LllltA (ltpt. 2J.Oct., :IS) Arl endeavor
you're Involved In might not be as '
promising u you've' led yourooll to btllleve. Fl•n-• thll development eo ,
that you don't wute time ond money.
ICORPIO(Oot. MoNo¥. 22) Your prot&gt;abllltletr u 111 lchlever lOOk V8t'Y good
today. But you mlgh1 qoncentrote on
objeetlvtl that w11 provide you with lit·
tie or no gratification
they're

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and tho candldat" hod better bring toumlquett." - M...,_ Connell!.' ,. ,J

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Peop e in
the news

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Director Brian l)e Palma, ~oping t.o
rebound from two mov1e flops, 1s
banking on a low-budget thriller
with a female protagonist
·
"Women are m~ aestheljcally
pleasin!l, which is why they've
been pamted throughout history,"
De Palma told the Los An~cles
Times in an interview published
Sunday. '"And a woman walking
down a corridor Jll'8)!s an audience
more viscenilly titan Dolph Lundgren walking down a corrilkir."
Lolita Davidovich and John
l:.ithgow star in "Raising Cain,"
set for release Friday. lt's about an
obsessed child psychologist who
kidnaps his daughter and oth~r
neighborhood kids and frames b1s
wife's former lover.
.
The film is produced by De
Palma's wife, Gale Anne Hurd,
who lists '"Terminator" and
"Aliens" to her credits.
De Palma, 51, hopes his new
film will put to test his two most
recent creations - "casoatties of
War" in 1989, which cost $23 million and earned only $18.7 ilt the
box office, and "The Bonfi!C of
the Vanities," a $45 miUion bomb
in 1990.
"If they're calling this a
'rebound,' I might as well get it
over with," De Palma said. "[
intend to go on malcing movies ...
and I can only go up. Anyhow, this
town bas a very short memory."

I
I'

!I

!

CAMPUS VISITED • Several students from
Eastern High School visited Deftance College
recently ror a tour or the campus and a presentation by the College's Olr'lce ol Admission. The
students are participants ol Upward Bound, a
college preparatory program coordinated by

'

i

Ohio· University. Giviitg ihe students a tour or
tbe campus is DC student Carl Easley, left. Par·
ticipating students included, ia ao particular
order, Crystal Harmoa, Welldi Harmon, Todd
Grace, Kevin Amott and Kathy Ottman.

Pastor Corcoran point of contact
•

PASTOR CORCORAN

Pastor John F. Corcoran of the
Rutland Chun:h of God is the point
of contact for the National Evangelistic Census in the counties of Gal·
lia, Meigs, Vinton and Athens. The
NEC is a simple inter-denominational, non-sectarian mobilization
of local churches for one day of
city-wide evangelistic outreach, to
share the salvation message of
Jesus Christ
According to Corcoran this all
began in March 1990 when Charles
. aod Frances Hunter, Houston-based
evangelists, heard the "GodBreathed" idea that the church
should take a census of the entire
world.
In 1991, when they took a "census" of the nation of Honduras,
they trained more than I 00,000
workers to go systematically door-

PARIS (AP)- Three decades
after Marilyn Monroe died of an
apparent drug overdose, playwright
Arthur Miller says that his former
wife was "highly self-destructive"
and addicted to sleeping pills.
Miller, 77, who wrote "Death of
a Salesman," said in an interview
published Monday in the newspaper Le Figaro that he put his career
on hold after marrying Monroe in
1956. They were divorced after
fuuryurs.
.
"All my energy and attention
were devoted to trying to help ber
solve her problems," Miller said.
"Unfortunately, I didn't have
much success.•'
Monroe became Hollywood's
sex symbol incarnate in films like
"Bus Stop," "Some Like it Hot,"
aod "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes."
She was found dead Aug. 5,
I962 from an apparent drug overdose ~t age 36. "Mari!yn ':':as ~ck;
the public knew nothm~, Miller
was quoted as saying. 'She was
totally dependent on sleeping piUs,
and they destroyed her bit by b1t''

to-door, preaching the gospel to
every home in Honduras. As a
result more than 1.5 miUion profes·
sions of faith have been documented Later they took the crusade to
P;nama with equally startling
results.
Corcoran stated President
. George Bush has. been asked to
officially recogmze Sept. 20 as
"Return our Nation to God Day,"
the day set aside fer the evangelis·
tic census of the United States,
officially called "Win Our Cities to
Jesus."
Pastor Corcoran invileS all pastors and congregations in Galiia,
Meigs, Vinton and Athens counues
to assist in this venture. Further
information may be obtained by
calling him at (614) 742-2060.

Astronauts ready satellite-on-a-string
experiment above Atlantis shuttle
By SUSAN IDGHTOWER
Associated Press Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston Atlantis' astronauts filed electron
beam guns and ran other last ·
minute tests of equipme~t for
today's daring space fmc sailing a
satellite above the shuttle on 12
miles of string.
The seven-member crew was to
remove the Italian Space Agency
satellite from the cargo bay and
unreel the 1,100-pound sphere thiS
afternoon on a flexible wire-andfiber tether about as th1ck as a
shoelace.
Scientists are trying to see

Meeting planned
A meeting for parents of stu·
dents enrolled in Southern Local
Kindergarten classes this fall will
be held Monday at 7 p.m . at the
high schopl in Racine. Class
assignments will be given at this
time. If there are any students not
already registered fer kindergarten,
parents are to bring their child's
birth certificate, immunization
records, and custody papers (if
applicable) to pre-register at 6:30
p.m.

ed instruments for the experiment,
including two sets of electron beam
guns aboard the shuttle.
NASA expects the cord to Jli:O·
duce up to 5,000 volts of elecblcity
as it cuts across Earth's magnetic
field at 17,500 mph.
The current should flow from
the satellite to the shuttle, and ·the
electron beam guns would shoot
the elecuical charge baclc into the
atmosphere.
Meanwhile, the first satellite
released by Atlantis' astronauts
remained stuck in a precariously
low orbit.
The $213 million Eureca sate!·
lite, releasell Sunday. was 276
miles above Earth. Ground controllers had ftred thrusters to boost
it to a 320-mile-high orbit, but
stopped because the satellite
appeared tilted the wrong way.
Controllers at the European
Space Agency, which owns the
satellite, said a sun sensor may
bave been programmed incorrectly. .
If so, the satellite was in the
scc.'1
right
place all along ~d they may
The astronauts planned to reel fire the
thrusters agam m a few
the satellite back in on Wednesday, days, said
Daria Robinson , a
after 30 hours.
spokeswoman
for the agency.
On Monday, Atlantis' crew leSt·
On its present course, Eureca
and its load of crystals, seeds,
shrimp eggs, and bacteria spores
eventually would sink through the
atmosphere and burn up.
Shuttle astronauts are scheduled
to pick up the satellite next ~ng,
if it can be boosted to the nght
orbit
The shuttle is scheduled to land
Friday at Kennedy Space Center
after a seven-day flight.

whether a thin cable stretched
through Earth's electrically
charged ionosphere can generate
electricity. Such cables m1ght
someday power a space station and
even propel spacecraft, sc1enttsts
say.
As Atlantis orbited 184 miles
above Earth, the tether was expected to ripple, sway like a pendulu'!'•
bounce like a yo-yo and swmg tn
circles like a jump rope.
NASA insisted the experiment
is safe. But if the shuttle gets into
danger the crew can activate
explosi~es to cut the satellite loose
and fly away.
. " We expect to see some things
about flying satellites attached to
tethers that nobody' s real! y thought
about " said commander Loren
Shrive~. who spent two years train·
ing for all the flying maneuvers he
may have to make to steady the
tether.
"Or at least if they've thought
about them, it's hard to describe
the kind of motion that we might

FIVE GENERATIONS • Plctued are live ltltratlotla olthe
Lula Youac famUy. Pictured wil. Mrs. Younc, Ill, veat·great
graadmotber, are Kea Youac, 60, creat-graadfalher; Jimmie
Youag, 40, c~adfatber; Julia Younc, ZO, father; aad Juslia
YounJ, fOlD' moallls, ~·
;

'

°

Representatives of the health
care staff at Veterans Memorial
Hospital are making 'final plans f(J
their annual appearance at the
Meigs County Fair.
Hospital personnel will be offering free blood sugar and blood
pressure testing from I through 9
p.m., Monday through Friday at the
fair. A variety of favors ~-.:e been
ordered to pass along to VISitors at
the hospital booth 'which will be
located in what is known as the
new commercial building. Also
personnel will take registmtion~ fer
several nice attendance pnzes
which will be awarded after the
fair.
.
The hospital is also sponsonng
the annual apple pie baking contest
to be held at 11:30 a.m. on Thursday this year rather than on S&amp;tu!'day morning when it was staged m
'91. Prizeswillbe$15, $10aod$5
to the top three winners.

If you're a member of an erga,
nization which needs a speaker at
fall approaches, do keep in mind
that the Meigs Division of the
·American Heart Association does
provide speakers for meetings of
various groups. To arrange a
speaker as you plan your program
for the year, just give me a call at
992-5292.

McDonald's pulls chicken
and·pasta from test markets

Auxiliary meets

ANDREA ROCKHOLD

the city directors picked up. some:
tips on clogging shows from
Paulette who continually demon.
strates creativity with the work
done by her organization. Paulellll
bad always wanted to see the lights
and life at Vegas so the uip was
really a treat for both her and bet
Mother. Paulette recomntellda the
city fer a few day~e sho!"S 811!1
food are great, she reports-UI case
you wondering what to do .on your
· vac~~ had Paulette relllned ,
home than she left again for Disne~
World in florida with her husban ;
Phil-the first vacation he's had in"
a long time-son, Trevor, and
DanieUe Crow. They stayed close
· by in one of the luxury Disney
hotels. Incidentally, the group aJsO,
enjoyed a visit with Bruce Wolfe or:.
Racine who is employed as an
entertainer at Magic Kingdom.

A telephone call came through
from a perturbed Rutland resident
who said she had not even realized
that Rutlaod water was unsife for
drinking and other uses until she
read a notice in the newspaper Stat·
ing thai it is now satisfactory !1fld a
boiling advisory has been hfted.
She feels that more notice should
Paulette Harrison, able director bave been provided cus!Ojllers.
of the Shady River Shuffiers, and
A pop song of many moons ago
her mother, Mrs. Mildred Hudson,
certainly
is appropriate this sum·
joined area cloggers for a uip to
mer.
The
First line of the lyrics go:
Las Vegas recently. .
"I
make
a
date for golfmg, you can
Paulette enjoyed the contact
with other directors during the bet your life it rains". Hopefully,
trip-the exchange of ideas was those lyrics ring a bell with some
excellent aod undoubtedly some of of you. Meantime, do keep smiJ.
ing.

Dance scheduled

technolo~ies, Jtortic~ltural indu~­

f

1sn 't that special!
The Stale Highway Patrol has
·
· ·
f th
completed
an mvesugauon
e
state welfare departmenl-formally
known as .the Ohio Department of
Human ResOUrces these days-and
scandal results.
One former official has been
sentenced to 18 months in priS&lt;?n
after pleading guilty to theft m
office. A current official bas been
suspended for thtee'da;s ~or her
role in creating a S24·? 3 JOb fo/
the ex-wife of thai official. Wasn t
she lucky'l Just think-slle might
have even been slapped on the
hands with a ruler or stood in the
ccrner for an hour or so.

Jones honored
by Big Wheel

tum which 'includes general and
basic studies, hands-on, practical
experience combined with a paid
industry internship.

tries, agncultural busmess, and BDI·
mal industries.
StudeniS participale in a cUITicu-

by Bob Hoejlick ·

OAK BROOK, Ill . (AP) McDonald's C01p. has withdrawn
its pasta aod chicken dinner menus
from leSt markets in three states.
A spokeswoman for the Oak
Brook-based
fast-food chain said
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Monday
ttlat
the
pasta and chicken
Mormon Church President Ezra
products
had
been
pulled from 70
Taft Benson, who seldom appears '
restaurants in New York, Ten·i~ public, plans to keep the c_elebrations simple on his !13rd birthday nessee aod Ohio. The ~­
an, who was not idenurted in an
Tuesday.
Benson, who was U.S. agricul- interview with the Chicago Sunture secretary under Dwight D. Times, said the company .was
Eisenhower from 1953 to 1961, bring!ng the PfO!!uc~ back to the
will receive family members and test kitthens (er tinkenng.
Company spokesmen could not
close associates in the leadership of
The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat·
ter-day Saints at his home, the
chun:h said in a statement
Benson has little to do with the
day-to-day affairs of the church
Joel Jones has been chosen
because of his advanced age. He Associate
of the Store for the
became president of the 8.3 mil- month of June
at Big Wheel in
lion-member church in 1985. Mor- Pomeroy.
mon presidents, considered
He works in the electronics
prophets by the faithful, serve for department
He name will be added
life.
to the Associate of the Store plaque
LONDON (AP) - Michael in the establishment.
He has been employed with Big
Jackson who missed a weekend
Wheel
for six years. According to
stadium 'date because of illness, is
Jon
Campbell,
store manager,
ready to resume his "Dangerous"
Jones
exemplifies
an above stantour on Wednesday in Cardiff,
dard
level
of
job
performance
and
Wales, a spokesman said Monday.
maintains
good
customer
service
More than 70,000 fans learned
that Jackson was ill less than an skills aod a positive attitude toward
hour befere his scheduled perfor- the company.
mance at Wembley stadium on Sat·
urday.
There Will be a dance at the RutJones confirmed Jackson had
land
American Legion Hall on Satbeen suffering from a viral infecurday
from 8 p.m. tD midniglit with
tion.
music
by White's Hill Band. Public
As he made his announcement
invited.
outside the Dorchester. Hotel,
where Jackson is staying, dozens of
fans crowded round implorin~ him
to ''tell Michael we love him. '
An ice cream aocial was set for
Promoters said Jackson would
make up for the missed show on Aug. 28 at the recent meeting of
Aug. 23 at Wembley. Ticket-hold· the Bashan Ladies Auxiliary.'
It was noted the recent social
ers were offered the option of a
was
a success and those who donal·
refund.
ed and entertained were thanked.

Rockhold receives scholarship
Andrea Dale Rockhold, daughter of Dale and Shirley Rockhold.
Reedsville was awarded the Ohio
Grain and ' Feed Association/Ohio
Agrobusiness Association Scholar~
ship at the Ohio s~~;~e Unive.rsity
Agricultural Techntcal Inslllute
(OSU/ATI), Wooster. She was
awarded the scholarship on the
basis of her outstanding academic
record and demonstrated leadership
capabUities.
Miss Rockhold, a 1992 ~te
of Eastern Higb School, will major
in agricultural business al
OSU/ATI.
OSU/ATI is The Ohio Slate
University's two year, statewide
technical college, offering 22 programs leadin~ to an AsaociaiC in
Applied Science degree from.OSU.
Career opportunities are pursued
within the areas of engineering

Beat of the Bend...

immediately be reached for further.
comment early today. In May.:
spokesman Chuck Ebeling sa1d
~es ofthedinneritems ~ ·:~ust
fine and up to our expectauons. . .
McDonilld's stock closed doWI!
$1.12 1/2 at $4175 a share on the~
New York Stock Eltcbange after~
the &amp;Mouncemenl was made Mon-.
day.
.
. . •
Investors had been p1nnmg,;
McDonald's future perfornumce on :
a planne~ introduc.tion of_new
items durmg the cnticall:hnner •
hour. McDonald's core U.S. operations have taken a back seat to
reUilns from its fcreign restaurants, . ·
a slowdown thai has worried stockholders.
Analysts have said a dinner,
menu is untested teniUI)' MeDon-:
aid's must undertake to keep the:
nation's largest restaurant chain.
ahead of the pack ilnd increase its·uaffic.
·
McDonald's in March began
testing recipes for four different
types of pizza, brais~d chicken
breast aod three pasta dishes.
The pizza dishes will remain in
test market in 500 restaurants.
nationwide, the company said.

"Dedicated to enriching and
improving the life of Senior Citizens
in Mamn, Gallia and Meigs counties."

Airborne allergies
An allergy is an abnormal ble allergens tu oetermine which
reaction by the body's immune ones the individual is allergic to.
system to an ordinarily harmless
3. Blood' test - a sample of
substance. The immune system blood is taken and analy~cd for
normally protects the body the allergy-producing lgE anti·
against harmful invaders, but in body.
allergic persons it reacts to
After diagnosis is detcnnincd,
innocuous subsUinces. The body treatment begins. Treatment can
produ.ccs.the antibody lgE to be as simple as taking medication
assost on th1s process.
·or as complicated as clim inating
Allergic symptoms include . the irritant in one's environment.
wh~ezing, sneezing, swelling, Treatment using medication is the
ttchmg, headache, llllusca, fatigue most common method. Antihisand shock (occasionally fatal). A tamines arc the most 'common
person may experience one, two drug used. They block the action
or all of the above symptoms dur-. of chemicals that contr.tet air pasmg an attack.
sages or cause sneezing or itch·
Doctors use three basic meth- ing. These arc especially useful
ods t~ assist in diagnosis of an with hives and hay fever.
allergy. These arc:
· · Elimillllting the-source of the
I. Questionnaire to determine allergy is nol only a treatment
how, what, when and the nature but, a preventive action. House·
of the allergy.
hold allergies arc the most frus, 2. Skin-prick test - relative trating because they include
painless, exquisitely sen.&lt;itive and molds, dust, dander and insects.
inexpensive test in which an area The number one culpit is the dust
of the body is inj&lt;;ctcd with possi(Continued on Pagel) ·

Understanding the MedicareMedicaid difference

Round dance
lessons slated
Basic round dance lessons for ·
beginners, plus continuing work·
shops for recent graduates and.
01her dancers, will be held Tues-'
days beginning at 6;30 p.m. on,
SepL I. Wcrkshops and Phase Jl.I·
sessions begin at 8·p.m. The last'
date to enter the class is Sept. IS.'
There are approximately 25 ses~~ ·
siorui. The classes will be held ar
!he American Legion Half in Mid,;
dlepon. Glenn Anders, Rio Grandi:,;
is the instructor. Further informa-:
tion mar be obtained by callinr.
Mary Skinner at 992-2SOO.
"

Members of the Meigs Relired Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) Kethel Hatfield, Vytire Sellers,
Opal Tyree and Vicki Kennedy assisted in preparing volunteer kiL~ ror the Meigs Chapter of the
Amerlc~n Cancer Society. Ferman Moore, Director ot the Meigs ACS, slates lhe house to house
canvas IS currently underway. Dan and Sue Romuno, information and education volunteers for
the ACS, are Chairpersons ror the 1992 Campaign.

Virginia DIoomer, Frances Curfman, VIlma Plkkoj1, Thelma
Filson, and Ruth Smith, members of the Lot 40+ Herbalist
Group, In Gallia County Herb Garden.

.

, . ,,~

.. ..

··~· ·· ·

by Canol Irwin-Carter
Social Security Manager
in Gallipolis, Ohio
What's the diffC!Cnce between
Medicare aod Medicaid?
These two similar-sounding
words arc really two very different government health insurance
programs-and a surprising number of people may not fully
under.;tand those differences.
Medicare is our country's
health insurance program for people 65 or older, for certain disabled people under 65, and for
people of any age who have permanent kidney failure. It provides
basic protcctoon against the· cost
of health care, but doesn't cover
all of.your.mcdioal expenses. To

receive Medicare, you must have
worked in Social Security covered jobs- or pay for Med icare

insurance.

While the Health Caro Financing Administration is in charge of
running the Medicare program,
we at Social Security aro the people who help you enroll in Medicare and who can give you general information about the program.
Medicaid is a State-run pro·
gram designed primarily to help
those with low income and few
resources. While the federal government helps pay for Medicaid,
each state has its own rules about
who is eligible and what is covered under Medicaid. However,

States MUST provide Medocaid
coverage to certain groups of
people (such as recipients of Aid
to Families with Dependent Chi ldren) and MUST provide certain
basic medical services under the
Medicaid program (such as inpatient/outpatient hospital services
and prenatal care.)
It is also important to know
that some aged, blind and/or dis·
ablcd persons can qualify for hoth
Medocarc and Medicaid.
If you would like to know
more about Medicare, call our
Social Security at 1·800-7721213. If you would like to know
more about Medicaid, comac1
your local social services or wei ·
fare ortice.

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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="33701">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="33700">
              <text>August 4, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
